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author | Nicky Sielicki <nlsielicki@wisc.edu> | 2015-06-06 07:51:54 -0500 |
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committer | Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@google.com> | 2015-06-11 20:18:49 +0200 |
commit | 1f38d7986828fb58ced4a30bb17accb03943e798 (patch) | |
tree | f8890b807ef3024684acda822ddfbfd7cc630dc5 /src/include | |
parent | 538ce57d47b9e017cea6f167c50f96a7ac702a45 (diff) | |
download | coreboot-1f38d7986828fb58ced4a30bb17accb03943e798.tar.xz |
Clearly define printk log level use cases.
The proper log level for any given printk statement is up to the
interpretation of the developer. This results in console output with
somewhat inconsistent levels of verbosity. This patch clearly defines each
log level and its use case, hopefully resulting in less ambiguity for
developers.
The concern with this patch might be that it leaves a lot of preexisting
printk statements using a log level that is inconsistent with the
description. I think that *most* statements map to these extended
definitions very nicely. The most discrepancies are between debug and
spew, but I'm willing to say that 95% of statements with a level lower than
debug are correct by these definitions.
There was some discussion dating back to 2010 on the mailing list about
renaming these constants to lose the 'BIOS_' prefix and to consolidate
some of them into a single constant. I disagree that it is necessary
to merge any of them, I think they all have unique use cases. But I do
think that if you all agree with these definitions, it might be useful to
rename them to reflect their use cases.
I also will add that I believe removing BIOS_NEVER is a good idea. I do
not see the use case, and it's used in only 4 files.
Change-Id: I8aefdd9dee4cb4ad2fc78ee7133a93f8ddf0720b
Signed-off-by: Nicky Sielicki <nlsielicki@wisc.edu>
Reviewed-on: http://review.coreboot.org/10444
Reviewed-by: Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@google.com>
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins)
Diffstat (limited to 'src/include')
-rw-r--r-- | src/include/console/loglevel.h | 184 |
1 files changed, 173 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/src/include/console/loglevel.h b/src/include/console/loglevel.h index 290cd891eb..e147490f7b 100644 --- a/src/include/console/loglevel.h +++ b/src/include/console/loglevel.h @@ -1,16 +1,178 @@ +/* + * This file is part of the coreboot project. + * + * Copyright (C) 2015 Nicholas Sielicki <sielicki@nicky.io> + * + * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify + * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or + * (at your option) any later version. + * + * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the + * GNU General Public License for more details. + * + * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software + * Foundation, Inc. + */ + #ifndef LOGLEVEL_H #define LOGLEVEL_H -/* Safe for inclusion in assembly */ -#define BIOS_EMERG 0 /* system is unusable */ -#define BIOS_ALERT 1 /* action must be taken immediately */ -#define BIOS_CRIT 2 /* critical conditions */ -#define BIOS_ERR 3 /* error conditions */ -#define BIOS_WARNING 4 /* warning conditions */ -#define BIOS_NOTICE 5 /* normal but significant condition */ -#define BIOS_INFO 6 /* informational */ -#define BIOS_DEBUG 7 /* debug-level messages */ -#define BIOS_SPEW 8 /* way too many details */ -#define BIOS_NEVER 9 /* these messages are never printed */ +/** + * @file loglevel.h + * + * \brief Definitions of the log levels to be used in printk calls. + * + * Safe for inclusion in assembly. + * + */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_EMERG - Emergency / Fatal + * + * Log level for when the system is entirely unusable. To be used when execution + * is halting as a result of the failure. No further instructions should run. + * + * Example - End of all debug output / death notice. + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_EMERG 0 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_ALERT - Dying / Unrecoverable + * + * Log level for when the system is certainly in the process of dying. + * To be used when execution will eventually halt as a result of the + * failure, but the system can still output valuable debugging + * information. + * + * Example - Ram initialization fails, dumping relevant POST codes and + * information + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_ALERT 1 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_CRIT - Recovery unlikely + * + * Log level for when the system has experienced a dire issue in essential + * components. To be used when boot will probably be unsuccessful as a + * result of the failure, but recovery/retry can be attempted. + * + * Example - MSR failures, SMM/SMI failures. + * or + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_CRIT 2 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_ERR - System in incomplete state. + * + * Log level for when the system has experienced an issue that may not preclude + * a successful boot. To be used when coreboot execution may still succeed, + * but the error places some non-essential portion of the machine in a broken + * state that will be noticed downstream. + * + * Example - Payload could still load, but will be missing access to integral + * components such as drives. + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_ERR 3 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_WARNING - Bad configuration + * + * Log level for when the system has noticed an issue that most likely will + * not preclude a successful boot. To be used when something is wrong, and + * would likely be noticed by an end user. + * + * Example - Bad ME firmware, bad microcode, mis-clocked CPU + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_WARNING 4 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_NOTICE - Unexpected but relatively insignificant + * + * Log level for when the system has noticed an issue that is an edge case, + * but is handled and is recoverable. To be used when an end-user would likely + * not notice. + * + * Example - Hardware was misconfigured, but is promptly fixed. + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_NOTICE 5 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_INFO - Expected events. + * + * Log level for when the system has experienced some typical event. + * Messages should be superficial in nature. + * + * Example - Success messages. Status messages. + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_INFO 6 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_DEBUG - Verbose output + * + * Log level for details of a method. Messages may be dense, + * but should not be excessive. Messages should be detailed enough + * that this level provides sufficient details to diagnose a problem, + * but not necessarily enough to fix it. + * + * Example - Printing of important variables. + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_DEBUG 7 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_SPEW - Excessively verbose output + * + * Log level for intricacies of a method. Messages might contain raw + * data and will produce large logs. Developers should try to make sure + * that this level is not useful to anyone besides developers. + * + * Example - Data dumps. + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_SPEW 8 +/** @} */ + +/** + * \brief BIOS_NEVER - Muted log level. + * + * Roughly equal to commenting out a printk statement. Because a user + * should not set their log level higher than 8, these statements + * are never printed. + * + * Example - A developer might locally define MY_LOGLEVEL to BIOS_SPEW, + * and later replace it with BIOS_NEVER as to mute their debug output. + * + * @{ + */ +#define BIOS_NEVER 9 +/** @} */ #endif /* LOGLEVEL_H */ |