The previous method, using zassert.h and hoping nothing includes
assert.h (which, on glibc at least, just does "#undef assert" and puts
its own definition in...) was fragile - and actually broke undetected.
Just provide our own assert.h and control overriding by putting it in a
separate directory to add to the include path (or not.)
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@opensourcerouting.org>
The log module buffers outgoing messages by default; add an
api to turn that off, and emit messages immediately.
Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
This logs the unique ID prefix from the xref that each log message call
has, and adds on/off knobs for both EC and unique ID printing.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@diac24.net>
Back when I put this together in 2015, ISO C11 was still reasonably new
and we couldn't require it just yet. Without ISO C11, there is no
"good" way (only bad hacks) to require a semicolon after a macro that
ends with a function definition. And if you added one anyway, you'd get
"spurious semicolon" warnings on some compilers...
With C11, `_Static_assert()` at the end of a macro will make it so that
the semicolon is properly required, consumed, and not warned about.
Consistently requiring semicolons after "file-level" macros matches
Linux kernel coding style and helps some editors against mis-syntax'ing
these macros.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@diac24.net>
This allows extracting a list of all log messages including their ECs
and autogenerated unique IDs for them.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@diac24.net>
- tracepoint() -> frrtrace()
- tracelog() -> frrtracelog()
- tracepoint_enabled() -> frrtrace_enabled()
Also removes copypasta'd #ifdefs for those LTTng macros, those are
handled in lib/trace.h
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
LTTng supports tracef() and tracelog() macros, which work like printf,
and are used to ease transition between logging and tracing. Messages
printed using these macros end up as trace events. For our uses we are
not interested in dropping logging, but it is nice to get log messages
in trace output, so I've added a call to tracelog() in zlog that dumps
our zlog messages as trace events.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
... this didn't work on NetBSD. Like, at all. It returns a positive
error code from posix_fallocate() and then we bang our head against a
brick wall trying to write to the mmap'd buffer.
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@diac24.net>
This is a full rewrite of the "back end" logging code. It now uses a
lock-free list to iterate over logging targets, and the targets
themselves are as lock-free as possible. (syslog() may have a hidden
internal mutex in the C library; the file/fd targets use a single
write() call which should ensure atomicity kernel-side.)
Note that some functionality is lost in this patch:
- Solaris printstack() backtraces are ditched (unlikely to come back)
- the `log-filter` machinery is gone (re-added in followup commit)
- `terminal monitor` is temporarily stubbed out. The old code had a
race condition with VTYs going away. It'll likely come back rewritten
and with vtysh support.
- The `zebra_ext_log` hook is gone. Instead, it's now much easier to
add a "proper" logging target.
v2: TLS buffer to get some actual performance
Signed-off-by: David Lamparter <equinox@diac24.net>