unsigned long flags;
if (!tr->allocated_snapshot) {
- trace_printk("*** SNAPSHOT NOT ALLOCATED ***\n");
- trace_printk("*** stopping trace here! ***\n");
+ internal_trace_puts("*** SNAPSHOT NOT ALLOCATED ***\n");
+ internal_trace_puts("*** stopping trace here! ***\n");
tracing_off();
return;
}
/* Note, snapshot can not be used when the tracer uses it */
if (tracer->use_max_tr) {
- trace_printk("*** LATENCY TRACER ACTIVE ***\n");
- trace_printk("*** Can not use snapshot (sorry) ***\n");
+ internal_trace_puts("*** LATENCY TRACER ACTIVE ***\n");
+ internal_trace_puts("*** Can not use snapshot (sorry) ***\n");
return;
}
int trace_keep_overwrite(struct tracer *tracer, u32 mask, int set);
int set_tracer_flag(struct trace_array *tr, unsigned int mask, int enabled);
+/*
+ * Normal trace_printk() and friends allocates special buffers
+ * to do the manipulation, as well as saves the print formats
+ * into sections to display. But the trace infrastructure wants
+ * to use these without the added overhead at the price of being
+ * a bit slower (used mainly for warnings, where we don't care
+ * about performance). The internal_trace_puts() is for such
+ * a purpose.
+ */
+#define internal_trace_puts(str) __trace_puts(_THIS_IP_, str, strlen(str))
+
#undef FTRACE_ENTRY
#define FTRACE_ENTRY(call, struct_name, id, tstruct, print, filter) \
extern struct ftrace_event_call \