| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| =========================== |
| Message logging with printk |
| =========================== |
| |
| printk() is one of the most widely known functions in the Linux kernel. It's the |
| standard tool we have for printing messages and usually the most basic way of |
| tracing and debugging. If you're familiar with printf(3) you can tell printk() |
| is based on it, although it has some functional differences: |
| |
| - printk() messages can specify a log level. |
| |
| - the format string, while largely compatible with C99, doesn't follow the |
| exact same specification. It has some extensions and a few limitations |
| (no ``%n`` or floating point conversion specifiers). See :ref:`How to get |
| printk format specifiers right <printk-specifiers>`. |
| |
| All printk() messages are printed to the kernel log buffer, which is a ring |
| buffer exported to userspace through /dev/kmsg. The usual way to read it is |
| using ``dmesg``. |
| |
| printk() is typically used like this:: |
| |
| printk(KERN_INFO "Message: %s\n", arg); |
| |
| where ``KERN_INFO`` is the log level (note that it's concatenated to the format |
| string, the log level is not a separate argument). The available log levels are: |
| |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | Name | String | Alias function | |
| +================+========+===============================================+ |
| | KERN_EMERG | "0" | pr_emerg() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_ALERT | "1" | pr_alert() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_CRIT | "2" | pr_crit() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_ERR | "3" | pr_err() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_WARNING | "4" | pr_warn() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_NOTICE | "5" | pr_notice() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_INFO | "6" | pr_info() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_DEBUG | "7" | pr_debug() and pr_devel() if DEBUG is defined | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_DEFAULT | "" | | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | KERN_CONT | "c" | pr_cont() | |
| +----------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| |
| The log level specifies the importance of a message. The kernel decides whether |
| to show the message immediately (printing it to the current console) depending |
| on its log level and the current *console_loglevel* (a kernel variable). If the |
| message priority is higher (lower log level value) than the *console_loglevel* |
| the message will be printed to the console. |
| |
| If the log level is omitted, the message is printed with ``KERN_DEFAULT`` |
| level. |
| |
| You can check the current *console_loglevel* with:: |
| |
| $ cat /proc/sys/kernel/printk |
| 4 4 1 7 |
| |
| The result shows the *current*, *default*, *minimum* and *boot-time-default* log |
| levels. |
| |
| To change the current console_loglevel simply write the desired level to |
| ``/proc/sys/kernel/printk``. For example, to print all messages to the console:: |
| |
| # echo 8 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk |
| |
| Another way, using ``dmesg``:: |
| |
| # dmesg -n 5 |
| |
| sets the console_loglevel to print KERN_WARNING (4) or more severe messages to |
| console. See ``dmesg(1)`` for more information. |
| |
| As an alternative to printk() you can use the ``pr_*()`` aliases for |
| logging. This family of macros embed the log level in the macro names. For |
| example:: |
| |
| pr_info("Info message no. %d\n", msg_num); |
| |
| prints a ``KERN_INFO`` message. |
| |
| Besides being more concise than the equivalent printk() calls, they can use a |
| common definition for the format string through the pr_fmt() macro. For |
| instance, defining this at the top of a source file (before any ``#include`` |
| directive):: |
| |
| #define pr_fmt(fmt) "%s:%s: " fmt, KBUILD_MODNAME, __func__ |
| |
| would prefix every pr_*() message in that file with the module and function name |
| that originated the message. |
| |
| For debugging purposes there are also two conditionally-compiled macros: |
| pr_debug() and pr_devel(), which are compiled-out unless ``DEBUG`` (or |
| also ``CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG`` in the case of pr_debug()) is defined. |
| |
| |
| Function reference |
| ================== |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/printk.h |
| :functions: printk pr_emerg pr_alert pr_crit pr_err pr_warn pr_notice pr_info |
| pr_fmt pr_debug pr_devel pr_cont |