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    Logging in U-Boot
    =================
    
    Introduction
    ------------
    
    U-Boot's internal operation involves many different steps and actions. From
    setting up the board to displaying a start-up screen to loading an Operating
    System, there are many component parts each with many actions.
    
    Most of the time this internal detail is not useful. Displaying it on the
    console would delay booting (U-Boot's primary purpose) and confuse users.
    
    But for digging into what is happening in a particular area, or for debugging
    a problem it is often useful to see what U-Boot is doing in more detail than
    is visible from the basic console output.
    
    U-Boot's logging feature aims to satisfy this goal for both users and
    developers.
    
    
    Logging levels
    --------------
    
    There are a number logging levels available, in increasing order of verbosity:
    
       LOGL_EMERG	- Printed before U-Boot halts
       LOGL_ALERT	- Indicates action must be taken immediate or U-Boot will crash
       LOGL_CRIT	- Indicates a critical error that will cause boot failure
       LOGL_ERR	- Indicates an error that may cause boot failure
       LOGL_WARNING	- Warning about an unexpected condition
       LOGL_NOTE	- Important information about progress
       LOGL_INFO	- Information about normal boot progress
       LOGL_DEBUG	- Debug information (useful for debugging a driver or subsystem)
       LOGL_DEBUG_CONTENT	- Debug message showing full message content
       LOGL_DEBUG_IO	- Debug message showing hardware I/O access
    
    
    Logging category
    ----------------
    
    Logging can come from a wide variety of places within U-Boot. Each log message
    has a category which is intended to allow messages to be filtered according to
    their source.
    
    The following main categories are defined:
    
       LOGC_NONE	- Unknown category (e.g. a debug() statement)
       UCLASS_...	- Related to a particular uclass (e.g. UCLASS_USB)
       LOGC_ARCH	- Related to architecture-specific code
       LOGC_BOARD	- Related to board-specific code
       LOGC_CORE	- Related to core driver-model support
       LOGC_DT	- Related to device tree control
    
       LOGC_EFI	- Related to EFI implementation
    
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    Enabling logging
    ----------------
    
    The following options are used to enable logging at compile time:
    
       CONFIG_LOG		- Enables the logging system
       CONFIG_MAX_LOG_LEVEL - Max log level to build (anything higher is compiled
    				out)
       CONFIG_LOG_CONSOLE	- Enable writing log records to the console
    
    If CONFIG_LOG is not set, then no logging will be available.
    
    The above have SPL versions also, e.g. CONFIG_SPL_MAX_LOG_LEVEL.
    
    
    
    Log commands
    ------------
    
    The 'log' command provides access to several features:
    
       level - access the default log level
       format - access the console log format
       rec - output a log record
       test - run tests
    
    Type 'help log' for details.
    
    
    
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    Using DEBUG
    -----------
    
    U-Boot has traditionally used a #define called DEBUG to enable debugging on a
    file-by-file basis. The debug() macro compiles to a printf() statement if
    DEBUG is enabled, and an empty statement if not.
    
    With logging enabled, debug() statements are interpreted as logging output
    with a level of LOGL_DEBUG and a category of LOGC_NONE.
    
    The logging facilities are intended to replace DEBUG, but if DEBUG is defined
    at the top of a file, then it takes precedence. This means that debug()
    statements will result in output to the console and this output will not be
    logged.
    
    
    Logging destinations
    --------------------
    
    If logging information goes nowhere then it serves no purpose. U-Boot provides
    several possible determinations for logging information, all of which can be
    enabled or disabled independently:
    
       console - goes to stdout
    
    
    
    Log format
    ----------
    
    You can control the log format using the 'log format' command. The basic
    format is:
    
       LEVEL.category,file.c:123-func() message
    
    In the above, file.c:123 is the filename where the log record was generated and
    func() is the function name. By default ('log format default') only the
    function name and message are displayed on the console. You can control which
    fields are present, but not the field order.
    
    
    
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    Filters
    -------
    
    Filters are attached to log drivers to control what those drivers emit. Only
    records that pass through the filter make it to the driver.
    
    Filters can be based on several criteria:
    
       - maximum log level
       - in a set of categories
       - in a set of files
    
    If no filters are attached to a driver then a default filter is used, which
    limits output to records with a level less than CONFIG_LOG_MAX_LEVEL.
    
    
    Logging statements
    ------------------
    
    The main logging function is:
    
       log(category, level, format_string, ...)
    
    Also debug() and error() will generate log records  - these use LOG_CATEGORY
    as the category, so you should #define this right at the top of the source
    file to ensure the category is correct.
    
    
    You can also define CONFIG_LOG_ERROR_RETURN to enable the log_ret() macro. This
    can be used whenever your function returns an error value:
    
       return log_ret(uclass_first_device(UCLASS_MMC, &dev));
    
    This will write a log record when an error code is detected (a value < 0). This
    can make it easier to trace errors that are generated deep in the call stack.
    
    
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    Code size
    ---------
    
    Code size impact depends largely on what is enabled. The following numbers are
    for snow, which is a Thumb-2 board:
    
    This series: adds bss +20.0 data +4.0 rodata +4.0 text +44.0
    CONFIG_LOG: bss -52.0 data +92.0 rodata -635.0 text +1048.0
    CONFIG_LOG_MAX_LEVEL=7: bss +188.0 data +4.0 rodata +49183.0 text +98124.0
    
    The last option turns every debug() statement into a logging call, which
    bloats the code hugely. The advantage is that it is then possible to enable
    all logging within U-Boot.
    
    
    To Do
    -----
    
    There are lots of useful additions that could be made. None of the below is
    implemented! If you do one, please add a test in test/py/tests/test_log.py
    
    Convenience functions to support setting the category:
    
       log_arch(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_ARCH
       log_board(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_BOARD
       log_core(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_CORE
       log_dt(level, format_string, ...) - category LOGC_DT
    
    Convenience functions to support a category defined for a single file, for
    example:
    
       #define LOG_CATEGORY   UCLASS_USB
    
    all of these can use LOG_CATEGORY as the category, and a log level
    corresponding to the function name:
    
       logc(level, format_string, ...)
    
    More logging destinations:
    
       device - goes to a device (e.g. serial)
       buffer - recorded in a memory buffer
    
    Convert debug() statements in the code to log() statements
    
    Support making printf() emit log statements a L_INFO level
    
    Convert error() statements in the code to log() statements
    
    Figure out what to do with BUG(), BUG_ON() and warn_non_spl()
    
    Figure out what to do with assert()
    
    Add a way to browse log records
    
    Add a way to record log records for browsing using an external tool
    
    Add commands to add and remove filters
    
    Add commands to add and remove log devices
    
    Allow sharing of printf format strings in log records to reduce storage size
    for large numbers of log records
    
    Add a command-line option to sandbox to set the default logging level
    
    Convert core driver model code to use logging
    
    Convert uclasses to use logging with the correct category
    
    Consider making log() calls emit an automatic newline, perhaps with a logn()
       function to avoid that
    
    Passing log records through to linux (e.g. via device tree /chosen)
    
    Provide a command to access the number of log records generated, and the
    number dropped due to them being generated before the log system was ready.
    
    Add a printf() format string pragma so that log statements are checked properly
    
    Enhance the log console driver to show level / category / file / line
    information
    
    Add a command to add new log records and delete existing records.
    
    Provide additional log() functions - e.g. logc() to specify the category
    
    --
    Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
    15-Sep-17