diff options
-rw-r--r-- | fs/ocfs2/cluster/masklog.h | 35 |
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/fs/ocfs2/cluster/masklog.h b/fs/ocfs2/cluster/masklog.h index 7e72a81bc2d..696c32e5071 100644 --- a/fs/ocfs2/cluster/masklog.h +++ b/fs/ocfs2/cluster/masklog.h @@ -48,34 +48,33 @@ * only emit the appropriage printk() when the caller passes in a constant * mask, as is almost always the case. * - * All this bitmask nonsense is hidden from the /proc interface so that Joel - * doesn't have an aneurism. Reading the file gives a straight forward - * indication of which bits are on or off: - * ENTRY off - * EXIT off + * All this bitmask nonsense is managed from the files under + * /sys/fs/o2cb/logmask/. Reading the files gives a straightforward + * indication of which bits are allowed (allow) or denied (off/deny). + * ENTRY deny + * EXIT deny * TCP off * MSG off * SOCKET off - * ERROR off - * NOTICE on + * ERROR allow + * NOTICE allow * * Writing changes the state of a given bit and requires a strictly formatted * single write() call: * - * write(fd, "ENTRY on", 8); + * write(fd, "allow", 5); * - * would turn the entry bit on. "1" is also accepted in the place of "on", and - * "off" and "0" behave as expected. + * Echoing allow/deny/off string into the logmask files can flip the bits + * on or off as expected; here is the bash script for example: * - * Some trivial shell can flip all the bits on or off: + * log_mask="/sys/fs/o2cb/log_mask" + * for node in ENTRY EXIT TCP MSG SOCKET ERROR NOTICE; do + * echo allow >"$log_mask"/"$node" + * done * - * log_mask="/proc/fs/ocfs2_nodemanager/log_mask" - * cat $log_mask | ( - * while read bit status; do - * # $1 is "on" or "off", say - * echo "$bit $1" > $log_mask - * done - * ) + * The debugfs.ocfs2 tool can also flip the bits with the -l option: + * + * debugfs.ocfs2 -l TCP allow */ /* for task_struct */ |