/* subr_prf.c 6.6 85/03/18 */ #include "param.h" #include "systm.h" #include "seg.h" #include "buf.h" #include "conf.h" #include "reboot.h" #include "vm.h" #include "msgbuf.h" #include "dir.h" #include "user.h" #include "proc.h" #include "ioctl.h" #include "tty.h" #include "syslog.h" #ifdef vax #include "../vax/mtpr.h" #endif #define TOCONS 0x1 #define TOTTY 0x2 #define TOLOG 0x4 /* * In case console is off, * panicstr contains argument to last * call to panic. */ char *panicstr; /* * Scaled down version of C Library printf. * Used to print diagnostic information directly on console tty. * Since it is not interrupt driven, all system activities are * suspended. Printf should not be used for chit-chat. * * One additional format: %b is supported to decode error registers. * Usage is: * printf("reg=%b\n", regval, "*"); * Where is the output base expressed as a control character, * e.g. \10 gives octal; \20 gives hex. Each arg is a sequence of * characters, the first of which gives the bit number to be inspected * (origin 1), and the next characters (up to a control character, i.e. * a character <= 32), give the name of the register. Thus * printf("reg=%b\n", 3, "\10\2BITTWO\1BITONE\n"); * would produce output: * reg=3 */ /*VARARGS1*/ printf(fmt, x1) char *fmt; unsigned x1; { prf(fmt, &x1, TOCONS | TOLOG, (struct tty *)0); logwakeup(); } /* * Uprintf prints to the current user's terminal * and does no watermark checking - (so no verbose messages). */ /*VARARGS1*/ uprintf(fmt, x1) char *fmt; unsigned x1; { prf(fmt, &x1, TOTTY, u.u_ttyp); } /* * tprintf prints on the specified terminal (console if none) * and logs the message. It is designed for error messages from * single-open devices, and may be called from interrupt level. */ /*VARARGS2*/ tprintf(ttyp, fmt, x1) struct tty *ttyp; char *fmt; unsigned x1; { prf(fmt, &x1, TOTTY | TOLOG, ttyp); } /* * Log writes to the log buffer, * and guarantees not to sleep (so can be called by interrupt routines). * If there is no process reading the log yet, it writes to the console also. */ /*VARARGS2*/ log(level, fmt, x1) char *fmt; unsigned x1; { register s = splhigh(); extern int log_open; putchar('<', TOLOG, (struct tty *)0); printn(level, 10, TOLOG, (struct tty *)0); putchar('>', TOLOG, (struct tty *)0); prf(fmt, &x1, TOLOG, (struct tty *)0); splx(s); if (!log_open) prf(fmt, &x1, TOCONS, (struct tty *)0); logwakeup(); } prf(fmt, adx, flags, ttyp) register char *fmt; register u_int *adx; struct tty *ttyp; { register int b, c, i; char *s; int any; loop: while ((c = *fmt++) != '%') { if (c == '\0') return; putchar(c, flags, ttyp); } again: c = *fmt++; /* THIS CODE IS VAX DEPENDENT IN HANDLING %l? AND %c */ switch (c) { case 'l': goto again; case 'x': case 'X': b = 16; goto number; case 'd': case 'D': case 'u': /* what a joke */ b = 10; goto number; case 'o': case 'O': b = 8; number: printn((u_long)*adx, b, flags, ttyp); break; case 'c': b = *adx; for (i = 24; i >= 0; i -= 8) if (c = (b >> i) & 0x7f) putchar(c, flags, ttyp); break; case 'b': b = *adx++; s = (char *)*adx; printn((u_long)b, *s++, flags, ttyp); any = 0; if (b) { while (i = *s++) { if (b & (1 << (i-1))) { putchar(any? ',' : '<', flags, ttyp); any = 1; for (; (c = *s) > 32; s++) putchar(c, flags, ttyp); } else for (; *s > 32; s++) ; } if (any) putchar('>', flags, ttyp); } break; case 's': s = (char *)*adx; while (c = *s++) putchar(c, flags, ttyp); break; case '%': putchar('%', flags, ttyp); break; } adx++; goto loop; } /* * Printn prints a number n in base b. * We don't use recursion to avoid deep kernel stacks. */ printn(n, b, flags, ttyp) u_long n; struct tty *ttyp; { char prbuf[11]; register char *cp; if (b == 10 && (int)n < 0) { putchar('-', flags, ttyp); n = (unsigned)(-(int)n); } cp = prbuf; do { *cp++ = "0123456789abcdef"[n%b]; n /= b; } while (n); do putchar(*--cp, flags, ttyp); while (cp > prbuf); } /* * Panic is called on unresolvable fatal errors. * It prints "panic: mesg", and then reboots. * If we are called twice, then we avoid trying to * sync the disks as this often leads to recursive panics. */ panic(s) char *s; { int bootopt = RB_AUTOBOOT; if (panicstr) bootopt |= RB_NOSYNC; else { panicstr = s; } printf("panic: %s\n", s); boot(RB_PANIC, bootopt); } /* * Warn that a system table is full. */ tablefull(tab) char *tab; { log(KERN_FAIL, "%s: table is full\n", tab); } /* * Hard error is the preface to plaintive error messages * about failing disk transfers. */ harderr(bp, cp) struct buf *bp; char *cp; { printf("%s%d%c: hard error sn%d ", cp, dkunit(bp), 'a'+(minor(bp->b_dev)&07), bp->b_blkno); } /* * Print a character on console or users terminal. * If destination is console then the last MSGBUFS characters * are saved in msgbuf for inspection later. */ /*ARGSUSED*/ putchar(c, flags, tp) register int c; struct tty *tp; { extern struct tty cons; if (flags & TOTTY) { if (tp == (struct tty *)NULL && (flags & TOCONS) == 0) tp = &cons; if (tp && (tp->t_state & TS_CARR_ON)) { register s = spl6(); if (c == '\n') (void) ttyoutput('\r', tp); (void) ttyoutput(c, tp); ttstart(tp); splx(s); } } if ((flags & TOLOG) && c != '\0' && c != '\r' && c != 0177 #ifdef vax && mfpr(MAPEN) #endif ) { if (msgbuf.msg_magic != MSG_MAGIC) { register int i; msgbuf.msg_magic = MSG_MAGIC; msgbuf.msg_bufx = msgbuf.msg_bufr = 0; for (i=0; i < MSG_BSIZE; i++) msgbuf.msg_bufc[i] = 0; } if (msgbuf.msg_bufx < 0 || msgbuf.msg_bufx >= MSG_BSIZE) msgbuf.msg_bufx = 0; msgbuf.msg_bufc[msgbuf.msg_bufx++] = c; } if ((flags & TOCONS) && c != '\0') cnputc(c); }