| ========================================= |
| How to get printk format specifiers right |
| ========================================= |
| |
| .. _printk-specifiers: |
| |
| :Author: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org> |
| :Author: Andrew Murray <amurray@mpc-data.co.uk> |
| |
| |
| Integer types |
| ============= |
| |
| :: |
| |
| If variable is of Type, use printk format specifier: |
| ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| signed char %d or %hhx |
| unsigned char %u or %x |
| char %u or %x |
| short int %d or %hx |
| unsigned short int %u or %x |
| int %d or %x |
| unsigned int %u or %x |
| long %ld or %lx |
| unsigned long %lu or %lx |
| long long %lld or %llx |
| unsigned long long %llu or %llx |
| size_t %zu or %zx |
| ssize_t %zd or %zx |
| s8 %d or %hhx |
| u8 %u or %x |
| s16 %d or %hx |
| u16 %u or %x |
| s32 %d or %x |
| u32 %u or %x |
| s64 %lld or %llx |
| u64 %llu or %llx |
| |
| |
| If <type> is architecture-dependent for its size (e.g., cycles_t, tcflag_t) or |
| is dependent on a config option for its size (e.g., blk_status_t), use a format |
| specifier of its largest possible type and explicitly cast to it. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| printk("test: latency: %llu cycles\n", (unsigned long long)time); |
| |
| Reminder: sizeof() returns type size_t. |
| |
| The kernel's printf does not support %n. Floating point formats (%e, %f, |
| %g, %a) are also not recognized, for obvious reasons. Use of any |
| unsupported specifier or length qualifier results in a WARN and early |
| return from vsnprintf(). |
| |
| Pointer types |
| ============= |
| |
| A raw pointer value may be printed with %p which will hash the address |
| before printing. The kernel also supports extended specifiers for printing |
| pointers of different types. |
| |
| Some of the extended specifiers print the data on the given address instead |
| of printing the address itself. In this case, the following error messages |
| might be printed instead of the unreachable information:: |
| |
| (null) data on plain NULL address |
| (efault) data on invalid address |
| (einval) invalid data on a valid address |
| |
| Plain Pointers |
| -------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %p abcdef12 or 00000000abcdef12 |
| |
| Pointers printed without a specifier extension (i.e unadorned %p) are |
| hashed to prevent leaking information about the kernel memory layout. This |
| has the added benefit of providing a unique identifier. On 64-bit machines |
| the first 32 bits are zeroed. The kernel will print ``(ptrval)`` until it |
| gathers enough entropy. |
| |
| When possible, use specialised modifiers such as %pS or %pB (described below) |
| to avoid the need of providing an unhashed address that has to be interpreted |
| post-hoc. If not possible, and the aim of printing the address is to provide |
| more information for debugging, use %p and boot the kernel with the |
| ``no_hash_pointers`` parameter during debugging, which will print all %p |
| addresses unmodified. If you *really* always want the unmodified address, see |
| %px below. |
| |
| If (and only if) you are printing addresses as a content of a virtual file in |
| e.g. procfs or sysfs (using e.g. seq_printf(), not printk()) read by a |
| userspace process, use the %pK modifier described below instead of %p or %px. |
| |
| Error Pointers |
| -------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pe -ENOSPC |
| |
| For printing error pointers (i.e. a pointer for which IS_ERR() is true) |
| as a symbolic error name. Error values for which no symbolic name is |
| known are printed in decimal, while a non-ERR_PTR passed as the |
| argument to %pe gets treated as ordinary %p. |
| |
| Symbols/Function Pointers |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pS versatile_init+0x0/0x110 |
| %ps versatile_init |
| %pSR versatile_init+0x9/0x110 |
| (with __builtin_extract_return_addr() translation) |
| %pB prev_fn_of_versatile_init+0x88/0x88 |
| |
| |
| The ``S`` and ``s`` specifiers are used for printing a pointer in symbolic |
| format. They result in the symbol name with (S) or without (s) |
| offsets. If KALLSYMS are disabled then the symbol address is printed instead. |
| |
| The ``B`` specifier results in the symbol name with offsets and should be |
| used when printing stack backtraces. The specifier takes into |
| consideration the effect of compiler optimisations which may occur |
| when tail-calls are used and marked with the noreturn GCC attribute. |
| |
| If the pointer is within a module, the module name and optionally build ID is |
| printed after the symbol name with an extra ``b`` appended to the end of the |
| specifier. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pS versatile_init+0x0/0x110 [module_name] |
| %pSb versatile_init+0x0/0x110 [module_name ed5019fdf5e53be37cb1ba7899292d7e143b259e] |
| %pSRb versatile_init+0x9/0x110 [module_name ed5019fdf5e53be37cb1ba7899292d7e143b259e] |
| (with __builtin_extract_return_addr() translation) |
| %pBb prev_fn_of_versatile_init+0x88/0x88 [module_name ed5019fdf5e53be37cb1ba7899292d7e143b259e] |
| |
| Probed Pointers from BPF / tracing |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pks kernel string |
| %pus user string |
| |
| The ``k`` and ``u`` specifiers are used for printing prior probed memory from |
| either kernel memory (k) or user memory (u). The subsequent ``s`` specifier |
| results in printing a string. For direct use in regular vsnprintf() the (k) |
| and (u) annotation is ignored, however, when used out of BPF's bpf_trace_printk(), |
| for example, it reads the memory it is pointing to without faulting. |
| |
| Kernel Pointers |
| --------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pK 01234567 or 0123456789abcdef |
| |
| For printing kernel pointers which should be hidden from unprivileged |
| users. The behaviour of %pK depends on the kptr_restrict sysctl - see |
| Documentation/admin-guide/sysctl/kernel.rst for more details. |
| |
| This modifier is *only* intended when producing content of a file read by |
| userspace from e.g. procfs or sysfs, not for dmesg. Please refer to the |
| section about %p above for discussion about how to manage hashing pointers |
| in printk(). |
| |
| Unmodified Addresses |
| -------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %px 01234567 or 0123456789abcdef |
| |
| For printing pointers when you *really* want to print the address. Please |
| consider whether or not you are leaking sensitive information about the |
| kernel memory layout before printing pointers with %px. %px is functionally |
| equivalent to %lx (or %lu). %px is preferred because it is more uniquely |
| grep'able. If in the future we need to modify the way the kernel handles |
| printing pointers we will be better equipped to find the call sites. |
| |
| Before using %px, consider if using %p is sufficient together with enabling the |
| ``no_hash_pointers`` kernel parameter during debugging sessions (see the %p |
| description above). One valid scenario for %px might be printing information |
| immediately before a panic, which prevents any sensitive information to be |
| exploited anyway, and with %px there would be no need to reproduce the panic |
| with no_hash_pointers. |
| |
| Pointer Differences |
| ------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %td 2560 |
| %tx a00 |
| |
| For printing the pointer differences, use the %t modifier for ptrdiff_t. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| printk("test: difference between pointers: %td\n", ptr2 - ptr1); |
| |
| Struct Resources |
| ---------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pr [mem 0x60000000-0x6fffffff flags 0x2200] or |
| [mem 0x0000000060000000-0x000000006fffffff flags 0x2200] |
| %pR [mem 0x60000000-0x6fffffff pref] or |
| [mem 0x0000000060000000-0x000000006fffffff pref] |
| |
| For printing struct resources. The ``R`` and ``r`` specifiers result in a |
| printed resource with (R) or without (r) a decoded flags member. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| Physical address types phys_addr_t |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pa[p] 0x01234567 or 0x0123456789abcdef |
| |
| For printing a phys_addr_t type (and its derivatives, such as |
| resource_size_t) which can vary based on build options, regardless of the |
| width of the CPU data path. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| DMA address types dma_addr_t |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pad 0x01234567 or 0x0123456789abcdef |
| |
| For printing a dma_addr_t type which can vary based on build options, |
| regardless of the width of the CPU data path. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| Raw buffer as an escaped string |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %*pE[achnops] |
| |
| For printing raw buffer as an escaped string. For the following buffer:: |
| |
| 1b 62 20 5c 43 07 22 90 0d 5d |
| |
| A few examples show how the conversion would be done (excluding surrounding |
| quotes):: |
| |
| %*pE "\eb \C\a"\220\r]" |
| %*pEhp "\x1bb \C\x07"\x90\x0d]" |
| %*pEa "\e\142\040\\\103\a\042\220\r\135" |
| |
| The conversion rules are applied according to an optional combination |
| of flags (see :c:func:`string_escape_mem` kernel documentation for the |
| details): |
| |
| - a - ESCAPE_ANY |
| - c - ESCAPE_SPECIAL |
| - h - ESCAPE_HEX |
| - n - ESCAPE_NULL |
| - o - ESCAPE_OCTAL |
| - p - ESCAPE_NP |
| - s - ESCAPE_SPACE |
| |
| By default ESCAPE_ANY_NP is used. |
| |
| ESCAPE_ANY_NP is the sane choice for many cases, in particularly for |
| printing SSIDs. |
| |
| If field width is omitted then 1 byte only will be escaped. |
| |
| Raw buffer as a hex string |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %*ph 00 01 02 ... 3f |
| %*phC 00:01:02: ... :3f |
| %*phD 00-01-02- ... -3f |
| %*phN 000102 ... 3f |
| |
| For printing small buffers (up to 64 bytes long) as a hex string with a |
| certain separator. For larger buffers consider using |
| :c:func:`print_hex_dump`. |
| |
| MAC/FDDI addresses |
| ------------------ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pM 00:01:02:03:04:05 |
| %pMR 05:04:03:02:01:00 |
| %pMF 00-01-02-03-04-05 |
| %pm 000102030405 |
| %pmR 050403020100 |
| |
| For printing 6-byte MAC/FDDI addresses in hex notation. The ``M`` and ``m`` |
| specifiers result in a printed address with (M) or without (m) byte |
| separators. The default byte separator is the colon (:). |
| |
| Where FDDI addresses are concerned the ``F`` specifier can be used after |
| the ``M`` specifier to use dash (-) separators instead of the default |
| separator. |
| |
| For Bluetooth addresses the ``R`` specifier shall be used after the ``M`` |
| specifier to use reversed byte order suitable for visual interpretation |
| of Bluetooth addresses which are in the little endian order. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| IPv4 addresses |
| -------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pI4 1.2.3.4 |
| %pi4 001.002.003.004 |
| %p[Ii]4[hnbl] |
| |
| For printing IPv4 dot-separated decimal addresses. The ``I4`` and ``i4`` |
| specifiers result in a printed address with (i4) or without (I4) leading |
| zeros. |
| |
| The additional ``h``, ``n``, ``b``, and ``l`` specifiers are used to specify |
| host, network, big or little endian order addresses respectively. Where |
| no specifier is provided the default network/big endian order is used. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| IPv6 addresses |
| -------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pI6 0001:0002:0003:0004:0005:0006:0007:0008 |
| %pi6 00010002000300040005000600070008 |
| %pI6c 1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8 |
| |
| For printing IPv6 network-order 16-bit hex addresses. The ``I6`` and ``i6`` |
| specifiers result in a printed address with (I6) or without (i6) |
| colon-separators. Leading zeros are always used. |
| |
| The additional ``c`` specifier can be used with the ``I`` specifier to |
| print a compressed IPv6 address as described by |
| https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5952 |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| IPv4/IPv6 addresses (generic, with port, flowinfo, scope) |
| --------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pIS 1.2.3.4 or 0001:0002:0003:0004:0005:0006:0007:0008 |
| %piS 001.002.003.004 or 00010002000300040005000600070008 |
| %pISc 1.2.3.4 or 1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8 |
| %pISpc 1.2.3.4:12345 or [1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8]:12345 |
| %p[Ii]S[pfschnbl] |
| |
| For printing an IP address without the need to distinguish whether it's of |
| type AF_INET or AF_INET6. A pointer to a valid struct sockaddr, |
| specified through ``IS`` or ``iS``, can be passed to this format specifier. |
| |
| The additional ``p``, ``f``, and ``s`` specifiers are used to specify port |
| (IPv4, IPv6), flowinfo (IPv6) and scope (IPv6). Ports have a ``:`` prefix, |
| flowinfo a ``/`` and scope a ``%``, each followed by the actual value. |
| |
| In case of an IPv6 address the compressed IPv6 address as described by |
| https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5952 is being used if the additional |
| specifier ``c`` is given. The IPv6 address is surrounded by ``[``, ``]`` in |
| case of additional specifiers ``p``, ``f`` or ``s`` as suggested by |
| https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-6man-text-addr-representation-07 |
| |
| In case of IPv4 addresses, the additional ``h``, ``n``, ``b``, and ``l`` |
| specifiers can be used as well and are ignored in case of an IPv6 |
| address. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| Further examples:: |
| |
| %pISfc 1.2.3.4 or [1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8]/123456789 |
| %pISsc 1.2.3.4 or [1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8]%1234567890 |
| %pISpfc 1.2.3.4:12345 or [1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8]:12345/123456789 |
| |
| UUID/GUID addresses |
| ------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pUb 00010203-0405-0607-0809-0a0b0c0d0e0f |
| %pUB 00010203-0405-0607-0809-0A0B0C0D0E0F |
| %pUl 03020100-0504-0706-0809-0a0b0c0e0e0f |
| %pUL 03020100-0504-0706-0809-0A0B0C0E0E0F |
| |
| For printing 16-byte UUID/GUIDs addresses. The additional ``l``, ``L``, |
| ``b`` and ``B`` specifiers are used to specify a little endian order in |
| lower (l) or upper case (L) hex notation - and big endian order in lower (b) |
| or upper case (B) hex notation. |
| |
| Where no additional specifiers are used the default big endian |
| order with lower case hex notation will be printed. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| dentry names |
| ------------ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pd{,2,3,4} |
| %pD{,2,3,4} |
| |
| For printing dentry name; if we race with :c:func:`d_move`, the name might |
| be a mix of old and new ones, but it won't oops. %pd dentry is a safer |
| equivalent of %s dentry->d_name.name we used to use, %pd<n> prints ``n`` |
| last components. %pD does the same thing for struct file. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| block_device names |
| ------------------ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pg sda, sda1 or loop0p1 |
| |
| For printing name of block_device pointers. |
| |
| struct va_format |
| ---------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pV |
| |
| For printing struct va_format structures. These contain a format string |
| and va_list as follows:: |
| |
| struct va_format { |
| const char *fmt; |
| va_list *va; |
| }; |
| |
| Implements a "recursive vsnprintf". |
| |
| Do not use this feature without some mechanism to verify the |
| correctness of the format string and va_list arguments. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| Device tree nodes |
| ----------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pOF[fnpPcCF] |
| |
| |
| For printing device tree node structures. Default behaviour is |
| equivalent to %pOFf. |
| |
| - f - device node full_name |
| - n - device node name |
| - p - device node phandle |
| - P - device node path spec (name + @unit) |
| - F - device node flags |
| - c - major compatible string |
| - C - full compatible string |
| |
| The separator when using multiple arguments is ':' |
| |
| Examples:: |
| |
| %pOF /foo/bar@0 - Node full name |
| %pOFf /foo/bar@0 - Same as above |
| %pOFfp /foo/bar@0:10 - Node full name + phandle |
| %pOFfcF /foo/bar@0:foo,device:--P- - Node full name + |
| major compatible string + |
| node flags |
| D - dynamic |
| d - detached |
| P - Populated |
| B - Populated bus |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| Fwnode handles |
| -------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pfw[fP] |
| |
| For printing information on fwnode handles. The default is to print the full |
| node name, including the path. The modifiers are functionally equivalent to |
| %pOF above. |
| |
| - f - full name of the node, including the path |
| - P - the name of the node including an address (if there is one) |
| |
| Examples (ACPI):: |
| |
| %pfwf \_SB.PCI0.CIO2.port@1.endpoint@0 - Full node name |
| %pfwP endpoint@0 - Node name |
| |
| Examples (OF):: |
| |
| %pfwf /ocp@68000000/i2c@48072000/camera@10/port/endpoint - Full name |
| %pfwP endpoint - Node name |
| |
| Time and date |
| ------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pt[RT] YYYY-mm-ddTHH:MM:SS |
| %pt[RT]s YYYY-mm-dd HH:MM:SS |
| %pt[RT]d YYYY-mm-dd |
| %pt[RT]t HH:MM:SS |
| %pt[RT][dt][r][s] |
| |
| For printing date and time as represented by:: |
| |
| R struct rtc_time structure |
| T time64_t type |
| |
| in human readable format. |
| |
| By default year will be incremented by 1900 and month by 1. |
| Use %pt[RT]r (raw) to suppress this behaviour. |
| |
| The %pt[RT]s (space) will override ISO 8601 separator by using ' ' (space) |
| instead of 'T' (Capital T) between date and time. It won't have any effect |
| when date or time is omitted. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| struct clk |
| ---------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pC pll1 |
| %pCn pll1 |
| |
| For printing struct clk structures. %pC and %pCn print the name of the clock |
| (Common Clock Framework) or a unique 32-bit ID (legacy clock framework). |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| bitmap and its derivatives such as cpumask and nodemask |
| ------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %*pb 0779 |
| %*pbl 0,3-6,8-10 |
| |
| For printing bitmap and its derivatives such as cpumask and nodemask, |
| %*pb outputs the bitmap with field width as the number of bits and %*pbl |
| output the bitmap as range list with field width as the number of bits. |
| |
| The field width is passed by value, the bitmap is passed by reference. |
| Helper macros cpumask_pr_args() and nodemask_pr_args() are available to ease |
| printing cpumask and nodemask. |
| |
| Flags bitfields such as page flags and gfp_flags |
| -------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pGp 0x17ffffc0002036(referenced|uptodate|lru|active|private|node=0|zone=2|lastcpupid=0x1fffff) |
| %pGg GFP_USER|GFP_DMA32|GFP_NOWARN |
| %pGv read|exec|mayread|maywrite|mayexec|denywrite |
| |
| For printing flags bitfields as a collection of symbolic constants that |
| would construct the value. The type of flags is given by the third |
| character. Currently supported are: |
| |
| - p - [p]age flags, expects value of type (``unsigned long *``) |
| - v - [v]ma_flags, expects value of type (``unsigned long *``) |
| - g - [g]fp_flags, expects value of type (``gfp_t *``) |
| |
| The flag names and print order depends on the particular type. |
| |
| Note that this format should not be used directly in the |
| :c:func:`TP_printk()` part of a tracepoint. Instead, use the show_*_flags() |
| functions from <trace/events/mmflags.h>. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| Network device features |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pNF 0x000000000000c000 |
| |
| For printing netdev_features_t. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| V4L2 and DRM FourCC code (pixel format) |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %p4cc |
| |
| Print a FourCC code used by V4L2 or DRM, including format endianness and |
| its numerical value as hexadecimal. |
| |
| Passed by reference. |
| |
| Examples:: |
| |
| %p4cc BG12 little-endian (0x32314742) |
| %p4cc Y10 little-endian (0x20303159) |
| %p4cc NV12 big-endian (0xb231564e) |
| |
| Rust |
| ---- |
| |
| :: |
| |
| %pA |
| |
| Only intended to be used from Rust code to format ``core::fmt::Arguments``. |
| Do *not* use it from C. |
| |
| Thanks |
| ====== |
| |
| If you add other %p extensions, please extend <lib/test_printf.c> with |
| one or more test cases, if at all feasible. |
| |
| Thank you for your cooperation and attention. |