4ee0fbe912
I discovered that we're logging each trap, which gets pretty spendy; and there wasn't any further information on the pid/tid/progname involved. I originally noticed this because I don't attach anything to /dev/log and so the log() output stays going to the kernel. That's an oops on my part, but I'm glad I did it. This commit adds the following: * a rate limiter, which could do with some eyeballs/ideas on how to make it more predictable on SMP; * log pid, tid, progname (comm) as part of the output. I now get output like this: Unaligned Load Word: pid=621 (pmcstat), tid=100060, pc=0xffffffff803ae898, badvaddr=0x40a10055 Unaligned Load Word: pid=621 (pmcstat), tid=100060, pc=0xffffffff803ae898, badvaddr=0x40a10051 Unaligned Load Word: pid=621 (pmcstat), tid=100060, pc=0xffffffff803ae898, badvaddr=0x40a1004d Unaligned Load Word: pid=602 (login), tid=100042, pc=0xffffffff803ae898, badvaddr=0x401159 Unaligned Load Word: pid=602 (login), tid=100042, pc=0xffffffff803ae898, badvaddr=0x401155 Unaligned Load Word: pid=602 (login), tid=100042, pc=0xffffffff803ae898, badvaddr=0x401151 .. which makes it much easier to start figuring out what/where to fix. The pc looks suss (it looks like it's in kernel space); I'll dig into that one next. Tested: * AR9331 SoC (Carambola2)