This is an old revision of the document!
Overview
How to mess with loglevel at boot time.
Files
include/linux/printk.h
/* printk's without a loglevel use this.. */
#define MESSAGE_LOGLEVEL_DEFAULT CONFIG_MESSAGE_LOGLEVEL_DEFAULT
/* We show everything that is MORE important than this.. */
#define CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_SILENT 0 /* Mum's the word */
#define CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_MIN 1 /* Minimum loglevel we let people use */
#define CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_QUIET 4 /* Shhh ..., when booted with "quiet" */
#define CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG 10 /* issue debug messages */
#define CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_MOTORMOUTH 15 /* You can't shut this one up */
/*
* Default used to be hard-coded at 7, we're now allowing it to be set from
* kernel config.
*/
#define CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_DEFAULT CONFIG_CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_DEFAULT
extern int console_printk[];
#define console_loglevel (console_printk[0])
#define default_message_loglevel (console_printk[1])
#define minimum_console_loglevel (console_printk[2])
#define default_console_loglevel (console_printk[3])
static inline void console_silent(void)
{
console_loglevel = CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_SILENT;
}
static inline void console_verbose(void)
{
if (console_loglevel)
console_loglevel = CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_MOTORMOUTH;
}
init/main.c
static int __init debug_kernel(char *str)
{
console_loglevel = CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG;
return 0;
}
static int __init quiet_kernel(char *str)
{
console_loglevel = CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_QUIET;
return 0;
}
early_param("debug", debug_kernel);
early_param("quiet", quiet_kernel);
static int __init loglevel(char *str)
{
int newlevel;
/*
* Only update loglevel value when a correct setting was passed,
* to prevent blind crashes (when loglevel being set to 0) that
* are quite hard to debug
*/
if (get_option(&str, &newlevel)) {
console_loglevel = newlevel;
return 0;
}
return -EINVAL;
}
early_param("loglevel", loglevel);