[RFC][PATCH 1/5] relayfs Documentation

From: Tom Zanussi (zanussi@us.ibm.com)
Date: Tue Jul 15 2003 - 10:16:02 EST


diff -urpN -X dontdiff linux-2.6.0-test1/Documentation/filesystems/relayfs.txt linux-2.6.0-test1-relayfs-printk/Documentation/filesystems/relayfs.txt
--- linux-2.6.0-test1/Documentation/filesystems/relayfs.txt Wed Dec 31 18:00:00 1969
+++ linux-2.6.0-test1-relayfs-printk/Documentation/filesystems/relayfs.txt Sun Jul 13 22:32:28 2003
@@ -0,0 +1,591 @@
+
+relayfs - a high-speed data relay filesystem
+============================================
+
+relayfs is a filesystem designed to provide an efficient mechanism for
+tools and facilities to relay large amounts of data from kernel space
+to user space.
+
+The main idea behind relayfs is that every data flow is put into a
+separate "channel" and each channel is a file. In practice, each
+channel is a separate memory buffer allocated from within kernel space
+upon channel instantiation. Software needing to relay data to user
+space would open a channel or a number of channels, depending on its
+needs, and would log data to that channel. All the buffering and
+locking mechanics are taken care of by relayfs. The actual format and
+protocol used for each channel is up to relayfs' clients.
+
+relayfs makes no provisions for copying the same data to more than a
+single channel. This is for the clients of the relay to take care of,
+and so is any form of data filtering. The purpose is to keep relayfs
+as simple as possible.
+
+
+Usage
+=====
+
+In addition to the relayfs kernel API described below, relayfs
+implements basic file operations. Here are the file operations that
+are available and some comments regarding their behavior:
+
+open() enables user to open an _existing_ channel.
+
+mmap() results in channel's memory buffer being mmapped into the
+ caller's memory space.
+
+read() since we are dealing with circular buffers, the user is only
+ allowed to read forward. Some apps may want to loop around
+ read() waiting for incoming data - if there is no data
+ available, read will put the reader on a wait queue until
+ data is available.
+
+write() writing from user space operates exactly as relay_write() does
+ (described below).
+
+close() decrements the channel's refcount. When the refcount reaches
+ 0 i.e. when no process or kernel client has the file open
+ (see relay_close() below), the channel buffer is freed.
+
+
+In order for a user application to make use of relayfs files, the
+relayfs filesystem must be mounted. For example,
+
+ mount -t relayfs relayfs /mountpoint
+
+
+The relayfs kernel API
+======================
+
+relayfs channels are implemented as circular buffers subdivided into
+'sub-buffers'. kernel clients write data into the channel using
+relay_write(), and are notified via a set of callbacks when
+significant events occur within the channel. 'Significant events'
+include:
+
+- a sub-buffer is full i.e. the current write won't fit into the
+ current sub-buffer, and a 'buffer-switch' is triggered, after which
+ the data is written into the next buffer (if the next buffer is
+ empty). The client is notified of this condition via two callbacks,
+ one providing an opportunity to perform start-of-buffer tasks, the
+ other end-of-buffer tasks.
+
+- data is ready for the client to process. The client can choose to
+ be notified either on a per-sub-buffer basis (bulk delivery) or
+ per-write basis (packet delivery).
+
+- all sub-buffers are full. The current write won't fit into the
+ current sub-buffer, and the next sub-buffer is also full, thus
+ writing the event would overwrite data in the next sub-buffer. The
+ client is notified of this condition and can choose to either go
+ ahead and overwrite, or suspend the channel, depending on the value
+ it returns.
+
+- the channel needs resizing, has resized, or needs to update its
+ state based on the results of the resize. Resizing the channel is
+ up to the kernel client to actually perform. If the channel is
+ configured for resizing, the client is notified when the unread data
+ in the channel passes a preset threshold, giving it the opportunity
+ to allocate a new channel buffer and replace the old one. If the
+ resize could have resulted in client offsets into the channel being
+ invalid after the resize, the client is notified by another callback
+ as to how to adjust the offsets to keep them valid.
+
+Here's a summary of the API relayfs provides to in-kernel clients:
+
+int relay_open(channel_path, bufsize_lockless, nbufs_lockless,
+ bufsize_locking, nbufs_locking, channel_flags,
+ channel_callbacks, start_reserve, end_reserve,
+ rchan_start_reserve, resize_min, resize_max)
+int relay_write(channel_id, *data_ptr, count, time_delta_offset)
+void relay_buffers_consumed(channel_id, buffers_consumed)
+void relay_bytes_consumed(channel_id, bytes_consumed, read_offset)
+void relay_resume(channel_id)
+int relay_info(channel_id, *channel_info)
+int relay_close(channel_id)
+int relay_read(channel_id, buf, count, read_offset, *new_offset, wait)
+int relay_read_last(channel_id, buf, count)
+int relay_bytes_avail(channel_id, read_offset)
+int relay_realloc_buffer(channel_id, bufsize, nbufs)
+int relay_replace_buffer(channel_id)
+
+----------
+int relay_open(channel_path, bufsize_lockless, nbufs_lockless, bufsize_locking,
+ nbufs_locking, channel_flags, channel_callbacks, start_reserve,
+ end_reserve, rchan_start_reserve, resize_min, resize_max)
+
+relay_open() is used to create a new entry in relayfs. This new entry
+is created according to channel_path. channel_path contains the
+absolute path to the channel file on relayfs. If, for example, the
+caller sets channel_path to "/xlog/9", a "xlog/9" entry will appear
+within relayfs automatically and the "xlog" directory will be created
+in the filesystem's root. relayfs does not implement any policy on
+its content, except to disallow the opening of two channels using the
+same file. There are, nevertheless a set of guidelines for using
+relayfs. Basically, each facility using relayfs should use a top-level
+directory identifying it. The entry created above, for example,
+presumably belongs to the "xlog" software.
+
+The remaining parameters for relay_open() are as follows:
+
+- channel_flags - an ORed combination of attribute values controlling
+ common channel characteristics:
+
+ - logging scheme - relayfs use 2 mutually exclusive schemes
+ for logging data to a channel. The 'lockless scheme'
+ reserves and writes data to a channel without the need of
+ any type of locking on the channel. This is the preferred
+ scheme, but may not be available on a given architecture (it
+ relies on the presence of a cmpxchg instruction). It's
+ specified by the RELAY_SCHEME_LOCKLESS flag. The 'locking
+ scheme' either obtains a lock on the channel for writing or
+ disables interrupts, depending on whether the channel was
+ opened for SMP or global usage (see below). It's specified
+ by the RELAY_SCHEME_LOCKING flag. While a client may want
+ to explicitly specify a particular scheme to use, it's more
+ convenient to specify RELAY_SCHEME_ANY for this flag, which
+ will allow relayfs to choose the best available scheme i.e.
+ lockless if supported.
+
+ - SMP usage - this applies only when the locking scheme is in
+ use. If RELAY_USAGE_SMP is specified, it's assumed that the
+ channel will be used in a per-CPU fashion and consequently,
+ the only locking that will be done for writes is to disable
+ local irqs. If RELAY_USAGE_GLOBAL is specified, it's assumed
+ that writes to the buffer can occur within any CPU context,
+ and spinlock_irq_save will be used to lock the buffer.
+
+ - delivery mode - if RELAY_DELIVERY_BULK is specified, the
+ client will be notified via its deliver() callback whenever a
+ sub-buffer has been filled. Alternatively,
+ RELAY_DELIVERY_PACKET will cause delivery to occur after the
+ completion of each write. See the description of the channel
+ callbacks below for more details.
+
+ - timestamping - if RELAY_TIMESTAMP_TSC is specified and the
+ architecture supports it, efficient TSC 'timestamps' can be
+ associated with each write, otherwise more expensive
+ gettimeofday() timestamping is used. At the beginning of
+ each sub-buffer, a gettimeofday() timestamp and the current
+ TSC, if supported, are read, and are passed on to the client
+ via the buffer_start() callback. This allows correlation of
+ the current time with the current TSC for subsequent writes.
+ Each subsequent write is associated with a 'time delta',
+ which is either the current TSC, if the channel is using
+ TSCs, or the difference between the buffer_start gettimeofday
+ timestamp and the gettimeofday time read for the current
+ write. Note that relayfs never writes either a timestamp or
+ time delta into the buffer unless explicitly asked to (see
+ the description of relay_write() for details).
+
+- bufsize_lockless - the size of the 'sub-buffers' making up the
+ circular channel buffer, if the lockless scheme is explicitly
+ specified or if RELAY_SCHEME_ANY is used. For the lockless scheme,
+ this must be a power of 2.
+
+- nbufs_lockless - the number of 'sub-buffers' making up the circular
+ channel buffer, if the lockless scheme is explicitly specified or if
+ RELAY_SCHEME_ANY is used. This must be a power of 2 for the
+ lockless scheme.
+
+ NOTE: if nbufs_lockless is 1, relayfs will bypass the normal size
+ checks and will allocate an rvmalloced buffer of size bufsize_lockless.
+ This buffer will be freed when relay_close() is called, if the channel
+ isn't still being referenced.
+
+- bufsize_locking - the size of the 'sub-buffers' making up the circular
+ channel buffer, if the locking scheme is explicitly specified or if
+ RELAY_SCHEME_ANY is used. For the locking scheme, this can be any size.
+
+- nbufs_locking - the number of 'sub-buffers' making up the circular
+ channel buffer, if the locking scheme is explicitly specified or if
+ RELAY_SCHEME_ANY is used. Currently, this must be 2 for the locking
+ scheme.
+
+- callbacks - a table of callback functions called when events occur
+ within the data relay that clients need to know about:
+
+ - int buffer_start(channel_id, current_write_pos, buffer_id,
+ start_time, start_tsc, using_tsc) -
+
+ called at the beginning of a new sub-buffer, the
+ buffer_start() callback gives the client an opportunity to
+ write data into space reserved at the beginning of a
+ sub-buffer. The client should only write into the buffer
+ if it specified a value for start_reserve and/or
+ channel_start_reserve (see below) when the channel was
+ opened. In the latter case, the client can determine
+ whether to write its one-time rchan_start_reserve data by
+ examining the value of buffer_id, which will be 0 for the
+ first sub-buffer. The address that the client can write
+ to is contained in current_write_pos (the client by
+ definition knows how much it can write i.e. the value it
+ passed to relay_open() for start_reserve/
+ channel_start_reserve). start_time contains the
+ gettimeofday() value for the start of the buffer and start
+ TSC contains the TSC read at the same time. The using_tsc
+ param indicates whether or not start_tsc is valid (it
+ wouldn't be if TSC timestamping isn't being used).
+
+ The client should return the number of bytes it wrote to
+ the channel, 0 if none.
+
+ - int buffer_end(channel_id, current_write_pos, end_of_buffer,
+ end_time, end_tsc, using_tsc)
+
+ called at the end of a sub-buffer, the buffer_end()
+ callback gives the client an opportunity to perform
+ end-of-buffer processing. Note that the current_write_pos
+ is the position where the next write would occur, but
+ since the current write wouldn't fit (which is the trigger
+ for the buffer_end event), the buffer is considered full
+ even though there may be unused space at the end. The
+ end_of_buffer param pointer value can be used to determine
+ exactly the size of the unused space. The client should
+ only write into the buffer if it specified a value for
+ end_reserve when the channel was opened. If the client
+ doesn't write anything i.e. returns 0, the unused space at
+ the end of the sub-buffer is available via relay_info() -
+ this data may be needed by the client later if it needs to
+ process raw sub-buffers (an alternative would be to save
+ the unused bytes count value in end_reserve space at the
+ end of each sub-buffer during buffer_end processing and
+ read it when needed at a later time. The other
+ alternative would be to use read(2), which makes the
+ unused count invisible to the caller). end_time contains
+ the gettimeofday() value for the end of the buffer and end
+ TSC contains the TSC read at the same time. The using_tsc
+ param indicates whether or not end_tsc is valid (it
+ wouldn't be if TSC timestamping isn't being used).
+
+ The client should return the number of bytes it wrote to
+ the channel, 0 if none.
+
+ - void deliver(channel_id, from, len)
+
+ called when data is ready for the client. This callback
+ is used to notify a client when a sub-buffer is complete
+ (in the case of bulk delivery) or a single write is
+ complete (packet delivery). A bulk delivery client might
+ wish to then signal a daemon that a sub-buffer is ready.
+ A packet delivery client might wish to process the packet
+ or send it elsewhere. The from param is a pointer to the
+ delivered data and len specifies how many bytes are ready.
+
+ - int buffers_full(channel_id)
+
+ called when a buffers-full condition is detected. This
+ callback is used to notify a client that further writes to
+ the channel will result in unread data being overwritten.
+ The client can signal that it doesn't want this to happen
+ by returning 1, which will 'suspend' the channel. Further
+ writes to the channel will be discarded, and the channel's
+ events_lost counter will be incremented for each discarded
+ write. The channel can be subsequently 'resumed' by
+ calling the relay_resume() API function. If the client
+ returns 0, writing will continue unhindered into the next
+ sub-buffer. This 'feature' could be used to implement
+ 'flight recorder' applications, for instance.
+
+ - int needs_resize(channel_id, resize_type,
+ suggested_buf_size, suggested_n_bufs)
+
+ called when a channel's buffers are in danger of becoming
+ full i.e. the number of unread bytes in the channel passes
+ a preset threshold, or when the current capacity of a
+ channel's buffer is no longer needed. Also called to
+ notify the client when a channel's buffer has been
+ replaced. If resize_type is RELAY_RESIZE_EXPAND or
+ RELAY_RESIZE_SHRINK, the kernel client should arrange to
+ call relay_realloc_buffer() with the suggested buffer size
+ and buffer count, which will allocate (but will not
+ replace the old one) a new buffer of the recommended size
+ for the channel. Note that this function should not be
+ called with locks held, as it may sleep, but may be called
+ from within interrupt context - in this case the
+ allocation will be put on a work queue. When the
+ allocation has completed, needs_resize() is again called,
+ this time with a resize_type of RELAY_RESIZE_REPLACE. The
+ kernel client should then arrange to call
+ relay_replace_buffer() to actually replace the old channel
+ buffer with the newly allocated buffer. Note that this
+ function can be called in any context, but clients should
+ make sure that the channel isn't currently in use, to
+ avoid pulling out the rug from under any current users.
+ Finally, once the buffer replacement has completed,
+ needs_resize() is again called, this time with a
+ resize_type of RELAY_RESIZE_REPLACED, to inform the client
+ that the replacement is complete and additionally
+ confirming the current sub-buffer size and number of
+ sub-buffers.
+
+ - int resize_offset(channel_id, ge_offset, le_offset, delta)
+
+ called during the buffer copying phase of buffer
+ replacement in order to let the client know that if it
+ currently holds any offsets into the channel buffer, those
+ offsets may be invalid due to resizing and should be
+ adjusted. The client should check any offsets it's using
+ that reference the channel buffer to see whether or not
+ they fall within the offset range defined by ge_offset and
+ le_offset. If so, it should add the delta value (which
+ may be negative) to any offset contained within the range.
+ Note that any particular offset can only be affected once
+ per resize, so the client should take care that subsequent
+ resize_offset() calls don't mistakenly change the offset
+ again within the same resize (e.g. set a flag once an
+ offset has been adjusted, which doesn't get reset until
+ the RELAY_RESIZE_REPLACED needs_resize() call is made
+ signifying the completion of the resize.
+
+- start_reserve - the number of bytes to be reserved at the start of
+ each sub-buffer. The client can do what it wants with this number
+ of bytes when the buffer_start() callback is invoked. Typically
+ clients would use this to write per-sub-buffer header data.
+
+- end_reserve - the number of bytes to be reserved at the end of each
+ sub-buffer. The client can do what it wants with this number of
+ bytes when the buffer_end() callback is invoked. Typically clients
+ would use this to write per-sub-buffer footer data.
+
+- channel_start_reserve - the number of bytes to be reserved, in
+ addition to start_reserve, at the beginning of the first sub-buffer
+ in the channel. The client can do what it wants with this number of
+ bytes when the buffer_start() callback is invoked. Typically
+ clients would use this to write per-channel header data.
+
+- resize_min - if set, this signifies that the channel is
+ auto-resizeable. The value specifies the size that the channel will
+ try to maintain as a normal working size, and that it won't go
+ below. The client makes use of the resizing callbacks and
+ relay_realloc_buffer() and relay_replace_buffer() to actually effect
+ the resize.
+
+- resize_max - if set, this signifies that the channel is
+ auto-resizeable. The value specifies the maximum size the channel
+ can have as a result of resizing.
+
+Upon successful completion, relay_open() returns a channel id
+to be used for all other operations with the relay. All buffers
+managed by the relay are allocated using rvmalloc/rvfree to allow
+for easy mmapping to user-space.
+
+----------
+int relay_write(channel_id, *data_ptr, count, time_delta_offset)
+
+relay_write() reserves space in the channel and writes count bytes of
+data pointed to by data_ptr to it. Automatically performs any
+necessary locking, depending on the scheme and SMP usage in effect (no
+locking is done for the lockless scheme regardless of usage). It
+returns the number of bytes written, or a negative number on failure.
+If time_delta_offset is >= 0, the internal time delta, the internal
+time delta calculated when the slot was reserved will be written at
+that offset. This is the TSC or gettimeofday() delta between the
+current write and the beginning of the buffer, whichever method is
+being used by the channel. Trying to write a count larger than the
+bufsize specified to relay_open() (taking into account the reserved
+start-of-buffer and end-of-buffer space as well) will fail.
+
+----------
+int relay_read(channel_id, buf, count, read_offset, *new_offset, wait)
+
+relay_read() attempts to read count bytes into buffer. If there are
+fewer than count bytes available, return available. if the read would
+cross a sub-buffer boundary, this function will only return the bytes
+available to the end of the sub-buffer; a subsequent read would get
+the remaining bytes (starting from the beginning of the buffer).
+Because we're reading from a circular buffer, if the read would wrap
+around to sub-buffer 0, offset will be reset to 0 to mark the
+beginning of the buffer. If nothing at all is available, the caller
+will be put on a wait queue until there is. This function takes into
+account the 'unused bytes', if any, at the end of each sub-buffer, and
+will transparently skip over them. If the return value is <= 0,
+*new_offset contains unpredictable data. If buf is NULL, will return
+the read_count and new offset without actually doing the read.
+
+----------
+int relay_read_last(channel_id, buf, count)
+
+Copies the last count bytes in the channel into the user buffer.
+Skips over unused bytes at the end of sub-buffers. Returns # bytes
+actually read, or negative on error.
+
+----------
+int relay_bytes_avail(channel_id, read_offset)
+
+Returns the number of bytes available in the current buffer, following
+read_offset. Note that this doesn't return the total bytes available
+in the buffer - this is enough though to know if anything is
+available.
+
+----------
+void relay_buffers_consumed(channel_id, buffers_consumed)
+
+relay_buffers_consumed() updates the channel's buffers_consumed
+counter, which is used in conjunction with its buffers_produced
+counter to determine when a buffers_full condition exists. The count
+in the buffers_consumed param is added to the channel's
+buffers_consumed counter, which should track the actual number of
+buffers consumed by the client. This would typically be called once
+the client had finished processing a delivered sub-buffer (bulk
+clients) or had received end-of-buffer notification (packet clients).
+If a client is operating in 'flight recorder' mode it never needs to
+call this function; suspending the channel in this case would be done
+by returning 1 from the next buffers_full calback, and the channel
+could be subsequently resumed via relay_resume(), which automatically
+'catches up' the buffers_consumed count with buffers_produced.
+
+----------
+void relay_bytes_consumed(channel_id, bytes_consumed, read_offset)
+
+In order for the relay to detect the 'buffers full' condition for a
+channel, it must be kept up-to-date with respect to the number of
+buffers consumed by the client. If the channel is being used in a
+continuous or 'flight recorder' fashion, this function can be ignored.
+For packet clients, it makes more sense to update after each read
+rather than after each complete sub-buffer read. The bytes_consumed
+count updates bufs_consumed when a buffer has been consumed so this
+count remains consistent.
+
+----------
+void relay_resume(channel_id)
+
+relay_resume() resumes a suspended channel. A channel that had a
+'buffers full' condition detected for it, and was told to 'suspend'
+via a non-zero buffers_full callback return value can again be written
+to following this call.
+
+----------
+int relay_info(channel_id, *channel_info)
+
+relay_info() fills in an rchan_info struct with channel status and
+attribute information such as usage modes, sub-buffer size and count,
+the allocated size of the entire buffer, buffers produced and
+consumed, current buffer id, count of writes lost due to buffers full
+condition.
+
+The virtual address of the channel buffer is also available here, for
+those clients that need it.
+
+Clients may need to know how many 'unused' bytes there are at the end
+of a given sub-buffer. This would only be the case if the client 1)
+didn't either write this count to the end of the sub-buffer or
+otherwise note it (it's available as the difference between the buffer
+end and current write pos params in the buffer_end callback) (if the
+client returned 0 from the buffer_end callback, it's assumed that this
+is indeed the case) 2) isn't using the read() system call to read the
+buffer. In other words, if the client isn't annotating the stream and
+is reading the buffer by mmaping it, this information would be needed
+in order for the client to 'skip over' the unused bytes at the ends of
+sub-buffers.
+
+Additionally, for the lockless scheme, clients may need to know
+whether a particular sub-buffer is actually complete. An array of
+boolean values, one per sub-buffer, contains non-zero if the buffer is
+complete, non-zero otherwise.
+
+----------
+int relay_close(channel_id)
+
+relay_close() is used to close the channel. It finalizes the last
+sub-buffer (the one currently being written to) and marks the channel
+as finalized. This doesn't free the channel buffer or channel data
+structure - this is handled automatically when the last reference to
+the channel is given up.
+
+----------
+int relay_realloc_buffer(channel_id, bufsize, nbufs)
+
+relay_realloc_buffer() allocates a new channel buffer using the
+specified sub-buffer size and count. If called from within interrupt
+context, the allocation is put onto a work queue. When the allocation
+has completed, the needs_resize() callback is called with a
+resize_type of RELAY_RESIZE_REPLACE. This function doesn't copy the
+old buffer contents to the new buffer - see relay_replace_buffer().
+This function is called by kernel clients in response to a
+needs_resize() callback call with a resize type of RELAY_RESIZE_EXPAND
+or RELAY_RESIZE_SHRINK. That callback also includes a suggested
+new_bufsize and new_nbufs which should be used when calling this
+function. Returns 0 on success, or errcode if the channel is busy or
+if the allocation couldn't happen for some reason. NOTE: should not
+be called with a lock held, as it may sleep.
+
+----------
+int relay_replace_buffer(channel_id)
+
+relay_replace_buffer() replaces the current channel buffer with the
+new buffer allocated by relay_alloc_buffer and contained in rchan.
+When the replacement is done, the needs_resize() callback is called
+with a resize_type of RELAY_RESIZE_REPLACED. This function is called
+by kernel clients in response to a needs_resize() callback call with a
+resize type of RELAY_RESIZE_REPLACE. Because the copy of contents
+from the old buffer into the new can result in sections of the buffer
+being rearranged, if the client is using offsets to reference
+positions within the buffer, those offsets may no longer be valid.
+The resize_offset() callback is used to deal with this situation.
+Returns 0 on success, or errcode if the channel is busy or if the
+replacement or previous allocation didn't happen for some reason.
+NOTE: This function will not sleep, so can called in any context and
+with locks held. The client should, however, ensure that the channel
+isn't actively being read from or written to.
+
+
+Writing directly into the channel
+=================================
+
+Using the relay_write() API function as described above is the
+preferred means of writing into a channel. In some cases, however,
+in-kernel clients might want to write directly into a relay channel
+rather than have relay_write() copy it into the buffer on the client's
+behalf. Clients wishing to do this should follow the model used to
+implement relay_write itself. The general sequence is:
+
+- get a pointer to the channel via rchan_get(). This increments the
+ channel's reference count.
+- call relay_lock_channel(). This will perform the proper locking for
+ the channel given the scheme in use and the SMP usage.
+- reserve a slot in the channel via relay_reserve()
+- write directly to the reserved address
+- call relay_commit() to commit the write
+- call relay_unlock_channel()
+- call rchan_put() to release the channel reference
+
+In particular, clients should make sure they call rchan_get() and
+rchan_put() and not hold on to references to the channel pointer.
+Also, forgetting to use relay_lock_channel()/relay_unlock_channel()
+has no effect if the lockless scheme is being used, but could result
+in corrupted buffer contents if the locking scheme is used.
+
+
+Limitations
+===========
+
+Writes made via the write() system call are currently limited to 2
+pages worth of data. There is no such limit on the in-kernel API
+function relay_write().
+
+User applications can currently only mmap the complete buffer (it
+doesn't really make sense to mmap only part of it, given its purpose).
+
+
+Latest version
+==============
+
+The latest version can be found at:
+
+http://www.opersys.com/relayfs
+
+Example relayfs clients, such as dynamic printk and the Linux Trace
+Toolkit, can also be found there.
+
+
+Credits
+=======
+
+The ideas and specs for relayfs came about as a result of discussions
+on tracing involving the following:
+
+Michel Dagenais <michel.dagenais@polymtl.ca>
+Richard Moore <richardj_moore@uk.ibm.com>
+Bob Wisniewski <bob@watson.ibm.com>
+Karim Yaghmour <karim@opersys.com>
+Tom Zanussi <zanussi@us.ibm.com>

-- 
Regards,

Tom Zanussi <zanussi@us.ibm.com> IBM Linux Technology Center/RAS

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