> I am not sure if I get Jason's idea: Is current Wireguard driver using a ring 
> buffer of 2,048 messages for logging?

Yes. There is a file (relative to the installation directory) at Data\log.bin. 
It contains a WORD with "0BADBABE" (base 16, converted to big endian; a 
signature?), another WORD with something, followed by (in my case) 2050 
structures of [a QWORD epoch time (with nanosecond precision) followed by 512 
bytes of event text (zero padded)]. When I export the file in the WireGuard UI, 
it produces a list of 2048 events.

> I am not sure if it has a notify mechanism: Otherwise, the userspace 
> collector will have to poll the logs. Polling too fast consumes power, 
> polling too slow may skip messages.

Hear, hear! Alas, it does not have a notify mechanism.

Frank Wayne

-----Original Message-----
From: WireGuard <[email protected]> On Behalf Of StarBrilliant
Sent: Thursday, 14 October, 2021 13:40
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Windows Log Output to Event Viewer or Text File

On Thu, Oct 14, 2021, at 17:41, Frank Wayne wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 13, 2021, at 18:16, Jason A. Donenfeld wrote:
> > Event Logging appears to be rather slow and clunky [...]

In fact, Windows Event Logging has two APIs: ETW and WPP.
The ETW API is, indeed, slow and clunky.
However, the WPP API is very high-performance. The trace function in Windows 
native TCP stack is implemented with WPP. 

If someone like Frank has the time and ability, they could check this MSDN 
documentation and try to implement it:
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/devtest/wpp-software-tracing__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!CMEOhPSNaRk9va55Sq3P6hrPlsaEZR9cKugdVaKMMSFkQVvmvAwTk-w9efcePl7WnfDRnWcQ$
 
However, I also think this feature is *not* a prioritized task, at least for 
average users.

I am not sure if I get Jason's idea: Is current Wireguard driver using a ring 
buffer of 2,048 messages for logging?
I am not sure if it has a notify mechanism: Otherwise, the userspace collector 
will have to poll the logs. Polling too fast consumes power, polling too slow 
may skip messages.


Best wishes,
StarBrilliant

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