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1lttng-ust(3)
2============
3:object-type: library
4
5
6NAME
7----
8lttng-ust - LTTng user space tracing
9
10
11SYNOPSIS
12--------
13[verse]
14*#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>*
15
16[verse]
17#define *TRACEPOINT_ENUM*('prov_name', 'enum_name', 'mappings')
18#define *TRACEPOINT_EVENT*('prov_name', 't_name', 'args', 'fields')
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19#define *TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS*('prov_name', 'class_name', 'args', 'fields')
20#define *TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE*('prov_name', 'class_name', 't_name', 'args')
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21#define *TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL*('prov_name', 't_name', 'level')
22#define *ctf_array*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
23#define *ctf_array_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
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24#define *ctf_array_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
25#define *ctf_array_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
26#define *ctf_array_network*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
27#define *ctf_array_network_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
28#define *ctf_array_network_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
29#define *ctf_array_network_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
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30#define *ctf_array_text*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
31#define *ctf_array_text_nowrite*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
32#define *ctf_enum*('prov_name', 'enum_name', 'int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
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33#define *ctf_enum_nowrite*('prov_name', 'enum_name', 'int_type', 'field_name',
34 'expr')
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35#define *ctf_enum_value*('label', 'value')
36#define *ctf_enum_range*('label', 'start', 'end')
37#define *ctf_float*('float_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
38#define *ctf_float_nowrite*('float_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
39#define *ctf_integer*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
40#define *ctf_integer_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
41#define *ctf_integer_network*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
42#define *ctf_integer_network_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
43#define *ctf_integer_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
44#define *ctf_sequence*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
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45#define *ctf_sequence_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
46 'len_expr')
47#define *ctf_sequence_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
48 'len_expr')
49#define *ctf_sequence_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
50 'len_expr')
51#define *ctf_sequence_network*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
52 'len_expr')
53#define *ctf_sequence_network_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr',
54 'len_type', 'len_expr')
55#define *ctf_sequence_network_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
56 'len_expr')
57#define *ctf_sequence_network_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr',
58 'len_type', 'len_expr')
4ddbd0b7 59#define *ctf_sequence_text*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
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60#define *ctf_sequence_text_nowrite*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
61 'len_expr')
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62#define *ctf_string*('field_name', 'expr')
63#define *ctf_string_nowrite*('field_name', 'expr')
64#define *do_tracepoint*('prov_name', 't_name', ...)
65#define *tracepoint*('prov_name', 't_name', ...)
66#define *tracepoint_enabled*('prov_name', 't_name')
67
68Link with `-llttng-ust -ldl`, following this man page.
69
70
71DESCRIPTION
72-----------
73The http://lttng.org/[_Linux Trace Toolkit: next generation_] is an open
74source software package used for correlated tracing of the Linux kernel,
75user applications, and user libraries.
76
77LTTng-UST is the user space tracing component of the LTTng project. It
78is a port to user space of the low-overhead tracing capabilities of the
79LTTng Linux kernel tracer. The `liblttng-ust` library is used to trace
80user applications and libraries.
81
82NOTE: This man page is about the `liblttng-ust` library. The LTTng-UST
83project also provides Java and Python packages to trace applications
84written in those languages. How to instrument and trace Java and Python
85applications is documented in
86http://lttng.org/docs/[the online LTTng documentation].
87
88There are three ways to use `liblttng-ust`:
89
90 * Using the man:tracef(3) API, which is similar to man:printf(3).
91 * Using the man:tracelog(3) API, which is man:tracef(3) with
92 a log level parameter.
93 * Defining your own tracepoints. See the
94 <<creating-tp,Creating a tracepoint provider>> section below.
95
96
97[[creating-tp]]
98Creating a tracepoint provider
99~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
100Creating a tracepoint provider is the first step of using
101`liblttng-ust`. The next steps are:
102
103 * <<tracepoint,Instrumenting your application with `tracepoint()` calls>>
104 * Building your application with LTTng-UST support, either
105 <<build-static,statically>> or <<build-dynamic,dynamically>>.
106
107A *tracepoint provider* is a compiled object containing the event
108probes corresponding to your custom tracepoint definitions. A tracepoint
109provider contains the code to get the size of an event and to serialize
110it, amongst other things.
111
112To create a tracepoint provider, start with the following
113_tracepoint provider header_ template:
114
115------------------------------------------------------------------------
116#undef TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER
117#define TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER my_provider
118
119#undef TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE
120#define TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE "./tp.h"
121
122#if !defined(_TP_H) || defined(TRACEPOINT_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
123#define _TP_H
124
125#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>
126
127/*
128 * TRACEPOINT_EVENT(), TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(),
129 * TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(), TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(),
130 * and `TRACEPOINT_ENUM()` are used here.
131 */
132
133#endif /* _TP_H */
134
135#include <lttng/tracepoint-event.h>
136------------------------------------------------------------------------
137
138In this template, the tracepoint provider is named `my_provider`
139(`TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER` definition). The file needs to bear the
140name of the `TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE` definition (`tp.h` in this case).
141Between `#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>` and `#endif` go
142the invocations of the <<tracepoint-event,`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()`>>,
143<<tracepoint-event-class,`TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS()`>>,
144<<tracepoint-event-class,`TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE()`>>,
145<<tracepoint-loglevel,`TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL()`>>, and
146<<tracepoint-enum,`TRACEPOINT_ENUM()`>> macros.
147
148NOTE: You can avoid writing the prologue and epilogue boilerplate in the
149template file above by using the man:lttng-gen-tp(1) tool shipped with
150LTTng-UST.
151
152The tracepoint provider header file needs to be included in a source
153file which looks like this:
154
155------------------------------------------------------------------------
156#define TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES
157
158#include "tp.h"
159------------------------------------------------------------------------
160
161Together, those two files (let's call them `tp.h` and `tp.c`) form the
162tracepoint provider sources, ready to be compiled.
163
164You can create multiple tracepoint providers to be used in a single
165application, but each one must have its own header file.
166
167The <<tracepoint-event,`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` usage>> section below
168shows how to use the `TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro to define the actual
169tracepoints in the tracepoint provider header file.
170
171See the <<example,EXAMPLE>> section below for a complete example.
172
173
174[[tracepoint-event]]
175`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` usage
176~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
177The `TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro is used in a template provider
178header file (see the <<creating-tp,Creating a tracepoint provider>>
179section above) to define LTTng-UST tracepoints.
180
181The `TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` usage template is as follows:
182
183------------------------------------------------------------------------
184TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
185 /* Tracepoint provider name */
186 my_provider,
187
188 /* Tracepoint/event name */
189 my_tracepoint,
190
191 /* List of tracepoint arguments (input) */
192 TP_ARGS(
193 ...
194 ),
195
196 /* List of fields of eventual event (output) */
197 TP_FIELDS(
198 ...
199 )
200)
201------------------------------------------------------------------------
202
203The `TP_ARGS()` macro contains the input arguments of the tracepoint.
204Those arguments can be used in the argument expressions of the output
205fields defined in `TP_FIELDS()`.
206
207The format of the `TP_ARGS()` parameters is: C type, then argument name;
208repeat as needed, up to ten times. For example:
209
210------------------------------------------------------------------------
211TP_ARGS(
212 int, my_int,
213 const char *, my_string,
214 FILE *, my_file,
215 double, my_float,
216 struct my_data *, my_data
217)
218------------------------------------------------------------------------
219
220The `TP_FIELDS()` macro contains the output fields of the tracepoint,
221that is, the actual data that can be recorded in the payload of an
222event emitted by this tracepoint.
223
224The `TP_FIELDS()` macro contains a list of `ctf_*()` macros
225:not: separated by commas. The available macros are documented in the
226<<ctf-macros,Available `ctf_*()` field type macros>> section below.
227
228
229[[ctf-macros]]
230Available `ctf_*()` field type macros
231~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
232This section documents the available `ctf_*()` macros that can be
233inserted in the `TP_FIELDS()` macro of the
234<<tracepoint-event,`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro>>.
235
236Standard integer, displayed in base 10:
237
238[verse]
239*ctf_integer*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
240*ctf_integer_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
241
242Standard integer, displayed in base 16:
243
244[verse]
245*ctf_integer_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
246
247Integer in network byte order (big endian), displayed in base 10:
248
249[verse]
250*ctf_integer_network*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
251
252Integer in network byte order, displayed in base 16:
253
254[verse]
255*ctf_integer_network_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
256
257Floating point number:
258
259[verse]
260*ctf_float*('float_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
261*ctf_float_nowrite*('float_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
262
263Null-terminated string:
264
265[verse]
266*ctf_string*('field_name', 'expr')
267*ctf_string_nowrite*('field_name', 'expr')
268
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269Statically-sized array of integers (`_hex` versions displayed in
270hexadecimal, `_network` versions in network byte order):
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271
272[verse]
273*ctf_array*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
274*ctf_array_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
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275*ctf_array_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
276*ctf_array_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
277*ctf_array_network*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
278*ctf_array_network_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
279*ctf_array_network_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
280*ctf_array_network_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
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281
282Statically-sized array, printed as text; no need to be null-terminated:
283
284[verse]
285*ctf_array_text*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
286*ctf_array_text_nowrite*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'count')
287
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288Dynamically-sized array of integers (`_hex` versions displayed in
289hexadecimal, `_network` versions in network byte order):
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290
291[verse]
292*ctf_sequence*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
293*ctf_sequence_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
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294*ctf_sequence_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
295*ctf_sequence_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
296 'len_expr')
297*ctf_sequence_network*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
298*ctf_sequence_network_nowrite*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
299 'len_expr')
300*ctf_sequence_network_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type',
301 'len_expr')
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302*ctf_sequence_network_nowrite_hex*('int_type', 'field_name', 'expr',
303 'len_type', 'len_expr')
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304
305Dynamically-sized array, displayed as text; no need to be null-terminated:
306
307[verse]
308*ctf_sequence_text*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
309*ctf_sequence_text_nowrite*(char, 'field_name', 'expr', 'len_type', 'len_expr')
310
311Enumeration. The enumeration field must be defined before using this
312macro with the `TRACEPOINT_ENUM()` macro. See the
313<<tracepoint-enum,`TRACEPOINT_ENUM()` usage>> section for more
314information.
315
316[verse]
317*ctf_enum*('prov_name', 'enum_name', 'int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
318*ctf_enum_nowrite*('prov_name', 'enum_name', 'int_type', 'field_name', 'expr')
319
320The parameters are:
321
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322'count'::
323 Number of elements in array/sequence. This must be known at
324 compile time.
4ddbd0b7 325
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326'enum_name'::
327 Name of an enumeration field previously defined with the
328 `TRACEPOINT_ENUM()` macro. See the
329 <<tracepoint-enum,`TRACEPOINT_ENUM()` usage>> section for more
330 information.
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331
332'expr'::
333 C expression resulting in the field's value. This expression can
334 use one or more arguments passed to the tracepoint. The arguments
335 of a given tracepoint are defined in the `TP_ARGS()` macro (see
336 the <<creating-tp,Creating a tracepoint provider>> section above).
337
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338'field_name'::
339 Event field name (C identifier syntax, :not: a literal string).
4ddbd0b7 340
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341'float_type'::
342 Float C type (`float` or `double`). The size of this type determines
343 the size of the floating point number field.
344
345'int_type'::
346 Integer C type. The size of this type determines the size of the
347 integer/enumeration field.
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348
349'len_expr'::
350 C expression resulting in the sequence's length. This expression
351 can use one or more arguments passed to the tracepoint.
352
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353'len_type'::
354 Unsigned integer C type of sequence's length.
355
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356'prov_name'::
357 Tracepoint provider name. This must be the same as the tracepoint
358 provider name used in a previous field definition.
359
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360The `_nowrite` versions omit themselves from the recorded trace, but are
361otherwise identical. Their primary purpose is to make some of the
362event context available to the event filters without having to commit
363the data to sub-buffers. See man:lttng-enable-event(1) to learn more
364about dynamic event filtering.
365
366See the <<example,EXAMPLE>> section below for a complete example.
367
368
369[[tracepoint-enum]]
370`TRACEPOINT_ENUM()` usage
371~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
372An enumeration field is a list of mappings between an integers, or a
373range of integers, and strings (sometimes called _labels_ or
374_enumerators_). Enumeration fields can be used to have a more compact
375trace when the possible values for a field are limited.
376
377An enumeration field is defined with the `TRACEPOINT_ENUM()` macro:
378
379------------------------------------------------------------------------
380TRACEPOINT_ENUM(
381 /* Tracepoint provider name */
382 my_provider,
383
384 /* Enumeration name (unique in the whole tracepoint provider) */
385 my_enum,
386
387 /* Enumeration mappings */
388 TP_ENUM_VALUES(
389 ...
390 )
391)
392------------------------------------------------------------------------
393
394`TP_ENUM_VALUES()` contains a list of enumeration mappings, :not:
395separated by commas. Two macros can be used in the `TP_ENUM_VALUES()`:
396`ctf_enum_value()` and `ctf_enum_range()`.
397
398`ctf_enum_value()` is a single value mapping:
399
400[verse]
401*ctf_enum_value*('label', 'value')
402
403This macro maps the given 'label' string to the value 'value'.
404
405`ctf_enum_range()` is a range mapping:
406
407[verse]
408*ctf_enum_range*('label', 'start', 'end')
409
410This macro maps the given 'label' string to the range of integers from
411'start' to 'end', inclusively. Range mappings may overlap, but the
412behaviour is implementation-defined: each trace reader handles
413overlapping ranges as it wishes.
414
415See the <<example,EXAMPLE>> section below for a complete example.
416
417
418[[tracepoint-event-class]]
419`TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS()` usage
420~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
421A *tracepoint class* is a class of tracepoints sharing the
422same field types and names. A tracepoint instance is one instance of
423such a declared tracepoint class, with its own event name.
424
425LTTng-UST creates one event serialization function per tracepoint
426class. Using `TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` creates one tracepoint class per
427tracepoint definition, whereas using `TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS()` and
428`TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE()` creates one tracepoint class, and one or
429more tracepoint instances of this class. In other words, many
430tracepoints can reuse the same serialization code. Reusing the same
431code, when possible, can reduce cache pollution, thus improve
432performance.
433
434The `TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS()` macro accepts the same parameters as
435the `TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro, except that instead of an event name,
436its second parameter is the _tracepoint class name_:
437
438------------------------------------------------------------------------
439TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(
440 /* Tracepoint provider name */
441 my_provider,
442
443 /* Tracepoint class name */
444 my_tracepoint_class,
445
446 /* List of tracepoint arguments (input) */
447 TP_ARGS(
448 ...
449 ),
450
451 /* List of fields of eventual event (output) */
452 TP_FIELDS(
453 ...
454 )
455)
456------------------------------------------------------------------------
457
458Once the tracepoint class is defined, you can create as many tracepoint
459instances as needed:
460
461-------------------------------------------------------------------------
462TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
463 /* Tracepoint provider name */
464 my_provider,
465
466 /* Tracepoint class name */
467 my_tracepoint_class,
468
469 /* Tracepoint/event name */
470 my_tracepoint,
471
472 /* List of tracepoint arguments (input) */
473 TP_ARGS(
474 ...
475 )
476)
477------------------------------------------------------------------------
478
479As you can see, the `TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE()` does not contain
480the `TP_FIELDS()` macro, because they are defined at the
481`TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS()` level.
482
483See the <<example,EXAMPLE>> section below for a complete example.
484
485
486[[tracepoint-loglevel]]
487`TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL()` usage
488~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
489Optionally, a *log level* can be assigned to a defined tracepoint.
490Assigning different levels of severity to tracepoints can be useful:
491when controlling tracing sessions, you can choose to only enable
492events falling into a specific log level range using the
493nloption:--loglevel and nloption:--loglevel-only options of the
494man:lttng-enable-event(1) command.
495
496Log levels are assigned to tracepoints that are already defined using
497the `TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL()` macro. The latter must be used after having
498used `TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` or `TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE()` for a given
499tracepoint. The `TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL()` macro is used as follows:
500
501------------------------------------------------------------------------
502TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(
503 /* Tracepoint provider name */
504 my_provider,
505
506 /* Tracepoint/event name */
507 my_tracepoint,
508
509 /* Log level */
510 TRACE_INFO
511)
512------------------------------------------------------------------------
513
514The available log level definitions are:
515
516include::log-levels.txt[]
517
518See the <<example,EXAMPLE>> section below for a complete example.
519
520
521[[tracepoint]]
522Instrumenting your application
523~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
524Once the tracepoint provider is created (see the
525<<creating-tp,Creating a tracepoint provider>> section above), you can
526instrument your application with the defined tracepoints thanks to the
527`tracepoint()` macro:
528
529[verse]
530#define *tracepoint*('prov_name', 't_name', ...)
531
532With:
533
534'prov_name'::
535 Tracepoint provider name.
536
537't_name'::
538 Tracepoint/event name.
539
540`...`::
541 Tracepoint arguments, if any.
542
543Make sure to include the tracepoint provider header file anywhere you
544use `tracepoint()` for this provider.
545
546NOTE: Even though LTTng-UST supports `tracepoint()` call site duplicates
547having the same provider and tracepoint names, it is recommended to use
548a provider/tracepoint name pair only once within the application source
549code to help map events back to their call sites when analyzing the
550trace.
551
552Sometimes, arguments to the tracepoint are expensive to compute (take
553call stack, for example). To avoid the computation when the tracepoint
554is disabled, you can use the `tracepoint_enabled()` and
555`do_tracepoint()` macros:
556
557[verse]
558#define *tracepoint_enabled*('prov_name', 't_name')
559#define *do_tracepoint*('prov_name', 't_name', ...)
560
561`tracepoint_enabled()` returns a non-zero value if the tracepoint
562named 't_name' from the provider named 'prov_name' is enabled at
563run time.
564
565`do_tracepoint()` is like `tracepoint()`, except that it doesn't check
566if the tracepoint is enabled. Using `tracepoint()` with
567`tracepoint_enabled()` is dangerous since `tracepoint()` also contains
568the `tracepoint_enabled()` check, thus a race condition is possible
569in this situation:
570
571------------------------------------------------------------------------
572if (tracepoint_enabled(my_provider, my_tracepoint)) {
573 stuff = prepare_stuff();
574}
575
576tracepoint(my_provider, my_tracepoint, stuff);
577------------------------------------------------------------------------
578
579If the tracepoint is enabled after the condition, then `stuff` is not
580prepared: the emitted event will either contain wrong data, or the
581whole application could crash (segmentation fault, for example).
582
583NOTE: Neither `tracepoint_enabled()` nor `do_tracepoint()` have
584a `STAP_PROBEV()` call, so if you need it, you should emit this call
585yourself.
586
587
588[[build-static]]
589Statically linking the tracepoint provider
590~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
591With the static linking method, compiled tracepoint providers are copied
592into the target application.
593
594Define `TRACEPOINT_DEFINE` definition below the
595`TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES` definition in the tracepoint provider
596source:
597
598------------------------------------------------------------------------
599#define TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES
600#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
601
602#include "tp.h"
603------------------------------------------------------------------------
604
605Create the tracepoint provider object file:
606
607[role="term"]
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608----
609$ cc -c -I. tp.c
610----
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611
612NOTE: Although an application instrumented with LTTng-UST tracepoints
613can be compiled with a C++ compiler, tracepoint probes should be
614compiled with a C compiler.
615
616At this point, you _can_ archive this tracepoint provider object file,
617possibly with other object files of your application or with other
618tracepoint provider object files, as a static library:
619
620[role="term"]
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621----
622$ ar rc tp.a tp.o
623----
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624
625Using a static library does have the advantage of centralising the
626tracepoint providers objects so they can be shared between multiple
627applications. This way, when the tracepoint provider is modified, the
628source code changes don't have to be patched into each application's
629source code tree. The applications need to be relinked after each
630change, but need not to be otherwise recompiled (unless the tracepoint
631provider's API changes).
632
633Then, link your application with this object file (or with the static
634library containing it) and with `liblttng-ust` and `libdl`
635(`libc` on a BSD system):
636
637[role="term"]
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PP
638----
639$ cc -o app tp.o app.o -llttng-ust -ldl
640----
4ddbd0b7
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641
642
643[[build-dynamic]]
644Dynamically loading the tracepoint provider
645~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
646The second approach to package the tracepoint provider is to use the
647dynamic loader: the library and its member functions are explicitly
648sought, loaded at run time.
649
650In this scenario, the tracepoint provider is compiled as a shared
651object.
652
653The process to create the tracepoint provider shared object is pretty
654much the same as the <<build-static,static linking method>>, except
655that:
656
657 * Since the tracepoint provider is not part of the application,
658 `TRACEPOINT_DEFINE` must be defined, for each tracepoint
659 provider, in exactly one source file of the
660 _application_
661 * `TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE` must be defined next
662 to `TRACEPOINT_DEFINE`
663
664Regarding `TRACEPOINT_DEFINE` and `TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE`,
665the recommended practice is to use a separate C source file in your
666application to define them, then include the tracepoint provider header
667files afterwards. For example, as `tp-define.c`:
668
669------------------------------------------------------------------------
670#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
671#define TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE
672
673#include "tp.h"
674------------------------------------------------------------------------
675
676The tracepoint provider object file used to create the shared library is
677built like it is using the static linking method, but with the
678nloption:-fpic option:
679
680[role="term"]
636cf2a0
PP
681----
682$ cc -c -fpic -I. tp.c
683----
4ddbd0b7
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684
685It is then linked as a shared library like this:
686
687[role="term"]
636cf2a0
PP
688----
689$ cc -shared -Wl,--no-as-needed -o tp.so tp.o -llttng-ust
690----
4ddbd0b7
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691
692This tracepoint provider shared object isn't linked with the user
693application: it must be loaded manually. This is why the application is
694built with no mention of this tracepoint provider, but still needs
695libdl:
696
697[role="term"]
636cf2a0
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698----
699$ cc -o app app.o tp-define.o -ldl
700----
4ddbd0b7
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701
702There are two ways to dynamically load the tracepoint provider shared
703object:
704
705 * Load it manually from the application using man:dlopen(3)
706 * Make the dynamic loader load it with the `LD_PRELOAD`
707 environment variable (see man:ld.so(8))
708
709If the application does not dynamically load the tracepoint provider
710shared object using one of the methods above, tracing is disabled for
711this application, and the events are not listed in the output of
712man:lttng-list(1).
713
714Note that it is not safe to use man:dlclose(3) on a tracepoint provider
715shared object that is being actively used for tracing, due to a lack of
716reference counting from LTTng-UST to the shared object.
717
718For example, statically linking a tracepoint provider to a shared object
719which is to be dynamically loaded by an application (a plugin, for
720example) is not safe: the shared object, which contains the tracepoint
721provider, could be dynamically closed (man:dlclose(3)) at any time by
722the application.
723
724To instrument a shared object, either:
725
726 * Statically link the tracepoint provider to the application, or
727 * Build the tracepoint provider as a shared object (following the
728 procedure shown in this section), and preload it when tracing is
729 needed using the `LD_PRELOAD` environment variable.
730
731
732Using LTTng-UST with daemons
733~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
734Some extra care is needed when using `liblttng-ust` with daemon
735applications that call man:fork(2), man:clone(2), or BSD's man:rfork(2)
736without a following man:exec(3) family system call. The library
737`liblttng-ust-fork.so` needs to be preloaded before starting the
738application with the `LD_PRELOAD` environment variable (see
739man:ld.so(8)).
740
321d3c8d
PP
741To use `liblttng-ust` with a daemon application which closes file
742descriptors that were not opened by it, preload the `liblttng-ust-fd.so`
743library before you start the application. Typical use cases include
744daemons closing all file descriptors after man:fork(2), and buggy
745applications doing ``double-closes''.
746
4ddbd0b7
PP
747
748Context information
749~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
750Context information can be prepended by the LTTng-UST tracer before
751each event, or before specific events.
752
753Context fields can be added to specific channels using
754man:lttng-add-context(1).
755
756The following context fields are supported by LTTng-UST:
757
758`cpu_id`::
759 CPU ID.
760+
761NOTE: This context field is always enabled, and it cannot be added
762with man:lttng-add-context(1). Its main purpose is to be used for
763dynamic event filtering. See man:lttng-enable-event(1) for more
764information about event filtering.
765
766`ip`::
767 Instruction pointer: enables recording the exact address from which
768 an event was emitted. This context field can be used to
769 reverse-lookup the source location that caused the event
770 to be emitted.
771
e0905172 772`perf:thread:COUNTER`::
4ddbd0b7
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773 perf counter named 'COUNTER'. Use `lttng add-context --list` to
774 list the available perf counters.
775+
776Only available on IA-32 and x86-64 architectures.
777
e0905172
PP
778`perf:thread:raw:rN:NAME`::
779 perf counter with raw ID 'N' and custom name 'NAME'. See
780 man:lttng-add-context(1) for more details.
781
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PP
782`pthread_id`::
783 POSIX thread identifier. Can be used on architectures where
784 `pthread_t` maps nicely to an `unsigned long` type.
785
786`procname`::
787 Thread name, as set by man:exec(3) or man:prctl(2). It is
788 recommended that programs set their thread name with man:prctl(2)
789 before hitting the first tracepoint for that thread.
790
791`vpid`::
792 Virtual process ID: process ID as seen from the point of view of
793 the process namespace.
794
795`vtid`::
796 Virtual thread ID: thread ID as seen from the point of view of
797 the process namespace.
798
799
174434f5 800[[state-dump]]
4ddbd0b7
PP
801LTTng-UST state dump
802~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
803If an application that uses `liblttng-ust` becomes part of a tracing
804session, information about its currently loaded shared objects, their
0c3c03e0 805build IDs, and their debug link information are emitted as events
4ddbd0b7
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806by the tracer.
807
808The following LTTng-UST state dump events exist and must be enabled
d1194248
PP
809to record application state dumps. Note that, during the state dump
810phase, LTTng-UST can also emit _shared library load/unload_ events
811(see <<ust-lib,Shared library load/unload tracking>> below).
4ddbd0b7
PP
812
813`lttng_ust_statedump:start`::
814 Emitted when the state dump begins.
815+
816This event has no fields.
817
818`lttng_ust_statedump:end`::
819 Emitted when the state dump ends. Once this event is emitted, it
820 is guaranteed that, for a given process, the state dump is
821 complete.
822+
823This event has no fields.
824
6488ae4c 825`lttng_ust_statedump:bin_info`::
f5eb039d
AB
826 Emitted when information about a currently loaded executable or
827 shared object is found.
4ddbd0b7
PP
828+
829Fields:
830+
831[options="header"]
8902dadc
PP
832|===
833|Field name |Description
834
835|`baddr`
d01f365a 836|Base address of loaded executable.
8902dadc
PP
837
838|`memsz`
d01f365a 839|Size of loaded executable in memory.
8902dadc
PP
840
841|`path`
d01f365a 842|Path to loaded executable file.
8902dadc
PP
843
844|`is_pic`
d1194248
PP
845|Whether or not the executable is position-independent code.
846
847|`has_build_id`
848|Whether or not the executable has a build ID. If this field is 1, you
849can expect that an `lttng_ust_statedump:build_id` event record follows
850this one (not necessarily immediately after).
851
852|`has_debug_link`
853|Whether or not the executable has debug link information. If this field
854is 1, you can expect that an `lttng_ust_statedump:debug_link` event
855record follows this one (not necessarily immediately after).
8902dadc 856|===
4ddbd0b7
PP
857
858`lttng_ust_statedump:build_id`::
859 Emitted when a build ID is found in a currently loaded shared
860 library. See
861 https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-Files.html[Debugging Information in Separate Files]
862 for more information about build IDs.
863+
864Fields:
865+
866[options="header"]
8902dadc
PP
867|===
868|Field name |Description
869
870|`baddr`
d01f365a 871|Base address of loaded library.
8902dadc
PP
872
873|`build_id`
d01f365a 874|Build ID.
8902dadc 875|===
4ddbd0b7
PP
876
877`lttng_ust_statedump:debug_link`::
878 Emitted when debug link information is found in a currently loaded
879 shared library. See
880 https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-Files.html[Debugging Information in Separate Files]
881 for more information about debug links.
882+
883Fields:
884+
885[options="header"]
8902dadc
PP
886|===
887|Field name |Description
888
889|`baddr`
d01f365a 890|Base address of loaded library.
8902dadc
PP
891
892|`crc`
d01f365a 893|Debug link file's CRC.
8902dadc
PP
894
895|`filename`
d01f365a 896|Debug link file name.
d1194248
PP
897|===
898
899
900[[ust-lib]]
901Shared library load/unload tracking
902~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
903The <<state-dump,LTTng-UST state dump>> and the LTTng-UST helper library
904to instrument the dynamic linker (see man:liblttng-ust-dl(3)) can emit
905**shared library load/unload tracking** events.
906
907The following shared library load/unload tracking events exist and must
908be enabled to track the loading and unloading of shared libraries:
909
910`lttng_ust_lib:load`::
911 Emitted when a shared library (shared object) is loaded.
912+
913Fields:
914+
915[options="header"]
916|===
917|Field name |Description
918
919|`baddr`
920|Base address of loaded library.
921
922|`memsz`
923|Size of loaded library in memory.
924
925|`path`
926|Path to loaded library file.
927
928|`has_build_id`
929|Whether or not the library has a build ID. If this field is 1, you
930can expect that an `lttng_ust_lib:build_id` event record follows
931this one (not necessarily immediately after).
932
933|`has_debug_link`
934|Whether or not the library has debug link information. If this field
935is 1, you can expect that an `lttng_ust_lib:debug_link` event
936record follows this one (not necessarily immediately after).
937|===
938
939`lttng_ust_lib:unload`::
940 Emitted when a shared library (shared object) is unloaded.
941+
942Fields:
943+
944[options="header"]
945|===
946|Field name |Description
947
948|`baddr`
949|Base address of unloaded library.
950|===
951
952`lttng_ust_lib:build_id`::
953 Emitted when a build ID is found in a loaded shared library (shared
954 object). See
955 https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-Files.html[Debugging Information in Separate Files]
956 for more information about build IDs.
957+
958Fields:
959+
960[options="header"]
961|===
962|Field name |Description
963
964|`baddr`
965|Base address of loaded library.
966
967|`build_id`
968|Build ID.
969|===
970
971`lttng_ust_lib:debug_link`::
972 Emitted when debug link information is found in a loaded
973 shared library (shared object). See
974 https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-Files.html[Debugging Information in Separate Files]
975 for more information about debug links.
976+
977Fields:
978+
979[options="header"]
980|===
981|Field name |Description
982
983|`baddr`
984|Base address of loaded library.
985
986|`crc`
987|Debug link file's CRC.
988
989|`filename`
990|Debug link file name.
8902dadc 991|===
4ddbd0b7
PP
992
993
2c520d0e
PP
994Detect if LTTng-UST is loaded
995~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
996To detect if `liblttng-ust` is loaded from an application:
997
998. Define the `lttng_ust_loaded` weak symbol globally:
999+
1000------------------------------------------------------------------------
1001int lttng_ust_loaded __attribute__((weak));
1002------------------------------------------------------------------------
1003+
1004This weak symbol is set by the constructor of `liblttng-ust`.
1005
1006. Test `lttng_ust_loaded` where needed:
1007+
1008------------------------------------------------------------------------
1009/* ... */
1010
1011if (lttng_ust_loaded) {
1012 /* LTTng-UST is loaded */
1013} else {
1014 /* LTTng-UST is NOT loaded */
1015}
1016
1017/* ... */
1018------------------------------------------------------------------------
1019
1020
4ddbd0b7
PP
1021[[example]]
1022EXAMPLE
1023-------
1024NOTE: A few examples are available in the
f596de62 1025https://github.com/lttng/lttng-ust/tree/v{lttng_version}/doc/examples[`doc/examples`]
4ddbd0b7
PP
1026directory of LTTng-UST's source tree.
1027
1028This example shows all the features documented in the previous
1029sections. The <<build-static,static linking>> method is chosen here
1030to link the application with the tracepoint provider.
1031
885adac8
PP
1032You can compile the source files and link them together statically
1033like this:
1034
1035[role="term"]
636cf2a0
PP
1036----
1037$ cc -c -I. tp.c
1038$ cc -c app.c
1039$ cc -o app tp.o app.o -llttng-ust -ldl
1040----
885adac8 1041
00665d8e
PP
1042Using the man:lttng(1) tool, create an LTTng tracing session, enable
1043all the events of this tracepoint provider, and start tracing:
1044
1045[role="term"]
636cf2a0
PP
1046----
1047$ lttng create my-session
1048$ lttng enable-event --userspace 'my_provider:*'
1049$ lttng start
1050----
00665d8e
PP
1051
1052You may also enable specific events:
1053
1054[role="term"]
636cf2a0
PP
1055----
1056$ lttng enable-event --userspace my_provider:big_event
1057$ lttng enable-event --userspace my_provider:event_instance2
1058----
00665d8e
PP
1059
1060Run the application:
1061
1062[role="term"]
636cf2a0
PP
1063----
1064$ ./app some arguments
1065----
00665d8e
PP
1066
1067Stop the current tracing session and inspect the recorded events:
1068
1069[role="term"]
636cf2a0
PP
1070----
1071$ lttng stop
1072$ lttng view
1073----
00665d8e 1074
885adac8
PP
1075
1076Tracepoint provider header file
1077~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1078`tp.h`:
4ddbd0b7
PP
1079
1080------------------------------------------------------------------------
1081#undef TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER
1082#define TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER my_provider
1083
1084#undef TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE
1085#define TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE "./tp.h"
1086
1087#if !defined(_TP_H) || defined(TRACEPOINT_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
1088#define _TP_H
1089
1090#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>
1091#include <stdio.h>
1092
1093#include "app.h"
1094
1095TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
1096 my_provider,
1097 simple_event,
1098 TP_ARGS(
1099 int, my_integer_arg,
1100 const char *, my_string_arg
1101 ),
1102 TP_FIELDS(
1103 ctf_string(argc, my_string_arg)
1104 ctf_integer(int, argv, my_integer_arg)
1105 )
1106)
1107
1108TRACEPOINT_ENUM(
1109 my_provider,
1110 my_enum,
1111 TP_ENUM_VALUES(
1112 ctf_enum_value("ZERO", 0)
1113 ctf_enum_value("ONE", 1)
1114 ctf_enum_value("TWO", 2)
1115 ctf_enum_range("A RANGE", 52, 125)
1116 ctf_enum_value("ONE THOUSAND", 1000)
1117 )
1118)
1119
1120TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
1121 my_provider,
1122 big_event,
1123 TP_ARGS(
1124 int, my_integer_arg,
1125 const char *, my_string_arg,
1126 FILE *, stream,
1127 double, flt_arg,
1128 int *, array_arg
1129 ),
1130 TP_FIELDS(
1131 ctf_integer(int, int_field1, my_integer_arg * 2)
1132 ctf_integer_hex(long int, stream_pos, ftell(stream))
1133 ctf_float(double, float_field, flt_arg)
1134 ctf_string(string_field, my_string_arg)
1135 ctf_array(int, array_field, array_arg, 7)
1136 ctf_array_text(char, array_text_field, array_arg, 5)
1137 ctf_sequence(int, seq_field, array_arg, int,
1138 my_integer_arg / 10)
1139 ctf_sequence_text(char, seq_text_field, array_arg,
1140 int, my_integer_arg / 5)
1141 ctf_enum(my_provider, my_enum, int,
1142 enum_field, array_arg[1])
1143 )
1144)
1145
1146TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(my_provider, big_event, TRACE_WARNING)
1147
1148TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(
1149 my_provider,
1150 my_tracepoint_class,
1151 TP_ARGS(
1152 int, my_integer_arg,
1153 struct app_struct *, app_struct_arg
1154 ),
1155 TP_FIELDS(
1156 ctf_integer(int, a, my_integer_arg)
1157 ctf_integer(unsigned long, b, app_struct_arg->b)
1158 ctf_string(c, app_struct_arg->c)
1159 )
1160)
1161
1162TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
1163 my_provider,
1164 my_tracepoint_class,
1165 event_instance1,
1166 TP_ARGS(
1167 int, my_integer_arg,
1168 struct app_struct *, app_struct_arg
1169 )
1170)
1171
1172TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
1173 my_provider,
1174 my_tracepoint_class,
1175 event_instance2,
1176 TP_ARGS(
1177 int, my_integer_arg,
1178 struct app_struct *, app_struct_arg
1179 )
1180)
1181
1182TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(my_provider, event_instance2, TRACE_INFO)
1183
1184TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
1185 my_provider,
1186 my_tracepoint_class,
1187 event_instance3,
1188 TP_ARGS(
1189 int, my_integer_arg,
1190 struct app_struct *, app_struct_arg
1191 )
1192)
1193
1194#endif /* _TP_H */
1195
1196#include <lttng/tracepoint-event.h>
1197------------------------------------------------------------------------
1198
885adac8
PP
1199
1200Tracepoint provider source file
1201~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1202`tp.c`:
4ddbd0b7
PP
1203
1204------------------------------------------------------------------------
1205#define TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES
1206#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
1207
1208#include "tp.h"
1209------------------------------------------------------------------------
1210
885adac8
PP
1211
1212Application header file
1213~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1214`app.h`:
4ddbd0b7
PP
1215
1216------------------------------------------------------------------------
1217#ifndef _APP_H
1218#define _APP_H
1219
1220struct app_struct {
1221 unsigned long b;
1222 const char *c;
1223 double d;
1224};
1225
1226#endif /* _APP_H */
1227------------------------------------------------------------------------
1228
885adac8
PP
1229
1230Application source file
1231~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1232`app.c`:
4ddbd0b7
PP
1233
1234------------------------------------------------------------------------
1235#include <stdlib.h>
1236#include <stdio.h>
1237
1238#include "tp.h"
1239#include "app.h"
1240
1241static int array_of_ints[] = {
1242 100, -35, 1, 23, 14, -6, 28, 1001, -3000,
1243};
1244
1245int main(int argc, char* argv[])
1246{
1247 FILE *stream;
1248 struct app_struct app_struct;
1249
1250 tracepoint(my_provider, simple_event, argc, argv[0]);
1251 stream = fopen("/tmp/app.txt", "w");
1252
1253 if (!stream) {
1254 fprintf(stderr,
1255 "Error: Cannot open /tmp/app.txt for writing\n");
1256 return EXIT_FAILURE;
1257 }
1258
1259 if (fprintf(stream, "0123456789") != 10) {
1260 fclose(stream);
1261 fprintf(stderr, "Error: Cannot write to /tmp/app.txt\n");
1262 return EXIT_FAILURE;
1263 }
1264
1265 tracepoint(my_provider, big_event, 35, "hello tracepoint",
1266 stream, -3.14, array_of_ints);
1267 fclose(stream);
1268 app_struct.b = argc;
1269 app_struct.c = "[the string]";
1270 tracepoint(my_provider, event_instance1, 23, &app_struct);
1271 app_struct.b = argc * 5;
1272 app_struct.c = "[other string]";
1273 tracepoint(my_provider, event_instance2, 17, &app_struct);
1274 app_struct.b = 23;
1275 app_struct.c = "nothing";
1276 tracepoint(my_provider, event_instance3, -52, &app_struct);
1277
1278 return EXIT_SUCCESS;
1279}
1280------------------------------------------------------------------------
1281
4ddbd0b7 1282
174434f5
PP
1283ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
1284---------------------
0ce82328 1285`LTTNG_HOME`::
14dd1c6f
PP
1286 Alternative user's home directory. This variable is useful when the
1287 user running the instrumented application has a non-writable home
0ce82328
PP
1288 directory.
1289+
1290Unix sockets used for the communication between `liblttng-ust` and the
1291LTTng session and consumer daemons (part of the LTTng-tools project)
1292are located in a specific directory under `$LTTNG_HOME` (or `$HOME` if
1293`$LTTNG_HOME` is not set).
1294
b2c5f61a 1295`LTTNG_UST_ALLOW_BLOCKING`::
d742d2aa 1296 If set, allow the application to retry event tracing when there's
b2c5f61a
MD
1297 no space left for the event record in the sub-buffer, therefore
1298 effectively blocking the application until space is made available
d742d2aa
PP
1299 or the configured timeout is reached.
1300+
1301To allow an application to block during tracing, you also need to
1302specify a blocking timeout when you create a channel with the
1303nloption:--blocking-timeout option of the man:lttng-enable-channel(1)
1304command.
c7667bfe 1305+
6f97f9c2
MD
1306This option can be useful in workloads generating very large trace data
1307throughput, where blocking the application is an acceptable trade-off to
1308prevent discarding event records.
1309+
b2c5f61a
MD
1310WARNING: Setting this environment variable may significantly
1311affect application timings.
6f97f9c2 1312
62c2f155
PP
1313`LTTNG_UST_CLOCK_PLUGIN`::
1314 Path to the shared object which acts as the clock override plugin.
1315 An example of such a plugin can be found in the LTTng-UST
1316 documentation under
f596de62 1317 https://github.com/lttng/lttng-ust/tree/v{lttng_version}/doc/examples/clock-override[`examples/clock-override`].
62c2f155 1318
174434f5 1319`LTTNG_UST_DEBUG`::
702d1b7d 1320 If set, enable `liblttng-ust`'s debug and error output.
174434f5 1321
62c2f155
PP
1322`LTTNG_UST_GETCPU_PLUGIN`::
1323 Path to the shared object which acts as the `getcpu()` override
1324 plugin. An example of such a plugin can be found in the LTTng-UST
1325 documentation under
f596de62 1326 https://github.com/lttng/lttng-ust/tree/v{lttng_version}/doc/examples/getcpu-override[`examples/getcpu-override`].
62c2f155 1327
174434f5 1328`LTTNG_UST_REGISTER_TIMEOUT`::
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1329 Waiting time for the _registration done_ session daemon command
1330 before proceeding to execute the main program (milliseconds).
174434f5 1331+
14dd1c6f
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1332The value `0` means _do not wait_. The value `-1` means _wait forever_.
1333Setting this environment variable to `0` is recommended for applications
174434f5
PP
1334with time constraints on the process startup time.
1335+
2b4444ce 1336Default: {lttng_ust_register_timeout}.
174434f5
PP
1337
1338`LTTNG_UST_WITHOUT_BADDR_STATEDUMP`::
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1339 If set, prevents `liblttng-ust` from performing a base address state
1340 dump (see the <<state-dump,LTTng-UST state dump>> section above).
174434f5 1341
174434f5 1342
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1343include::common-footer.txt[]
1344
1345include::common-copyrights.txt[]
1346
1347include::common-authors.txt[]
1348
1349
1350SEE ALSO
1351--------
1352man:tracef(3),
1353man:tracelog(3),
1354man:lttng-gen-tp(1),
1355man:lttng-ust-dl(3),
1356man:lttng-ust-cyg-profile(3),
1357man:lttng(1),
1358man:lttng-enable-event(1),
1359man:lttng-list(1),
1360man:lttng-add-context(1),
1361man:babeltrace(1),
1362man:dlopen(3),
1363man:ld.so(8)
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