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1<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
2<html>
3<head>
4 <title>Linux Trace Toolkit Next Generation Manual</title>
5</head>
6 <body>
7
8<h1>Linux Trace Toolkit Next Generation Manual</h1>
9
10Author : Mathieu Desnoyers, September 2005<br>
11Last update : January 21st, 2009<br>
12(originally known as the LTTng QUICKSTART guide)
13
14<h2>Table of Contents</h2>
15
16<ul>
17<li><a href="#intro" name="TOCintro">Introduction</a></li>
18<ul>
19<li><a href="#arch" name="TOCarch">Supported architectures</a></li>
20</ul>
21
22<li><a href="#section1" name="TOCsection1">Installing LTTng and LTTV from
23sources</a></li>
24<ul>
25<li><a href="#prerequisites" name="TOCprerequisites">Prerequisistes</li>
26<li><a href="#getlttng" name="TOCgetlttng">Getting the LTTng packages</li>
27<li><a href="#getlttngsrc" name="TOCgetlttngsrc">Getting the LTTng kernel sources</li>
28<li><a href="#installlttng" name="TOCinstalllttng">Installing a LTTng kernel</li>
29<li><a href="#editconfig" name="TOCeditconfig">Editing the system wide
30configuration</a>
31<li><a href="#getlttctl" name="TOCgetlttctl">Getting and installing the
32ltt-control package</li>
33<li><a href="#userspacetracing" name="TOCuserspacetracing">Userspace Tracing</li>
34<li><a href="#getlttv" name="TOCgetlttv">Getting and installing the LTTV package</ul>
35
36<li><a href="#section2" name="TOCsection2">Using LTTng and LTTV</a></li>
37<ul>
38<li><a href="#uselttvgui" name="TOCuselttvgui">Use graphical LTTV to control
39tracing and analyse traces</a></li>
40<li><a href="#uselttngtext" name="TOCuselttngtext">Use text mode LTTng to
41control tracing</a></li>
42<li><a href="#uselttvtext" name="TOCuselttvtext">Use text mode LTTV</a></li>
43<li><a href="#hybrid" name="TOChybrid">Tracing in "Hybrid" mode</a></li>
44<li><a href="#flight" name="TOCflight">Tracing in flight recorder mode</a></li>
45</ul>
46
47<li><a href="#section3" name="TOCsection3">Adding kernel and user-space
48instrumentation</a>
49<ul>
50<li><a href="#kerneltp" name="TOCkerneltp">Adding kernel instrumentation</a></li>
51<li><a href="#usertp" name="TOCusertp">Adding userspace instrumentation</a></li>
52</ul>
53
54<li><a href="#section4" name="TOCsection4">Creating Debian and RPM packages
55from LTTV</a></li>
56<ul>
57<li><a href="#pkgdebian" name="TOCpkgdebian">Create custom LTTV Debian
58<li><a href="#pkglttng" name="TOCpkglttng">Create custom LTTng packages</a></li>
59</ul>
60
61</ul>
62
63<hr />
64
65<h2><a href="#TOCintro" name="intro">Introduction</a></h2>
66<p>
67This document is made of five parts : the first one explains how
68to install LTTng and LTTV from sources, the second one describes the steps
69to follow to trace a system and view it. The third part explains
70briefly how to add a new trace point to the kernel and to user space
71applications. The fourth and last part explains how to create Debian or RPM
72packages from the LTTng and LTTV sources.
73<p>
74These operations are made for installing the LTTng 0.86 tracer on a linux 2.6.X
75kernel. You will also find instructions for installation of LTTV 0.12.x : the
76Linux Trace Toolkit Viewer.
77To see the list of compatibilities between LTTng, ltt-control, LTTV, please
78refer to :
79<a
80href="http://ltt.polymtl.ca/svn/trunk/lttv/doc/developer/lttng-lttv-compatibility.html">LTTng+LTTV versions compatibility</a>
81
82The ongoing work had the Linux Kernel Markers integrated in the mainline Linux
83kernel since Linux 2.6.24 and the Tracepoints since 2.6.28. In its current
84state, the lttng patchset is necessary to have the trace clocksource, the
85instrumentation and the LTTng high-speed data extraction mechanism added to the
86kernel.
87
88<br>
89<br>
90<h3><a href="#TOClicense" name="license">Licenses</a></h3>
91<br>
92<p>
93LTTng, UST and LTTV are developed by an open community. LTTng is released under
94a dual Gnu LGPLv2.1/GPLv2 license, except for very few kernel-specific files
95which are derived work from the Linux kernel.
96<p>
97LTTV is available under the Gnu GPLv2. The low-level LTTV trace reading library
98is released under Gnu LGPLv2.1.
99<p>
100The UST userspace tracer and the Userspace RCU library are released under the
101LGPLv2.1 license, which allows linking these userspace tracing library to
102non-GPL (BSD, proprietary...) applications. The associated headers are released
103under MIT-style/BSD-style licenses.
104<p>
105Please refer to each particular file licensing for details.
106
107<br>
108<br>
109<h3><a href="#TOCarch" name="arch">Supported architectures</a></h3>
110<br>
111LTTng :<br>
112<br>
113<li> x86 32/64 bits
114<li> PowerPC 32 and 64 bits
115<li> ARMv7 OMAP3
116<li> Other ARM (with limited timestamping precision, e.g. 1HZ. Need
117architecture-specific support for better precision)
118<li> MIPS
119<li> sh (partial architecture-specific instrumentation)
120<li> sparc64 (partial architecture-specific instrumentation)
121<li> s390 (partial architecture-specific instrumentation)
122<li> Other architectures supported without architecture-specific instrumentation
123and with low-resolution timestamps.<br>
124<br>
125<br>
126LTTV :<br>
127<br>
128<li> Intel 32/64 bits
129<li> PowerPC 32 and 64 bits
130<li> Possibly others. Takes care of endianness and type size difference between
131the LTTng traces and the LTTV analysis tool.
132
133<hr />
134
135
136<h2><a href="#TOCsection1" name="section1">Installation from sources</a></h2>
137<p>
138
139<h3><a href="#TOCprerequisites" name="prerequisites">Prerequisites</a></h3>
140<ul>
141<p>
142Tools needed to follow the package download steps :
143
144<li>wget
145<li>bzip2
146<li>gzip
147<li>tar
148
149<p>
150You have to install the standard development libraries and programs necessary
151to compile a kernel :
152
153<PRE>
154(from Documentation/Changes in the Linux kernel tree)
155Gnu C 2.95.3 # gcc --version
156Gnu make 3.79.1 # make --version
157binutils 2.12 # ld -v
158util-linux 2.10o # fdformat --version
159module-init-tools 0.9.10 # depmod -V
160</PRE>
161
162<p>
163You might also want to have libncurses5 to have the text mode kernel
164configuration menu, but there are alternatives.
165
166<p>
167Prerequisites for LTTV 0.x.x installation are :
168
169<PRE>
170gcc 3.2 or better
171gtk 2.4 or better development libraries
172 (Debian : libgtk2.0, libgtk2.0-dev)
173 (Fedora : gtk2, gtk2-devel)
174 note : For Fedora users : this might require at least core 3 from Fedora,
175 or you might have to compile your own GTK2 library.
176glib 2.4 or better development libraries
177 (Debian : libglib2.0-0, libglib2.0-dev)
178 (Fedora : glib2, glib2-devel)
179libpopt development libraries
180 (Debian : libpopt0, libpopt-dev)
181 (Fedora : popt)
182libpango development libraries
183 (Debian : libpango1.0, libpango1.0-dev)
184 (Fedora : pango, pango-devel)
185libc6 development librairies
186 (Debian : libc6, libc6-dev)
187 (Fedora : glibc, glibc)
188</PRE>
189</ul>
190
191<li>Reminder</li>
192
193<p>
194See the list of compatibilities between LTTng, ltt-control and LTTV at :
195<a
196href="http://ltt.polymtl.ca/svn/trunk/lttv/doc/developer/lttng-lttv-compatibility.html">LTTng+LTTV
197versions compatibility</a>.
198
199
200<h3><a href="#TOCgetlttng" name="getlttng">Getting the LTTng packages</a></h3>
201
202<PRE>
203su -
204mkdir /usr/src/lttng
205cd /usr/src/lttng
206(see http://ltt.polymtl.ca/lttng for package listing)
207wget http://ltt.polymtl.ca/lttng/patch-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx.tar.bz2
208bzip2 -cd patch-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx.tar.bz2 | tar xvof -
209</PRE>
210
211
212<h3><a href="#TOCgetlttngsrc" name="getlttngsrc">Getting LTTng kernel sources</a></h3>
213
214<PRE>
215su -
216cd /usr/src
217wget http://kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.X.tar.bz2
218bzip2 -cd linux-2.6.X.tar.bz2 | tar xvof -
219cd linux-2.6.X
220- For LTTng 0.9.4- cat /usr/src/lttng/patch*-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx* | patch -p1
221- For LTTng 0.9.5+ apply the patches in the order specified in the series file,
222 or use quilt
223cd ..
224mv linux-2.6.X linux-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx
225</PRE>
226
227
228<h3><a href="#TOCinstalllttng" name="installlttng">Installing a LTTng kernel</a></h3>
229
230<PRE>
231su -
232cd /usr/src/linux-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx
233make menuconfig (or make xconfig or make config)
234 Select the < Help > button if you are not familiar with kernel
235 configuration.
236 Items preceded by [*] means they has to be built into the kernel.
237 Items preceded by [M] means they has to be built as modules.
238 Items preceded by [ ] means they should be removed.
239 go to the "General setup" section
240 Select the following options :
241 [*] Prompt for development and/or incomplete code/drivers
242 [*] Activate markers
243 [*] Activate userspace markers ABI (experimental, optional)
244 [*] Immediate value optimization (optional)
245 [*] Linux Trace Toolkit Next Generation (LTTng) --->
246 <M> or <*> Compile lttng tracing probes
247 <M> or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit High-speed Lockless Data Relay
248 <M> or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit Lock-Protected Data Relay
249 <M> or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit Serializer
250 <M> or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit Marker Control
251 <M> or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit Tracer
252 [*] Align Linux Trace Toolkit Traces
253 <M> or <*> Support logging events from userspace
254 [*] Support trace extraction from crash dump
255 <M> or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit Trace Controller
256 <M> or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit State Dump
257 Select <Exit>
258 Select <Exit>
259 Select <Yes>
260make
261make modules_install
262(if necessary, create a initrd with mkinitrd or your preferate alternative)
263(mkinitrd -o /boot/initrd.img-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx 2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx)
264
265-- on X86, X86_64
266make install
267reboot
268Select the Linux 2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx kernel in your boot loader.
269
270-- on PowerPC
271cp vmlinux.strip /boot/vmlinux-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx
272cp System.map /boot/System.map-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx
273cp .config /boot/config-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx
274depmod -ae -F /boot/System.map-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx 2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx
275mkinitrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx 2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx
276(edit /etc/yaboot.conf to add a new entry pointing to your kernel : the entry
277that comes first is the default kernel)
278ybin
279select the right entry at the yaboot prompt (see choices : tab, select : type
280the kernel name followed by enter)
281Select the Linux 2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx kernel in your boot loader.
282--
283</PRE>
284
285<h3><a href="#TOCeditconfig" name="editconfig">Editing the system wide
286configuration</a></h3>
287
288<p>
289You must activate debugfs and specify a mount point. This is typically done in
290fstab such that it happens at boot time. If you have never used DebugFS before,
291these operation would do this for you :
292
293<PRE>
294mkdir /mnt/debugfs
295cp /etc/fstab /etc/fstab.lttng.bkp
296echo "debugfs /mnt/debugfs debugfs rw 0 0" >> /etc/fstab
297</PRE>
298
299<p>
300then, rebooting or issuing the following command will activate debugfs :
301<PRE>
302mount /mnt/debugfs
303</PRE>
304
305<p>
306You need to load the LTT modules to be able to control tracing from user
307space. This is done by issuing the following commands. Note however
308these commands load all LTT modules. Depending on what options you chose to
309compile statically, you may not need to issue all these commands.
310
311<PRE>
312modprobe ltt-trace-control
313modprobe ltt-marker-control
314modprobe ltt-tracer
315modprobe ltt-serialize
316modprobe ltt-relay
317modprobe ipc-trace
318modprobe kernel-trace
319modprobe mm-trace
320modprobe net-trace
321modprobe fs-trace
322modprobe jbd2-trace
323modprobe ext4-trace
324modprobe syscall-trace
325modprobe trap-trace
326#if locking tracing is wanted, uncomment the following
327#modprobe lockdep-trace
328</PRE>
329
330<p>
331If you want to have complete information about the kernel state (including all
332the process names), you need to load the ltt-statedump module. This is done by
333issuing the command :
334
335<PRE>
336modprobe ltt-statedump
337</PRE>
338<p>
339You can automate at boot time loading the ltt-control module by :
340
341<PRE>
342cp /etc/modules /etc/modules.bkp
343echo ltt-trace-control >> /etc/modules
344echo ltt-marker-control >> /etc/modules
345echo ltt-tracer >> /etc/modules
346echo ltt-serialize >> /etc/modules
347echo ltt-relay >> /etc/modules
348echo ipc-trace >> /etc/modules
349echo kernel-trace >> /etc/modules
350echo mm-trace >> /etc/modules
351echo net-trace >> /etc/modules
352echo fs-trace >> /etc/modules
353echo jbd2-trace >> /etc/modules
354echo ext4-trace >> /etc/modules
355echo syscall-trace >> /etc/modules
356echo trap-trace >> /etc/modules
357#if locking tracing is wanted, uncomment the following
358#echo lockdep-trace >> /etc/modules
359</PRE>
360
361
362<h3><a href="#TOCgetlttctl" name="getlttctl">Getting and installing the
363ltt-control package (on the traced machine)</a></h3>
364<p>
365(note : the ltt-control package contains lttd and lttctl. Although it has the
366same name as the ltt-control kernel module, they are *not* the same thing.)
367
368<PRE>
369su -
370cd /usr/src
371wget http://ltt.polymtl.ca/lttng/ltt-control-0.x-xxxx2006.tar.gz
372gzip -cd ltt-control-0.x-xxxx2008.tar.gz | tar xvof -
373cd ltt-control-0.x-xxxx2006
374(refer to README to see the development libraries that must be installed on you
375system)
376./configure
377make
378make install
379# (run ldconfig to ensure new shared objects are taken into account)
380ldconfig
381</PRE>
382
383<h3><a href="#TOCuserspacetracing" name="userspacetracing">Userspace tracing</a></h3>
384
385<PRE>
386Make sure you selected the kernel menuconfig option :
387 <M> or <*> Support logging events from userspace
388And that the ltt-userspace-event kernel module is loaded if selected as a
389module.
390
391Simple userspace tracing is available through
392echo "some text to record" > /mnt/debugfs/ltt/write_event
393
394It will appear in the trace under event :
395channel : userspace
396event name : event
397</PRE>
398
399<h3><a href="#TOCgetlttv" name="getlttv">Getting and installing the LTTV package
400(on the visualisation machine, same
401or different from the visualisation machine)</a></h3>
402
403<PRE>
404su -
405cd /usr/src
406wget http://ltt.polymtl.ca/packages/lttv-0.x.xx-xxxx2008.tar.gz
407gzip -cd lttv-0.x.xx-xxxx2008.tar.gz | tar xvof -
408cd lttv-0.x.xx-xxxx2008
409(refer to README to see the development libraries that must be installed on your
410system)
411./configure
412make
413make install
414# (run ldconfig to ensure new shared objects are taken into account)
415ldconfig
416</PRE>
417
418<hr />
419
420
421<h2><a href="#TOCsection2" name="section2">Using LTTng and LTTV</a></h2>
422
423<li><b>IMPORTANT : Arm Linux Kernel Markers after each boot before tracing</b></li>
424<PRE>
425ltt-armall
426</PRE>
427
428<h3><a href="#TOCuselttvgui" name="uselttvgui">Use graphical LTTV to control
429tracing and analyse traces</a></h3>
430<PRE>
431lttv-gui (or /usr/local/bin/lttv-gui)
432 - Spot the "Tracing Control" icon : click on it
433 (it's a traffic light icon)
434 - enter the root password
435 - click "start"
436 - click "stop"
437 - Yes
438 * You should now see a trace
439</PRE>
440
441<h3><a href="#TOCuselttngtext" name="uselttngtext">Use text mode LTTng to control tracing</a></h3>
442<PRE>
443The tracing can be controlled from a terminal by using the lttctl command (as
444root).
445
446Start tracing :
447
448lttctl -C -w /tmp/trace1 trace1
449
450Stop tracing and destroy trace channels :
451
452lttctl -D trace1
453
454see lttctl --help for details.
455</PRE>
456<p>
457(note : to see if the buffers has been filled, look at the dmesg output after
458lttctl -D or after stopping tracing from the GUI, it will show an event lost
459count. If it is the case, try using larger buffers. See lttctl --help to learn
460how. lttv now also shows event lost messages in the console when loading a trace
461with missing events or lost subbuffers.)
462
463<h3><a href="#TOCuselttvtext" name="uselttvtext">Use text mode LTTV</a></h3>
464<p>
465Feel free to look in /usr/local/lib/lttv/plugins to see all the text and
466graphical plugins available.
467<p>
468For example, a simple trace dump in text format is available with :
469<PRE>
470lttv -m textDump -t /tmp/trace
471</PRE>
472<p>
473See lttv -m textDump --help for detailed command line options of textDump.
474<p>
475It is, in the current state of the project, very useful to use "grep" on the
476text output to filter by specific event fields. You can later copy the timestamp
477of the events to the clipboard and paste them in the GUI by clicking on the
478bottom right label "Current time". Support for this type of filtering should
479be added to the filter module soon.
480
481<h3><a href="#TOChybrid" name="hybrid">Tracing in "Hybrid" mode</a></h3>
482<p>
483Starting from LTTng 0.5.105 and ltt-control 0.20, a new mode can be used :
484hybrid. It can be especially useful when studying big workloads on a long period
485of time.
486<p>
487When using this mode, the most important, low rate control information will be
488recorded during all the trace by lttd (i.e. process creation/exit). The high
489rate information (i.e. interrupt/traps/syscall entry/exit) will be kept in a
490flight recorder buffer (now named flight-channelname_X).
491<p>
492The following lttctl commands take an hybrid trace :
493<p>
494Create trace channel, start lttd on normal channels, start tracing:
495<PRE>
496lttctl -C -w /tmp/trace2 -o channel.kernel.overwrite=1 trace2
497</PRE>
498<p>
499Stop tracing, start lttd on flight recorder channels, destroy trace channels :
500<PRE>
501lttctl -D -w /tmp/trace2 trace2
502</PRE>
503<p>
504Each "overwrite" channel is flight recorder channel.
505
506
507<h3><a href="#TOCflight" name="flight">Tracing in flight recorder mode</a></h3>
508<li>Flight recorder mode</li>
509<p>
510The flight recorder mode writes data into overwritten buffers for all channels,
511including control channels, except for the facilities tracefiles. It consists of
512setting all channels to "overwrite".
513<p>
514The following lttctl commands take a flight recorder trace :
515<PRE>
516lttctl -C -w /tmp/trace3 -o channel.all.overwrite=1 trace3
517...
518lttctl -D -w /tmp/trace3 trace3
519</PRE>
520
521<hr />
522
523
524<h2><a href="#TOCsection3" name="section3">Adding new instrumentations with the
525markers</a></h2>
526<p>
527
528<h3><a href="#TOCkerneltp" name="kerneltp">Adding kernel
529instrumentation</a></h3>
530
531<p>
532See <a
533href="http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/compudj/linux-2.6-lttng.git;a=blob;f=Documentation/markers.txt">Documentation/markers.txt</a>
534and <a
535href="http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/compudj/linux-2.6-lttng.git;a=blob;f=Documentation/trace/tracepoints.txt">Documentation/trace/tracepoints.txt</a> in your kernel
536tree.
537<p>
538Also see <a
539href="http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/compudj/linux-2.6-lttng.git;a=tree;f=ltt/probes">ltt/probes/</a>
540for LTTng probe examples.
541
542<h3><a href="#TOCusertp" name="usertp">Adding userspace instrumentation</a></h3>
543
544Add new events to userspace programs with
545<a href="http://ltt.polymtl.ca/packages/">userspace markers packages</a>.
546Get the latest markers-userspace-*.tar.bz2 and see the Makefile and examples. It
547allows inserting markers in executables and libraries, currently only on x86_32
548and x86_64.
549See <a
550href="http://ltt.polymtl.ca/packages/markers-userspace-0.5.tar.bz2">markers-userspace-0.5.tar.bz2</a> or more recent.
551
552<p>
553Note that a new design document for a 3rd generation of tracepoint/marker-based
554userspace tracing is available at <a
555href="http://ltt.polymtl.ca/svn/trunk/lttv/doc/developer/ust.html">LTTng User-space Tracing
556Design</a>. This new infrastructure is not yet implemented.
557
558<p>
559The easy quick-and-dirty way to perform userspace tracing is currently to write
560an string to /mnt/debugfs/ltt/write_event. See <a
561href="#userspacetracing">Userspace tracing</a> in the
562installation for sources section of this document.
563
564<hr />
565
566<h2><a href="#TOCsection4" name="section4">Creating Debian or RPM packages</a></h2>
567<p>
568
569<h3><a href="#TOCpkgdebian" name="pkgdebian">Create custom LTTV Debian packages</a></h3>
570
571<PRE>
572Use : dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot
573</PRE>
574<p>
575You should then have your LTTV .deb files created for your architecture.
576
577<h3><a href="#TOCpkglttng" name="pkglttng">Create custom LTTng packages</a></h3>
578<p>
579For building LTTng Debian packages :
580get the build tree with patches applies as explained in section 2.
581
582<PRE>
583make menuconfig (or xconfig or config) (customize your configuration)
584make-kpkg kernel_image
585</PRE>
586<p>
587You will then see your freshly created .deb in /usr/src. Install it with
588<PRE>
589dpkg -i /usr/src/(image-name).deb
590</PRE>
591<p>
592Then, follow the section "Editing the system wide configuration" in section 2.
593
594<hr />
595
596 </body>
597</html>
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