Fix: broken links
[lttng-docs.git] / 2.8 / lttng-docs-2.8.txt
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1The LTTng Documentation
2=======================
3Philippe Proulx <pproulx@efficios.com>
c0468840 4v2.8, 24 July 2017
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5
6
7include::../common/copyright.txt[]
8
9
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10include::../common/warning-not-maintained.txt[]
11
12
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13include::../common/welcome.txt[]
14
15
16include::../common/audience.txt[]
17
18
19[[chapters]]
20=== What's in this documentation?
21
22The LTTng Documentation is divided into the following sections:
23
24* **<<nuts-and-bolts,Nuts and bolts>>** explains the
25 rudiments of software tracing and the rationale behind the
26 LTTng project.
27+
28You can skip this section if you’re familiar with software tracing and
29with the LTTng project.
30
31* **<<installing-lttng,Installation>>** describes the steps to
32 install the LTTng packages on common Linux distributions and from
33 their sources.
34+
35You can skip this section if you already properly installed LTTng on
36your target system.
37
38* **<<getting-started,Quick start>>** is a concise guide to
39 getting started quickly with LTTng kernel and user space tracing.
40+
41We recommend this section if you're new to LTTng or to software tracing
42in general.
43+
44You can skip this section if you're not new to LTTng.
45
46* **<<core-concepts,Core concepts>>** explains the concepts at
47 the heart of LTTng.
48+
49It's a good idea to become familiar with the core concepts
50before attempting to use the toolkit.
51
52* **<<plumbing,Components of LTTng>>** describes the various components
53 of the LTTng machinery, like the daemons, the libraries, and the
54 command-line interface.
55* **<<instrumenting,Instrumentation>>** shows different ways to
56 instrument user applications and the Linux kernel.
57+
58Instrumenting source code is essential to provide a meaningful
59source of events.
60+
61You can skip this section if you do not have a programming background.
62
63* **<<controlling-tracing,Tracing control>>** is divided into topics
64 which demonstrate how to use the vast array of features that
65 LTTng{nbsp}{revision} offers.
66* **<<reference,Reference>>** contains reference tables.
67* **<<glossary,Glossary>>** is a specialized dictionary of terms related
68 to LTTng or to the field of software tracing.
69
70
71include::../common/convention.txt[]
72
73
74include::../common/acknowledgements.txt[]
75
76
77[[whats-new]]
78== What's new in LTTng {revision}?
79
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80LTTng{nbsp}{revision} bears the name _Isseki Nicho_. The result of a
81collaboration between http://www.dieuduciel.com/[Dieu du Ciel!] and
82Nagano-based Shiga Kogen,
83https://www.beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/1141/53111/[_**Isseki
84Nicho**_] is a strong Imperial Dark Saison offering a rich roasted malt
85flavor combined with a complex fruity finish typical of Saison yeasts.
86
87New features and changes in LTTng{nbsp}{revision}:
88
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89* **Tracing control**:
90** You can attach <<java-application-context,Java application-specific
91 context fields>> to a <<channel,channel>> with the
92 man:lttng-add-context(1) command:
93+
94--
95[role="term"]
96----
ded02698 97$ lttng add-context --jul --type='$app.retriever:cur_msg_id'
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98----
99--
100+
101Here, `$app` is the prefix of all application-specific context fields,
102`retriever` names a _context information retriever_ defined at the
103application level, and `cur_msg_id` names a context field read from this
104retriever.
105+
106Both the `java.util.logging` and Apache log4j <<domain,tracing domains>>
107are supported.
108
109** You can use Java application-specific <<adding-context,context>>
110 fields in the <<enabling-disabling-events,filter expression>> of an
111 <<event,event rule>>:
112+
113--
114[role="term"]
115----
ded02698 116$ lttng enable-event --log4j my_logger \
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117 --filter='$app.retriever:cur_msg_id == 23'
118----
119--
120
121** New `lttng status` command which is the equivalent of +lttng list
122 __CUR__+, where +__CUR__+ is the name of the current
123 <<tracing-session,tracing session>>.
124+
125See man:lttng-status(1).
126
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127** New `lttng metadata regenerate` command to
128 <<metadata-regenerate,regenerate the metadata file of an LTTng
129 trace>> at any moment. This command is meant to be used to resample
130 the wall time following a major
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131 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Time_Protocol[NTP] correction
132 so that a system which boots with an incorrect wall time can be
133 traced before its wall time is NTP-corrected.
134+
135See man:lttng-metadata(1).
136
137** New command-line interface warnings when <<event,event records>> or
138 whole sub-buffers are
139 <<channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode,lost>>. The warning messages
140 are printed when a <<tracing-session,tracing session>> is
141 <<basic-tracing-session-control,stopped>> (man:lttng-stop(1)
142 command).
143
144* **User space tracing**:
145** Shared object base address dump in order to map <<event,event
146 records>> to original source location (file and line number).
147+
148If you attach the `ip` and `vpid` <<adding-context,context fields>> to a
149user space <<channel,channel>> and if you use the
150<<liblttng-ust-dl,path:{liblttng-ust-dl.so} helper>>, you can retrieve
151the source location where a given event record was generated.
152+
153The http://diamon.org/babeltrace/[Babeltrace] trace viewer supports this
154state dump and those context fields since version 1.4 to print the
155source location of a given event record. http://tracecompass.org/[Trace
156Compass] also supports this since version 2.0.
157
158** A <<java-application,Java application>> which uses
159 `java.util.logging` now adds an LTTng-UST log handler to the desired
160 JUL loggers.
161+
162The previous workflow was to initialize the LTTng-UST Java agent
163by calling `LTTngAgent.getLTTngAgent()`. This had the effect of adding
164an LTTng-UST log handler to the root loggers.
165
166** A <<java-application,Java application>> which uses Apache log4j now
167 adds an LTTng-UST log appender to the desired log4j loggers.
168+
169The previous workflow was to initialize the LTTng-UST Java agent
170by calling `LTTngAgent.getLTTngAgent()`. This had the effect of adding
171an LTTng-UST appender to the root loggers.
172
173** Any <<java-application,Java application>> can provide
174 <<java-application-context,dynamic context fields>> while running
175 thanks to a new API provided by the <<lttng-ust-agents,LTTng-UST Java
176 agent>>. You can require LTTng to record specific context fields in
177 event records, and you can use them in the filter expression of
178 <<event,event rules>>.
179
180* **Linux kernel tracing**:
181** The LTTng kernel modules can now be built into a Linux kernel image,
182 that is, not as loadable modules.
183+
184Follow the project's
185https://github.com/lttng/lttng-modules/blob/stable-{revision}/README.md#kernel-built-in-support[`README.md`]
186file to learn how.
187
188** New instrumentation:
189*** ARM64 architecture support.
190*** x86 page faults.
191*** x86 `irq_vectors`.
192** New <<adding-context,context fields>>:
193*** `interruptible`
194*** `preemptible`
195*** `need_reschedule`
196*** `migratable` (specific to RT-Preempt)
197** Clock source plugin support for advanced cases where a custom source
198 of time is needed to timestamp LTTng event records.
199+
200See https://github.com/lttng/lttng-modules/blob/stable-{revision}/lttng-clock.h[`lttng-clock.h`]
201for an overview of the small API.
202
203* **Documentation**:
204** The link:/man[man pages] of the man:lttng(1) command-line tool are
205 split into one man page per command (à la Git), for example:
206+
207--
208[role="term"]
209----
ded02698 210$ man lttng-enable-event
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211----
212--
213+
214You can also use the `--help` option of any man:lttng(1) command to
215open its man page.
216+
217The content and formatting of all the LTTng man pages has improved
218dramatically.
219
220
221[[nuts-and-bolts]]
222== Nuts and bolts
223
224What is LTTng? As its name suggests, the _Linux Trace Toolkit: next
225generation_ is a modern toolkit for tracing Linux systems and
226applications. So your first question might be:
227**what is tracing?**
228
229
230[[what-is-tracing]]
231=== What is tracing?
232
233As the history of software engineering progressed and led to what
234we now take for granted--complex, numerous and
235interdependent software applications running in parallel on
236sophisticated operating systems like Linux--the authors of such
237components, software developers, began feeling a natural
238urge to have tools that would ensure the robustness and good performance
239of their masterpieces.
240
241One major achievement in this field is, inarguably, the
242https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/[GNU debugger (GDB)],
243an essential tool for developers to find and fix bugs. But even the best
244debugger won't help make your software run faster, and nowadays, faster
245software means either more work done by the same hardware, or cheaper
246hardware for the same work.
247
248A _profiler_ is often the tool of choice to identify performance
249bottlenecks. Profiling is suitable to identify _where_ performance is
250lost in a given software. The profiler outputs a profile, a statistical
251summary of observed events, which you may use to discover which
252functions took the most time to execute. However, a profiler won't
253report _why_ some identified functions are the bottleneck. Bottlenecks
254might only occur when specific conditions are met, conditions that are
255sometimes impossible to capture by a statistical profiler, or impossible
256to reproduce with an application altered by the overhead of an
257event-based profiler. For a thorough investigation of software
258performance issues, a history of execution is essential, with the
259recorded values of variables and context fields you choose, and
260with as little influence as possible on the instrumented software. This
261is where tracing comes in handy.
262
263_Tracing_ is a technique used to understand what goes on in a running
264software system. The software used for tracing is called a _tracer_,
265which is conceptually similar to a tape recorder. When recording,
266specific instrumentation points placed in the software source code
267generate events that are saved on a giant tape: a _trace_ file. You
268can trace user applications and the operating system at the same time,
269opening the possibility of resolving a wide range of problems that would
270otherwise be extremely challenging.
271
272Tracing is often compared to _logging_. However, tracers and loggers are
273two different tools, serving two different purposes. Tracers are
274designed to record much lower-level events that occur much more
275frequently than log messages, often in the range of thousands per
276second, with very little execution overhead. Logging is more appropriate
277for a very high-level analysis of less frequent events: user accesses,
278exceptional conditions (errors and warnings, for example), database
279transactions, instant messaging communications, and such. Simply put,
280logging is one of the many use cases that can be satisfied with tracing.
281
282The list of recorded events inside a trace file can be read manually
283like a log file for the maximum level of detail, but it is generally
284much more interesting to perform application-specific analyses to
285produce reduced statistics and graphs that are useful to resolve a
286given problem. Trace viewers and analyzers are specialized tools
287designed to do this.
288
289In the end, this is what LTTng is: a powerful, open source set of
290tools to trace the Linux kernel and user applications at the same time.
291LTTng is composed of several components actively maintained and
292developed by its link:/community/#where[community].
293
294
295[[lttng-alternatives]]
296=== Alternatives to noch:{LTTng}
297
298Excluding proprietary solutions, a few competing software tracers
299exist for Linux:
300
301* https://github.com/dtrace4linux/linux[dtrace4linux] is a port of
302 Sun Microsystems's DTrace to Linux. The cmd:dtrace tool interprets
303 user scripts and is responsible for loading code into the
304 Linux kernel for further execution and collecting the outputted data.
305* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_Packet_Filter[eBPF] is a
306 subsystem in the Linux kernel in which a virtual machine can execute
307 programs passed from the user space to the kernel. You can attach
308 such programs to tracepoints and KProbes thanks to a system call, and
309 they can output data to the user space when executed thanks to
310 different mechanisms (pipe, VM register values, and eBPF maps, to name
311 a few).
312* https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt[ftrace]
313 is the de facto function tracer of the Linux kernel. Its user
314 interface is a set of special files in sysfs.
315* https://perf.wiki.kernel.org/[perf] is
316 a performance analyzing tool for Linux which supports hardware
317 performance counters, tracepoints, as well as other counters and
318 types of probes. perf's controlling utility is the cmd:perf command
319 line/curses tool.
320* http://linux.die.net/man/1/strace[strace]
321 is a command-line utility which records system calls made by a
322 user process, as well as signal deliveries and changes of process
323 state. strace makes use of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptrace[ptrace]
324 to fulfill its function.
325* http://www.sysdig.org/[sysdig], like SystemTap, uses scripts to
326 analyze Linux kernel events. You write scripts, or _chisels_ in
327 sysdig's jargon, in Lua and sysdig executes them while the system is
328 being traced or afterwards. sysdig's interface is the cmd:sysdig
329 command-line tool as well as the curses-based cmd:csysdig tool.
330* https://sourceware.org/systemtap/[SystemTap] is a Linux kernel and
331 user space tracer which uses custom user scripts to produce plain text
332 traces. SystemTap converts the scripts to the C language, and then
333 compiles them as Linux kernel modules which are loaded to produce
334 trace data. SystemTap's primary user interface is the cmd:stap
335 command-line tool.
336
337The main distinctive features of LTTng is that it produces correlated
338kernel and user space traces, as well as doing so with the lowest
339overhead amongst other solutions. It produces trace files in the
340http://diamon.org/ctf[CTF] format, a file format optimized
341for the production and analyses of multi-gigabyte data.
342
343LTTng is the result of more than 10 years of active open source
344development by a community of passionate developers.
345LTTng{nbsp}{revision} is currently available on major desktop and server
346Linux distributions.
347
348The main interface for tracing control is a single command-line tool
349named cmd:lttng. The latter can create several tracing sessions, enable
350and disable events on the fly, filter events efficiently with custom
351user expressions, start and stop tracing, and much more. LTTng can
352record the traces on the file system or send them over the network, and
353keep them totally or partially. You can view the traces once tracing
354becomes inactive or in real-time.
355
356<<installing-lttng,Install LTTng now>> and
357<<getting-started,start tracing>>!
358
359
360[[installing-lttng]]
361== Installation
362
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363include::../common/warning-installation-outdated.txt[]
364
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365**LTTng** is a set of software <<plumbing,components>> which interact to
366<<instrumenting,instrument>> the Linux kernel and user applications, and
367to <<controlling-tracing,control tracing>> (start and stop
368tracing, enable and disable event rules, and the rest). Those
369components are bundled into the following packages:
370
371* **LTTng-tools**: Libraries and command-line interface to
372 control tracing.
373* **LTTng-modules**: Linux kernel modules to instrument and
374 trace the kernel.
375* **LTTng-UST**: Libraries and Java/Python packages to instrument and
376 trace user applications.
377
378Most distributions mark the LTTng-modules and LTTng-UST packages as
379optional when installing LTTng-tools (which is always required). In the
380following sections, we always provide the steps to install all three,
381but note that:
382
383* You only need to install LTTng-modules if you intend to trace the
384 Linux kernel.
385* You only need to install LTTng-UST if you intend to trace user
386 applications.
387
388[role="growable"]
01b2f702 389.Availability of LTTng{nbsp}{revision} for major Linux distributions as of 14 March 2017.
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390|====
391|Distribution |Available in releases |Alternatives
392
4515af6e 393|https://www.ubuntu.com/[Ubuntu]
a8fb8540 394|<<ubuntu,Ubuntu{nbsp}16.10 _Yakkety Yak_>>.
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395|LTTng{nbsp}{revision} for Ubuntu{nbsp}14.04 _Trusty Tahr_
396and Ubuntu{nbsp}16.04 _Xenial Xerus_:
397<<ubuntu-ppa,use the LTTng Stable{nbsp}{revision} PPA>>.
398
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399LTTng{nbsp}2.9 for Ubuntu{nbsp}14.04 _Trusty Tahr_
400and Ubuntu{nbsp}16.04 _Xenial Xerus_:
401link:/docs/v2.9#doc-ubuntu-ppa[use the LTTng Stable{nbsp}2.9 PPA].
402
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403LTTng{nbsp}2.9 for Ubuntu{nbsp}17.04 _Zesty Zapus_ (not released
404yet).
405
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406<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>> for
407other Ubuntu releases.
408
4515af6e 409|https://getfedora.org/[Fedora]
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410|<<fedora,Fedora{nbsp}25>>.
411|<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>> for
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412other Fedora releases.
413
4515af6e 414|https://www.debian.org/[Debian]
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415|_Not available_
416|link:/docs/v2.9#doc-debian[LTTng{nbsp}2.9 for Debian "stretch" (testing)
417and Debian "sid" (unstable)].
418
419<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>>.
7adf7ee2 420
4515af6e 421|https://www.opensuse.org/[openSUSE]
7adf7ee2 422|_Not available_
a8fb8540 423|<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>>.
7adf7ee2 424
4515af6e 425|https://www.archlinux.org/[Arch Linux]
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426|_Not available_
427|link:/docs/v2.9#doc-arch-linux[LTTng{nbsp}2.9 from the AUR].
7adf7ee2 428
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429<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>>.
430
4515af6e 431|https://alpinelinux.org/[Alpine Linux]
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432|_Not available_
433|link:/docs/v2.9#doc-alpine-linux[LTTng{nbsp}2.9 for Alpine Linux "edge"].
7adf7ee2 434
01b2f702 435<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>>.
7adf7ee2 436
4515af6e 437|https://www.redhat.com/[RHEL] and https://www.suse.com/[SLES]
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438|See http://packages.efficios.com/[EfficiOS Enterprise Packages].
439|
440
4515af6e 441|https://buildroot.org/[Buildroot]
d522e823 442|<<buildroot,Buildroot 2016.11>>.
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443|link:/docs/v2.9#doc-buildroot[LTTng{nbsp}2.9 for Buildroot 2017.02].
444
445<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>> for
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446other Buildroot releases.
447
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448|http://www.openembedded.org/wiki/Main_Page[OpenEmbedded] and
449https://www.yoctoproject.org/[Yocto]
a8fb8540 450|<<oe-yocto,Yocto Project{nbsp}2.2 _Morty_>> (`openembedded-core` layer).
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451|LTTng{nbsp}2.9 for Yocto Project{nbsp}2.3 _Pyro_
452(`openembedded-core` layer) (not released yet).
453
454<<building-from-source,Build LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source>> for
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455other OpenEmbedded releases.
456|====
457
458
459[[ubuntu]]
460=== [[ubuntu-official-repositories]]Ubuntu
461
462LTTng{nbsp}{revision} is available on Ubuntu{nbsp}16.10 _Yakkety Yak_.
463For previous releases of Ubuntu, <<ubuntu-ppa,use the LTTng
464Stable{nbsp}{revision} PPA>>.
465
974979f0 466To install LTTng{nbsp}{revision} on Ubuntu{nbsp}16.10 _Yakkety Yak_:
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467
468. Install the main LTTng{nbsp}{revision} packages:
469+
470--
471[role="term"]
472----
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473# apt-get install lttng-tools
474# apt-get install lttng-modules-dkms
475# apt-get install liblttng-ust-dev
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476----
477--
478
479. **If you need to instrument and trace
480 <<java-application,Java applications>>**, install the LTTng-UST
481 Java agent:
482+
483--
484[role="term"]
485----
ded02698 486# apt-get install liblttng-ust-agent-java
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487----
488--
489
490. **If you need to instrument and trace
e0a7ba77 491 <<python-application,Python{nbsp}3 applications>>**, install the
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492 LTTng-UST Python agent:
493+
494--
495[role="term"]
496----
ded02698 497# apt-get install python3-lttngust
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498----
499--
500
501
502[[ubuntu-ppa]]
503==== noch:{LTTng} Stable {revision} PPA
504
505The https://launchpad.net/~lttng/+archive/ubuntu/stable-{revision}[LTTng
506Stable{nbsp}{revision} PPA] offers the latest stable
507LTTng{nbsp}{revision} packages for:
508
509* Ubuntu{nbsp}14.04 _Trusty Tahr_
510* Ubuntu{nbsp}16.04 _Xenial Xerus_
511
512To install LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from the LTTng Stable{nbsp}{revision} PPA:
513
514. Add the LTTng Stable{nbsp}{revision} PPA repository and update the
515 list of packages:
516+
517--
518[role="term"]
519----
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520# apt-add-repository ppa:lttng/stable-2.8
521# apt-get update
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522----
523--
524
525. Install the main LTTng{nbsp}{revision} packages:
526+
527--
528[role="term"]
529----
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530# apt-get install lttng-tools
531# apt-get install lttng-modules-dkms
532# apt-get install liblttng-ust-dev
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533----
534--
535
536. **If you need to instrument and trace
537 <<java-application,Java applications>>**, install the LTTng-UST
538 Java agent:
539+
540--
541[role="term"]
542----
ded02698 543# apt-get install liblttng-ust-agent-java
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544----
545--
546
547. **If you need to instrument and trace
e0a7ba77 548 <<python-application,Python{nbsp}3 applications>>**, install the
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549 LTTng-UST Python agent:
550+
551--
552[role="term"]
553----
ded02698 554# apt-get install python3-lttngust
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555----
556--
557
558
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559[[fedora]]
560=== Fedora
7adf7ee2 561
a8fb8540 562To install LTTng{nbsp}{revision} on Fedora{nbsp}25:
7adf7ee2 563
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564. Install the LTTng-tools{nbsp}{revision} and LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision}
565 packages:
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566+
567--
568[role="term"]
569----
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570# yum install lttng-tools
571# yum install lttng-ust
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572----
573--
574
a8fb8540 575. Download, build, and install the latest LTTng-modules{nbsp}{revision}:
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576+
577--
578[role="term"]
579----
ded02698 580$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
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581wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-modules/lttng-modules-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
582tar -xf lttng-modules-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
583cd lttng-modules-2.8.* &&
584make &&
585sudo make modules_install &&
586sudo depmod -a
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587----
588--
589
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590[IMPORTANT]
591.Java and Python application instrumentation and tracing
592====
593If you need to instrument and trace <<java-application,Java
722eb111 594applications>> on Fedora, you need to build and install
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595LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision} <<building-from-source,from source>> and pass
596the `--enable-java-agent-jul`, `--enable-java-agent-log4j`, or
597`--enable-java-agent-all` options to the `configure` script, depending
598on which Java logging framework you use.
599
600If you need to instrument and trace <<python-application,Python
722eb111 601applications>> on Fedora, you need to build and install
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602LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision} from source and pass the
603`--enable-python-agent` option to the `configure` script.
604====
605
606
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607[[enterprise-distributions]]
608=== RHEL, SUSE, and other enterprise distributions
609
610To install LTTng on enterprise Linux distributions, such as Red Hat
611Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SUSE), please
612see http://packages.efficios.com/[EfficiOS Enterprise Packages].
613
614
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615[[buildroot]]
616=== Buildroot
617
618To install LTTng{nbsp}{revision} on Buildroot{nbsp}2016.11:
619
620. Launch the Buildroot configuration tool:
621+
622--
623[role="term"]
624----
ded02698 625$ make menuconfig
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626----
627--
628
629. In **Kernel**, check **Linux kernel**.
630. In **Toolchain**, check **Enable WCHAR support**.
631. In **Target packages**{nbsp}&#8594; **Debugging, profiling and benchmark**,
632 check **lttng-modules** and **lttng-tools**.
633. In **Target packages**{nbsp}&#8594; **Libraries**{nbsp}&#8594;
634 **Other**, check **lttng-libust**.
635
636
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637[[oe-yocto]]
638=== OpenEmbedded and Yocto
639
640LTTng{nbsp}{revision} recipes are available in the
641http://layers.openembedded.org/layerindex/branch/master/layer/openembedded-core/[`openembedded-core`]
af80c5ed 642layer for Yocto Project{nbsp}2.2 _Morty_ under the following names:
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643
644* `lttng-tools`
645* `lttng-modules`
646* `lttng-ust`
647
648With BitBake, the simplest way to include LTTng recipes in your target
649image is to add them to `IMAGE_INSTALL_append` in path:{conf/local.conf}:
650
651----
652IMAGE_INSTALL_append = " lttng-tools lttng-modules lttng-ust"
653----
654
655If you use Hob:
656
657. Select a machine and an image recipe.
658. Click **Edit image recipe**.
659. Under the **All recipes** tab, search for **lttng**.
660. Check the desired LTTng recipes.
661
662[IMPORTANT]
663.Java and Python application instrumentation and tracing
664====
665If you need to instrument and trace <<java-application,Java
722eb111 666applications>> on Yocto/OpenEmbedded, you need to build and install
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667LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision} <<building-from-source,from source>> and pass
668the `--enable-java-agent-jul`, `--enable-java-agent-log4j`, or
669`--enable-java-agent-all` options to the `configure` script, depending
670on which Java logging framework you use.
671
672If you need to instrument and trace <<python-application,Python
722eb111 673applications>> on Yocto/OpenEmbedded, you need to build and install
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674LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision} from source and pass the
675`--enable-python-agent` option to the `configure` script.
676====
677
678
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679[[building-from-source]]
680=== Build from source
681
682To build and install LTTng{nbsp}{revision} from source:
683
684. Using your distribution's package manager, or from source, install
685 the following dependencies of LTTng-tools and LTTng-UST:
686+
687--
688* https://sourceforge.net/projects/libuuid/[libuuid]
689* http://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Popt[popt]
690* http://liburcu.org/[Userspace RCU]
691* http://www.xmlsoft.org/[libxml2]
692--
693
694. Download, build, and install the latest LTTng-modules{nbsp}{revision}:
695+
696--
697[role="term"]
698----
ded02698 699$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
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700wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-modules/lttng-modules-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
701tar -xf lttng-modules-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
702cd lttng-modules-2.8.* &&
703make &&
704sudo make modules_install &&
705sudo depmod -a
706----
707--
708
709. Download, build, and install the latest LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision}:
710+
711--
712[role="term"]
713----
ded02698 714$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
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715wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-ust/lttng-ust-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
716tar -xf lttng-ust-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
717cd lttng-ust-2.8.* &&
718./configure &&
719make &&
720sudo make install &&
721sudo ldconfig
722----
723--
724+
725--
726[IMPORTANT]
727.Java and Python application tracing
728====
729If you need to instrument and trace <<java-application,Java
730applications>>, pass the `--enable-java-agent-jul`,
731`--enable-java-agent-log4j`, or `--enable-java-agent-all` options to the
732`configure` script, depending on which Java logging framework you use.
733
734If you need to instrument and trace <<python-application,Python
735applications>>, pass the `--enable-python-agent` option to the
736`configure` script. You can set the `PYTHON` environment variable to the
737path to the Python interpreter for which to install the LTTng-UST Python
738agent package.
739====
740--
741+
742--
743[NOTE]
744====
745By default, LTTng-UST libraries are installed to
746dir:{/usr/local/lib}, which is the de facto directory in which to
747keep self-compiled and third-party libraries.
748
749When <<building-tracepoint-providers-and-user-application,linking an
750instrumented user application with `liblttng-ust`>>:
751
752* Append `/usr/local/lib` to the env:LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment
753 variable.
754* Pass the `-L/usr/local/lib` and `-Wl,-rpath,/usr/local/lib` options to
755 man:gcc(1), man:g++(1), or man:clang(1).
756====
757--
758
759. Download, build, and install the latest LTTng-tools{nbsp}{revision}:
760+
761--
762[role="term"]
763----
ded02698 764$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
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765wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-tools/lttng-tools-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
766tar -xf lttng-tools-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
767cd lttng-tools-2.8.* &&
768./configure &&
769make &&
770sudo make install &&
771sudo ldconfig
772----
773--
774
775TIP: The https://github.com/eepp/vlttng[vlttng tool] can do all the
776previous steps automatically for a given version of LTTng and confine
777the installed files in a specific directory. This can be useful to test
778LTTng without installing it on your system.
779
780
781[[getting-started]]
782== Quick start
783
784This is a short guide to get started quickly with LTTng kernel and user
785space tracing.
786
787Before you follow this guide, make sure to <<installing-lttng,install>>
788LTTng.
789
790This tutorial walks you through the steps to:
791
792. <<tracing-the-linux-kernel,Trace the Linux kernel>>.
793. <<tracing-your-own-user-application,Trace a user application>> written
794 in C.
795. <<viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces,View and analyze the
796 recorded events>>.
797
798
799[[tracing-the-linux-kernel]]
800=== Trace the Linux kernel
801
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802The following command lines start with the `#` prompt because you need
803root privileges to trace the Linux kernel. You can also trace the kernel
804as a regular user if your Unix user is a member of the
805<<tracing-group,tracing group>>.
7adf7ee2 806
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807. Create a <<tracing-session,tracing session>> which writes its traces
808 to dir:{/tmp/my-kernel-trace}:
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809+
810--
811[role="term"]
812----
ded02698 813# lttng create my-kernel-session --output=/tmp/my-kernel-trace
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814----
815--
816
817. List the available kernel tracepoints and system calls:
818+
819--
820[role="term"]
821----
ded02698
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822# lttng list --kernel
823# lttng list --kernel --syscall
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824----
825--
826
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827. Create <<event,event rules>> which match the desired instrumentation
828 point names, for example the `sched_switch` and `sched_process_fork`
829 tracepoints, and the man:open(2) and man:close(2) system calls:
7adf7ee2
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830+
831--
832[role="term"]
833----
ded02698
PP
834# lttng enable-event --kernel sched_switch,sched_process_fork
835# lttng enable-event --kernel --syscall open,close
7adf7ee2
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836----
837--
838+
cdd6b153 839You can also create an event rule which matches _all_ the Linux kernel
7adf7ee2
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840tracepoints (this will generate a lot of data when tracing):
841+
842--
843[role="term"]
844----
ded02698 845# lttng enable-event --kernel --all
7adf7ee2
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846----
847--
848
cdd6b153 849. <<basic-tracing-session-control,Start tracing>>:
7adf7ee2
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850+
851--
852[role="term"]
853----
ded02698 854# lttng start
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855----
856--
857
858. Do some operation on your system for a few seconds. For example,
859 load a website, or list the files of a directory.
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860. <<basic-tracing-session-control,Stop tracing>> and destroy the
861 tracing session:
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862+
863--
864[role="term"]
865----
866sudo lttng stop
867sudo lttng destroy
868----
869--
870+
871The man:lttng-destroy(1) command does not destroy the trace data; it
872only destroys the state of the tracing session.
873
cdd6b153
PP
874. For the sake of this example, make the recorded trace accessible to
875 the non-root users:
876+
877--
878[role="term"]
879----
880sudo chown -R $(whoami) /tmp/my-kernel-trace
881----
882--
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883
884See <<viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces,View and analyze the
885recorded events>> to view the recorded events.
886
887
888[[tracing-your-own-user-application]]
889=== Trace a user application
890
891This section steps you through a simple example to trace a
892_Hello world_ program written in C.
893
894To create the traceable user application:
895
896. Create the tracepoint provider header file, which defines the
897 tracepoints and the events they can generate:
898+
899--
900[source,c]
901.path:{hello-tp.h}
902----
903#undef TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER
904#define TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER hello_world
905
906#undef TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE
907#define TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE "./hello-tp.h"
908
909#if !defined(_HELLO_TP_H) || defined(TRACEPOINT_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
910#define _HELLO_TP_H
911
912#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>
913
914TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
915 hello_world,
916 my_first_tracepoint,
917 TP_ARGS(
918 int, my_integer_arg,
919 char*, my_string_arg
920 ),
921 TP_FIELDS(
922 ctf_string(my_string_field, my_string_arg)
923 ctf_integer(int, my_integer_field, my_integer_arg)
924 )
925)
926
927#endif /* _HELLO_TP_H */
928
929#include <lttng/tracepoint-event.h>
930----
931--
932
933. Create the tracepoint provider package source file:
934+
935--
936[source,c]
937.path:{hello-tp.c}
938----
939#define TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES
940#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
941
942#include "hello-tp.h"
943----
944--
945
946. Build the tracepoint provider package:
947+
948--
949[role="term"]
950----
ded02698 951$ gcc -c -I. hello-tp.c
7adf7ee2
PP
952----
953--
954
955. Create the _Hello World_ application source file:
956+
957--
958[source,c]
959.path:{hello.c}
960----
961#include <stdio.h>
962#include "hello-tp.h"
963
964int main(int argc, char *argv[])
965{
966 int x;
967
968 puts("Hello, World!\nPress Enter to continue...");
969
970 /*
971 * The following getchar() call is only placed here for the purpose
972 * of this demonstration, to pause the application in order for
973 * you to have time to list its tracepoints. It is not
974 * needed otherwise.
975 */
976 getchar();
977
978 /*
979 * A tracepoint() call.
980 *
981 * Arguments, as defined in hello-tp.h:
982 *
983 * 1. Tracepoint provider name (required)
984 * 2. Tracepoint name (required)
985 * 3. my_integer_arg (first user-defined argument)
986 * 4. my_string_arg (second user-defined argument)
987 *
988 * Notice the tracepoint provider and tracepoint names are
989 * NOT strings: they are in fact parts of variables that the
990 * macros in hello-tp.h create.
991 */
992 tracepoint(hello_world, my_first_tracepoint, 23, "hi there!");
993
994 for (x = 0; x < argc; ++x) {
995 tracepoint(hello_world, my_first_tracepoint, x, argv[x]);
996 }
997
998 puts("Quitting now!");
999 tracepoint(hello_world, my_first_tracepoint, x * x, "x^2");
1000
1001 return 0;
1002}
1003----
1004--
1005
1006. Build the application:
1007+
1008--
1009[role="term"]
1010----
ded02698 1011$ gcc -c hello.c
7adf7ee2
PP
1012----
1013--
1014
1015. Link the application with the tracepoint provider package,
1016 `liblttng-ust`, and `libdl`:
1017+
1018--
1019[role="term"]
1020----
ded02698 1021$ gcc -o hello hello.o hello-tp.o -llttng-ust -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
1022----
1023--
1024
1025Here's the whole build process:
1026
1027[role="img-100"]
1028.User space tracing tutorial's build steps.
1029image::ust-flow.png[]
1030
1031To trace the user application:
1032
1033. Run the application with a few arguments:
1034+
1035--
1036[role="term"]
1037----
ded02698 1038$ ./hello world and beyond
7adf7ee2
PP
1039----
1040--
1041+
1042You see:
1043+
1044--
1045----
1046Hello, World!
1047Press Enter to continue...
1048----
1049--
1050
1051. Start an LTTng <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>:
1052+
1053--
1054[role="term"]
1055----
ded02698 1056$ lttng-sessiond --daemonize
7adf7ee2
PP
1057----
1058--
1059+
1060Note that a session daemon might already be running, for example as
1061a service that the distribution's service manager started.
1062
1063. List the available user space tracepoints:
1064+
1065--
1066[role="term"]
1067----
ded02698 1068$ lttng list --userspace
7adf7ee2
PP
1069----
1070--
1071+
1072You see the `hello_world:my_first_tracepoint` tracepoint listed
1073under the `./hello` process.
1074
1075. Create a <<tracing-session,tracing session>>:
1076+
1077--
1078[role="term"]
1079----
ded02698 1080$ lttng create my-user-space-session
7adf7ee2
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1081----
1082--
1083
1084. Create an <<event,event rule>> which matches the
1085 `hello_world:my_first_tracepoint` event name:
1086+
1087--
1088[role="term"]
1089----
ded02698 1090$ lttng enable-event --userspace hello_world:my_first_tracepoint
7adf7ee2
PP
1091----
1092--
1093
cdd6b153 1094. <<basic-tracing-session-control,Start tracing>>:
7adf7ee2
PP
1095+
1096--
1097[role="term"]
1098----
ded02698 1099$ lttng start
7adf7ee2
PP
1100----
1101--
1102
1103. Go back to the running `hello` application and press Enter. The
1104 program executes all `tracepoint()` instrumentation points and exits.
cdd6b153
PP
1105. <<basic-tracing-session-control,Stop tracing>> and destroy the
1106 tracing session:
7adf7ee2
PP
1107+
1108--
1109[role="term"]
1110----
ded02698
PP
1111$ lttng stop
1112$ lttng destroy
7adf7ee2
PP
1113----
1114--
1115+
1116The man:lttng-destroy(1) command does not destroy the trace data; it
1117only destroys the state of the tracing session.
1118
1119By default, LTTng saves the traces in
1120+$LTTNG_HOME/lttng-traces/__name__-__date__-__time__+,
cdd6b153 1121where +__name__+ is the tracing session name. The
7adf7ee2
PP
1122env:LTTNG_HOME environment variable defaults to `$HOME` if not set.
1123
1124See <<viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces,View and analyze the
1125recorded events>> to view the recorded events.
1126
1127
1128[[viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces]]
1129=== View and analyze the recorded events
1130
1131Once you have completed the <<tracing-the-linux-kernel,Trace the Linux
1132kernel>> and <<tracing-your-own-user-application,Trace a user
1133application>> tutorials, you can inspect the recorded events.
1134
1135Many tools are available to read LTTng traces:
1136
1137* **cmd:babeltrace** is a command-line utility which converts trace
1138 formats; it supports the format that LTTng produces, CTF, as well as a
1139 basic text output which can be ++grep++ed. The cmd:babeltrace command
1140 is part of the http://diamon.org/babeltrace[Babeltrace] project.
1141* Babeltrace also includes
1142 **https://www.python.org/[Python] bindings** so
1143 that you can easily open and read an LTTng trace with your own script,
1144 benefiting from the power of Python.
1145* http://tracecompass.org/[**Trace Compass**]
1146 is a graphical user interface for viewing and analyzing any type of
1147 logs or traces, including LTTng's.
1148* https://github.com/lttng/lttng-analyses[**LTTng analyses**] is a
1149 project which includes many high-level analyses of LTTng kernel
1150 traces, like scheduling statistics, interrupt frequency distribution,
1151 top CPU usage, and more.
1152
1153NOTE: This section assumes that the traces recorded during the previous
1154tutorials were saved to their default location, in the
cdd6b153 1155dir:{$LTTNG_HOME/lttng-traces} directory. The env:LTTNG_HOME
7adf7ee2
PP
1156environment variable defaults to `$HOME` if not set.
1157
1158
1159[[viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces-bt]]
1160==== Use the cmd:babeltrace command-line tool
1161
1162The simplest way to list all the recorded events of a trace is to pass
1163its path to cmd:babeltrace with no options:
1164
1165[role="term"]
1166----
ded02698 1167$ babeltrace ~/lttng-traces/my-user-space-session*
7adf7ee2
PP
1168----
1169
1170cmd:babeltrace finds all traces recursively within the given path and
1171prints all their events, merging them in chronological order.
1172
1173You can pipe the output of cmd:babeltrace into a tool like man:grep(1) for
1174further filtering:
1175
1176[role="term"]
1177----
ded02698 1178$ babeltrace /tmp/my-kernel-trace | grep _switch
7adf7ee2
PP
1179----
1180
1181You can pipe the output of cmd:babeltrace into a tool like man:wc(1) to
1182count the recorded events:
1183
1184[role="term"]
1185----
ded02698 1186$ babeltrace /tmp/my-kernel-trace | grep _open | wc --lines
7adf7ee2
PP
1187----
1188
1189
1190[[viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces-bt-python]]
1191==== Use the Babeltrace Python bindings
1192
1193The <<viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces-bt,text output of cmd:babeltrace>>
1194is useful to isolate events by simple matching using man:grep(1) and
1195similar utilities. However, more elaborate filters, such as keeping only
1196event records with a field value falling within a specific range, are
1197not trivial to write using a shell. Moreover, reductions and even the
1198most basic computations involving multiple event records are virtually
1199impossible to implement.
1200
1201Fortunately, Babeltrace ships with Python 3 bindings which makes it easy
1202to read the event records of an LTTng trace sequentially and compute the
1203desired information.
1204
1205The following script accepts an LTTng Linux kernel trace path as its
1206first argument and prints the short names of the top 5 running processes
1207on CPU 0 during the whole trace:
1208
1209[source,python]
1210.path:{top5proc.py}
1211----
1212from collections import Counter
1213import babeltrace
1214import sys
1215
1216
1217def top5proc():
1218 if len(sys.argv) != 2:
1219 msg = 'Usage: python3 {} TRACEPATH'.format(sys.argv[0])
1220 print(msg, file=sys.stderr)
1221 return False
1222
1223 # A trace collection contains one or more traces
1224 col = babeltrace.TraceCollection()
1225
1226 # Add the trace provided by the user (LTTng traces always have
1227 # the 'ctf' format)
1228 if col.add_trace(sys.argv[1], 'ctf') is None:
1229 raise RuntimeError('Cannot add trace')
1230
1231 # This counter dict contains execution times:
1232 #
1233 # task command name -> total execution time (ns)
1234 exec_times = Counter()
1235
1236 # This contains the last `sched_switch` timestamp
1237 last_ts = None
1238
1239 # Iterate on events
1240 for event in col.events:
1241 # Keep only `sched_switch` events
1242 if event.name != 'sched_switch':
1243 continue
1244
1245 # Keep only events which happened on CPU 0
1246 if event['cpu_id'] != 0:
1247 continue
1248
1249 # Event timestamp
1250 cur_ts = event.timestamp
1251
1252 if last_ts is None:
1253 # We start here
1254 last_ts = cur_ts
1255
1256 # Previous task command (short) name
1257 prev_comm = event['prev_comm']
1258
1259 # Initialize entry in our dict if not yet done
1260 if prev_comm not in exec_times:
1261 exec_times[prev_comm] = 0
1262
1263 # Compute previous command execution time
1264 diff = cur_ts - last_ts
1265
1266 # Update execution time of this command
1267 exec_times[prev_comm] += diff
1268
1269 # Update last timestamp
1270 last_ts = cur_ts
1271
1272 # Display top 5
1273 for name, ns in exec_times.most_common(5):
1274 s = ns / 1000000000
1275 print('{:20}{} s'.format(name, s))
1276
1277 return True
1278
1279
1280if __name__ == '__main__':
1281 sys.exit(0 if top5proc() else 1)
1282----
1283
1284Run this script:
1285
1286[role="term"]
1287----
ded02698 1288$ python3 top5proc.py /tmp/my-kernel-trace/kernel
7adf7ee2
PP
1289----
1290
1291Output example:
1292
1293----
1294swapper/0 48.607245889 s
1295chromium 7.192738188 s
1296pavucontrol 0.709894415 s
1297Compositor 0.660867933 s
1298Xorg.bin 0.616753786 s
1299----
1300
1301Note that `swapper/0` is the "idle" process of CPU 0 on Linux; since we
1302weren't using the CPU that much when tracing, its first position in the
1303list makes sense.
1304
1305
1306[[core-concepts]]
1307== [[understanding-lttng]]Core concepts
1308
1309From a user's perspective, the LTTng system is built on a few concepts,
1310or objects, on which the <<lttng-cli,cmd:lttng command-line tool>>
1311operates by sending commands to the <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>.
1312Understanding how those objects relate to eachother is key in mastering
1313the toolkit.
1314
1315The core concepts are:
1316
1317* <<tracing-session,Tracing session>>
1318* <<domain,Tracing domain>>
1319* <<channel,Channel and ring buffer>>
1320* <<"event","Instrumentation point, event rule, event, and event record">>
1321
1322
1323[[tracing-session]]
1324=== Tracing session
1325
1326A _tracing session_ is a stateful dialogue between you and
1327a <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>. You can
1328<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,create a new tracing
1329session>> with the `lttng create` command.
1330
1331Anything that you do when you control LTTng tracers happens within a
1332tracing session. In particular, a tracing session:
1333
1334* Has its own name.
1335* Has its own set of trace files.
1336* Has its own state of activity (started or stopped).
1337* Has its own <<tracing-session-mode,mode>> (local, network streaming,
1338 snapshot, or live).
1339* Has its own <<channel,channels>> which have their own
1340 <<event,event rules>>.
1341
1342[role="img-100"]
1343.A _tracing session_ contains <<channel,channels>> that are members of <<domain,tracing domains>> and contain <<event,event rules>>.
1344image::concepts.png[]
1345
1346Those attributes and objects are completely isolated between different
1347tracing sessions.
1348
1349A tracing session is analogous to a cash machine session:
1350the operations you do on the banking system through the cash machine do
1351not alter the data of other users of the same system. In the case of
1352the cash machine, a session lasts as long as your bank card is inside.
1353In the case of LTTng, a tracing session lasts from the `lttng create`
1354command to the `lttng destroy` command.
1355
1356[role="img-100"]
1357.Each Unix user has its own set of tracing sessions.
1358image::many-sessions.png[]
1359
1360
1361[[tracing-session-mode]]
1362==== Tracing session mode
1363
1364LTTng can send the generated trace data to different locations. The
1365_tracing session mode_ dictates where to send it. The following modes
1366are available in LTTng{nbsp}{revision}:
1367
1368Local mode::
1369 LTTng writes the traces to the file system of the machine being traced
1370 (target system).
1371
1372Network streaming mode::
1373 LTTng sends the traces over the network to a
1374 <<lttng-relayd,relay daemon>> running on a remote system.
1375
1376Snapshot mode::
1377 LTTng does not write the traces by default. Instead, you can request
1378 LTTng to <<taking-a-snapshot,take a snapshot>>, that is, a copy of the
1379 current tracing buffers, and to write it to the target's file system
1380 or to send it over the network to a <<lttng-relayd,relay daemon>>
1381 running on a remote system.
1382
1383Live mode::
1384 This mode is similar to the network streaming mode, but a live
1385 trace viewer can connect to the distant relay daemon to
1386 <<lttng-live,view event records as LTTng generates them>> by
1387 the tracers.
1388
1389
1390[[domain]]
1391=== Tracing domain
1392
1393A _tracing domain_ is a namespace for event sources. A tracing domain
1394has its own properties and features.
1395
1396There are currently five available tracing domains:
1397
1398* Linux kernel
1399* User space
1400* `java.util.logging` (JUL)
1401* log4j
1402* Python
1403
1404You must specify a tracing domain when using some commands to avoid
1405ambiguity. For example, since all the domains support named tracepoints
1406as event sources (instrumentation points that you manually insert in the
1407source code), you need to specify a tracing domain when
1408<<enabling-disabling-events,creating an event rule>> because all the
1409tracing domains could have tracepoints with the same names.
1410
1411Some features are reserved to specific tracing domains. Dynamic function
1412entry and return instrumentation points, for example, are currently only
1413supported in the Linux kernel tracing domain, but support for other
1414tracing domains could be added in the future.
1415
1416You can create <<channel,channels>> in the Linux kernel and user space
1417tracing domains. The other tracing domains have a single default
1418channel.
1419
1420
1421[[channel]]
1422=== Channel and ring buffer
1423
1424A _channel_ is an object which is responsible for a set of ring buffers.
1425Each ring buffer is divided into multiple sub-buffers. When an LTTng
1426tracer emits an event, it can record it to one or more
1427sub-buffers. The attributes of a channel determine what to do when
1428there's no space left for a new event record because all sub-buffers
1429are full, where to send a full sub-buffer, and other behaviours.
1430
1431A channel is always associated to a <<domain,tracing domain>>. The
1432`java.util.logging` (JUL), log4j, and Python tracing domains each have
1433a default channel which you cannot configure.
1434
1435A channel also owns <<event,event rules>>. When an LTTng tracer emits
1436an event, it records it to the sub-buffers of all
1437the enabled channels with a satisfied event rule, as long as those
1438channels are part of active <<tracing-session,tracing sessions>>.
1439
1440
1441[[channel-buffering-schemes]]
1442==== Per-user vs. per-process buffering schemes
1443
1444A channel has at least one ring buffer _per CPU_. LTTng always
1445records an event to the ring buffer associated to the CPU on which it
1446occurred.
1447
1448Two _buffering schemes_ are available when you
1449<<enabling-disabling-channels,create a channel>> in the
1450user space <<domain,tracing domain>>:
1451
1452Per-user buffering::
1453 Allocate one set of ring buffers--one per CPU--shared by all the
1454 instrumented processes of each Unix user.
1455+
1456--
1457[role="img-100"]
1458.Per-user buffering scheme.
1459image::per-user-buffering.png[]
1460--
1461
1462Per-process buffering::
1463 Allocate one set of ring buffers--one per CPU--for each
1464 instrumented process.
1465+
1466--
1467[role="img-100"]
1468.Per-process buffering scheme.
1469image::per-process-buffering.png[]
1470--
1471+
1472The per-process buffering scheme tends to consume more memory than the
1473per-user option because systems generally have more instrumented
1474processes than Unix users running instrumented processes. However, the
1475per-process buffering scheme ensures that one process having a high
1476event throughput won't fill all the shared sub-buffers of the same
1477user, only its own.
1478
1479The Linux kernel tracing domain has only one available buffering scheme
1480which is to allocate a single set of ring buffers for the whole system.
1481This scheme is similar to the per-user option, but with a single, global
1482user "running" the kernel.
1483
1484
1485[[channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode]]
1486==== Overwrite vs. discard event loss modes
1487
1488When an event occurs, LTTng records it to a specific sub-buffer (yellow
1489arc in the following animation) of a specific channel's ring buffer.
1490When there's no space left in a sub-buffer, the tracer marks it as
1491consumable (red) and another, empty sub-buffer starts receiving the
1492following event records. A <<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>>
1493eventually consumes the marked sub-buffer (returns to white).
1494
1495[NOTE]
1496[role="docsvg-channel-subbuf-anim"]
1497====
1498{note-no-anim}
1499====
1500
1501In an ideal world, sub-buffers are consumed faster than they are filled,
1502as is the case in the previous animation. In the real world,
1503however, all sub-buffers can be full at some point, leaving no space to
1504record the following events.
1505
1506By design, LTTng is a _non-blocking_ tracer: when no empty sub-buffer is
1507available, it is acceptable to lose event records when the alternative
1508would be to cause substantial delays in the instrumented application's
1509execution. LTTng privileges performance over integrity; it aims at
1510perturbing the traced system as little as possible in order to make
1511tracing of subtle race conditions and rare interrupt cascades possible.
1512
1513When it comes to losing event records because no empty sub-buffer is
1514available, the channel's _event loss mode_ determines what to do. The
1515available event loss modes are:
1516
1517Discard mode::
1518 Drop the newest event records until a the tracer
1519 releases a sub-buffer.
1520
1521Overwrite mode::
1522 Clear the sub-buffer containing the oldest event records and start
1523 writing the newest event records there.
1524+
1525This mode is sometimes called _flight recorder mode_ because it's
1526similar to a
1527https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_recorder[flight recorder]:
1528always keep a fixed amount of the latest data.
1529
1530Which mechanism you should choose depends on your context: prioritize
1531the newest or the oldest event records in the ring buffer?
1532
1533Beware that, in overwrite mode, the tracer abandons a whole sub-buffer
1534as soon as a there's no space left for a new event record, whereas in
1535discard mode, the tracer only discards the event record that doesn't
1536fit.
1537
4089946d
PP
1538In discard mode, LTTng increments a count of lost event records when an
1539event record is lost and saves this count to the trace. In overwrite
1540mode, since LTTng 2.8, LTTng increments a count of lost sub-buffers when
1541a sub-buffer is lost and saves this count to the trace. In this mode,
1542the exact number of lost event records in those lost sub-buffers is not
1543saved to the trace. Trace analyses can use the trace's saved discarded
1544event record and sub-buffer counts to decide whether or not to perform
1545the analyses even if trace data is known to be missing.
7adf7ee2
PP
1546
1547There are a few ways to decrease your probability of losing event
1548records.
1549<<channel-subbuf-size-vs-subbuf-count,Sub-buffer count and size>> shows
1550how you can fine-une the sub-buffer count and size of a channel to
1551virtually stop losing event records, though at the cost of greater
1552memory usage.
1553
1554
1555[[channel-subbuf-size-vs-subbuf-count]]
1556==== Sub-buffer count and size
1557
1558When you <<enabling-disabling-channels,create a channel>>, you can
1559set its number of sub-buffers and their size.
1560
1561Note that there is noticeable CPU overhead introduced when
1562switching sub-buffers (marking a full one as consumable and switching
1563to an empty one for the following events to be recorded). Knowing this,
1564the following list presents a few practical situations along with how
1565to configure the sub-buffer count and size for them:
1566
1567* **High event throughput**: In general, prefer bigger sub-buffers to
1568 lower the risk of losing event records.
1569+
4ef3b81e
PP
1570Having bigger sub-buffers also ensures a lower
1571<<channel-switch-timer,sub-buffer switching frequency>>.
7adf7ee2
PP
1572+
1573The number of sub-buffers is only meaningful if you create the channel
1574in overwrite mode: in this case, if a sub-buffer overwrite happens, the
1575other sub-buffers are left unaltered.
1576
1577* **Low event throughput**: In general, prefer smaller sub-buffers
1578 since the risk of losing event records is low.
1579+
1580Because events occur less frequently, the sub-buffer switching frequency
1581should remain low and thus the tracer's overhead should not be a
1582problem.
1583
1584* **Low memory system**: If your target system has a low memory
1585 limit, prefer fewer first, then smaller sub-buffers.
1586+
1587Even if the system is limited in memory, you want to keep the
1588sub-buffers as big as possible to avoid a high sub-buffer switching
1589frequency.
1590
1591Note that LTTng uses http://diamon.org/ctf/[CTF] as its trace format,
1592which means event data is very compact. For example, the average
1593LTTng kernel event record weights about 32{nbsp}bytes. Thus, a
1594sub-buffer size of 1{nbsp}MiB is considered big.
1595
1596The previous situations highlight the major trade-off between a few big
1597sub-buffers and more, smaller sub-buffers: sub-buffer switching
1598frequency vs. how much data is lost in overwrite mode. Assuming a
1599constant event throughput and using the overwrite mode, the two
1600following configurations have the same ring buffer total size:
1601
1602[NOTE]
1603[role="docsvg-channel-subbuf-size-vs-count-anim"]
1604====
1605{note-no-anim}
1606====
1607
1608* **2 sub-buffers of 4{nbsp}MiB each**: Expect a very low sub-buffer
1609 switching frequency, but if a sub-buffer overwrite happens, half of
1610 the event records so far (4{nbsp}MiB) are definitely lost.
1611* **8 sub-buffers of 1{nbsp}MiB each**: Expect 4{nbsp}times the tracer's
1612 overhead as the previous configuration, but if a sub-buffer
1613 overwrite happens, only the eighth of event records so far are
1614 definitely lost.
1615
1616In discard mode, the sub-buffers count parameter is pointless: use two
1617sub-buffers and set their size according to the requirements of your
1618situation.
1619
1620
1621[[channel-switch-timer]]
1622==== Switch timer period
1623
1624The _switch timer period_ is an important configurable attribute of
1625a channel to ensure periodic sub-buffer flushing.
1626
1627When the _switch timer_ expires, a sub-buffer switch happens. You can
1628set the switch timer period attribute when you
1629<<enabling-disabling-channels,create a channel>> to ensure that event
1630data is consumed and committed to trace files or to a distant relay
1631daemon periodically in case of a low event throughput.
1632
1633[NOTE]
1634[role="docsvg-channel-switch-timer"]
1635====
1636{note-no-anim}
1637====
1638
1639This attribute is also convenient when you use big sub-buffers to cope
1640with a sporadic high event throughput, even if the throughput is
1641normally low.
1642
1643
1644[[channel-read-timer]]
1645==== Read timer period
1646
1647By default, the LTTng tracers use a notification mechanism to signal a
1648full sub-buffer so that a consumer daemon can consume it. When such
1649notifications must be avoided, for example in real-time applications,
1650you can use the channel's _read timer_ instead. When the read timer
1651fires, the <<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>> checks for full,
1652consumable sub-buffers.
1653
1654
1655[[tracefile-rotation]]
1656==== Trace file count and size
1657
1658By default, trace files can grow as large as needed. You can set the
1659maximum size of each trace file that a channel writes when you
1660<<enabling-disabling-channels,create a channel>>. When the size of
1661a trace file reaches the channel's fixed maximum size, LTTng creates
1662another file to contain the next event records. LTTng appends a file
1663count to each trace file name in this case.
1664
1665If you set the trace file size attribute when you create a channel, the
1666maximum number of trace files that LTTng creates is _unlimited_ by
1667default. To limit them, you can also set a maximum number of trace
1668files. When the number of trace files reaches the channel's fixed
1669maximum count, the oldest trace file is overwritten. This mechanism is
1670called _trace file rotation_.
1671
1672
1673[[event]]
1674=== Instrumentation point, event rule, event, and event record
1675
1676An _event rule_ is a set of conditions which must be **all** satisfied
1677for LTTng to record an occuring event.
1678
1679You set the conditions when you <<enabling-disabling-events,create
1680an event rule>>.
1681
1682You always attach an event rule to <<channel,channel>> when you create
1683it.
1684
1685When an event passes the conditions of an event rule, LTTng records it
1686in one of the attached channel's sub-buffers.
1687
1688The available conditions, as of LTTng{nbsp}{revision}, are:
1689
1690* The event rule _is enabled_.
1691* The instrumentation point's type _is{nbsp}T_.
1692* The instrumentation point's name (sometimes called _event name_)
1693 _matches{nbsp}N_, but _is not{nbsp}E_.
1694* The instrumentation point's log level _is as severe as{nbsp}L_, or
1695 _is exactly{nbsp}L_.
1696* The fields of the event's payload _satisfy_ a filter
1697 expression{nbsp}__F__.
1698
1699As you can see, all the conditions but the dynamic filter are related to
1700the event rule's status or to the instrumentation point, not to the
1701occurring events. This is why, without a filter, checking if an event
1702passes an event rule is not a dynamic task: when you create or modify an
1703event rule, all the tracers of its tracing domain enable or disable the
1704instrumentation points themselves once. This is possible because the
1705attributes of an instrumentation point (type, name, and log level) are
1706defined statically. In other words, without a dynamic filter, the tracer
1707_does not evaluate_ the arguments of an instrumentation point unless it
1708matches an enabled event rule.
1709
1710Note that, for LTTng to record an event, the <<channel,channel>> to
1711which a matching event rule is attached must also be enabled, and the
1712tracing session owning this channel must be active.
1713
1714[role="img-100"]
1715.Logical path from an instrumentation point to an event record.
1716image::event-rule.png[]
1717
1718.Event, event record, or event rule?
1719****
1720With so many similar terms, it's easy to get confused.
1721
1722An **event** is the consequence of the execution of an _instrumentation
1723point_, like a tracepoint that you manually place in some source code,
1724or a Linux kernel KProbe. An event is said to _occur_ at a specific
310431f4 1725time. Different actions can be taken upon the occurrence of an event,
7adf7ee2
PP
1726like record the event's payload to a buffer.
1727
1728An **event record** is the representation of an event in a sub-buffer. A
1729tracer is responsible for capturing the payload of an event, current
1730context variables, the event's ID, and the event's timestamp. LTTng
1731can append this sub-buffer to a trace file.
1732
1733An **event rule** is a set of conditions which must all be satisfied for
1734LTTng to record an occuring event. Events still occur without
1735satisfying event rules, but LTTng does not record them.
1736****
1737
1738
1739[[plumbing]]
1740== Components of noch:{LTTng}
1741
1742The second _T_ in _LTTng_ stands for _toolkit_: it would be wrong
1743to call LTTng a simple _tool_ since it is composed of multiple
1744interacting components. This section describes those components,
1745explains their respective roles, and shows how they connect together to
1746form the LTTng ecosystem.
1747
1748The following diagram shows how the most important components of LTTng
1749interact with user applications, the Linux kernel, and you:
1750
1751[role="img-100"]
1752.Control and trace data paths between LTTng components.
1753image::plumbing.png[]
1754
1755The LTTng project incorporates:
1756
1757* **LTTng-tools**: Libraries and command-line interface to
1758 control tracing sessions.
1759** <<lttng-sessiond,Session daemon>> (man:lttng-sessiond(8)).
a9f3997c 1760** <<lttng-consumerd,Consumer daemon>> (cmd:lttng-consumerd).
7adf7ee2
PP
1761** <<lttng-relayd,Relay daemon>> (man:lttng-relayd(8)).
1762** <<liblttng-ctl-lttng,Tracing control library>> (`liblttng-ctl`).
1763** <<lttng-cli,Tracing control command-line tool>> (man:lttng(1)).
1764* **LTTng-UST**: Libraries and Java/Python packages to trace user
1765 applications.
1766** <<lttng-ust,User space tracing library>> (`liblttng-ust`) and its
1767 headers to instrument and trace any native user application.
1768** <<prebuilt-ust-helpers,Preloadable user space tracing helpers>>:
1769*** `liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper`
1770*** `liblttng-ust-pthread-wrapper`
1771*** `liblttng-ust-cyg-profile`
1772*** `liblttng-ust-cyg-profile-fast`
1773*** `liblttng-ust-dl`
1774** User space tracepoint provider source files generator command-line
1775 tool (man:lttng-gen-tp(1)).
1776** <<lttng-ust-agents,LTTng-UST Java agent>> to instrument and trace
1777 Java applications using `java.util.logging` or
1778 Apache log4j 1.2 logging.
1779** <<lttng-ust-agents,LTTng-UST Python agent>> to instrument
1780 Python applications using the standard `logging` package.
1781* **LTTng-modules**: <<lttng-modules,Linux kernel modules>> to trace
1782 the kernel.
1783** LTTng kernel tracer module.
1784** Tracing ring buffer kernel modules.
1785** Probe kernel modules.
1786** LTTng logger kernel module.
1787
1788
1789[[lttng-cli]]
1790=== Tracing control command-line interface
1791
1792[role="img-100"]
1793.The tracing control command-line interface.
1794image::plumbing-lttng-cli.png[]
1795
1796The _man:lttng(1) command-line tool_ is the standard user interface to
1797control LTTng <<tracing-session,tracing sessions>>. The cmd:lttng tool
1798is part of LTTng-tools.
1799
1800The cmd:lttng tool is linked with
1801<<liblttng-ctl-lttng,`liblttng-ctl`>> to communicate with
1802one or more <<lttng-sessiond,session daemons>> behind the scenes.
1803
1804The cmd:lttng tool has a Git-like interface:
1805
1806[role="term"]
1807----
ded02698 1808$ lttng <GENERAL OPTIONS> <COMMAND> <COMMAND OPTIONS>
7adf7ee2
PP
1809----
1810
1811The <<controlling-tracing,Tracing control>> section explores the
1812available features of LTTng using the cmd:lttng tool.
1813
1814
1815[[liblttng-ctl-lttng]]
1816=== Tracing control library
1817
1818[role="img-100"]
1819.The tracing control library.
1820image::plumbing-liblttng-ctl.png[]
1821
1822The _LTTng control library_, `liblttng-ctl`, is used to communicate
1823with a <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>> using a C API that hides the
1824underlying protocol's details. `liblttng-ctl` is part of LTTng-tools.
1825
1826The <<lttng-cli,cmd:lttng command-line tool>>
1827is linked with `liblttng-ctl`.
1828
1829You can use `liblttng-ctl` in C or $$C++$$ source code by including its
1830"master" header:
1831
1832[source,c]
1833----
1834#include <lttng/lttng.h>
1835----
1836
1837Some objects are referenced by name (C string), such as tracing
1838sessions, but most of them require to create a handle first using
1839`lttng_create_handle()`.
1840
1841The best available developer documentation for `liblttng-ctl` is, as of
1842LTTng{nbsp}{revision}, its installed header files. Every function and
1843structure is thoroughly documented.
1844
1845
1846[[lttng-ust]]
1847=== User space tracing library
1848
1849[role="img-100"]
1850.The user space tracing library.
1851image::plumbing-liblttng-ust.png[]
1852
1853The _user space tracing library_, `liblttng-ust` (see man:lttng-ust(3)),
1854is the LTTng user space tracer. It receives commands from a
1855<<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>, for example to
1856enable and disable specific instrumentation points, and writes event
1857records to ring buffers shared with a
1858<<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>>.
1859`liblttng-ust` is part of LTTng-UST.
1860
1861Public C header files are installed beside `liblttng-ust` to
1862instrument any <<c-application,C or $$C++$$ application>>.
1863
1864<<lttng-ust-agents,LTTng-UST agents>>, which are regular Java and Python
1865packages, use their own library providing tracepoints which is
1866linked with `liblttng-ust`.
1867
1868An application or library does not have to initialize `liblttng-ust`
1869manually: its constructor does the necessary tasks to properly register
1870to a session daemon. The initialization phase also enables the
1871instrumentation points matching the <<event,event rules>> that you
1872already created.
1873
1874
1875[[lttng-ust-agents]]
1876=== User space tracing agents
1877
1878[role="img-100"]
1879.The user space tracing agents.
1880image::plumbing-lttng-ust-agents.png[]
1881
1882The _LTTng-UST Java and Python agents_ are regular Java and Python
1883packages which add LTTng tracing capabilities to the
1884native logging frameworks. The LTTng-UST agents are part of LTTng-UST.
1885
1886In the case of Java, the
1887https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/logging/package-summary.html[`java.util.logging`
1888core logging facilities] and
1889https://logging.apache.org/log4j/1.2/[Apache log4j 1.2] are supported.
1890Note that Apache Log4{nbsp}2 is not supported.
1891
1892In the case of Python, the standard
1893https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html[`logging`] package
1894is supported. Both Python 2 and Python 3 modules can import the
1895LTTng-UST Python agent package.
1896
1897The applications using the LTTng-UST agents are in the
1898`java.util.logging` (JUL),
1899log4j, and Python <<domain,tracing domains>>.
1900
1901Both agents use the same mechanism to trace the log statements. When an
1902agent is initialized, it creates a log handler that attaches to the root
1903logger. The agent also registers to a <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>.
1904When the application executes a log statement, it is passed to the
1905agent's log handler by the root logger. The agent's log handler calls a
1906native function in a tracepoint provider package shared library linked
1907with <<lttng-ust,`liblttng-ust`>>, passing the formatted log message and
1908other fields, like its logger name and its log level. This native
1909function contains a user space instrumentation point, hence tracing the
1910log statement.
1911
1912The log level condition of an
1913<<event,event rule>> is considered when tracing
1914a Java or a Python application, and it's compatible with the standard
1915JUL, log4j, and Python log levels.
1916
1917
1918[[lttng-modules]]
1919=== LTTng kernel modules
1920
1921[role="img-100"]
1922.The LTTng kernel modules.
1923image::plumbing-lttng-modules.png[]
1924
1925The _LTTng kernel modules_ are a set of Linux kernel modules
1926which implement the kernel tracer of the LTTng project. The LTTng
1927kernel modules are part of LTTng-modules.
1928
1929The LTTng kernel modules include:
1930
1931* A set of _probe_ modules.
1932+
1933Each module attaches to a specific subsystem
1934of the Linux kernel using its tracepoint instrument points. There are
1935also modules to attach to the entry and return points of the Linux
1936system call functions.
1937
1938* _Ring buffer_ modules.
1939+
1940A ring buffer implementation is provided as kernel modules. The LTTng
1941kernel tracer writes to the ring buffer; a
1942<<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>> reads from the ring buffer.
1943
1944* The _LTTng kernel tracer_ module.
1945* The _LTTng logger_ module.
1946+
1947The LTTng logger module implements the special path:{/proc/lttng-logger}
1948file so that any executable can generate LTTng events by opening and
1949writing to this file.
1950+
1951See <<proc-lttng-logger-abi,LTTng logger>>.
1952
1953Generally, you do not have to load the LTTng kernel modules manually
1954(using man:modprobe(8), for example): a root <<lttng-sessiond,session
1955daemon>> loads the necessary modules when starting. If you have extra
1956probe modules, you can specify to load them to the session daemon on
1957the command line.
1958
1959The LTTng kernel modules are installed in
1960+/usr/lib/modules/__release__/extra+ by default, where +__release__+ is
1961the kernel release (see `uname --kernel-release`).
1962
1963
1964[[lttng-sessiond]]
1965=== Session daemon
1966
1967[role="img-100"]
1968.The session daemon.
1969image::plumbing-sessiond.png[]
1970
1971The _session daemon_, man:lttng-sessiond(8), is a daemon responsible for
1972managing tracing sessions and for controlling the various components of
1973LTTng. The session daemon is part of LTTng-tools.
1974
1975The session daemon sends control requests to and receives control
1976responses from:
1977
1978* The <<lttng-ust,user space tracing library>>.
1979+
1980Any instance of the user space tracing library first registers to
1981a session daemon. Then, the session daemon can send requests to
1982this instance, such as:
1983+
1984--
1985** Get the list of tracepoints.
1986** Share an <<event,event rule>> so that the user space tracing library
1987 can enable or disable tracepoints. Amongst the possible conditions
1988 of an event rule is a filter expression which `liblttng-ust` evalutes
1989 when an event occurs.
1990** Share <<channel,channel>> attributes and ring buffer locations.
1991--
1992+
1993The session daemon and the user space tracing library use a Unix
1994domain socket for their communication.
1995
1996* The <<lttng-ust-agents,user space tracing agents>>.
1997+
1998Any instance of a user space tracing agent first registers to
1999a session daemon. Then, the session daemon can send requests to
2000this instance, such as:
2001+
2002--
2003** Get the list of loggers.
2004** Enable or disable a specific logger.
2005--
2006+
2007The session daemon and the user space tracing agent use a TCP connection
2008for their communication.
2009
2010* The <<lttng-modules,LTTng kernel tracer>>.
2011* The <<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>>.
2012+
2013The session daemon sends requests to the consumer daemon to instruct
2014it where to send the trace data streams, amongst other information.
2015
2016* The <<lttng-relayd,relay daemon>>.
2017
2018The session daemon receives commands from the
2019<<liblttng-ctl-lttng,tracing control library>>.
2020
2021The root session daemon loads the appropriate
2022<<lttng-modules,LTTng kernel modules>> on startup. It also spawns
2023a <<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>> as soon as you create
2024an <<event,event rule>>.
2025
2026The session daemon does not send and receive trace data: this is the
2027role of the <<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>> and
2028<<lttng-relayd,relay daemon>>. It does, however, generate the
2029http://diamon.org/ctf/[CTF] metadata stream.
2030
2031Each Unix user can have its own session daemon instance. The
2032tracing sessions managed by different session daemons are completely
2033independent.
2034
2035The root user's session daemon is the only one which is
2036allowed to control the LTTng kernel tracer, and its spawned consumer
2037daemon is the only one which is allowed to consume trace data from the
2038LTTng kernel tracer. Note, however, that any Unix user which is a member
2039of the <<tracing-group,tracing group>> is allowed
2040to create <<channel,channels>> in the
2041Linux kernel <<domain,tracing domain>>, and thus to trace the Linux
2042kernel.
2043
2044The <<lttng-cli,cmd:lttng command-line tool>> automatically starts a
2045session daemon when using its `create` command if none is currently
2046running. You can also start the session daemon manually.
2047
2048
2049[[lttng-consumerd]]
2050=== Consumer daemon
2051
2052[role="img-100"]
2053.The consumer daemon.
2054image::plumbing-consumerd.png[]
2055
a9f3997c 2056The _consumer daemon_, cmd:lttng-consumerd, is a daemon which shares
7adf7ee2
PP
2057ring buffers with user applications or with the LTTng kernel modules to
2058collect trace data and send it to some location (on disk or to a
2059<<lttng-relayd,relay daemon>> over the network). The consumer daemon
2060is part of LTTng-tools.
2061
2062You do not start a consumer daemon manually: a consumer daemon is always
2063spawned by a <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>> as soon as you create an
2064<<event,event rule>>, that is, before you start tracing. When you kill
2065its owner session daemon, the consumer daemon also exits because it is
2066the session daemon's child process. Command-line options of
2067man:lttng-sessiond(8) target the consumer daemon process.
2068
2069There are up to two running consumer daemons per Unix user, whereas only
2070one session daemon can run per user. This is because each process can be
2071either 32-bit or 64-bit: if the target system runs a mixture of 32-bit
2072and 64-bit processes, it is more efficient to have separate
2073corresponding 32-bit and 64-bit consumer daemons. The root user is an
2074exception: it can have up to _three_ running consumer daemons: 32-bit
2075and 64-bit instances for its user applications, and one more
2076reserved for collecting kernel trace data.
2077
2078
2079[[lttng-relayd]]
2080=== Relay daemon
2081
2082[role="img-100"]
2083.The relay daemon.
2084image::plumbing-relayd.png[]
2085
2086The _relay daemon_, man:lttng-relayd(8), is a daemon acting as a bridge
2087between remote session and consumer daemons, local trace files, and a
2088remote live trace viewer. The relay daemon is part of LTTng-tools.
2089
2090The main purpose of the relay daemon is to implement a receiver of
2091<<sending-trace-data-over-the-network,trace data over the network>>.
2092This is useful when the target system does not have much file system
2093space to record trace files locally.
2094
2095The relay daemon is also a server to which a
2096<<lttng-live,live trace viewer>> can
2097connect. The live trace viewer sends requests to the relay daemon to
2098receive trace data as the target system emits events. The
2099communication protocol is named _LTTng live_; it is used over TCP
2100connections.
2101
2102Note that you can start the relay daemon on the target system directly.
2103This is the setup of choice when the use case is to view events as
2104the target system emits them without the need of a remote system.
2105
2106
2107[[instrumenting]]
2108== [[using-lttng]]Instrumentation
2109
2110There are many examples of tracing and monitoring in our everyday life:
2111
2112* You have access to real-time and historical weather reports and
2113 forecasts thanks to weather stations installed around the country.
2114* You know your heart is safe thanks to an electrocardiogram.
2115* You make sure not to drive your car too fast and to have enough fuel
2116 to reach your destination thanks to gauges visible on your dashboard.
2117
2118All the previous examples have something in common: they rely on
2119**instruments**. Without the electrodes attached to the surface of your
2120body's skin, cardiac monitoring is futile.
2121
2122LTTng, as a tracer, is no different from those real life examples. If
2123you're about to trace a software system or, in other words, record its
2124history of execution, you better have **instrumentation points** in the
2125subject you're tracing, that is, the actual software.
2126
2127Various ways were developed to instrument a piece of software for LTTng
2128tracing. The most straightforward one is to manually place
2129instrumentation points, called _tracepoints_, in the software's source
2130code. It is also possible to add instrumentation points dynamically in
2131the Linux kernel <<domain,tracing domain>>.
2132
2133If you're only interested in tracing the Linux kernel, your
2134instrumentation needs are probably already covered by LTTng's built-in
2135<<lttng-modules,Linux kernel tracepoints>>. You may also wish to trace a
2136user application which is already instrumented for LTTng tracing.
2137In such cases, you can skip this whole section and read the topics of
2138the <<controlling-tracing,Tracing control>> section.
2139
2140Many methods are available to instrument a piece of software for LTTng
2141tracing. They are:
2142
2143* <<c-application,User space instrumentation for C and $$C++$$
2144 applications>>.
2145* <<prebuilt-ust-helpers,Prebuilt user space tracing helpers>>.
2146* <<java-application,User space Java agent>>.
2147* <<python-application,User space Python agent>>.
2148* <<proc-lttng-logger-abi,LTTng logger>>.
2149* <<instrumenting-linux-kernel,LTTng kernel tracepoints>>.
2150
2151
2152[[c-application]]
2153=== [[cxx-application]]User space instrumentation for C and $$C++$$ applications
2154
2155The procedure to instrument a C or $$C++$$ user application with
2156the <<lttng-ust,LTTng user space tracing library>>, `liblttng-ust`, is:
2157
2158. <<tracepoint-provider,Create the source files of a tracepoint provider
2159 package>>.
2160. <<probing-the-application-source-code,Add tracepoints to
2161 the application's source code>>.
2162. <<building-tracepoint-providers-and-user-application,Build and link
2163 a tracepoint provider package and the user application>>.
2164
2165If you need quick, man:printf(3)-like instrumentation, you can skip
2166those steps and use <<tracef,`tracef()`>> or <<tracelog,`tracelog()`>>
2167instead.
2168
2169IMPORTANT: You need to <<installing-lttng,install>> LTTng-UST to
2170instrument a user application with `liblttng-ust`.
2171
2172
2173[[tracepoint-provider]]
2174==== Create the source files of a tracepoint provider package
2175
2176A _tracepoint provider_ is a set of compiled functions which provide
2177**tracepoints** to an application, the type of instrumentation point
2178supported by LTTng-UST. Those functions can emit events with
2179user-defined fields and serialize those events as event records to one
2180or more LTTng-UST <<channel,channel>> sub-buffers. The `tracepoint()`
2181macro, which you <<probing-the-application-source-code,insert in a user
2182application's source code>>, calls those functions.
2183
2184A _tracepoint provider package_ is an object file (`.o`) or a shared
2185library (`.so`) which contains one or more tracepoint providers.
2186Its source files are:
2187
2188* One or more <<tpp-header,tracepoint provider header>> (`.h`).
2189* A <<tpp-source,tracepoint provider package source>> (`.c`).
2190
2191A tracepoint provider package is dynamically linked with `liblttng-ust`,
2192the LTTng user space tracer, at run time.
2193
2194[role="img-100"]
2195.User application linked with `liblttng-ust` and containing a tracepoint provider.
2196image::ust-app.png[]
2197
2198NOTE: If you need quick, man:printf(3)-like instrumentation, you can
2199skip creating and using a tracepoint provider and use
2200<<tracef,`tracef()`>> or <<tracelog,`tracelog()`>> instead.
2201
2202
2203[[tpp-header]]
2204===== Create a tracepoint provider header file template
2205
2206A _tracepoint provider header file_ contains the tracepoint
2207definitions of a tracepoint provider.
2208
2209To create a tracepoint provider header file:
2210
2211. Start from this template:
2212+
2213--
2214[source,c]
2215.Tracepoint provider header file template (`.h` file extension).
2216----
2217#undef TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER
2218#define TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER provider_name
2219
2220#undef TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE
2221#define TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE "./tp.h"
2222
2223#if !defined(_TP_H) || defined(TRACEPOINT_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
2224#define _TP_H
2225
2226#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>
2227
2228/*
2229 * Use TRACEPOINT_EVENT(), TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(),
2230 * TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(), and TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL() here.
2231 */
2232
2233#endif /* _TP_H */
2234
2235#include <lttng/tracepoint-event.h>
2236----
2237--
2238
2239. Replace:
2240+
2241* `provider_name` with the name of your tracepoint provider.
2242* `"tp.h"` with the name of your tracepoint provider header file.
2243
2244. Below the `#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>` line, put your
2245 <<defining-tracepoints,tracepoint definitions>>.
2246
2247Your tracepoint provider name must be unique amongst all the possible
2248tracepoint provider names used on the same target system. We
2249suggest to include the name of your project or company in the name,
2250for example, `org_lttng_my_project_tpp`.
2251
2252TIP: [[lttng-gen-tp]]You can use the man:lttng-gen-tp(1) tool to create
2253this boilerplate for you. When using cmd:lttng-gen-tp, all you need to
2254write are the <<defining-tracepoints,tracepoint definitions>>.
2255
2256
2257[[defining-tracepoints]]
2258===== Create a tracepoint definition
2259
2260A _tracepoint definition_ defines, for a given tracepoint:
2261
2262* Its **input arguments**. They are the macro parameters that the
2263 `tracepoint()` macro accepts for this particular tracepoint
2264 in the user application's source code.
2265* Its **output event fields**. They are the sources of event fields
2266 that form the payload of any event that the execution of the
2267 `tracepoint()` macro emits for this particular tracepoint.
2268
2269You can create a tracepoint definition by using the
2270`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro below the `#include <lttng/tracepoint.h>`
2271line in the
2272<<tpp-header,tracepoint provider header file template>>.
2273
2274The syntax of the `TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro is:
2275
2276[source,c]
2277.`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro syntax.
2278----
2279TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2280 /* Tracepoint provider name */
2281 provider_name,
2282
2283 /* Tracepoint name */
2284 tracepoint_name,
2285
2286 /* Input arguments */
2287 TP_ARGS(
2288 arguments
2289 ),
2290
2291 /* Output event fields */
2292 TP_FIELDS(
2293 fields
2294 )
2295)
2296----
2297
2298Replace:
2299
2300* `provider_name` with your tracepoint provider name.
2301* `tracepoint_name` with your tracepoint name.
2302* `arguments` with the <<tpp-def-input-args,input arguments>>.
2303* `fields` with the <<tpp-def-output-fields,output event field>>
2304 definitions.
2305
2306This tracepoint emits events named `provider_name:tracepoint_name`.
2307
2308[IMPORTANT]
2309.Event name's length limitation
2310====
2311The concatenation of the tracepoint provider name and the
2312tracepoint name must not exceed **254 characters**. If it does, the
2313instrumented application compiles and runs, but LTTng throws multiple
2314warnings and you could experience serious issues.
2315====
2316
2317[[tpp-def-input-args]]The syntax of the `TP_ARGS()` macro is:
2318
2319[source,c]
2320.`TP_ARGS()` macro syntax.
2321----
2322TP_ARGS(
2323 type, arg_name
2324)
2325----
2326
2327Replace:
2328
2329* `type` with the C type of the argument.
2330* `arg_name` with the argument name.
2331
2332You can repeat `type` and `arg_name` up to 10 times to have
2333more than one argument.
2334
2335.`TP_ARGS()` usage with three arguments.
2336====
2337[source,c]
2338----
2339TP_ARGS(
2340 int, count,
2341 float, ratio,
2342 const char*, query
2343)
2344----
2345====
2346
2347The `TP_ARGS()` and `TP_ARGS(void)` forms are valid to create a
2348tracepoint definition with no input arguments.
2349
2350[[tpp-def-output-fields]]The `TP_FIELDS()` macro contains a list of
2351`ctf_*()` macros. Each `ctf_*()` macro defines one event field. See
2352man:lttng-ust(3) for a complete description of the available `ctf_*()`
2353macros. A `ctf_*()` macro specifies the type, size, and byte order of
2354one event field.
2355
2356Each `ctf_*()` macro takes an _argument expression_ parameter. This is a
2357C expression that the tracer evalutes at the `tracepoint()` macro site
2358in the application's source code. This expression provides a field's
2359source of data. The argument expression can include input argument names
2360listed in the `TP_ARGS()` macro.
2361
2362Each `ctf_*()` macro also takes a _field name_ parameter. Field names
2363must be unique within a given tracepoint definition.
2364
2365Here's a complete tracepoint definition example:
2366
2367.Tracepoint definition.
2368====
2369The following tracepoint definition defines a tracepoint which takes
2370three input arguments and has four output event fields.
2371
2372[source,c]
2373----
2374#include "my-custom-structure.h"
2375
2376TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2377 my_provider,
2378 my_tracepoint,
2379 TP_ARGS(
2380 const struct my_custom_structure*, my_custom_structure,
2381 float, ratio,
2382 const char*, query
2383 ),
2384 TP_FIELDS(
2385 ctf_string(query_field, query)
2386 ctf_float(double, ratio_field, ratio)
2387 ctf_integer(int, recv_size, my_custom_structure->recv_size)
2388 ctf_integer(int, send_size, my_custom_structure->send_size)
2389 )
2390)
2391----
2392
2393You can refer to this tracepoint definition with the `tracepoint()`
2394macro in your application's source code like this:
2395
2396[source,c]
2397----
2398tracepoint(my_provider, my_tracepoint,
2399 my_structure, some_ratio, the_query);
2400----
2401====
2402
2403NOTE: The LTTng tracer only evaluates tracepoint arguments at run time
2404if they satisfy an enabled <<event,event rule>>.
2405
2406
2407[[using-tracepoint-classes]]
2408===== Use a tracepoint class
2409
2410A _tracepoint class_ is a class of tracepoints which share the same
2411output event field definitions. A _tracepoint instance_ is one
2412instance of such a defined tracepoint class, with its own tracepoint
2413name.
2414
2415The <<defining-tracepoints,`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` macro>> is actually a
2416shorthand which defines both a tracepoint class and a tracepoint
2417instance at the same time.
2418
2419When you build a tracepoint provider package, the C or $$C++$$ compiler
2420creates one serialization function for each **tracepoint class**. A
2421serialization function is responsible for serializing the event fields
2422of a tracepoint to a sub-buffer when tracing.
2423
2424For various performance reasons, when your situation requires multiple
2425tracepoint definitions with different names, but with the same event
2426fields, we recommend that you manually create a tracepoint class
2427and instantiate as many tracepoint instances as needed. One positive
2428effect of such a design, amongst other advantages, is that all
2429tracepoint instances of the same tracepoint class reuse the same
2430serialization function, thus reducing
2431https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cache_pollution[cache pollution].
2432
2433.Use a tracepoint class and tracepoint instances.
2434====
2435Consider the following three tracepoint definitions:
2436
2437[source,c]
2438----
2439TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2440 my_app,
2441 get_account,
2442 TP_ARGS(
2443 int, userid,
2444 size_t, len
2445 ),
2446 TP_FIELDS(
2447 ctf_integer(int, userid, userid)
2448 ctf_integer(size_t, len, len)
2449 )
2450)
2451
2452TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2453 my_app,
2454 get_settings,
2455 TP_ARGS(
2456 int, userid,
2457 size_t, len
2458 ),
2459 TP_FIELDS(
2460 ctf_integer(int, userid, userid)
2461 ctf_integer(size_t, len, len)
2462 )
2463)
2464
2465TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2466 my_app,
2467 get_transaction,
2468 TP_ARGS(
2469 int, userid,
2470 size_t, len
2471 ),
2472 TP_FIELDS(
2473 ctf_integer(int, userid, userid)
2474 ctf_integer(size_t, len, len)
2475 )
2476)
2477----
2478
2479In this case, we create three tracepoint classes, with one implicit
2480tracepoint instance for each of them: `get_account`, `get_settings`, and
2481`get_transaction`. However, they all share the same event field names
2482and types. Hence three identical, yet independent serialization
2483functions are created when you build the tracepoint provider package.
2484
2485A better design choice is to define a single tracepoint class and three
2486tracepoint instances:
2487
2488[source,c]
2489----
2490/* The tracepoint class */
2491TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(
2492 /* Tracepoint provider name */
2493 my_app,
2494
2495 /* Tracepoint class name */
2496 my_class,
2497
2498 /* Input arguments */
2499 TP_ARGS(
2500 int, userid,
2501 size_t, len
2502 ),
2503
2504 /* Output event fields */
2505 TP_FIELDS(
2506 ctf_integer(int, userid, userid)
2507 ctf_integer(size_t, len, len)
2508 )
2509)
2510
2511/* The tracepoint instances */
2512TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
2513 /* Tracepoint provider name */
2514 my_app,
2515
2516 /* Tracepoint class name */
2517 my_class,
2518
2519 /* Tracepoint name */
2520 get_account,
2521
2522 /* Input arguments */
2523 TP_ARGS(
2524 int, userid,
2525 size_t, len
2526 )
2527)
2528TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
2529 my_app,
2530 my_class,
2531 get_settings,
2532 TP_ARGS(
2533 int, userid,
2534 size_t, len
2535 )
2536)
2537TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
2538 my_app,
2539 my_class,
2540 get_transaction,
2541 TP_ARGS(
2542 int, userid,
2543 size_t, len
2544 )
2545)
2546----
2547====
2548
2549
2550[[assigning-log-levels]]
2551===== Assign a log level to a tracepoint definition
2552
2553You can assign an optional _log level_ to a
2554<<defining-tracepoints,tracepoint definition>>.
2555
2556Assigning different levels of severity to tracepoint definitions can
2557be useful: when you <<enabling-disabling-events,create an event rule>>,
2558you can target tracepoints having a log level as severe as a specific
2559value.
2560
2561The concept of LTTng-UST log levels is similar to the levels found
2562in typical logging frameworks:
2563
2564* In a logging framework, the log level is given by the function
2565 or method name you use at the log statement site: `debug()`,
2566 `info()`, `warn()`, `error()`, and so on.
2567* In LTTng-UST, you statically assign the log level to a tracepoint
2568 definition; any `tracepoint()` macro invocation which refers to
2569 this definition has this log level.
2570
2571You can assign a log level to a tracepoint definition with the
2572`TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL()` macro. You must use this macro _after_ the
2573<<defining-tracepoints,`TRACEPOINT_EVENT()`>> or
2574<<using-tracepoint-classes,`TRACEPOINT_INSTANCE()`>> macro for a given
2575tracepoint.
2576
2577The syntax of the `TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL()` macro is:
2578
2579[source,c]
2580.`TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL()` macro syntax.
2581----
2582TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(provider_name, tracepoint_name, log_level)
2583----
2584
2585Replace:
2586
2587* `provider_name` with the tracepoint provider name.
2588* `tracepoint_name` with the tracepoint name.
2589* `log_level` with the log level to assign to the tracepoint
2590 definition named `tracepoint_name` in the `provider_name`
2591 tracepoint provider.
2592+
2593See man:lttng-ust(3) for a list of available log level names.
2594
2595.Assign the `TRACE_DEBUG_UNIT` log level to a tracepoint definition.
2596====
2597[source,c]
2598----
2599/* Tracepoint definition */
2600TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2601 my_app,
2602 get_transaction,
2603 TP_ARGS(
2604 int, userid,
2605 size_t, len
2606 ),
2607 TP_FIELDS(
2608 ctf_integer(int, userid, userid)
2609 ctf_integer(size_t, len, len)
2610 )
2611)
2612
2613/* Log level assignment */
2614TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(my_app, get_transaction, TRACE_DEBUG_UNIT)
2615----
2616====
2617
2618
2619[[tpp-source]]
2620===== Create a tracepoint provider package source file
2621
2622A _tracepoint provider package source file_ is a C source file which
2623includes a <<tpp-header,tracepoint provider header file>> to expand its
2624macros into event serialization and other functions.
2625
2626You can always use the following tracepoint provider package source
2627file template:
2628
2629[source,c]
2630.Tracepoint provider package source file template.
2631----
2632#define TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES
2633
2634#include "tp.h"
2635----
2636
2637Replace `tp.h` with the name of your <<tpp-header,tracepoint provider
2638header file>> name. You may also include more than one tracepoint
2639provider header file here to create a tracepoint provider package
2640holding more than one tracepoint providers.
2641
2642
2643[[probing-the-application-source-code]]
2644==== Add tracepoints to an application's source code
2645
2646Once you <<tpp-header,create a tracepoint provider header file>>, you
2647can use the `tracepoint()` macro in your application's
2648source code to insert the tracepoints that this header
30240715 2649<<defining-tracepoints,defines>>.
7adf7ee2
PP
2650
2651The `tracepoint()` macro takes at least two parameters: the tracepoint
2652provider name and the tracepoint name. The corresponding tracepoint
2653definition defines the other parameters.
2654
2655.`tracepoint()` usage.
2656====
2657The following <<defining-tracepoints,tracepoint definition>> defines a
2658tracepoint which takes two input arguments and has two output event
2659fields.
2660
2661[source,c]
2662.Tracepoint provider header file.
2663----
2664#include "my-custom-structure.h"
2665
2666TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2667 my_provider,
2668 my_tracepoint,
2669 TP_ARGS(
2670 int, argc,
2671 const char*, cmd_name
2672 ),
2673 TP_FIELDS(
2674 ctf_string(cmd_name, cmd_name)
2675 ctf_integer(int, number_of_args, argc)
2676 )
2677)
2678----
2679
2680You can refer to this tracepoint definition with the `tracepoint()`
2681macro in your application's source code like this:
2682
2683[source,c]
2684.Application's source file.
2685----
2686#include "tp.h"
2687
2688int main(int argc, char* argv[])
2689{
2690 tracepoint(my_provider, my_tracepoint, argc, argv[0]);
2691
2692 return 0;
2693}
2694----
2695
2696Note how the application's source code includes
2697the tracepoint provider header file containing the tracepoint
2698definitions to use, path:{tp.h}.
2699====
2700
2701.`tracepoint()` usage with a complex tracepoint definition.
2702====
2703Consider this complex tracepoint definition, where multiple event
2704fields refer to the same input arguments in their argument expression
2705parameter:
2706
2707[source,c]
2708.Tracepoint provider header file.
2709----
2710/* For `struct stat` */
2711#include <sys/types.h>
2712#include <sys/stat.h>
2713#include <unistd.h>
2714
2715TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
2716 my_provider,
2717 my_tracepoint,
2718 TP_ARGS(
2719 int, my_int_arg,
2720 char*, my_str_arg,
2721 struct stat*, st
2722 ),
2723 TP_FIELDS(
2724 ctf_integer(int, my_constant_field, 23 + 17)
2725 ctf_integer(int, my_int_arg_field, my_int_arg)
2726 ctf_integer(int, my_int_arg_field2, my_int_arg * my_int_arg)
2727 ctf_integer(int, sum4_field, my_str_arg[0] + my_str_arg[1] +
2728 my_str_arg[2] + my_str_arg[3])
2729 ctf_string(my_str_arg_field, my_str_arg)
2730 ctf_integer_hex(off_t, size_field, st->st_size)
2731 ctf_float(double, size_dbl_field, (double) st->st_size)
2732 ctf_sequence_text(char, half_my_str_arg_field, my_str_arg,
2733 size_t, strlen(my_str_arg) / 2)
2734 )
2735)
2736----
2737
2738You can refer to this tracepoint definition with the `tracepoint()`
2739macro in your application's source code like this:
2740
2741[source,c]
2742.Application's source file.
2743----
2744#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
2745#include "tp.h"
2746
2747int main(void)
2748{
2749 struct stat s;
2750
2751 stat("/etc/fstab", &s);
2752 tracepoint(my_provider, my_tracepoint, 23, "Hello, World!", &s);
2753
2754 return 0;
2755}
2756----
2757
2758If you look at the event record that LTTng writes when tracing this
2759program, assuming the file size of path:{/etc/fstab} is 301{nbsp}bytes,
2760it should look like this:
2761
2762.Event record fields
2763|====
2764|Field's name |Field's value
2765|`my_constant_field` |40
2766|`my_int_arg_field` |23
2767|`my_int_arg_field2` |529
2768|`sum4_field` |389
2769|`my_str_arg_field` |`Hello, World!`
2770|`size_field` |0x12d
2771|`size_dbl_field` |301.0
2772|`half_my_str_arg_field` |`Hello,`
2773|====
2774====
2775
2776Sometimes, the arguments you pass to `tracepoint()` are expensive to
2777compute--they use the call stack, for example. To avoid this
2778computation when the tracepoint is disabled, you can use the
2779`tracepoint_enabled()` and `do_tracepoint()` macros.
2780
2781The syntax of the `tracepoint_enabled()` and `do_tracepoint()` macros
2782is:
2783
2784[source,c]
2785.`tracepoint_enabled()` and `do_tracepoint()` macros syntax.
2786----
2787tracepoint_enabled(provider_name, tracepoint_name)
2788do_tracepoint(provider_name, tracepoint_name, ...)
2789----
2790
2791Replace:
2792
2793* `provider_name` with the tracepoint provider name.
2794* `tracepoint_name` with the tracepoint name.
2795
2796`tracepoint_enabled()` returns a non-zero value if the tracepoint named
2797`tracepoint_name` from the provider named `provider_name` is enabled
2798**at run time**.
2799
2800`do_tracepoint()` is like `tracepoint()`, except that it doesn't check
2801if the tracepoint is enabled. Using `tracepoint()` with
2802`tracepoint_enabled()` is dangerous since `tracepoint()` also contains
2803the `tracepoint_enabled()` check, thus a race condition is
2804possible in this situation:
2805
2806[source,c]
2807.Possible race condition when using `tracepoint_enabled()` with `tracepoint()`.
2808----
2809if (tracepoint_enabled(my_provider, my_tracepoint)) {
2810 stuff = prepare_stuff();
2811}
2812
2813tracepoint(my_provider, my_tracepoint, stuff);
2814----
2815
2816If the tracepoint is enabled after the condition, then `stuff` is not
2817prepared: the emitted event will either contain wrong data, or the whole
2818application could crash (segmentation fault, for example).
2819
2820NOTE: Neither `tracepoint_enabled()` nor `do_tracepoint()` have an
2821`STAP_PROBEV()` call. If you need it, you must emit
2822this call yourself.
2823
2824
2825[[building-tracepoint-providers-and-user-application]]
2826==== Build and link a tracepoint provider package and an application
2827
2828Once you have one or more <<tpp-header,tracepoint provider header
2829files>> and a <<tpp-source,tracepoint provider package source file>>,
2830you can create the tracepoint provider package by compiling its source
2831file. From here, multiple build and run scenarios are possible. The
2832following table shows common application and library configurations
2833along with the required command lines to achieve them.
2834
2835In the following diagrams, we use the following file names:
2836
2837`app`::
2838 Executable application.
2839
2840`app.o`::
2841 Application's object file.
2842
2843`tpp.o`::
2844 Tracepoint provider package object file.
2845
2846`tpp.a`::
2847 Tracepoint provider package archive file.
2848
2849`libtpp.so`::
2850 Tracepoint provider package shared object file.
2851
2852`emon.o`::
2853 User library object file.
2854
2855`libemon.so`::
2856 User library shared object file.
2857
30240715
PP
2858We use the following symbols in the diagrams of table below:
2859
2860[role="img-100"]
2861.Symbols used in the build scenario diagrams.
2862image::ust-sit-symbols.png[]
7adf7ee2
PP
2863
2864We assume that path:{.} is part of the env:LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment
2865variable in the following instructions.
2866
2867[role="growable ust-scenarios",cols="asciidoc,asciidoc"]
2868.Common tracepoint provider package scenarios.
2869|====
2870|Scenario |Instructions
2871
2872|
2873The instrumented application is statically linked with
2874the tracepoint provider package object.
2875
2876image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-tp-o+app-instrumented.png[]
2877
2878|
2879include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-o.txt[]
2880
2881To build the instrumented application:
2882
2883. In path:{app.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the following line:
2884+
2885--
2886[source,c]
2887----
2888#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
2889----
2890--
2891
2892. Compile the application source file:
2893+
2894--
2895[role="term"]
2896----
ded02698 2897$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
2898----
2899--
2900
2901. Build the application:
2902+
2903--
2904[role="term"]
2905----
ded02698 2906$ gcc -o app app.o tpp.o -llttng-ust -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
2907----
2908--
2909
2910To run the instrumented application:
2911
2912* Start the application:
2913+
2914--
2915[role="term"]
2916----
ded02698 2917$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
2918----
2919--
2920
2921|
2922The instrumented application is statically linked with the
2923tracepoint provider package archive file.
2924
2925image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-tp-a+app-instrumented.png[]
2926
2927|
2928To create the tracepoint provider package archive file:
2929
2930. Compile the <<tpp-source,tracepoint provider package source file>>:
2931+
2932--
2933[role="term"]
2934----
ded02698 2935$ gcc -I. -c tpp.c
7adf7ee2
PP
2936----
2937--
2938
2939. Create the tracepoint provider package archive file:
2940+
2941--
2942[role="term"]
2943----
ded02698 2944$ ar rcs tpp.a tpp.o
7adf7ee2
PP
2945----
2946--
2947
2948To build the instrumented application:
2949
2950. In path:{app.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the following line:
2951+
2952--
2953[source,c]
2954----
2955#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
2956----
2957--
2958
2959. Compile the application source file:
2960+
2961--
2962[role="term"]
2963----
ded02698 2964$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
2965----
2966--
2967
2968. Build the application:
2969+
2970--
2971[role="term"]
2972----
ded02698 2973$ gcc -o app app.o tpp.a -llttng-ust -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
2974----
2975--
2976
2977To run the instrumented application:
2978
2979* Start the application:
2980+
2981--
2982[role="term"]
2983----
ded02698 2984$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
2985----
2986--
2987
2988|
2989The instrumented application is linked with the tracepoint provider
2990package shared object.
2991
2992image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-tp-so+app-instrumented.png[]
2993
2994|
2995include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
2996
2997To build the instrumented application:
2998
2999. In path:{app.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the following line:
3000+
3001--
3002[source,c]
3003----
3004#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3005----
3006--
3007
3008. Compile the application source file:
3009+
3010--
3011[role="term"]
3012----
ded02698 3013$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3014----
3015--
3016
3017. Build the application:
3018+
3019--
3020[role="term"]
3021----
ded02698 3022$ gcc -o app app.o -ldl -L. -ltpp
7adf7ee2
PP
3023----
3024--
3025
3026To run the instrumented application:
3027
3028* Start the application:
3029+
3030--
3031[role="term"]
3032----
ded02698 3033$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3034----
3035--
3036
3037|
3038The tracepoint provider package shared object is preloaded before the
3039instrumented application starts.
3040
3041image::ust-sit+tp-so-preloaded+app-instrumented.png[]
3042
3043|
3044include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3045
3046To build the instrumented application:
3047
3048. In path:{app.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
3049 following lines:
3050+
3051--
3052[source,c]
3053----
3054#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3055#define TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE
3056----
3057--
3058
3059. Compile the application source file:
3060+
3061--
3062[role="term"]
3063----
ded02698 3064$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3065----
3066--
3067
3068. Build the application:
3069+
3070--
3071[role="term"]
3072----
ded02698 3073$ gcc -o app app.o -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
3074----
3075--
3076
3077To run the instrumented application with tracing support:
3078
3079* Preload the tracepoint provider package shared object and
3080 start the application:
3081+
3082--
3083[role="term"]
3084----
ded02698 3085$ LD_PRELOAD=./libtpp.so ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3086----
3087--
3088
3089To run the instrumented application without tracing support:
3090
3091* Start the application:
3092+
3093--
3094[role="term"]
3095----
ded02698 3096$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3097----
3098--
3099
3100|
3101The instrumented application dynamically loads the tracepoint provider
3102package shared object.
3103
3104See the <<dlclose-warning,warning about `dlclose()`>>.
3105
3106image::ust-sit+app-dlopens-tp-so+app-instrumented.png[]
3107
3108|
3109include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3110
3111To build the instrumented application:
3112
3113. In path:{app.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
3114 following lines:
3115+
3116--
3117[source,c]
3118----
3119#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3120#define TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE
3121----
3122--
3123
3124. Compile the application source file:
3125+
3126--
3127[role="term"]
3128----
ded02698 3129$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3130----
3131--
3132
3133. Build the application:
3134+
3135--
3136[role="term"]
3137----
ded02698 3138$ gcc -o app app.o -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
3139----
3140--
3141
3142To run the instrumented application:
3143
3144* Start the application:
3145+
3146--
3147[role="term"]
3148----
ded02698 3149$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3150----
3151--
3152
3153|
3154The application is linked with the instrumented user library.
3155
3156The instrumented user library is statically linked with the tracepoint
3157provider package object file.
3158
3159image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-lib+lib-linked-with-tp-o+lib-instrumented.png[]
3160
3161|
3162include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-o-fpic.txt[]
3163
3164To build the instrumented user library:
3165
3166. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
3167 following line:
3168+
3169--
3170[source,c]
3171----
3172#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3173----
3174--
3175
3176. Compile the user library source file:
3177+
3178--
3179[role="term"]
3180----
ded02698 3181$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3182----
3183--
3184
3185. Build the user library shared object:
3186+
3187--
3188[role="term"]
3189----
ded02698 3190$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o tpp.o -llttng-ust -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
3191----
3192--
3193
3194To build the application:
3195
3196. Compile the application source file:
3197+
3198--
3199[role="term"]
3200----
ded02698 3201$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3202----
3203--
3204
3205. Build the application:
3206+
3207--
3208[role="term"]
3209----
ded02698 3210$ gcc -o app app.o -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3211----
3212--
3213
3214To run the application:
3215
3216* Start the application:
3217+
3218--
3219[role="term"]
3220----
ded02698 3221$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3222----
3223--
3224
3225|
3226The application is linked with the instrumented user library.
3227
3228The instrumented user library is linked with the tracepoint provider
3229package shared object.
3230
3231image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-lib+lib-linked-with-tp-so+lib-instrumented.png[]
3232
3233|
3234include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3235
3236To build the instrumented user library:
3237
3238. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
3239 following line:
3240+
3241--
3242[source,c]
3243----
3244#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3245----
3246--
3247
3248. Compile the user library source file:
3249+
3250--
3251[role="term"]
3252----
ded02698 3253$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3254----
3255--
3256
3257. Build the user library shared object:
3258+
3259--
3260[role="term"]
3261----
ded02698 3262$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o -ldl -L. -ltpp
7adf7ee2
PP
3263----
3264--
3265
3266To build the application:
3267
3268. Compile the application source file:
3269+
3270--
3271[role="term"]
3272----
ded02698 3273$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3274----
3275--
3276
3277. Build the application:
3278+
3279--
3280[role="term"]
3281----
ded02698 3282$ gcc -o app app.o -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3283----
3284--
3285
3286To run the application:
3287
3288* Start the application:
3289+
3290--
3291[role="term"]
3292----
ded02698 3293$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3294----
3295--
3296
3297|
3298The tracepoint provider package shared object is preloaded before the
3299application starts.
3300
3301The application is linked with the instrumented user library.
3302
3303image::ust-sit+tp-so-preloaded+app-linked-with-lib+lib-instrumented.png[]
3304
3305|
3306include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3307
3308To build the instrumented user library:
3309
3310. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
1e0fb3c5 3311 following lines:
7adf7ee2
PP
3312+
3313--
3314[source,c]
3315----
3316#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3317#define TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE
3318----
3319--
3320
3321. Compile the user library source file:
3322+
3323--
3324[role="term"]
3325----
ded02698 3326$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3327----
3328--
3329
3330. Build the user library shared object:
3331+
3332--
3333[role="term"]
3334----
ded02698 3335$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
3336----
3337--
3338
3339To build the application:
3340
3341. Compile the application source file:
3342+
3343--
3344[role="term"]
3345----
ded02698 3346$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3347----
3348--
3349
3350. Build the application:
3351+
3352--
3353[role="term"]
3354----
ded02698 3355$ gcc -o app app.o -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3356----
3357--
3358
3359To run the application with tracing support:
3360
3361* Preload the tracepoint provider package shared object and
3362 start the application:
3363+
3364--
3365[role="term"]
3366----
ded02698 3367$ LD_PRELOAD=./libtpp.so ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3368----
3369--
3370
3371To run the application without tracing support:
3372
3373* Start the application:
3374+
3375--
3376[role="term"]
3377----
ded02698 3378$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3379----
3380--
3381
3382|
3383The application is linked with the instrumented user library.
3384
3385The instrumented user library dynamically loads the tracepoint provider
3386package shared object.
3387
3388See the <<dlclose-warning,warning about `dlclose()`>>.
3389
3390image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-lib+lib-dlopens-tp-so+lib-instrumented.png[]
3391
3392|
3393include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3394
3395To build the instrumented user library:
3396
3397. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
1e0fb3c5 3398 following lines:
7adf7ee2
PP
3399+
3400--
3401[source,c]
3402----
3403#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3404#define TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE
3405----
3406--
3407
3408. Compile the user library source file:
3409+
3410--
3411[role="term"]
3412----
ded02698 3413$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3414----
3415--
3416
3417. Build the user library shared object:
3418+
3419--
3420[role="term"]
3421----
ded02698 3422$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
3423----
3424--
3425
3426To build the application:
3427
3428. Compile the application source file:
3429+
3430--
3431[role="term"]
3432----
ded02698 3433$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3434----
3435--
3436
3437. Build the application:
3438+
3439--
3440[role="term"]
3441----
ded02698 3442$ gcc -o app app.o -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3443----
3444--
3445
3446To run the application:
3447
3448* Start the application:
3449+
3450--
3451[role="term"]
3452----
ded02698 3453$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3454----
3455--
3456
3457|
3458The application dynamically loads the instrumented user library.
3459
3460The instrumented user library is linked with the tracepoint provider
3461package shared object.
3462
3463See the <<dlclose-warning,warning about `dlclose()`>>.
3464
3465image::ust-sit+app-dlopens-lib+lib-linked-with-tp-so+lib-instrumented.png[]
3466
3467|
3468include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3469
3470To build the instrumented user library:
3471
3472. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
3473 following line:
3474+
3475--
3476[source,c]
3477----
3478#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3479----
3480--
3481
3482. Compile the user library source file:
3483+
3484--
3485[role="term"]
3486----
ded02698 3487$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3488----
3489--
3490
3491. Build the user library shared object:
3492+
3493--
3494[role="term"]
3495----
ded02698 3496$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o -ldl -L. -ltpp
7adf7ee2
PP
3497----
3498--
3499
3500To build the application:
3501
3502. Compile the application source file:
3503+
3504--
3505[role="term"]
3506----
ded02698 3507$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3508----
3509--
3510
3511. Build the application:
3512+
3513--
3514[role="term"]
3515----
ded02698 3516$ gcc -o app app.o -ldl -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3517----
3518--
3519
3520To run the application:
3521
3522* Start the application:
3523+
3524--
3525[role="term"]
3526----
ded02698 3527$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3528----
3529--
3530
3531|
3532The application dynamically loads the instrumented user library.
3533
3534The instrumented user library dynamically loads the tracepoint provider
3535package shared object.
3536
3537See the <<dlclose-warning,warning about `dlclose()`>>.
3538
3539image::ust-sit+app-dlopens-lib+lib-dlopens-tp-so+lib-instrumented.png[]
3540
3541|
3542include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3543
3544To build the instrumented user library:
3545
3546. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
1e0fb3c5 3547 following lines:
7adf7ee2
PP
3548+
3549--
3550[source,c]
3551----
3552#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3553#define TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE
3554----
3555--
3556
3557. Compile the user library source file:
3558+
3559--
3560[role="term"]
3561----
ded02698 3562$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3563----
3564--
3565
3566. Build the user library shared object:
3567+
3568--
3569[role="term"]
3570----
ded02698 3571$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
3572----
3573--
3574
3575To build the application:
3576
3577. Compile the application source file:
3578+
3579--
3580[role="term"]
3581----
ded02698 3582$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3583----
3584--
3585
3586. Build the application:
3587+
3588--
3589[role="term"]
3590----
ded02698 3591$ gcc -o app app.o -ldl -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3592----
3593--
3594
3595To run the application:
3596
3597* Start the application:
3598+
3599--
3600[role="term"]
3601----
ded02698 3602$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3603----
3604--
3605
3606|
3607The tracepoint provider package shared object is preloaded before the
3608application starts.
3609
3610The application dynamically loads the instrumented user library.
3611
3612image::ust-sit+tp-so-preloaded+app-dlopens-lib+lib-instrumented.png[]
3613
3614|
3615include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-so.txt[]
3616
3617To build the instrumented user library:
3618
3619. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
1e0fb3c5 3620 following lines:
7adf7ee2
PP
3621+
3622--
3623[source,c]
3624----
3625#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3626#define TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE
3627----
3628--
3629
3630. Compile the user library source file:
3631+
3632--
3633[role="term"]
3634----
ded02698 3635$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3636----
3637--
3638
3639. Build the user library shared object:
3640+
3641--
3642[role="term"]
3643----
ded02698 3644$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o -ldl
7adf7ee2
PP
3645----
3646--
3647
3648To build the application:
3649
3650. Compile the application source file:
3651+
3652--
3653[role="term"]
3654----
ded02698 3655$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3656----
3657--
3658
3659. Build the application:
3660+
3661--
3662[role="term"]
3663----
ded02698 3664$ gcc -o app app.o -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3665----
3666--
3667
3668To run the application with tracing support:
3669
3670* Preload the tracepoint provider package shared object and
3671 start the application:
3672+
3673--
3674[role="term"]
3675----
ded02698 3676$ LD_PRELOAD=./libtpp.so ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3677----
3678--
3679
3680To run the application without tracing support:
3681
3682* Start the application:
3683+
3684--
3685[role="term"]
3686----
ded02698 3687$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3688----
3689--
3690
3691|
3692The application is statically linked with the tracepoint provider
3693package object file.
3694
3695The application is linked with the instrumented user library.
3696
3697image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-tp-o+app-linked-with-lib+lib-instrumented.png[]
3698
3699|
3700include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-o.txt[]
3701
3702To build the instrumented user library:
3703
3704. In path:{emon.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the
3705 following line:
3706+
3707--
3708[source,c]
3709----
3710#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3711----
3712--
3713
3714. Compile the user library source file:
3715+
3716--
3717[role="term"]
3718----
ded02698 3719$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3720----
3721--
3722
3723. Build the user library shared object:
3724+
3725--
3726[role="term"]
3727----
ded02698 3728$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o
7adf7ee2
PP
3729----
3730--
3731
3732To build the application:
3733
3734. Compile the application source file:
3735+
3736--
3737[role="term"]
3738----
ded02698 3739$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3740----
3741--
3742
3743. Build the application:
3744+
3745--
3746[role="term"]
3747----
ded02698 3748$ gcc -o app app.o tpp.o -llttng-ust -ldl -L. -lemon
7adf7ee2
PP
3749----
3750--
3751
3752To run the instrumented application:
3753
3754* Start the application:
3755+
3756--
3757[role="term"]
3758----
ded02698 3759$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3760----
3761--
3762
3763|
3764The application is statically linked with the tracepoint provider
3765package object file.
3766
3767The application dynamically loads the instrumented user library.
3768
3769image::ust-sit+app-linked-with-tp-o+app-dlopens-lib+lib-instrumented.png[]
3770
3771|
3772include::../common/ust-sit-step-tp-o.txt[]
3773
3774To build the application:
3775
3776. In path:{app.c}, before including path:{tpp.h}, add the following line:
3777+
3778--
3779[source,c]
3780----
3781#define TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
3782----
3783--
3784
3785. Compile the application source file:
3786+
3787--
3788[role="term"]
3789----
ded02698 3790$ gcc -c app.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3791----
3792--
3793
3794. Build the application:
3795+
3796--
3797[role="term"]
3798----
ded02698 3799$ gcc -Wl,--export-dynamic -o app app.o tpp.o \
7adf7ee2
PP
3800 -llttng-ust -ldl
3801----
3802--
3803+
3804The `--export-dynamic` option passed to the linker is necessary for the
3805dynamically loaded library to ``see'' the tracepoint symbols defined in
3806the application.
3807
3808To build the instrumented user library:
3809
3810. Compile the user library source file:
3811+
3812--
3813[role="term"]
3814----
ded02698 3815$ gcc -I. -fpic -c emon.c
7adf7ee2
PP
3816----
3817--
3818
3819. Build the user library shared object:
3820+
3821--
3822[role="term"]
3823----
ded02698 3824$ gcc -shared -o libemon.so emon.o
7adf7ee2
PP
3825----
3826--
3827
3828To run the application:
3829
3830* Start the application:
3831+
3832--
3833[role="term"]
3834----
ded02698 3835$ ./app
7adf7ee2
PP
3836----
3837--
3838|====
3839
3840[[dlclose-warning]]
3841[IMPORTANT]
3842.Do not use man:dlclose(3) on a tracepoint provider package
3843====
3844Never use man:dlclose(3) on any shared object which:
3845
3846* Is linked with, statically or dynamically, a tracepoint provider
3847 package.
3848* Calls man:dlopen(3) itself to dynamically open a tracepoint provider
3849 package shared object.
3850
3851This is currently considered **unsafe** due to a lack of reference
3852counting from LTTng-UST to the shared object.
3853
3854A known workaround (available since glibc 2.2) is to use the
3855`RTLD_NODELETE` flag when calling man:dlopen(3) initially. This has the
3856effect of not unloading the loaded shared object, even if man:dlclose(3)
3857is called.
3858
3859You can also preload the tracepoint provider package shared object with
3860the env:LD_PRELOAD environment variable to overcome this limitation.
3861====
3862
3863
3864[[using-lttng-ust-with-daemons]]
3865===== Use noch:{LTTng-UST} with daemons
3866
3867If your instrumented application calls man:fork(2), man:clone(2),
3868or BSD's man:rfork(2), without a following man:exec(3)-family
3869system call, you must preload the path:{liblttng-ust-fork.so} shared
3870object when starting the application.
3871
3872[role="term"]
3873----
ded02698 3874$ LD_PRELOAD=liblttng-ust-fork.so ./my-app
7adf7ee2
PP
3875----
3876
3877If your tracepoint provider package is
3878a shared library which you also preload, you must put both
3879shared objects in env:LD_PRELOAD:
3880
3881[role="term"]
3882----
ded02698 3883$ LD_PRELOAD=liblttng-ust-fork.so:/path/to/tp.so ./my-app
7adf7ee2
PP
3884----
3885
3886
3887[[lttng-ust-pkg-config]]
3888===== Use noch:{pkg-config}
3889
3890On some distributions, LTTng-UST ships with a
3891https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/pkg-config/[pkg-config]
3892metadata file. If this is your case, then you can use cmd:pkg-config to
3893build an application on the command line:
3894
3895[role="term"]
3896----
ded02698 3897$ gcc -o my-app my-app.o tp.o $(pkg-config --cflags --libs lttng-ust)
7adf7ee2
PP
3898----
3899
3900
3901[[instrumenting-32-bit-app-on-64-bit-system]]
3902===== [[advanced-instrumenting-techniques]]Build a 32-bit instrumented application for a 64-bit target system
3903
3904In order to trace a 32-bit application running on a 64-bit system,
3905LTTng must use a dedicated 32-bit
3906<<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>>.
3907
3908The following steps show how to build and install a 32-bit consumer
3909daemon, which is _not_ part of the default 64-bit LTTng build, how to
3910build and install the 32-bit LTTng-UST libraries, and how to build and
3911link an instrumented 32-bit application in that context.
3912
3913To build a 32-bit instrumented application for a 64-bit target system,
3914assuming you have a fresh target system with no installed Userspace RCU
3915or LTTng packages:
3916
3917. Download, build, and install a 32-bit version of Userspace RCU:
3918+
3919--
3920[role="term"]
3921----
ded02698 3922$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
7adf7ee2
PP
3923wget http://lttng.org/files/urcu/userspace-rcu-latest-0.9.tar.bz2 &&
3924tar -xf userspace-rcu-latest-0.9.tar.bz2 &&
3925cd userspace-rcu-0.9.* &&
3926./configure --libdir=/usr/local/lib32 CFLAGS=-m32 &&
3927make &&
3928sudo make install &&
3929sudo ldconfig
3930----
3931--
3932
3933. Using your distribution's package manager, or from source, install
3934 the following 32-bit versions of the following dependencies of
3935 LTTng-tools and LTTng-UST:
3936+
3937--
3938* https://sourceforge.net/projects/libuuid/[libuuid]
3939* http://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Popt[popt]
3940* http://www.xmlsoft.org/[libxml2]
3941--
3942
3943. Download, build, and install a 32-bit version of the latest
3944 LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision}:
3945+
3946--
3947[role="term"]
3948----
ded02698 3949$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
7adf7ee2
PP
3950wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-ust/lttng-ust-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
3951tar -xf lttng-ust-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
3952cd lttng-ust-2.8.* &&
3953./configure --libdir=/usr/local/lib32 \
3954 CFLAGS=-m32 CXXFLAGS=-m32 \
3955 LDFLAGS='-L/usr/local/lib32 -L/usr/lib32' &&
3956make &&
3957sudo make install &&
3958sudo ldconfig
3959----
3960--
3961+
3962[NOTE]
3963====
3964Depending on your distribution,
396532-bit libraries could be installed at a different location than
3966`/usr/lib32`. For example, Debian is known to install
3967some 32-bit libraries in `/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu`.
3968
3969In this case, make sure to set `LDFLAGS` to all the
3970relevant 32-bit library paths, for example:
3971
3972[role="term"]
3973----
ded02698 3974$ LDFLAGS='-L/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu -L/usr/lib32'
7adf7ee2
PP
3975----
3976====
3977
3978. Download the latest LTTng-tools{nbsp}{revision}, build, and install
3979 the 32-bit consumer daemon:
3980+
3981--
3982[role="term"]
3983----
ded02698 3984$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
7adf7ee2
PP
3985wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-tools/lttng-tools-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
3986tar -xf lttng-tools-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
3987cd lttng-tools-2.8.* &&
3988./configure --libdir=/usr/local/lib32 CFLAGS=-m32 CXXFLAGS=-m32 \
060d8534
JG
3989 LDFLAGS='-L/usr/local/lib32 -L/usr/lib32' \
3990 --disable-bin-lttng --disable-bin-lttng-crash \
3991 --disable-bin-lttng-relayd --disable-bin-lttng-sessiond &&
7adf7ee2
PP
3992make &&
3993cd src/bin/lttng-consumerd &&
3994sudo make install &&
3995sudo ldconfig
3996----
3997--
3998
3999. From your distribution or from source,
4000 <<installing-lttng,install>> the 64-bit versions of
4001 LTTng-UST and Userspace RCU.
4002. Download, build, and install the 64-bit version of the
4003 latest LTTng-tools{nbsp}{revision}:
4004+
4005--
4006[role="term"]
4007----
ded02698 4008$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
7adf7ee2
PP
4009wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-tools/lttng-tools-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
4010tar -xf lttng-tools-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
4011cd lttng-tools-2.8.* &&
4012./configure --with-consumerd32-libdir=/usr/local/lib32 \
4013 --with-consumerd32-bin=/usr/local/lib32/lttng/libexec/lttng-consumerd &&
4014make &&
4015sudo make install &&
4016sudo ldconfig
4017----
4018--
4019
4020. Pass the following options to man:gcc(1), man:g++(1), or man:clang(1)
4021 when linking your 32-bit application:
4022+
4023----
4024-m32 -L/usr/lib32 -L/usr/local/lib32 \
4025-Wl,-rpath,/usr/lib32,-rpath,/usr/local/lib32
4026----
4027+
4028For example, let's rebuild the quick start example in
4029<<tracing-your-own-user-application,Trace a user application>> as an
4030instrumented 32-bit application:
4031+
4032--
4033[role="term"]
4034----
ded02698
PP
4035$ gcc -m32 -c -I. hello-tp.c
4036$ gcc -m32 -c hello.c
4037$ gcc -m32 -o hello hello.o hello-tp.o \
7adf7ee2
PP
4038 -L/usr/lib32 -L/usr/local/lib32 \
4039 -Wl,-rpath,/usr/lib32,-rpath,/usr/local/lib32 \
4040 -llttng-ust -ldl
4041----
4042--
4043
4044No special action is required to execute the 32-bit application and
4045to trace it: use the command-line man:lttng(1) tool as usual.
4046
4047
4048[role="since-2.5"]
4049[[tracef]]
4050==== Use `tracef()`
4051
4052man:tracef(3) is a small LTTng-UST API designed for quick,
4053man:printf(3)-like instrumentation without the burden of
4054<<tracepoint-provider,creating>> and
4055<<building-tracepoint-providers-and-user-application,building>>
4056a tracepoint provider package.
4057
4058To use `tracef()` in your application:
4059
4060. In the C or C++ source files where you need to use `tracef()`,
4061 include `<lttng/tracef.h>`:
4062+
4063--
4064[source,c]
4065----
4066#include <lttng/tracef.h>
4067----
4068--
4069
4070. In the application's source code, use `tracef()` like you would use
4071 man:printf(3):
4072+
4073--
4074[source,c]
4075----
4076 /* ... */
4077
4078 tracef("my message: %d (%s)", my_integer, my_string);
4079
4080 /* ... */
4081----
4082--
4083
4084. Link your application with `liblttng-ust`:
4085+
4086--
4087[role="term"]
4088----
ded02698 4089$ gcc -o app app.c -llttng-ust
7adf7ee2
PP
4090----
4091--
4092
4093To trace the events that `tracef()` calls emit:
4094
4095* <<enabling-disabling-events,Create an event rule>> which matches the
4096 `lttng_ust_tracef:*` event name:
4097+
4098--
4099[role="term"]
4100----
ded02698 4101$ lttng enable-event --userspace 'lttng_ust_tracef:*'
7adf7ee2
PP
4102----
4103--
4104
4105[IMPORTANT]
4106.Limitations of `tracef()`
4107====
4108The `tracef()` utility function was developed to make user space tracing
4109super simple, albeit with notable disadvantages compared to
4110<<defining-tracepoints,user-defined tracepoints>>:
4111
4112* All the emitted events have the same tracepoint provider and
4113 tracepoint names, respectively `lttng_ust_tracef` and `event`.
4114* There is no static type checking.
4115* The only event record field you actually get, named `msg`, is a string
4116 potentially containing the values you passed to `tracef()`
4117 using your own format string. This also means that you cannot filter
4118 events with a custom expression at run time because there are no
4119 isolated fields.
4120* Since `tracef()` uses the C standard library's man:vasprintf(3)
4121 function behind the scenes to format the strings at run time, its
4122 expected performance is lower than with user-defined tracepoints,
4123 which do not require a conversion to a string.
4124
4125Taking this into consideration, `tracef()` is useful for some quick
4126prototyping and debugging, but you should not consider it for any
4127permanent and serious applicative instrumentation.
4128====
4129
4130
4131[role="since-2.7"]
4132[[tracelog]]
4133==== Use `tracelog()`
4134
4135The man:tracelog(3) API is very similar to <<tracef,`tracef()`>>, with
4136the difference that it accepts an additional log level parameter.
4137
4138The goal of `tracelog()` is to ease the migration from logging to
4139tracing.
4140
4141To use `tracelog()` in your application:
4142
4143. In the C or C++ source files where you need to use `tracelog()`,
4144 include `<lttng/tracelog.h>`:
4145+
4146--
4147[source,c]
4148----
4149#include <lttng/tracelog.h>
4150----
4151--
4152
4153. In the application's source code, use `tracelog()` like you would use
4154 man:printf(3), except for the first parameter which is the log
4155 level:
4156+
4157--
4158[source,c]
4159----
4160 /* ... */
4161
4162 tracelog(TRACE_WARNING, "my message: %d (%s)",
4163 my_integer, my_string);
4164
4165 /* ... */
4166----
4167--
4168+
4169See man:lttng-ust(3) for a list of available log level names.
4170
4171. Link your application with `liblttng-ust`:
4172+
4173--
4174[role="term"]
4175----
ded02698 4176$ gcc -o app app.c -llttng-ust
7adf7ee2
PP
4177----
4178--
4179
4180To trace the events that `tracelog()` calls emit with a log level
4181_as severe as_ a specific log level:
4182
4183* <<enabling-disabling-events,Create an event rule>> which matches the
4184 `lttng_ust_tracelog:*` event name and a minimum level
4185 of severity:
4186+
4187--
4188[role="term"]
4189----
ded02698 4190$ lttng enable-event --userspace 'lttng_ust_tracelog:*'
7adf7ee2
PP
4191 --loglevel=TRACE_WARNING
4192----
4193--
4194
4195To trace the events that `tracelog()` calls emit with a
4196_specific log level_:
4197
4198* Create an event rule which matches the `lttng_ust_tracelog:*`
4199 event name and a specific log level:
4200+
4201--
4202[role="term"]
4203----
ded02698 4204$ lttng enable-event --userspace 'lttng_ust_tracelog:*'
7adf7ee2
PP
4205 --loglevel-only=TRACE_INFO
4206----
4207--
4208
4209
4210[[prebuilt-ust-helpers]]
4211=== Prebuilt user space tracing helpers
4212
4213The LTTng-UST package provides a few helpers in the form or preloadable
4214shared objects which automatically instrument system functions and
4215calls.
4216
4217The helper shared objects are normally found in dir:{/usr/lib}. If you
4218built LTTng-UST <<building-from-source,from source>>, they are probably
4219located in dir:{/usr/local/lib}.
4220
4221The installed user space tracing helpers in LTTng-UST{nbsp}{revision}
4222are:
4223
4224path:{liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper.so}::
4225path:{liblttng-ust-pthread-wrapper.so}::
4226 <<liblttng-ust-libc-pthread-wrapper,C{nbsp}standard library
4227 memory and POSIX threads function tracing>>.
4228
4229path:{liblttng-ust-cyg-profile.so}::
4230path:{liblttng-ust-cyg-profile-fast.so}::
4231 <<liblttng-ust-cyg-profile,Function entry and exit tracing>>.
4232
4233path:{liblttng-ust-dl.so}::
4234 <<liblttng-ust-dl,Dynamic linker tracing>>.
4235
4236To use a user space tracing helper with any user application:
4237
4238* Preload the helper shared object when you start the application:
4239+
4240--
4241[role="term"]
4242----
ded02698 4243$ LD_PRELOAD=liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper.so my-app
7adf7ee2
PP
4244----
4245--
4246+
4247You can preload more than one helper:
4248+
4249--
4250[role="term"]
4251----
ded02698 4252$ LD_PRELOAD=liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper.so:liblttng-ust-dl.so my-app
7adf7ee2
PP
4253----
4254--
4255
4256
4257[role="since-2.3"]
4258[[liblttng-ust-libc-pthread-wrapper]]
4259==== Instrument C standard library memory and POSIX threads functions
4260
4261The path:{liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper.so} and
4262path:{liblttng-ust-pthread-wrapper.so} helpers
4263add instrumentation to some C standard library and POSIX
4264threads functions.
4265
4266[role="growable"]
4267.Functions instrumented by preloading path:{liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper.so}.
4268|====
4269|TP provider name |TP name |Instrumented function
4270
4271.6+|`lttng_ust_libc` |`malloc` |man:malloc(3)
4272 |`calloc` |man:calloc(3)
4273 |`realloc` |man:realloc(3)
4274 |`free` |man:free(3)
4275 |`memalign` |man:memalign(3)
4276 |`posix_memalign` |man:posix_memalign(3)
4277|====
4278
4279[role="growable"]
4280.Functions instrumented by preloading path:{liblttng-ust-pthread-wrapper.so}.
4281|====
4282|TP provider name |TP name |Instrumented function
4283
4284.4+|`lttng_ust_pthread` |`pthread_mutex_lock_req` |man:pthread_mutex_lock(3p) (request time)
4285 |`pthread_mutex_lock_acq` |man:pthread_mutex_lock(3p) (acquire time)
4286 |`pthread_mutex_trylock` |man:pthread_mutex_trylock(3p)
4287 |`pthread_mutex_unlock` |man:pthread_mutex_unlock(3p)
4288|====
4289
4290When you preload the shared object, it replaces the functions listed
4291in the previous tables by wrappers which contain tracepoints and call
4292the replaced functions.
4293
4294
4295[[liblttng-ust-cyg-profile]]
4296==== Instrument function entry and exit
4297
4298The path:{liblttng-ust-cyg-profile*.so} helpers can add instrumentation
4299to the entry and exit points of functions.
4300
4301man:gcc(1) and man:clang(1) have an option named
20036e91 4302https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Instrumentation-Options.html[`-finstrument-functions`]
7adf7ee2
PP
4303which generates instrumentation calls for entry and exit to functions.
4304The LTTng-UST function tracing helpers,
4305path:{liblttng-ust-cyg-profile.so} and
4306path:{liblttng-ust-cyg-profile-fast.so}, take advantage of this feature
4307to add tracepoints to the two generated functions (which contain
4308`cyg_profile` in their names, hence the helper's name).
4309
4310To use the LTTng-UST function tracing helper, the source files to
4311instrument must be built using the `-finstrument-functions` compiler
4312flag.
4313
4314There are two versions of the LTTng-UST function tracing helper:
4315
4316* **path:{liblttng-ust-cyg-profile-fast.so}** is a lightweight variant
4317 that you should only use when it can be _guaranteed_ that the
4318 complete event stream is recorded without any lost event record.
4319 Any kind of duplicate information is left out.
4320+
4321Assuming no event record is lost, having only the function addresses on
4322entry is enough to create a call graph, since an event record always
4323contains the ID of the CPU that generated it.
4324+
55e90f33
PP
4325You can use a tool like man:addr2line(1) to convert function addresses
4326back to source file names and line numbers.
7adf7ee2
PP
4327
4328* **path:{liblttng-ust-cyg-profile.so}** is a more robust variant
4329which also works in use cases where event records might get discarded or
4330not recorded from application startup.
4331In these cases, the trace analyzer needs more information to be
4332able to reconstruct the program flow.
4333
4334See man:lttng-ust-cyg-profile(3) to learn more about the instrumentation
4335points of this helper.
4336
4337All the tracepoints that this helper provides have the
4338log level `TRACE_DEBUG_FUNCTION` (see man:lttng-ust(3)).
4339
4340TIP: It's sometimes a good idea to limit the number of source files that
4341you compile with the `-finstrument-functions` option to prevent LTTng
4342from writing an excessive amount of trace data at run time. When using
4343man:gcc(1), you can use the
4344`-finstrument-functions-exclude-function-list` option to avoid
4345instrument entries and exits of specific function names.
4346
4347
4348[role="since-2.4"]
4349[[liblttng-ust-dl]]
4350==== Instrument the dynamic linker
4351
4352The path:{liblttng-ust-dl.so} helper adds instrumentation to the
4353man:dlopen(3) and man:dlclose(3) function calls.
4354
4355See man:lttng-ust-dl(3) to learn more about the instrumentation points
4356of this helper.
4357
4358
4359[role="since-2.4"]
4360[[java-application]]
4361=== User space Java agent
4362
4363You can instrument any Java application which uses one of the following
4364logging frameworks:
4365
4366* The https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/logging/package-summary.html[**`java.util.logging`**]
4367 (JUL) core logging facilities.
4368* http://logging.apache.org/log4j/1.2/[**Apache log4j 1.2**], since
4369 LTTng 2.6. Note that Apache Log4j{nbsp}2 is not supported.
4370
4371[role="img-100"]
4372.LTTng-UST Java agent imported by a Java application.
4373image::java-app.png[]
4374
4375Note that the methods described below are new in LTTng{nbsp}{revision}.
4376Previous LTTng versions use another technique.
4377
4378NOTE: We use http://openjdk.java.net/[OpenJDK]{nbsp}8 for development
4379and https://ci.lttng.org/[continuous integration], thus this version is
4380directly supported. However, the LTTng-UST Java agent is also tested
4381with OpenJDK{nbsp}7.
4382
4383
4384[role="since-2.8"]
4385[[jul]]
4386==== Use the LTTng-UST Java agent for `java.util.logging`
4387
4388To use the LTTng-UST Java agent in a Java application which uses
4389`java.util.logging` (JUL):
4390
4391. In the Java application's source code, import the LTTng-UST
4392 log handler package for `java.util.logging`:
4393+
4394--
4395[source,java]
4396----
4397import org.lttng.ust.agent.jul.LttngLogHandler;
4398----
4399--
4400
4401. Create an LTTng-UST JUL log handler:
4402+
4403--
4404[source,java]
4405----
4406Handler lttngUstLogHandler = new LttngLogHandler();
4407----
4408--
4409
4410. Add this handler to the JUL loggers which should emit LTTng events:
4411+
4412--
4413[source,java]
4414----
4415Logger myLogger = Logger.getLogger("some-logger");
4416
4417myLogger.addHandler(lttngUstLogHandler);
4418----
4419--
4420
4421. Use `java.util.logging` log statements and configuration as usual.
4422 The loggers with an attached LTTng-UST log handler can emit
4423 LTTng events.
4424
4425. Before exiting the application, remove the LTTng-UST log handler from
4426 the loggers attached to it and call its `close()` method:
4427+
4428--
4429[source,java]
4430----
4431myLogger.removeHandler(lttngUstLogHandler);
4432lttngUstLogHandler.close();
4433----
4434--
4435+
4436This is not strictly necessary, but it is recommended for a clean
4437disposal of the handler's resources.
4438
4439. Include the LTTng-UST Java agent's common and JUL-specific JAR files,
4440 path:{lttng-ust-agent-common.jar} and path:{lttng-ust-agent-jul.jar},
4441 in the
4442 https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/environment/paths.html[class
4443 path] when you build the Java application.
4444+
4445The JAR files are typically located in dir:{/usr/share/java}.
4446+
4447IMPORTANT: The LTTng-UST Java agent must be
4448<<installing-lttng,installed>> for the logging framework your
4449application uses.
4450
4451.Use the LTTng-UST Java agent for `java.util.logging`.
4452====
4453[source,java]
4454.path:{Test.java}
4455----
4456import java.io.IOException;
4457import java.util.logging.Handler;
4458import java.util.logging.Logger;
4459import org.lttng.ust.agent.jul.LttngLogHandler;
4460
4461public class Test
4462{
4463 private static final int answer = 42;
4464
4465 public static void main(String[] argv) throws Exception
4466 {
4467 // Create a logger
4468 Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("jello");
4469
4470 // Create an LTTng-UST log handler
4471 Handler lttngUstLogHandler = new LttngLogHandler();
4472
4473 // Add the LTTng-UST log handler to our logger
4474 logger.addHandler(lttngUstLogHandler);
4475
4476 // Log at will!
4477 logger.info("some info");
4478 logger.warning("some warning");
4479 Thread.sleep(500);
4480 logger.finer("finer information; the answer is " + answer);
4481 Thread.sleep(123);
4482 logger.severe("error!");
4483
4484 // Not mandatory, but cleaner
4485 logger.removeHandler(lttngUstLogHandler);
4486 lttngUstLogHandler.close();
4487 }
4488}
4489----
4490
4491Build this example:
4492
4493[role="term"]
4494----
ded02698 4495$ javac -cp /usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-common.jar:/usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-jul.jar Test.java
7adf7ee2
PP
4496----
4497
4498<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,Create a tracing session>>,
4499<<enabling-disabling-events,create an event rule>> matching the
4500`jello` JUL logger, and <<basic-tracing-session-control,start tracing>>:
4501
4502[role="term"]
4503----
ded02698
PP
4504$ lttng create
4505$ lttng enable-event --jul jello
4506$ lttng start
7adf7ee2
PP
4507----
4508
4509Run the compiled class:
4510
4511[role="term"]
4512----
ded02698 4513$ java -cp /usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-common.jar:/usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-jul.jar:. Test
7adf7ee2
PP
4514----
4515
4516<<basic-tracing-session-control,Stop tracing>> and inspect the
4517recorded events:
4518
4519[role="term"]
4520----
ded02698
PP
4521$ lttng stop
4522$ lttng view
7adf7ee2
PP
4523----
4524====
4525
44eda56c
PP
4526In the resulting trace, an <<event,event record>> generated by a Java
4527application using `java.util.logging` is named `lttng_jul:event` and
4528has the following fields:
4529
4530`msg`::
4531 Log record's message.
4532
4533`logger_name`::
4534 Logger name.
4535
4536`class_name`::
4537 Name of the class in which the log statement was executed.
4538
4539`method_name`::
4540 Name of the method in which the log statement was executed.
4541
4542`long_millis`::
4543 Logging time (timestamp in milliseconds).
4544
4545`int_loglevel`::
4546 Log level integer value.
4547
4548`int_threadid`::
4549 ID of the thread in which the log statement was executed.
4550
7adf7ee2
PP
4551You can use the opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--loglevel or
4552opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--loglevel-only option of the
4553man:lttng-enable-event(1) command to target a range of JUL log levels
4554or a specific JUL log level.
4555
4556
4557[role="since-2.8"]
4558[[log4j]]
4559==== Use the LTTng-UST Java agent for Apache log4j
4560
4561To use the LTTng-UST Java agent in a Java application which uses
4562Apache log4j 1.2:
4563
4564. In the Java application's source code, import the LTTng-UST
4565 log appender package for Apache log4j:
4566+
4567--
4568[source,java]
4569----
4570import org.lttng.ust.agent.log4j.LttngLogAppender;
4571----
4572--
4573
4574. Create an LTTng-UST log4j log appender:
4575+
4576--
4577[source,java]
4578----
4579Appender lttngUstLogAppender = new LttngLogAppender();
4580----
4581--
4582
4583. Add this appender to the log4j loggers which should emit LTTng events:
4584+
4585--
4586[source,java]
4587----
4588Logger myLogger = Logger.getLogger("some-logger");
4589
4590myLogger.addAppender(lttngUstLogAppender);
4591----
4592--
4593
4594. Use Apache log4j log statements and configuration as usual. The
4595 loggers with an attached LTTng-UST log appender can emit LTTng events.
4596
4597. Before exiting the application, remove the LTTng-UST log appender from
4598 the loggers attached to it and call its `close()` method:
4599+
4600--
4601[source,java]
4602----
4603myLogger.removeAppender(lttngUstLogAppender);
4604lttngUstLogAppender.close();
4605----
4606--
4607+
4608This is not strictly necessary, but it is recommended for a clean
4609disposal of the appender's resources.
4610
4611. Include the LTTng-UST Java agent's common and log4j-specific JAR
4612 files, path:{lttng-ust-agent-common.jar} and
4613 path:{lttng-ust-agent-log4j.jar}, in the
4614 https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/environment/paths.html[class
4615 path] when you build the Java application.
4616+
4617The JAR files are typically located in dir:{/usr/share/java}.
4618+
4619IMPORTANT: The LTTng-UST Java agent must be
4620<<installing-lttng,installed>> for the logging framework your
4621application uses.
4622
4623.Use the LTTng-UST Java agent for Apache log4j.
4624====
4625[source,java]
4626.path:{Test.java}
4627----
4628import org.apache.log4j.Appender;
4629import org.apache.log4j.Logger;
4630import org.lttng.ust.agent.log4j.LttngLogAppender;
4631
4632public class Test
4633{
4634 private static final int answer = 42;
4635
4636 public static void main(String[] argv) throws Exception
4637 {
4638 // Create a logger
4639 Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("jello");
4640
4641 // Create an LTTng-UST log appender
4642 Appender lttngUstLogAppender = new LttngLogAppender();
4643
4644 // Add the LTTng-UST log appender to our logger
4645 logger.addAppender(lttngUstLogAppender);
4646
4647 // Log at will!
4648 logger.info("some info");
4649 logger.warn("some warning");
4650 Thread.sleep(500);
4651 logger.debug("debug information; the answer is " + answer);
4652 Thread.sleep(123);
4653 logger.fatal("error!");
4654
4655 // Not mandatory, but cleaner
4656 logger.removeAppender(lttngUstLogAppender);
4657 lttngUstLogAppender.close();
4658 }
4659}
4660
4661----
4662
4663Build this example (`$LOG4JPATH` is the path to the Apache log4j JAR
4664file):
4665
4666[role="term"]
4667----
ded02698 4668$ javac -cp /usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-common.jar:/usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-log4j.jar:$LOG4JPATH Test.java
7adf7ee2
PP
4669----
4670
4671<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,Create a tracing session>>,
4672<<enabling-disabling-events,create an event rule>> matching the
4673`jello` log4j logger, and <<basic-tracing-session-control,start tracing>>:
4674
4675[role="term"]
4676----
ded02698
PP
4677$ lttng create
4678$ lttng enable-event --log4j jello
4679$ lttng start
7adf7ee2
PP
4680----
4681
4682Run the compiled class:
4683
4684[role="term"]
4685----
ded02698 4686$ java -cp /usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-common.jar:/usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-log4j.jar:$LOG4JPATH:. Test
7adf7ee2
PP
4687----
4688
4689<<basic-tracing-session-control,Stop tracing>> and inspect the
4690recorded events:
4691
4692[role="term"]
4693----
ded02698
PP
4694$ lttng stop
4695$ lttng view
7adf7ee2
PP
4696----
4697====
4698
44eda56c
PP
4699In the resulting trace, an <<event,event record>> generated by a Java
4700application using log4j is named `lttng_log4j:event` and
4701has the following fields:
4702
4703`msg`::
4704 Log record's message.
4705
4706`logger_name`::
4707 Logger name.
4708
4709`class_name`::
4710 Name of the class in which the log statement was executed.
4711
4712`method_name`::
4713 Name of the method in which the log statement was executed.
4714
4715`filename`::
4716 Name of the file in which the executed log statement is located.
4717
4718`line_number`::
4719 Line number at which the log statement was executed.
4720
4721`timestamp`::
4722 Logging timestamp.
4723
4724`int_loglevel`::
4725 Log level integer value.
4726
4727`thread_name`::
4728 Name of the Java thread in which the log statement was executed.
4729
7adf7ee2
PP
4730You can use the opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--loglevel or
4731opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--loglevel-only option of the
4732man:lttng-enable-event(1) command to target a range of Apache log4j log levels
4733or a specific log4j log level.
4734
4735
4736[role="since-2.8"]
4737[[java-application-context]]
4738==== Provide application-specific context fields in a Java application
4739
4740A Java application-specific context field is a piece of state provided
4741by the application which <<adding-context,you can add>>, using the
4742man:lttng-add-context(1) command, to each <<event,event record>>
4743produced by the log statements of this application.
4744
4745For example, a given object might have a current request ID variable.
4746You can create a context information retriever for this object and
4747assign a name to this current request ID. You can then, using the
4748man:lttng-add-context(1) command, add this context field by name to
4749the JUL or log4j <<channel,channel>>.
4750
4751To provide application-specific context fields in a Java application:
4752
4753. In the Java application's source code, import the LTTng-UST
4754 Java agent context classes and interfaces:
4755+
4756--
4757[source,java]
4758----
4759import org.lttng.ust.agent.context.ContextInfoManager;
4760import org.lttng.ust.agent.context.IContextInfoRetriever;
4761----
4762--
4763
4764. Create a context information retriever class, that is, a class which
4765 implements the `IContextInfoRetriever` interface:
4766+
4767--
4768[source,java]
4769----
4770class MyContextInfoRetriever implements IContextInfoRetriever
4771{
4772 @Override
4773 public Object retrieveContextInfo(String key)
4774 {
4775 if (key.equals("intCtx")) {
4776 return (short) 17;
4777 } else if (key.equals("strContext")) {
4778 return "context value!";
4779 } else {
4780 return null;
4781 }
4782 }
4783}
4784----
4785--
4786+
4787This `retrieveContextInfo()` method is the only member of the
4788`IContextInfoRetriever` interface. Its role is to return the current
4789value of a state by name to create a context field. The names of the
4790context fields and which state variables they return depends on your
4791specific scenario.
4792+
4793All primitive types and objects are supported as context fields.
4794When `retrieveContextInfo()` returns an object, the context field
4795serializer calls its `toString()` method to add a string field to
4796event records. The method can also return `null`, which means that
4797no context field is available for the required name.
4798
4799. Register an instance of your context information retriever class to
4800 the context information manager singleton:
4801+
4802--
4803[source,java]
4804----
4805IContextInfoRetriever cir = new MyContextInfoRetriever();
4806ContextInfoManager cim = ContextInfoManager.getInstance();
4807cim.registerContextInfoRetriever("retrieverName", cir);
4808----
4809--
4810
4811. Before exiting the application, remove your context information
4812 retriever from the context information manager singleton:
4813+
4814--
4815[source,java]
4816----
4817ContextInfoManager cim = ContextInfoManager.getInstance();
4818cim.unregisterContextInfoRetriever("retrieverName");
4819----
4820--
4821+
4822This is not strictly necessary, but it is recommended for a clean
4823disposal of some manager's resources.
4824
4825. Build your Java application with LTTng-UST Java agent support as
4826 usual, following the procedure for either the <<jul,JUL>> or
4827 <<log4j,Apache log4j>> framework.
4828
4829
4830.Provide application-specific context fields in a Java application.
4831====
4832[source,java]
4833.path:{Test.java}
4834----
4835import java.util.logging.Handler;
4836import java.util.logging.Logger;
4837import org.lttng.ust.agent.jul.LttngLogHandler;
4838import org.lttng.ust.agent.context.ContextInfoManager;
4839import org.lttng.ust.agent.context.IContextInfoRetriever;
4840
4841public class Test
4842{
4843 // Our context information retriever class
4844 private static class MyContextInfoRetriever
4845 implements IContextInfoRetriever
4846 {
4847 @Override
4848 public Object retrieveContextInfo(String key) {
4849 if (key.equals("intCtx")) {
4850 return (short) 17;
4851 } else if (key.equals("strContext")) {
4852 return "context value!";
4853 } else {
4854 return null;
4855 }
4856 }
4857 }
4858
4859 private static final int answer = 42;
4860
4861 public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception
4862 {
4863 // Get the context information manager instance
4864 ContextInfoManager cim = ContextInfoManager.getInstance();
4865
4866 // Create and register our context information retriever
4867 IContextInfoRetriever cir = new MyContextInfoRetriever();
4868 cim.registerContextInfoRetriever("myRetriever", cir);
4869
4870 // Create a logger
4871 Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("jello");
4872
4873 // Create an LTTng-UST log handler
4874 Handler lttngUstLogHandler = new LttngLogHandler();
4875
4876 // Add the LTTng-UST log handler to our logger
4877 logger.addHandler(lttngUstLogHandler);
4878
4879 // Log at will!
4880 logger.info("some info");
4881 logger.warning("some warning");
4882 Thread.sleep(500);
4883 logger.finer("finer information; the answer is " + answer);
4884 Thread.sleep(123);
4885 logger.severe("error!");
4886
4887 // Not mandatory, but cleaner
4888 logger.removeHandler(lttngUstLogHandler);
4889 lttngUstLogHandler.close();
4890 cim.unregisterContextInfoRetriever("myRetriever");
4891 }
4892}
4893----
4894
4895Build this example:
4896
4897[role="term"]
4898----
ded02698 4899$ javac -cp /usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-common.jar:/usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-jul.jar Test.java
7adf7ee2
PP
4900----
4901
4902<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,Create a tracing session>>
4903and <<enabling-disabling-events,create an event rule>> matching the
4904`jello` JUL logger:
4905
4906[role="term"]
4907----
ded02698
PP
4908$ lttng create
4909$ lttng enable-event --jul jello
7adf7ee2
PP
4910----
4911
4912<<adding-context,Add the application-specific context fields>> to the
4913JUL channel:
4914
4915[role="term"]
4916----
ded02698
PP
4917$ lttng add-context --jul --type='$app.myRetriever:intCtx'
4918$ lttng add-context --jul --type='$app.myRetriever:strContext'
7adf7ee2
PP
4919----
4920
4921<<basic-tracing-session-control,Start tracing>>:
4922
4923[role="term"]
4924----
ded02698 4925$ lttng start
7adf7ee2
PP
4926----
4927
4928Run the compiled class:
4929
4930[role="term"]
4931----
ded02698 4932$ java -cp /usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-common.jar:/usr/share/java/jarpath/lttng-ust-agent-jul.jar:. Test
7adf7ee2
PP
4933----
4934
4935<<basic-tracing-session-control,Stop tracing>> and inspect the
4936recorded events:
4937
4938[role="term"]
4939----
ded02698
PP
4940$ lttng stop
4941$ lttng view
7adf7ee2
PP
4942----
4943====
4944
4945
4946[role="since-2.7"]
4947[[python-application]]
4948=== User space Python agent
4949
4950You can instrument a Python 2 or Python 3 application which uses the
4951standard https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html[`logging`]
4952package.
4953
4954Each log statement emits an LTTng event once the
4955application module imports the
4956<<lttng-ust-agents,LTTng-UST Python agent>> package.
4957
4958[role="img-100"]
4959.A Python application importing the LTTng-UST Python agent.
4960image::python-app.png[]
4961
4962To use the LTTng-UST Python agent:
4963
4964. In the Python application's source code, import the LTTng-UST Python
4965 agent:
4966+
4967--
4968[source,python]
4969----
4970import lttngust
4971----
4972--
4973+
4974The LTTng-UST Python agent automatically adds its logging handler to the
4975root logger at import time.
4976+
4977Any log statement that the application executes before this import does
4978not emit an LTTng event.
4979+
4980IMPORTANT: The LTTng-UST Python agent must be
4981<<installing-lttng,installed>>.
4982
4983. Use log statements and logging configuration as usual.
4984 Since the LTTng-UST Python agent adds a handler to the _root_
4985 logger, you can trace any log statement from any logger.
4986
4987.Use the LTTng-UST Python agent.
4988====
4989[source,python]
4990.path:{test.py}
4991----
4992import lttngust
4993import logging
4994import time
4995
4996
4997def example():
4998 logging.basicConfig()
4999 logger = logging.getLogger('my-logger')
5000
5001 while True:
5002 logger.debug('debug message')
5003 logger.info('info message')
5004 logger.warn('warn message')
5005 logger.error('error message')
5006 logger.critical('critical message')
5007 time.sleep(1)
5008
5009
5010if __name__ == '__main__':
5011 example()
5012----
5013
5014NOTE: `logging.basicConfig()`, which adds to the root logger a basic
5015logging handler which prints to the standard error stream, is not
5016strictly required for LTTng-UST tracing to work, but in versions of
5017Python preceding 3.2, you could see a warning message which indicates
5018that no handler exists for the logger `my-logger`.
5019
5020<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,Create a tracing session>>,
5021<<enabling-disabling-events,create an event rule>> matching the
5022`my-logger` Python logger, and <<basic-tracing-session-control,start
5023tracing>>:
5024
5025[role="term"]
5026----
ded02698
PP
5027$ lttng create
5028$ lttng enable-event --python my-logger
5029$ lttng start
7adf7ee2
PP
5030----
5031
5032Run the Python script:
5033
5034[role="term"]
5035----
ded02698 5036$ python test.py
7adf7ee2
PP
5037----
5038
5039<<basic-tracing-session-control,Stop tracing>> and inspect the recorded
5040events:
5041
5042[role="term"]
5043----
ded02698
PP
5044$ lttng stop
5045$ lttng view
7adf7ee2
PP
5046----
5047====
5048
44eda56c
PP
5049In the resulting trace, an <<event,event record>> generated by a Python
5050application is named `lttng_python:event` and has the following fields:
5051
5052`asctime`::
5053 Logging time (string).
5054
5055`msg`::
5056 Log record's message.
5057
5058`logger_name`::
5059 Logger name.
5060
5061`funcName`::
5062 Name of the function in which the log statement was executed.
5063
5064`lineno`::
5065 Line number at which the log statement was executed.
5066
5067`int_loglevel`::
5068 Log level integer value.
5069
5070`thread`::
5071 ID of the Python thread in which the log statement was executed.
5072
5073`threadName`::
5074 Name of the Python thread in which the log statement was executed.
5075
7adf7ee2
PP
5076You can use the opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--loglevel or
5077opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--loglevel-only option of the
5078man:lttng-enable-event(1) command to target a range of Python log levels
5079or a specific Python log level.
5080
5081When an application imports the LTTng-UST Python agent, the agent tries
5082to register to a <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>. Note that you must
5083<<start-sessiond,start the session daemon>> _before_ you run the Python
5084application. If a session daemon is found, the agent tries to register
5085to it during 5{nbsp}seconds, after which the application continues
5086without LTTng tracing support. You can override this timeout value with
5087the env:LTTNG_UST_PYTHON_REGISTER_TIMEOUT environment variable
5088(milliseconds).
5089
5090If the session daemon stops while a Python application with an imported
5091LTTng-UST Python agent runs, the agent retries to connect and to
5092register to a session daemon every 3{nbsp}seconds. You can override this
5093delay with the env:LTTNG_UST_PYTHON_REGISTER_RETRY_DELAY environment
5094variable.
5095
5096
5097[role="since-2.5"]
5098[[proc-lttng-logger-abi]]
5099=== LTTng logger
5100
5101The `lttng-tracer` Linux kernel module, part of
5102<<lttng-modules,LTTng-modules>>, creates the special LTTng logger file
5103path:{/proc/lttng-logger} when it's loaded. Any application can write
5104text data to this file to emit an LTTng event.
5105
5106[role="img-100"]
5107.An application writes to the LTTng logger file to emit an LTTng event.
5108image::lttng-logger.png[]
5109
5110The LTTng logger is the quickest method--not the most efficient,
5111however--to add instrumentation to an application. It is designed
5112mostly to instrument shell scripts:
5113
5114[role="term"]
5115----
ded02698 5116$ echo "Some message, some $variable" > /proc/lttng-logger
7adf7ee2
PP
5117----
5118
5119Any event that the LTTng logger emits is named `lttng_logger` and
5120belongs to the Linux kernel <<domain,tracing domain>>. However, unlike
5121other instrumentation points in the kernel tracing domain, **any Unix
5122user** can <<enabling-disabling-events,create an event rule>> which
2e333859
PP
5123matches its event name, not only the root user or users in the
5124<<tracing-group,tracing group>>.
7adf7ee2
PP
5125
5126To use the LTTng logger:
5127
5128* From any application, write text data to the path:{/proc/lttng-logger}
5129 file.
5130
5131The `msg` field of `lttng_logger` event records contains the
5132recorded message.
5133
5134NOTE: The maximum message length of an LTTng logger event is
51351024{nbsp}bytes. Writing more than this makes the LTTng logger emit more
5136than one event to contain the remaining data.
5137
5138You should not use the LTTng logger to trace a user application which
5139can be instrumented in a more efficient way, namely:
5140
5141* <<c-application,C and $$C++$$ applications>>.
5142* <<java-application,Java applications>>.
5143* <<python-application,Python applications>>.
5144
5145.Use the LTTng logger.
5146====
5147[source,bash]
5148.path:{test.bash}
5149----
5150echo 'Hello, World!' > /proc/lttng-logger
5151sleep 2
5152df --human-readable --print-type / > /proc/lttng-logger
5153----
5154
5155<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,Create a tracing session>>,
5156<<enabling-disabling-events,create an event rule>> matching the
5157`lttng_logger` Linux kernel tracepoint, and
5158<<basic-tracing-session-control,start tracing>>:
5159
5160[role="term"]
5161----
ded02698
PP
5162$ lttng create
5163$ lttng enable-event --kernel lttng_logger
5164$ lttng start
7adf7ee2
PP
5165----
5166
5167Run the Bash script:
5168
5169[role="term"]
5170----
ded02698 5171$ bash test.bash
7adf7ee2
PP
5172----
5173
5174<<basic-tracing-session-control,Stop tracing>> and inspect the recorded
5175events:
5176
5177[role="term"]
5178----
ded02698
PP
5179$ lttng stop
5180$ lttng view
7adf7ee2
PP
5181----
5182====
5183
5184
5185[[instrumenting-linux-kernel]]
5186=== LTTng kernel tracepoints
5187
5188NOTE: This section shows how to _add_ instrumentation points to the
5189Linux kernel. The kernel's subsystems are already thoroughly
5190instrumented at strategic places for LTTng when you
5191<<installing-lttng,install>> the <<lttng-modules,LTTng-modules>>
5192package.
5193
5194////
5195There are two methods to instrument the Linux kernel:
5196
5197. <<linux-add-lttng-layer,Add an LTTng layer>> over an existing ftrace
5198 tracepoint which uses the `TRACE_EVENT()` API.
5199+
5200Choose this if you want to instrumentation a Linux kernel tree with an
5201instrumentation point compatible with ftrace, perf, and SystemTap.
5202
5203. Use an <<linux-lttng-tracepoint-event,LTTng-only approach>> to
5204 instrument an out-of-tree kernel module.
5205+
5206Choose this if you don't need ftrace, perf, or SystemTap support.
5207////
5208
5209
5210[[linux-add-lttng-layer]]
5211==== [[instrumenting-linux-kernel-itself]][[mainline-trace-event]][[lttng-adaptation-layer]]Add an LTTng layer to an existing ftrace tracepoint
5212
5213This section shows how to add an LTTng layer to existing ftrace
5214instrumentation using the `TRACE_EVENT()` API.
5215
5216This section does not document the `TRACE_EVENT()` macro. You can
5217read the following articles to learn more about this API:
5218
5219* http://lwn.net/Articles/379903/[Using the TRACE_EVENT() macro (Part 1)]
5220* http://lwn.net/Articles/381064/[Using the TRACE_EVENT() macro (Part 2)]
5221* http://lwn.net/Articles/383362/[Using the TRACE_EVENT() macro (Part 3)]
5222
5223The following procedure assumes that your ftrace tracepoints are
5224correctly defined in their own header and that they are created in
5225one source file using the `CREATE_TRACE_POINTS` definition.
5226
5227To add an LTTng layer over an existing ftrace tracepoint:
5228
5229. Make sure the following kernel configuration options are
5230 enabled:
5231+
5232--
5233* `CONFIG_MODULES`
5234* `CONFIG_KALLSYMS`
5235* `CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS`
5236* `CONFIG_TRACEPOINTS`
5237--
5238
5239. Build the Linux source tree with your custom ftrace tracepoints.
5240. Boot the resulting Linux image on your target system.
5241+
5242Confirm that the tracepoints exist by looking for their names in the
5243dir:{/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/subsys} directory, where `subsys`
5244is your subsystem's name.
5245
5246. Get a copy of the latest LTTng-modules{nbsp}{revision}:
5247+
5248--
5249[role="term"]
5250----
ded02698 5251$ cd $(mktemp -d) &&
7adf7ee2
PP
5252wget http://lttng.org/files/lttng-modules/lttng-modules-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
5253tar -xf lttng-modules-latest-2.8.tar.bz2 &&
5254cd lttng-modules-2.8.*
5255----
5256--
5257
5258. In dir:{instrumentation/events/lttng-module}, relative to the root
5259 of the LTTng-modules source tree, create a header file named
5260 +__subsys__.h+ for your custom subsystem +__subsys__+ and write your
5261 LTTng-modules tracepoint definitions using the LTTng-modules
5262 macros in it.
5263+
5264Start with this template:
5265+
5266--
5267[source,c]
5268.path:{instrumentation/events/lttng-module/my_subsys.h}
5269----
5270#undef TRACE_SYSTEM
5271#define TRACE_SYSTEM my_subsys
5272
5273#if !defined(_LTTNG_MY_SUBSYS_H) || defined(TRACE_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
5274#define _LTTNG_MY_SUBSYS_H
5275
5276#include "../../../probes/lttng-tracepoint-event.h"
5277#include <linux/tracepoint.h>
5278
5279LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
5280 /*
5281 * Format is identical to TRACE_EVENT()'s version for the three
5282 * following macro parameters:
5283 */
5284 my_subsys_my_event,
5285 TP_PROTO(int my_int, const char *my_string),
5286 TP_ARGS(my_int, my_string),
5287
5288 /* LTTng-modules specific macros */
5289 TP_FIELDS(
5290 ctf_integer(int, my_int_field, my_int)
5291 ctf_string(my_bar_field, my_bar)
5292 )
5293)
5294
5295#endif /* !defined(_LTTNG_MY_SUBSYS_H) || defined(TRACE_HEADER_MULTI_READ) */
5296
5297#include "../../../probes/define_trace.h"
5298----
5299--
5300+
5301The entries in the `TP_FIELDS()` section are the list of fields for the
5302LTTng tracepoint. This is similar to the `TP_STRUCT__entry()` part of
5303ftrace's `TRACE_EVENT()` macro.
5304+
5305See <<lttng-modules-tp-fields,Tracepoint fields macros>> for a
5306complete description of the available `ctf_*()` macros.
5307
5308. Create the LTTng-modules probe's kernel module C source file,
5309 +probes/lttng-probe-__subsys__.c+, where +__subsys__+ is your
5310 subsystem name:
5311+
5312--
5313[source,c]
5314.path:{probes/lttng-probe-my-subsys.c}
5315----
5316#include <linux/module.h>
5317#include "../lttng-tracer.h"
5318
5319/*
5320 * Build-time verification of mismatch between mainline
5321 * TRACE_EVENT() arguments and the LTTng-modules adaptation
5322 * layer LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT() arguments.
5323 */
5324#include <trace/events/my_subsys.h>
5325
5326/* Create LTTng tracepoint probes */
5327#define LTTNG_PACKAGE_BUILD
5328#define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS
5329#define TRACE_INCLUDE_PATH ../instrumentation/events/lttng-module
5330
5331#include "../instrumentation/events/lttng-module/my_subsys.h"
5332
5333MODULE_LICENSE("GPL and additional rights");
5334MODULE_AUTHOR("Your name <your-email>");
5335MODULE_DESCRIPTION("LTTng my_subsys probes");
5336MODULE_VERSION(__stringify(LTTNG_MODULES_MAJOR_VERSION) "."
5337 __stringify(LTTNG_MODULES_MINOR_VERSION) "."
5338 __stringify(LTTNG_MODULES_PATCHLEVEL_VERSION)
5339 LTTNG_MODULES_EXTRAVERSION);
5340----
5341--
5342
f4d8d998 5343. Edit path:{probes/KBuild} and add your new kernel module object
7adf7ee2
PP
5344 next to the existing ones:
5345+
5346--
5347[source,make]
f4d8d998 5348.path:{probes/KBuild}
7adf7ee2
PP
5349----
5350# ...
5351
5352obj-m += lttng-probe-module.o
5353obj-m += lttng-probe-power.o
5354
5355obj-m += lttng-probe-my-subsys.o
5356
5357# ...
5358----
5359--
5360
5361. Build and install the LTTng kernel modules:
5362+
5363--
5364[role="term"]
5365----
ded02698
PP
5366$ make KERNELDIR=/path/to/linux
5367# make modules_install && depmod -a
7adf7ee2
PP
5368----
5369--
5370+
5371Replace `/path/to/linux` with the path to the Linux source tree where
5372you defined and used tracepoints with ftrace's `TRACE_EVENT()` macro.
5373
5374Note that you can also use the
5375<<lttng-tracepoint-event-code,`LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CODE()` macro>>
5376instead of `LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` to use custom local variables and
5377C code that need to be executed before the event fields are recorded.
5378
5379The best way to learn how to use the previous LTTng-modules macros is to
5380inspect the existing LTTng-modules tracepoint definitions in the
5381dir:{instrumentation/events/lttng-module} header files. Compare them
5382with the Linux kernel mainline versions in the
5383dir:{include/trace/events} directory of the Linux source tree.
5384
5385
5386[role="since-2.7"]
5387[[lttng-tracepoint-event-code]]
5388===== Use custom C code to access the data for tracepoint fields
5389
5390Although we recommended to always use the
5391<<lttng-adaptation-layer,`LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()`>> macro to describe
5392the arguments and fields of an LTTng-modules tracepoint when possible,
5393sometimes you need a more complex process to access the data that the
5394tracer records as event record fields. In other words, you need local
5395variables and multiple C{nbsp}statements instead of simple
5396argument-based expressions that you pass to the
5397<<lttng-modules-tp-fields,`ctf_*()` macros of `TP_FIELDS()`>>.
5398
5399You can use the `LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CODE()` macro instead of
5400`LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()` to declare custom local variables and define
5401a block of C{nbsp}code to be executed before LTTng records the fields.
5402The structure of this macro is:
5403
5404[source,c]
5405.`LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CODE()` macro syntax.
5406----
5407LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CODE(
5408 /*
5409 * Format identical to the LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()
5410 * version for the following three macro parameters:
5411 */
5412 my_subsys_my_event,
5413 TP_PROTO(int my_int, const char *my_string),
5414 TP_ARGS(my_int, my_string),
5415
5416 /* Declarations of custom local variables */
5417 TP_locvar(
5418 int a = 0;
5419 unsigned long b = 0;
5420 const char *name = "(undefined)";
5421 struct my_struct *my_struct;
5422 ),
5423
5424 /*
5425 * Custom code which uses both tracepoint arguments
5426 * (in TP_ARGS()) and local variables (in TP_locvar()).
5427 *
5428 * Local variables are actually members of a structure pointed
5429 * to by the special variable tp_locvar.
5430 */
5431 TP_code(
5432 if (my_int) {
5433 tp_locvar->a = my_int + 17;
5434 tp_locvar->my_struct = get_my_struct_at(tp_locvar->a);
5435 tp_locvar->b = my_struct_compute_b(tp_locvar->my_struct);
5436 tp_locvar->name = my_struct_get_name(tp_locvar->my_struct);
5437 put_my_struct(tp_locvar->my_struct);
5438
5439 if (tp_locvar->b) {
5440 tp_locvar->a = 1;
5441 }
5442 }
5443 ),
5444
5445 /*
5446 * Format identical to the LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()
5447 * version for this, except that tp_locvar members can be
5448 * used in the argument expression parameters of
5449 * the ctf_*() macros.
5450 */
5451 TP_FIELDS(
5452 ctf_integer(unsigned long, my_struct_b, tp_locvar->b)
5453 ctf_integer(int, my_struct_a, tp_locvar->a)
5454 ctf_string(my_string_field, my_string)
5455 ctf_string(my_struct_name, tp_locvar->name)
5456 )
5457)
5458----
5459
5460IMPORTANT: The C code defined in `TP_code()` must not have any side
5461effects when executed. In particular, the code must not allocate
5462memory or get resources without deallocating this memory or putting
5463those resources afterwards.
5464
5465
5466[[instrumenting-linux-kernel-tracing]]
5467==== Load and unload a custom probe kernel module
5468
5469You must load a <<lttng-adaptation-layer,created LTTng-modules probe
5470kernel module>> in the kernel before it can emit LTTng events.
5471
5472To load the default probe kernel modules and a custom probe kernel
5473module:
5474
5475* Use the opt:lttng-sessiond(8):--extra-kmod-probes option to give extra
5476 probe modules to load when starting a root <<lttng-sessiond,session
5477 daemon>>:
5478+
5479--
5480.Load the `my_subsys`, `usb`, and the default probe modules.
5481====
5482[role="term"]
5483----
ded02698 5484# lttng-sessiond --extra-kmod-probes=my_subsys,usb
7adf7ee2
PP
5485----
5486====
5487--
5488+
5489You only need to pass the subsystem name, not the whole kernel module
5490name.
5491
5492To load _only_ a given custom probe kernel module:
5493
5494* Use the opt:lttng-sessiond(8):--kmod-probes option to give the probe
5495 modules to load when starting a root session daemon:
5496+
5497--
5498.Load only the `my_subsys` and `usb` probe modules.
5499====
5500[role="term"]
5501----
ded02698 5502# lttng-sessiond --kmod-probes=my_subsys,usb
7adf7ee2
PP
5503----
5504====
5505--
5506
5507To confirm that a probe module is loaded:
5508
5509* Use man:lsmod(8):
5510+
5511--
5512[role="term"]
5513----
ded02698 5514$ lsmod | grep lttng_probe_usb
7adf7ee2
PP
5515----
5516--
5517
5518To unload the loaded probe modules:
5519
5520* Kill the session daemon with `SIGTERM`:
5521+
5522--
5523[role="term"]
5524----
ded02698 5525# pkill lttng-sessiond
7adf7ee2
PP
5526----
5527--
5528+
5529You can also use man:modprobe(8)'s `--remove` option if the session
5530daemon terminates abnormally.
5531
5532
5533[[controlling-tracing]]
5534== Tracing control
5535
5536Once an application or a Linux kernel is
5537<<instrumenting,instrumented>> for LTTng tracing,
5538you can _trace_ it.
5539
5540This section is divided in topics on how to use the various
5541<<plumbing,components of LTTng>>, in particular the <<lttng-cli,cmd:lttng
5542command-line tool>>, to _control_ the LTTng daemons and tracers.
5543
5544NOTE: In the following subsections, we refer to an man:lttng(1) command
5545using its man page name. For example, instead of _Run the `create`
5546command to..._, we use _Run the man:lttng-create(1) command to..._.
5547
5548
5549[[start-sessiond]]
5550=== Start a session daemon
5551
5552In some situations, you need to run a <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>
5553(man:lttng-sessiond(8)) _before_ you can use the man:lttng(1)
5554command-line tool.
5555
5556You will see the following error when you run a command while no session
5557daemon is running:
5558
5559----
5560Error: No session daemon is available
5561----
5562
5563The only command that automatically runs a session daemon is
5564man:lttng-create(1), which you use to
5565<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,create a tracing session>>. While
5566this is most of the time the first operation that you do, sometimes it's
5567not. Some examples are:
5568
5569* <<list-instrumentation-points,List the available instrumentation points>>.
5570* <<saving-loading-tracing-session,Load a tracing session configuration>>.
5571
5572[[tracing-group]] Each Unix user must have its own running session
5573daemon to trace user applications. The session daemon that the root user
5574starts is the only one allowed to control the LTTng kernel tracer. Users
5575that are part of the _tracing group_ can control the root session
5576daemon. The default tracing group name is `tracing`; you can set it to
5577something else with the opt:lttng-sessiond(8):--group option when you
5578start the root session daemon.
5579
5580To start a user session daemon:
5581
5582* Run man:lttng-sessiond(8):
5583+
5584--
5585[role="term"]
5586----
ded02698 5587$ lttng-sessiond --daemonize
7adf7ee2
PP
5588----
5589--
5590
5591To start the root session daemon:
5592
5593* Run man:lttng-sessiond(8) as the root user:
5594+
5595--
5596[role="term"]
5597----
ded02698 5598# lttng-sessiond --daemonize
7adf7ee2
PP
5599----
5600--
5601
5602In both cases, remove the opt:lttng-sessiond(8):--daemonize option to
5603start the session daemon in foreground.
5604
5605To stop a session daemon, use man:kill(1) on its process ID (standard
5606`TERM` signal).
5607
5608Note that some Linux distributions could manage the LTTng session daemon
5609as a service. In this case, you should use the service manager to
5610start, restart, and stop session daemons.
5611
5612
5613[[creating-destroying-tracing-sessions]]
5614=== Create and destroy a tracing session
5615
5616Almost all the LTTng control operations happen in the scope of
5617a <<tracing-session,tracing session>>, which is the dialogue between the
5618<<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>> and you.
5619
5620To create a tracing session with a generated name:
5621
5622* Use the man:lttng-create(1) command:
5623+
5624--
5625[role="term"]
5626----
ded02698 5627$ lttng create
7adf7ee2
PP
5628----
5629--
5630
5631The created tracing session's name is `auto` followed by the
5632creation date.
5633
5634To create a tracing session with a specific name:
5635
5636* Use the optional argument of the man:lttng-create(1) command:
5637+
5638--
5639[role="term"]
5640----
ded02698 5641$ lttng create my-session
7adf7ee2
PP
5642----
5643--
5644+
5645Replace `my-session` with the specific tracing session name.
5646
5647LTTng appends the creation date to the created tracing session's name.
5648
5649LTTng writes the traces of a tracing session in
5650+$LTTNG_HOME/lttng-trace/__name__+ by default, where +__name__+ is the
5651name of the tracing session. Note that the env:LTTNG_HOME environment
5652variable defaults to `$HOME` if not set.
5653
5654To output LTTng traces to a non-default location:
5655
5656* Use the opt:lttng-create(1):--output option of the man:lttng-create(1) command:
5657+
5658--
5659[role="term"]
5660----
ded02698 5661$ lttng create my-session --output=/tmp/some-directory
7adf7ee2
PP
5662----
5663--
5664
5665You may create as many tracing sessions as you wish.
5666
5667To list all the existing tracing sessions for your Unix user:
5668
5669* Use the man:lttng-list(1) command:
5670+
5671--
5672[role="term"]
5673----
ded02698 5674$ lttng list
7adf7ee2
PP
5675----
5676--
5677
5678When you create a tracing session, it is set as the _current tracing
5679session_. The following man:lttng(1) commands operate on the current
5680tracing session when you don't specify one:
5681
5682[role="list-3-cols"]
5683* `add-context`
5684* `destroy`
5685* `disable-channel`
5686* `disable-event`
5687* `enable-channel`
5688* `enable-event`
5689* `load`
5690* `save`
5691* `snapshot`
5692* `start`
5693* `stop`
5694* `track`
5695* `untrack`
5696* `view`
5697
5698To change the current tracing session:
5699
5700* Use the man:lttng-set-session(1) command:
5701+
5702--
5703[role="term"]
5704----
ded02698 5705$ lttng set-session new-session
7adf7ee2
PP
5706----
5707--
5708+
5709Replace `new-session` by the name of the new current tracing session.
5710
5711When you are done tracing in a given tracing session, you can destroy
5712it. This operation frees the resources taken by the tracing session
5713to destroy; it does not destroy the trace data that LTTng wrote for
5714this tracing session.
5715
5716To destroy the current tracing session:
5717
5718* Use the man:lttng-destroy(1) command:
5719+
5720--
5721[role="term"]
5722----
ded02698 5723$ lttng destroy
7adf7ee2
PP
5724----
5725--
5726
5727
5728[[list-instrumentation-points]]
5729=== List the available instrumentation points
5730
5731The <<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>> can query the running instrumented
5732user applications and the Linux kernel to get a list of available
5733instrumentation points. For the Linux kernel <<domain,tracing domain>>,
5734they are tracepoints and system calls. For the user space tracing
5735domain, they are tracepoints. For the other tracing domains, they are
5736logger names.
5737
5738To list the available instrumentation points:
5739
5740* Use the man:lttng-list(1) command with the requested tracing domain's
5741 option amongst:
5742+
5743--
5744* opt:lttng-list(1):--kernel: Linux kernel tracepoints (your Unix user
5745 must be a root user, or it must be a member of the
5746 <<tracing-group,tracing group>>).
5747* opt:lttng-list(1):--kernel with opt:lttng-list(1):--syscall: Linux
5748 kernel system calls (your Unix user must be a root user, or it must be
5749 a member of the tracing group).
5750* opt:lttng-list(1):--userspace: user space tracepoints.
5751* opt:lttng-list(1):--jul: `java.util.logging` loggers.
5752* opt:lttng-list(1):--log4j: Apache log4j loggers.
5753* opt:lttng-list(1):--python: Python loggers.
5754--
5755
5756.List the available user space tracepoints.
5757====
5758[role="term"]
5759----
ded02698 5760$ lttng list --userspace
7adf7ee2
PP
5761----
5762====
5763
5764.List the available Linux kernel system call tracepoints.
5765====
5766[role="term"]
5767----
ded02698 5768$ lttng list --kernel --syscall
7adf7ee2
PP
5769----
5770====
5771
5772
5773[[enabling-disabling-events]]
5774=== Create and enable an event rule
5775
5776Once you <<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,create a tracing
5777session>>, you can create <<event,event rules>> with the
5778man:lttng-enable-event(1) command.
5779
5780You specify each condition with a command-line option. The available
5781condition options are shown in the following table.
5782
5783[role="growable",cols="asciidoc,asciidoc,default"]
5784.Condition command-line options for the man:lttng-enable-event(1) command.
5785|====
5786|Option |Description |Applicable tracing domains
5787
5788|
5789One of:
5790
5791. `--syscall`
5792. +--probe=__ADDR__+
5793. +--function=__ADDR__+
5794
5795|
5796Instead of using the default _tracepoint_ instrumentation type, use:
5797
5798. A Linux system call.
5799. A Linux https://lwn.net/Articles/132196/[KProbe] (symbol or address).
5800. The entry and return points of a Linux function (symbol or address).
5801
5802|Linux kernel.
5803
5804|First positional argument.
5805
5806|
5807Tracepoint or system call name. In the case of a Linux KProbe or
5808function, this is a custom name given to the event rule. With the
5809JUL, log4j, and Python domains, this is a logger name.
5810
5811With a tracepoint, logger, or system call name, the last character
5812can be `*` to match anything that remains.
5813
5814|All.
5815
5816|
5817One of:
5818
5819. +--loglevel=__LEVEL__+
5820. +--loglevel-only=__LEVEL__+
5821
5822|
5823. Match only tracepoints or log statements with a logging level at
5824 least as severe as +__LEVEL__+.
5825. Match only tracepoints or log statements with a logging level
5826 equal to +__LEVEL__+.
5827
5828See man:lttng-enable-event(1) for the list of available logging level
5829names.
5830
5831|User space, JUL, log4j, and Python.
5832
5833|+--exclude=__EXCLUSIONS__+
5834
5835|
5836When you use a `*` character at the end of the tracepoint or logger
5837name (first positional argument), exclude the specific names in the
5838comma-delimited list +__EXCLUSIONS__+.
5839
5840|
5841User space, JUL, log4j, and Python.
5842
5843|+--filter=__EXPR__+
5844
5845|
5846Match only events which satisfy the expression +__EXPR__+.
5847
5848See man:lttng-enable-event(1) to learn more about the syntax of a
5849filter expression.
5850
5851|All.
5852
5853|====
5854
5855You attach an event rule to a <<channel,channel>> on creation. If you do
5856not specify the channel with the opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--channel
5857option, and if the event rule to create is the first in its
5858<<domain,tracing domain>> for a given tracing session, then LTTng
5859creates a _default channel_ for you. This default channel is reused in
5860subsequent invocations of the man:lttng-enable-event(1) command for the
5861same tracing domain.
5862
5863An event rule is always enabled at creation time.
5864
5865The following examples show how you can combine the previous
5866command-line options to create simple to more complex event rules.
5867
5868.Create an event rule targetting a Linux kernel tracepoint (default channel).
5869====
5870[role="term"]
5871----
ded02698 5872$ lttng enable-event --kernel sched_switch
7adf7ee2
PP
5873----
5874====
5875
5876.Create an event rule matching four Linux kernel system calls (default channel).
5877====
5878[role="term"]
5879----
ded02698 5880$ lttng enable-event --kernel --syscall open,write,read,close
7adf7ee2
PP
5881----
5882====
5883
5884.Create event rules matching tracepoints with filter expressions (default channel).
5885====
5886[role="term"]
5887----
ded02698 5888$ lttng enable-event --kernel sched_switch --filter='prev_comm == "bash"'
7adf7ee2
PP
5889----
5890
5891[role="term"]
5892----
ded02698 5893$ lttng enable-event --kernel --all \
7adf7ee2
PP
5894 --filter='$ctx.tid == 1988 || $ctx.tid == 1534'
5895----
5896
5897[role="term"]
5898----
ded02698 5899$ lttng enable-event --jul my_logger \
7adf7ee2
PP
5900 --filter='$app.retriever:cur_msg_id > 3'
5901----
5902
5903IMPORTANT: Make sure to always quote the filter string when you
5904use man:lttng(1) from a shell.
5905====
5906
5907.Create an event rule matching any user space tracepoint of a given tracepoint provider with a log level range (default channel).
5908====
5909[role="term"]
5910----
ded02698 5911$ lttng enable-event --userspace my_app:'*' --loglevel=TRACE_INFO
7adf7ee2
PP
5912----
5913
5914IMPORTANT: Make sure to always quote the wildcard character when you
5915use man:lttng(1) from a shell.
5916====
5917
5918.Create an event rule matching multiple Python loggers with a wildcard and with exclusions (default channel).
5919====
5920[role="term"]
5921----
ded02698 5922$ lttng enable-event --python my-app.'*' \
7adf7ee2
PP
5923 --exclude='my-app.module,my-app.hello'
5924----
5925====
5926
5927.Create an event rule matching any Apache log4j logger with a specific log level (default channel).
5928====
5929[role="term"]
5930----
ded02698 5931$ lttng enable-event --log4j --all --loglevel-only=LOG4J_WARN
7adf7ee2
PP
5932----
5933====
5934
5935.Create an event rule attached to a specific channel matching a specific user space tracepoint provider and tracepoint.
5936====
5937[role="term"]
5938----
ded02698 5939$ lttng enable-event --userspace my_app:my_tracepoint --channel=my-channel
7adf7ee2
PP
5940----
5941====
5942
5943The event rules of a given channel form a whitelist: as soon as an
5944emitted event passes one of them, LTTng can record the event. For
5945example, an event named `my_app:my_tracepoint` emitted from a user space
5946tracepoint with a `TRACE_ERROR` log level passes both of the following
5947rules:
5948
5949[role="term"]
5950----
ded02698
PP
5951$ lttng enable-event --userspace my_app:my_tracepoint
5952$ lttng enable-event --userspace my_app:my_tracepoint \
7adf7ee2
PP
5953 --loglevel=TRACE_INFO
5954----
5955
5956The second event rule is redundant: the first one includes
5957the second one.
5958
5959
5960[[disable-event-rule]]
5961=== Disable an event rule
5962
5963To disable an event rule that you <<enabling-disabling-events,created>>
5964previously, use the man:lttng-disable-event(1) command. This command
5965disables _all_ the event rules (of a given tracing domain and channel)
5966which match an instrumentation point. The other conditions are not
5967supported as of LTTng{nbsp}{revision}.
5968
5969The LTTng tracer does not record an emitted event which passes
5970a _disabled_ event rule.
5971
5972.Disable an event rule matching a Python logger (default channel).
5973====
5974[role="term"]
5975----
ded02698 5976$ lttng disable-event --python my-logger
7adf7ee2
PP
5977----
5978====
5979
5980.Disable an event rule matching all `java.util.logging` loggers (default channel).
5981====
5982[role="term"]
5983----
ded02698 5984$ lttng disable-event --jul '*'
7adf7ee2
PP
5985----
5986====
5987
5988.Disable _all_ the event rules of the default channel.
5989====
5990The opt:lttng-disable-event(1):--all-events option is not, like the
5991opt:lttng-enable-event(1):--all option of man:lttng-enable-event(1), the
5992equivalent of the event name `*` (wildcard): it disables _all_ the event
5993rules of a given channel.
5994
5995[role="term"]
5996----
ded02698 5997$ lttng disable-event --jul --all-events
7adf7ee2
PP
5998----
5999====
6000
6001NOTE: You cannot delete an event rule once you create it.
6002
6003
6004[[status]]
6005=== Get the status of a tracing session
6006
6007To get the status of the current tracing session, that is, its
6008parameters, its channels, event rules, and their attributes:
6009
6010* Use the man:lttng-status(1) command:
6011+
6012--
6013[role="term"]
6014----
ded02698 6015$ lttng status
7adf7ee2
PP
6016----
6017--
6018+
6019
6020To get the status of any tracing session:
6021
6022* Use the man:lttng-list(1) command with the tracing session's name:
6023+
6024--
6025[role="term"]
6026----
ded02698 6027$ lttng list my-session
7adf7ee2
PP
6028----
6029--
6030+
6031Replace `my-session` with the desired tracing session's name.
6032
6033
6034[[basic-tracing-session-control]]
6035=== Start and stop a tracing session
6036
6037Once you <<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,create a tracing
6038session>> and
6039<<enabling-disabling-events,create one or more event rules>>,
6040you can start and stop the tracers for this tracing session.
6041
6042To start tracing in the current tracing session:
6043
6044* Use the man:lttng-start(1) command:
6045+
6046--
6047[role="term"]
6048----
ded02698 6049$ lttng start
7adf7ee2
PP
6050----
6051--
6052
6053LTTng is very flexible: you can launch user applications before
6054or after the you start the tracers. The tracers only record the events
6055if they pass enabled event rules and if they occur while the tracers are
6056started.
6057
6058To stop tracing in the current tracing session:
6059
6060* Use the man:lttng-stop(1) command:
6061+
6062--
6063[role="term"]
6064----
ded02698 6065$ lttng stop
7adf7ee2
PP
6066----
6067--
6068+
6069If there were <<channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode,lost event
6070records>> or lost sub-buffers since the last time you ran
6071man:lttng-start(1), warnings are printed when you run the
6072man:lttng-stop(1) command.
6073
6074
6075[[enabling-disabling-channels]]
6076=== Create a channel
6077
6078Once you create a tracing session, you can create a <<channel,channel>>
6079with the man:lttng-enable-channel(1) command.
6080
6081Note that LTTng automatically creates a default channel when, for a
6082given <<domain,tracing domain>>, no channels exist and you
6083<<enabling-disabling-events,create>> the first event rule. This default
6084channel is named `channel0` and its attributes are set to reasonable
6085values. Therefore, you only need to create a channel when you need
6086non-default attributes.
6087
6088You specify each non-default channel attribute with a command-line
6089option when you use the man:lttng-enable-channel(1) command. The
6090available command-line options are:
6091
6092[role="growable",cols="asciidoc,asciidoc"]
6093.Command-line options for the man:lttng-enable-channel(1) command.
6094|====
6095|Option |Description
6096
6097|`--overwrite`
6098
6099|
6100Use the _overwrite_
6101<<channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode,event loss mode>> instead of
6102the default _discard_ mode.
6103
6104|`--buffers-pid` (user space tracing domain only)
6105
6106|
6107Use the per-process <<channel-buffering-schemes,buffering scheme>>
6108instead of the default per-user buffering scheme.
6109
6110|+--subbuf-size=__SIZE__+
6111
6112|
6113Allocate sub-buffers of +__SIZE__+ bytes (power of two), for each CPU,
6114either for each Unix user (default), or for each instrumented process.
6115
6116See <<channel-subbuf-size-vs-subbuf-count,Sub-buffer count and size>>.
6117
6118|+--num-subbuf=__COUNT__+
6119
6120|
6121Allocate +__COUNT__+ sub-buffers (power of two), for each CPU, either
6122for each Unix user (default), or for each instrumented process.
6123
6124See <<channel-subbuf-size-vs-subbuf-count,Sub-buffer count and size>>.
6125
6126|+--tracefile-size=__SIZE__+
6127
6128|
6129Set the maximum size of each trace file that this channel writes within
6130a stream to +__SIZE__+ bytes instead of no maximum.
6131
6132See <<tracefile-rotation,Trace file count and size>>.
6133
6134|+--tracefile-count=__COUNT__+
6135
6136|
6137Limit the number of trace files that this channel creates to
6138+__COUNT__+ channels instead of no limit.
6139
6140See <<tracefile-rotation,Trace file count and size>>.
6141
6142|+--switch-timer=__PERIODUS__+
6143
6144|
6145Set the <<channel-switch-timer,switch timer period>>
6146to +__PERIODUS__+{nbsp}µs.
6147
6148|+--read-timer=__PERIODUS__+
6149
6150|
6151Set the <<channel-read-timer,read timer period>>
6152to +__PERIODUS__+{nbsp}µs.
6153
6154|+--output=__TYPE__+ (Linux kernel tracing domain only)
6155
6156|
6157Set the channel's output type to +__TYPE__+, either `mmap` or `splice`.
6158
6159|====
6160
6161You can only create a channel in the Linux kernel and user space
6162<<domain,tracing domains>>: other tracing domains have their own channel
6163created on the fly when <<enabling-disabling-events,creating event
6164rules>>.
6165
6166[IMPORTANT]
6167====
6168Because of a current LTTng limitation, you must create all channels
6169_before_ you <<basic-tracing-session-control,start tracing>> in a given
6170tracing session, that is, before the first time you run
6171man:lttng-start(1).
6172
6173Since LTTng automatically creates a default channel when you use the
6174man:lttng-enable-event(1) command with a specific tracing domain, you
6175cannot, for example, create a Linux kernel event rule, start tracing,
6176and then create a user space event rule, because no user space channel
6177exists yet and it's too late to create one.
6178
6179For this reason, make sure to configure your channels properly
6180before starting the tracers for the first time!
6181====
6182
6183The following examples show how you can combine the previous
6184command-line options to create simple to more complex channels.
6185
6186.Create a Linux kernel channel with default attributes.
6187====
6188[role="term"]
6189----
ded02698 6190$ lttng enable-channel --kernel my-channel
7adf7ee2
PP
6191----
6192====
6193
6194.Create a user space channel with 4 sub-buffers or 1{nbsp}MiB each, per CPU, per instrumented process.
6195====
6196[role="term"]
6197----
ded02698 6198$ lttng enable-channel --userspace --num-subbuf=4 --subbuf-size=1M \
7adf7ee2
PP
6199 --buffers-pid my-channel
6200----
6201====
6202
6203.Create a Linux kernel channel which rotates 8 trace files of 4{nbsp}MiB each for each stream
6204====
6205[role="term"]
6206----
ded02698 6207$ lttng enable-channel --kernel --tracefile-count=8 \
7adf7ee2
PP
6208 --tracefile-size=4194304 my-channel
6209----
6210====
6211
6212.Create a user space channel in overwrite (or _flight recorder_) mode.
6213====
6214[role="term"]
6215----
ded02698 6216$ lttng enable-channel --userspace --overwrite my-channel
7adf7ee2
PP
6217----
6218====
6219
6220You can <<enabling-disabling-events,create>> the same event rule in
6221two different channels:
6222
6223[role="term"]
6224----
ded02698
PP
6225$ lttng enable-event --userspace --channel=my-channel app:tp
6226$ lttng enable-event --userspace --channel=other-channel app:tp
7adf7ee2
PP
6227----
6228
6229If both channels are enabled, when a tracepoint named `app:tp` is
6230reached, LTTng records two events, one for each channel.
6231
6232
6233[[disable-channel]]
6234=== Disable a channel
6235
6236To disable a specific channel that you <<enabling-disabling-channels,created>>
6237previously, use the man:lttng-disable-channel(1) command.
6238
6239.Disable a specific Linux kernel channel.
6240====
6241[role="term"]
6242----
ded02698 6243$ lttng disable-channel --kernel my-channel
7adf7ee2
PP
6244----
6245====
6246
6247The state of a channel precedes the individual states of event rules
6248attached to it: event rules which belong to a disabled channel, even if
6249they are enabled, are also considered disabled.
6250
6251
6252[[adding-context]]
6253=== Add context fields to a channel
6254
6255Event record fields in trace files provide important information about
6256events that occured previously, but sometimes some external context may
6257help you solve a problem faster. Examples of context fields are:
6258
6259* The **process ID**, **thread ID**, **process name**, and
6260 **process priority** of the thread in which the event occurs.
6261* The **hostname** of the system on which the event occurs.
6262* The current values of many possible **performance counters** using
6263 perf, for example:
6264** CPU cycles, stalled cycles, idle cycles, and the other cycle types.
6265** Cache misses.
6266** Branch instructions, misses, and loads.
6267** CPU faults.
6268* Any context defined at the application level (supported for the
6269 JUL and log4j <<domain,tracing domains>>).
6270
6271To get the full list of available context fields, see
6272`lttng add-context --list`. Some context fields are reserved for a
6273specific <<domain,tracing domain>> (Linux kernel or user space).
6274
6275You add context fields to <<channel,channels>>. All the events
6276that a channel with added context fields records contain those fields.
6277
6278To add context fields to one or all the channels of a given tracing
6279session:
6280
6281* Use the man:lttng-add-context(1) command.
6282
6283.Add context fields to all the channels of the current tracing session.
6284====
6285The following command line adds the virtual process identifier and
6286the per-thread CPU cycles count fields to all the user space channels
6287of the current tracing session.
6288
6289[role="term"]
6290----
ded02698 6291$ lttng add-context --userspace --type=vpid --type=perf:thread:cpu-cycles
7adf7ee2
PP
6292----
6293====
6294
6295.Add a context field to a specific channel.
6296====
6297The following command line adds the thread identifier context field
6298to the Linux kernel channel named `my-channel` in the current
6299tracing session.
6300
6301[role="term"]
6302----
ded02698 6303$ lttng add-context --kernel --channel=my-channel --type=tid
7adf7ee2
PP
6304----
6305====
6306
6307.Add an application-specific context field to a specific channel.
6308====
6309The following command line adds the `cur_msg_id` context field of the
6310`retriever` context retriever for all the instrumented
6311<<java-application,Java applications>> recording <<event,event records>>
6312in the channel named `my-channel`:
6313
6314[role="term"]
6315----
ded02698 6316$ lttng add-context --kernel --channel=my-channel \
7adf7ee2
PP
6317 --type='$app:retriever:cur_msg_id'
6318----
6319
6320IMPORTANT: Make sure to always quote the `$` character when you
6321use man:lttng-add-context(1) from a shell.
6322====
6323
6324NOTE: You cannot remove context fields from a channel once you add it.
6325
6326
6327[role="since-2.7"]
6328[[pid-tracking]]
6329=== Track process IDs
6330
6331It's often useful to allow only specific process IDs (PIDs) to emit
6332events. For example, you may wish to record all the system calls made by
6333a given process (à la http://linux.die.net/man/1/strace[strace]).
6334
6335The man:lttng-track(1) and man:lttng-untrack(1) commands serve this
6336purpose. Both commands operate on a whitelist of process IDs. You _add_
6337entries to this whitelist with the man:lttng-track(1) command and remove
6338entries with the man:lttng-untrack(1) command. Any process which has one
6339of the PIDs in the whitelist is allowed to emit LTTng events which pass
6340an enabled <<event,event rule>>.
6341
6342NOTE: The PID tracker tracks the _numeric process IDs_. Should a
6343process with a given tracked ID exit and another process be given this
6344ID, then the latter would also be allowed to emit events.
6345
6346.Track and untrack process IDs.
6347====
6348For the sake of the following example, assume the target system has 16
6349possible PIDs.
6350
6351When you
6352<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,create a tracing session>>,
6353the whitelist contains all the possible PIDs:
6354
6355[role="img-100"]
6356.All PIDs are tracked.
6357image::track-all.png[]
6358
6359When the whitelist is full and you use the man:lttng-track(1) command to
6360specify some PIDs to track, LTTng first clears the whitelist, then it
6361tracks the specific PIDs. After:
6362
6363[role="term"]
6364----
ded02698 6365$ lttng track --pid=3,4,7,10,13
7adf7ee2
PP
6366----
6367
6368the whitelist is:
6369
6370[role="img-100"]
6371.PIDs 3, 4, 7, 10, and 13 are tracked.
6372image::track-3-4-7-10-13.png[]
6373
6374You can add more PIDs to the whitelist afterwards:
6375
6376[role="term"]
6377----
ded02698 6378$ lttng track --pid=1,15,16
7adf7ee2
PP
6379----
6380
6381The result is:
6382
6383[role="img-100"]
6384.PIDs 1, 15, and 16 are added to the whitelist.
6385image::track-1-3-4-7-10-13-15-16.png[]
6386
6387The man:lttng-untrack(1) command removes entries from the PID tracker's
6388whitelist. Given the previous example, the following command:
6389
6390[role="term"]
6391----
ded02698 6392$ lttng untrack --pid=3,7,10,13
7adf7ee2
PP
6393----
6394
6395leads to this whitelist:
6396
6397[role="img-100"]
6398.PIDs 3, 7, 10, and 13 are removed from the whitelist.
6399image::track-1-4-15-16.png[]
6400
a9f3997c
PP
6401LTTng can track all possible PIDs again using the
6402opt:lttng-track(1):--all option:
7adf7ee2
PP
6403
6404[role="term"]
6405----
ded02698 6406$ lttng track --pid --all
7adf7ee2
PP
6407----
6408
6409The result is, again:
6410
6411[role="img-100"]
6412.All PIDs are tracked.
6413image::track-all.png[]
6414====
6415
6416.Track only specific PIDs
6417====
6418A very typical use case with PID tracking is to start with an empty
6419whitelist, then <<basic-tracing-session-control,start the tracers>>, and
6420then add PIDs manually while tracers are active. You can accomplish this
6421by using the opt:lttng-untrack(1):--all option of the
6422man:lttng-untrack(1) command to clear the whitelist after you
6423<<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,create a tracing session>>:
6424
6425[role="term"]
6426----
ded02698 6427$ lttng untrack --pid --all
7adf7ee2
PP
6428----
6429
6430gives:
6431
6432[role="img-100"]
6433.No PIDs are tracked.
6434image::untrack-all.png[]
6435
6436If you trace with this whitelist configuration, the tracer records no
6437events for this <<domain,tracing domain>> because no processes are
6438tracked. You can use the man:lttng-track(1) command as usual to track
6439specific PIDs, for example:
6440
6441[role="term"]
6442----
ded02698 6443$ lttng track --pid=6,11
7adf7ee2
PP
6444----
6445
6446Result:
6447
6448[role="img-100"]
6449.PIDs 6 and 11 are tracked.
6450image::track-6-11.png[]
6451====
6452
6453
6454[role="since-2.5"]
6455[[saving-loading-tracing-session]]
6456=== Save and load tracing session configurations
6457
6458Configuring a <<tracing-session,tracing session>> can be long. Some of
6459the tasks involved are:
6460
6461* <<enabling-disabling-channels,Create channels>> with
6462 specific attributes.
6463* <<adding-context,Add context fields>> to specific channels.
6464* <<enabling-disabling-events,Create event rules>> with specific log
6465 level and filter conditions.
6466
6467If you use LTTng to solve real world problems, chances are you have to
6468record events using the same tracing session setup over and over,
6469modifying a few variables each time in your instrumented program
6470or environment. To avoid constant tracing session reconfiguration,
6471the man:lttng(1) command-line tool can save and load tracing session
6472configurations to/from XML files.
6473
6474To save a given tracing session configuration:
6475
6476* Use the man:lttng-save(1) command:
6477+
6478--
6479[role="term"]
6480----
ded02698 6481$ lttng save my-session
7adf7ee2
PP
6482----
6483--
6484+
6485Replace `my-session` with the name of the tracing session to save.
6486
6487LTTng saves tracing session configurations to
6488dir:{$LTTNG_HOME/.lttng/sessions} by default. Note that the
6489env:LTTNG_HOME environment variable defaults to `$HOME` if not set. Use
6490the opt:lttng-save(1):--output-path option to change this destination
6491directory.
6492
6493LTTng saves all configuration parameters, for example:
6494
6495* The tracing session name.
6496* The trace data output path.
6497* The channels with their state and all their attributes.
6498* The context fields you added to channels.
6499* The event rules with their state, log level and filter conditions.
6500
6501To load a tracing session:
6502
6503* Use the man:lttng-load(1) command:
6504+
6505--
6506[role="term"]
6507----
ded02698 6508$ lttng load my-session
7adf7ee2
PP
6509----
6510--
6511+
6512Replace `my-session` with the name of the tracing session to load.
6513
6514When LTTng loads a configuration, it restores your saved tracing session
6515as if you just configured it manually.
6516
6517See man:lttng(1) for the complete list of command-line options. You
6518can also save and load all many sessions at a time, and decide in which
6519directory to output the XML files.
6520
6521
6522[[sending-trace-data-over-the-network]]
6523=== Send trace data over the network
6524
6525LTTng can send the recorded trace data to a remote system over the
6526network instead of writing it to the local file system.
6527
6528To send the trace data over the network:
6529
6530. On the _remote_ system (which can also be the target system),
6531 start an LTTng <<lttng-relayd,relay daemon>> (man:lttng-relayd(8)):
6532+
6533--
6534[role="term"]
6535----
ded02698 6536$ lttng-relayd
7adf7ee2
PP
6537----
6538--
6539
6540. On the _target_ system, create a tracing session configured to
6541 send trace data over the network:
6542+
6543--
6544[role="term"]
6545----
ded02698 6546$ lttng create my-session --set-url=net://remote-system
7adf7ee2
PP
6547----
6548--
6549+
6550Replace `remote-system` by the host name or IP address of the
6551remote system. See man:lttng-create(1) for the exact URL format.
6552
6553. On the target system, use the man:lttng(1) command-line tool as usual.
6554 When tracing is active, the target's consumer daemon sends sub-buffers
d1b6c345 6555 to the relay daemon running on the remote system instead of flushing
7adf7ee2
PP
6556 them to the local file system. The relay daemon writes the received
6557 packets to the local file system.
6558
6559The relay daemon writes trace files to
6560+$LTTNG_HOME/lttng-traces/__hostname__/__session__+ by default, where
6561+__hostname__+ is the host name of the target system and +__session__+
6562is the tracing session name. Note that the env:LTTNG_HOME environment
6563variable defaults to `$HOME` if not set. Use the
6564opt:lttng-relayd(8):--output option of man:lttng-relayd(8) to write
6565trace files to another base directory.
6566
6567
6568[role="since-2.4"]
6569[[lttng-live]]
6570=== View events as LTTng emits them (noch:{LTTng} live)
6571
6572LTTng live is a network protocol implemented by the <<lttng-relayd,relay
6573daemon>> (man:lttng-relayd(8)) to allow compatible trace viewers to
6574display events as LTTng emits them on the target system while tracing is
6575active.
6576
6577The relay daemon creates a _tee_: it forwards the trace data to both
6578the local file system and to connected live viewers:
6579
6580[role="img-90"]
6581.The relay daemon creates a _tee_, forwarding the trace data to both trace files and a connected live viewer.
6582image::live.png[]
6583
6584To use LTTng live:
6585
6586. On the _target system_, create a <<tracing-session,tracing session>>
6587 in _live mode_:
6588+
6589--
6590[role="term"]
6591----
ded02698 6592$ lttng create my-session --live
7adf7ee2
PP
6593----
6594--
6595+
6596This spawns a local relay daemon.
6597
6598. Start the live viewer and configure it to connect to the relay
6599 daemon. For example, with http://diamon.org/babeltrace[Babeltrace]:
6600+
6601--
6602[role="term"]
6603----
ded02698
PP
6604$ babeltrace --input-format=lttng-live
6605 net://localhost/host/hostname/my-session
7adf7ee2
PP
6606----
6607--
6608+
6609Replace:
6610+
6611--
6612* `hostname` with the host name of the target system.
6613* `my-session` with the name of the tracing session to view.
6614--
6615
6616. Configure the tracing session as usual with the man:lttng(1)
6617 command-line tool, and <<basic-tracing-session-control,start tracing>>.
6618
6619You can list the available live tracing sessions with Babeltrace:
6620
6621[role="term"]
6622----
ded02698 6623$ babeltrace --input-format=lttng-live net://localhost
7adf7ee2
PP
6624----
6625
6626You can start the relay daemon on another system. In this case, you need
6627to specify the relay daemon's URL when you create the tracing session
6628with the opt:lttng-create(1):--set-url option. You also need to replace
6629`localhost` in the procedure above with the host name of the system on
6630which the relay daemon is running.
6631
6632See man:lttng-create(1) and man:lttng-relayd(8) for the complete list of
6633command-line options.
6634
6635
6636[role="since-2.3"]
6637[[taking-a-snapshot]]
6638=== Take a snapshot of the current sub-buffers of a tracing session
6639
6640The normal behavior of LTTng is to append full sub-buffers to growing
6641trace data files. This is ideal to keep a full history of the events
6642that occurred on the target system, but it can
6643represent too much data in some situations. For example, you may wish
6644to trace your application continuously until some critical situation
6645happens, in which case you only need the latest few recorded
6646events to perform the desired analysis, not multi-gigabyte trace files.
6647
6648With the man:lttng-snapshot(1) command, you can take a snapshot of the
6649current sub-buffers of a given <<tracing-session,tracing session>>.
6650LTTng can write the snapshot to the local file system or send it over
6651the network.
6652
6653To take a snapshot:
6654
6655. Create a tracing session in _snapshot mode_:
6656+
6657--
6658[role="term"]
6659----
ded02698 6660$ lttng create my-session --snapshot
7adf7ee2
PP
6661----
6662--
6663+
6664The <<channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode,event loss mode>> of
6665<<channel,channels>> created in this mode is automatically set to
6666_overwrite_ (flight recorder mode).
6667
6668. Configure the tracing session as usual with the man:lttng(1)
6669 command-line tool, and <<basic-tracing-session-control,start tracing>>.
6670
6671. **Optional**: When you need to take a snapshot,
6672 <<basic-tracing-session-control,stop tracing>>.
6673+
6674You can take a snapshot when the tracers are active, but if you stop
6675them first, you are sure that the data in the sub-buffers does not
6676change before you actually take the snapshot.
6677
6678. Take a snapshot:
6679+
6680--
6681[role="term"]
6682----
ded02698 6683$ lttng snapshot record --name=my-first-snapshot
7adf7ee2
PP
6684----
6685--
6686+
6687LTTng writes the current sub-buffers of all the current tracing
6688session's channels to trace files on the local file system. Those trace
6689files have `my-first-snapshot` in their name.
6690
6691There is no difference between the format of a normal trace file and the
6692format of a snapshot: viewers of LTTng traces also support LTTng
6693snapshots.
6694
6695By default, LTTng writes snapshot files to the path shown by
6696`lttng snapshot list-output`. You can change this path or decide to send
6697snapshots over the network using either:
6698
6699. An output path or URL that you specify when you create the
6700 tracing session.
6701. An snapshot output path or URL that you add using
6702 `lttng snapshot add-output`
6703. An output path or URL that you provide directly to the
6704 `lttng snapshot record` command.
6705
6706Method 3 overrides method 2, which overrides method 1. When you
6707specify a URL, a relay daemon must listen on a remote system (see
6708<<sending-trace-data-over-the-network,Send trace data over the network>>).
6709
6710
6711[role="since-2.6"]
6712[[mi]]
6713=== Use the machine interface
6714
6715With any command of the man:lttng(1) command-line tool, you can set the
6716opt:lttng(1):--mi option to `xml` (before the command name) to get an
6717XML machine interface output, for example:
6718
6719[role="term"]
6720----
ded02698 6721$ lttng --mi=xml enable-event --kernel --syscall open
7adf7ee2
PP
6722----
6723
6724A schema definition (XSD) is
6725https://github.com/lttng/lttng-tools/blob/stable-2.8/src/common/mi-lttng-3.0.xsd[available]
6726to ease the integration with external tools as much as possible.
6727
6728
6729[role="since-2.8"]
6730[[metadata-regenerate]]
6731=== Regenerate the metadata of an LTTng trace
6732
6733An LTTng trace, which is a http://diamon.org/ctf[CTF] trace, has both
6734data stream files and a metadata file. This metadata file contains,
6735amongst other things, information about the offset of the clock sources
6736used to timestamp <<event,event records>> when tracing.
6737
6738If, once a <<tracing-session,tracing session>> is
6739<<basic-tracing-session-control,started>>, a major
6740https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Time_Protocol[NTP] correction
6741happens, the trace's clock offset also needs to be updated. You
6742can use the man:lttng-metadata(1) command to do so.
6743
6744The main use case of this command is to allow a system to boot with
6745an incorrect wall time and trace it with LTTng before its wall time
6746is corrected. Once the system is known to be in a state where its
6747wall time is correct, it can run `lttng metadata regenerate`.
6748
6749To regenerate the metadata of an LTTng trace:
6750
6751* Use the `regenerate` action of the man:lttng-metadata(1) command:
6752+
6753--
6754[role="term"]
6755----
ded02698 6756$ lttng metadata regenerate
7adf7ee2
PP
6757----
6758--
6759
6760[IMPORTANT]
6761====
6762`lttng metadata regenerate` has the following limitations:
6763
6764* Tracing session <<creating-destroying-tracing-sessions,created>>
6765 in non-live mode.
6766* User space <<channel,channels>>, if any, using
6767 <<channel-buffering-schemes,per-user buffering>>.
6768====
6769
6770
6771[role="since-2.7"]
6772[[persistent-memory-file-systems]]
6773=== Record trace data on persistent memory file systems
6774
6775https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-volatile_random-access_memory[Non-volatile random-access memory]
6776(NVRAM) is random-access memory that retains its information when power
6777is turned off (non-volatile). Systems with such memory can store data
6778structures in RAM and retrieve them after a reboot, without flushing
6779to typical _storage_.
6780
6781Linux supports NVRAM file systems thanks to either
6782http://pramfs.sourceforge.net/[PRAMFS] or
6783https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/dax.txt[DAX]{nbsp}+{nbsp}http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1504.1/03463.html[pmem]
6784(requires Linux 4.1+).
6785
6786This section does not describe how to operate such file systems;
6787we assume that you have a working persistent memory file system.
6788
6789When you create a <<tracing-session,tracing session>>, you can specify
6790the path of the shared memory holding the sub-buffers. If you specify a
6791location on an NVRAM file system, then you can retrieve the latest
6792recorded trace data when the system reboots after a crash.
6793
6794To record trace data on a persistent memory file system and retrieve the
6795trace data after a system crash:
6796
6797. Create a tracing session with a sub-buffer shared memory path located
6798 on an NVRAM file system:
6799+
6800--
6801[role="term"]
6802----
ded02698 6803$ lttng create my-session --shm-path=/path/to/shm
7adf7ee2
PP
6804----
6805--
6806
6807. Configure the tracing session as usual with the man:lttng(1)
6808 command-line tool, and <<basic-tracing-session-control,start tracing>>.
6809
6810. After a system crash, use the man:lttng-crash(1) command-line tool to
6811 view the trace data recorded on the NVRAM file system:
6812+
6813--
6814[role="term"]
6815----
ded02698 6816$ lttng-crash /path/to/shm
7adf7ee2
PP
6817----
6818--
6819
6820The binary layout of the ring buffer files is not exactly the same as
6821the trace files layout. This is why you need to use man:lttng-crash(1)
6822instead of your preferred trace viewer directly.
6823
6824To convert the ring buffer files to LTTng trace files:
6825
6826* Use the opt:lttng-crash(1):--extract option of man:lttng-crash(1):
6827+
6828--
6829[role="term"]
6830----
ded02698 6831$ lttng-crash --extract=/path/to/trace /path/to/shm
7adf7ee2
PP
6832----
6833--
6834
6835
6836[[reference]]
6837== Reference
6838
6839[[lttng-modules-ref]]
6840=== noch:{LTTng-modules}
6841
6842[role="since-2.7"]
6843[[lttng-modules-tp-fields]]
6844==== Tracepoint fields macros (for `TP_FIELDS()`)
6845
6846[[tp-fast-assign]][[tp-struct-entry]]The available macros to define
6847tracepoint fields, which must be listed within `TP_FIELDS()` in
6848`LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()`, are:
6849
6850[role="func-desc growable",cols="asciidoc,asciidoc"]
6851.Available macros to define LTTng-modules tracepoint fields
6852|====
6853|Macro |Description and parameters
6854
6855|
6856+ctf_integer(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6857
6858+ctf_integer_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6859
6860+ctf_user_integer(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6861
6862+ctf_user_integer_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6863|
6864Standard integer, displayed in base 10.
6865
6866+__t__+::
6867 Integer C type (`int`, `long`, `size_t`, ...).
6868
6869+__n__+::
6870 Field name.
6871
6872+__e__+::
6873 Argument expression.
6874
6875|
6876+ctf_integer_hex(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6877
6878+ctf_user_integer_hex(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6879|
6880Standard integer, displayed in base 16.
6881
6882+__t__+::
6883 Integer C type.
6884
6885+__n__+::
6886 Field name.
6887
6888+__e__+::
6889 Argument expression.
6890
6891|+ctf_integer_oct(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6892|
6893Standard integer, displayed in base 8.
6894
6895+__t__+::
6896 Integer C type.
6897
6898+__n__+::
6899 Field name.
6900
6901+__e__+::
6902 Argument expression.
6903
6904|
6905+ctf_integer_network(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6906
6907+ctf_user_integer_network(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6908|
6909Integer in network byte order (big-endian), displayed in base 10.
6910
6911+__t__+::
6912 Integer C type.
6913
6914+__n__+::
6915 Field name.
6916
6917+__e__+::
6918 Argument expression.
6919
6920|
6921+ctf_integer_network_hex(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6922
6923+ctf_user_integer_network_hex(__t__, __n__, __e__)+
6924|
6925Integer in network byte order, displayed in base 16.
6926
6927+__t__+::
6928 Integer C type.
6929
6930+__n__+::
6931 Field name.
6932
6933+__e__+::
6934 Argument expression.
6935
6936|
6937+ctf_string(__n__, __e__)+
6938
6939+ctf_string_nowrite(__n__, __e__)+
6940
6941+ctf_user_string(__n__, __e__)+
6942
6943+ctf_user_string_nowrite(__n__, __e__)+
6944|
6945Null-terminated string; undefined behavior if +__e__+ is `NULL`.
6946
6947+__n__+::
6948 Field name.
6949
6950+__e__+::
6951 Argument expression.
6952
6953|
6954+ctf_array(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6955
6956+ctf_array_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6957
6958+ctf_user_array(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6959
6960+ctf_user_array_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6961|
6962Statically-sized array of integers.
6963
6964+__t__+::
6965 Array element C type.
6966
6967+__n__+::
6968 Field name.
6969
6970+__e__+::
6971 Argument expression.
6972
6973+__s__+::
6974 Number of elements.
6975
6976|
6977+ctf_array_bitfield(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6978
6979+ctf_array_bitfield_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6980
6981+ctf_user_array_bitfield(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6982
6983+ctf_user_array_bitfield_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
6984|
6985Statically-sized array of bits.
6986
6987The type of +__e__+ must be an integer type. +__s__+ is the number
6988of elements of such type in +__e__+, not the number of bits.
6989
6990+__t__+::
6991 Array element C type.
6992
6993+__n__+::
6994 Field name.
6995
6996+__e__+::
6997 Argument expression.
6998
6999+__s__+::
7000 Number of elements.
7001
7002|
7003+ctf_array_text(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
7004
7005+ctf_array_text_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
7006
7007+ctf_user_array_text(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
7008
7009+ctf_user_array_text_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __s__)+
7010|
7011Statically-sized array, printed as text.
7012
7013The string does not need to be null-terminated.
7014
7015+__t__+::
7016 Array element C type (always `char`).
7017
7018+__n__+::
7019 Field name.
7020
7021+__e__+::
7022 Argument expression.
7023
7024+__s__+::
7025 Number of elements.
7026
7027|
7028+ctf_sequence(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7029
7030+ctf_sequence_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7031
7032+ctf_user_sequence(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7033
7034+ctf_user_sequence_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7035|
7036Dynamically-sized array of integers.
7037
7038The type of +__E__+ must be unsigned.
7039
7040+__t__+::
7041 Array element C type.
7042
7043+__n__+::
7044 Field name.
7045
7046+__e__+::
7047 Argument expression.
7048
7049+__T__+::
7050 Length expression C type.
7051
7052+__E__+::
7053 Length expression.
7054
7055|
7056+ctf_sequence_hex(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7057
7058+ctf_user_sequence_hex(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7059|
7060Dynamically-sized array of integers, displayed in base 16.
7061
7062The type of +__E__+ must be unsigned.
7063
7064+__t__+::
7065 Array element C type.
7066
7067+__n__+::
7068 Field name.
7069
7070+__e__+::
7071 Argument expression.
7072
7073+__T__+::
7074 Length expression C type.
7075
7076+__E__+::
7077 Length expression.
7078
7079|+ctf_sequence_network(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7080|
7081Dynamically-sized array of integers in network byte order (big-endian),
7082displayed in base 10.
7083
7084The type of +__E__+ must be unsigned.
7085
7086+__t__+::
7087 Array element C type.
7088
7089+__n__+::
7090 Field name.
7091
7092+__e__+::
7093 Argument expression.
7094
7095+__T__+::
7096 Length expression C type.
7097
7098+__E__+::
7099 Length expression.
7100
7101|
7102+ctf_sequence_bitfield(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7103
7104+ctf_sequence_bitfield_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7105
7106+ctf_user_sequence_bitfield(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7107
7108+ctf_user_sequence_bitfield_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7109|
7110Dynamically-sized array of bits.
7111
7112The type of +__e__+ must be an integer type. +__s__+ is the number
7113of elements of such type in +__e__+, not the number of bits.
7114
7115The type of +__E__+ must be unsigned.
7116
7117+__t__+::
7118 Array element C type.
7119
7120+__n__+::
7121 Field name.
7122
7123+__e__+::
7124 Argument expression.
7125
7126+__T__+::
7127 Length expression C type.
7128
7129+__E__+::
7130 Length expression.
7131
7132|
7133+ctf_sequence_text(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7134
7135+ctf_sequence_text_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7136
7137+ctf_user_sequence_text(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7138
7139+ctf_user_sequence_text_nowrite(__t__, __n__, __e__, __T__, __E__)+
7140|
7141Dynamically-sized array, displayed as text.
7142
7143The string does not need to be null-terminated.
7144
7145The type of +__E__+ must be unsigned.
7146
7147The behaviour is undefined if +__e__+ is `NULL`.
7148
7149+__t__+::
7150 Sequence element C type (always `char`).
7151
7152+__n__+::
7153 Field name.
7154
7155+__e__+::
7156 Argument expression.
7157
7158+__T__+::
7159 Length expression C type.
7160
7161+__E__+::
7162 Length expression.
7163|====
7164
7165Use the `_user` versions when the argument expression, `e`, is
7166a user space address. In the cases of `ctf_user_integer*()` and
7167`ctf_user_float*()`, `&e` must be a user space address, thus `e` must
7168be addressable.
7169
7170The `_nowrite` versions omit themselves from the session trace, but are
7171otherwise identical. This means the `_nowrite` fields won't be written
7172in the recorded trace. Their primary purpose is to make some
7173of the event context available to the
7174<<enabling-disabling-events,event filters>> without having to
7175commit the data to sub-buffers.
7176
7177
7178[[glossary]]
7179== Glossary
7180
7181Terms related to LTTng and to tracing in general:
7182
7183Babeltrace::
7184 The http://diamon.org/babeltrace[Babeltrace] project, which includes
7185 the cmd:babeltrace command, some libraries, and Python bindings.
7186
7187<<channel-buffering-schemes,buffering scheme>>::
7188 A layout of sub-buffers applied to a given channel.
7189
7190<<channel,channel>>::
7191 An entity which is responsible for a set of ring buffers.
7192+
7193<<event,Event rules>> are always attached to a specific channel.
7194
7195clock::
7196 A reference of time for a tracer.
7197
7198<<lttng-consumerd,consumer daemon>>::
7199 A process which is responsible for consuming the full sub-buffers
7200 and write them to a file system or send them over the network.
7201
7202<<channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode,discard mode>>:: The event loss
7203 mode in which the tracer _discards_ new event records when there's no
7204 sub-buffer space left to store them.
7205
7206event::
7207 The consequence of the execution of an instrumentation
7208 point, like a tracepoint that you manually place in some source code,
7209 or a Linux kernel KProbe.
7210+
7211An event is said to _occur_ at a specific time. Different actions can
310431f4 7212be taken upon the occurrence of an event, like record the event's payload
7adf7ee2
PP
7213to a sub-buffer.
7214
7215<<channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode,event loss mode>>::
7216 The mechanism by which event records of a given channel are lost
7217 (not recorded) when there is no sub-buffer space left to store them.
7218
7219[[def-event-name]]event name::
7220 The name of an event, which is also the name of the event record.
7221 This is also called the _instrumentation point name_.
7222
7223event record::
7224 A record, in a trace, of the payload of an event which occured.
7225
7226<<event,event rule>>::
7227 Set of conditions which must be satisfied for one or more occuring
7228 events to be recorded.
7229
7230`java.util.logging`::
7231 Java platform's
7232 https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/logging/package-summary.html[core logging facilities].
7233
7234<<instrumenting,instrumentation>>::
7235 The use of LTTng probes to make a piece of software traceable.
7236
7237instrumentation point::
7238 A point in the execution path of a piece of software that, when
7239 reached by this execution, can emit an event.
7240
7241instrumentation point name::
7242 See _<<def-event-name,event name>>_.
7243
7244log4j::
7245 A http://logging.apache.org/log4j/1.2/[logging library] for Java
7246 developed by the Apache Software Foundation.
7247
7248log level::
7249 Level of severity of a log statement or user space
7250 instrumentation point.
7251
7252LTTng::
7253 The _Linux Trace Toolkit: next generation_ project.
7254
7255<<lttng-cli,cmd:lttng>>::
7256 A command-line tool provided by the LTTng-tools project which you
7257 can use to send and receive control messages to and from a
7258 session daemon.
7259
7260LTTng analyses::
7261 The https://github.com/lttng/lttng-analyses[LTTng analyses] project,
7262 which is a set of analyzing programs that are used to obtain a
7263 higher level view of an LTTng trace.
7264
7265cmd:lttng-consumerd::
7266 The name of the consumer daemon program.
7267
7268cmd:lttng-crash::
7269 A utility provided by the LTTng-tools project which can convert
7270 ring buffer files (usually
7271 <<persistent-memory-file-systems,saved on a persistent memory file system>>)
7272 to trace files.
7273
7274LTTng Documentation::
7275 This document.
7276
7277<<lttng-live,LTTng live>>::
7278 A communication protocol between the relay daemon and live viewers
7279 which makes it possible to see events "live", as they are received by
7280 the relay daemon.
7281
7282<<lttng-modules,LTTng-modules>>::
7283 The https://github.com/lttng/lttng-modules[LTTng-modules] project,
7284 which contains the Linux kernel modules to make the Linux kernel
7285 instrumentation points available for LTTng tracing.
7286
7287cmd:lttng-relayd::
7288 The name of the relay daemon program.
7289
7290cmd:lttng-sessiond::
7291 The name of the session daemon program.
7292
7293LTTng-tools::
7294 The https://github.com/lttng/lttng-tools[LTTng-tools] project, which
7295 contains the various programs and libraries used to
7296 <<controlling-tracing,control tracing>>.
7297
7298<<lttng-ust,LTTng-UST>>::
7299 The https://github.com/lttng/lttng-ust[LTTng-UST] project, which
7300 contains libraries to instrument user applications.
7301
7302<<lttng-ust-agents,LTTng-UST Java agent>>::
7303 A Java package provided by the LTTng-UST project to allow the
7304 LTTng instrumentation of `java.util.logging` and Apache log4j 1.2
7305 logging statements.
7306
7307<<lttng-ust-agents,LTTng-UST Python agent>>::
7308 A Python package provided by the LTTng-UST project to allow the
7309 LTTng instrumentation of Python logging statements.
7310
7311<<channel-overwrite-mode-vs-discard-mode,overwrite mode>>::
7312 The event loss mode in which new event records overwrite older
7313 event records when there's no sub-buffer space left to store them.
7314
7315<<channel-buffering-schemes,per-process buffering>>::
7316 A buffering scheme in which each instrumented process has its own
7317 sub-buffers for a given user space channel.
7318
7319<<channel-buffering-schemes,per-user buffering>>::
7320 A buffering scheme in which all the processes of a Unix user share the
7321 same sub-buffer for a given user space channel.
7322
7323<<lttng-relayd,relay daemon>>::
7324 A process which is responsible for receiving the trace data sent by
7325 a distant consumer daemon.
7326
7327ring buffer::
7328 A set of sub-buffers.
7329
7330<<lttng-sessiond,session daemon>>::
7331 A process which receives control commands from you and orchestrates
7332 the tracers and various LTTng daemons.
7333
7334<<taking-a-snapshot,snapshot>>::
7335 A copy of the current data of all the sub-buffers of a given tracing
7336 session, saved as trace files.
7337
7338sub-buffer::
7339 One part of an LTTng ring buffer which contains event records.
7340
7341timestamp::
7342 The time information attached to an event when it is emitted.
7343
7344trace (_noun_)::
7345 A set of files which are the concatenations of one or more
7346 flushed sub-buffers.
7347
7348trace (_verb_)::
7349 The action of recording the events emitted by an application
7350 or by a system, or to initiate such recording by controlling
7351 a tracer.
7352
7353Trace Compass::
7354 The http://tracecompass.org[Trace Compass] project and application.
7355
7356tracepoint::
7357 An instrumentation point using the tracepoint mechanism of the Linux
7358 kernel or of LTTng-UST.
7359
7360tracepoint definition::
7361 The definition of a single tracepoint.
7362
7363tracepoint name::
7364 The name of a tracepoint.
7365
7366tracepoint provider::
7367 A set of functions providing tracepoints to an instrumented user
7368 application.
7369+
7370Not to be confused with a _tracepoint provider package_: many tracepoint
7371providers can exist within a tracepoint provider package.
7372
7373tracepoint provider package::
7374 One or more tracepoint providers compiled as an object file or as
7375 a shared library.
7376
7377tracer::
7378 A software which records emitted events.
7379
7380<<domain,tracing domain>>::
7381 A namespace for event sources.
7382
2e333859 7383<<tracing-group,tracing group>>::
7adf7ee2
PP
7384 The Unix group in which a Unix user can be to be allowed to trace the
7385 Linux kernel.
7386
7387<<tracing-session,tracing session>>::
7388 A stateful dialogue between you and a <<lttng-sessiond,session
7389 daemon>>.
7390
7391user application::
7392 An application running in user space, as opposed to a Linux kernel
7393 module, for example.
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