+Adds one or more entries to a tracker
+
+The \fBtrack\fP command adds one or more entries to a tracker. A tracker is
+a whitelist of resources. Tracked resources are allowed to emit events, provided
+those events are enabled (see the \fBenable-event\fP command).
+
+Tracker entries can be removed from the whitelist with the
+\fBuntrack\fP command.
+
+As of this version, the only available tracker is the \fBPID tracker\fP. The
+process ID (PID) tracker follows one or more process IDs;
+only the processes with a tracked PID are allowed to emit events. By default,
+all possible PIDs on the system are tracked: any process may emit enabled
+events (equivalent of \fBlttng track \-\-pid \-\-all\fR for all domains).
+
+With the PID tracker, it is possible, for example, to record all system calls
+called by a given process:
+
+.nf
+ $ lttng enable-event --kernel --all --syscall
+ $ lttng track --kernel --pid 2345
+ $ lttng start
+.fi
+
+If all the PIDs are tracked (i.e. \fBlttng track \-\-pid \-\-all\fR, which
+is the default state of all domains when creating a tracing session), then
+using the \fBtrack\fR command with one or more specific PIDs has the effect of
+first removing all the PIDs from the whitelist, then adding the specified PIDs.
+
+Assume the maximum PID is 7 for the following examples:
+
+.nf
+ Initial whitelist: [0] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
+
+ $ lttng track --userspace --pid 3,6,7
+
+ Whitelist: [ ] [ ] [ ] [3] [ ] [ ] [6] [7]
+
+ $ lttng untrack --userspace --pid 7
+
+ Whitelist: [ ] [ ] [ ] [3] [ ] [ ] [6] [ ]
+
+ $ lttng track --userspace --pid 1,5
+
+ Whitelist: [ ] [1] [ ] [3] [ ] [5] [6] [ ]
+.fi
+
+It should be noted that the PID tracker tracks the numeric process IDs.
+Should a process with a given ID exit and another process be given this
+ID, then the latter would also be allowed to emit events.
+
+See the \fBuntrack\fR command's documentation for more details about
+removing entries.