Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | <!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN" |
| 2 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" |
| 3 | [<!ENTITY % poky SYSTEM "../poky.ent"> %poky; ] > |
| 4 | |
| 5 | <chapter id='profile-manual-usage'> |
| 6 | |
| 7 | <title>Basic Usage (with examples) for each of the Yocto Tracing Tools</title> |
| 8 | |
| 9 | <para> |
| 10 | This chapter presents basic usage examples for each of the tracing |
| 11 | tools. |
| 12 | </para> |
| 13 | |
| 14 | <section id='profile-manual-perf'> |
| 15 | <title>perf</title> |
| 16 | |
| 17 | <para> |
| 18 | The 'perf' tool is the profiling and tracing tool that comes |
| 19 | bundled with the Linux kernel. |
| 20 | </para> |
| 21 | |
| 22 | <para> |
| 23 | Don't let the fact that it's part of the kernel fool you into thinking |
| 24 | that it's only for tracing and profiling the kernel - you can indeed |
| 25 | use it to trace and profile just the kernel, but you can also use it |
| 26 | to profile specific applications separately (with or without kernel |
| 27 | context), and you can also use it to trace and profile the kernel |
| 28 | and all applications on the system simultaneously to gain a system-wide |
| 29 | view of what's going on. |
| 30 | </para> |
| 31 | |
| 32 | <para> |
| 33 | In many ways, perf aims to be a superset of all the tracing and profiling |
| 34 | tools available in Linux today, including all the other tools covered |
| 35 | in this HOWTO. The past couple of years have seen perf subsume a lot |
| 36 | of the functionality of those other tools and, at the same time, those |
| 37 | other tools have removed large portions of their previous functionality |
| 38 | and replaced it with calls to the equivalent functionality now |
| 39 | implemented by the perf subsystem. Extrapolation suggests that at |
| 40 | some point those other tools will simply become completely redundant |
| 41 | and go away; until then, we'll cover those other tools in these pages |
| 42 | and in many cases show how the same things can be accomplished in |
| 43 | perf and the other tools when it seems useful to do so. |
| 44 | </para> |
| 45 | |
| 46 | <para> |
| 47 | The coverage below details some of the most common ways you'll likely |
| 48 | want to apply the tool; full documentation can be found either within |
| 49 | the tool itself or in the man pages at |
| 50 | <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf'>perf(1)</ulink>. |
| 51 | </para> |
| 52 | |
| 53 | <section id='perf-setup'> |
| 54 | <title>Setup</title> |
| 55 | |
| 56 | <para> |
| 57 | For this section, we'll assume you've already performed the basic |
| 58 | setup outlined in the General Setup section. |
| 59 | </para> |
| 60 | |
| 61 | <para> |
| 62 | In particular, you'll get the most mileage out of perf if you |
Patrick Williams | c0f7c04 | 2017-02-23 20:41:17 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 63 | profile an image built with the following in your |
| 64 | <filename>local.conf</filename> file: |
| 65 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 66 | <ulink url='&YOCTO_DOCS_REF_URL;#var-INHIBIT_PACKAGE_STRIP'>INHIBIT_PACKAGE_STRIP</ulink> = "1" |
| 67 | </literallayout> |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 68 | </para> |
| 69 | |
| 70 | <para> |
| 71 | perf runs on the target system for the most part. You can archive |
| 72 | profile data and copy it to the host for analysis, but for the |
| 73 | rest of this document we assume you've ssh'ed to the host and |
| 74 | will be running the perf commands on the target. |
| 75 | </para> |
| 76 | </section> |
| 77 | |
| 78 | <section id='perf-basic-usage'> |
| 79 | <title>Basic Usage</title> |
| 80 | |
| 81 | <para> |
| 82 | The perf tool is pretty much self-documenting. To remind yourself |
| 83 | of the available commands, simply type 'perf', which will show you |
| 84 | basic usage along with the available perf subcommands: |
| 85 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 86 | root@crownbay:~# perf |
| 87 | |
| 88 | usage: perf [--version] [--help] COMMAND [ARGS] |
| 89 | |
| 90 | The most commonly used perf commands are: |
| 91 | annotate Read perf.data (created by perf record) and display annotated code |
| 92 | archive Create archive with object files with build-ids found in perf.data file |
| 93 | bench General framework for benchmark suites |
| 94 | buildid-cache Manage build-id cache. |
| 95 | buildid-list List the buildids in a perf.data file |
| 96 | diff Read two perf.data files and display the differential profile |
| 97 | evlist List the event names in a perf.data file |
| 98 | inject Filter to augment the events stream with additional information |
| 99 | kmem Tool to trace/measure kernel memory(slab) properties |
| 100 | kvm Tool to trace/measure kvm guest os |
| 101 | list List all symbolic event types |
| 102 | lock Analyze lock events |
| 103 | probe Define new dynamic tracepoints |
| 104 | record Run a command and record its profile into perf.data |
| 105 | report Read perf.data (created by perf record) and display the profile |
| 106 | sched Tool to trace/measure scheduler properties (latencies) |
| 107 | script Read perf.data (created by perf record) and display trace output |
| 108 | stat Run a command and gather performance counter statistics |
| 109 | test Runs sanity tests. |
| 110 | timechart Tool to visualize total system behavior during a workload |
| 111 | top System profiling tool. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | See 'perf help COMMAND' for more information on a specific command. |
| 114 | </literallayout> |
| 115 | </para> |
| 116 | |
| 117 | <section id='using-perf-to-do-basic-profiling'> |
| 118 | <title>Using perf to do Basic Profiling</title> |
| 119 | |
| 120 | <para> |
| 121 | As a simple test case, we'll profile the 'wget' of a fairly large |
| 122 | file, which is a minimally interesting case because it has both |
| 123 | file and network I/O aspects, and at least in the case of standard |
| 124 | Yocto images, it's implemented as part of busybox, so the methods |
| 125 | we use to analyze it can be used in a very similar way to the whole |
| 126 | host of supported busybox applets in Yocto. |
| 127 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 128 | root@crownbay:~# rm linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2; \ |
| 129 | wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 130 | </literallayout> |
| 131 | The quickest and easiest way to get some basic overall data about |
| 132 | what's going on for a particular workload is to profile it using |
| 133 | 'perf stat'. 'perf stat' basically profiles using a few default |
| 134 | counters and displays the summed counts at the end of the run: |
| 135 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 136 | root@crownbay:~# perf stat wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 137 | Connecting to downloads.yoctoproject.org (140.211.169.59:80) |
| 138 | linux-2.6.19.2.tar.b 100% |***************************************************| 41727k 0:00:00 ETA |
| 139 | |
| 140 | Performance counter stats for 'wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink>': |
| 141 | |
| 142 | 4597.223902 task-clock # 0.077 CPUs utilized |
| 143 | 23568 context-switches # 0.005 M/sec |
| 144 | 68 CPU-migrations # 0.015 K/sec |
| 145 | 241 page-faults # 0.052 K/sec |
| 146 | 3045817293 cycles # 0.663 GHz |
| 147 | <not supported> stalled-cycles-frontend |
| 148 | <not supported> stalled-cycles-backend |
| 149 | 858909167 instructions # 0.28 insns per cycle |
| 150 | 165441165 branches # 35.987 M/sec |
| 151 | 19550329 branch-misses # 11.82% of all branches |
| 152 | |
| 153 | 59.836627620 seconds time elapsed |
| 154 | </literallayout> |
| 155 | Many times such a simple-minded test doesn't yield much of |
| 156 | interest, but sometimes it does (see Real-world Yocto bug |
| 157 | (slow loop-mounted write speed)). |
| 158 | </para> |
| 159 | |
| 160 | <para> |
| 161 | Also, note that 'perf stat' isn't restricted to a fixed set of |
| 162 | counters - basically any event listed in the output of 'perf list' |
| 163 | can be tallied by 'perf stat'. For example, suppose we wanted to |
| 164 | see a summary of all the events related to kernel memory |
| 165 | allocation/freeing along with cache hits and misses: |
| 166 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 167 | root@crownbay:~# perf stat -e kmem:* -e cache-references -e cache-misses wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 168 | Connecting to downloads.yoctoproject.org (140.211.169.59:80) |
| 169 | linux-2.6.19.2.tar.b 100% |***************************************************| 41727k 0:00:00 ETA |
| 170 | |
| 171 | Performance counter stats for 'wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink>': |
| 172 | |
| 173 | 5566 kmem:kmalloc |
| 174 | 125517 kmem:kmem_cache_alloc |
| 175 | 0 kmem:kmalloc_node |
| 176 | 0 kmem:kmem_cache_alloc_node |
| 177 | 34401 kmem:kfree |
| 178 | 69920 kmem:kmem_cache_free |
| 179 | 133 kmem:mm_page_free |
| 180 | 41 kmem:mm_page_free_batched |
| 181 | 11502 kmem:mm_page_alloc |
| 182 | 11375 kmem:mm_page_alloc_zone_locked |
| 183 | 0 kmem:mm_page_pcpu_drain |
| 184 | 0 kmem:mm_page_alloc_extfrag |
| 185 | 66848602 cache-references |
| 186 | 2917740 cache-misses # 4.365 % of all cache refs |
| 187 | |
| 188 | 44.831023415 seconds time elapsed |
| 189 | </literallayout> |
| 190 | So 'perf stat' gives us a nice easy way to get a quick overview of |
| 191 | what might be happening for a set of events, but normally we'd |
| 192 | need a little more detail in order to understand what's going on |
| 193 | in a way that we can act on in a useful way. |
| 194 | </para> |
| 195 | |
| 196 | <para> |
| 197 | To dive down into a next level of detail, we can use 'perf |
| 198 | record'/'perf report' which will collect profiling data and |
| 199 | present it to use using an interactive text-based UI (or |
| 200 | simply as text if we specify --stdio to 'perf report'). |
| 201 | </para> |
| 202 | |
| 203 | <para> |
| 204 | As our first attempt at profiling this workload, we'll simply |
| 205 | run 'perf record', handing it the workload we want to profile |
| 206 | (everything after 'perf record' and any perf options we hand |
| 207 | it - here none - will be executed in a new shell). perf collects |
| 208 | samples until the process exits and records them in a file named |
| 209 | 'perf.data' in the current working directory. |
| 210 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 211 | root@crownbay:~# perf record wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 212 | |
| 213 | Connecting to downloads.yoctoproject.org (140.211.169.59:80) |
| 214 | linux-2.6.19.2.tar.b 100% |************************************************| 41727k 0:00:00 ETA |
| 215 | [ perf record: Woken up 1 times to write data ] |
| 216 | [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.176 MB perf.data (~7700 samples) ] |
| 217 | </literallayout> |
| 218 | To see the results in a 'text-based UI' (tui), simply run |
| 219 | 'perf report', which will read the perf.data file in the current |
| 220 | working directory and display the results in an interactive UI: |
| 221 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 222 | root@crownbay:~# perf report |
| 223 | </literallayout> |
| 224 | </para> |
| 225 | |
| 226 | <para> |
| 227 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-flat-stripped.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 228 | </para> |
| 229 | |
| 230 | <para> |
| 231 | The above screenshot displays a 'flat' profile, one entry for |
| 232 | each 'bucket' corresponding to the functions that were profiled |
| 233 | during the profiling run, ordered from the most popular to the |
| 234 | least (perf has options to sort in various orders and keys as |
| 235 | well as display entries only above a certain threshold and so |
| 236 | on - see the perf documentation for details). Note that this |
| 237 | includes both userspace functions (entries containing a [.]) and |
| 238 | kernel functions accounted to the process (entries containing |
| 239 | a [k]). (perf has command-line modifiers that can be used to |
| 240 | restrict the profiling to kernel or userspace, among others). |
| 241 | </para> |
| 242 | |
| 243 | <para> |
| 244 | Notice also that the above report shows an entry for 'busybox', |
| 245 | which is the executable that implements 'wget' in Yocto, but that |
| 246 | instead of a useful function name in that entry, it displays |
| 247 | a not-so-friendly hex value instead. The steps below will show |
| 248 | how to fix that problem. |
| 249 | </para> |
| 250 | |
| 251 | <para> |
| 252 | Before we do that, however, let's try running a different profile, |
| 253 | one which shows something a little more interesting. The only |
| 254 | difference between the new profile and the previous one is that |
| 255 | we'll add the -g option, which will record not just the address |
| 256 | of a sampled function, but the entire callchain to the sampled |
| 257 | function as well: |
| 258 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 259 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -g wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 260 | Connecting to downloads.yoctoproject.org (140.211.169.59:80) |
| 261 | linux-2.6.19.2.tar.b 100% |************************************************| 41727k 0:00:00 ETA |
| 262 | [ perf record: Woken up 3 times to write data ] |
| 263 | [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.652 MB perf.data (~28476 samples) ] |
| 264 | |
| 265 | |
| 266 | root@crownbay:~# perf report |
| 267 | </literallayout> |
| 268 | </para> |
| 269 | |
| 270 | <para> |
| 271 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-g-copy-to-user-expanded-stripped.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 272 | </para> |
| 273 | |
| 274 | <para> |
| 275 | Using the callgraph view, we can actually see not only which |
| 276 | functions took the most time, but we can also see a summary of |
| 277 | how those functions were called and learn something about how the |
| 278 | program interacts with the kernel in the process. |
| 279 | </para> |
| 280 | |
| 281 | <para> |
| 282 | Notice that each entry in the above screenshot now contains a '+' |
| 283 | on the left-hand side. This means that we can expand the entry and |
| 284 | drill down into the callchains that feed into that entry. |
| 285 | Pressing 'enter' on any one of them will expand the callchain |
| 286 | (you can also press 'E' to expand them all at the same time or 'C' |
| 287 | to collapse them all). |
| 288 | </para> |
| 289 | |
| 290 | <para> |
| 291 | In the screenshot above, we've toggled the __copy_to_user_ll() |
| 292 | entry and several subnodes all the way down. This lets us see |
| 293 | which callchains contributed to the profiled __copy_to_user_ll() |
| 294 | function which contributed 1.77% to the total profile. |
| 295 | </para> |
| 296 | |
| 297 | <para> |
| 298 | As a bit of background explanation for these callchains, think |
| 299 | about what happens at a high level when you run wget to get a file |
| 300 | out on the network. Basically what happens is that the data comes |
| 301 | into the kernel via the network connection (socket) and is passed |
| 302 | to the userspace program 'wget' (which is actually a part of |
| 303 | busybox, but that's not important for now), which takes the buffers |
| 304 | the kernel passes to it and writes it to a disk file to save it. |
| 305 | </para> |
| 306 | |
| 307 | <para> |
| 308 | The part of this process that we're looking at in the above call |
| 309 | stacks is the part where the kernel passes the data it's read from |
| 310 | the socket down to wget i.e. a copy-to-user. |
| 311 | </para> |
| 312 | |
| 313 | <para> |
| 314 | Notice also that here there's also a case where the hex value |
| 315 | is displayed in the callstack, here in the expanded |
| 316 | sys_clock_gettime() function. Later we'll see it resolve to a |
| 317 | userspace function call in busybox. |
| 318 | </para> |
| 319 | |
| 320 | <para> |
| 321 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-g-copy-from-user-expanded-stripped.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 322 | </para> |
| 323 | |
| 324 | <para> |
| 325 | The above screenshot shows the other half of the journey for the |
| 326 | data - from the wget program's userspace buffers to disk. To get |
| 327 | the buffers to disk, the wget program issues a write(2), which |
| 328 | does a copy-from-user to the kernel, which then takes care via |
| 329 | some circuitous path (probably also present somewhere in the |
| 330 | profile data), to get it safely to disk. |
| 331 | </para> |
| 332 | |
| 333 | <para> |
| 334 | Now that we've seen the basic layout of the profile data and the |
| 335 | basics of how to extract useful information out of it, let's get |
| 336 | back to the task at hand and see if we can get some basic idea |
| 337 | about where the time is spent in the program we're profiling, |
| 338 | wget. Remember that wget is actually implemented as an applet |
| 339 | in busybox, so while the process name is 'wget', the executable |
| 340 | we're actually interested in is busybox. So let's expand the |
| 341 | first entry containing busybox: |
| 342 | </para> |
| 343 | |
| 344 | <para> |
| 345 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-busybox-expanded-stripped.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 346 | </para> |
| 347 | |
| 348 | <para> |
| 349 | Again, before we expanded we saw that the function was labeled |
| 350 | with a hex value instead of a symbol as with most of the kernel |
| 351 | entries. Expanding the busybox entry doesn't make it any better. |
| 352 | </para> |
| 353 | |
| 354 | <para> |
| 355 | The problem is that perf can't find the symbol information for the |
| 356 | busybox binary, which is actually stripped out by the Yocto build |
| 357 | system. |
| 358 | </para> |
| 359 | |
| 360 | <para> |
Patrick Williams | c0f7c04 | 2017-02-23 20:41:17 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 361 | One way around that is to put the following in your |
| 362 | <filename>local.conf</filename> file when you build the image: |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 363 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
Patrick Williams | c0f7c04 | 2017-02-23 20:41:17 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 364 | <ulink url='&YOCTO_DOCS_REF_URL;#var-INHIBIT_PACKAGE_STRIP'>INHIBIT_PACKAGE_STRIP</ulink> = "1" |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 365 | </literallayout> |
| 366 | However, we already have an image with the binaries stripped, |
| 367 | so what can we do to get perf to resolve the symbols? Basically |
| 368 | we need to install the debuginfo for the busybox package. |
| 369 | </para> |
| 370 | |
| 371 | <para> |
| 372 | To generate the debug info for the packages in the image, we can |
| 373 | add dbg-pkgs to EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES in local.conf. For example: |
| 374 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 375 | EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES = "debug-tweaks tools-profile dbg-pkgs" |
| 376 | </literallayout> |
| 377 | Additionally, in order to generate the type of debuginfo that |
Brad Bishop | 1a4b7ee | 2018-12-16 17:11:34 -0800 | [diff] [blame^] | 378 | perf understands, we also need to set |
| 379 | <ulink url='&YOCTO_DOCS_REF_URL;#var-PACKAGE_DEBUG_SPLIT_STYLE'><filename>PACKAGE_DEBUG_SPLIT_STYLE</filename></ulink> |
| 380 | in the <filename>local.conf</filename> file: |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 381 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 382 | PACKAGE_DEBUG_SPLIT_STYLE = 'debug-file-directory' |
| 383 | </literallayout> |
| 384 | Once we've done that, we can install the debuginfo for busybox. |
| 385 | The debug packages once built can be found in |
| 386 | build/tmp/deploy/rpm/* on the host system. Find the |
| 387 | busybox-dbg-...rpm file and copy it to the target. For example: |
| 388 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 389 | [trz@empanada core2]$ scp /home/trz/yocto/crownbay-tracing-dbg/build/tmp/deploy/rpm/core2_32/busybox-dbg-1.20.2-r2.core2_32.rpm root@192.168.1.31: |
| 390 | root@192.168.1.31's password: |
| 391 | busybox-dbg-1.20.2-r2.core2_32.rpm 100% 1826KB 1.8MB/s 00:01 |
| 392 | </literallayout> |
| 393 | Now install the debug rpm on the target: |
| 394 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 395 | root@crownbay:~# rpm -i busybox-dbg-1.20.2-r2.core2_32.rpm |
| 396 | </literallayout> |
| 397 | Now that the debuginfo is installed, we see that the busybox |
| 398 | entries now display their functions symbolically: |
| 399 | </para> |
| 400 | |
| 401 | <para> |
| 402 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-busybox-debuginfo.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 403 | </para> |
| 404 | |
| 405 | <para> |
| 406 | If we expand one of the entries and press 'enter' on a leaf node, |
| 407 | we're presented with a menu of actions we can take to get more |
| 408 | information related to that entry: |
| 409 | </para> |
| 410 | |
| 411 | <para> |
| 412 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-busybox-dso-zoom-menu.png" width="6in" depth="2in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 413 | </para> |
| 414 | |
| 415 | <para> |
| 416 | One of these actions allows us to show a view that displays a |
| 417 | busybox-centric view of the profiled functions (in this case we've |
| 418 | also expanded all the nodes using the 'E' key): |
| 419 | </para> |
| 420 | |
| 421 | <para> |
| 422 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-busybox-dso-zoom.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 423 | </para> |
| 424 | |
| 425 | <para> |
| 426 | Finally, we can see that now that the busybox debuginfo is |
| 427 | installed, the previously unresolved symbol in the |
| 428 | sys_clock_gettime() entry mentioned previously is now resolved, |
| 429 | and shows that the sys_clock_gettime system call that was the |
| 430 | source of 6.75% of the copy-to-user overhead was initiated by |
| 431 | the handle_input() busybox function: |
| 432 | </para> |
| 433 | |
| 434 | <para> |
| 435 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-g-copy-to-user-expanded-debuginfo.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 436 | </para> |
| 437 | |
| 438 | <para> |
| 439 | At the lowest level of detail, we can dive down to the assembly |
| 440 | level and see which instructions caused the most overhead in a |
| 441 | function. Pressing 'enter' on the 'udhcpc_main' function, we're |
| 442 | again presented with a menu: |
| 443 | </para> |
| 444 | |
| 445 | <para> |
| 446 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-busybox-annotate-menu.png" width="6in" depth="2in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 447 | </para> |
| 448 | |
| 449 | <para> |
| 450 | Selecting 'Annotate udhcpc_main', we get a detailed listing of |
| 451 | percentages by instruction for the udhcpc_main function. From the |
| 452 | display, we can see that over 50% of the time spent in this |
| 453 | function is taken up by a couple tests and the move of a |
| 454 | constant (1) to a register: |
| 455 | </para> |
| 456 | |
| 457 | <para> |
| 458 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-wget-busybox-annotate-udhcpc.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 459 | </para> |
| 460 | |
| 461 | <para> |
| 462 | As a segue into tracing, let's try another profile using a |
| 463 | different counter, something other than the default 'cycles'. |
| 464 | </para> |
| 465 | |
| 466 | <para> |
| 467 | The tracing and profiling infrastructure in Linux has become |
| 468 | unified in a way that allows us to use the same tool with a |
| 469 | completely different set of counters, not just the standard |
| 470 | hardware counters that traditional tools have had to restrict |
| 471 | themselves to (of course the traditional tools can also make use |
| 472 | of the expanded possibilities now available to them, and in some |
| 473 | cases have, as mentioned previously). |
| 474 | </para> |
| 475 | |
| 476 | <para> |
| 477 | We can get a list of the available events that can be used to |
| 478 | profile a workload via 'perf list': |
| 479 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 480 | root@crownbay:~# perf list |
| 481 | |
| 482 | List of pre-defined events (to be used in -e): |
| 483 | cpu-cycles OR cycles [Hardware event] |
| 484 | stalled-cycles-frontend OR idle-cycles-frontend [Hardware event] |
| 485 | stalled-cycles-backend OR idle-cycles-backend [Hardware event] |
| 486 | instructions [Hardware event] |
| 487 | cache-references [Hardware event] |
| 488 | cache-misses [Hardware event] |
| 489 | branch-instructions OR branches [Hardware event] |
| 490 | branch-misses [Hardware event] |
| 491 | bus-cycles [Hardware event] |
| 492 | ref-cycles [Hardware event] |
| 493 | |
| 494 | cpu-clock [Software event] |
| 495 | task-clock [Software event] |
| 496 | page-faults OR faults [Software event] |
| 497 | minor-faults [Software event] |
| 498 | major-faults [Software event] |
| 499 | context-switches OR cs [Software event] |
| 500 | cpu-migrations OR migrations [Software event] |
| 501 | alignment-faults [Software event] |
| 502 | emulation-faults [Software event] |
| 503 | |
| 504 | L1-dcache-loads [Hardware cache event] |
| 505 | L1-dcache-load-misses [Hardware cache event] |
| 506 | L1-dcache-prefetch-misses [Hardware cache event] |
| 507 | L1-icache-loads [Hardware cache event] |
| 508 | L1-icache-load-misses [Hardware cache event] |
| 509 | . |
| 510 | . |
| 511 | . |
| 512 | rNNN [Raw hardware event descriptor] |
| 513 | cpu/t1=v1[,t2=v2,t3 ...]/modifier [Raw hardware event descriptor] |
| 514 | (see 'perf list --help' on how to encode it) |
| 515 | |
| 516 | mem:<addr>[:access] [Hardware breakpoint] |
| 517 | |
| 518 | sunrpc:rpc_call_status [Tracepoint event] |
| 519 | sunrpc:rpc_bind_status [Tracepoint event] |
| 520 | sunrpc:rpc_connect_status [Tracepoint event] |
| 521 | sunrpc:rpc_task_begin [Tracepoint event] |
| 522 | skb:kfree_skb [Tracepoint event] |
| 523 | skb:consume_skb [Tracepoint event] |
| 524 | skb:skb_copy_datagram_iovec [Tracepoint event] |
| 525 | net:net_dev_xmit [Tracepoint event] |
| 526 | net:net_dev_queue [Tracepoint event] |
| 527 | net:netif_receive_skb [Tracepoint event] |
| 528 | net:netif_rx [Tracepoint event] |
| 529 | napi:napi_poll [Tracepoint event] |
| 530 | sock:sock_rcvqueue_full [Tracepoint event] |
| 531 | sock:sock_exceed_buf_limit [Tracepoint event] |
| 532 | udp:udp_fail_queue_rcv_skb [Tracepoint event] |
| 533 | hda:hda_send_cmd [Tracepoint event] |
| 534 | hda:hda_get_response [Tracepoint event] |
| 535 | hda:hda_bus_reset [Tracepoint event] |
| 536 | scsi:scsi_dispatch_cmd_start [Tracepoint event] |
| 537 | scsi:scsi_dispatch_cmd_error [Tracepoint event] |
| 538 | scsi:scsi_eh_wakeup [Tracepoint event] |
| 539 | drm:drm_vblank_event [Tracepoint event] |
| 540 | drm:drm_vblank_event_queued [Tracepoint event] |
| 541 | drm:drm_vblank_event_delivered [Tracepoint event] |
| 542 | random:mix_pool_bytes [Tracepoint event] |
| 543 | random:mix_pool_bytes_nolock [Tracepoint event] |
| 544 | random:credit_entropy_bits [Tracepoint event] |
| 545 | gpio:gpio_direction [Tracepoint event] |
| 546 | gpio:gpio_value [Tracepoint event] |
| 547 | block:block_rq_abort [Tracepoint event] |
| 548 | block:block_rq_requeue [Tracepoint event] |
| 549 | block:block_rq_issue [Tracepoint event] |
| 550 | block:block_bio_bounce [Tracepoint event] |
| 551 | block:block_bio_complete [Tracepoint event] |
| 552 | block:block_bio_backmerge [Tracepoint event] |
| 553 | . |
| 554 | . |
| 555 | writeback:writeback_wake_thread [Tracepoint event] |
| 556 | writeback:writeback_wake_forker_thread [Tracepoint event] |
| 557 | writeback:writeback_bdi_register [Tracepoint event] |
| 558 | . |
| 559 | . |
| 560 | writeback:writeback_single_inode_requeue [Tracepoint event] |
| 561 | writeback:writeback_single_inode [Tracepoint event] |
| 562 | kmem:kmalloc [Tracepoint event] |
| 563 | kmem:kmem_cache_alloc [Tracepoint event] |
| 564 | kmem:mm_page_alloc [Tracepoint event] |
| 565 | kmem:mm_page_alloc_zone_locked [Tracepoint event] |
| 566 | kmem:mm_page_pcpu_drain [Tracepoint event] |
| 567 | kmem:mm_page_alloc_extfrag [Tracepoint event] |
| 568 | vmscan:mm_vmscan_kswapd_sleep [Tracepoint event] |
| 569 | vmscan:mm_vmscan_kswapd_wake [Tracepoint event] |
| 570 | vmscan:mm_vmscan_wakeup_kswapd [Tracepoint event] |
| 571 | vmscan:mm_vmscan_direct_reclaim_begin [Tracepoint event] |
| 572 | . |
| 573 | . |
| 574 | module:module_get [Tracepoint event] |
| 575 | module:module_put [Tracepoint event] |
| 576 | module:module_request [Tracepoint event] |
| 577 | sched:sched_kthread_stop [Tracepoint event] |
| 578 | sched:sched_wakeup [Tracepoint event] |
| 579 | sched:sched_wakeup_new [Tracepoint event] |
| 580 | sched:sched_process_fork [Tracepoint event] |
| 581 | sched:sched_process_exec [Tracepoint event] |
| 582 | sched:sched_stat_runtime [Tracepoint event] |
| 583 | rcu:rcu_utilization [Tracepoint event] |
| 584 | workqueue:workqueue_queue_work [Tracepoint event] |
| 585 | workqueue:workqueue_execute_end [Tracepoint event] |
| 586 | signal:signal_generate [Tracepoint event] |
| 587 | signal:signal_deliver [Tracepoint event] |
| 588 | timer:timer_init [Tracepoint event] |
| 589 | timer:timer_start [Tracepoint event] |
| 590 | timer:hrtimer_cancel [Tracepoint event] |
| 591 | timer:itimer_state [Tracepoint event] |
| 592 | timer:itimer_expire [Tracepoint event] |
| 593 | irq:irq_handler_entry [Tracepoint event] |
| 594 | irq:irq_handler_exit [Tracepoint event] |
| 595 | irq:softirq_entry [Tracepoint event] |
| 596 | irq:softirq_exit [Tracepoint event] |
| 597 | irq:softirq_raise [Tracepoint event] |
| 598 | printk:console [Tracepoint event] |
| 599 | task:task_newtask [Tracepoint event] |
| 600 | task:task_rename [Tracepoint event] |
| 601 | syscalls:sys_enter_socketcall [Tracepoint event] |
| 602 | syscalls:sys_exit_socketcall [Tracepoint event] |
| 603 | . |
| 604 | . |
| 605 | . |
| 606 | syscalls:sys_enter_unshare [Tracepoint event] |
| 607 | syscalls:sys_exit_unshare [Tracepoint event] |
| 608 | raw_syscalls:sys_enter [Tracepoint event] |
| 609 | raw_syscalls:sys_exit [Tracepoint event] |
| 610 | </literallayout> |
| 611 | </para> |
| 612 | |
| 613 | <informalexample> |
| 614 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> These are exactly the same set of events defined |
| 615 | by the trace event subsystem and exposed by |
| 616 | ftrace/tracecmd/kernelshark as files in |
| 617 | /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events, by SystemTap as |
| 618 | kernel.trace("tracepoint_name") and (partially) accessed by LTTng. |
| 619 | </informalexample> |
| 620 | |
| 621 | <para> |
| 622 | Only a subset of these would be of interest to us when looking at |
| 623 | this workload, so let's choose the most likely subsystems |
| 624 | (identified by the string before the colon in the Tracepoint events) |
| 625 | and do a 'perf stat' run using only those wildcarded subsystems: |
| 626 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 627 | root@crownbay:~# perf stat -e skb:* -e net:* -e napi:* -e sched:* -e workqueue:* -e irq:* -e syscalls:* wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 628 | Performance counter stats for 'wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink>': |
| 629 | |
| 630 | 23323 skb:kfree_skb |
| 631 | 0 skb:consume_skb |
| 632 | 49897 skb:skb_copy_datagram_iovec |
| 633 | 6217 net:net_dev_xmit |
| 634 | 6217 net:net_dev_queue |
| 635 | 7962 net:netif_receive_skb |
| 636 | 2 net:netif_rx |
| 637 | 8340 napi:napi_poll |
| 638 | 0 sched:sched_kthread_stop |
| 639 | 0 sched:sched_kthread_stop_ret |
| 640 | 3749 sched:sched_wakeup |
| 641 | 0 sched:sched_wakeup_new |
| 642 | 0 sched:sched_switch |
| 643 | 29 sched:sched_migrate_task |
| 644 | 0 sched:sched_process_free |
| 645 | 1 sched:sched_process_exit |
| 646 | 0 sched:sched_wait_task |
| 647 | 0 sched:sched_process_wait |
| 648 | 0 sched:sched_process_fork |
| 649 | 1 sched:sched_process_exec |
| 650 | 0 sched:sched_stat_wait |
| 651 | 2106519415641 sched:sched_stat_sleep |
| 652 | 0 sched:sched_stat_iowait |
| 653 | 147453613 sched:sched_stat_blocked |
| 654 | 12903026955 sched:sched_stat_runtime |
| 655 | 0 sched:sched_pi_setprio |
| 656 | 3574 workqueue:workqueue_queue_work |
| 657 | 3574 workqueue:workqueue_activate_work |
| 658 | 0 workqueue:workqueue_execute_start |
| 659 | 0 workqueue:workqueue_execute_end |
| 660 | 16631 irq:irq_handler_entry |
| 661 | 16631 irq:irq_handler_exit |
| 662 | 28521 irq:softirq_entry |
| 663 | 28521 irq:softirq_exit |
| 664 | 28728 irq:softirq_raise |
| 665 | 1 syscalls:sys_enter_sendmmsg |
| 666 | 1 syscalls:sys_exit_sendmmsg |
| 667 | 0 syscalls:sys_enter_recvmmsg |
| 668 | 0 syscalls:sys_exit_recvmmsg |
| 669 | 14 syscalls:sys_enter_socketcall |
| 670 | 14 syscalls:sys_exit_socketcall |
| 671 | . |
| 672 | . |
| 673 | . |
| 674 | 16965 syscalls:sys_enter_read |
| 675 | 16965 syscalls:sys_exit_read |
| 676 | 12854 syscalls:sys_enter_write |
| 677 | 12854 syscalls:sys_exit_write |
| 678 | . |
| 679 | . |
| 680 | . |
| 681 | |
| 682 | 58.029710972 seconds time elapsed |
| 683 | </literallayout> |
| 684 | Let's pick one of these tracepoints and tell perf to do a profile |
| 685 | using it as the sampling event: |
| 686 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 687 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -g -e sched:sched_wakeup wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 688 | </literallayout> |
| 689 | </para> |
| 690 | |
| 691 | <para> |
| 692 | <imagedata fileref="figures/sched-wakeup-profile.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 693 | </para> |
| 694 | |
| 695 | <para> |
| 696 | The screenshot above shows the results of running a profile using |
| 697 | sched:sched_switch tracepoint, which shows the relative costs of |
| 698 | various paths to sched_wakeup (note that sched_wakeup is the |
| 699 | name of the tracepoint - it's actually defined just inside |
| 700 | ttwu_do_wakeup(), which accounts for the function name actually |
| 701 | displayed in the profile: |
| 702 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 703 | /* |
| 704 | * Mark the task runnable and perform wakeup-preemption. |
| 705 | */ |
| 706 | static void |
| 707 | ttwu_do_wakeup(struct rq *rq, struct task_struct *p, int wake_flags) |
| 708 | { |
| 709 | trace_sched_wakeup(p, true); |
| 710 | . |
| 711 | . |
| 712 | . |
| 713 | } |
| 714 | </literallayout> |
| 715 | A couple of the more interesting callchains are expanded and |
| 716 | displayed above, basically some network receive paths that |
| 717 | presumably end up waking up wget (busybox) when network data is |
| 718 | ready. |
| 719 | </para> |
| 720 | |
| 721 | <para> |
| 722 | Note that because tracepoints are normally used for tracing, |
| 723 | the default sampling period for tracepoints is 1 i.e. for |
| 724 | tracepoints perf will sample on every event occurrence (this |
| 725 | can be changed using the -c option). This is in contrast to |
| 726 | hardware counters such as for example the default 'cycles' |
| 727 | hardware counter used for normal profiling, where sampling |
| 728 | periods are much higher (in the thousands) because profiling should |
| 729 | have as low an overhead as possible and sampling on every cycle |
| 730 | would be prohibitively expensive. |
| 731 | </para> |
| 732 | </section> |
| 733 | |
| 734 | <section id='using-perf-to-do-basic-tracing'> |
| 735 | <title>Using perf to do Basic Tracing</title> |
| 736 | |
| 737 | <para> |
| 738 | Profiling is a great tool for solving many problems or for |
| 739 | getting a high-level view of what's going on with a workload or |
| 740 | across the system. It is however by definition an approximation, |
| 741 | as suggested by the most prominent word associated with it, |
| 742 | 'sampling'. On the one hand, it allows a representative picture of |
| 743 | what's going on in the system to be cheaply taken, but on the other |
| 744 | hand, that cheapness limits its utility when that data suggests a |
| 745 | need to 'dive down' more deeply to discover what's really going |
| 746 | on. In such cases, the only way to see what's really going on is |
| 747 | to be able to look at (or summarize more intelligently) the |
| 748 | individual steps that go into the higher-level behavior exposed |
| 749 | by the coarse-grained profiling data. |
| 750 | </para> |
| 751 | |
| 752 | <para> |
| 753 | As a concrete example, we can trace all the events we think might |
| 754 | be applicable to our workload: |
| 755 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 756 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -g -e skb:* -e net:* -e napi:* -e sched:sched_switch -e sched:sched_wakeup -e irq:* |
| 757 | -e syscalls:sys_enter_read -e syscalls:sys_exit_read -e syscalls:sys_enter_write -e syscalls:sys_exit_write |
| 758 | wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 759 | </literallayout> |
| 760 | We can look at the raw trace output using 'perf script' with no |
| 761 | arguments: |
| 762 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 763 | root@crownbay:~# perf script |
| 764 | |
| 765 | perf 1262 [000] 11624.857082: sys_exit_read: 0x0 |
| 766 | perf 1262 [000] 11624.857193: sched_wakeup: comm=migration/0 pid=6 prio=0 success=1 target_cpu=000 |
| 767 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.858021: softirq_raise: vec=1 [action=TIMER] |
| 768 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.858074: softirq_entry: vec=1 [action=TIMER] |
| 769 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.858081: softirq_exit: vec=1 [action=TIMER] |
| 770 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.858166: sys_enter_read: fd: 0x0003, buf: 0xbf82c940, count: 0x0200 |
| 771 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.858177: sys_exit_read: 0x200 |
| 772 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.858878: kfree_skb: skbaddr=0xeb248d80 protocol=0 location=0xc15a5308 |
| 773 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.858945: kfree_skb: skbaddr=0xeb248000 protocol=0 location=0xc15a5308 |
| 774 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859020: softirq_raise: vec=1 [action=TIMER] |
| 775 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859076: softirq_entry: vec=1 [action=TIMER] |
| 776 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859083: softirq_exit: vec=1 [action=TIMER] |
| 777 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859167: sys_enter_read: fd: 0x0003, buf: 0xb7720000, count: 0x0400 |
| 778 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859192: sys_exit_read: 0x1d7 |
| 779 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859228: sys_enter_read: fd: 0x0003, buf: 0xb7720000, count: 0x0400 |
| 780 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859233: sys_exit_read: 0x0 |
| 781 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859573: sys_enter_read: fd: 0x0003, buf: 0xbf82c580, count: 0x0200 |
| 782 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859584: sys_exit_read: 0x200 |
| 783 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859864: sys_enter_read: fd: 0x0003, buf: 0xb7720000, count: 0x0400 |
| 784 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859888: sys_exit_read: 0x400 |
| 785 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859935: sys_enter_read: fd: 0x0003, buf: 0xb7720000, count: 0x0400 |
| 786 | wget 1262 [001] 11624.859944: sys_exit_read: 0x400 |
| 787 | </literallayout> |
| 788 | This gives us a detailed timestamped sequence of events that |
| 789 | occurred within the workload with respect to those events. |
| 790 | </para> |
| 791 | |
| 792 | <para> |
| 793 | In many ways, profiling can be viewed as a subset of tracing - |
| 794 | theoretically, if you have a set of trace events that's sufficient |
| 795 | to capture all the important aspects of a workload, you can derive |
| 796 | any of the results or views that a profiling run can. |
| 797 | </para> |
| 798 | |
| 799 | <para> |
| 800 | Another aspect of traditional profiling is that while powerful in |
| 801 | many ways, it's limited by the granularity of the underlying data. |
| 802 | Profiling tools offer various ways of sorting and presenting the |
| 803 | sample data, which make it much more useful and amenable to user |
| 804 | experimentation, but in the end it can't be used in an open-ended |
| 805 | way to extract data that just isn't present as a consequence of |
| 806 | the fact that conceptually, most of it has been thrown away. |
| 807 | </para> |
| 808 | |
| 809 | <para> |
| 810 | Full-blown detailed tracing data does however offer the opportunity |
| 811 | to manipulate and present the information collected during a |
| 812 | tracing run in an infinite variety of ways. |
| 813 | </para> |
| 814 | |
| 815 | <para> |
| 816 | Another way to look at it is that there are only so many ways that |
| 817 | the 'primitive' counters can be used on their own to generate |
| 818 | interesting output; to get anything more complicated than simple |
| 819 | counts requires some amount of additional logic, which is typically |
| 820 | very specific to the problem at hand. For example, if we wanted to |
| 821 | make use of a 'counter' that maps to the value of the time |
| 822 | difference between when a process was scheduled to run on a |
| 823 | processor and the time it actually ran, we wouldn't expect such |
| 824 | a counter to exist on its own, but we could derive one called say |
| 825 | 'wakeup_latency' and use it to extract a useful view of that metric |
| 826 | from trace data. Likewise, we really can't figure out from standard |
| 827 | profiling tools how much data every process on the system reads and |
| 828 | writes, along with how many of those reads and writes fail |
| 829 | completely. If we have sufficient trace data, however, we could |
| 830 | with the right tools easily extract and present that information, |
| 831 | but we'd need something other than pre-canned profiling tools to |
| 832 | do that. |
| 833 | </para> |
| 834 | |
| 835 | <para> |
| 836 | Luckily, there is a general-purpose way to handle such needs, |
| 837 | called 'programming languages'. Making programming languages |
| 838 | easily available to apply to such problems given the specific |
| 839 | format of data is called a 'programming language binding' for |
| 840 | that data and language. Perf supports two programming language |
| 841 | bindings, one for Python and one for Perl. |
| 842 | </para> |
| 843 | |
| 844 | <informalexample> |
| 845 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> Language bindings for manipulating and |
| 846 | aggregating trace data are of course not a new |
| 847 | idea. One of the first projects to do this was IBM's DProbes |
| 848 | dpcc compiler, an ANSI C compiler which targeted a low-level |
| 849 | assembly language running on an in-kernel interpreter on the |
| 850 | target system. This is exactly analogous to what Sun's DTrace |
| 851 | did, except that DTrace invented its own language for the purpose. |
| 852 | Systemtap, heavily inspired by DTrace, also created its own |
| 853 | one-off language, but rather than running the product on an |
| 854 | in-kernel interpreter, created an elaborate compiler-based |
| 855 | machinery to translate its language into kernel modules written |
| 856 | in C. |
| 857 | </informalexample> |
| 858 | |
| 859 | <para> |
| 860 | Now that we have the trace data in perf.data, we can use |
| 861 | 'perf script -g' to generate a skeleton script with handlers |
| 862 | for the read/write entry/exit events we recorded: |
| 863 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 864 | root@crownbay:~# perf script -g python |
| 865 | generated Python script: perf-script.py |
| 866 | </literallayout> |
| 867 | The skeleton script simply creates a python function for each |
| 868 | event type in the perf.data file. The body of each function simply |
| 869 | prints the event name along with its parameters. For example: |
| 870 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 871 | def net__netif_rx(event_name, context, common_cpu, |
| 872 | common_secs, common_nsecs, common_pid, common_comm, |
| 873 | skbaddr, len, name): |
| 874 | print_header(event_name, common_cpu, common_secs, common_nsecs, |
| 875 | common_pid, common_comm) |
| 876 | |
| 877 | print "skbaddr=%u, len=%u, name=%s\n" % (skbaddr, len, name), |
| 878 | </literallayout> |
| 879 | We can run that script directly to print all of the events |
| 880 | contained in the perf.data file: |
| 881 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 882 | root@crownbay:~# perf script -s perf-script.py |
| 883 | |
| 884 | in trace_begin |
| 885 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 0 11624.857082795 1262 perf nr=3, ret=0 |
| 886 | sched__sched_wakeup 0 11624.857193498 1262 perf comm=migration/0, pid=6, prio=0, success=1, target_cpu=0 |
| 887 | irq__softirq_raise 1 11624.858021635 1262 wget vec=TIMER |
| 888 | irq__softirq_entry 1 11624.858074075 1262 wget vec=TIMER |
| 889 | irq__softirq_exit 1 11624.858081389 1262 wget vec=TIMER |
| 890 | syscalls__sys_enter_read 1 11624.858166434 1262 wget nr=3, fd=3, buf=3213019456, count=512 |
| 891 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 1 11624.858177924 1262 wget nr=3, ret=512 |
| 892 | skb__kfree_skb 1 11624.858878188 1262 wget skbaddr=3945041280, location=3243922184, protocol=0 |
| 893 | skb__kfree_skb 1 11624.858945608 1262 wget skbaddr=3945037824, location=3243922184, protocol=0 |
| 894 | irq__softirq_raise 1 11624.859020942 1262 wget vec=TIMER |
| 895 | irq__softirq_entry 1 11624.859076935 1262 wget vec=TIMER |
| 896 | irq__softirq_exit 1 11624.859083469 1262 wget vec=TIMER |
| 897 | syscalls__sys_enter_read 1 11624.859167565 1262 wget nr=3, fd=3, buf=3077701632, count=1024 |
| 898 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 1 11624.859192533 1262 wget nr=3, ret=471 |
| 899 | syscalls__sys_enter_read 1 11624.859228072 1262 wget nr=3, fd=3, buf=3077701632, count=1024 |
| 900 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 1 11624.859233707 1262 wget nr=3, ret=0 |
| 901 | syscalls__sys_enter_read 1 11624.859573008 1262 wget nr=3, fd=3, buf=3213018496, count=512 |
| 902 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 1 11624.859584818 1262 wget nr=3, ret=512 |
| 903 | syscalls__sys_enter_read 1 11624.859864562 1262 wget nr=3, fd=3, buf=3077701632, count=1024 |
| 904 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 1 11624.859888770 1262 wget nr=3, ret=1024 |
| 905 | syscalls__sys_enter_read 1 11624.859935140 1262 wget nr=3, fd=3, buf=3077701632, count=1024 |
| 906 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 1 11624.859944032 1262 wget nr=3, ret=1024 |
| 907 | </literallayout> |
| 908 | That in itself isn't very useful; after all, we can accomplish |
| 909 | pretty much the same thing by simply running 'perf script' |
| 910 | without arguments in the same directory as the perf.data file. |
| 911 | </para> |
| 912 | |
| 913 | <para> |
| 914 | We can however replace the print statements in the generated |
| 915 | function bodies with whatever we want, and thereby make it |
| 916 | infinitely more useful. |
| 917 | </para> |
| 918 | |
| 919 | <para> |
| 920 | As a simple example, let's just replace the print statements in |
| 921 | the function bodies with a simple function that does nothing but |
| 922 | increment a per-event count. When the program is run against a |
| 923 | perf.data file, each time a particular event is encountered, |
| 924 | a tally is incremented for that event. For example: |
| 925 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 926 | def net__netif_rx(event_name, context, common_cpu, |
| 927 | common_secs, common_nsecs, common_pid, common_comm, |
| 928 | skbaddr, len, name): |
| 929 | inc_counts(event_name) |
| 930 | </literallayout> |
| 931 | Each event handler function in the generated code is modified |
| 932 | to do this. For convenience, we define a common function called |
| 933 | inc_counts() that each handler calls; inc_counts() simply tallies |
| 934 | a count for each event using the 'counts' hash, which is a |
| 935 | specialized hash function that does Perl-like autovivification, a |
| 936 | capability that's extremely useful for kinds of multi-level |
| 937 | aggregation commonly used in processing traces (see perf's |
| 938 | documentation on the Python language binding for details): |
| 939 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 940 | counts = autodict() |
| 941 | |
| 942 | def inc_counts(event_name): |
| 943 | try: |
| 944 | counts[event_name] += 1 |
| 945 | except TypeError: |
| 946 | counts[event_name] = 1 |
| 947 | </literallayout> |
| 948 | Finally, at the end of the trace processing run, we want to |
| 949 | print the result of all the per-event tallies. For that, we |
| 950 | use the special 'trace_end()' function: |
| 951 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 952 | def trace_end(): |
| 953 | for event_name, count in counts.iteritems(): |
| 954 | print "%-40s %10s\n" % (event_name, count) |
| 955 | </literallayout> |
| 956 | The end result is a summary of all the events recorded in the |
| 957 | trace: |
| 958 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 959 | skb__skb_copy_datagram_iovec 13148 |
| 960 | irq__softirq_entry 4796 |
| 961 | irq__irq_handler_exit 3805 |
| 962 | irq__softirq_exit 4795 |
| 963 | syscalls__sys_enter_write 8990 |
| 964 | net__net_dev_xmit 652 |
| 965 | skb__kfree_skb 4047 |
| 966 | sched__sched_wakeup 1155 |
| 967 | irq__irq_handler_entry 3804 |
| 968 | irq__softirq_raise 4799 |
| 969 | net__net_dev_queue 652 |
| 970 | syscalls__sys_enter_read 17599 |
| 971 | net__netif_receive_skb 1743 |
| 972 | syscalls__sys_exit_read 17598 |
| 973 | net__netif_rx 2 |
| 974 | napi__napi_poll 1877 |
| 975 | syscalls__sys_exit_write 8990 |
| 976 | </literallayout> |
| 977 | Note that this is pretty much exactly the same information we get |
| 978 | from 'perf stat', which goes a little way to support the idea |
| 979 | mentioned previously that given the right kind of trace data, |
| 980 | higher-level profiling-type summaries can be derived from it. |
| 981 | </para> |
| 982 | |
| 983 | <para> |
| 984 | Documentation on using the |
| 985 | <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf-script-python'>'perf script' python binding</ulink>. |
| 986 | </para> |
| 987 | </section> |
| 988 | |
| 989 | <section id='system-wide-tracing-and-profiling'> |
| 990 | <title>System-Wide Tracing and Profiling</title> |
| 991 | |
| 992 | <para> |
| 993 | The examples so far have focused on tracing a particular program or |
| 994 | workload - in other words, every profiling run has specified the |
| 995 | program to profile in the command-line e.g. 'perf record wget ...'. |
| 996 | </para> |
| 997 | |
| 998 | <para> |
| 999 | It's also possible, and more interesting in many cases, to run a |
| 1000 | system-wide profile or trace while running the workload in a |
| 1001 | separate shell. |
| 1002 | </para> |
| 1003 | |
| 1004 | <para> |
| 1005 | To do system-wide profiling or tracing, you typically use |
| 1006 | the -a flag to 'perf record'. |
| 1007 | </para> |
| 1008 | |
| 1009 | <para> |
| 1010 | To demonstrate this, open up one window and start the profile |
| 1011 | using the -a flag (press Ctrl-C to stop tracing): |
| 1012 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1013 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -g -a |
| 1014 | ^C[ perf record: Woken up 6 times to write data ] |
| 1015 | [ perf record: Captured and wrote 1.400 MB perf.data (~61172 samples) ] |
| 1016 | </literallayout> |
| 1017 | In another window, run the wget test: |
| 1018 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1019 | root@crownbay:~# wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink> |
| 1020 | Connecting to downloads.yoctoproject.org (140.211.169.59:80) |
| 1021 | linux-2.6.19.2.tar.b 100% |*******************************| 41727k 0:00:00 ETA |
| 1022 | </literallayout> |
| 1023 | Here we see entries not only for our wget load, but for other |
| 1024 | processes running on the system as well: |
| 1025 | </para> |
| 1026 | |
| 1027 | <para> |
| 1028 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-systemwide.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1029 | </para> |
| 1030 | |
| 1031 | <para> |
| 1032 | In the snapshot above, we can see callchains that originate in |
| 1033 | libc, and a callchain from Xorg that demonstrates that we're |
| 1034 | using a proprietary X driver in userspace (notice the presence |
| 1035 | of 'PVR' and some other unresolvable symbols in the expanded |
| 1036 | Xorg callchain). |
| 1037 | </para> |
| 1038 | |
| 1039 | <para> |
| 1040 | Note also that we have both kernel and userspace entries in the |
| 1041 | above snapshot. We can also tell perf to focus on userspace but |
| 1042 | providing a modifier, in this case 'u', to the 'cycles' hardware |
| 1043 | counter when we record a profile: |
| 1044 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1045 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -g -a -e cycles:u |
| 1046 | ^C[ perf record: Woken up 2 times to write data ] |
| 1047 | [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.376 MB perf.data (~16443 samples) ] |
| 1048 | </literallayout> |
| 1049 | </para> |
| 1050 | |
| 1051 | <para> |
| 1052 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-report-cycles-u.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1053 | </para> |
| 1054 | |
| 1055 | <para> |
| 1056 | Notice in the screenshot above, we see only userspace entries ([.]) |
| 1057 | </para> |
| 1058 | |
| 1059 | <para> |
| 1060 | Finally, we can press 'enter' on a leaf node and select the 'Zoom |
| 1061 | into DSO' menu item to show only entries associated with a |
| 1062 | specific DSO. In the screenshot below, we've zoomed into the |
| 1063 | 'libc' DSO which shows all the entries associated with the |
| 1064 | libc-xxx.so DSO. |
| 1065 | </para> |
| 1066 | |
| 1067 | <para> |
| 1068 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-systemwide-libc.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1069 | </para> |
| 1070 | |
| 1071 | <para> |
| 1072 | We can also use the system-wide -a switch to do system-wide |
| 1073 | tracing. Here we'll trace a couple of scheduler events: |
| 1074 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1075 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -a -e sched:sched_switch -e sched:sched_wakeup |
| 1076 | ^C[ perf record: Woken up 38 times to write data ] |
| 1077 | [ perf record: Captured and wrote 9.780 MB perf.data (~427299 samples) ] |
| 1078 | </literallayout> |
| 1079 | We can look at the raw output using 'perf script' with no |
| 1080 | arguments: |
| 1081 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1082 | root@crownbay:~# perf script |
| 1083 | |
| 1084 | perf 1383 [001] 6171.460045: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1085 | perf 1383 [001] 6171.460066: sched_switch: prev_comm=perf prev_pid=1383 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R+ ==> next_comm=kworker/1:1 next_pid=21 next_prio=120 |
| 1086 | kworker/1:1 21 [001] 6171.460093: sched_switch: prev_comm=kworker/1:1 prev_pid=21 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=perf next_pid=1383 next_prio=120 |
| 1087 | swapper 0 [000] 6171.468063: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/0:3 pid=1209 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=000 |
| 1088 | swapper 0 [000] 6171.468107: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/0 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R ==> next_comm=kworker/0:3 next_pid=1209 next_prio=120 |
| 1089 | kworker/0:3 1209 [000] 6171.468143: sched_switch: prev_comm=kworker/0:3 prev_pid=1209 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=swapper/0 next_pid=0 next_prio=120 |
| 1090 | perf 1383 [001] 6171.470039: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1091 | perf 1383 [001] 6171.470058: sched_switch: prev_comm=perf prev_pid=1383 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R+ ==> next_comm=kworker/1:1 next_pid=21 next_prio=120 |
| 1092 | kworker/1:1 21 [001] 6171.470082: sched_switch: prev_comm=kworker/1:1 prev_pid=21 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=perf next_pid=1383 next_prio=120 |
| 1093 | perf 1383 [001] 6171.480035: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1094 | </literallayout> |
| 1095 | </para> |
| 1096 | |
| 1097 | <section id='perf-filtering'> |
| 1098 | <title>Filtering</title> |
| 1099 | |
| 1100 | <para> |
| 1101 | Notice that there are a lot of events that don't really have |
| 1102 | anything to do with what we're interested in, namely events |
| 1103 | that schedule 'perf' itself in and out or that wake perf up. |
| 1104 | We can get rid of those by using the '--filter' option - |
| 1105 | for each event we specify using -e, we can add a --filter |
| 1106 | after that to filter out trace events that contain fields |
| 1107 | with specific values: |
| 1108 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1109 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -a -e sched:sched_switch --filter 'next_comm != perf && prev_comm != perf' -e sched:sched_wakeup --filter 'comm != perf' |
| 1110 | ^C[ perf record: Woken up 38 times to write data ] |
| 1111 | [ perf record: Captured and wrote 9.688 MB perf.data (~423279 samples) ] |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 | |
| 1114 | root@crownbay:~# perf script |
| 1115 | |
| 1116 | swapper 0 [000] 7932.162180: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/0 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R ==> next_comm=kworker/0:3 next_pid=1209 next_prio=120 |
| 1117 | kworker/0:3 1209 [000] 7932.162236: sched_switch: prev_comm=kworker/0:3 prev_pid=1209 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=swapper/0 next_pid=0 next_prio=120 |
| 1118 | perf 1407 [001] 7932.170048: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1119 | perf 1407 [001] 7932.180044: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1120 | perf 1407 [001] 7932.190038: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1121 | perf 1407 [001] 7932.200044: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1122 | perf 1407 [001] 7932.210044: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1123 | perf 1407 [001] 7932.220044: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1124 | swapper 0 [001] 7932.230111: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/1:1 pid=21 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001 |
| 1125 | swapper 0 [001] 7932.230146: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/1 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R ==> next_comm=kworker/1:1 next_pid=21 next_prio=120 |
| 1126 | kworker/1:1 21 [001] 7932.230205: sched_switch: prev_comm=kworker/1:1 prev_pid=21 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=swapper/1 next_pid=0 next_prio=120 |
| 1127 | swapper 0 [000] 7932.326109: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/0:3 pid=1209 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=000 |
| 1128 | swapper 0 [000] 7932.326171: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/0 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R ==> next_comm=kworker/0:3 next_pid=1209 next_prio=120 |
| 1129 | kworker/0:3 1209 [000] 7932.326214: sched_switch: prev_comm=kworker/0:3 prev_pid=1209 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=swapper/0 next_pid=0 next_prio=120 |
| 1130 | </literallayout> |
| 1131 | In this case, we've filtered out all events that have 'perf' |
| 1132 | in their 'comm' or 'comm_prev' or 'comm_next' fields. Notice |
| 1133 | that there are still events recorded for perf, but notice |
| 1134 | that those events don't have values of 'perf' for the filtered |
| 1135 | fields. To completely filter out anything from perf will |
| 1136 | require a bit more work, but for the purpose of demonstrating |
| 1137 | how to use filters, it's close enough. |
| 1138 | </para> |
| 1139 | |
| 1140 | <informalexample> |
| 1141 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> These are exactly the same set of event |
| 1142 | filters defined by the trace event subsystem. See the |
| 1143 | ftrace/tracecmd/kernelshark section for more discussion about |
| 1144 | these event filters. |
| 1145 | </informalexample> |
| 1146 | |
| 1147 | <informalexample> |
| 1148 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> These event filters are implemented by a |
| 1149 | special-purpose pseudo-interpreter in the kernel and are an |
| 1150 | integral and indispensable part of the perf design as it |
| 1151 | relates to tracing. kernel-based event filters provide a |
| 1152 | mechanism to precisely throttle the event stream that appears |
| 1153 | in user space, where it makes sense to provide bindings to real |
| 1154 | programming languages for postprocessing the event stream. |
| 1155 | This architecture allows for the intelligent and flexible |
| 1156 | partitioning of processing between the kernel and user space. |
| 1157 | Contrast this with other tools such as SystemTap, which does |
| 1158 | all of its processing in the kernel and as such requires a |
| 1159 | special project-defined language in order to accommodate that |
| 1160 | design, or LTTng, where everything is sent to userspace and |
| 1161 | as such requires a super-efficient kernel-to-userspace |
| 1162 | transport mechanism in order to function properly. While |
| 1163 | perf certainly can benefit from for instance advances in |
| 1164 | the design of the transport, it doesn't fundamentally depend |
| 1165 | on them. Basically, if you find that your perf tracing |
| 1166 | application is causing buffer I/O overruns, it probably |
| 1167 | means that you aren't taking enough advantage of the |
| 1168 | kernel filtering engine. |
| 1169 | </informalexample> |
| 1170 | </section> |
| 1171 | </section> |
| 1172 | |
| 1173 | <section id='using-dynamic-tracepoints'> |
| 1174 | <title>Using Dynamic Tracepoints</title> |
| 1175 | |
| 1176 | <para> |
| 1177 | perf isn't restricted to the fixed set of static tracepoints |
| 1178 | listed by 'perf list'. Users can also add their own 'dynamic' |
| 1179 | tracepoints anywhere in the kernel. For instance, suppose we |
| 1180 | want to define our own tracepoint on do_fork(). We can do that |
| 1181 | using the 'perf probe' perf subcommand: |
| 1182 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1183 | root@crownbay:~# perf probe do_fork |
| 1184 | Added new event: |
| 1185 | probe:do_fork (on do_fork) |
| 1186 | |
| 1187 | You can now use it in all perf tools, such as: |
| 1188 | |
| 1189 | perf record -e probe:do_fork -aR sleep 1 |
| 1190 | </literallayout> |
| 1191 | Adding a new tracepoint via 'perf probe' results in an event |
| 1192 | with all the expected files and format in |
| 1193 | /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events, just the same as for static |
| 1194 | tracepoints (as discussed in more detail in the trace events |
| 1195 | subsystem section: |
| 1196 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1197 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/probe/do_fork# ls -al |
| 1198 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Oct 28 11:42 . |
| 1199 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Oct 28 11:42 .. |
| 1200 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Oct 28 11:42 enable |
| 1201 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Oct 28 11:42 filter |
| 1202 | -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Oct 28 11:42 format |
| 1203 | -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Oct 28 11:42 id |
| 1204 | |
| 1205 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/probe/do_fork# cat format |
| 1206 | name: do_fork |
| 1207 | ID: 944 |
| 1208 | format: |
| 1209 | field:unsigned short common_type; offset:0; size:2; signed:0; |
| 1210 | field:unsigned char common_flags; offset:2; size:1; signed:0; |
| 1211 | field:unsigned char common_preempt_count; offset:3; size:1; signed:0; |
| 1212 | field:int common_pid; offset:4; size:4; signed:1; |
| 1213 | field:int common_padding; offset:8; size:4; signed:1; |
| 1214 | |
| 1215 | field:unsigned long __probe_ip; offset:12; size:4; signed:0; |
| 1216 | |
| 1217 | print fmt: "(%lx)", REC->__probe_ip |
| 1218 | </literallayout> |
| 1219 | We can list all dynamic tracepoints currently in existence: |
| 1220 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1221 | root@crownbay:~# perf probe -l |
| 1222 | probe:do_fork (on do_fork) |
| 1223 | probe:schedule (on schedule) |
| 1224 | </literallayout> |
| 1225 | Let's record system-wide ('sleep 30' is a trick for recording |
| 1226 | system-wide but basically do nothing and then wake up after |
| 1227 | 30 seconds): |
| 1228 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1229 | root@crownbay:~# perf record -g -a -e probe:do_fork sleep 30 |
| 1230 | [ perf record: Woken up 1 times to write data ] |
| 1231 | [ perf record: Captured and wrote 0.087 MB perf.data (~3812 samples) ] |
| 1232 | </literallayout> |
| 1233 | Using 'perf script' we can see each do_fork event that fired: |
| 1234 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1235 | root@crownbay:~# perf script |
| 1236 | |
| 1237 | # ======== |
| 1238 | # captured on: Sun Oct 28 11:55:18 2012 |
| 1239 | # hostname : crownbay |
| 1240 | # os release : 3.4.11-yocto-standard |
| 1241 | # perf version : 3.4.11 |
| 1242 | # arch : i686 |
| 1243 | # nrcpus online : 2 |
| 1244 | # nrcpus avail : 2 |
| 1245 | # cpudesc : Intel(R) Atom(TM) CPU E660 @ 1.30GHz |
| 1246 | # cpuid : GenuineIntel,6,38,1 |
| 1247 | # total memory : 1017184 kB |
| 1248 | # cmdline : /usr/bin/perf record -g -a -e probe:do_fork sleep 30 |
| 1249 | # event : name = probe:do_fork, type = 2, config = 0x3b0, config1 = 0x0, config2 = 0x0, excl_usr = 0, excl_kern |
| 1250 | = 0, id = { 5, 6 } |
| 1251 | # HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY info available, use -I to display |
| 1252 | # ======== |
| 1253 | # |
| 1254 | matchbox-deskto 1197 [001] 34211.378318: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1255 | matchbox-deskto 1295 [001] 34211.380388: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1256 | pcmanfm 1296 [000] 34211.632350: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1257 | pcmanfm 1296 [000] 34211.639917: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1258 | matchbox-deskto 1197 [001] 34217.541603: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1259 | matchbox-deskto 1299 [001] 34217.543584: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1260 | gthumb 1300 [001] 34217.697451: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1261 | gthumb 1300 [001] 34219.085734: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1262 | gthumb 1300 [000] 34219.121351: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1263 | gthumb 1300 [001] 34219.264551: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1264 | pcmanfm 1296 [000] 34219.590380: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1265 | matchbox-deskto 1197 [001] 34224.955965: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1266 | matchbox-deskto 1306 [001] 34224.957972: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1267 | matchbox-termin 1307 [000] 34225.038214: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1268 | matchbox-termin 1307 [001] 34225.044218: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1269 | matchbox-termin 1307 [000] 34225.046442: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1270 | matchbox-deskto 1197 [001] 34237.112138: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1271 | matchbox-deskto 1311 [001] 34237.114106: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1272 | gaku 1312 [000] 34237.202388: do_fork: (c1028460) |
| 1273 | </literallayout> |
| 1274 | And using 'perf report' on the same file, we can see the |
| 1275 | callgraphs from starting a few programs during those 30 seconds: |
| 1276 | </para> |
| 1277 | |
| 1278 | <para> |
| 1279 | <imagedata fileref="figures/perf-probe-do_fork-profile.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1280 | </para> |
| 1281 | |
| 1282 | <informalexample> |
| 1283 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> The trace events subsystem accommodate static |
| 1284 | and dynamic tracepoints in exactly the same way - there's no |
| 1285 | difference as far as the infrastructure is concerned. See the |
| 1286 | ftrace section for more details on the trace event subsystem. |
| 1287 | </informalexample> |
| 1288 | |
| 1289 | <informalexample> |
| 1290 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> Dynamic tracepoints are implemented under the |
| 1291 | covers by kprobes and uprobes. kprobes and uprobes are also used |
| 1292 | by and in fact are the main focus of SystemTap. |
| 1293 | </informalexample> |
| 1294 | </section> |
| 1295 | </section> |
| 1296 | |
| 1297 | <section id='perf-documentation'> |
| 1298 | <title>Documentation</title> |
| 1299 | |
| 1300 | <para> |
| 1301 | Online versions of the man pages for the commands discussed in this |
| 1302 | section can be found here: |
| 1303 | <itemizedlist> |
| 1304 | <listitem><para>The <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf-stat'>'perf stat' manpage</ulink>. |
| 1305 | </para></listitem> |
| 1306 | <listitem><para>The <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf-record'>'perf record' manpage</ulink>. |
| 1307 | </para></listitem> |
| 1308 | <listitem><para>The <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf-report'>'perf report' manpage</ulink>. |
| 1309 | </para></listitem> |
| 1310 | <listitem><para>The <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf-probe'>'perf probe' manpage</ulink>. |
| 1311 | </para></listitem> |
| 1312 | <listitem><para>The <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf-script'>'perf script' manpage</ulink>. |
| 1313 | </para></listitem> |
| 1314 | <listitem><para>Documentation on using the |
| 1315 | <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf-script-python'>'perf script' python binding</ulink>. |
| 1316 | </para></listitem> |
| 1317 | <listitem><para>The top-level |
| 1318 | <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/perf'>perf(1) manpage</ulink>. |
| 1319 | </para></listitem> |
| 1320 | </itemizedlist> |
| 1321 | </para> |
| 1322 | |
| 1323 | <para> |
| 1324 | Normally, you should be able to invoke the man pages via perf |
| 1325 | itself e.g. 'perf help' or 'perf help record'. |
| 1326 | </para> |
| 1327 | |
| 1328 | <para> |
| 1329 | However, by default Yocto doesn't install man pages, but perf |
| 1330 | invokes the man pages for most help functionality. This is a bug |
| 1331 | and is being addressed by a Yocto bug: |
| 1332 | <ulink url='https://bugzilla.yoctoproject.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3388'>Bug 3388 - perf: enable man pages for basic 'help' functionality</ulink>. |
| 1333 | </para> |
| 1334 | |
| 1335 | <para> |
| 1336 | The man pages in text form, along with some other files, such as |
| 1337 | a set of examples, can be found in the 'perf' directory of the |
| 1338 | kernel tree: |
| 1339 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1340 | tools/perf/Documentation |
| 1341 | </literallayout> |
| 1342 | There's also a nice perf tutorial on the perf wiki that goes |
| 1343 | into more detail than we do here in certain areas: |
| 1344 | <ulink url='https://perf.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Tutorial'>Perf Tutorial</ulink> |
| 1345 | </para> |
| 1346 | </section> |
| 1347 | </section> |
| 1348 | |
| 1349 | <section id='profile-manual-ftrace'> |
| 1350 | <title>ftrace</title> |
| 1351 | |
| 1352 | <para> |
| 1353 | 'ftrace' literally refers to the 'ftrace function tracer' but in |
| 1354 | reality this encompasses a number of related tracers along with |
| 1355 | the infrastructure that they all make use of. |
| 1356 | </para> |
| 1357 | |
| 1358 | <section id='ftrace-setup'> |
| 1359 | <title>Setup</title> |
| 1360 | |
| 1361 | <para> |
| 1362 | For this section, we'll assume you've already performed the basic |
| 1363 | setup outlined in the General Setup section. |
| 1364 | </para> |
| 1365 | |
| 1366 | <para> |
| 1367 | ftrace, trace-cmd, and kernelshark run on the target system, |
| 1368 | and are ready to go out-of-the-box - no additional setup is |
| 1369 | necessary. For the rest of this section we assume you've ssh'ed |
| 1370 | to the host and will be running ftrace on the target. kernelshark |
| 1371 | is a GUI application and if you use the '-X' option to ssh you |
| 1372 | can have the kernelshark GUI run on the target but display |
| 1373 | remotely on the host if you want. |
| 1374 | </para> |
| 1375 | </section> |
| 1376 | |
| 1377 | <section id='basic-ftrace-usage'> |
| 1378 | <title>Basic ftrace usage</title> |
| 1379 | |
| 1380 | <para> |
| 1381 | 'ftrace' essentially refers to everything included in |
| 1382 | the /tracing directory of the mounted debugfs filesystem |
| 1383 | (Yocto follows the standard convention and mounts it |
| 1384 | at /sys/kernel/debug). Here's a listing of all the files |
| 1385 | found in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing on a Yocto system: |
| 1386 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1387 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# ls |
| 1388 | README kprobe_events trace |
| 1389 | available_events kprobe_profile trace_clock |
| 1390 | available_filter_functions options trace_marker |
| 1391 | available_tracers per_cpu trace_options |
| 1392 | buffer_size_kb printk_formats trace_pipe |
| 1393 | buffer_total_size_kb saved_cmdlines tracing_cpumask |
| 1394 | current_tracer set_event tracing_enabled |
| 1395 | dyn_ftrace_total_info set_ftrace_filter tracing_on |
| 1396 | enabled_functions set_ftrace_notrace tracing_thresh |
| 1397 | events set_ftrace_pid |
| 1398 | free_buffer set_graph_function |
| 1399 | </literallayout> |
| 1400 | The files listed above are used for various purposes - |
| 1401 | some relate directly to the tracers themselves, others are |
| 1402 | used to set tracing options, and yet others actually contain |
| 1403 | the tracing output when a tracer is in effect. Some of the |
| 1404 | functions can be guessed from their names, others need |
| 1405 | explanation; in any case, we'll cover some of the files we |
| 1406 | see here below but for an explanation of the others, please |
| 1407 | see the ftrace documentation. |
| 1408 | </para> |
| 1409 | |
| 1410 | <para> |
| 1411 | We'll start by looking at some of the available built-in |
| 1412 | tracers. |
| 1413 | </para> |
| 1414 | |
| 1415 | <para> |
| 1416 | cat'ing the 'available_tracers' file lists the set of |
| 1417 | available tracers: |
| 1418 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1419 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat available_tracers |
| 1420 | blk function_graph function nop |
| 1421 | </literallayout> |
| 1422 | The 'current_tracer' file contains the tracer currently in |
| 1423 | effect: |
| 1424 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1425 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat current_tracer |
| 1426 | nop |
| 1427 | </literallayout> |
| 1428 | The above listing of current_tracer shows that |
| 1429 | the 'nop' tracer is in effect, which is just another |
| 1430 | way of saying that there's actually no tracer |
| 1431 | currently in effect. |
| 1432 | </para> |
| 1433 | |
| 1434 | <para> |
| 1435 | echo'ing one of the available_tracers into current_tracer |
| 1436 | makes the specified tracer the current tracer: |
| 1437 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1438 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# echo function > current_tracer |
| 1439 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat current_tracer |
| 1440 | function |
| 1441 | </literallayout> |
| 1442 | The above sets the current tracer to be the |
| 1443 | 'function tracer'. This tracer traces every function |
| 1444 | call in the kernel and makes it available as the |
| 1445 | contents of the 'trace' file. Reading the 'trace' file |
| 1446 | lists the currently buffered function calls that have been |
| 1447 | traced by the function tracer: |
| 1448 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1449 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat trace | less |
| 1450 | |
| 1451 | # tracer: function |
| 1452 | # |
| 1453 | # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 310629/766471 #P:8 |
| 1454 | # |
| 1455 | # _-----=> irqs-off |
| 1456 | # / _----=> need-resched |
| 1457 | # | / _---=> hardirq/softirq |
| 1458 | # || / _--=> preempt-depth |
| 1459 | # ||| / delay |
| 1460 | # TASK-PID CPU# |||| TIMESTAMP FUNCTION |
| 1461 | # | | | |||| | | |
| 1462 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867169: ktime_get_real <-intel_idle |
| 1463 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867170: getnstimeofday <-ktime_get_real |
| 1464 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867171: ns_to_timeval <-intel_idle |
| 1465 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867171: ns_to_timespec <-ns_to_timeval |
| 1466 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867172: smp_apic_timer_interrupt <-apic_timer_interrupt |
| 1467 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867172: native_apic_mem_write <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt |
| 1468 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867172: irq_enter <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt |
| 1469 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867172: rcu_irq_enter <-irq_enter |
| 1470 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867173: rcu_idle_exit_common.isra.33 <-rcu_irq_enter |
| 1471 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867173: local_bh_disable <-irq_enter |
| 1472 | <idle>-0 [004] d..1 470.867173: add_preempt_count <-local_bh_disable |
| 1473 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867174: tick_check_idle <-irq_enter |
| 1474 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867174: tick_check_oneshot_broadcast <-tick_check_idle |
| 1475 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867174: ktime_get <-tick_check_idle |
| 1476 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867174: tick_nohz_stop_idle <-tick_check_idle |
| 1477 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867175: update_ts_time_stats <-tick_nohz_stop_idle |
| 1478 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867175: nr_iowait_cpu <-update_ts_time_stats |
| 1479 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867175: tick_do_update_jiffies64 <-tick_check_idle |
| 1480 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867175: _raw_spin_lock <-tick_do_update_jiffies64 |
| 1481 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s1 470.867176: add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock |
| 1482 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s2 470.867176: do_timer <-tick_do_update_jiffies64 |
| 1483 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s2 470.867176: _raw_spin_lock <-do_timer |
| 1484 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s2 470.867176: add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock |
| 1485 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s3 470.867177: ntp_tick_length <-do_timer |
| 1486 | <idle>-0 [004] d.s3 470.867177: _raw_spin_lock_irqsave <-ntp_tick_length |
| 1487 | . |
| 1488 | . |
| 1489 | . |
| 1490 | </literallayout> |
| 1491 | Each line in the trace above shows what was happening in |
| 1492 | the kernel on a given cpu, to the level of detail of |
| 1493 | function calls. Each entry shows the function called, |
| 1494 | followed by its caller (after the arrow). |
| 1495 | </para> |
| 1496 | |
| 1497 | <para> |
| 1498 | The function tracer gives you an extremely detailed idea |
| 1499 | of what the kernel was doing at the point in time the trace |
| 1500 | was taken, and is a great way to learn about how the kernel |
| 1501 | code works in a dynamic sense. |
| 1502 | </para> |
| 1503 | |
| 1504 | <informalexample> |
| 1505 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> The ftrace function tracer is also |
| 1506 | available from within perf, as the ftrace:function tracepoint. |
| 1507 | </informalexample> |
| 1508 | |
| 1509 | <para> |
| 1510 | It is a little more difficult to follow the call chains than |
| 1511 | it needs to be - luckily there's a variant of the function |
| 1512 | tracer that displays the callchains explicitly, called the |
| 1513 | 'function_graph' tracer: |
| 1514 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1515 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# echo function_graph > current_tracer |
| 1516 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat trace | less |
| 1517 | |
| 1518 | tracer: function_graph |
| 1519 | |
| 1520 | CPU DURATION FUNCTION CALLS |
| 1521 | | | | | | | | |
| 1522 | 7) 0.046 us | pick_next_task_fair(); |
| 1523 | 7) 0.043 us | pick_next_task_stop(); |
| 1524 | 7) 0.042 us | pick_next_task_rt(); |
| 1525 | 7) 0.032 us | pick_next_task_fair(); |
| 1526 | 7) 0.030 us | pick_next_task_idle(); |
| 1527 | 7) | _raw_spin_unlock_irq() { |
| 1528 | 7) 0.033 us | sub_preempt_count(); |
| 1529 | 7) 0.258 us | } |
| 1530 | 7) 0.032 us | sub_preempt_count(); |
| 1531 | 7) + 13.341 us | } /* __schedule */ |
| 1532 | 7) 0.095 us | } /* sub_preempt_count */ |
| 1533 | 7) | schedule() { |
| 1534 | 7) | __schedule() { |
| 1535 | 7) 0.060 us | add_preempt_count(); |
| 1536 | 7) 0.044 us | rcu_note_context_switch(); |
| 1537 | 7) | _raw_spin_lock_irq() { |
| 1538 | 7) 0.033 us | add_preempt_count(); |
| 1539 | 7) 0.247 us | } |
| 1540 | 7) | idle_balance() { |
| 1541 | 7) | _raw_spin_unlock() { |
| 1542 | 7) 0.031 us | sub_preempt_count(); |
| 1543 | 7) 0.246 us | } |
| 1544 | 7) | update_shares() { |
| 1545 | 7) 0.030 us | __rcu_read_lock(); |
| 1546 | 7) 0.029 us | __rcu_read_unlock(); |
| 1547 | 7) 0.484 us | } |
| 1548 | 7) 0.030 us | __rcu_read_lock(); |
| 1549 | 7) | load_balance() { |
| 1550 | 7) | find_busiest_group() { |
| 1551 | 7) 0.031 us | idle_cpu(); |
| 1552 | 7) 0.029 us | idle_cpu(); |
| 1553 | 7) 0.035 us | idle_cpu(); |
| 1554 | 7) 0.906 us | } |
| 1555 | 7) 1.141 us | } |
| 1556 | 7) 0.022 us | msecs_to_jiffies(); |
| 1557 | 7) | load_balance() { |
| 1558 | 7) | find_busiest_group() { |
| 1559 | 7) 0.031 us | idle_cpu(); |
| 1560 | . |
| 1561 | . |
| 1562 | . |
| 1563 | 4) 0.062 us | msecs_to_jiffies(); |
| 1564 | 4) 0.062 us | __rcu_read_unlock(); |
| 1565 | 4) | _raw_spin_lock() { |
| 1566 | 4) 0.073 us | add_preempt_count(); |
| 1567 | 4) 0.562 us | } |
| 1568 | 4) + 17.452 us | } |
| 1569 | 4) 0.108 us | put_prev_task_fair(); |
| 1570 | 4) 0.102 us | pick_next_task_fair(); |
| 1571 | 4) 0.084 us | pick_next_task_stop(); |
| 1572 | 4) 0.075 us | pick_next_task_rt(); |
| 1573 | 4) 0.062 us | pick_next_task_fair(); |
| 1574 | 4) 0.066 us | pick_next_task_idle(); |
| 1575 | ------------------------------------------ |
| 1576 | 4) kworker-74 => <idle>-0 |
| 1577 | ------------------------------------------ |
| 1578 | |
| 1579 | 4) | finish_task_switch() { |
| 1580 | 4) | _raw_spin_unlock_irq() { |
| 1581 | 4) 0.100 us | sub_preempt_count(); |
| 1582 | 4) 0.582 us | } |
| 1583 | 4) 1.105 us | } |
| 1584 | 4) 0.088 us | sub_preempt_count(); |
| 1585 | 4) ! 100.066 us | } |
| 1586 | . |
| 1587 | . |
| 1588 | . |
| 1589 | 3) | sys_ioctl() { |
| 1590 | 3) 0.083 us | fget_light(); |
| 1591 | 3) | security_file_ioctl() { |
| 1592 | 3) 0.066 us | cap_file_ioctl(); |
| 1593 | 3) 0.562 us | } |
| 1594 | 3) | do_vfs_ioctl() { |
| 1595 | 3) | drm_ioctl() { |
| 1596 | 3) 0.075 us | drm_ut_debug_printk(); |
| 1597 | 3) | i915_gem_pwrite_ioctl() { |
| 1598 | 3) | i915_mutex_lock_interruptible() { |
| 1599 | 3) 0.070 us | mutex_lock_interruptible(); |
| 1600 | 3) 0.570 us | } |
| 1601 | 3) | drm_gem_object_lookup() { |
| 1602 | 3) | _raw_spin_lock() { |
| 1603 | 3) 0.080 us | add_preempt_count(); |
| 1604 | 3) 0.620 us | } |
| 1605 | 3) | _raw_spin_unlock() { |
| 1606 | 3) 0.085 us | sub_preempt_count(); |
| 1607 | 3) 0.562 us | } |
| 1608 | 3) 2.149 us | } |
| 1609 | 3) 0.133 us | i915_gem_object_pin(); |
| 1610 | 3) | i915_gem_object_set_to_gtt_domain() { |
| 1611 | 3) 0.065 us | i915_gem_object_flush_gpu_write_domain(); |
| 1612 | 3) 0.065 us | i915_gem_object_wait_rendering(); |
| 1613 | 3) 0.062 us | i915_gem_object_flush_cpu_write_domain(); |
| 1614 | 3) 1.612 us | } |
| 1615 | 3) | i915_gem_object_put_fence() { |
| 1616 | 3) 0.097 us | i915_gem_object_flush_fence.constprop.36(); |
| 1617 | 3) 0.645 us | } |
| 1618 | 3) 0.070 us | add_preempt_count(); |
| 1619 | 3) 0.070 us | sub_preempt_count(); |
| 1620 | 3) 0.073 us | i915_gem_object_unpin(); |
| 1621 | 3) 0.068 us | mutex_unlock(); |
| 1622 | 3) 9.924 us | } |
| 1623 | 3) + 11.236 us | } |
| 1624 | 3) + 11.770 us | } |
| 1625 | 3) + 13.784 us | } |
| 1626 | 3) | sys_ioctl() { |
| 1627 | </literallayout> |
| 1628 | As you can see, the function_graph display is much easier to |
| 1629 | follow. Also note that in addition to the function calls and |
| 1630 | associated braces, other events such as scheduler events |
| 1631 | are displayed in context. In fact, you can freely include |
| 1632 | any tracepoint available in the trace events subsystem described |
| 1633 | in the next section by simply enabling those events, and they'll |
| 1634 | appear in context in the function graph display. Quite a |
| 1635 | powerful tool for understanding kernel dynamics. |
| 1636 | </para> |
| 1637 | |
| 1638 | <para> |
| 1639 | Also notice that there are various annotations on the left |
| 1640 | hand side of the display. For example if the total time it |
| 1641 | took for a given function to execute is above a certain |
| 1642 | threshold, an exclamation point or plus sign appears on the |
| 1643 | left hand side. Please see the ftrace documentation for |
| 1644 | details on all these fields. |
| 1645 | </para> |
| 1646 | </section> |
| 1647 | |
| 1648 | <section id='the-trace-events-subsystem'> |
| 1649 | <title>The 'trace events' Subsystem</title> |
| 1650 | |
| 1651 | <para> |
| 1652 | One especially important directory contained within |
| 1653 | the /sys/kernel/debug/tracing directory is the 'events' |
| 1654 | subdirectory, which contains representations of every |
| 1655 | tracepoint in the system. Listing out the contents of |
| 1656 | the 'events' subdirectory, we see mainly another set of |
| 1657 | subdirectories: |
| 1658 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1659 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cd events |
| 1660 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events# ls -al |
| 1661 | drwxr-xr-x 38 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 . |
| 1662 | drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 .. |
| 1663 | drwxr-xr-x 19 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 block |
| 1664 | drwxr-xr-x 32 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 btrfs |
| 1665 | drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 drm |
| 1666 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 enable |
| 1667 | drwxr-xr-x 40 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 ext3 |
| 1668 | drwxr-xr-x 79 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 ext4 |
| 1669 | drwxr-xr-x 14 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 ftrace |
| 1670 | drwxr-xr-x 8 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 hda |
| 1671 | -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 header_event |
| 1672 | -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 header_page |
| 1673 | drwxr-xr-x 25 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 i915 |
| 1674 | drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 irq |
| 1675 | drwxr-xr-x 12 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 jbd |
| 1676 | drwxr-xr-x 14 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 jbd2 |
| 1677 | drwxr-xr-x 14 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 kmem |
| 1678 | drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 module |
| 1679 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 napi |
| 1680 | drwxr-xr-x 6 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 net |
| 1681 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 oom |
| 1682 | drwxr-xr-x 12 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 power |
| 1683 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 printk |
| 1684 | drwxr-xr-x 8 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 random |
| 1685 | drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 raw_syscalls |
| 1686 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 rcu |
| 1687 | drwxr-xr-x 6 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 rpm |
| 1688 | drwxr-xr-x 20 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 sched |
| 1689 | drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 scsi |
| 1690 | drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 signal |
| 1691 | drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 skb |
| 1692 | drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 sock |
| 1693 | drwxr-xr-x 10 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 sunrpc |
| 1694 | drwxr-xr-x 538 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 syscalls |
| 1695 | drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 task |
| 1696 | drwxr-xr-x 14 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 timer |
| 1697 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 udp |
| 1698 | drwxr-xr-x 21 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 vmscan |
| 1699 | drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 vsyscall |
| 1700 | drwxr-xr-x 6 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 workqueue |
| 1701 | drwxr-xr-x 26 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 writeback |
| 1702 | </literallayout> |
| 1703 | Each one of these subdirectories corresponds to a |
| 1704 | 'subsystem' and contains yet again more subdirectories, |
| 1705 | each one of those finally corresponding to a tracepoint. |
| 1706 | For example, here are the contents of the 'kmem' subsystem: |
| 1707 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1708 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events# cd kmem |
| 1709 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem# ls -al |
| 1710 | drwxr-xr-x 14 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 . |
| 1711 | drwxr-xr-x 38 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 .. |
| 1712 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 enable |
| 1713 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 filter |
| 1714 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 kfree |
| 1715 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 kmalloc |
| 1716 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 kmalloc_node |
| 1717 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 kmem_cache_alloc |
| 1718 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 kmem_cache_alloc_node |
| 1719 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 kmem_cache_free |
| 1720 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 mm_page_alloc |
| 1721 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 mm_page_alloc_extfrag |
| 1722 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 mm_page_alloc_zone_locked |
| 1723 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 mm_page_free |
| 1724 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 mm_page_free_batched |
| 1725 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 mm_page_pcpu_drain |
| 1726 | </literallayout> |
| 1727 | Let's see what's inside the subdirectory for a specific |
| 1728 | tracepoint, in this case the one for kmalloc: |
| 1729 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1730 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem# cd kmalloc |
| 1731 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc# ls -al |
| 1732 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 . |
| 1733 | drwxr-xr-x 14 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 .. |
| 1734 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 enable |
| 1735 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 filter |
| 1736 | -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 format |
| 1737 | -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Nov 14 23:19 id |
| 1738 | </literallayout> |
| 1739 | The 'format' file for the tracepoint describes the event |
| 1740 | in memory, which is used by the various tracing tools |
| 1741 | that now make use of these tracepoint to parse the event |
| 1742 | and make sense of it, along with a 'print fmt' field that |
| 1743 | allows tools like ftrace to display the event as text. |
| 1744 | Here's what the format of the kmalloc event looks like: |
| 1745 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1746 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc# cat format |
| 1747 | name: kmalloc |
| 1748 | ID: 313 |
| 1749 | format: |
| 1750 | field:unsigned short common_type; offset:0; size:2; signed:0; |
| 1751 | field:unsigned char common_flags; offset:2; size:1; signed:0; |
| 1752 | field:unsigned char common_preempt_count; offset:3; size:1; signed:0; |
| 1753 | field:int common_pid; offset:4; size:4; signed:1; |
| 1754 | field:int common_padding; offset:8; size:4; signed:1; |
| 1755 | |
| 1756 | field:unsigned long call_site; offset:16; size:8; signed:0; |
| 1757 | field:const void * ptr; offset:24; size:8; signed:0; |
| 1758 | field:size_t bytes_req; offset:32; size:8; signed:0; |
| 1759 | field:size_t bytes_alloc; offset:40; size:8; signed:0; |
| 1760 | field:gfp_t gfp_flags; offset:48; size:4; signed:0; |
| 1761 | |
| 1762 | print fmt: "call_site=%lx ptr=%p bytes_req=%zu bytes_alloc=%zu gfp_flags=%s", REC->call_site, REC->ptr, REC->bytes_req, REC->bytes_alloc, |
| 1763 | (REC->gfp_flags) ? __print_flags(REC->gfp_flags, "|", {(unsigned long)(((( gfp_t)0x10u) | (( gfp_t)0x40u) | (( gfp_t)0x80u) | (( |
| 1764 | gfp_t)0x20000u) | (( gfp_t)0x02u) | (( gfp_t)0x08u)) | (( gfp_t)0x4000u) | (( gfp_t)0x10000u) | (( gfp_t)0x1000u) | (( gfp_t)0x200u) | (( |
| 1765 | gfp_t)0x400000u)), "GFP_TRANSHUGE"}, {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x10u) | (( gfp_t)0x40u) | (( gfp_t)0x80u) | (( gfp_t)0x20000u) | (( |
| 1766 | gfp_t)0x02u) | (( gfp_t)0x08u)), "GFP_HIGHUSER_MOVABLE"}, {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x10u) | (( gfp_t)0x40u) | (( gfp_t)0x80u) | (( |
| 1767 | gfp_t)0x20000u) | (( gfp_t)0x02u)), "GFP_HIGHUSER"}, {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x10u) | (( gfp_t)0x40u) | (( gfp_t)0x80u) | (( |
| 1768 | gfp_t)0x20000u)), "GFP_USER"}, {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x10u) | (( gfp_t)0x40u) | (( gfp_t)0x80u) | (( gfp_t)0x80000u)), GFP_TEMPORARY"}, |
| 1769 | {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x10u) | (( gfp_t)0x40u) | (( gfp_t)0x80u)), "GFP_KERNEL"}, {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x10u) | (( gfp_t)0x40u)), |
| 1770 | "GFP_NOFS"}, {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x20u)), "GFP_ATOMIC"}, {(unsigned long)((( gfp_t)0x10u)), "GFP_NOIO"}, {(unsigned long)(( |
| 1771 | gfp_t)0x20u), "GFP_HIGH"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x10u), "GFP_WAIT"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x40u), "GFP_IO"}, {(unsigned long)(( |
| 1772 | gfp_t)0x100u), "GFP_COLD"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x200u), "GFP_NOWARN"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x400u), "GFP_REPEAT"}, {(unsigned |
| 1773 | long)(( gfp_t)0x800u), "GFP_NOFAIL"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x1000u), "GFP_NORETRY"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x4000u), "GFP_COMP"}, |
| 1774 | {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x8000u), "GFP_ZERO"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x10000u), "GFP_NOMEMALLOC"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x20000u), |
| 1775 | "GFP_HARDWALL"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x40000u), "GFP_THISNODE"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x80000u), "GFP_RECLAIMABLE"}, {(unsigned |
| 1776 | long)(( gfp_t)0x08u), "GFP_MOVABLE"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0), "GFP_NOTRACK"}, {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x400000u), "GFP_NO_KSWAPD"}, |
| 1777 | {(unsigned long)(( gfp_t)0x800000u), "GFP_OTHER_NODE"} ) : "GFP_NOWAIT" |
| 1778 | </literallayout> |
| 1779 | The 'enable' file in the tracepoint directory is what allows |
| 1780 | the user (or tools such as trace-cmd) to actually turn the |
| 1781 | tracepoint on and off. When enabled, the corresponding |
| 1782 | tracepoint will start appearing in the ftrace 'trace' |
| 1783 | file described previously. For example, this turns on the |
| 1784 | kmalloc tracepoint: |
| 1785 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1786 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc# echo 1 > enable |
| 1787 | </literallayout> |
| 1788 | At the moment, we're not interested in the function tracer or |
| 1789 | some other tracer that might be in effect, so we first turn |
| 1790 | it off, but if we do that, we still need to turn tracing on in |
| 1791 | order to see the events in the output buffer: |
| 1792 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1793 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# echo nop > current_tracer |
| 1794 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# echo 1 > tracing_on |
| 1795 | </literallayout> |
| 1796 | Now, if we look at the the 'trace' file, we see nothing |
| 1797 | but the kmalloc events we just turned on: |
| 1798 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1799 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat trace | less |
| 1800 | # tracer: nop |
| 1801 | # |
| 1802 | # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 1897/1897 #P:8 |
| 1803 | # |
| 1804 | # _-----=> irqs-off |
| 1805 | # / _----=> need-resched |
| 1806 | # | / _---=> hardirq/softirq |
| 1807 | # || / _--=> preempt-depth |
| 1808 | # ||| / delay |
| 1809 | # TASK-PID CPU# |||| TIMESTAMP FUNCTION |
| 1810 | # | | | |||| | | |
| 1811 | dropbear-1465 [000] ...1 18154.620753: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff816650d4 ptr=ffff8800729c3000 bytes_req=2048 bytes_alloc=2048 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL |
| 1812 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18154.621640: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d555800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1813 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18154.621656: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d555800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1814 | matchbox-termin-1361 [001] ...1 18154.755472: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81614050 ptr=ffff88006d5f0e00 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_REPEAT |
| 1815 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18154.755581: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff8141abe8 ptr=ffff8800734f4cc0 bytes_req=168 bytes_alloc=192 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_NOWARN|GFP_NORETRY |
| 1816 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18154.755583: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff814192a3 ptr=ffff88001f822520 bytes_req=24 bytes_alloc=32 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_ZERO |
| 1817 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18154.755589: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81419edb ptr=ffff8800721a2f00 bytes_req=64 bytes_alloc=64 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_ZERO |
| 1818 | matchbox-termin-1361 [001] ...1 18155.354594: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81614050 ptr=ffff88006db35400 bytes_req=576 bytes_alloc=1024 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_REPEAT |
| 1819 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18155.354703: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff8141abe8 ptr=ffff8800734f4cc0 bytes_req=168 bytes_alloc=192 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_NOWARN|GFP_NORETRY |
| 1820 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18155.354705: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff814192a3 ptr=ffff88001f822520 bytes_req=24 bytes_alloc=32 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_ZERO |
| 1821 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18155.354711: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81419edb ptr=ffff8800721a2f00 bytes_req=64 bytes_alloc=64 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_ZERO |
| 1822 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18155.673319: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d555800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1823 | dropbear-1465 [000] ...1 18155.673525: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff816650d4 ptr=ffff8800729c3000 bytes_req=2048 bytes_alloc=2048 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL |
| 1824 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18155.674821: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d554800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1825 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18155.793014: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d554800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1826 | dropbear-1465 [000] ...1 18155.793219: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff816650d4 ptr=ffff8800729c3000 bytes_req=2048 bytes_alloc=2048 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL |
| 1827 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18155.794147: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d555800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1828 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18155.936705: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d555800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1829 | dropbear-1465 [000] ...1 18155.936910: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff816650d4 ptr=ffff8800729c3000 bytes_req=2048 bytes_alloc=2048 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL |
| 1830 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18155.937869: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d554800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1831 | matchbox-termin-1361 [001] ...1 18155.953667: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81614050 ptr=ffff88006d5f2000 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_REPEAT |
| 1832 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18155.953775: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff8141abe8 ptr=ffff8800734f4cc0 bytes_req=168 bytes_alloc=192 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_NOWARN|GFP_NORETRY |
| 1833 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18155.953777: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff814192a3 ptr=ffff88001f822520 bytes_req=24 bytes_alloc=32 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_ZERO |
| 1834 | Xorg-1264 [002] ...1 18155.953783: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81419edb ptr=ffff8800721a2f00 bytes_req=64 bytes_alloc=64 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_ZERO |
| 1835 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18156.176053: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d554800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1836 | dropbear-1465 [000] ...1 18156.176257: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff816650d4 ptr=ffff8800729c3000 bytes_req=2048 bytes_alloc=2048 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL |
| 1837 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18156.177717: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d555800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1838 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18156.399229: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d555800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1839 | dropbear-1465 [000] ...1 18156.399434: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff816650d4 ptr=ffff8800729c3000 bytes_http://rostedt.homelinux.com/kernelshark/req=2048 bytes_alloc=2048 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL |
| 1840 | <idle>-0 [000] ..s3 18156.400660: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81619b36 ptr=ffff88006d554800 bytes_req=512 bytes_alloc=512 gfp_flags=GFP_ATOMIC |
| 1841 | matchbox-termin-1361 [001] ...1 18156.552800: kmalloc: call_site=ffffffff81614050 ptr=ffff88006db34800 bytes_req=576 bytes_alloc=1024 gfp_flags=GFP_KERNEL|GFP_REPEAT |
| 1842 | </literallayout> |
| 1843 | To again disable the kmalloc event, we need to send 0 to the |
| 1844 | enable file: |
| 1845 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1846 | root@sugarbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc# echo 0 > enable |
| 1847 | </literallayout> |
| 1848 | You can enable any number of events or complete subsystems |
| 1849 | (by using the 'enable' file in the subsystem directory) and |
| 1850 | get an arbitrarily fine-grained idea of what's going on in the |
| 1851 | system by enabling as many of the appropriate tracepoints |
| 1852 | as applicable. |
| 1853 | </para> |
| 1854 | |
| 1855 | <para> |
| 1856 | A number of the tools described in this HOWTO do just that, |
| 1857 | including trace-cmd and kernelshark in the next section. |
| 1858 | </para> |
| 1859 | |
| 1860 | <informalexample> |
| 1861 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> These tracepoints and their representation |
| 1862 | are used not only by ftrace, but by many of the other tools |
| 1863 | covered in this document and they form a central point of |
| 1864 | integration for the various tracers available in Linux. |
| 1865 | They form a central part of the instrumentation for the |
| 1866 | following tools: perf, lttng, ftrace, blktrace and SystemTap |
| 1867 | </informalexample> |
| 1868 | |
| 1869 | <informalexample> |
| 1870 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> Eventually all the special-purpose tracers |
| 1871 | currently available in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing will be |
| 1872 | removed and replaced with equivalent tracers based on the |
| 1873 | 'trace events' subsystem. |
| 1874 | </informalexample> |
| 1875 | </section> |
| 1876 | |
| 1877 | <section id='trace-cmd-kernelshark'> |
| 1878 | <title>trace-cmd/kernelshark</title> |
| 1879 | |
| 1880 | <para> |
| 1881 | trace-cmd is essentially an extensive command-line 'wrapper' |
| 1882 | interface that hides the details of all the individual files |
| 1883 | in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing, allowing users to specify |
| 1884 | specific particular events within the |
| 1885 | /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/ subdirectory and to collect |
| 1886 | traces and avoid having to deal with those details directly. |
| 1887 | </para> |
| 1888 | |
| 1889 | <para> |
| 1890 | As yet another layer on top of that, kernelshark provides a GUI |
| 1891 | that allows users to start and stop traces and specify sets |
| 1892 | of events using an intuitive interface, and view the |
| 1893 | output as both trace events and as a per-CPU graphical |
| 1894 | display. It directly uses 'trace-cmd' as the plumbing |
| 1895 | that accomplishes all that underneath the covers (and |
| 1896 | actually displays the trace-cmd command it uses, as we'll see). |
| 1897 | </para> |
| 1898 | |
| 1899 | <para> |
| 1900 | To start a trace using kernelshark, first start kernelshark: |
| 1901 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1902 | root@sugarbay:~# kernelshark |
| 1903 | </literallayout> |
| 1904 | Then bring up the 'Capture' dialog by choosing from the |
| 1905 | kernelshark menu: |
| 1906 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1907 | Capture | Record |
| 1908 | </literallayout> |
| 1909 | That will display the following dialog, which allows you to |
| 1910 | choose one or more events (or even one or more complete |
| 1911 | subsystems) to trace: |
| 1912 | </para> |
| 1913 | |
| 1914 | <para> |
| 1915 | <imagedata fileref="figures/kernelshark-choose-events.png" width="6in" depth="6in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1916 | </para> |
| 1917 | |
| 1918 | <para> |
| 1919 | Note that these are exactly the same sets of events described |
| 1920 | in the previous trace events subsystem section, and in fact |
| 1921 | is where trace-cmd gets them for kernelshark. |
| 1922 | </para> |
| 1923 | |
| 1924 | <para> |
| 1925 | In the above screenshot, we've decided to explore the |
| 1926 | graphics subsystem a bit and so have chosen to trace all |
| 1927 | the tracepoints contained within the 'i915' and 'drm' |
| 1928 | subsystems. |
| 1929 | </para> |
| 1930 | |
| 1931 | <para> |
| 1932 | After doing that, we can start and stop the trace using |
| 1933 | the 'Run' and 'Stop' button on the lower right corner of |
| 1934 | the dialog (the same button will turn into the 'Stop' |
| 1935 | button after the trace has started): |
| 1936 | </para> |
| 1937 | |
| 1938 | <para> |
| 1939 | <imagedata fileref="figures/kernelshark-output-display.png" width="6in" depth="6in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1940 | </para> |
| 1941 | |
| 1942 | <para> |
| 1943 | Notice that the right-hand pane shows the exact trace-cmd |
| 1944 | command-line that's used to run the trace, along with the |
| 1945 | results of the trace-cmd run. |
| 1946 | </para> |
| 1947 | |
| 1948 | <para> |
| 1949 | Once the 'Stop' button is pressed, the graphical view magically |
| 1950 | fills up with a colorful per-cpu display of the trace data, |
| 1951 | along with the detailed event listing below that: |
| 1952 | </para> |
| 1953 | |
| 1954 | <para> |
| 1955 | <imagedata fileref="figures/kernelshark-i915-display.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1956 | </para> |
| 1957 | |
| 1958 | <para> |
| 1959 | Here's another example, this time a display resulting |
| 1960 | from tracing 'all events': |
| 1961 | </para> |
| 1962 | |
| 1963 | <para> |
| 1964 | <imagedata fileref="figures/kernelshark-all.png" width="6in" depth="7in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 1965 | </para> |
| 1966 | |
| 1967 | <para> |
| 1968 | The tool is pretty self-explanatory, but for more detailed |
| 1969 | information on navigating through the data, see the |
| 1970 | <ulink url='http://rostedt.homelinux.com/kernelshark/'>kernelshark website</ulink>. |
| 1971 | </para> |
| 1972 | </section> |
| 1973 | |
| 1974 | <section id='ftrace-documentation'> |
| 1975 | <title>Documentation</title> |
| 1976 | |
| 1977 | <para> |
| 1978 | The documentation for ftrace can be found in the kernel |
| 1979 | Documentation directory: |
| 1980 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1981 | Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt |
| 1982 | </literallayout> |
| 1983 | The documentation for the trace event subsystem can also |
| 1984 | be found in the kernel Documentation directory: |
| 1985 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 1986 | Documentation/trace/events.txt |
| 1987 | </literallayout> |
| 1988 | There is a nice series of articles on using |
| 1989 | ftrace and trace-cmd at LWN: |
| 1990 | <itemizedlist> |
| 1991 | <listitem><para><ulink url='http://lwn.net/Articles/365835/'>Debugging the kernel using Ftrace - part 1</ulink> |
| 1992 | </para></listitem> |
| 1993 | <listitem><para><ulink url='http://lwn.net/Articles/366796/'>Debugging the kernel using Ftrace - part 2</ulink> |
| 1994 | </para></listitem> |
| 1995 | <listitem><para><ulink url='http://lwn.net/Articles/370423/'>Secrets of the Ftrace function tracer</ulink> |
| 1996 | </para></listitem> |
| 1997 | <listitem><para><ulink url='https://lwn.net/Articles/410200/'>trace-cmd: A front-end for Ftrace</ulink> |
| 1998 | </para></listitem> |
| 1999 | </itemizedlist> |
| 2000 | </para> |
| 2001 | |
| 2002 | <para> |
| 2003 | There's more detailed documentation kernelshark usage here: |
| 2004 | <ulink url='http://rostedt.homelinux.com/kernelshark/'>KernelShark</ulink> |
| 2005 | </para> |
| 2006 | |
| 2007 | <para> |
| 2008 | An amusing yet useful README (a tracing mini-HOWTO) can be |
| 2009 | found in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/README. |
| 2010 | </para> |
| 2011 | </section> |
| 2012 | </section> |
| 2013 | |
| 2014 | <section id='profile-manual-systemtap'> |
| 2015 | <title>systemtap</title> |
| 2016 | |
| 2017 | <para> |
| 2018 | SystemTap is a system-wide script-based tracing and profiling tool. |
| 2019 | </para> |
| 2020 | |
| 2021 | <para> |
| 2022 | SystemTap scripts are C-like programs that are executed in the |
| 2023 | kernel to gather/print/aggregate data extracted from the context |
| 2024 | they end up being invoked under. |
| 2025 | </para> |
| 2026 | |
| 2027 | <para> |
| 2028 | For example, this probe from the |
| 2029 | <ulink url='http://sourceware.org/systemtap/tutorial/'>SystemTap tutorial</ulink> |
| 2030 | simply prints a line every time any process on the system open()s |
| 2031 | a file. For each line, it prints the executable name of the |
| 2032 | program that opened the file, along with its PID, and the name |
| 2033 | of the file it opened (or tried to open), which it extracts |
| 2034 | from the open syscall's argstr. |
| 2035 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2036 | probe syscall.open |
| 2037 | { |
| 2038 | printf ("%s(%d) open (%s)\n", execname(), pid(), argstr) |
| 2039 | } |
| 2040 | |
| 2041 | probe timer.ms(4000) # after 4 seconds |
| 2042 | { |
| 2043 | exit () |
| 2044 | } |
| 2045 | </literallayout> |
| 2046 | Normally, to execute this probe, you'd simply install |
| 2047 | systemtap on the system you want to probe, and directly run |
| 2048 | the probe on that system e.g. assuming the name of the file |
| 2049 | containing the above text is trace_open.stp: |
| 2050 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2051 | # stap trace_open.stp |
| 2052 | </literallayout> |
| 2053 | What systemtap does under the covers to run this probe is 1) |
| 2054 | parse and convert the probe to an equivalent 'C' form, 2) |
| 2055 | compile the 'C' form into a kernel module, 3) insert the |
| 2056 | module into the kernel, which arms it, and 4) collect the data |
| 2057 | generated by the probe and display it to the user. |
| 2058 | </para> |
| 2059 | |
| 2060 | <para> |
| 2061 | In order to accomplish steps 1 and 2, the 'stap' program needs |
| 2062 | access to the kernel build system that produced the kernel |
| 2063 | that the probed system is running. In the case of a typical |
| 2064 | embedded system (the 'target'), the kernel build system |
| 2065 | unfortunately isn't typically part of the image running on |
| 2066 | the target. It is normally available on the 'host' system |
| 2067 | that produced the target image however; in such cases, |
| 2068 | steps 1 and 2 are executed on the host system, and steps |
| 2069 | 3 and 4 are executed on the target system, using only the |
| 2070 | systemtap 'runtime'. |
| 2071 | </para> |
| 2072 | |
| 2073 | <para> |
| 2074 | The systemtap support in Yocto assumes that only steps |
| 2075 | 3 and 4 are run on the target; it is possible to do |
| 2076 | everything on the target, but this section assumes only |
| 2077 | the typical embedded use-case. |
| 2078 | </para> |
| 2079 | |
| 2080 | <para> |
| 2081 | So basically what you need to do in order to run a systemtap |
| 2082 | script on the target is to 1) on the host system, compile the |
| 2083 | probe into a kernel module that makes sense to the target, 2) |
| 2084 | copy the module onto the target system and 3) insert the |
| 2085 | module into the target kernel, which arms it, and 4) collect |
| 2086 | the data generated by the probe and display it to the user. |
| 2087 | </para> |
| 2088 | |
| 2089 | <section id='systemtap-setup'> |
| 2090 | <title>Setup</title> |
| 2091 | |
| 2092 | <para> |
| 2093 | Those are a lot of steps and a lot of details, but |
| 2094 | fortunately Yocto includes a script called 'crosstap' |
| 2095 | that will take care of those details, allowing you to |
| 2096 | simply execute a systemtap script on the remote target, |
| 2097 | with arguments if necessary. |
| 2098 | </para> |
| 2099 | |
| 2100 | <para> |
| 2101 | In order to do this from a remote host, however, you |
| 2102 | need to have access to the build for the image you |
| 2103 | booted. The 'crosstap' script provides details on how |
| 2104 | to do this if you run the script on the host without having |
| 2105 | done a build: |
| 2106 | <note> |
| 2107 | SystemTap, which uses 'crosstap', assumes you can establish an |
| 2108 | ssh connection to the remote target. |
| 2109 | Please refer to the crosstap wiki page for details on verifying |
| 2110 | ssh connections at |
| 2111 | <ulink url='https://wiki.yoctoproject.org/wiki/Tracing_and_Profiling#systemtap'></ulink>. |
| 2112 | Also, the ability to ssh into the target system is not enabled |
| 2113 | by default in *-minimal images. |
| 2114 | </note> |
| 2115 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2116 | $ crosstap root@192.168.1.88 trace_open.stp |
| 2117 | |
| 2118 | Error: No target kernel build found. |
| 2119 | Did you forget to create a local build of your image? |
| 2120 | |
| 2121 | 'crosstap' requires a local sdk build of the target system |
| 2122 | (or a build that includes 'tools-profile') in order to build |
| 2123 | kernel modules that can probe the target system. |
| 2124 | |
| 2125 | Practically speaking, that means you need to do the following: |
| 2126 | - If you're running a pre-built image, download the release |
| 2127 | and/or BSP tarballs used to build the image. |
| 2128 | - If you're working from git sources, just clone the metadata |
| 2129 | and BSP layers needed to build the image you'll be booting. |
| 2130 | - Make sure you're properly set up to build a new image (see |
| 2131 | the BSP README and/or the widely available basic documentation |
| 2132 | that discusses how to build images). |
| 2133 | - Build an -sdk version of the image e.g.: |
| 2134 | $ bitbake core-image-sato-sdk |
| 2135 | OR |
| 2136 | - Build a non-sdk image but include the profiling tools: |
| 2137 | [ edit local.conf and add 'tools-profile' to the end of |
| 2138 | the EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable ] |
| 2139 | $ bitbake core-image-sato |
| 2140 | |
| 2141 | Once you've build the image on the host system, you're ready to |
| 2142 | boot it (or the equivalent pre-built image) and use 'crosstap' |
| 2143 | to probe it (you need to source the environment as usual first): |
| 2144 | |
| 2145 | $ source oe-init-build-env |
| 2146 | $ cd ~/my/systemtap/scripts |
| 2147 | $ crosstap root@192.168.1.xxx myscript.stp |
| 2148 | </literallayout> |
| 2149 | So essentially what you need to do is build an SDK image or |
| 2150 | image with 'tools-profile' as detailed in the |
| 2151 | "<link linkend='profile-manual-general-setup'>General Setup</link>" |
| 2152 | section of this manual, and boot the resulting target image. |
| 2153 | </para> |
| 2154 | |
| 2155 | <note> |
| 2156 | If you have a build directory containing multiple machines, |
| 2157 | you need to have the MACHINE you're connecting to selected |
| 2158 | in local.conf, and the kernel in that machine's build |
| 2159 | directory must match the kernel on the booted system exactly, |
| 2160 | or you'll get the above 'crosstap' message when you try to |
| 2161 | invoke a script. |
| 2162 | </note> |
| 2163 | </section> |
| 2164 | |
| 2165 | <section id='running-a-script-on-a-target'> |
| 2166 | <title>Running a Script on a Target</title> |
| 2167 | |
| 2168 | <para> |
| 2169 | Once you've done that, you should be able to run a systemtap |
| 2170 | script on the target: |
| 2171 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2172 | $ cd /path/to/yocto |
| 2173 | $ source oe-init-build-env |
| 2174 | |
| 2175 | ### Shell environment set up for builds. ### |
| 2176 | |
Patrick Williams | d8c66bc | 2016-06-20 12:57:21 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2177 | You can now run 'bitbake <target>' |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2178 | |
| 2179 | Common targets are: |
Patrick Williams | d8c66bc | 2016-06-20 12:57:21 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2180 | core-image-minimal |
| 2181 | core-image-sato |
| 2182 | meta-toolchain |
| 2183 | meta-ide-support |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2184 | |
| 2185 | You can also run generated qemu images with a command like 'runqemu qemux86' |
Patrick Williams | d8c66bc | 2016-06-20 12:57:21 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2186 | |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2187 | </literallayout> |
| 2188 | Once you've done that, you can cd to whatever directory |
| 2189 | contains your scripts and use 'crosstap' to run the script: |
| 2190 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2191 | $ cd /path/to/my/systemap/script |
| 2192 | $ crosstap root@192.168.7.2 trace_open.stp |
| 2193 | </literallayout> |
| 2194 | If you get an error connecting to the target e.g.: |
| 2195 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2196 | $ crosstap root@192.168.7.2 trace_open.stp |
| 2197 | error establishing ssh connection on remote 'root@192.168.7.2' |
| 2198 | </literallayout> |
| 2199 | Try ssh'ing to the target and see what happens: |
| 2200 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2201 | $ ssh root@192.168.7.2 |
| 2202 | </literallayout> |
| 2203 | A lot of the time, connection problems are due specifying a |
| 2204 | wrong IP address or having a 'host key verification error'. |
| 2205 | </para> |
| 2206 | |
| 2207 | <para> |
| 2208 | If everything worked as planned, you should see something |
| 2209 | like this (enter the password when prompted, or press enter |
| 2210 | if it's set up to use no password): |
| 2211 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2212 | $ crosstap root@192.168.7.2 trace_open.stp |
| 2213 | root@192.168.7.2's password: |
| 2214 | matchbox-termin(1036) open ("/tmp/vte3FS2LW", O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL|O_LARGEFILE, 0600) |
| 2215 | matchbox-termin(1036) open ("/tmp/vteJMC7LW", O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL|O_LARGEFILE, 0600) |
| 2216 | </literallayout> |
| 2217 | </para> |
| 2218 | </section> |
| 2219 | |
| 2220 | <section id='systemtap-documentation'> |
| 2221 | <title>Documentation</title> |
| 2222 | |
| 2223 | <para> |
| 2224 | The SystemTap language reference can be found here: |
| 2225 | <ulink url='http://sourceware.org/systemtap/langref/'>SystemTap Language Reference</ulink> |
| 2226 | </para> |
| 2227 | |
| 2228 | <para> |
| 2229 | Links to other SystemTap documents, tutorials, and examples can be |
| 2230 | found here: |
| 2231 | <ulink url='http://sourceware.org/systemtap/documentation.html'>SystemTap documentation page</ulink> |
| 2232 | </para> |
| 2233 | </section> |
| 2234 | </section> |
| 2235 | |
Patrick Williams | c124f4f | 2015-09-15 14:41:29 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2236 | <section id='profile-manual-sysprof'> |
| 2237 | <title>Sysprof</title> |
| 2238 | |
| 2239 | <para> |
| 2240 | Sysprof is a very easy to use system-wide profiler that consists |
| 2241 | of a single window with three panes and a few buttons which allow |
| 2242 | you to start, stop, and view the profile from one place. |
| 2243 | </para> |
| 2244 | |
| 2245 | <section id='sysprof-setup'> |
| 2246 | <title>Setup</title> |
| 2247 | |
| 2248 | <para> |
| 2249 | For this section, we'll assume you've already performed the |
| 2250 | basic setup outlined in the General Setup section. |
| 2251 | </para> |
| 2252 | |
| 2253 | <para> |
| 2254 | Sysprof is a GUI-based application that runs on the target |
| 2255 | system. For the rest of this document we assume you've |
| 2256 | ssh'ed to the host and will be running Sysprof on the |
| 2257 | target (you can use the '-X' option to ssh and have the |
| 2258 | Sysprof GUI run on the target but display remotely on the |
| 2259 | host if you want). |
| 2260 | </para> |
| 2261 | </section> |
| 2262 | |
| 2263 | <section id='sysprof-basic-usage'> |
| 2264 | <title>Basic Usage</title> |
| 2265 | |
| 2266 | <para> |
| 2267 | To start profiling the system, you simply press the 'Start' |
| 2268 | button. To stop profiling and to start viewing the profile data |
| 2269 | in one easy step, press the 'Profile' button. |
| 2270 | </para> |
| 2271 | |
| 2272 | <para> |
| 2273 | Once you've pressed the profile button, the three panes will |
| 2274 | fill up with profiling data: |
| 2275 | </para> |
| 2276 | |
| 2277 | <para> |
| 2278 | <imagedata fileref="figures/sysprof-copy-to-user.png" width="6in" depth="4in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 2279 | </para> |
| 2280 | |
| 2281 | <para> |
| 2282 | The left pane shows a list of functions and processes. |
| 2283 | Selecting one of those expands that function in the right |
| 2284 | pane, showing all its callees. Note that this caller-oriented |
| 2285 | display is essentially the inverse of perf's default |
| 2286 | callee-oriented callchain display. |
| 2287 | </para> |
| 2288 | |
| 2289 | <para> |
| 2290 | In the screenshot above, we're focusing on __copy_to_user_ll() |
| 2291 | and looking up the callchain we can see that one of the callers |
| 2292 | of __copy_to_user_ll is sys_read() and the complete callpath |
| 2293 | between them. Notice that this is essentially a portion of the |
| 2294 | same information we saw in the perf display shown in the perf |
| 2295 | section of this page. |
| 2296 | </para> |
| 2297 | |
| 2298 | <para> |
| 2299 | <imagedata fileref="figures/sysprof-copy-from-user.png" width="6in" depth="4in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 2300 | </para> |
| 2301 | |
| 2302 | <para> |
| 2303 | Similarly, the above is a snapshot of the Sysprof display of a |
| 2304 | copy-from-user callchain. |
| 2305 | </para> |
| 2306 | |
| 2307 | <para> |
| 2308 | Finally, looking at the third Sysprof pane in the lower left, |
| 2309 | we can see a list of all the callers of a particular function |
| 2310 | selected in the top left pane. In this case, the lower pane is |
| 2311 | showing all the callers of __mark_inode_dirty: |
| 2312 | </para> |
| 2313 | |
| 2314 | <para> |
| 2315 | <imagedata fileref="figures/sysprof-callers.png" width="6in" depth="4in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 2316 | </para> |
| 2317 | |
| 2318 | <para> |
| 2319 | Double-clicking on one of those functions will in turn change the |
| 2320 | focus to the selected function, and so on. |
| 2321 | </para> |
| 2322 | |
| 2323 | <informalexample> |
| 2324 | <emphasis>Tying it Together:</emphasis> If you like sysprof's 'caller-oriented' |
| 2325 | display, you may be able to approximate it in other tools as |
| 2326 | well. For example, 'perf report' has the -g (--call-graph) |
| 2327 | option that you can experiment with; one of the options is |
| 2328 | 'caller' for an inverted caller-based callgraph display. |
| 2329 | </informalexample> |
| 2330 | </section> |
| 2331 | |
| 2332 | <section id='sysprof-documentation'> |
| 2333 | <title>Documentation</title> |
| 2334 | |
| 2335 | <para> |
| 2336 | There doesn't seem to be any documentation for Sysprof, but |
| 2337 | maybe that's because it's pretty self-explanatory. |
| 2338 | The Sysprof website, however, is here: |
| 2339 | <ulink url='http://sysprof.com/'>Sysprof, System-wide Performance Profiler for Linux</ulink> |
| 2340 | </para> |
| 2341 | </section> |
| 2342 | </section> |
| 2343 | |
| 2344 | <section id='lttng-linux-trace-toolkit-next-generation'> |
| 2345 | <title>LTTng (Linux Trace Toolkit, next generation)</title> |
| 2346 | |
| 2347 | <section id='lttng-setup'> |
| 2348 | <title>Setup</title> |
| 2349 | |
| 2350 | <para> |
| 2351 | For this section, we'll assume you've already performed the |
| 2352 | basic setup outlined in the General Setup section. |
| 2353 | </para> |
| 2354 | |
| 2355 | <para> |
| 2356 | LTTng is run on the target system by ssh'ing to it. |
| 2357 | However, if you want to see the traces graphically, |
| 2358 | install Eclipse as described in section |
| 2359 | "<link linkend='manually-copying-a-trace-to-the-host-and-viewing-it-in-eclipse'>Manually copying a trace to the host and viewing it in Eclipse (i.e. using Eclipse without network support)</link>" |
| 2360 | and follow the directions to manually copy traces to the host and |
| 2361 | view them in Eclipse (i.e. using Eclipse without network support). |
| 2362 | </para> |
| 2363 | |
| 2364 | <note> |
| 2365 | Be sure to download and install/run the 'SR1' or later Juno release |
| 2366 | of eclipse e.g.: |
| 2367 | <ulink url='http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/download.php?file=/technology/epp/downloads/release/juno/SR1/eclipse-cpp-juno-SR1-linux-gtk-x86_64.tar.gz'>http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/download.php?file=/technology/epp/downloads/release/juno/SR1/eclipse-cpp-juno-SR1-linux-gtk-x86_64.tar.gz</ulink> |
| 2368 | </note> |
| 2369 | </section> |
| 2370 | |
| 2371 | <section id='collecting-and-viewing-traces'> |
| 2372 | <title>Collecting and Viewing Traces</title> |
| 2373 | |
| 2374 | <para> |
| 2375 | Once you've applied the above commits and built and booted your |
| 2376 | image (you need to build the core-image-sato-sdk image or use one of the |
| 2377 | other methods described in the General Setup section), you're |
| 2378 | ready to start tracing. |
| 2379 | </para> |
| 2380 | |
| 2381 | <section id='collecting-and-viewing-a-trace-on-the-target-inside-a-shell'> |
| 2382 | <title>Collecting and viewing a trace on the target (inside a shell)</title> |
| 2383 | |
| 2384 | <para> |
| 2385 | First, from the host, ssh to the target: |
| 2386 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2387 | $ ssh -l root 192.168.1.47 |
| 2388 | The authenticity of host '192.168.1.47 (192.168.1.47)' can't be established. |
| 2389 | RSA key fingerprint is 23:bd:c8:b1:a8:71:52:00:ee:00:4f:64:9e:10:b9:7e. |
| 2390 | Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes |
| 2391 | Warning: Permanently added '192.168.1.47' (RSA) to the list of known hosts. |
| 2392 | root@192.168.1.47's password: |
| 2393 | </literallayout> |
| 2394 | Once on the target, use these steps to create a trace: |
| 2395 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2396 | root@crownbay:~# lttng create |
| 2397 | Spawning a session daemon |
| 2398 | Session auto-20121015-232120 created. |
| 2399 | Traces will be written in /home/root/lttng-traces/auto-20121015-232120 |
| 2400 | </literallayout> |
| 2401 | Enable the events you want to trace (in this case all |
| 2402 | kernel events): |
| 2403 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2404 | root@crownbay:~# lttng enable-event --kernel --all |
| 2405 | All kernel events are enabled in channel channel0 |
| 2406 | </literallayout> |
| 2407 | Start the trace: |
| 2408 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2409 | root@crownbay:~# lttng start |
| 2410 | Tracing started for session auto-20121015-232120 |
| 2411 | </literallayout> |
| 2412 | And then stop the trace after awhile or after running |
| 2413 | a particular workload that you want to trace: |
| 2414 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2415 | root@crownbay:~# lttng stop |
| 2416 | Tracing stopped for session auto-20121015-232120 |
| 2417 | </literallayout> |
| 2418 | You can now view the trace in text form on the target: |
| 2419 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2420 | root@crownbay:~# lttng view |
| 2421 | [23:21:56.989270399] (+?.?????????) sys_geteuid: { 1 }, { } |
| 2422 | [23:21:56.989278081] (+0.000007682) exit_syscall: { 1 }, { ret = 0 } |
| 2423 | [23:21:56.989286043] (+0.000007962) sys_pipe: { 1 }, { fildes = 0xB77B9E8C } |
| 2424 | [23:21:56.989321802] (+0.000035759) exit_syscall: { 1 }, { ret = 0 } |
| 2425 | [23:21:56.989329345] (+0.000007543) sys_mmap_pgoff: { 1 }, { addr = 0x0, len = 10485760, prot = 3, flags = 131362, fd = 4294967295, pgoff = 0 } |
| 2426 | [23:21:56.989351694] (+0.000022349) exit_syscall: { 1 }, { ret = -1247805440 } |
| 2427 | [23:21:56.989432989] (+0.000081295) sys_clone: { 1 }, { clone_flags = 0x411, newsp = 0xB5EFFFE4, parent_tid = 0xFFFFFFFF, child_tid = 0x0 } |
| 2428 | [23:21:56.989477129] (+0.000044140) sched_stat_runtime: { 1 }, { comm = "lttng-consumerd", tid = 1193, runtime = 681660, vruntime = 43367983388 } |
| 2429 | [23:21:56.989486697] (+0.000009568) sched_migrate_task: { 1 }, { comm = "lttng-consumerd", tid = 1193, prio = 20, orig_cpu = 1, dest_cpu = 1 } |
| 2430 | [23:21:56.989508418] (+0.000021721) hrtimer_init: { 1 }, { hrtimer = 3970832076, clockid = 1, mode = 1 } |
| 2431 | [23:21:56.989770462] (+0.000262044) hrtimer_cancel: { 1 }, { hrtimer = 3993865440 } |
| 2432 | [23:21:56.989771580] (+0.000001118) hrtimer_cancel: { 0 }, { hrtimer = 3993812192 } |
| 2433 | [23:21:56.989776957] (+0.000005377) hrtimer_expire_entry: { 1 }, { hrtimer = 3993865440, now = 79815980007057, function = 3238465232 } |
| 2434 | [23:21:56.989778145] (+0.000001188) hrtimer_expire_entry: { 0 }, { hrtimer = 3993812192, now = 79815980008174, function = 3238465232 } |
| 2435 | [23:21:56.989791695] (+0.000013550) softirq_raise: { 1 }, { vec = 1 } |
| 2436 | [23:21:56.989795396] (+0.000003701) softirq_raise: { 0 }, { vec = 1 } |
| 2437 | [23:21:56.989800635] (+0.000005239) softirq_raise: { 0 }, { vec = 9 } |
| 2438 | [23:21:56.989807130] (+0.000006495) sched_stat_runtime: { 1 }, { comm = "lttng-consumerd", tid = 1193, runtime = 330710, vruntime = 43368314098 } |
| 2439 | [23:21:56.989809993] (+0.000002863) sched_stat_runtime: { 0 }, { comm = "lttng-sessiond", tid = 1181, runtime = 1015313, vruntime = 36976733240 } |
| 2440 | [23:21:56.989818514] (+0.000008521) hrtimer_expire_exit: { 0 }, { hrtimer = 3993812192 } |
| 2441 | [23:21:56.989819631] (+0.000001117) hrtimer_expire_exit: { 1 }, { hrtimer = 3993865440 } |
| 2442 | [23:21:56.989821866] (+0.000002235) hrtimer_start: { 0 }, { hrtimer = 3993812192, function = 3238465232, expires = 79815981000000, softexpires = 79815981000000 } |
| 2443 | [23:21:56.989822984] (+0.000001118) hrtimer_start: { 1 }, { hrtimer = 3993865440, function = 3238465232, expires = 79815981000000, softexpires = 79815981000000 } |
| 2444 | [23:21:56.989832762] (+0.000009778) softirq_entry: { 1 }, { vec = 1 } |
| 2445 | [23:21:56.989833879] (+0.000001117) softirq_entry: { 0 }, { vec = 1 } |
| 2446 | [23:21:56.989838069] (+0.000004190) timer_cancel: { 1 }, { timer = 3993871956 } |
| 2447 | [23:21:56.989839187] (+0.000001118) timer_cancel: { 0 }, { timer = 3993818708 } |
| 2448 | [23:21:56.989841492] (+0.000002305) timer_expire_entry: { 1 }, { timer = 3993871956, now = 79515980, function = 3238277552 } |
| 2449 | [23:21:56.989842819] (+0.000001327) timer_expire_entry: { 0 }, { timer = 3993818708, now = 79515980, function = 3238277552 } |
| 2450 | [23:21:56.989854831] (+0.000012012) sched_stat_runtime: { 1 }, { comm = "lttng-consumerd", tid = 1193, runtime = 49237, vruntime = 43368363335 } |
| 2451 | [23:21:56.989855949] (+0.000001118) sched_stat_runtime: { 0 }, { comm = "lttng-sessiond", tid = 1181, runtime = 45121, vruntime = 36976778361 } |
| 2452 | [23:21:56.989861257] (+0.000005308) sched_stat_sleep: { 1 }, { comm = "kworker/1:1", tid = 21, delay = 9451318 } |
| 2453 | [23:21:56.989862374] (+0.000001117) sched_stat_sleep: { 0 }, { comm = "kworker/0:0", tid = 4, delay = 9958820 } |
| 2454 | [23:21:56.989868241] (+0.000005867) sched_wakeup: { 0 }, { comm = "kworker/0:0", tid = 4, prio = 120, success = 1, target_cpu = 0 } |
| 2455 | [23:21:56.989869358] (+0.000001117) sched_wakeup: { 1 }, { comm = "kworker/1:1", tid = 21, prio = 120, success = 1, target_cpu = 1 } |
| 2456 | [23:21:56.989877460] (+0.000008102) timer_expire_exit: { 1 }, { timer = 3993871956 } |
| 2457 | [23:21:56.989878577] (+0.000001117) timer_expire_exit: { 0 }, { timer = 3993818708 } |
| 2458 | . |
| 2459 | . |
| 2460 | . |
| 2461 | </literallayout> |
| 2462 | You can now safely destroy the trace session (note that |
| 2463 | this doesn't delete the trace - it's still there |
| 2464 | in ~/lttng-traces): |
| 2465 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2466 | root@crownbay:~# lttng destroy |
| 2467 | Session auto-20121015-232120 destroyed at /home/root |
| 2468 | </literallayout> |
| 2469 | Note that the trace is saved in a directory of the same |
| 2470 | name as returned by 'lttng create', under the ~/lttng-traces |
| 2471 | directory (note that you can change this by supplying your |
| 2472 | own name to 'lttng create'): |
| 2473 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2474 | root@crownbay:~# ls -al ~/lttng-traces |
| 2475 | drwxrwx--- 3 root root 1024 Oct 15 23:21 . |
| 2476 | drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 1024 Oct 15 23:57 .. |
| 2477 | drwxrwx--- 3 root root 1024 Oct 15 23:21 auto-20121015-232120 |
| 2478 | </literallayout> |
| 2479 | </para> |
| 2480 | </section> |
| 2481 | |
| 2482 | <section id='collecting-and-viewing-a-userspace-trace-on-the-target-inside-a-shell'> |
| 2483 | <title>Collecting and viewing a userspace trace on the target (inside a shell)</title> |
| 2484 | |
| 2485 | <para> |
| 2486 | For LTTng userspace tracing, you need to have a properly |
| 2487 | instrumented userspace program. For this example, we'll use |
| 2488 | the 'hello' test program generated by the lttng-ust build. |
| 2489 | </para> |
| 2490 | |
| 2491 | <para> |
| 2492 | The 'hello' test program isn't installed on the rootfs by |
| 2493 | the lttng-ust build, so we need to copy it over manually. |
| 2494 | First cd into the build directory that contains the hello |
| 2495 | executable: |
| 2496 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2497 | $ cd build/tmp/work/core2_32-poky-linux/lttng-ust/2.0.5-r0/git/tests/hello/.libs |
| 2498 | </literallayout> |
| 2499 | Copy that over to the target machine: |
| 2500 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2501 | $ scp hello root@192.168.1.20: |
| 2502 | </literallayout> |
| 2503 | You now have the instrumented lttng 'hello world' test |
| 2504 | program on the target, ready to test. |
| 2505 | </para> |
| 2506 | |
| 2507 | <para> |
| 2508 | First, from the host, ssh to the target: |
| 2509 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2510 | $ ssh -l root 192.168.1.47 |
| 2511 | The authenticity of host '192.168.1.47 (192.168.1.47)' can't be established. |
| 2512 | RSA key fingerprint is 23:bd:c8:b1:a8:71:52:00:ee:00:4f:64:9e:10:b9:7e. |
| 2513 | Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes |
| 2514 | Warning: Permanently added '192.168.1.47' (RSA) to the list of known hosts. |
| 2515 | root@192.168.1.47's password: |
| 2516 | </literallayout> |
| 2517 | Once on the target, use these steps to create a trace: |
| 2518 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2519 | root@crownbay:~# lttng create |
| 2520 | Session auto-20190303-021943 created. |
| 2521 | Traces will be written in /home/root/lttng-traces/auto-20190303-021943 |
| 2522 | </literallayout> |
| 2523 | Enable the events you want to trace (in this case all |
| 2524 | userspace events): |
| 2525 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2526 | root@crownbay:~# lttng enable-event --userspace --all |
| 2527 | All UST events are enabled in channel channel0 |
| 2528 | </literallayout> |
| 2529 | Start the trace: |
| 2530 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2531 | root@crownbay:~# lttng start |
| 2532 | Tracing started for session auto-20190303-021943 |
| 2533 | </literallayout> |
| 2534 | Run the instrumented hello world program: |
| 2535 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2536 | root@crownbay:~# ./hello |
| 2537 | Hello, World! |
| 2538 | Tracing... done. |
| 2539 | </literallayout> |
| 2540 | And then stop the trace after awhile or after running a |
| 2541 | particular workload that you want to trace: |
| 2542 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2543 | root@crownbay:~# lttng stop |
| 2544 | Tracing stopped for session auto-20190303-021943 |
| 2545 | </literallayout> |
| 2546 | You can now view the trace in text form on the target: |
| 2547 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2548 | root@crownbay:~# lttng view |
| 2549 | [02:31:14.906146544] (+?.?????????) hello:1424 ust_tests_hello:tptest: { cpu_id = 1 }, { intfield = 0, intfield2 = 0x0, longfield = 0, netintfield = 0, netintfieldhex = 0x0, arrfield1 = [ [0] = 1, [1] = 2, [2] = 3 ], arrfield2 = "test", _seqfield1_length = 4, seqfield1 = [ [0] = 116, [1] = 101, [2] = 115, [3] = 116 ], _seqfield2_length = 4, seqfield2 = "test", stringfield = "test", floatfield = 2222, doublefield = 2, boolfield = 1 } |
| 2550 | [02:31:14.906170360] (+0.000023816) hello:1424 ust_tests_hello:tptest: { cpu_id = 1 }, { intfield = 1, intfield2 = 0x1, longfield = 1, netintfield = 1, netintfieldhex = 0x1, arrfield1 = [ [0] = 1, [1] = 2, [2] = 3 ], arrfield2 = "test", _seqfield1_length = 4, seqfield1 = [ [0] = 116, [1] = 101, [2] = 115, [3] = 116 ], _seqfield2_length = 4, seqfield2 = "test", stringfield = "test", floatfield = 2222, doublefield = 2, boolfield = 1 } |
| 2551 | [02:31:14.906183140] (+0.000012780) hello:1424 ust_tests_hello:tptest: { cpu_id = 1 }, { intfield = 2, intfield2 = 0x2, longfield = 2, netintfield = 2, netintfieldhex = 0x2, arrfield1 = [ [0] = 1, [1] = 2, [2] = 3 ], arrfield2 = "test", _seqfield1_length = 4, seqfield1 = [ [0] = 116, [1] = 101, [2] = 115, [3] = 116 ], _seqfield2_length = 4, seqfield2 = "test", stringfield = "test", floatfield = 2222, doublefield = 2, boolfield = 1 } |
| 2552 | [02:31:14.906194385] (+0.000011245) hello:1424 ust_tests_hello:tptest: { cpu_id = 1 }, { intfield = 3, intfield2 = 0x3, longfield = 3, netintfield = 3, netintfieldhex = 0x3, arrfield1 = [ [0] = 1, [1] = 2, [2] = 3 ], arrfield2 = "test", _seqfield1_length = 4, seqfield1 = [ [0] = 116, [1] = 101, [2] = 115, [3] = 116 ], _seqfield2_length = 4, seqfield2 = "test", stringfield = "test", floatfield = 2222, doublefield = 2, boolfield = 1 } |
| 2553 | . |
| 2554 | . |
| 2555 | . |
| 2556 | </literallayout> |
| 2557 | You can now safely destroy the trace session (note that |
| 2558 | this doesn't delete the trace - it's still |
| 2559 | there in ~/lttng-traces): |
| 2560 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2561 | root@crownbay:~# lttng destroy |
| 2562 | Session auto-20190303-021943 destroyed at /home/root |
| 2563 | </literallayout> |
| 2564 | </para> |
| 2565 | </section> |
| 2566 | |
| 2567 | <section id='manually-copying-a-trace-to-the-host-and-viewing-it-in-eclipse'> |
| 2568 | <title>Manually copying a trace to the host and viewing it in Eclipse (i.e. using Eclipse without network support)</title> |
| 2569 | |
| 2570 | <para> |
| 2571 | If you already have an LTTng trace on a remote target and |
| 2572 | would like to view it in Eclipse on the host, you can easily |
| 2573 | copy it from the target to the host and import it into |
| 2574 | Eclipse to view it using the LTTng Eclipse plug-in already |
| 2575 | bundled in the Eclipse (Juno SR1 or greater). |
| 2576 | </para> |
| 2577 | |
| 2578 | <para> |
| 2579 | Using the trace we created in the previous section, archive |
| 2580 | it and copy it to your host system: |
| 2581 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2582 | root@crownbay:~/lttng-traces# tar zcvf auto-20121015-232120.tar.gz auto-20121015-232120 |
| 2583 | auto-20121015-232120/ |
| 2584 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/ |
| 2585 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/metadata |
| 2586 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/channel0_1 |
| 2587 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/channel0_0 |
| 2588 | |
| 2589 | $ scp root@192.168.1.47:lttng-traces/auto-20121015-232120.tar.gz . |
| 2590 | root@192.168.1.47's password: |
| 2591 | auto-20121015-232120.tar.gz 100% 1566KB 1.5MB/s 00:01 |
| 2592 | </literallayout> |
| 2593 | Unarchive it on the host: |
| 2594 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2595 | $ gunzip -c auto-20121015-232120.tar.gz | tar xvf - |
| 2596 | auto-20121015-232120/ |
| 2597 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/ |
| 2598 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/metadata |
| 2599 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/channel0_1 |
| 2600 | auto-20121015-232120/kernel/channel0_0 |
| 2601 | </literallayout> |
| 2602 | We can now import the trace into Eclipse and view it: |
| 2603 | <orderedlist> |
| 2604 | <listitem><para>First, start eclipse and open the |
| 2605 | 'LTTng Kernel' perspective by selecting the following |
| 2606 | menu item: |
| 2607 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2608 | Window | Open Perspective | Other... |
| 2609 | </literallayout></para></listitem> |
| 2610 | <listitem><para>In the dialog box that opens, select |
| 2611 | 'LTTng Kernel' from the list.</para></listitem> |
| 2612 | <listitem><para>Back at the main menu, select the |
| 2613 | following menu item: |
| 2614 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2615 | File | New | Project... |
| 2616 | </literallayout></para></listitem> |
| 2617 | <listitem><para>In the dialog box that opens, select |
| 2618 | the 'Tracing | Tracing Project' wizard and press |
| 2619 | 'Next>'.</para></listitem> |
| 2620 | <listitem><para>Give the project a name and press |
| 2621 | 'Finish'.</para></listitem> |
| 2622 | <listitem><para>In the 'Project Explorer' pane under |
| 2623 | the project you created, right click on the |
| 2624 | 'Traces' item.</para></listitem> |
| 2625 | <listitem><para>Select 'Import..." and in the dialog |
| 2626 | that's displayed:</para></listitem> |
| 2627 | <listitem><para>Browse the filesystem and find the |
| 2628 | select the 'kernel' directory containing the trace |
| 2629 | you copied from the target |
| 2630 | e.g. auto-20121015-232120/kernel</para></listitem> |
| 2631 | <listitem><para>'Checkmark' the directory in the tree |
| 2632 | that's displayed for the trace</para></listitem> |
| 2633 | <listitem><para>Below that, select 'Common Trace Format: |
| 2634 | Kernel Trace' for the 'Trace Type'</para></listitem> |
| 2635 | <listitem><para>Press 'Finish' to close the dialog |
| 2636 | </para></listitem> |
| 2637 | <listitem><para>Back in the 'Project Explorer' pane, |
| 2638 | double-click on the 'kernel' item for the |
| 2639 | trace you just imported under 'Traces' |
| 2640 | </para></listitem> |
| 2641 | </orderedlist> |
| 2642 | You should now see your trace data displayed graphically |
| 2643 | in several different views in Eclipse: |
| 2644 | </para> |
| 2645 | |
| 2646 | <para> |
| 2647 | <imagedata fileref="figures/lttngmain0.png" width="6in" depth="6in" align="center" scalefit="1" /> |
| 2648 | </para> |
| 2649 | |
| 2650 | <para> |
| 2651 | You can access extensive help information on how to use |
| 2652 | the LTTng plug-in to search and analyze captured traces via |
| 2653 | the Eclipse help system: |
| 2654 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2655 | Help | Help Contents | LTTng Plug-in User Guide |
| 2656 | </literallayout> |
| 2657 | </para> |
| 2658 | </section> |
| 2659 | |
| 2660 | <section id='collecting-and-viewing-a-trace-in-eclipse'> |
| 2661 | <title>Collecting and viewing a trace in Eclipse</title> |
| 2662 | |
| 2663 | <note> |
| 2664 | This section on collecting traces remotely doesn't currently |
| 2665 | work because of Eclipse 'RSE' connectivity problems. Manually |
| 2666 | tracing on the target, copying the trace files to the host, |
| 2667 | and viewing the trace in Eclipse on the host as outlined in |
| 2668 | previous steps does work however - please use the manual |
| 2669 | steps outlined above to view traces in Eclipse. |
| 2670 | </note> |
| 2671 | |
| 2672 | <para> |
| 2673 | In order to trace a remote target, you also need to add |
| 2674 | a 'tracing' group on the target and connect as a user |
| 2675 | who's part of that group e.g: |
| 2676 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2677 | # adduser tomz |
| 2678 | # groupadd -r tracing |
| 2679 | # usermod -a -G tracing tomz |
| 2680 | </literallayout> |
| 2681 | <orderedlist> |
| 2682 | <listitem><para>First, start eclipse and open the |
| 2683 | 'LTTng Kernel' perspective by selecting the following |
| 2684 | menu item: |
| 2685 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2686 | Window | Open Perspective | Other... |
| 2687 | </literallayout></para></listitem> |
| 2688 | <listitem><para>In the dialog box that opens, select |
| 2689 | 'LTTng Kernel' from the list.</para></listitem> |
| 2690 | <listitem><para>Back at the main menu, select the |
| 2691 | following menu item: |
| 2692 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2693 | File | New | Project... |
| 2694 | </literallayout></para></listitem> |
| 2695 | <listitem><para>In the dialog box that opens, select |
| 2696 | the 'Tracing | Tracing Project' wizard and |
| 2697 | press 'Next>'.</para></listitem> |
| 2698 | <listitem><para>Give the project a name and press |
| 2699 | 'Finish'. That should result in an entry in the |
| 2700 | 'Project' subwindow.</para></listitem> |
| 2701 | <listitem><para>In the 'Control' subwindow just below |
| 2702 | it, press 'New Connection'.</para></listitem> |
| 2703 | <listitem><para>Add a new connection, giving it the |
| 2704 | hostname or IP address of the target system. |
| 2705 | </para></listitem> |
| 2706 | <listitem><para>Provide the username and password |
| 2707 | of a qualified user (a member of the 'tracing' group) |
| 2708 | or root account on the target system. |
| 2709 | </para></listitem> |
| 2710 | <listitem><para>Provide appropriate answers to whatever |
| 2711 | else is asked for e.g. 'secure storage password' |
| 2712 | can be anything you want. |
| 2713 | If you get an 'RSE Error' it may be due to proxies. |
| 2714 | It may be possible to get around the problem by |
| 2715 | changing the following setting: |
| 2716 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2717 | Window | Preferences | Network Connections |
| 2718 | </literallayout> |
| 2719 | Switch 'Active Provider' to 'Direct' |
| 2720 | </para></listitem> |
| 2721 | </orderedlist> |
| 2722 | </para> |
| 2723 | </section> |
| 2724 | </section> |
| 2725 | |
| 2726 | <section id='lltng-documentation'> |
| 2727 | <title>Documentation</title> |
| 2728 | |
| 2729 | <para> |
| 2730 | You can find the primary LTTng Documentation on the |
| 2731 | <ulink url='https://lttng.org/docs/'>LTTng Documentation</ulink> |
| 2732 | site. |
| 2733 | The documentation on this site is appropriate for intermediate to |
| 2734 | advanced software developers who are working in a Linux environment |
| 2735 | and are interested in efficient software tracing. |
| 2736 | </para> |
| 2737 | |
| 2738 | <para> |
| 2739 | For information on LTTng in general, visit the |
| 2740 | <ulink url='http://lttng.org/lttng2.0'>LTTng Project</ulink> |
| 2741 | site. |
| 2742 | You can find a "Getting Started" link on this site that takes |
| 2743 | you to an LTTng Quick Start. |
| 2744 | </para> |
| 2745 | |
| 2746 | <para> |
| 2747 | Finally, you can access extensive help information on how to use |
| 2748 | the LTTng plug-in to search and analyze captured traces via the |
| 2749 | Eclipse help system: |
| 2750 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2751 | Help | Help Contents | LTTng Plug-in User Guide |
| 2752 | </literallayout> |
| 2753 | </para> |
| 2754 | </section> |
| 2755 | </section> |
| 2756 | |
| 2757 | <section id='profile-manual-blktrace'> |
| 2758 | <title>blktrace</title> |
| 2759 | |
| 2760 | <para> |
| 2761 | blktrace is a tool for tracing and reporting low-level disk I/O. |
| 2762 | blktrace provides the tracing half of the equation; its output can |
| 2763 | be piped into the blkparse program, which renders the data in a |
| 2764 | human-readable form and does some basic analysis: |
| 2765 | </para> |
| 2766 | |
| 2767 | <section id='blktrace-setup'> |
| 2768 | <title>Setup</title> |
| 2769 | |
| 2770 | <para> |
| 2771 | For this section, we'll assume you've already performed the |
| 2772 | basic setup outlined in the |
| 2773 | "<link linkend='profile-manual-general-setup'>General Setup</link>" |
| 2774 | section. |
| 2775 | </para> |
| 2776 | |
| 2777 | <para> |
| 2778 | blktrace is an application that runs on the target system. |
| 2779 | You can run the entire blktrace and blkparse pipeline on the |
| 2780 | target, or you can run blktrace in 'listen' mode on the target |
| 2781 | and have blktrace and blkparse collect and analyze the data on |
| 2782 | the host (see the |
| 2783 | "<link linkend='using-blktrace-remotely'>Using blktrace Remotely</link>" |
| 2784 | section below). |
| 2785 | For the rest of this section we assume you've ssh'ed to the |
| 2786 | host and will be running blkrace on the target. |
| 2787 | </para> |
| 2788 | </section> |
| 2789 | |
| 2790 | <section id='blktrace-basic-usage'> |
| 2791 | <title>Basic Usage</title> |
| 2792 | |
| 2793 | <para> |
| 2794 | To record a trace, simply run the 'blktrace' command, giving it |
| 2795 | the name of the block device you want to trace activity on: |
| 2796 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2797 | root@crownbay:~# blktrace /dev/sdc |
| 2798 | </literallayout> |
| 2799 | In another shell, execute a workload you want to trace. |
| 2800 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2801 | root@crownbay:/media/sdc# rm linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2; wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink>; sync |
| 2802 | Connecting to downloads.yoctoproject.org (140.211.169.59:80) |
| 2803 | linux-2.6.19.2.tar.b 100% |*******************************| 41727k 0:00:00 ETA |
| 2804 | </literallayout> |
| 2805 | Press Ctrl-C in the blktrace shell to stop the trace. It will |
| 2806 | display how many events were logged, along with the per-cpu file |
| 2807 | sizes (blktrace records traces in per-cpu kernel buffers and |
| 2808 | simply dumps them to userspace for blkparse to merge and sort |
| 2809 | later). |
| 2810 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2811 | ^C=== sdc === |
| 2812 | CPU 0: 7082 events, 332 KiB data |
| 2813 | CPU 1: 1578 events, 74 KiB data |
| 2814 | Total: 8660 events (dropped 0), 406 KiB data |
| 2815 | </literallayout> |
| 2816 | If you examine the files saved to disk, you see multiple files, |
| 2817 | one per CPU and with the device name as the first part of the |
| 2818 | filename: |
| 2819 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2820 | root@crownbay:~# ls -al |
| 2821 | drwxr-xr-x 6 root root 1024 Oct 27 22:39 . |
| 2822 | drwxr-sr-x 4 root root 1024 Oct 26 18:24 .. |
| 2823 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 339938 Oct 27 22:40 sdc.blktrace.0 |
| 2824 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 75753 Oct 27 22:40 sdc.blktrace.1 |
| 2825 | </literallayout> |
| 2826 | To view the trace events, simply invoke 'blkparse' in the |
| 2827 | directory containing the trace files, giving it the device name |
| 2828 | that forms the first part of the filenames: |
| 2829 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2830 | root@crownbay:~# blkparse sdc |
| 2831 | |
| 2832 | 8,32 1 1 0.000000000 1225 Q WS 3417048 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2833 | 8,32 1 2 0.000025213 1225 G WS 3417048 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2834 | 8,32 1 3 0.000033384 1225 P N [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2835 | 8,32 1 4 0.000043301 1225 I WS 3417048 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2836 | 8,32 1 0 0.000057270 0 m N cfq1225 insert_request |
| 2837 | 8,32 1 0 0.000064813 0 m N cfq1225 add_to_rr |
| 2838 | 8,32 1 5 0.000076336 1225 U N [jbd2/sdc-8] 1 |
| 2839 | 8,32 1 0 0.000088559 0 m N cfq workload slice:150 |
| 2840 | 8,32 1 0 0.000097359 0 m N cfq1225 set_active wl_prio:0 wl_type:1 |
| 2841 | 8,32 1 0 0.000104063 0 m N cfq1225 Not idling. st->count:1 |
| 2842 | 8,32 1 0 0.000112584 0 m N cfq1225 fifo= (null) |
| 2843 | 8,32 1 0 0.000118730 0 m N cfq1225 dispatch_insert |
| 2844 | 8,32 1 0 0.000127390 0 m N cfq1225 dispatched a request |
| 2845 | 8,32 1 0 0.000133536 0 m N cfq1225 activate rq, drv=1 |
| 2846 | 8,32 1 6 0.000136889 1225 D WS 3417048 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2847 | 8,32 1 7 0.000360381 1225 Q WS 3417056 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2848 | 8,32 1 8 0.000377422 1225 G WS 3417056 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2849 | 8,32 1 9 0.000388876 1225 P N [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2850 | 8,32 1 10 0.000397886 1225 Q WS 3417064 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2851 | 8,32 1 11 0.000404800 1225 M WS 3417064 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2852 | 8,32 1 12 0.000412343 1225 Q WS 3417072 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2853 | 8,32 1 13 0.000416533 1225 M WS 3417072 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2854 | 8,32 1 14 0.000422121 1225 Q WS 3417080 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2855 | 8,32 1 15 0.000425194 1225 M WS 3417080 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2856 | 8,32 1 16 0.000431968 1225 Q WS 3417088 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2857 | 8,32 1 17 0.000435251 1225 M WS 3417088 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2858 | 8,32 1 18 0.000440279 1225 Q WS 3417096 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2859 | 8,32 1 19 0.000443911 1225 M WS 3417096 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2860 | 8,32 1 20 0.000450336 1225 Q WS 3417104 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2861 | 8,32 1 21 0.000454038 1225 M WS 3417104 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2862 | 8,32 1 22 0.000462070 1225 Q WS 3417112 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2863 | 8,32 1 23 0.000465422 1225 M WS 3417112 + 8 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2864 | 8,32 1 24 0.000474222 1225 I WS 3417056 + 64 [jbd2/sdc-8] |
| 2865 | 8,32 1 0 0.000483022 0 m N cfq1225 insert_request |
| 2866 | 8,32 1 25 0.000489727 1225 U N [jbd2/sdc-8] 1 |
| 2867 | 8,32 1 0 0.000498457 0 m N cfq1225 Not idling. st->count:1 |
| 2868 | 8,32 1 0 0.000503765 0 m N cfq1225 dispatch_insert |
| 2869 | 8,32 1 0 0.000512914 0 m N cfq1225 dispatched a request |
| 2870 | 8,32 1 0 0.000518851 0 m N cfq1225 activate rq, drv=2 |
| 2871 | . |
| 2872 | . |
| 2873 | . |
| 2874 | 8,32 0 0 58.515006138 0 m N cfq3551 complete rqnoidle 1 |
| 2875 | 8,32 0 2024 58.516603269 3 C WS 3156992 + 16 [0] |
| 2876 | 8,32 0 0 58.516626736 0 m N cfq3551 complete rqnoidle 1 |
| 2877 | 8,32 0 0 58.516634558 0 m N cfq3551 arm_idle: 8 group_idle: 0 |
| 2878 | 8,32 0 0 58.516636933 0 m N cfq schedule dispatch |
| 2879 | 8,32 1 0 58.516971613 0 m N cfq3551 slice expired t=0 |
| 2880 | 8,32 1 0 58.516982089 0 m N cfq3551 sl_used=13 disp=6 charge=13 iops=0 sect=80 |
| 2881 | 8,32 1 0 58.516985511 0 m N cfq3551 del_from_rr |
| 2882 | 8,32 1 0 58.516990819 0 m N cfq3551 put_queue |
| 2883 | |
| 2884 | CPU0 (sdc): |
| 2885 | Reads Queued: 0, 0KiB Writes Queued: 331, 26,284KiB |
| 2886 | Read Dispatches: 0, 0KiB Write Dispatches: 485, 40,484KiB |
| 2887 | Reads Requeued: 0 Writes Requeued: 0 |
| 2888 | Reads Completed: 0, 0KiB Writes Completed: 511, 41,000KiB |
| 2889 | Read Merges: 0, 0KiB Write Merges: 13, 160KiB |
| 2890 | Read depth: 0 Write depth: 2 |
| 2891 | IO unplugs: 23 Timer unplugs: 0 |
| 2892 | CPU1 (sdc): |
| 2893 | Reads Queued: 0, 0KiB Writes Queued: 249, 15,800KiB |
| 2894 | Read Dispatches: 0, 0KiB Write Dispatches: 42, 1,600KiB |
| 2895 | Reads Requeued: 0 Writes Requeued: 0 |
| 2896 | Reads Completed: 0, 0KiB Writes Completed: 16, 1,084KiB |
| 2897 | Read Merges: 0, 0KiB Write Merges: 40, 276KiB |
| 2898 | Read depth: 0 Write depth: 2 |
| 2899 | IO unplugs: 30 Timer unplugs: 1 |
| 2900 | |
| 2901 | Total (sdc): |
| 2902 | Reads Queued: 0, 0KiB Writes Queued: 580, 42,084KiB |
| 2903 | Read Dispatches: 0, 0KiB Write Dispatches: 527, 42,084KiB |
| 2904 | Reads Requeued: 0 Writes Requeued: 0 |
| 2905 | Reads Completed: 0, 0KiB Writes Completed: 527, 42,084KiB |
| 2906 | Read Merges: 0, 0KiB Write Merges: 53, 436KiB |
| 2907 | IO unplugs: 53 Timer unplugs: 1 |
| 2908 | |
| 2909 | Throughput (R/W): 0KiB/s / 719KiB/s |
| 2910 | Events (sdc): 6,592 entries |
| 2911 | Skips: 0 forward (0 - 0.0%) |
| 2912 | Input file sdc.blktrace.0 added |
| 2913 | Input file sdc.blktrace.1 added |
| 2914 | </literallayout> |
| 2915 | The report shows each event that was found in the blktrace data, |
| 2916 | along with a summary of the overall block I/O traffic during |
| 2917 | the run. You can look at the |
| 2918 | <ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/blkparse'>blkparse</ulink> |
| 2919 | manpage to learn the |
| 2920 | meaning of each field displayed in the trace listing. |
| 2921 | </para> |
| 2922 | |
| 2923 | <section id='blktrace-live-mode'> |
| 2924 | <title>Live Mode</title> |
| 2925 | |
| 2926 | <para> |
| 2927 | blktrace and blkparse are designed from the ground up to |
| 2928 | be able to operate together in a 'pipe mode' where the |
| 2929 | stdout of blktrace can be fed directly into the stdin of |
| 2930 | blkparse: |
| 2931 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2932 | root@crownbay:~# blktrace /dev/sdc -o - | blkparse -i - |
| 2933 | </literallayout> |
| 2934 | This enables long-lived tracing sessions to run without |
| 2935 | writing anything to disk, and allows the user to look for |
| 2936 | certain conditions in the trace data in 'real-time' by |
| 2937 | viewing the trace output as it scrolls by on the screen or |
| 2938 | by passing it along to yet another program in the pipeline |
| 2939 | such as grep which can be used to identify and capture |
| 2940 | conditions of interest. |
| 2941 | </para> |
| 2942 | |
| 2943 | <para> |
| 2944 | There's actually another blktrace command that implements |
| 2945 | the above pipeline as a single command, so the user doesn't |
| 2946 | have to bother typing in the above command sequence: |
| 2947 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2948 | root@crownbay:~# btrace /dev/sdc |
| 2949 | </literallayout> |
| 2950 | </para> |
| 2951 | </section> |
| 2952 | |
| 2953 | <section id='using-blktrace-remotely'> |
| 2954 | <title>Using blktrace Remotely</title> |
| 2955 | |
| 2956 | <para> |
| 2957 | Because blktrace traces block I/O and at the same time |
| 2958 | normally writes its trace data to a block device, and |
| 2959 | in general because it's not really a great idea to make |
| 2960 | the device being traced the same as the device the tracer |
| 2961 | writes to, blktrace provides a way to trace without |
| 2962 | perturbing the traced device at all by providing native |
| 2963 | support for sending all trace data over the network. |
| 2964 | </para> |
| 2965 | |
| 2966 | <para> |
| 2967 | To have blktrace operate in this mode, start blktrace on |
| 2968 | the target system being traced with the -l option, along with |
| 2969 | the device to trace: |
| 2970 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2971 | root@crownbay:~# blktrace -l /dev/sdc |
| 2972 | server: waiting for connections... |
| 2973 | </literallayout> |
| 2974 | On the host system, use the -h option to connect to the |
| 2975 | target system, also passing it the device to trace: |
| 2976 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2977 | $ blktrace -d /dev/sdc -h 192.168.1.43 |
| 2978 | blktrace: connecting to 192.168.1.43 |
| 2979 | blktrace: connected! |
| 2980 | </literallayout> |
| 2981 | On the target system, you should see this: |
| 2982 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2983 | server: connection from 192.168.1.43 |
| 2984 | </literallayout> |
| 2985 | In another shell, execute a workload you want to trace. |
| 2986 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2987 | root@crownbay:/media/sdc# rm linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2; wget <ulink url='http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2'>http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/mirror/sources/linux-2.6.19.2.tar.bz2</ulink>; sync |
| 2988 | Connecting to downloads.yoctoproject.org (140.211.169.59:80) |
| 2989 | linux-2.6.19.2.tar.b 100% |*******************************| 41727k 0:00:00 ETA |
| 2990 | </literallayout> |
| 2991 | When it's done, do a Ctrl-C on the host system to |
| 2992 | stop the trace: |
| 2993 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 2994 | ^C=== sdc === |
| 2995 | CPU 0: 7691 events, 361 KiB data |
| 2996 | CPU 1: 4109 events, 193 KiB data |
| 2997 | Total: 11800 events (dropped 0), 554 KiB data |
| 2998 | </literallayout> |
| 2999 | On the target system, you should also see a trace |
| 3000 | summary for the trace just ended: |
| 3001 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3002 | server: end of run for 192.168.1.43:sdc |
| 3003 | === sdc === |
| 3004 | CPU 0: 7691 events, 361 KiB data |
| 3005 | CPU 1: 4109 events, 193 KiB data |
| 3006 | Total: 11800 events (dropped 0), 554 KiB data |
| 3007 | </literallayout> |
| 3008 | The blktrace instance on the host will save the target |
| 3009 | output inside a hostname-timestamp directory: |
| 3010 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3011 | $ ls -al |
| 3012 | drwxr-xr-x 10 root root 1024 Oct 28 02:40 . |
| 3013 | drwxr-sr-x 4 root root 1024 Oct 26 18:24 .. |
| 3014 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 1024 Oct 28 02:40 192.168.1.43-2012-10-28-02:40:56 |
| 3015 | </literallayout> |
| 3016 | cd into that directory to see the output files: |
| 3017 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3018 | $ ls -l |
| 3019 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 369193 Oct 28 02:44 sdc.blktrace.0 |
| 3020 | -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 197278 Oct 28 02:44 sdc.blktrace.1 |
| 3021 | </literallayout> |
| 3022 | And run blkparse on the host system using the device name: |
| 3023 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3024 | $ blkparse sdc |
| 3025 | |
| 3026 | 8,32 1 1 0.000000000 1263 Q RM 6016 + 8 [ls] |
| 3027 | 8,32 1 0 0.000036038 0 m N cfq1263 alloced |
| 3028 | 8,32 1 2 0.000039390 1263 G RM 6016 + 8 [ls] |
| 3029 | 8,32 1 3 0.000049168 1263 I RM 6016 + 8 [ls] |
| 3030 | 8,32 1 0 0.000056152 0 m N cfq1263 insert_request |
| 3031 | 8,32 1 0 0.000061600 0 m N cfq1263 add_to_rr |
| 3032 | 8,32 1 0 0.000075498 0 m N cfq workload slice:300 |
| 3033 | . |
| 3034 | . |
| 3035 | . |
| 3036 | 8,32 0 0 177.266385696 0 m N cfq1267 arm_idle: 8 group_idle: 0 |
| 3037 | 8,32 0 0 177.266388140 0 m N cfq schedule dispatch |
| 3038 | 8,32 1 0 177.266679239 0 m N cfq1267 slice expired t=0 |
| 3039 | 8,32 1 0 177.266689297 0 m N cfq1267 sl_used=9 disp=6 charge=9 iops=0 sect=56 |
| 3040 | 8,32 1 0 177.266692649 0 m N cfq1267 del_from_rr |
| 3041 | 8,32 1 0 177.266696560 0 m N cfq1267 put_queue |
| 3042 | |
| 3043 | CPU0 (sdc): |
| 3044 | Reads Queued: 0, 0KiB Writes Queued: 270, 21,708KiB |
| 3045 | Read Dispatches: 59, 2,628KiB Write Dispatches: 495, 39,964KiB |
| 3046 | Reads Requeued: 0 Writes Requeued: 0 |
| 3047 | Reads Completed: 90, 2,752KiB Writes Completed: 543, 41,596KiB |
| 3048 | Read Merges: 0, 0KiB Write Merges: 9, 344KiB |
| 3049 | Read depth: 2 Write depth: 2 |
| 3050 | IO unplugs: 20 Timer unplugs: 1 |
| 3051 | CPU1 (sdc): |
| 3052 | Reads Queued: 688, 2,752KiB Writes Queued: 381, 20,652KiB |
| 3053 | Read Dispatches: 31, 124KiB Write Dispatches: 59, 2,396KiB |
| 3054 | Reads Requeued: 0 Writes Requeued: 0 |
| 3055 | Reads Completed: 0, 0KiB Writes Completed: 11, 764KiB |
| 3056 | Read Merges: 598, 2,392KiB Write Merges: 88, 448KiB |
| 3057 | Read depth: 2 Write depth: 2 |
| 3058 | IO unplugs: 52 Timer unplugs: 0 |
| 3059 | |
| 3060 | Total (sdc): |
| 3061 | Reads Queued: 688, 2,752KiB Writes Queued: 651, 42,360KiB |
| 3062 | Read Dispatches: 90, 2,752KiB Write Dispatches: 554, 42,360KiB |
| 3063 | Reads Requeued: 0 Writes Requeued: 0 |
| 3064 | Reads Completed: 90, 2,752KiB Writes Completed: 554, 42,360KiB |
| 3065 | Read Merges: 598, 2,392KiB Write Merges: 97, 792KiB |
| 3066 | IO unplugs: 72 Timer unplugs: 1 |
| 3067 | |
| 3068 | Throughput (R/W): 15KiB/s / 238KiB/s |
| 3069 | Events (sdc): 9,301 entries |
| 3070 | Skips: 0 forward (0 - 0.0%) |
| 3071 | </literallayout> |
| 3072 | You should see the trace events and summary just as |
| 3073 | you would have if you'd run the same command on the target. |
| 3074 | </para> |
| 3075 | </section> |
| 3076 | |
| 3077 | <section id='tracing-block-io-via-ftrace'> |
| 3078 | <title>Tracing Block I/O via 'ftrace'</title> |
| 3079 | |
| 3080 | <para> |
| 3081 | It's also possible to trace block I/O using only |
| 3082 | <link linkend='the-trace-events-subsystem'>trace events subsystem</link>, |
| 3083 | which can be useful for casual tracing |
| 3084 | if you don't want to bother dealing with the userspace tools. |
| 3085 | </para> |
| 3086 | |
| 3087 | <para> |
| 3088 | To enable tracing for a given device, use |
| 3089 | /sys/block/xxx/trace/enable, where xxx is the device name. |
| 3090 | This for example enables tracing for /dev/sdc: |
| 3091 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3092 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# echo 1 > /sys/block/sdc/trace/enable |
| 3093 | </literallayout> |
| 3094 | Once you've selected the device(s) you want to trace, |
| 3095 | selecting the 'blk' tracer will turn the blk tracer on: |
| 3096 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3097 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat available_tracers |
| 3098 | blk function_graph function nop |
| 3099 | |
| 3100 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# echo blk > current_tracer |
| 3101 | </literallayout> |
| 3102 | Execute the workload you're interested in: |
| 3103 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3104 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat /media/sdc/testfile.txt |
| 3105 | </literallayout> |
| 3106 | And look at the output (note here that we're using |
| 3107 | 'trace_pipe' instead of trace to capture this trace - |
| 3108 | this allows us to wait around on the pipe for data to |
| 3109 | appear): |
| 3110 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3111 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# cat trace_pipe |
| 3112 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276361: 8,32 Q R 1699848 + 8 [cat] |
| 3113 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276410: 8,32 m N cfq3587 alloced |
| 3114 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276415: 8,32 G R 1699848 + 8 [cat] |
| 3115 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276424: 8,32 P N [cat] |
| 3116 | cat-3587 [001] d..2 3023.276432: 8,32 I R 1699848 + 8 [cat] |
| 3117 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276439: 8,32 m N cfq3587 insert_request |
| 3118 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276445: 8,32 m N cfq3587 add_to_rr |
| 3119 | cat-3587 [001] d..2 3023.276454: 8,32 U N [cat] 1 |
| 3120 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276464: 8,32 m N cfq workload slice:150 |
| 3121 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276471: 8,32 m N cfq3587 set_active wl_prio:0 wl_type:2 |
| 3122 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276478: 8,32 m N cfq3587 fifo= (null) |
| 3123 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276483: 8,32 m N cfq3587 dispatch_insert |
| 3124 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276490: 8,32 m N cfq3587 dispatched a request |
| 3125 | cat-3587 [001] d..1 3023.276497: 8,32 m N cfq3587 activate rq, drv=1 |
| 3126 | cat-3587 [001] d..2 3023.276500: 8,32 D R 1699848 + 8 [cat] |
| 3127 | </literallayout> |
| 3128 | And this turns off tracing for the specified device: |
| 3129 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3130 | root@crownbay:/sys/kernel/debug/tracing# echo 0 > /sys/block/sdc/trace/enable |
| 3131 | </literallayout> |
| 3132 | </para> |
| 3133 | </section> |
| 3134 | </section> |
| 3135 | |
| 3136 | <section id='blktrace-documentation'> |
| 3137 | <title>Documentation</title> |
| 3138 | |
| 3139 | <para> |
| 3140 | Online versions of the man pages for the commands discussed |
| 3141 | in this section can be found here: |
| 3142 | <itemizedlist> |
| 3143 | <listitem><para><ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/8/blktrace'>http://linux.die.net/man/8/blktrace</ulink> |
| 3144 | </para></listitem> |
| 3145 | <listitem><para><ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/1/blkparse'>http://linux.die.net/man/1/blkparse</ulink> |
| 3146 | </para></listitem> |
| 3147 | <listitem><para><ulink url='http://linux.die.net/man/8/btrace'>http://linux.die.net/man/8/btrace</ulink> |
| 3148 | </para></listitem> |
| 3149 | </itemizedlist> |
| 3150 | </para> |
| 3151 | |
| 3152 | <para> |
| 3153 | The above manpages, along with manpages for the other |
| 3154 | blktrace utilities (btt, blkiomon, etc) can be found in the |
| 3155 | /doc directory of the blktrace tools git repo: |
| 3156 | <literallayout class='monospaced'> |
| 3157 | $ git clone git://git.kernel.dk/blktrace.git |
| 3158 | </literallayout> |
| 3159 | </para> |
| 3160 | </section> |
| 3161 | </section> |
| 3162 | </chapter> |
| 3163 | <!-- |
| 3164 | vim: expandtab tw=80 ts=4 |
| 3165 | --> |