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1---
2id: viewing-and-analyzing-your-traces
3---
4
5This section describes how to visualize the data gathered after tracing
6the Linux kernel or a user space application.
7
8Many ways exist to read your LTTng traces:
9
10 * **`babeltrace`** is a command line utility which converts trace formats;
11 it supports the format used by LTTng,
12 <abbr title="Common Trace Format">CTF</abbr>, as well as a basic
13 text output which may be `grep`ed. The `babeltrace` command is
14 part of the
15 <a href="http://www.efficios.com/babeltrace" class="ext">Babeltrace</a> project.
16 * Babeltrace also includes a **Python binding** so that you may
17 easily open and read an LTTng trace with your own script, benefiting
18 from the power of Python.
19 * The **<a href="https://eclipse.org/downloads/packages/eclipse-ide-cc-developers/lunar" class="ext">
20 Eclise IDE for C/C++ Developers</a>**
21 includes the Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF) plugin which
22 supports LTTng traces, amongst others.
23
24LTTng trace files are usually recorded in the `~/lttng-traces` directory.
25Let's now view the trace and perform a basic analysis using
26`babeltrace`.
27
28The simplest way to list all the recorded events of a trace is to pass its
29path to `babeltrace` with no options:
30
31<pre class="term">
32babeltrace ~/lttng-traces/my-session
33</pre>
34
35`babeltrace` will find all traces within the given path recursively and
36output all their events, merging them intelligently.
37
38Listing all the system calls of a Linux kernel trace with their arguments is
39easy with `babeltrace` and `grep`:
40
41<pre class="term">
42babeltrace ~/lttng-traces/my-kernel-session | grep sys_
43</pre>
44
45Counting events is also straightforward:
46
47<pre class="term">
48babeltrace ~/lttng-traces/my-kernel-session | grep sys_read | wc -l
49</pre>
50
51The text output of `babeltrace` is useful for isolating events by simple
52matching using `grep` and similar utilities. However, more elaborate filters
53such as keeping only events with a field value falling within a specific range
54are not trivial to write using a shell. Moreover, reductions and even the
55most basic computations involving multiple events are virtually impossible
56to implement.
57
58Fortunately, Babeltrace ships with a Python 3 binding which makes it
59really easy to read the events of an LTTng trace sequentially and compute
60the desired information.
61
62Here's a simple example using the Babeltrace Python binding. The following
63script accepts an LTTng Linux kernel trace path as its first argument and
64outputs the short names of the top 5 running processes on CPU 0 during the
65whole trace:
66
67~~~ python
68import sys
69from collections import Counter
70import babeltrace
71
72
73def top5proc():
74 if len(sys.argv) != 2:
75 msg = 'Usage: python {} TRACEPATH'.format(sys.argv[0])
76 raise ValueError(msg)
77
78 # a trace collection holds one to many traces
79 col = babeltrace.TraceCollection()
80
81 # add the trace provided by the user
82 # (LTTng traces always have the 'ctf' format)
83 if col.add_trace(sys.argv[1], 'ctf') is None:
84 raise RuntimeError('Cannot add trace')
85
86 # this counter dict will hold execution times:
87 #
88 # task command name -> total execution time (ns)
89 exec_times = Counter()
90
91 # this holds the last `sched_switch` timestamp
92 last_ts = None
93
94 # iterate events
95 for event in col.events:
96 # keep only `sched_switch` events
97 if event.name != 'sched_switch':
98 continue
99
100 # keep only events which happened on CPU 0
101 if event['cpu_id'] != 0:
102 continue
103
104 # event timestamp
105 cur_ts = event.timestamp
106
107 if last_ts is None:
108 # we start here
109 last_ts = cur_ts
110
111 # previous task command (short) name
112 prev_comm = event['prev_comm']
113
114 # initialize entry in our dict if not yet done
115 if prev_comm not in exec_times:
116 exec_times[prev_comm] = 0
117
118 # compute previous command execution time
119 diff = cur_ts - last_ts
120
121 # update execution time of this command
122 exec_times[prev_comm] += diff
123
124 # update last timestamp
125 last_ts = cur_ts
126
127 # display top 10
128 for name, ns in exec_times.most_common()[:5]:
129 s = ns / 1000000000
130 print('{:20}{} s'.format(name, s))
131
132
133if __name__ == '__main__':
134 top5proc()
135~~~
136
137Save this script as `top5proc.py` and run it with Python 3, providing the
138path to an LTTng Linux kernel trace as the first argument:
139
140<pre class="term">
141python3 top5proc.py ~/lttng-sessions/my-session-.../kernel
142</pre>
143
144Make sure the path you provide is the directory containing actual trace
145files (`channel0_0`, `metadata`, etc.): the `babeltrace` utility recurses
146directories, but the Python binding does not.
147
148Here's an example of output:
149
150~~~ text
151swapper/0 48.607245889 s
152chromium 7.192738188 s
153pavucontrol 0.709894415 s
154Compositor 0.660867933 s
155Xorg.bin 0.616753786 s
156~~~
157
158Note that `swapper/0` is the "idle" process of CPU 0 on Linux; since we
159weren't using the CPU that much when tracing, its first position in the list
160makes sense.
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