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1 | |
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2 | LTTng usertrace package |
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3 | |
4 | Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@polymtl.ca> |
5 | March 2006 |
6 | |
7 | This package contains all the user space headers and c files necessary to make |
8 | your application and library trace through an active LTTng tracer. Here is a |
9 | short quickstart guide of it. |
10 | |
11 | Here are the currently supported architectures : |
12 | x86 |
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13 | (please add the ltt_trace_generic and ltt_register_generic system calls to |
14 | other architectures as you need them : it will work magically) |
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15 | |
16 | * Compile your kernel with the latest LTTng patch. Make sure the option |
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17 | "Allow tracing from userspace" is _active_! |
18 | See the QUICKSTART guide at http://ltt.polymtl.ca/ for details about how to |
19 | setup a working tracer and viewer. See the genevent installation step : it is |
20 | required for method #2 below. |
21 | |
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22 | * Extract the latest ltt-usertrace archive : |
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23 | su |
24 | cd /usr/src |
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25 | wget http://ltt.polymtl.ca/packages/ltt-usertrace-x.x.tar.gz |
26 | gzip -cd ltt-usertrace-x.x.tar.gz | tar xvof - |
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27 | |
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28 | * Build the sample programs and install the headers and librairies into your |
29 | system : |
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30 | (32 bits) |
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31 | su |
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32 | cd /usr/src/ltt-usertrace |
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33 | make clean |
34 | make install (will build and install headers and libraries) |
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35 | make |
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36 | (64 bits) |
37 | su |
38 | cd /usr/src/ltt-usertrace |
39 | make clean |
40 | LIB_DIR=/usr/lib64 make install CFLAGS=-m64 |
41 | make CFLAGS=-m64 |
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42 | |
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43 | Feel free to look at the sample programs and the Makefile : they demonstrate |
44 | very well the features of the usertrace package and how to use them. |
45 | |
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46 | * There are three ways to trace information from your application. The choice |
47 | will principally depend on the trace data rate. |
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48 | |
49 | 1) Easy way, but slow (printf style) |
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50 | See sample-printf.c for code example. |
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51 | |
52 | - Add the following statements to your program source (the define must come |
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53 | _before_ the includes!) : |
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54 | |
55 | #define LTT_TRACE |
56 | #define LTT_BLOCKING 1 |
57 | #include <ltt/ltt-facility-user_generic.h> |
58 | #include <ltt/ltt-facility-custom-user_generic.h> |
59 | |
60 | Note the define of LTT_BLOCKING to 1 : if a trace buffer is full, your |
61 | application will block. The default of this parameter is 0 (non blocking) : |
62 | events are lost when trace buffer is full. The choice is up to you. |
63 | |
64 | - Add something like the following sample line in your code. Note that this is a |
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65 | very standard format string, this is only a suggested presentation. |
66 | |
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67 | trace_user_generic_slow_printf("in: %s at: %s:%d: Counter value is: %u.", |
68 | __FILE__, __func__, __LINE__, count); |
69 | |
70 | - Compile your application with at least these parameters to gcc (it is splitted |
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71 | on two lines, joined by a "\") : |
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72 | gcc -D LTT_SHOW_DEBUG -I /usr/src/usertrace-generic -o myapp myapp.c \ |
73 | /usr/src/usertrace-generic/ltt-facility-loader-user_generic.c |
74 | |
75 | To see what the final result looks like : |
76 | - Start tracing |
77 | - Start your application |
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78 | ** You should see the following message when your program starts and the |
79 | LTT_SHOW_DEBUG is defined : |
80 | "LTT : ltt-facility-user_generic init in userspace" |
81 | If you don't then you forgot to compile the facility loader in your |
82 | application. If you find this output annoying, you can remove the |
83 | "-D LTT_SHOW_DEBUG" gcc parameter, which will make the facility loader |
84 | silent. |
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85 | - Stop tracing |
86 | Then, to see only the user_generic events : |
87 | lttv -m textDump -t /tmp/trace1 -e "event.facility=user_generic" |
88 | |
89 | It will show : |
90 | user_generic.slow_printf: 35885.922829472 (/cpu_0), 15521, 7453, SYSCALL { "in: sample-printf.c at: main:18: Counter value is: 0." } |
91 | user_generic.slow_printf: 35886.925685289 (/cpu_0), 15521, 7453, SYSCALL { "in: sample-printf.c at: main:18: Counter value is: 1." } |
92 | ... |
93 | |
94 | |
95 | |
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96 | 2) The second way to log events is still easy. The advantage is that it |
97 | will make it easier to identify your data in the trace viewer afterward. |
98 | Please read the comments in method 1) explained previously, as they |
99 | are not repeated here. |
100 | See sample.c and sample-thread-slow.c for code example. |
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101 | |
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102 | - Go to the ltt-usertrace directory |
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103 | su |
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104 | cd /usr/src/ltt-usertrace |
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105 | |
106 | - Create your own facility (i.e. user_myfacility.xml). |
107 | See the ones available in /usr/share/LinuxTraceToolkitViewer/facilities for |
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108 | examples. |
109 | You facility _must_ be named following this standard : "user_*", where * is |
110 | whatever you like. If it is not, it will be rejected by the kernel with a |
111 | Operation not permitted (can be seen with the -D LTT_SHOW_DEBUG compilation |
112 | parameter). |
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113 | |
114 | user_myfacility.xml: |
115 | |
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116 | <?xml version="1.0"?> |
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117 | <facility name="user_myfacility"> |
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118 | <description>Sample facility</description> |
119 | <event name="myevent"> |
120 | <description>Sample event</description> |
121 | <field name="file"><string></field> |
122 | <field name="function"><string></field> |
123 | <field name="line"><int></field> |
124 | <field name="firstval"><long></field> |
125 | <field name="secondval"><pointer></field> |
126 | </event> |
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127 | </facility> |
128 | |
129 | - AN IMPORTANT STEP FOLLOWS : |
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130 | *copy* the user_myfacility.xml file in your system : |
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131 | su |
132 | cp user_myfacility.xml /usr/share/LinuxTraceToolkitViewer/facilities |
133 | |
134 | - Use genevent to create the c code and headers : |
135 | su |
136 | cd /tmp |
137 | mkdir genevent |
138 | cd genevent |
139 | for a in /usr/share/LinuxTraceToolkitViewer/facilities/user_*.xml; |
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140 | do /usr/local/bin/genevent $a; |
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141 | done |
142 | cd /usr/src/usertrace-generic |
143 | cp /tmp/genevent/*load* . |
144 | cd ltt |
145 | cp /tmp/genevent/ltt-facility-id-user_myfacility.h . |
146 | cp /tmp/genevent/ltt-facility-user_myfacility.h . |
147 | cd .. |
148 | make install |
149 | |
150 | - Add the following statements to your program source (the define must come |
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151 | _before_ the includes!) : |
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152 | |
153 | #define LTT_TRACE |
154 | #define LTT_BLOCKING 1 |
155 | #include <ltt/ltt-facility-user_myfacility.h> |
156 | |
157 | - Add a call following the trace_user_myfacility_myevent function found in |
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158 | /usr/include/ltt/ltt-facility-user_myfacility.h in your program. |
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159 | For instance : |
160 | trace_user_myfacility_myevent(__FILE__, __func__, __LINE__, 1234, (void*)0xF0F0F0F0); |
161 | |
162 | - Compile your application with at least these parameters to gcc (it is splitted |
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163 | on two lines, joined by a "\") : |
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164 | gcc -I /usr/src/usertrace-generic -o myapp myapp.c \ |
165 | /usr/src/usertrace-generic/ltt-facility-loader-user_myfacility.c |
166 | |
167 | To see what the final result looks like : |
168 | - Start tracing |
169 | - Start your application |
170 | - Stop tracing |
171 | Then, to see only the user_myfacility events : |
172 | lttv -m textDump -t /tmp/trace1 -e "event.facility=user_myfacility" |
173 | |
174 | It will show, for example : |
175 | user_myfacility.myevent: 39507.805584526 (/cpu_1), 15829, 15736, SYSCALL { "myapp.c", "main", 8, 1234, 0xf0f0f0f0 } |
176 | |
177 | |
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178 | 3) The third way to trace information from your application |
179 | |
180 | This method is cleary the _FASTEST_. It is principally I/O (disk and memory) |
181 | bound. It will create a companion process for each of you program's thread which |
182 | will dump the tracing information into /tmp/ltt-usertrace. |
183 | |
184 | See sample-highspeed.c and sample-thread-fast.c for code example. |
185 | |
186 | - Add the following statements to your program source (the define must come |
187 | _before_ the includes!) : |
188 | |
189 | #define LTT_TRACE |
190 | #define LTT_TRACE_FAST |
191 | #include <ltt/ltt-facility-user_myfacility.h> |
192 | |
193 | - Add a call following the trace_user_myfacility_myevent function found in |
194 | /usr/include/ltt/ltt-facility-user_myfacility.h in your program. |
195 | For instance : |
196 | trace_user_myfacility_myevent(__FILE__, __func__, __LINE__, 1234, (void*)0xF0F0F0F0); |
197 | |
198 | - Compile your application with at least these parameters to gcc (it is splitted |
199 | on two lines, joined by a "\") : |
200 | gcc -lltt-usertrace-fast -I /usr/src/usertrace-generic -o myapp myapp.c \ |
201 | /usr/src/usertrace-generic/ltt-facility-loader-user_myfacility.c |
202 | |
203 | It requires a supplementary operation when you take the trace : |
204 | - Start tracing (with lttctl) |
205 | - Start your application |
206 | - Let your application run... |
207 | - Stop tracing |
208 | - Move or copy /tmp/ltt-usertrace info your trace. |
209 | i.e., if your trace is in /tmp/trace1 : |
210 | su |
211 | mv /tmp/ltt-usertrace /tmp/trace1 |
212 | |
213 | |
214 | Then, to see only the user_myfacility events : |
215 | lttv -m textDump -t /tmp/trace1 -e "event.facility=user_myfacility" |
216 | |
217 | It will show, for example : |
218 | user_myfacility.myevent: 39507.805584526 (/ltt-usertrace/process-26174.26174.39236180500380_0), 15829, 15736, USER_MODE { "myapp.c", "main", 8, 1234, 0xf0f0f0f0 } |
219 | |
220 | |
221 | |
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222 | * Fun feature : function instrumentation |
223 | |
224 | Here is how to generate a full trace of you program function calls. |
225 | See the sample-instrument-fct.c example program. |
226 | |
227 | - Compile your application with at least these parameters to gcc (it is splitted |
228 | on two lines, joined by a "\") : |
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229 | gcc -g -finstrument-functions \ |
230 | -lltt-instrument-functions -o myapp myapp.c |
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231 | |
232 | To see what the final result looks like : |
233 | - Start tracing |
234 | - Start your application |
235 | - Stop tracing |
236 | Then, to see only the function_entry and function_exit events : |
237 | lttv -m textDump -t /tmp/trace1 -e "event.facility=user_generic & (event.name=function_entry & event.name=function_exit)" |
238 | |
239 | It will show, for example : |
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240 | user_generic.function_entry: 59329.709939111 (/ltt-usertrace/process-26202.0.39949996866578_0), 19250, 18581, USER_MODE { 0x8048454, 0x80484c2 } |
241 | user_generic.function_exit: 59329.709944613 (/ltt-usertrace/process-26202.0.39949996866578_0), 19250, 18581, USER_MODE { 0x8048454, 0x80484c2 } |
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242 | |
243 | you can then use (from the binutils package) |
244 | addr2line -e sample-instrument-fct -i -f 0x8048454 |
245 | Which shows : |
246 | test_function |
247 | /usr/src/usertrace-generic/sample-instrument-fct.c:12 |
248 | |
249 | The lookup in LTTV through libbfd has not been implemented yet. |
250 | |
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251 | |
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252 | * Instrumentation of a java program |
253 | |
254 | See the java/ directory of this package. You will have to create a C library |
255 | that holds the tracing functions, following the java-instrument-string.c. It has |
256 | to be called from the Java code as shown in Sample.java. |
257 | |
258 | The generate.sh scripts compiles and executes the Java program with the JNI |
259 | tracing library. |
260 | |