X-Git-Url: http://git.lttng.org./?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fman%2Flttng-ust.3;h=61efa5094611d39859a88761dff90cb4eabfccc6;hb=fc0ec7f9751f28ca83d7452972e1aa1a41f6e73e;hp=26841d02e3f89ebf6ba9acdeac0b74867360c30f;hpb=cf949d071aeea0f97d3df0946de383a01dbcc393;p=lttng-ust.git diff --git a/doc/man/lttng-ust.3 b/doc/man/lttng-ust.3 index 26841d02..61efa509 100644 --- a/doc/man/lttng-ust.3 +++ b/doc/man/lttng-ust.3 @@ -17,7 +17,35 @@ port of the low-overhead tracing capabilities of the LTTng kernel tracer to user-space. The library "liblttng-ust" enables tracing of applications and libraries. -.SH "USAGE" +.SH "USAGE WITH TRACEF" +.PP +The simplest way to add instrumentation to your code is by far the +tracef() API. To do it, in a nutshell: + +1) #include + +2) /* in your code, use like a printf */ + tracef("my message, this integer %d", 1234); + +3) Link your program against liblttng-ust.so. + +4) Enable the UST event "lttng_ust_tracef:event" when tracing with the + following sequence of commands from lttng-tools: + + lttng create; lttng enable-event -u "lttng_ust_tracef:event"; lttng start + [... run your program ...] + lttng stop; lttng view + +That's it! + +If you want to have more flexibility and control on the event names, +payload typing, etc, you can continue reading on and use the tracepoints +below. "tracef()" is there for quick and dirty ad hoc instrumentation, +whereas tracepoint.h is meant for thorough instrumentation of a code +base to be integrated with an upstream project. +.PP + +.SH "USAGE WITH TRACEPOINT" .PP The simple way to generate the lttng-ust tracepoint probes is to use the lttng-gen-tp(1) tool. See the lttng-gen-tp(1) manpage for explanation. @@ -33,9 +61,13 @@ script, through an example: .nf To create a tracepoint provider, within a build tree similar to -examples/easy-ust installed with lttng-ust documentation, a -sample_component_provider.h for the general layout. This manpage will -focus on the various types that can be recorded into a trace event: +examples/easy-ust installed with lttng-ust documentation, see +sample_component_provider.h for the general layout. You will need to +define TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES before including your tracepoint +provider probe in one source file of your application. See tp.c from +easy-ust for an example of a tracepoint probe source file. This manpage +will focus on the various types that can be recorded into a trace +event: TRACEPOINT_EVENT( /* @@ -342,6 +374,13 @@ Virtual process ID: process ID as seen from the point of view of the process namespace. .PP +.PP +.IP "ip" +Instruction pointer: Enables recording of the exact location where a tracepoint +was emitted. Can be used to reverse-lookup the source location that caused the +event to be emitted. +.PP + .PP .IP "procname" Thread name, as set by exec() or prctl(). It is recommended that @@ -355,6 +394,33 @@ Pthread identifier. Can be used on architectures where pthread_t maps nicely to an unsigned long type. .PP +.SH "BASE ADDRESS STATEDUMP (Experimental feature)" + +.PP +Warning: This is an experimental feature known to cause deadlocks when the +traced application uses fork, clone or daemon. Only use it for debugging and +testing. Do NOT use it in production. + +If an application that uses liblttng-ust.so becomes part of a session, +information about its currently loaded shared objects will be traced to the +session at session-enable time. To record this information, the following event +needs to be enabled: +.PP +.IP "ust_baddr_statedump:soinfo" +This event is used to trace a currently loaded shared object. The base address +(where the dynamic linker has placed the shared object) is recorded in the +"baddr" field. The path to the shared object gets recorded in the +"sopath" field (as string). The file size of the loaded object (in +bytes) is recorded to the "size" field and its time of last modification +(in seconds since Epoch) is recorded in the "mtime" field. +.PP +If the event above is enabled, a series of "ust_baddr_statedump:soinfo" +events is recorded at session-enable time. It represents the state of +currently loaded shared objects for the traced process. If this +information gets combined with the lttng-ust-dl(3) instrumentation, all +aspects of dynamic loading that are relevant for symbol and +line number lookup are traced by LTTng. +.PP .SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" .PP @@ -371,12 +437,15 @@ specified in milliseconds. The value 0 means "don't wait". The value recommended for applications with time constraints on the process startup time. .PP +.IP "LTTNG_UST_WITH_EXPERIMENTAL_BADDR_STATEDUMP" +Experimentally allow liblttng-ust to perform a base-address statedump on session-enable. +.PP .SH "SEE ALSO" .PP lttng-gen-tp(1), lttng(1), babeltrace(1), lttng-ust-cyg-profile(3), -lttng-sessiond(8) +lttng-ust-dl(3), lttng-sessiond(8) .PP .SH "COMPATIBILITY"