X-Git-Url: http://git.lttng.org./?a=blobdiff_plain;f=trunk%2Flttv%2Fdoc%2Fdeveloper%2Fust.html;h=181408ace862a217d79de454a3dd57fe7383edf8;hb=86f3d84b4d12bc599df8dca2cc8d954746d67942;hp=b607f818de574ba3e490081aa542308753b65238;hpb=e6f8d5e66ab0feedaf3daa6736dcaf3caaaff00c;p=lttv.git diff --git a/trunk/lttv/doc/developer/ust.html b/trunk/lttv/doc/developer/ust.html index b607f818..181408ac 100644 --- a/trunk/lttv/doc/developer/ust.html +++ b/trunk/lttv/doc/developer/ust.html @@ -1,49 +1,21 @@ - - -
--A user-space application may contain static instrumentation, and be linked with -an associated runtime library, in order to produce an execution trace. User -space Tracepoints and Markers, analogous to Kernel Tracepoints and Markers, -define program locations and arguments provided. Probes may then be connected to -each Tracepoint and Marker before they are activated. The probes will typically -call LTTng user-space event writing functions. - -
-When the instrumented application starts, a pipe is opened to allow external -tracing control, asynchronous notification is requested when commands arrive in -the pipe, and a signal handler is installed for SIGIO (or a carefully chosen -chainable signal number). Every time such signal is received, the runtime -library checks for commands received on the external tracing control pipe. The -recognized commands are: + +
+ --The application may also spontaneously provide information to the pipe: +
-In addition, the tracing control application should be notified when the -application exits (to save the content of buffers if the application is -crashing). Such notification may be obtained through utrace. -
-This tracing scheme plans to use a direct function call to tracing into buffers +Earlier versions of LTTng contained simple, system call based, tracepoints and fast, +user-space buffered, tracepoints for user-space tracing. During the kernel inclusion phase +of LTTng, extensive rework and modularization of the kernel tracing portion was undertaken. +This phase is well under way and several portions have been included already in the mainline kernel. +The rework of the kernel tracing infrastructure will shortly thereafter be ported to fast user-space +tracing. +This fast user-space tracing scheme uses a direct function call to write events into buffers mapped in user-space. This should be an order of magnitude faster than the current Dtrace implementation (c.f. Dtrace information @@ -53,11 +25,88 @@ a function call vs the int3 approach is available at Markers vs int3 performance comparison (see "Conclusion"). +
+Libmarkers will provide applications with user-space Markers and Tracepoints +declarations, such that programmers will be able to insert Markers and Tracepoints in their +libraries and applications. User-space Tracepoints and Markers, analogous to Kernel Tracepoints and Markers, +define program locations and arguments provided. Libmarkers will also +provide utility functions to enumerate, activate and deactivate tracepoints and markers in the +process, and to associate probes with any tracepoint or marker. +
+Libtracing will provide the infrastructure to allocate buffers, define event types, write event +metadata and data to the buffers, and get notification when buffers are full. The initial implementation +will simply use one set of buffers per process. Subsequent more optimized versions will allocate one +set of buffers per thread; one set of buffers per CPU would be desirable but user-space programs cannot check +or control CPU migration without resorting to more costly bus locking operations or system calls. The library +provides a generic probe for markers which, when connected, generates an event in the buffer each time the marker +is encountered. + +
+Finally, libtracingcontrol opens a connection allowing a separate process (e.g. LTTng daemon, Eclipse, GDB) to control the +tracing within the application. Through this connection, the remote process can: + +
Tracing of Java application is planned to be done through a JNI interface. Linking standard low-level C tracing library to the application within a JNI adaptation class will be required to trace Java events. This has been prototyped -in the past. The work is available here for older LTTng versions : +in the past. The work is available +here +for older LTTng versions. +
+The principle of operation of libtracingcontrol is that +when the instrumented application starts, a pipe is opened to allow external +tracing control. Asynchronous notification is requested when commands arrive in +the pipe, and a signal handler is installed for SIGIO (or a carefully chosen +chainable signal number). Every time such signal is received, the runtime +library checks for commands received on the external tracing control pipe. +The application may also spontaneously provide information to the remote control process +through the pipe: + ++In addition, the tracing control application should be notified when the +application exits (to save the content of buffers if the application is +crashing) or forks (to trace the child as well if needed). +Such notification may be obtained through utrace. + +
+In summary, a user-space application linking with libmarkers may contain static +instrumentation, Tracepoints and Markers, just like the kernel with Kernel Markers and Tracepoints. +The application can exploit this instrumentation itself or link with libtracing and have tracing probes +connected to each Marker. Other instrumentation mechanisms, like the GCC instrument-function option, or hooks +inserted by a JIT compiler, can also use libtracing to define and write event to the trace buffers. +Finally, libtracingcontrol, analogous to GDB stubs, allows the remote control of the tracing by remote +monitoring or debugging frameworks. - - +