human-readable text log. These tools are available at the following URL:
http://lttng.org/lttng2.0
-So far, it has been tested on vanilla Linux kernels 2.6.38, 2.6.39 and 3.0 (on
-x86 32/64-bit, and powerpc 32-bit at the moment, build tested on ARM). It should
-work fine with newer kernels and other architectures, but expect build issues
-with kernels older than 2.6.36. The clock source currently used is the standard
-gettimeofday (slower, less scalable and less precise than the LTTng 0.x clocks).
-Support for LTTng 0.x clocks will be added back soon into LTTng 2.0. Please
-note that lttng-modules 2.0 can build on a Linux kernel patched with the LTTng
-0.x patchset, but the lttng-modules 2.0 replace the lttng-modules 0.x, so both
-tracers cannot be installed at the same time for a given kernel version.
+So far, it has been tested on vanilla Linux kernels 2.6.38, 2.6.39, 3.0,
+3.1, 3.2, 3.3 (on x86 32/64-bit, and powerpc 32-bit at the moment, build
+tested on ARM). It should work fine with newer kernels and other
+architectures, but expect build issues with kernels older than 2.6.36.
+The clock source currently used is the standard gettimeofday (slower,
+less scalable and less precise than the LTTng 0.x clocks). Support for
+LTTng 0.x clocks will be added back soon into LTTng 2.0. Please note
+that lttng-modules 2.0 can build on a Linux kernel patched with the
+LTTng 0.x patchset, but the lttng-modules 2.0 replace the lttng-modules
+0.x, so both tracers cannot be installed at the same time for a given
+kernel version.
LTTng-modules depends on having kallsyms enabled in the kernel it is
built against. Ideally, if you want to have system call tracing, the