Documentation: fix manpage typo
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1.TH "LTTNG-UST" "3" "February 16, 2012" "" ""
2
3.SH "NAME"
4lttng-ust \(em Linux Trace Toolkit Next Generation User-Space Tracer 2.x
5
6.SH "SYNOPSIS"
7
8.PP
9.nf
10Link liblttng-ust.so with applications, following this manpage.
11.fi
12.SH "DESCRIPTION"
13
14.PP
15LTTng-UST, the Linux Trace Toolkit Next Generation Userspace Tracer, is a
16port of the low-overhead tracing capabilities of the LTTng kernel tracer
17to user-space. The library "liblttng-ust" enables tracing of
18applications and libraries.
19
20.SH "USAGE WITH TRACEF"
21.PP
22The simplest way to add instrumentation to your code is by far the
23tracef() API. To do it, in a nutshell:
24
251) #include <lttng/tracef.h>
26
272) /* in your code, use like a printf */
28 tracef("my message, this integer %d", 1234);
29
303) Link your program against liblttng-ust.so.
31
324) Enable UST events when tracing with the following sequence of commands
33 from lttng-tools:
34
35 lttng create
36 lttng enable-event -u -a
37 lttng start
38 [... run your program ...]
39 lttng stop
40 lttng view
41
42That's it!
43
44If you want to have more flexibility and control on the event names,
45payload typing, etc, you can continue reading on and use the tracepoints
46below. "tracef()" is there for quick and dirty ad hoc instrumentation,
47whereas tracepoint.h is meant for thorough instrumentation of a code
48base to be integrated with an upstream project.
49.PP
50
51.SH "USAGE WITH TRACELOG"
52.PP
53If you want to migrate existing logging (info, errors, ...)
54to LTTng UST, you can use the tracelog() interface.
55To do it, in a nutshell:
56
571) #include <lttng/tracelog.h>
58
592) /* in your code, use like a printf, with extra loglevel info. */
60 tracelog(TRACE_INFO, "Message with integer %d", 1234);
61
623) Link your program against liblttng-ust.so.
63
644) Enable UST events when tracing with the following sequence of commands
65 from lttng-tools:
66
67 lttng create
68 lttng enable-event -u "lttng_ust_tracelog:*"
69 lttng start
70 [... run your program ...]
71 lttng stop
72 lttng view
73
74That's it!
75
76You can replace the enable-event line above with a selection of
77loglevels, e.g.:
78
79 lttng enable-event -u -a --loglevel TRACE_INFO
80
81Which will gather all events from TRACE_INFO and more important
82loglevels.
83
84.PP
85
86.SH "USAGE WITH TRACEPOINT"
87.PP
88The simple way to generate the lttng-ust tracepoint probes is to use the
89lttng-gen-tp(1) tool. See the lttng-gen-tp(1) manpage for explanation.
90.PP
91
92.PP
93Here is the way to do it manually, without the lttng-gen-tp(1) helper
94script, through an example:
95.PP
96
97.SH "CREATION OF TRACEPOINT PROVIDER"
98
99.nf
100
101To create a tracepoint provider, within a build tree similar to
102examples/easy-ust installed with lttng-ust documentation, see
103sample_component_provider.h for the general layout. You will need to
104define TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES before including your tracepoint
105provider probe in one source file of your application. See tp.c from
106easy-ust for an example of a tracepoint probe source file. This manpage
107will focus on the various types that can be recorded into a trace
108event:
109
110TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
111 /*
112 * provider name, not a variable but a string starting with a
113 * letter and containing either letters, numbers or underscores.
114 * Needs to be the same as TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER. Needs to
115 * follow the namespacing guide-lines in lttng/tracepoint.h:
116 *
117 * Must be included before include tracepoint provider
118 * ex.: project_event
119 * ex.: project_component_event
120 *
121 * Optional company name goes here
122 * ex.: com_efficios_project_component_event
123 *
124 * In this example, "sample" is the project, and "component" is the
125 * component.
126 */
127 sample_component,
128
129 /*
130 * tracepoint name, characters permitted follow the same
131 * constraints as the provider name. The name of this example
132 * event is "sample_event".
133 */
134 sample_event,
135
136 /*
137 * TP_ARGS macro contains the arguments passed for the tracepoint
138 * it is in the following format
139 * TP_ARGS(type1, name1, type2, name2, ... type10,
140 name10)
141 * where there can be from zero to ten elements.
142 * typeN is the datatype, such as int, struct or double **.
143 * name is the variable name (in "int myInt" the name would be
144 * myint)
145 * TP_ARGS() is valid to mean no arguments
146 * TP_ARGS(void) is valid too
147 */
148 TP_ARGS(int, anint, int, netint, long *, values,
149 char *, text, size_t, textlen,
150 double, doublearg, float, floatarg),
151
152 /*
153 * TP_FIELDS describes how to write the fields of the trace event.
154 * You can put expressions in the "argument expression" area,
155 * typically using the input arguments from TP_ARGS.
156 */
157 TP_FIELDS(
158 /*
159 * ctf_integer: standard integer field.
160 * args: (type, field name, argument expression)
161 */
162 ctf_integer(int, intfield, anint)
163 ctf_integer(long, longfield, anint)
164
165 /*
166 * ctf_integer_hex: integer field printed as hexadecimal.
167 * args: (type, field name, argument expression)
168 */
169 ctf_integer_hex(int, intfield2, anint)
170
171 /*
172 * ctf_integer_network: integer field in network byte
173 * order. (_hex: printed as hexadecimal too)
174 * args: (type, field name, argument expression)
175 */
176 ctf_integer_network(int, netintfield, netint)
177 ctf_integer_network_hex(int, netintfieldhex, netint)
178
179 /*
180 * ctf_array: a statically-sized array.
181 * args: (type, field name, argument expression, value)
182 */
183 ctf_array(long, arrfield1, values, 3)
184
185 /*
186 * ctf_array_text: a statically-sized array, printed as
187 * a string. No need to be terminated by a null
188 * character.
189 * Behavior is undefined if "text" argument is NULL.
190 */
191 ctf_array_text(char, arrfield2, text, 10)
192
193 /*
194 * ctf_sequence: a dynamically-sized array.
195 * args: (type, field name, argument expression,
196 * type of length expression, length expression)
197 * The "type of length expression" needs to be an
198 * unsigned type. As a reminder, "unsigned char" should
199 * be preferred to "char", since the signedness of
200 * "char" is implementation-defined.
201 * Behavior is undefined if "text" argument is NULL.
202 */
203 ctf_sequence(char, seqfield1, text,
204 size_t, textlen)
205
206 /*
207 * ctf_sequence_text: a dynamically-sized array, printed
208 * as string. No need to be null-terminated.
209 * Behavior is undefined if "text" argument is NULL.
210 */
211 ctf_sequence_text(char, seqfield2, text,
212 size_t, textlen)
213
214 /*
215 * ctf_string: null-terminated string.
216 * args: (field name, argument expression)
217 * Behavior is undefined if "text" argument is NULL.
218 */
219 ctf_string(stringfield, text)
220
221 /*
222 * ctf_float: floating-point number.
223 * args: (type, field name, argument expression)
224 */
225 ctf_float(float, floatfield, floatarg)
226 ctf_float(double, doublefield, doublearg)
227 )
228)
229
230There can be an arbitrary number of tracepoint providers within an
231application, but they must each have their own provider name. Duplicate
232provider names are not allowed.
233
234.fi
235
236.SH "ASSIGNING LOGLEVEL TO EVENTS"
237
238.nf
239
240Optionally, a loglevel can be assigned to a TRACEPOINT_EVENT using the
241following construct:
242
243 TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(< [com_company_]project[_component] >,
244 < event >, < loglevel_name >)
245
246The first field is the provider name, the second field is the name of
247the tracepoint, and the third field is the loglevel name. A
248TRACEPOINT_EVENT should be declared prior to the the TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL
249for a given tracepoint name. The TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER must be already
250declared before declaring a TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL.
251
252The loglevels go from 0 to 14. Higher numbers imply the most verbosity
253(higher event throughput expected.
254
255Loglevels 0 through 6, and loglevel 14, match syslog(3) loglevels
256semantic. Loglevels 7 through 13 offer more fine-grained selection of
257debug information.
258
259 TRACE_EMERG 0
260 system is unusable
261
262 TRACE_ALERT 1
263 action must be taken immediately
264
265 TRACE_CRIT 2
266 critical conditions
267
268 TRACE_ERR 3
269 error conditions
270
271 TRACE_WARNING 4
272 warning conditions
273
274 TRACE_NOTICE 5
275 normal, but significant, condition
276
277 TRACE_INFO 6
278 informational message
279
280 TRACE_DEBUG_SYSTEM 7
281 debug information with system-level scope (set of programs)
282
283 TRACE_DEBUG_PROGRAM 8
284 debug information with program-level scope (set of processes)
285
286 TRACE_DEBUG_PROCESS 9
287 debug information with process-level scope (set of modules)
288
289 TRACE_DEBUG_MODULE 10
290 debug information with module (executable/library) scope (set of
291 units)
292
293 TRACE_DEBUG_UNIT 11
294 debug information with compilation unit scope (set of functions)
295
296 TRACE_DEBUG_FUNCTION 12
297 debug information with function-level scope
298
299 TRACE_DEBUG_LINE 13
300 debug information with line-level scope (TRACEPOINT_EVENT default)
301
302 TRACE_DEBUG 14
303 debug-level message
304
305See lttng(1) for information on how to use LTTng-UST loglevels.
306
307.fi
308
309.SH "ADDING TRACEPOINTS TO YOUR CODE"
310
311.nf
312
313Include the provider header in each C files you plan to instrument,
314following the building/linking directives in the next section.
315
316For instance, add within a function:
317
318 tracepoint(ust_tests_hello, tptest, i, netint, values,
319 text, strlen(text), dbl, flt);
320
321As a call to the tracepoint. It will only be activated when requested by
322lttng(1) through lttng-sessiond(8).
323
324Even though LTTng-UST supports tracepoint() call site duplicates having
325the same provider and event name, it is recommended to use a
326provider event name pair only once within the source code to help
327map events back to their call sites when analyzing the trace.
328
329Sometimes arguments to the probe are expensive to compute (e.g.
330take call stack). To avoid the computation when the tracepoint is
331disabled one can use more 'low level' tracepoint_enabled() and
332do_tracepoint() macros as following:
333
334 if (tracepoint_enabled(ust_tests_hello, tptest)) {
335 /* prepare arguments */
336 do_tracepoint(ust_tests_hello, tptest, i, netint, values,
337 text, strlen(text), dbl, flt);
338 }
339
340Here do_tracepoint() doesn't contain check if the tracepoint is enabled.
341Using tracepoint() in such scenario is dangerous since it also contains
342enabled check and thus race condition is possible in the following code
343if the tracepoint has been enabled after check in tracepoint_enabled()
344but before tracepoint():
345
346 if (tracepoint_enabled(provider, name)) { /* tracepoint is disabled */
347 prepare(args);
348 }
349 /* tracepoint is enabled by 'lttng' tool */
350 tracepoint(provider, name, args); /* args wasn't prepared properly */
351
352Note also that neither tracepoint_enabled() nor do_tracepoint() have
353STAP_PROBEV() call so if you need it you should emit this call yourself.
354
355.fi
356
357.SH "BUILDING/LINKING THE TRACEPOINT PROVIDER"
358
359.nf
360There are 2 ways to compile the Tracepoint Provider with the
361application: either statically or dynamically. Please follow
362carefully:
363
364 1) Compile the Tracepoint Provider with the application, either
365 directly or through a static library (.a):
366 - Into exactly one object of your application, define
367 "TRACEPOINT_DEFINE" and include the tracepoint provider.
368 - Use "\-I." for the compilation unit containing the tracepoint
369 provider include (e.g., tp.c).
370 - Link the application with "\-llttng-ust" and "\-ldl".
371 - Include the tracepoint provider header into all C files using
372 the provider.
373 - Examples:
374 - doc/examples/easy-ust/ sample.c sample_component_provider.h tp.c
375 Makefile
376 - doc/examples/hello-static-lib/ hello.c tp.c ust_test_hello.h Makefile
377
378 2) Compile the Tracepoint Provider separately from the application,
379 using dynamic linking:
380 - Into exactly one object of your application: define
381 "TRACEPOINT_DEFINE" _and_ also define
382 "TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE", then include the tracepoint
383 provider header.
384 - Include the tracepoint provider header into all instrumented C
385 files that use the provider.
386 - Compile the tracepoint provider with "\-I.".
387 - Link the tracepoint provider with "\-llttng-ust".
388 - Link application with "\-ldl".
389 - Set a LD_PRELOAD environment to preload the tracepoint provider
390 shared object before starting the application when tracing is
391 needed. Another way is to dlopen the tracepoint probe when needed
392 by the application.
393 - Example:
394 - doc/examples/demo demo.c tp*.c ust_tests_demo*.h demo-trace Makefile
395
396 - Note about dlclose() usage: it is not safe to use dlclose on a
397 provider shared object that is being actively used for tracing due
398 to a lack of reference counting from lttng-ust to the used shared
399 object.
400 - Enable instrumentation and control tracing with the "lttng" command
401 from lttng-tools. See lttng-tools doc/quickstart.txt.
402 - Note for C++ support: although an application instrumented with
403 tracepoints can be compiled with g++, tracepoint probes should be
404 compiled with gcc (only tested with gcc so far).
405
406.fi
407
408.SH "USING LTTNG UST WITH DAEMONS"
409
410.nf
411Some extra care is needed when using liblttng-ust with daemon
412applications that call fork(), clone(), or BSD rfork() without a
413following exec() family system call. The library "liblttng-ust-fork.so"
414needs to be preloaded for the application (launch with e.g.
415LD_PRELOAD=liblttng-ust-fork.so appname).
416
417.fi
418
419.SH "CONTEXT"
420
421.PP
422Context information can be prepended by the tracer before each, or some,
423events. The following context information is supported by LTTng-UST:
424.PP
425
426.PP
427.IP "vtid"
428Virtual thread ID: thread ID as seen from the point of view of the
429process namespace.
430.PP
431
432.PP
433.IP "vpid"
434Virtual process ID: process ID as seen from the point of view of the
435process namespace.
436.PP
437
438.PP
439.IP "ip"
440Instruction pointer: Enables recording of the exact location where a tracepoint
441was emitted. Can be used to reverse-lookup the source location that caused the
442event to be emitted.
443.PP
444
445.PP
446.IP "procname"
447Thread name, as set by exec() or prctl(). It is recommended that
448programs set their thread name with prctl() before hitting the first
449tracepoint for that thread.
450.PP
451
452.PP
453.IP "pthread_id"
454Pthread identifier. Can be used on architectures where pthread_t maps
455nicely to an unsigned long type.
456.PP
457
458.SH "BASE ADDRESS STATEDUMP"
459
460.PP
461If an application that uses liblttng-ust.so becomes part of a session,
462information about its currently loaded shared objects will be traced to the
463session at session-enable time. To record this information, the following event
464needs to be enabled:
465.PP
466.IP "ust_baddr_statedump:soinfo"
467This event is used to trace a currently loaded shared object. The base address
468(where the dynamic linker has placed the shared object) is recorded in the
469"baddr" field. The path to the shared object gets recorded in the
470"sopath" field (as string). The file size of the loaded object (in
471bytes) is recorded to the "size" field and its time of last modification
472(in seconds since Epoch) is recorded in the "mtime" field.
473.PP
474If the event above is enabled, a series of "ust_baddr_statedump:soinfo"
475events is recorded at session-enable time. It represents the state of
476currently loaded shared objects for the traced process. If this
477information gets combined with the lttng-ust-dl(3) instrumentation, all
478aspects of dynamic loading that are relevant for symbol and
479line number lookup are traced by LTTng.
480.PP
481.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
482
483.PP
484.IP "LTTNG_UST_DEBUG"
485Activate liblttng-ust debug and error output.
486.PP
487.IP "LTTNG_UST_REGISTER_TIMEOUT"
488The environment variable "LTTNG_UST_REGISTER_TIMEOUT" can be used to
489specify how long the applications should wait for sessiond
490"registration done" command before proceeding to execute the main
491program. The default is 3000ms (3 seconds). The timeout value is
492specified in milliseconds. The value 0 means "don't wait". The value
493\-1 means "wait forever". Setting this environment variable to 0 is
494recommended for applications with time constraints on the process
495startup time.
496.PP
497.IP "LTTNG_UST_WITHOUT_BADDR_STATEDUMP"
498Prevent liblttng-ust to perform a base-address statedump on session-enable.
499.PP
500.IP "LTTNG_UST_GETCPU_PLUGIN"
501Used by the getcpu override plugin system. The environment variable
502provides the path to the shared object which will act as the getcpu override
503plugin. An example can be found in the lttng-ust documentation under
504examples/getcpu-override .
505.PP
506.IP "LTTNG_UST_CLOCK_PLUGIN"
507Used by the clock override plugin system. The environment variable
508provides the path to the shared object which will act as the clock override
509plugin. An example can be found in the lttng-ust documentation under
510doc/examples/clock-override .
511.PP
512
513.SH "SEE ALSO"
514
515.PP
516lttng-gen-tp(1), lttng(1), babeltrace(1), lttng-ust-cyg-profile(3),
517lttng-ust-dl(3), lttng-sessiond(8)
518.PP
519
520.SH "COMPATIBILITY"
521
522.PP
523Older lttng-ust libraries reject more recent, and incompatible, probe
524providers. Newer lttng-ust libraries accept older probe providers, even
525though some newer features might not be available with those providers.
526.PP
527
528.SH "BUGS"
529
530.PP
531LTTng-UST 2.0 and 2.1 lttng-ust libraries do not check for probe
532provider version compatibility. This can lead to out-of-bound accesses
533when using a more recent probe provider with an older lttng-ust library.
534These error only trigger when tracing is active. This issue has been
535fixed in LTTng-UST 2.2.
536
537If you encounter any issues or usability problem, please report it on
538our mailing list <lttng-dev@lists.lttng.org> to help improve this
539project.
540.SH "CREDITS"
541
542liblttng-ust is distributed under the GNU Lesser General Public License
543version 2.1. The headers are distributed under the MIT license.
544.PP
545See http://lttng.org for more information on the LTTng project.
546.PP
547Mailing list for support and development: <lttng-dev@lists.lttng.org>.
548.PP
549You can find us on IRC server irc.oftc.net (OFTC) in #lttng.
550.PP
551.SH "THANKS"
552
553Thanks to Ericsson for funding this work, providing real-life use-cases,
554and testing.
555
556Special thanks to Michel Dagenais and the DORSAL laboratory at
557Polytechnique de Montreal for the LTTng journey.
558.PP
559.SH "AUTHORS"
560
561.PP
562liblttng-ust was originally written by Mathieu Desnoyers, with additional
563contributions from various other people. It is currently maintained by
564Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>.
565.PP
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