X-Git-Url: http://git.lttng.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=README;h=abbfd27746926f6a1426e81ee96b1c4c9e53a4e3;hb=730e5783e713c53b1c1850e0dc44096514ce75da;hp=e6a0d4a043d85611117b90440af27e757137c29b;hpb=6b40862968f9211983918d0e99cbe3656a0dd600;p=lttng-modules.git diff --git a/README b/README index e6a0d4a0..abbfd277 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ LTTng 2.0 modules Mathieu Desnoyers -July 19, 2011 +February 8, 2012 LTTng 2.0 kernel modules build against a vanilla or distribution kernel, without need for additional patches. Other features: @@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ need for additional patches. Other features: - Produces CTF (Common Trace Format) natively, (http://www.efficios.com/ctf) - Tracepoints, Function tracer, CPU Performance Monitoring Unit (PMU) - counters and kprobes support, + counters, kprobes, and kretprobes support, - Integrated interface for both kernel and userspace tracing, - Have the ability to attach "context" information to events in the trace (e.g. any PMU counter, pid, ppid, tid, comm name, etc). @@ -22,24 +22,39 @@ access to your full kernel source tree), and use: % make # make modules_install +# depmod -a If you need to specify the target directory to the kernel you want to build against, use: % KERNELDIR=path_to_kernel_dir make # KERNELDIR=path_to_kernel_dir make modules_install +# depmod -a kernel_version Use lttng-tools to control the tracer. LTTng tools should automatically load the kernel modules when needed. Use Babeltrace to print traces as a human-readable text log. These tools are available at the following URL: http://lttng.org/lttng2.0 -Please note that the LTTng-UST 2.0 (user-space tracing counterpart of LTTng 2.0) -is still in active development and not released yet. - -So far, it has been tested on vanilla kernels 2.6.38 and 2.6.39 (on x86 at the -moment). 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. +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 +"Trace Syscalls" feature should be enabled too. + +* Note about Perf PMU counters support + +Each PMU counter has its zero value set when it is attached to a context with +add-context. Therefore, it is normal that the same counters attached to both the +stream context and event context show different values for a given event; what +matters is that they increment at the same rate.