lttng-enable-event(1)
=====================
+:revdate: 14 June 2021
NAME
----
-lttng-enable-event - Create or enable LTTng event rules
+lttng-enable-event - Create or enable LTTng recording event rules
SYNOPSIS
--------
-Create or enable Linux kernel event rules:
+Create or enable one or more recording event rules to match Linux kernel
+tracepoint or system call events:
[verse]
-*lttng* ['linkgenoptions:(GENERAL OPTIONS)'] *enable-event* option:--kernel
- [option:--probe='SOURCE' | option:--function='SOURCE' | option:--syscall]
- [option:--filter='EXPR'] [option:--session='SESSION']
- [option:--channel='CHANNEL'] 'EVENT'[,'EVENT']...
+*lttng* ['linkgenoptions:(GENERAL OPTIONS)'] *enable-event* option:--kernel [option:--tracepoint | option:--syscall]
+ (option:--all | 'NAME'[,'NAME']...) [option:--filter='EXPR']
+ [option:--session='SESSION'] [option:--channel='CHANNEL']
-Create or enable an "all" Linux kernel event rule:
+Create or enable a recording event rule to match Linux kernel events
+created from a dynamic instrumentation point:
[verse]
-*lttng* ['linkgenoptions:(GENERAL OPTIONS)'] *enable-event* option:--kernel option:--all [option:--syscall]
- [option:--filter='EXPR'] [option:--session='SESSION'] [option:--channel='CHANNEL']
+*lttng* ['linkgenoptions:(GENERAL OPTIONS)'] *enable-event* option:--kernel
+ (option:--probe='LOC' | option:--function='LOC' | option:--userspace-probe='LOC') 'RECORDNAME'
+ [option:--session='SESSION'] [option:--channel='CHANNEL']
-Create or enable application event rules:
+Create or enable one or more recording event rules to match
+user space tracepoint events:
[verse]
-*lttng* ['linkgenoptions:(GENERAL OPTIONS)'] *enable-event*
- (option:--userspace | option:--jul | option:--log4j | option:--python)
- [option:--filter='EXPR'] [option:--exclude='EVENT'[,'EVENT']...]
- [option:--loglevel='LOGLEVEL' | option:--loglevel-only='LOGLEVEL']
- [option:--session='SESSION'] [option:--channel='CHANNEL'] (option:--all | 'EVENT'[,'EVENT']...)
+*lttng* ['linkgenoptions:(GENERAL OPTIONS)'] *enable-event* option:--userspace [option:--tracepoint]
+ (option:--all | 'NAME'[,'NAME']...) [option:--exclude='XNAME'[,'XNAME']...]
+ [option:--loglevel='LOGLEVEL' | option:--loglevel-only='LOGLEVEL'] [option:--filter='EXPR']
+ [option:--session='SESSION'] [option:--channel='CHANNEL']
+Create or enable one or more recording event rules to match
+Java/Python logging events:
+
+[verse]
+*lttng* ['linkgenoptions:(GENERAL OPTIONS)'] *enable-event* (option:--jul | option:--log4j | option:--python)
+ [option:--tracepoint] (option:--all | 'NAME'[,'NAME']...)
+ [option:--loglevel='LOGLEVEL' | option:--loglevel-only='LOGLEVEL'] [option:--filter='EXPR']
+ [option:--session='SESSION'] [option:--channel='CHANNEL']
DESCRIPTION
-----------
-The `lttng enable-event` command can create a new event rule, or enable
-one or more existing and disabled ones.
+The `lttng enable-event` command does one of:
-An event rule created by `lttng enable-event` is a set of conditions
-that must be satisfied in order for an actual event to be emitted by
-an LTTng tracer when the execution of an application or the Linux kernel
-reaches an event source (tracepoint, system call, dynamic probe).
-Event sources can be listed with the man:lttng-list(1) command.
+* Create one or more recording event rules.
-The man:lttng-disable-event(1) command can be used to disable
-existing event rules.
+* Enable one or more disabled recording event rules.
++
+See the ``<<enable,Enable a disabled recording event rule>>'' section
+below.
-Event rules are always assigned to a channel when they are created. If
-the option:--channel option is omitted, a default channel named
-`channel0` is used (and created automatically if it does not exist for
-the specified domain in the selected tracing session).
+See man:lttng-concepts(7) to learn more about instrumentation points,
+events, recording event rules, and event records.
-If the option:--session option is omitted, the chosen channel is picked
-from the current tracing session.
+The recording event rule(s) to create or enable belong to:
-Events can be enabled while tracing is active
-(use man:lttng-start(1) to make a tracing session active).
+With the option:--session='SESSION' option::
+ The recording session named 'SESSION'.
+Without the option:--session option::
+ The current recording session (see man:lttng-concepts(7) to learn
+ more about the current recording session).
-Event source types
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Four types of event sources are available in the Linux kernel tracing
-domain (option:--kernel option):
+With the option:--channel='CHANNEL' option::
+ The channel named 'CHANNEL'.
-Tracepoint (option:--tracepoint option; default)::
- A Linux kernel tracepoint, that is, a static instrumentation point
- placed in the kernel source code. Standard tracepoints are designed
- and placed in the source code by developers and record useful
- payload fields.
+Without the option:--channel option::
+ The channel named `channel0`.
++
+If there's already a channel for the selected recording session and
+domain which isn't named `channel0`, the `enable-event` command fails.
+Otherwise, it automatically creates it.
-Dynamic probe (option:--probe option)::
- A Linux kernel kprobe, that is, an instrumentation point placed
- dynamically in the compiled kernel code. Dynamic probe events do not
- record any payload field.
+See the ``<<examples,EXAMPLES>>'' section below for usage examples.
-Function probe (option:--function option)::
- A Linux kernel kretprobe, that is, two instrumentation points placed
- dynamically where a function is entered and where it returns in the
- compiled kernel code. Function probe events do not record any
- payload field.
+List the recording event rules of a specific recording session
+and/or channel with the man:lttng-list(1) and man:lttng-status(1)
+commands.
-System call (option:--syscall option)::
- A Linux kernel system call. Two instrumentation points are
- statically placed where a system call function is entered and where
- it returns in the compiled kernel code. System call event sources
- record useful payload fields.
+Disable an enabled recording event rule with the
+man:lttng-disable-event(1) command.
-The application tracing domains (option:--userspace, option:--jul,
-option:--log4j, or option:--python options) only support tracepoints.
-In the cases of the JUL, Apache log4j, and Python domains, the event
-names correspond to _logger_ names.
+Overview of recording event rule conditions
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+For LTTng to emit and record an event{nbsp}__E__,{nbsp}__E__ must
+satisfy *all* the conditions of a recording event rule{nbsp}__ER__, that
+is:
-Understanding event rule conditions
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-When creating an event rule with `lttng enable-event`, conditions are
-specified using options. The logical conjunction (logical AND) of all
-those conditions must be true when an event source is reached by an
-application or by the Linux kernel in order for an actual event
-to be emitted by an LTTng tracer.
+Explicit conditions::
+ You set the following conditions when you create or
+ enable{nbsp}__ER__ with the `enable-event` command:
++
+--
+* The instrumentation point type from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__
+ has a specific type.
++
+See the ``<<inst-point-type-cond,Instrumentation point type
+condition>>'' section below.
-Any condition that is not explicitly specified on creation is considered
-a _don't care_.
+* A pattern matches the name of{nbsp}__E__ while another pattern
+ doesn't.
++
+See the ``<<event-name-cond,Event name condition>>'' section below.
-For example, consider the following commands:
+* The log level of the instrumentation point from which LTTng
+ creates{nbsp}__E__ is at least as severe as some value, or is exactly
+ some value.
++
+See the ``<<inst-point-log-level-cond,Instrumentation point log level
+condition>>'' section below.
-[role="term"]
-----
-$ lttng enable-event --userspace hello:world
-$ lttng enable-event --userspace hello:world --loglevel=TRACE_INFO
-----
+* The fields of the payload of{nbsp}__E__ and the current context fields
+ satisfy a filter expression.
++
+See the ``<<filter-cond,Event payload and context filter condition>>''
+section below.
+--
-Here, two event rules are created. The first one has a single condition:
-the tracepoint name must match `hello:world`. The second one has two
-conditions:
-
-* The tracepoint name must match `hello:world`, _and_
-* The tracepoint's defined log level must be at least as severe as
- the `TRACE_INFO` level.
-
-In this case, the second event rule is pointless because the first one
-is more general: it does not care about the tracepoint's log level.
-If an event source matching both event rules is reached by the
-application's execution, only one event is emitted.
-
-The available conditions for the Linux kernel domain are:
-
-* Tracepoint/system call name ('EVENT' argument with
- option:--tracepoint or option:--syscall options) or
- dynamic probe/function name/address
- (option:--probe or option:--function option's argument) which must
- match event source's equivalent.
-+
-You can use `*` characters at any place in the tracepoint or system
-call name as wildcards to match zero or more characters. To use a
-literal `*` character, use :escwc:.
-
-* Filter expression (option:--filter option) executed against the
- dynamic values of event fields at execution time that must evaluate
- to true. See the <<filter-syntax,Filter expression syntax>> section
- below for more information.
-
-The available conditions for the application domains are:
-
-* Tracepoint name ('EVENT' with option:--tracepoint option) which must
- match event source's equivalent.
-+
-You can use `*` characters at any place in the tracepoint name as
-wildcards to match zero or more characters. To use a literal `*`
-character, use :escwc:. When you create an event rule with a tracepoint
-name containing a wildcard, you can exclude specific tracepoint names
-from the match with the option:--exclude option.
-
-* Filter expression (option:--filter option) executed against the
- dynamic values of event fields at execution time that must evaluate
- to true. See the <<filter-syntax,Filter expression syntax>> section
- below for more information.
-* Event's log level that must be at least as severe as a given
- log level (option:--loglevel option) or match exactly a given log
- level (option:--loglevel-only option).
-
-When using `lttng enable-event` with a set of conditions that does not
-currently exist for the chosen tracing session, domain, and channel,
-a new event rule is created. Otherwise, the existing event rule is
-enabled if it is currently disabled
-(see man:lttng-disable-event(1)).
-
-The option:--all option can be used alongside the option:--tracepoint
-or option:--syscall options. When this option is used, no 'EVENT'
-argument must be specified. This option defines a single event rule
-matching _all_ the possible events of a given tracing domain for the
-chosen channel and tracing session. It is the equivalent of an 'EVENT'
-argument named `*` (wildcard).
-
-
-[[filter-syntax]]
-Filter expression syntax
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-Filter expressions can be specified with the option:--filter option
-when creating a new event rule. If the filter expression evaluates
-to true when executed against the dynamic values of an event's fields
-when tracing, the filtering condition passes.
-
-NOTE: Make sure to **single-quote** the filter expression when running
-the command from a shell, as filter expressions typically include
-characters having a special meaning for most shells.
-
-The filter expression syntax is very similar to C language conditional
-expressions (expressions that can be evaluated by an `if` statement).
-
-The following logical operators are supported:
-
-[width="40%",options="header"]
-|=====================================
-| Name | Syntax
-| Logical negation (NOT) | `!a`
-| Logical conjunction (AND) | `a && b`
-| Logical disjunction (OR) | `a \|\| b`
-|=====================================
-
-The following comparison operators/relational operators are supported:
-
-[width="40%",options="header"]
-|====================================
-| Name | Syntax
-| Equal to | `a == b`
-| Not equal to | `a != b`
-| Greater than | `a > b`
-| Less than | `a < b`
-| Greater than or equal to | `a >= b`
-| Less than or equal to | `a <= b`
-|====================================
-
-The arithmetic and bitwise operators are :not: supported.
-
-The precedence table of the operators above is the same as the one of
-the C language. Parentheses are supported to bypass this.
-
-The dynamic value of an event field is read by using its name as
-a C identifier.
-
-The dynamic value of a statically-known context field is read by
-prefixing its name with `$ctx.`. Statically-known context fields are
-context fields added to channels without the `$app.` prefix using the
+Implicit conditions::
++
+--
+* _ER_ itself is enabled.
++
+A recording event rule is enabled on creation.
++
+Enable a disabled recording event rule with the `enable-event` command.
+
+* The channel to which{nbsp}__ER__ is attached is enabled.
++
+A channel is enabled on creation.
++
+Enable a disabled channel with the man:lttng-enable-channel(1) command.
+
+* The recording session of{nbsp}__ER__ is active (started).
++
+A recording session is inactive (stopped) on creation.
++
+Start an inactive recording session with the man:lttng-start(1) command.
+
+* The process for which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__ is allowed to record
+ events.
++
+All processes are allowed to record events on recording session
+creation.
++
+Use the man:lttng-track(1) and man:lttng-untrack(1) commands to select
+which processes are allowed to record events based on specific process
+attributes.
+--
+
+The dedicated command-line options of most conditions are optional: if
+you don't specify the option, the associated condition is always
+satisfied.
+
+
+[[inst-point-type-cond]]
+Instrumentation point type condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+An event{nbsp}__E__ satisfies the instrumentation point type condition
+of a recording event rule if the instrumentation point from which LTTng
+creates{nbsp}__E__ is:
+
+For the Linux kernel tracing domain (option:--kernel option)::
+ With the option:--tracepoint option or without any other instrumentation point type option:::
+ An LTTng kernel tracepoint, that is, a statically defined point
+ in the source code of the kernel image or of a kernel module
+ with LTTng kernel tracer macros.
++
+As of LTTng{nbsp}{lttng_version}, this is the default instrumentation
+point type of the Linux kernel tracing domain, but this may change in
+the future.
++
+List the available Linux kernel tracepoints with `lttng list --kernel`.
+See man:lttng-list(1) to learn more.
+
+ With the option:--syscall option:::
+ The entry and exit of a Linux kernel system call.
++
+List the available Linux kernel system call instrumentation points with
+`lttng list --kernel --syscall`. See man:lttng-list(1) to learn more.
+
+ With the option:--probe option:::
+ A Linux kprobe, that is, a single probe dynamically placed in
+ the compiled kernel code.
++
+The argument of the option:--probe option is the location of the
+kprobe to insert, either a symbol or a
+memory address, while 'RECORDNAME' is the name of the record
+of{nbsp}__E__ (see the ``<<er-name,Event record name>>'' section below).
++
+The payload of a Linux kprobe event is empty.
+
+ With the option:--userspace-probe option:::
+ A Linux user space probe, that is, a single probe dynamically
+ placed at the entry of a compiled user space application/library
+ function through the kernel.
++
+The argument of the option:--userspace-probe option is the location
+of the user space probe to insert, one of:
++
+--
+* A path and symbol (ELF method).
+* A path, provider name, and probe name (SystemTap User-level Statically
+ Defined Tracing (USDT) method; a DTrace-style marker).
++
+As of LTTng{nbsp}{lttng_version}, LTTng only supports USDT probes which
+are :not: reference-counted.
+--
++
+'RECORDNAME' is the name of the record of{nbsp}__E__ (see the
+``<<er-name,Event record name>>'' section below).
++
+The payload of a Linux user space probe event is empty.
+
+ With the option:--function option:::
+ A Linux kretprobe, that is, two probes dynamically placed at the
+ entry and exit of a function in the compiled kernel code.
++
+The argument of the option:--function option is the location of the
+Linux kretprobe to insert, either a symbol or
+a memory address, while 'RECORDNAME' is the name of the record
+of{nbsp}__E__ (see the ``<<er-name,Event record name>>'' section below).
++
+The payload of a Linux kretprobe event is empty.
+
+For the user space tracing domain (option:--userspace option)::
+ With or without the option:--tracepoint option:::
+ An LTTng user space tracepoint, that is, a statically defined
+ point in the source code of a C/$$C++$$ application/library with
+ LTTng user space tracer macros.
++
+As of LTTng{nbsp}{lttng_version}, this is the default and sole
+instrumentation point type of the user space tracing domain, but this
+may change in the future.
++
+List the available user space tracepoints with `lttng list --userspace`.
+See man:lttng-list(1) to learn more.
+
+For the `java.util.logging` (option:--jul option), Apache log4j (option:--log4j option), and Python (option:--python option) tracing domains::
+ With or without the option:--tracepoint option:::
+ A logging statement.
++
+As of LTTng{nbsp}{lttng_version}, this is the default and sole
+instrumentation point type of the `java.util.logging`, Apache log4j, and
+Python tracing domains, but this may change in the future.
++
+List the available Java and Python loggers with `lttng list --jul`,
+`lttng list --log4j`, and `lttng list --python`. See man:lttng-list(1)
+to learn more.
+
+
+[[event-name-cond]]
+Event name condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+An event{nbsp}__E__ satisfies the event name condition of a recording
+event rule{nbsp}__ER__ if the two following statements are true:
+
+* You specify the option:--all option or, depending on the
+ instrumentation type condition (see the
+ ``<<inst-point-type-cond,Instrumentation point type condition>>''
+ section above) of{nbsp}__ER__, 'NAME' matches:
++
+--
+LTTng tracepoint::
+ The full name of the tracepoint from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__.
++
+Note that the full name of a user space tracepoint is
+__PROVIDER__++:++__NAME__, where __PROVIDER__ is the tracepoint provider
+name and __NAME__ is the tracepoint name.
+
+Logging statement::
+ The name of the Java or Python logger from which LTTng
+ creates{nbsp}__E__.
+
+Linux system call::
+ The name of the system call, without any `sys_` prefix, from which
+ LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__.
+--
+
+* You don't specify the option:--exclude=__XNAME__[++,++__XNAME__]...
+ option or, depending on the instrumentation type condition
+ of{nbsp}__ER__, none of the 'XNAME' arguments matches the full name of
+ the user space tracepoint from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__.
++
+The option:--exclude option is only available with the option:--userspace
+option.
+
+This condition is only meaningful for the LTTng tracepoint, logging
+statement, and Linux system call instrumentation point types: it's
+always satisfied for the other types.
+
+In all cases, 'NAME' and 'XNAME' are globbing patterns: the `*`
+character means ``match anything''. To match a literal `*` character,
+use :escwc:. To match a literal `,` character, use
+:esccomma:.
+
+IMPORTANT: Make sure to **single-quote** 'NAME' and 'XNAME' when they
+contain the `*` character and when you run the `enable-event` command
+from a shell.
+
+With the LTTng tracepoint, logging statement, and Linux system call
+instrumentation point types, the `enable-event` command creates or
+enables one independent recording event rule per 'NAME' argument
+(non-option, comma-separated). With the option:--all option, the
+`enable-event` command creates or enables a single recording event rule.
+
+
+[[inst-point-log-level-cond]]
+Instrumentation point log level condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+An event{nbsp}__E__ satisfies the instrumentation point log level
+condition of a recording event rule if either:
+
+* The option:--loglevel and option:--loglevel-only options are
+ missing.
+
+* The log level of the LTTng user space tracepoint or logging statement
+ which creates{nbsp}__E__ is:
+ With the option:--loglevel='LOGLEVEL' option::
+ At least as severe as 'LOGLEVEL'.
+
+ With the option:--loglevel-only='LOGLEVEL' option::
+ Exactly 'LOGLEVEL'.
+
+This condition is only meaningful for the LTTng user space tracepoint
+and logging statement instrumentation point types: it's always satisfied
+for other types.
+
+The available values of 'LOGLEVEL' are, depending on the tracing domain,
+from the most to the least severe:
+
+User space (option:--userspace option)::
++
+* `EMERG` (0)
+* `ALERT` (1)
+* `CRIT` (2)
+* `ERR` (3)
+* `WARNING` (4)
+* `NOTICE` (5)
+* `INFO` (6)
+* `DEBUG_SYSTEM` (7)
+* `DEBUG_PROGRAM` (8)
+* `DEBUG_PROCESS` (9)
+* `DEBUG_MODULE` (10)
+* `DEBUG_UNIT` (11)
+* `DEBUG_FUNCTION` (12)
+* `DEBUG_LINE` (13)
+* `DEBUG` (14)
+
+`java.util.logging` (option:--jul option)::
++
+* `OFF` (`INT32_MAX`)
+* `SEVERE` (1000)
+* `WARNING` (900)
+* `INFO` (800)
+* `CONFIG` (700)
+* `FINE` (500)
+* `FINER` (400)
+* `FINEST` (300)
+* `ALL` (`INT32_MIN`)
+
+Apache log4j (option:--log4j option)::
++
+* `OFF` (`INT32_MAX`)
+* `FATAL` (50000)
+* `ERROR` (40000)
+* `WARN` (30000)
+* `INFO` (20000)
+* `DEBUG` (10000)
+* `TRACE` (5000)
+* `ALL` (`INT32_MIN`)
+
+Python (option:--python option)::
++
+* `CRITICAL` (50)
+* `ERROR` (40)
+* `WARNING` (30)
+* `INFO` (20)
+* `DEBUG` (10)
+* `NOTSET` (0)
+
+
+[[filter-cond]]
+Event payload and context filter condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+An event{nbsp}__E__ satisfies the event payload and context filter
+condition of a recording event rule if the option:--filter='EXPR'
+option is missing or if 'EXPR' is _true_.
+
+This condition is only meaningful for the LTTng tracepoint and Linux
+system call instrumentation point types: it's always satisfied for other
+types.
+
+'EXPR' can contain references to the payload fields of{nbsp}__E__ and
+to the current context fields.
+
+IMPORTANT: Make sure to **single-quote** 'EXPR' when you run the
+`enable-event` command from a shell, as filter expressions typically
+include characters having a special meaning for most shells.
+
+The expected syntax of 'EXPR' is similar to the syntax of a
+C{nbsp}language conditional expression (an expression which an `if`
+statement can evaluate), but there are a few differences:
+
+* A _NAME_ expression identifies an event payload field named
+ _NAME_ (a C{nbsp}identifier).
++
+Use the C{nbsp}language dot and square bracket notations to access
+nested structure and array/sequence fields. You can only use a constant,
+positive integer number within square brackets. If the index is out of
+bounds, 'EXPR' is _false_.
++
+The value of an enumeration field is an integer.
++
+When a field expression doesn't exist, 'EXPR' is _false_.
++
+Examples: `my_field`, `target_cpu`, `seq[7]`, `msg.user[1].data[2][17]`.
+
+* A ++$ctx.++__TYPE__ expression identifies the statically-known context
+ field having the type _TYPE_ (a C{nbsp}identifier).
++
+List the available statically-known context field names with the
man:lttng-add-context(1) command.
++
+When a field expression doesn't exist, 'EXPR' is _false_.
++
+Examples: `$ctx.prio`, `$ctx.preemptible`,
+`$ctx.perf:cpu:stalled-cycles-frontend`.
-The dynamic value of an application-specific context field is read by
-prefixing its name with `$app.` (follows the format used to add such a
-context field with the man:lttng-add-context(1) command).
+* A ++$app.++__PROVIDER__++:++__TYPE__ expression identifies the
+ application-specific context field having the type _TYPE_ (a
+ C{nbsp}identifier) from the provider _PROVIDER_ (a C{nbsp}identifier).
++
+When a field expression doesn't exist, 'EXPR' is _false_.
++
+Example: `$app.server:cur_user`.
-When a comparison includes a non existent event field, the whole filter
-expression evaluates to false (the event is discarded).
+* Compare strings, either string fields or string literals
+ (double-quoted), with the `==` and `!=` operators.
++
+When comparing to a string literal, the `*` character means ``match
+anything''. To match a literal `*` character, use :escwc:.
++
+Examples: `my_field == "user34"`, `my_field == my_other_field`,
+`my_field == "192.168.*"`.
-C integer and floating point number constants are supported, as well as
-literal strings between double quotes (`"`). You can use `*` characters
-at any place in a literal string as wildcards to match zero or more
-characters. To use a literal `*` character, use :escwc:.
+* The precedence table of the operators which are supported in 'EXPR'
+ is as follows. In this table, the highest precedence is{nbsp}1:
++
+[options="header"]
+|===
+|Precedence |Operator |Description |Associativity
+|1 |`-` |Unary minus |Right-to-left
+|1 |`+` |Unary plus |Right-to-left
+|1 |`!` |Logical NOT |Right-to-left
+|1 |`~` |Bitwise NOT |Right-to-left
+|2 |`<<` |Bitwise left shift |Left-to-right
+|2 |`>>` |Bitwise right shift |Left-to-right
+|3 |`&` |Bitwise AND |Left-to-right
+|4 |`^` |Bitwise XOR |Left-to-right
+|5 |`\|` |Bitwise OR |Left-to-right
+|6 |`<` |Less than |Left-to-right
+|6 |`<=` |Less than or equal to |Left-to-right
+|6 |`>` |Greater than |Left-to-right
+|6 |`>=` |Greater than or equal to |Left-to-right
+|7 |`==` |Equal to |Left-to-right
+|7 |`!=` |Not equal to |Left-to-right
+|8 |`&&` |Logical AND |Left-to-right
+|9 |`\|\|` |Logical OR |Left-to-right
+|===
++
+Parentheses are supported to bypass the default order.
++
+IMPORTANT: Unlike the C{nbsp}language, the bitwise AND and OR operators
+(`&` and `|`) in 'EXPR' take precedence over relational operators (`<`,
+`<=`, `>`, `>=`, `==`, and `!=`). This means the expression `2 & 2 == 2`
+is _true_ while the equivalent C{nbsp}expression is _false_.
++
+The arithmetic operators are :not: supported.
++
+LTTng first casts all integer constants and fields to signed 64-bit
+integers. The representation of negative integers is two's complement.
+This means that, for example, the signed 8-bit integer field 0xff (-1)
+becomes 0xffffffffffffffff (still -1) once casted.
++
+Before a bitwise operator is applied, LTTng casts all its operands to
+unsigned 64-bit integers, and then casts the result back to a signed
+64-bit integer. For the bitwise NOT operator, it's the equivalent of
+this C{nbsp}expression:
++
+[source,c]
+----
+(int64_t) ~((uint64_t) val)
+----
++
+For the binary bitwise operators, it's the equivalent of those
+C{nbsp}expressions:
++
+[source,c]
+----
+(int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs >> (uint64_t) rhs)
+(int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs << (uint64_t) rhs)
+(int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs & (uint64_t) rhs)
+(int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs ^ (uint64_t) rhs)
+(int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs | (uint64_t) rhs)
+----
++
+If the right-hand side of a bitwise shift operator (`<<` and `>>`) is
+not in the [0,{nbsp}63] range, then 'EXPR' is _false_.
-LTTng-UST enumeration fields can be compared to integer values (fields
-or constants).
+[NOTE]
+====
+Use the man:lttng-track(1) and man:lttng-untrack(1) commands to allow or
+disallow processes to record LTTng events based on their attributes
+instead of using equivalent statically-known context fields in 'EXPR'
+like `$ctx.pid`.
-NOTE: Although it is possible to filter the process ID of an event when
-the `pid` context has been added to its channel using, for example,
-`$ctx.pid == 2832`, it is recommended to use the PID tracker instead,
-which is much more efficient (see man:lttng-track(1)).
+The former method is much more efficient.
+====
-Examples:
+'EXPR' examples:
----------------------------
msg_id == 23 && size >= 2048
$app.my_provider:my_context == 17.34e9 || some_enum >= 14
---------------------------------------------------------
--------------------
-filename != "*.log"
--------------------
-
-
-[[log-levels]]
-Log levels
-~~~~~~~~~~
-Tracepoints and log statements in applications have an attached log
-level. Application event rules can contain a _log level_ condition.
-
-With the option:--loglevel option, the event source's log level must
-be at least as severe as the option's argument. With the
-option:--loglevel-only option, the event source's log level must match
-the option's argument.
-
-The available log levels are:
-
-User space domain (option:--userspace option)::
- Shortcuts such as `system` are allowed.
-+
-* `TRACE_EMERG` (0)
-* `TRACE_ALERT` (1)
-* `TRACE_CRIT` (2)
-* `TRACE_ERR` (3)
-* `TRACE_WARNING` (4)
-* `TRACE_NOTICE` (5)
-* `TRACE_INFO` (6)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG_SYSTEM` (7)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG_PROGRAM` (8)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG_PROCESS` (9)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG_MODULE` (10)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG_UNIT` (11)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG_FUNCTION` (12)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG_LINE` (13)
-* `TRACE_DEBUG` (14)
-
-`java.util.logging` domain (option:--jul option)::
- Shortcuts such as `severe` are allowed.
-+
-* `JUL_OFF` (`INT32_MAX`)
-* `JUL_SEVERE` (1000)
-* `JUL_WARNING` (900)
-* `JUL_INFO` (800)
-* `JUL_CONFIG` (700)
-* `JUL_FINE` (500)
-* `JUL_FINER` (400)
-* `JUL_FINEST` (300)
-* `JUL_ALL` (`INT32_MIN`)
-
-Apache log4j domain (option:--log4j option)::
- Shortcuts such as `severe` are allowed.
-+
-* `LOG4J_OFF` (`INT32_MAX`)
-* `LOG4J_FATAL` (50000)
-* `LOG4J_ERROR` (40000)
-* `LOG4J_WARN` (30000)
-* `LOG4J_INFO` (20000)
-* `LOG4J_DEBUG` (10000)
-* `LOG4J_TRACE` (5000)
-* `LOG4J_ALL` (`INT32_MIN`)
-
-Python domain (option:--python option)::
- Shortcuts such as `critical` are allowed.
-+
-* `PYTHON_CRITICAL` (50)
-* `PYTHON_ERROR` (40)
-* `PYTHON_WARNING` (30)
-* `PYTHON_INFO` (20)
-* `PYTHON_DEBUG` (10)
-* `PYTHON_NOTSET` (0)
-
-
-include::common-cmd-options-head.txt[]
-
-
-Domain
-~~~~~~
+---------------------------------------
+$ctx.cpu_id == 2 && filename != "*.log"
+---------------------------------------
+
+------------------------------------------------
+eax_reg & 0xff7 == 0x240 && x[4] >> 12 <= 0x1234
+------------------------------------------------
+
+
+[[er-name]]
+Event record name
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+When LTTng records an event{nbsp}__E__, the resulting event record has a
+name which depends on the instrumentation point type condition (see the
+``<<inst-point-type-cond,Instrumentation point type condition>>''
+section above) of the recording event rule which matched{nbsp}__E__:
+
+LTTng tracepoint (option:--kernel/option:--userspace and option:--tracepoint options)::
+ Full name of the tracepoint from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__.
++
+Note that the full name of a user space tracepoint is
+__PROVIDER__++:++__NAME__, where __PROVIDER__ is the tracepoint provider
+name and __NAME__ is the tracepoint name.
+
+`java.util.logging` logging statement (option:--jul and option:--tracepoint options)::
+ `lttng_jul:event`
++
+Such an event record has a string field `logger_name` which contains the
+name of the `java.util.logging` logger from which LTTng
+creates{nbsp}__E__.
+
+Apache log4j logging statement (option:--log4j and option:--tracepoint options)::
+ `lttng_log4j:event`
++
+Such an event record has a string field `logger_name` which contains the
+name of the Apache log4j logger from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__.
+
+Python logging statement (option:--python and option:--tracepoint options)::
+ `lttng_python:event`
++
+Such an event record has a string field `logger_name` which contains the
+name of the Python logger from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__.
+
+Linux system call (option:--kernel and option:--syscall options)::
+ Entry:::
+ ++syscall_entry_++__NAME__, where _NAME_ is the name of the
+ system call from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__, without any
+ `sys_` prefix.
+
+ Exit:::
+ ++syscall_exit_++__NAME__, where _NAME_ is the name of the
+ system call from which LTTng creates{nbsp}__E__, without any
+ `sys_` prefix.
+
+Linux kprobe (option:--kernel and option:--probe options)::
+Linux user space probe (option:--kernel and option:--userspace-probe options)::
+ 'RECORDNAME' (first non-option argument).
+
+Linux kretprobe (option:--kernel and option:--function options)::
+ Entry:::
+ __RECORDNAME__++_entry++
+
+ Exit:::
+ __RECORDNAME__++_exit++
+
+
+[[enable]]
+Enable a disabled recording event rule
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+The `enable-event` command can enable a disabled recording event rule,
+as listed in the output of the man:lttng-list(1) command.
+
+You may enable a disabled recording event rule regardless of the
+activity (started or stopped) of its recording session (see
+man:lttng-start(1) and man:lttng-stop(1)).
+
+To enable a disabled recording event rule, run the `enable-event`
+command with the exact same options and arguments that you used to
+create it. In particular, with the option:--filter='EXPR' option, 'EXPR'
+must be the exact same string as the one you used on creation.
+
+
+include::common-lttng-cmd-options-head.txt[]
+
+
+Tracing domain
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One of:
option:-j, option:--jul::
- Create or enable event rules in the `java.util.logging`
- (JUL) domain.
+ Create or enable recording event rules in the `java.util.logging`
+ (JUL) tracing domain.
option:-k, option:--kernel::
- Create or enable event rules in the Linux kernel domain.
+ Create or enable recording event rules in the Linux kernel tracing
+ domain.
option:-l, option:--log4j::
- Create or enable event rules in the Apache log4j domain.
+ Create or enable recording event rules in the Apache log4j tracing
+ domain.
option:-p, option:--python::
- Create or enable event rules in the Python domain.
+ Create or enable recording event rules in the Python tracing domain.
option:-u, option:--userspace::
- Create or enable event rules in the user space domain.
+ Create or enable recording event rules in the user space tracing
+ domain.
-Target
-~~~~~~
+Recording target
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
option:-c 'CHANNEL', option:--channel='CHANNEL'::
- Create or enable event rules in the channel named 'CHANNEL' instead
- of the default channel name `channel0`.
+ Create or enable recording event rules attached to the channel named
+ 'CHANNEL' instead of `channel0`.
option:-s 'SESSION', option:--session='SESSION'::
- Create or enable event rules in the tracing session named 'SESSION'
- instead of the current tracing session.
+ Create or enable recording event rules in the recording session
+ named 'SESSION' instead of the current recording session.
-Event source type
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Instrumentation point type condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+See the ``<<inst-point-type-cond,Instrumentation point type
+condition>>'' section above.
+
+At most one of:
+
+option:--function='LOC'::
+ Only match Linux kretprobe events.
++
+Only available with the option:--kernel option.
++
+'LOC' is one of:
++
+--
+* A function address (`0x` hexadecimal prefix supported).
+* A function symbol name.
+* A function symbol name and an offset
+ (__SYMBOL__++pass:[+]++__OFFSET__ format).
+--
++
+You must specify the event record name with 'RECORDNAME'. See the
+``<<er-name,Event record name>>'' section above to learn more.
+
+option:--probe='LOC'::
+ Only match Linux kprobe events.
++
+Only available with the option:--kernel option.
++
+'LOC' is one of:
++
+--
+* An address (`0x` hexadecimal prefix supported).
+* A symbol name.
+* A symbol name and an offset (__SYMBOL__++pass:[+]++__OFFSET__ format).
+--
++
+You must specify the event record name with 'RECORDNAME'. See the
+``<<er-name,Event record name>>'' section above to learn more.
+
+option:--userspace-probe='LOC'::
+ Only match Linux user space probe events.
++
+Only available with the option:--kernel option.
++
+'LOC' is one of:
++
+--
+\[++elf:++]__PATH__++:++__SYMBOL__::
+ Probe an available symbol within a user space application or
+ library.
++
+--
+'PATH'::
+ Application or library path.
++
One of:
++
+* An absolute path.
+* A relative path.
+* The name of an application as found in the directories listed in the
+ `PATH` environment variable.
-option:--function='SOURCE'::
- Linux kernel kretprobe. Only available with the option:--kernel
- domain option. 'SOURCE' is one of:
+'SYMBOL'::
+ Symbol name of the function of which to instrument the entry.
++
+'SYMBOL' can be any defined code symbol in the output of the man:nm(1)
+command, including with its nloption:--dynamic option, which lists
+dynamic symbols.
+--
++
+As of LTTng{nbsp}{lttng_version}, not specifying `elf:` is equivalent to
+specifying it, but this default may change in the future.
++
+Examples:
+
-* Function address (`0x` prefix supported)
-* Function symbol
-* Function symbol and offset (`SYMBOL+OFFSET` format)
+* `--userspace-probe=/usr/lib/libc.so.6:malloc`
+* `--userspace-probe=./myapp:createUser`
+* `--userspace-probe=elf:httpd:ap_run_open_htaccess`
-option:--probe='SOURCE'::
- Linux kernel kprobe. Only available with the option:--kernel
- domain option. 'SOURCE' is one of:
+++sdt:++__PATH__++:++__PROVIDER__++:++__NAME__::
+ Use a SystemTap User-level Statically Defined Tracing (USDT) probe
+ within a user space application or library.
+
-* Address (`0x` prefix supported)
-* Symbol
-* Symbol and offset (`SYMBOL+OFFSET` format)
+--
+'PATH'::
+ Application or library path.
++
+This can be:
++
+* An absolute path.
+* A relative path.
+* The name of an application as found in the directories listed in the
+ `PATH` environment variable.
+
+'PROVIDER'::
+'NAME'::
+ USDT provider and probe names.
++
+For example, with the following USDT probe:
++
+[source,c]
+----
+DTRACE_PROBE2("server", "accept_request",
+ request_id, ip_addr);
+----
++
+The provider/probe name pair is `server:accept_request`.
+--
++
+Example: `--userspace-probe=sdt:./build/server:server:accept_request`
+--
++
+You must specify the event record name with 'RECORDNAME'. See the
+``<<er-name,Event record name>>'' section above to learn more.
option:--syscall::
- Linux kernel system call. Only available with the option:--kernel
- domain option.
+ Only match Linux system call events.
++
+Only available with the option:--kernel option.
option:--tracepoint::
- Linux kernel or application tracepoint (default).
+ Only match:
++
+With the option:--kernel or option:--userspace option:::
+ LTTng tracepoint events.
+With the option:--jul, option:--log4j, or option:--python option:::
+ Logging events.
+With the option:--kernel, not specifying any of the instrumentation
+point type options is equivalent to specifying the option:--tracepoint
+option, but this default may change in the future.
+
+With the option:--userspace, option:--jul, option:--log4j, and
+option:--python options, not specifying the option:--tracepoint option
+is equivalent to specifying it, but this default may change in the
+future.
-Log level
-~~~~~~~~~
-One of:
+
+Event name condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+See the ``<<event-name-cond,Event name condition>>'' section above.
+
+option:-a, option:--all::
+ Equivalent to a single 'NAME' argument (LTTng tracepoint or logger
+ name) set to `*` (match anything).
++
+You may :not: use this option with a 'NAME' argument.
+
+option:-x 'XNAME'[,'XNAME']..., option:--exclude='XNAME'[,'XNAME']...::
+ Only match events of which none of the 'XNAME' arguments
+ matches the full name of the LTTng user space tracepoint.
++
+Only available with the option:--userspace option.
++
+'XNAME' is a globbing pattern: the `*` character means ``match
+anything''. To match a literal `*` character, use :escwc:. To match
+a literal `,` character, use :esccomma:.
+
+
+Instrumentation point log level condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+See the ``<<inst-point-log-level-cond,Instrumentation point log level
+condition>>'' section above.
+
+At most one of:
option:--loglevel='LOGLEVEL'::
- Add log level condition to the event rule: the event source's
- defined log level must be at least as severe as 'LOGLEVEL'.
- See the <<log-levels,Log levels>> section above for the available
- log levels. Only available with application domains.
+ Only match events of which the log level of the LTTng tracepoint or
+ logging statement is at least as severe as 'LOGLEVEL'.
option:--loglevel-only='LOGLEVEL'::
- Add log level condition to the event rule: the event source's
- defined log level must match 'LOGLEVEL'. See the
- <<log-levels,Log levels>> section above for the available log
- levels. Only available with application domains.
-
-
-Filtering and exclusion
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-option:-x 'EVENT'[,'EVENT']..., option:--exclude='EVENT'[,'EVENT']...::
- Exclude events named 'EVENT' from the event rule. This option
- can be used when the command's 'EVENT' argument contains at least
- one wildcard star (`*`) to exclude specific names. 'EVENT' can also
- contain wildcard stars. To use a
- literal `,` character, use :esccomma:.
- Only available with the option:--userspace domain.
+ Only match events of which the log level of the LTTng tracepoint or
+ logging statement is exactly 'LOGLEVEL'.
+
+The instrumentation point log level options above are :not: available
+with the option:--kernel option.
+
+
+Event payload and context filter condition
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+See the ``<<filter-cond,Event payload and context filter condition>>''
+section above.
option:-f 'EXPR', option:--filter='EXPR'::
- Add filter expression condition to the event rule. Expression 'EXPR'
- must evaluate to true when executed against the dynamic values of
- event fields. See the <<filter-syntax,Filter expression syntax>>
- section above for more information.
+ Only match events of which 'EXPR', which can contain references to
+ event payload and current context fields, is _true_.
++
+This option is only available with the option:--tracepoint or
+option:--syscall option.
-Shortcuts
-~~~~~~~~~
-option:-a, option:--all::
- Equivalent to an 'EVENT' argument named `*` (wildcard) when also
- using the option:--tracepoint (default) or option:--syscall option.
+include::common-lttng-cmd-help-options.txt[]
+
+
+include::common-lttng-cmd-after-options.txt[]
+
+
+[[examples]]
+EXAMPLES
+--------
+.Create a recording event rule which matches all Linux system call events (current recording session, default channel).
+====
+See the option:--all and option:--syscall options.
+
+[role="term"]
+----
+$ lttng enable-event --kernel --all --syscall
+----
+====
+
+.Create a recording event rule which matches user space tracepoint events named specifically (current recording session, default channel).
+====
+The recording event rule below matches all user space tracepoint events
+of which the name starts with `my_provider:msg`.
+
+[role="term"]
+----
+$ lttng enable-event --userspace 'my_provider:msg*'
+----
+====
+
+.Create three recording event rules which match Python logging events named specifically (current recording session, default channel).
+====
+[role="term"]
+----
+$ lttng enable-event --python server3,ui.window,user-mgmt
+----
+====
+
+.Create a recording event rule which matches Apache log4j logging events with a specific log level range (current recording session, specific channel).
+====
+See the option:--channel, option:--all, and option:--loglevel options.
+
+[role="term"]
+----
+$ lttng enable-event --log4j --channel=my-loggers \
+ --all --loglevel=INFO
+----
+====
+
+.Create a recording event rule which matches specific Linux kprobe events (current recording session, default channel).
+====
+The recording event rule below matches the entry of `usb_disconnect()`
+Linux kernel function calls. The records of such events are named `usbd`
+(see the ``<<er-name,Event record name>>'' section above).
+See the option:--probe option.
-include::common-cmd-help-options.txt[]
+[role="term"]
+----
+$ lttng enable-event --kernel --probe=usb_disconnect usbd
+----
+====
+
+.Create a recording event rule which matches Linux kernel tracepoint events which satisfy an event payload and context filter (specific recording session, default channel).
+====
+See the option:--session and option:--filter options.
+
+[role="term"]
+----
+$ lttng enable-event --kernel --session=my-session 'sched_*' \
+ --filter='$ctx.preemptible && comm != "systemd*"'
+----
+====
+
+.Enable two Linux kernel tracepoint recording event rules (current recording session, specific channel).
+====
+See the option:--channel option.
+
+[role="term"]
+----
+$ lttng enable-event --kernel --channel=tva ja,wendy
+----
+====
-include::common-cmd-footer.txt[]
+include::common-footer.txt[]
SEE ALSO
--------
+man:lttng(1),
man:lttng-disable-event(1),
-man:lttng(1)
+man:lttng-enable-channel(1),
+man:lttng-list(1),
+man:lttng-start(1),
+man:lttng-track(1),
+man:lttng-concepts(7)