X-Git-Url: https://git.lttng.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=ltt%2Fbranches%2Fpoly%2FQUICKSTART;h=e50d25d9e1165f9caf7f2037e40fcf6e723c44fa;hb=c133f16bdc98a06211111f3365b525b67379199f;hp=61bf32648c3961f5b312a14e46400caa381a8981;hpb=3bef9a5fad85df7e3c22378f226bf957ecf5af99;p=lttv.git diff --git a/ltt/branches/poly/QUICKSTART b/ltt/branches/poly/QUICKSTART index 61bf3264..e50d25d9 100644 --- a/ltt/branches/poly/QUICKSTART +++ b/ltt/branches/poly/QUICKSTART @@ -7,18 +7,18 @@ This document is made of four parts : The first one explains how to install LTTng and LTTV from Debian and RPM binary packages, the second one explains how to install LTTng and LTTV from sources and the third one describes the steps to follow to trace a system and view it. The fourth and last part explains -briefly how to add a new trace point to the kernel. +briefly how to add a new trace point to the kernel and to user space +applications. -What you will typically want is to read sections 1 and 3 : install LTTng from -binary packages and use it. If there are no packages ready for your system, you -will have to install from sources (section 2) instead. +What you will typically want is to read sections 2 and 3 : install LTTng from +sources and use it. -These operations are made for installing the LTTng 0.5.X tracer on a +These operations are made for installing the LTTng 0.6.X tracer on a linux 2.6.X kernel. You will also find instructions for installation of LTTV 0.8.x : the Linux Trace Toolkit Viewer. To see the list of compatibilities between LTTng, ltt-control, LTTV, genevent -and lttng-modules, please refer to : +and ltt-usertrace, please refer to : http://ltt.polymtl.ca > LTTng+LTTV versions compatibility @@ -36,19 +36,21 @@ sources, the dependencies are listed. LTTng : supported architectures : Intel Pentium (UP/SMP) with TSC +PowerPC 32 and 64 bits ARM +x86_64 C2 Microsystems (variant of MIPS) LTTV : supported architectures : Intel i386 and better Intel 64 bits -PowerPC +PowerPC 32 and 64 bits Author : Mathieu Desnoyers, September 2005 -Last update : May 13, 2006 +Last update : May 30, 2006 *********************************************************** @@ -57,9 +59,9 @@ Last update : May 13, 2006 ** NOTE : RPM and debian packages are only made once a version has been thoroughly tested. If they do not exist at the moment, please install from - sources (see section 2 below). To see the list of compatibilities between - LTTng, ltt-control, LTTV, genevent and lttng-modules, please refer to - http://ltt.polymtl.ca > LTTng+LTTV versions compatibility + sources (see section 2 below). To see the list of compatibilities between + LTTng, ltt-control, LTTV, genevent and lttng-modules, please refer to + http://ltt.polymtl.ca > LTTng+LTTV versions compatibility * Install from RPM packages on Fedora Core 4 : @@ -195,26 +197,26 @@ su - mkdir /usr/src/lttng cd /usr/src/lttng (see http://ltt.polymtl.ca/lttng for package listing) -wget http://ltt.polymtl.ca/lttng/patch-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx.tar.bz2 -bzip2 -cd patch-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx.tar.bz2 | tar xvof - +wget http://ltt.polymtl.ca/lttng/patch-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx.tar.bz2 +bzip2 -cd patch-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx.tar.bz2 | tar xvof - * Getting LTTng kernel sources su - cd /usr/src -wget http://kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/testing/linux-2.6.16.tar.bz2 -bzip2 -cd linux-2.6.16.tar.bz2 | tar xvof - -cd linux-2.6.16 -cat /usr/src/lttng/patch-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx* | patch -p1 +wget http://kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.X.tar.bz2 +bzip2 -cd linux-2.6.X.tar.bz2 | tar xvof - +cd linux-2.6.X +cat /usr/src/lttng/patch*-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx* | patch -p1 cd .. -mv linux-2.6.16 linux-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx +mv linux-2.6.X linux-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx * Installing a LTTng kernel su - -cd /usr/src/linux-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx +cd /usr/src/linux-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx make menuconfig (or make xconfig or make config) Select the < Help > button if you are not familiar with kernel configuration. @@ -225,49 +227,77 @@ make menuconfig (or make xconfig or make config) Select the following options : [*] Linux Trace Toolkit Instrumentation Support or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit Tracer + or <*> Linux Trace Toolkit Relay+DebugFS Support It makes no difference for the rest of the procedure whether the Tracer is compiled built-in or as a module. activate : [*] Align Linux Trace Toolkit Traces [*] Allow tracing from userspace + Linux Trace Toolkit Netlink Controller + Linux Trace Toolkit State Dump your choice (see < Help >) : [ ] Activate Linux Trace Toolkit Heartbeat Timer - You may or may not activate instrumentation per facility. They are all - selected for logging by default. It can be used as a compile time filter to - enable/disable logging of events. It is useful to discard events with a - minimal impact on the system and especially useful for now, as the dynamic - filter has not been implemented yet. - Select + You may or may not decide to compile probes. Afterward, you will have to + load the probe modules to enable tracing of their events. The probes + automatically select the appropriate facilities. + Static instrumentation is a more invasive type of instrumentation that gives + the address taking a lock or doing a printk. + Select Select Select make make modules_install -make install +-- on X86, X86_64 +make install reboot +Select the Linux 2.6.17-lttng-0.x.xx kernel in your boot loader. + +-- on PowerPC +cp vmlinux.strip /boot/vmlinux-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx +cp System.map /boot/System.map-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx +cp .config /boot/config-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx +depmod -ae -F /boot/System.map-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx 2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx +mkinitrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx 2.6.X-lttng-0.x.xx +(edit /etc/yaboot.conf to add a new entry pointing to your kernel : the entry +that comes first is the default kernel) +ybin +select the right entry at the yaboot prompt (see choices : tab, select : type +the kernel name followed by enter) +Select the Linux 2.6.17-lttng-0.x.xx kernel in your boot loader. +-- - Select the Linux 2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx kernel in your boot loader. * Editing the system wide configuration -You must activate relayfs and specify a mount point. This is typically done in +You must activate debugfs and specify a mount point. This is typically done in fstab such that it happens at boot time. -If you have never used RelayFS before, these operation would do this for you : +If you have never used DebugFS before, these operation would do this for you : -mkdir /mnt/relayfs +mkdir /mnt/debugfs cp /etc/fstab /etc/fstab.lttng.bkp -echo "relayfs /mnt/relayfs relayfs rw 0 0" >> /etc/fstab +echo "debugfs /mnt/debugfs debugfs rw 0 0" >> /etc/fstab -then, rebooting or issuing the following command will activate relayfs : +then, rebooting or issuing the following command will activate debugfs : -mount /mnt/relayfs +mount /mnt/debugfs -You need to load the ltt-control module to be able to control tracing from user +You need to load the LTT modules to be able to control tracing from user space. This is done by issuing the command : modprobe ltt-control +modprobe ltt-core +modprobe ltt-relay +modprobe ltt-tracer +modprobe ltt-probe-mm +modprobe ltt-probe-kernel +modprobe ltt-probe-i386 (or x86_64, powerpc, ppc, arm, mips) +modprobe ltt-probe-net +modprobe ltt-probe-list +modprobe ltt-probe-ipc +modprobe ltt-probe-fs If you want to have complete information about the kernel state (including all the process names), you need to load the ltt-statedump module. This is done by @@ -277,9 +307,24 @@ modprobe ltt-statedump You can automate at boot time loading the ltt-control module by : +cp /etc/modules /etc/modules.bkp echo ltt-control >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-core >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-relay >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-tracer >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-probe-mm >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-probe-kernel >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-probe-i386 >> /etc/modules (or x86_64, powerpc, ppc, arm, mips) +echo ltt-probe-net >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-probe-list >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-probe-ipc >> /etc/modules +echo ltt-probe-fs >> /etc/modules echo ltt-statedump >> /etc/modules +(note : if you want to probe a marker which is within a module, make sure you +load the probe _after_ the module, otherwise the probe will not be able to +connect itself to the marker.) + * Getting and installing the ltt-control package (on the traced machine) (note : the ltt-control package contains lttd and lttctl. Although it has the @@ -295,6 +340,9 @@ system) make make install +* Getting and installing the ltt-usertrace package for user space tracing +See http://ltt.polymtl.ca/ > USERSPACE TRACING QUICKSTART + * Getting and installing the LTTV package (on the visualisation machine, same or different from the visualisation machine) @@ -335,7 +383,7 @@ root). Start tracing : -lttctl -n trace -d -l /mnt/relayfs/ltt -t /tmp/trace +lttctl -n trace -d -l /mnt/debugfs/ltt -t /tmp/trace Stop tracing and destroy trace channels : @@ -343,6 +391,10 @@ lttctl -n trace -R see lttctl --help for details. +(note : to see if the buffers has been filled, look at the dmesg output after +lttctl -R or after stopping tracing from the GUI, it will show an event lost +count. If it is the case, try using larger buffers. See lttctl --help to learn +how.) * Use text mode LTTV @@ -355,7 +407,11 @@ lttv -m textDump -t /tmp/trace see lttv -m textDump --help for detailed command line options of textDump. - +It is, in the current state of the project, very useful to use "grep" on the +text output to filter by specific event fields. You can later copy the timestamp +of the events to the clipboard and paste them in the GUI by clicking on the +bottom right label "Current time". Support for this type of filtering should +be added to the filter module soon. *********************************************************** @@ -376,20 +432,24 @@ make install * Add new events to the kernel with genevent su - -cd /usr/local/share/LinuxTraceToolkitViewer/facilities +cd /usr/local/share/ltt-control/facilities cp process.xml yourfacility.xml * edit yourfacility.xml to fit your needs. cd /tmp -/usr/local/bin/genevent /usr/local/share/LinuxTraceToolkitViewer/facilities/yourfacility.xml +/usr/local/bin/genevent /usr/local/share/ltt-control/facilities/yourfacility.xml cp ltt-facility-yourfacility.h ltt-facility-id-yourfacility.h \ - /usr/src/linux-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx8/include/linux/ltt + /usr/src/linux-2.6.17-lttng-0.x.xx8/include/ltt cp ltt-facility-loader-yourfacility.c ltt-facility-loader-yourfacility.h \ - /usr/src/linux-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx/ltt - * edit the kernel file you want to instrument - - Add #include at the beginning - of the file. - - Add a call to the tracing functions. See their names and parameters in - /usr/src/linux-2.6.16-lttng-0.x.xx/include/linux/ltt/ltt-facility-yourfacility.h - + /usr/src/linux-2.6.17-lttng-0.x.xx/ltt/facilities + * edit the kernel file you want to instrument to add a marker to it. See + include/linux/marker.h. + * create a dynamically loadable probe. See ltt/probes for examples. The probe + will be connected to your marker and will typically call the logging + functions found in the header file you created with genevent. + +* Add new events to userspace programs with genevent +See http://ltt.polymtl.ca/ > USERSPACE TRACING QUICKSTART + +