1			     Event Tracing
2
3		Documentation written by Theodore Ts'o
4		Updated by Li Zefan and Tom Zanussi
5
61. Introduction
7===============
8
9Tracepoints (see Documentation/trace/tracepoints.txt) can be used
10without creating custom kernel modules to register probe functions
11using the event tracing infrastructure.
12
13Not all tracepoints can be traced using the event tracing system;
14the kernel developer must provide code snippets which define how the
15tracing information is saved into the tracing buffer, and how the
16tracing information should be printed.
17
182. Using Event Tracing
19======================
20
212.1 Via the 'set_event' interface
22---------------------------------
23
24The events which are available for tracing can be found in the file
25/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/available_events.
26
27To enable a particular event, such as 'sched_wakeup', simply echo it
28to /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/set_event. For example:
29
30	# echo sched_wakeup >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/set_event
31
32[ Note: '>>' is necessary, otherwise it will firstly disable
33  all the events. ]
34
35To disable an event, echo the event name to the set_event file prefixed
36with an exclamation point:
37
38	# echo '!sched_wakeup' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/set_event
39
40To disable all events, echo an empty line to the set_event file:
41
42	# echo > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/set_event
43
44To enable all events, echo '*:*' or '*:' to the set_event file:
45
46	# echo *:* > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/set_event
47
48The events are organized into subsystems, such as ext4, irq, sched,
49etc., and a full event name looks like this: <subsystem>:<event>.  The
50subsystem name is optional, but it is displayed in the available_events
51file.  All of the events in a subsystem can be specified via the syntax
52"<subsystem>:*"; for example, to enable all irq events, you can use the
53command:
54
55	# echo 'irq:*' > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/set_event
56
572.2 Via the 'enable' toggle
58---------------------------
59
60The events available are also listed in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/ hierarchy
61of directories.
62
63To enable event 'sched_wakeup':
64
65	# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_wakeup/enable
66
67To disable it:
68
69	# echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_wakeup/enable
70
71To enable all events in sched subsystem:
72
73	# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/enable
74
75To enable all events:
76
77	# echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/enable
78
79When reading one of these enable files, there are four results:
80
81 0 - all events this file affects are disabled
82 1 - all events this file affects are enabled
83 X - there is a mixture of events enabled and disabled
84 ? - this file does not affect any event
85
862.3 Boot option
87---------------
88
89In order to facilitate early boot debugging, use boot option:
90
91	trace_event=[event-list]
92
93event-list is a comma separated list of events. See section 2.1 for event
94format.
95
963. Defining an event-enabled tracepoint
97=======================================
98
99See The example provided in samples/trace_events
100
1014. Event formats
102================
103
104Each trace event has a 'format' file associated with it that contains
105a description of each field in a logged event.  This information can
106be used to parse the binary trace stream, and is also the place to
107find the field names that can be used in event filters (see section 5).
108
109It also displays the format string that will be used to print the
110event in text mode, along with the event name and ID used for
111profiling.
112
113Every event has a set of 'common' fields associated with it; these are
114the fields prefixed with 'common_'.  The other fields vary between
115events and correspond to the fields defined in the TRACE_EVENT
116definition for that event.
117
118Each field in the format has the form:
119
120     field:field-type field-name; offset:N; size:N;
121
122where offset is the offset of the field in the trace record and size
123is the size of the data item, in bytes.
124
125For example, here's the information displayed for the 'sched_wakeup'
126event:
127
128# cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_wakeup/format
129
130name: sched_wakeup
131ID: 60
132format:
133	field:unsigned short common_type;	offset:0;	size:2;
134	field:unsigned char common_flags;	offset:2;	size:1;
135	field:unsigned char common_preempt_count;	offset:3;	size:1;
136	field:int common_pid;	offset:4;	size:4;
137	field:int common_tgid;	offset:8;	size:4;
138
139	field:char comm[TASK_COMM_LEN];	offset:12;	size:16;
140	field:pid_t pid;	offset:28;	size:4;
141	field:int prio;	offset:32;	size:4;
142	field:int success;	offset:36;	size:4;
143	field:int cpu;	offset:40;	size:4;
144
145print fmt: "task %s:%d [%d] success=%d [%03d]", REC->comm, REC->pid,
146	   REC->prio, REC->success, REC->cpu
147
148This event contains 10 fields, the first 5 common and the remaining 5
149event-specific.  All the fields for this event are numeric, except for
150'comm' which is a string, a distinction important for event filtering.
151
1525. Event filtering
153==================
154
155Trace events can be filtered in the kernel by associating boolean
156'filter expressions' with them.  As soon as an event is logged into
157the trace buffer, its fields are checked against the filter expression
158associated with that event type.  An event with field values that
159'match' the filter will appear in the trace output, and an event whose
160values don't match will be discarded.  An event with no filter
161associated with it matches everything, and is the default when no
162filter has been set for an event.
163
1645.1 Expression syntax
165---------------------
166
167A filter expression consists of one or more 'predicates' that can be
168combined using the logical operators '&&' and '||'.  A predicate is
169simply a clause that compares the value of a field contained within a
170logged event with a constant value and returns either 0 or 1 depending
171on whether the field value matched (1) or didn't match (0):
172
173	  field-name relational-operator value
174
175Parentheses can be used to provide arbitrary logical groupings and
176double-quotes can be used to prevent the shell from interpreting
177operators as shell metacharacters.
178
179The field-names available for use in filters can be found in the
180'format' files for trace events (see section 4).
181
182The relational-operators depend on the type of the field being tested:
183
184The operators available for numeric fields are:
185
186==, !=, <, <=, >, >=, &
187
188And for string fields they are:
189
190==, !=, ~
191
192The glob (~) only accepts a wild card character (*) at the start and or
193end of the string. For example:
194
195  prev_comm ~ "*sh"
196  prev_comm ~ "sh*"
197  prev_comm ~ "*sh*"
198
199But does not allow for it to be within the string:
200
201  prev_comm ~ "ba*sh"   <-- is invalid
202
2035.2 Setting filters
204-------------------
205
206A filter for an individual event is set by writing a filter expression
207to the 'filter' file for the given event.
208
209For example:
210
211# cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_wakeup
212# echo "common_preempt_count > 4" > filter
213
214A slightly more involved example:
215
216# cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/signal/signal_generate
217# echo "((sig >= 10 && sig < 15) || sig == 17) && comm != bash" > filter
218
219If there is an error in the expression, you'll get an 'Invalid
220argument' error when setting it, and the erroneous string along with
221an error message can be seen by looking at the filter e.g.:
222
223# cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/signal/signal_generate
224# echo "((sig >= 10 && sig < 15) || dsig == 17) && comm != bash" > filter
225-bash: echo: write error: Invalid argument
226# cat filter
227((sig >= 10 && sig < 15) || dsig == 17) && comm != bash
228^
229parse_error: Field not found
230
231Currently the caret ('^') for an error always appears at the beginning of
232the filter string; the error message should still be useful though
233even without more accurate position info.
234
2355.3 Clearing filters
236--------------------
237
238To clear the filter for an event, write a '0' to the event's filter
239file.
240
241To clear the filters for all events in a subsystem, write a '0' to the
242subsystem's filter file.
243
2445.3 Subsystem filters
245---------------------
246
247For convenience, filters for every event in a subsystem can be set or
248cleared as a group by writing a filter expression into the filter file
249at the root of the subsystem.  Note however, that if a filter for any
250event within the subsystem lacks a field specified in the subsystem
251filter, or if the filter can't be applied for any other reason, the
252filter for that event will retain its previous setting.  This can
253result in an unintended mixture of filters which could lead to
254confusing (to the user who might think different filters are in
255effect) trace output.  Only filters that reference just the common
256fields can be guaranteed to propagate successfully to all events.
257
258Here are a few subsystem filter examples that also illustrate the
259above points:
260
261Clear the filters on all events in the sched subsystem:
262
263# cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched
264# echo 0 > filter
265# cat sched_switch/filter
266none
267# cat sched_wakeup/filter
268none
269
270Set a filter using only common fields for all events in the sched
271subsystem (all events end up with the same filter):
272
273# cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched
274# echo common_pid == 0 > filter
275# cat sched_switch/filter
276common_pid == 0
277# cat sched_wakeup/filter
278common_pid == 0
279
280Attempt to set a filter using a non-common field for all events in the
281sched subsystem (all events but those that have a prev_pid field retain
282their old filters):
283
284# cd /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched
285# echo prev_pid == 0 > filter
286# cat sched_switch/filter
287prev_pid == 0
288# cat sched_wakeup/filter
289common_pid == 0
290
2916. Event triggers
292=================
293
294Trace events can be made to conditionally invoke trigger 'commands'
295which can take various forms and are described in detail below;
296examples would be enabling or disabling other trace events or invoking
297a stack trace whenever the trace event is hit.  Whenever a trace event
298with attached triggers is invoked, the set of trigger commands
299associated with that event is invoked.  Any given trigger can
300additionally have an event filter of the same form as described in
301section 5 (Event filtering) associated with it - the command will only
302be invoked if the event being invoked passes the associated filter.
303If no filter is associated with the trigger, it always passes.
304
305Triggers are added to and removed from a particular event by writing
306trigger expressions to the 'trigger' file for the given event.
307
308A given event can have any number of triggers associated with it,
309subject to any restrictions that individual commands may have in that
310regard.
311
312Event triggers are implemented on top of "soft" mode, which means that
313whenever a trace event has one or more triggers associated with it,
314the event is activated even if it isn't actually enabled, but is
315disabled in a "soft" mode.  That is, the tracepoint will be called,
316but just will not be traced, unless of course it's actually enabled.
317This scheme allows triggers to be invoked even for events that aren't
318enabled, and also allows the current event filter implementation to be
319used for conditionally invoking triggers.
320
321The syntax for event triggers is roughly based on the syntax for
322set_ftrace_filter 'ftrace filter commands' (see the 'Filter commands'
323section of Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt), but there are major
324differences and the implementation isn't currently tied to it in any
325way, so beware about making generalizations between the two.
326
3276.1 Expression syntax
328---------------------
329
330Triggers are added by echoing the command to the 'trigger' file:
331
332  # echo 'command[:count] [if filter]' > trigger
333
334Triggers are removed by echoing the same command but starting with '!'
335to the 'trigger' file:
336
337  # echo '!command[:count] [if filter]' > trigger
338
339The [if filter] part isn't used in matching commands when removing, so
340leaving that off in a '!' command will accomplish the same thing as
341having it in.
342
343The filter syntax is the same as that described in the 'Event
344filtering' section above.
345
346For ease of use, writing to the trigger file using '>' currently just
347adds or removes a single trigger and there's no explicit '>>' support
348('>' actually behaves like '>>') or truncation support to remove all
349triggers (you have to use '!' for each one added.)
350
3516.2 Supported trigger commands
352------------------------------
353
354The following commands are supported:
355
356- enable_event/disable_event
357
358  These commands can enable or disable another trace event whenever
359  the triggering event is hit.  When these commands are registered,
360  the other trace event is activated, but disabled in a "soft" mode.
361  That is, the tracepoint will be called, but just will not be traced.
362  The event tracepoint stays in this mode as long as there's a trigger
363  in effect that can trigger it.
364
365  For example, the following trigger causes kmalloc events to be
366  traced when a read system call is entered, and the :1 at the end
367  specifies that this enablement happens only once:
368
369  # echo 'enable_event:kmem:kmalloc:1' > \
370      /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/syscalls/sys_enter_read/trigger
371
372  The following trigger causes kmalloc events to stop being traced
373  when a read system call exits.  This disablement happens on every
374  read system call exit:
375
376  # echo 'disable_event:kmem:kmalloc' > \
377      /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/syscalls/sys_exit_read/trigger
378
379  The format is:
380
381      enable_event:<system>:<event>[:count]
382      disable_event:<system>:<event>[:count]
383
384  To remove the above commands:
385
386  # echo '!enable_event:kmem:kmalloc:1' > \
387      /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/syscalls/sys_enter_read/trigger
388
389  # echo '!disable_event:kmem:kmalloc' > \
390      /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/syscalls/sys_exit_read/trigger
391
392  Note that there can be any number of enable/disable_event triggers
393  per triggering event, but there can only be one trigger per
394  triggered event. e.g. sys_enter_read can have triggers enabling both
395  kmem:kmalloc and sched:sched_switch, but can't have two kmem:kmalloc
396  versions such as kmem:kmalloc and kmem:kmalloc:1 or 'kmem:kmalloc if
397  bytes_req == 256' and 'kmem:kmalloc if bytes_alloc == 256' (they
398  could be combined into a single filter on kmem:kmalloc though).
399
400- stacktrace
401
402  This command dumps a stacktrace in the trace buffer whenever the
403  triggering event occurs.
404
405  For example, the following trigger dumps a stacktrace every time the
406  kmalloc tracepoint is hit:
407
408  # echo 'stacktrace' > \
409        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc/trigger
410
411  The following trigger dumps a stacktrace the first 5 times a kmalloc
412  request happens with a size >= 64K
413
414  # echo 'stacktrace:5 if bytes_req >= 65536' > \
415        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc/trigger
416
417  The format is:
418
419      stacktrace[:count]
420
421  To remove the above commands:
422
423  # echo '!stacktrace' > \
424        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc/trigger
425
426  # echo '!stacktrace:5 if bytes_req >= 65536' > \
427        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc/trigger
428
429  The latter can also be removed more simply by the following (without
430  the filter):
431
432  # echo '!stacktrace:5' > \
433        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc/trigger
434
435  Note that there can be only one stacktrace trigger per triggering
436  event.
437
438- snapshot
439
440  This command causes a snapshot to be triggered whenever the
441  triggering event occurs.
442
443  The following command creates a snapshot every time a block request
444  queue is unplugged with a depth > 1.  If you were tracing a set of
445  events or functions at the time, the snapshot trace buffer would
446  capture those events when the trigger event occurred:
447
448  # echo 'snapshot if nr_rq > 1' > \
449        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
450
451  To only snapshot once:
452
453  # echo 'snapshot:1 if nr_rq > 1' > \
454        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
455
456  To remove the above commands:
457
458  # echo '!snapshot if nr_rq > 1' > \
459        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
460
461  # echo '!snapshot:1 if nr_rq > 1' > \
462        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
463
464  Note that there can be only one snapshot trigger per triggering
465  event.
466
467- traceon/traceoff
468
469  These commands turn tracing on and off when the specified events are
470  hit. The parameter determines how many times the tracing system is
471  turned on and off. If unspecified, there is no limit.
472
473  The following command turns tracing off the first time a block
474  request queue is unplugged with a depth > 1.  If you were tracing a
475  set of events or functions at the time, you could then examine the
476  trace buffer to see the sequence of events that led up to the
477  trigger event:
478
479  # echo 'traceoff:1 if nr_rq > 1' > \
480        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
481
482  To always disable tracing when nr_rq  > 1 :
483
484  # echo 'traceoff if nr_rq > 1' > \
485        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
486
487  To remove the above commands:
488
489  # echo '!traceoff:1 if nr_rq > 1' > \
490        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
491
492  # echo '!traceoff if nr_rq > 1' > \
493        /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/block/block_unplug/trigger
494
495  Note that there can be only one traceon or traceoff trigger per
496  triggering event.
497