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2= Table of Contents =
3
4__TOC__
5
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6= Overview =
7
61fd6eae 8Trace Compass is a Java tool for viewing and analyzing any type of logs or traces. Its goal is to provide views, graphs, metrics, etc. to help extract useful information from traces, in a way that is more user-friendly and informative than huge text dumps.
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9
10== About Tracing ==
11
12Tracing is a troubleshooting technique used to understand the behavior of an instrumented application by collecting information on its execution path. A tracer is the software used for tracing. Tracing can be used to troubleshoot a wide range of bugs that are otherwise extremely challenging. These include, for example, performance problems in complex parallel systems or real-time systems.
13
14Tracing is similar to logging: it consists in recording events that happen in a system at selected execution locations. However, compared to logging, it is generally aimed at developers and it usually records low-level events at a high rate. Tracers can typically generate thousands of events per second. The generated traces can easily contain millions of events and have sizes from many megabytes to tens of gigabytes. Tracers must therefore be optimized to handle a lot of data while having a small impact on the system.
15
16Traces may include events from the operating system kernel (IRQ handler entry/exit, system call entry/exit, scheduling activity, network activity, etc). They can also consists of application events (a.k.a UST - User Space Tracing) or a mix of the two.
17
c3181353 18For the maximum level of detail, tracing events may be viewed like a log file. However, trace analyzers and viewers are available to derive useful information from the raw data coupled with knowledge of the traced program. These programs must be specially designed to handle quickly the enormous amount of data a trace may contain.
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61fd6eae 20== Features ==
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61fd6eae 22Trace Compass has a number of features to allow efficient handling of very large traces (and sets of large traces):
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24* Support for arbitrarily large traces (larger than available memory)
25* Support for correlating multiple time-ordered traces
26* Support for zooming down to the nanosecond on any part of a trace or set of traces
27* Views synchronization of currently selected time or time range, and window time range
28* Efficient searching and filtering of events
29* Support for trace bookmarks
30* Support for importing and exporting trace packages
ff25eb47 31
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32There is also support for the integration of non-LTTng trace types:
33
34* Built-in CTF parser
35* Dynamic creation of customized parsers (for XML and text traces)
36* Dynamic creation of customized state systems (from XML files)
37* Dynamic creation of customized views (from XML files)
38
39Trace Compass provides the following main views:
40
41* ''Project Explorer'' - an extension to the standard Eclipse Project view tailored for tracing projects
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42* ''Events'' - a versatile view that presents the raw events in tabular format with support for searching, filtering and bookmarking
43* ''Statistics'' - a view that that provides simple statistics on event occurrences by type
44* ''Histogram'' - a view that displays the event density with respect to time in traces
45
46These views can be extended or tailored for specific trace types (e.g. kernel, HW, user app).
47
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48== LTTng integration ==
49
50One of the main features of Trace Compass is the LTTng integration. LTTng (Linux Trace Toolkit, next generation) is a highly efficient tracing tool for Linux that can be used to track down kernel and application performance issues as well as troubleshoot problems involving multiple concurrent processes and threads. It consists of a set of kernel modules, daemons - to collect the raw tracing data - and a set of tools to control, visualize and analyze the generated data. It also provides support for user space application instrumentation.
51For more information about LTTng, refer to the project [http://lttng.org site]
52
53'''Note''': This User Guide covers the integration of the latest LTTng (up to v2.4) in Eclipse.
54
55The LTTng plug-ins provide an integration for the control of the LTTng tracer as well as fetching and visualization of the traces produced. It also provides the foundation for user-defined analysis tools.
56
57At present, the LTTng plug-ins support the following kernel-oriented views:
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58
59* ''Control Flow'' - to visualize processes state transitions
60* ''Resources'' - to visualize system resources state transitions
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61* ''CPU usage'' - to visualize the usage of the processor with respect to the time in traces
62
61fd6eae 63Also, the LTTng plug-ins supports the following User Space traces views:
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64
65* ''Memory Usage'' - to visualize the memory usage per thread with respect to time in the traces
66* ''Call Stack'' - to visualize the call stack's evolution over time
ff25eb47 67
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68Finally, the LTTng plug-ins supports the following Control views:
69* ''Control'' - to control the tracer and configure the tracepoints
ff25eb47 70
61fd6eae 71Although the control and fetching parts are targeted at the LTTng tracer, the underlying framework can also be used to process any trace that complies with the ''Common Trace Format'' ([http://www.efficios.com/ctf CTF]). CTF specifies a very efficient and compact binary trace format that is meant to be application-, architecture-, and language-agnostic.
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72
73= Installation =
74
61fd6eae 75This section describes the installation of the LTTng tracer and the Trace Compass plug-ins as well as their dependencies.
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76
77== LTTng Tracer ==
78
79While the Eclipse plug-ins can run on the standard Eclipse platforms (Linux, Mac, Windows), the LTTng tracer and its accompanying tools run on Linux.
80
81The tracer and tools have been available for download in Ubuntu since 12.04. They can easily be installed with the following command:
82
83<pre>
84 > sudo apt-get install lttng-tools
85</pre>
86
87For other distributions, older Ubuntu distributions, or the latest, bleeding edge LTTng tracer, please refer to the [http://lttng.org/download LTTng website] for installation information.
88
89'''Note''': The LTTng tracer (and accompanying tools) is required only if you want to create your own traces (the usual case). If you intend to simply analyze existing traces then it is not necessary to install the tracer.
90
61fd6eae 91== Trace Compass Plug-ins ==
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61fd6eae 93The easiest way to install the Trace Compass plug-ins for Eclipse is through the Install New Software menu. For information on how to use this menu, refer to this [http://help.eclipse.org/luna/index.jsp?topic=%2Forg.eclipse.platform.doc.user%2Ftasks%2Ftasks-124.htm link].
ff25eb47 94
61fd6eae 95The Trace Compass main plug-ins are structured as a stack of features/plug-ins as following:
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96
97* '''CTF''' - A CTF parser that can also be used as a standalone component
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98** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.ctf
99** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.ctf.core, org.eclipse.tracecompass.ctf.parser
43d4f823 100
c3181353 101* '''State System Core''' - State system for TMF
61fd6eae 102** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core
c3181353 103
ff25eb47 104* '''TMF''' - ''Tracing and Monitoring Framework'' a framework for generic trace processing
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105** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf
106** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core, org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui. org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.analysis.xml.core, org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.analysis.xml.ui
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107
108* '''CTF support for TMF''' - CTF support for the TMF Feature
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109** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ctf
110** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ctf.core
ff25eb47 111
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112* '''LTTng Control''' - The wrapper for the LTTng tracer control. Can be used for kernel or application tracing.
113** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.control
114** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.control.core, org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.control.ui
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115
116* '''LTTng Kernel''' - Analysis components specific to Linux kernel traces
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117** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel
118** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.os.linux.core, org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.os.linux.ui, org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.core, org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.ui
ff25eb47 119
c3181353 120* '''LTTng UST''' - Analysis components specific to Linux userspace traces
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121** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.ust
122** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.ust.core, org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.ust.ui
c3181353 123
61fd6eae 124== LTTng Control Dependencies ==
ff25eb47 125
61fd6eae 126The Eclipse LTTng Control feature controls the LTTng tracer through an ''ssh'' connection, if the tracer is running locally it can use or bypass the ''ssh'' connection.
ff25eb47 127
61fd6eae 128When using ''ssh'', the target system (where the tracer runs) needs to run an ''ssh'' server as well as ''sftp'' server (for file transfer) to which you have permission to connect.
ff25eb47 129
61fd6eae 130On the host side (where Eclipse is running), you also need to have Eclipse Remote Services installed to handle the SSH connection and transport. The Remote Services are installed for you as a dependency of the LTTng Control feature. If necessary, it can be installed manually with the standard way (''Help'' > ''Install New Software...'' > ''General Purpose Tools'' > ''Remote Services'').
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131
132== Installation Verification ==
133
61fd6eae 134If you do not have any traces, sample LTTng traces can be found here [http://lttng.org/files/samples]. This page contains links to some sample LTTng 2.0 kernel traces. The trace needs to be uncompressed to be opened. The traces can also be imported directly as archive, see the [[#Importing|Importing]] section for more detail.
c3181353 135
61fd6eae 136Here are the quick steps to verify that your installation is functional using a LTTng trace:
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137
138* Start Eclipse
139* Open the LTTng perspective
140* Create a Tracing project
61fd6eae 141** Right-click in the Project Explorer view and select New, Tracing Project
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142** Enter the name of your project (e.g. "MyLTTngProject")
143** The project will be created. It will contain 2 empty folders: "Traces" and "Experiments"
61fd6eae 144* Open and visualize a sample trace
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145** Right-click on the newly created project "Traces" folder and select "Open Trace..."
146** Navigate to the sample LTTng trace that you want to visualize and select any file in the trace folder
ff25eb47 147** The newly imported trace should appear under the Traces folder
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148** The trace should load and the views be populated
149
150If an error message is displayed, you might want to double-check that the trace type is correctly set (right-click on the trace and "Select Trace Type...").
151
c3181353 152Refer to [[#Tracing Perspective]] for detailed description of the views and their usage.
ff25eb47 153
61fd6eae 154= Trace Compass Main Features =
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155
156== Tracing Perspective ==
157
61fd6eae 158The '''Tracing''' perspective is part of the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)''' and groups the following views:
ff25eb47 159
61fd6eae 160* [[#Project Explorer_View | Project Explorer View]]
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161* [[#Events_Editor | Events Editor]]
162* [[#Histogram_View | Histogram View]]
163* [[#Statistics_View | Statistics View]]
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164
165The views are synchronized i.e. selecting an event, a timestamp, a time range, etc will update the other views accordingly.
166
167[[Image:images/TracingPerspective.png]]
168
169The perspective can be opened from the Eclipse Open Perspective dialog ('''Window > Open Perspective... > Other''').
170
171[[Image:images/ShowTracingPerspective.png]]
172
43d4f823 173In addition to these views, the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)''' feature provides a set of generic tracing specific views, such as:
ff25eb47 174
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175* [[#Colors_View | Colors View]]
176* [[#Filters_View | Filters View]]
177* [[#Time_Chart_View | Time Chart View]]
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178* [[#State_System_Explorer_View | State System Explorer View]]
179* [[#Call_Stack_View | Call Stack View]]
ff25eb47 180
43b509ac 181The framework also supports user creation of [[#Custom_Parsers | Custom Parsers]].
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182
183To open one of the above '''Tracing''' views, use the Eclipse Show View dialog ('''Window > Show View > Other...'''). Then select the relevant view from the '''Tracing''' category.
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184
185[[Image:images/ShowTracingViews.png]]
186
61fd6eae 187Additionally, the '''LTTng Control''' feature provides an '''LTTng Tracer Control''' functionality. It comes with a dedicated '''Control View'''.
ff25eb47 188
43b509ac 189* [[#LTTng_Tracer_Control | LTTng Tracer Control]]
ff25eb47 190
61fd6eae 191== Project Explorer View ==
43d4f823 192
61fd6eae 193The Project Explorer view is the standard Eclipse Project Explorer. '''Tracing''' projects are well integrated in the Eclipse's Common Navigator Framework. The Project Explorer shows '''Tracing''' project with a small "T" decorator in the upper right of the project folder icon.
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194
195=== Creating a Tracing Project ===
43d4f823 196
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197A new '''Tracing''' project can be created using the New Tracing Project wizard. To create a new '''Tracing''' select '''File > New > Project...''' from the main menu bar or alternatively form the context-sensitive menu (click with right mouse button in the '''Project Explorer'''.
198
43d4f823 199The first page of project wizard will open.
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200
201[[Image:images/NewTracingProjectPage1.png]]
202
203In the list of project categories, expand category '''Tracing''' and select '''Tracing Project''' and the click on '''Next >'''. A second page of the wizard will show. Now enter the a name in the field '''Project Name''', select a location if required and the press on '''Finish'''.
204
205[[Image:images/NewTracingProjectPage2.png]]
206
43d4f823 207A new project will appear in the '''Project Explorer''' view.
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208
209[[Image:images/NewProjectExplorer.png]]
210
43d4f823 211Tracing projects have two sub-folders: '''Traces''' which holds the individual traces, and '''Experiments''' which holds sets of traces that we want to correlate.
ff25eb47 212
e03c29a7 213=== Importing Traces to the Project ===
9e684aeb 214
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215The '''Traces''' folder holds the set of traces available for a tracing project. It can optionally contain a tree of trace folders to organize traces into sub-folders. The following chapters will explain different ways to import traces to the '''Traces''' folder of a tracing project.
216
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217* [[#Opening a Trace | Opening a Trace]]
218* [[#Importing | Importing]]
219* [[#Drag and Drop | Drag and Drop]]
ad19d2e4 220
1aec2e92 221==== Opening a Trace ====
9e684aeb 222
e03c29a7 223To open a trace, right-click on a target trace folder and select '''Open Trace...'''.
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224
225[[Image:images/OpenTraceFile.png]]
226
e03c29a7 227A new dialog will show for selecting a trace to open. Select a trace file and then click on '''OK'''. Note that for traces that are directories (such as Common Trace Format (CTF) traces) any file in the trace directory can be selected to open the trace. Now, the trace viewer will attempt to detect the trace types of the selected trace. The auto detection algorithm will validate the trace against all known trace types. If multiple trace types are valid, a trace type is chosen based on a confidence criteria. The validation process and the computation of the confidence level are trace type specific. After successful validation the trace will be linked into the selected target trace folder and then opened with the detected trace type.
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228
229Note that a trace type is an extension point of the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)'''. Depending on the which features are loaded, the list of available trace types can vary.
230
ad19d2e4 231==== Importing ====
9e684aeb 232
e03c29a7 233To import a set of traces to a trace folder, right-click on the target folder and select '''Import...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
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234
235[[Image:images/ProjectImportTraceAction.png]]
236
a797fff5 237At this point, the '''Import Trace Wizard''' will show for selecting traces to import. By default, it shows the correct destination directory where the traces will be imported to. Now, specify the location of the traces in the '''Root directory'''. For that click on the button '''Browse''', browse the media to the location of the traces and click on '''OK'''. Then select the traces to import in the list of files and folders. If the selected files include archive files (tar, zip), they will be extracted automatically and imported as well.
ad19d2e4 238
a797fff5 239Traces can also be imported directly from an archive file such as a zip or a tar file by selecting the '''Select archive file''' option then by clicking '''Browse'''. Then select the traces to import in the list of files and folders as usual.
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240
241Optionally, select the '''Trace Type''' from the drop-down menu. If '''Trace Type''' is set to '''<Automatic Detection>''', the wizard will attempt to detect the trace types of the selected files. The automatic detection algorithm validates a trace against all known trace types. If multiple trace types are valid, a trace type is chosen based on a confidence criteria. The validation process and the computation of the confidence level are trace type specific. Optionally, '''Import unrecognized traces''' can be selected to import trace files that could not be automatically detected by '''<Automatic Detection>'''.
ad19d2e4 242
e03c29a7 243Select or deselect the checkboxes for '''Overwrite existing trace without warning''', '''Create links in workspace''' and '''Preserve folder structure'''. When all options are configured, click on '''Finish'''.
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244
245Note that traces of certain types (e.g. LTTng Kernel) are actually a composite of multiple channel traces grouped under a folder. Either the folder or its files can be selected to import the trace.
246
c8cf44dc 247The option '''Preserve folder structure''' will create, if necessary, the structure of folders relative to (and excluding) the selected '''Root directory''' (or '''Archive file''') into the target trace folder.
e03c29a7 248
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249The option '''Create Experiment''' will create an experiment with all imported traces. By default, the experiment name is the '''Root directory''' name, when importing from directory, or the ''' Archive file''' name, when importing from archive. One can change the experiment name by typing a new name in the text box beside the option.
250
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251[[Image:images/ProjectImportTraceDialog.png]]
252
e03c29a7 253If a trace already exists with the same name in the target trace folder, the user can choose to rename the imported trace, overwrite the original trace or skip the trace. When rename is chosen, a number is appended to the trace name, for example smalltrace becomes smalltrace(2).
ff25eb47 254
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255[[Image:images/ProjectImportTraceDialogRename.png]]
256
257If one selects '''Rename All''', '''Overwrite All''' or '''Skip All''' the choice will be applied for all traces with a name conflict.
258
19178c82 259Upon successful importing, the traces will be stored in the target trace folder. If a trace type was associated to a trace, then the corresponding icon will be displayed. If no trace type is detected the default editor icon associated with this file type will be displayed. Linked traces will have a little arrow as decorator on the right bottom corner.
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260
261Note that trace type is an extension point of the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)'''. Depending on the which features are loaded, the list of trace types can vary.
262
e03c29a7 263Alternatively, one can open the '''Import...''' menu from the '''File''' main menu, then select '''Tracing''' > '''Trace Import''' and click on '''Next >'''.
efa5fe79 264
ad19d2e4 265[[Image:images/ProjectImportWizardSelect.png]]
efa5fe79 266
ad19d2e4 267At this point, the '''Import Trace Wizard''' will show. To import traces to the tracing project, follow the instructions that were described above.
efa5fe79 268
e03c29a7 269==== Drag and Drop ====
efa5fe79 270
e03c29a7 271Traces can be also be imported to a project by dragging from another tracing project and dropping to the project's target trace folder. The trace will be copied and the trace type will be set.
efa5fe79 272
e03c29a7 273Any resource can be dragged and dropped from a non-tracing project, and any file or folder can be dragged from an external tool, into a tracing project's trace folder. The resource will be copied or imported as a new trace and it will be attempted to detect the trace types of the imported resource. The automatic detection algorithm validates a trace against all known trace types. If multiple trace types are valid, a trace type is chosen based on a confidence criteria. The validation process and the computation of the confidence level are trace type specific. If no trace type is detected the user needs to set the trace type manually.
efa5fe79 274
e03c29a7 275To import the trace as a link, use the platform-specific key modifier while dragging the source trace. A link will be created in the target project to the trace's location on the file system.
ad19d2e4 276
e03c29a7 277If a folder containing traces is dropped on a trace folder, the full directory structure will be copied or linked to the target trace folder. The trace type of the contained traces will not be auto-detected.
ad19d2e4 278
e03c29a7 279It is also possible to drop a trace, resource, file or folder into an existing experiment. If the item does not already exist as a trace in the project's trace folder, it will first be copied or imported, then the trace will be added to the experiment.
ad19d2e4 280
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281=== Trace Package Exporting and Importing ===
282
283A trace package is an archive file that contains the trace itself and can also contain its bookmarks and its supplementary files. Including supplementary files in the package can improve performance of opening an imported trace but at the expense of package size.
284
285==== Exporting ====
286
287The '''Export Trace Package Wizard''' allows users to select a trace and export its files and bookmarks to an archive on a media.
288
e03c29a7 289The '''Traces''' folder holds the set of traces available for a tracing project. To export traces contained in the '''Traces''' folder, one can open the '''Export...''' menu from the '''File''' main menu. Then select '''Trace Package Export'''
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290
291[[Image:images/tracePackageImages/fileExport.png]]
292
e03c29a7 293At this point, the '''Trace Package Export''' is opened. The project containing the traces has to be selected first then the traces to be exported.
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294
295[[Image:images/tracePackageImages/chooseTrace.png]]
296
e03c29a7 297One can also open the wizard and skip the first page by expanding the project, selecting traces or trace folders under the '''Traces''' folder, then right-clicking and selecting the '''Export Trace Package...''' menu item in the context-sensitive menu.
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298
299[[Image:images/tracePackageImages/exportSelectedTrace.png]]
300
301Next, the user can choose the content to export and various format options for the resulting file.
302
303[[Image:images/tracePackageImages/exportPackage.png]]
304
305The '''Trace''' item is always selected and represents the files that constitute the trace. The '''Supplementary files''' items represent files that are typically generated when a trace is opened by the viewer. Sharing these files can speed up opening a trace dramatically but also increases the size of the exported archive file. The ''Size'' column can help to decide whether or not to include these files. Lastly, by selecting '''Bookmarks''', the user can export all the bookmarks so that they can be shared along with the trace.
306
307The '''To archive file''' field is used to specify the location where to save the resulting archive.
308
309The '''Options''' section allows the user to choose between a tar archive or a zip archive. Compression can also be toggled on or off.
310
e03c29a7 311When Finish button is clicked, the package is generated and saved to the media. The folder structure of the selected traces relative to the '''Traces''' folder is preserved in the trace package.
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312
313==== Importing ====
314
315The '''Import Trace Package Wizard''' allows users to select a previously exported trace package from their media and import the content of the package in the workspace.
316
317The '''Traces''' folder holds the set of traces for a tracing project. To import a trace package to the '''Traces''' folder, one can open the '''Import...''' menu from the '''File''' main menu. Then select '''Trace Package Import'''.
318
319[[Image:images/tracePackageImages/fileImport.png]]
320
e03c29a7 321One can also open the wizard by expanding the project name, right-clicking on a target folder under the '''Traces''' folder then selecting '''Import Trace Package...''' menu item in the context-sensitive menu.
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322
323[[Image:images/tracePackageImages/importTraceFolder.png]]
324
325At this point, the '''Trace Package Import Wizard''' is opened.
326
327[[Image:images/tracePackageImages/importPackage.png]]
328
329The '''From archive file''' field is used to specify the location of the trace package to export. The user can choose the content to import in the tree.
330
331If the wizard was opened using the File menu, the destination project has to be selected in the '''Into project''' field.
332
e03c29a7 333When Finish is clicked, the trace is imported in the target folder. The folder structure from the trace package is restored in the target folder.
a460743a 334
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335=== Refreshing of Trace and Trace Folder ===
336Traces and trace folders in the workspace might be updated on the media. To refresh the content, right-click the trace or trace folder and select menu item '''Refresh'''. Alternatively, select the trace or trace folder and press key '''F5'''.
337
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338=== Remote Fetching ===
339
340It is possible to import traces automatically from one or more remote hosts according to a predefined remote profile by using the '''Fetch Remote Traces''' wizard.
341
342To start the wizard, right-click on a target trace folder and select '''Fetch Remote Traces...'''.
343
344[[Image:images/FetchRemoteTracesMenu.png]]
345
346The wizard opens on the '''Remote Profile''' page.
347
348[[Image:images/RemoteProfileWizardPageBlank.png]]
349
350If the remote profile already exists, it can be selected in the '''Profile name''' combo box. Otherwise, click '''Manage Profiles''' to open the '''Remote Profiles''' preferences page.
351
352==== Remote Profile elements ====
353
354[[Image:images/RemoteProfilesPreferencesPage.png]]
355
356Click '''Add''' to create a new remote profile. A default remote profile template appears.
357
358[[Image:images/RemoteProfilesPreferencesPageDefault.png]]
359
360===== Profile =====
361
362Edit the '''Profile name''' field to give a unique name to the new profile.
363
364Under the Profile element, at least one Connection Node element must be defined.
365
366===== Connection Node =====
367
368'''Node name''': Unique name for the connection within the scope of the Remote Services provider.
369
370'''URI''': URI for the connection. Its scheme maps to a particular Remote Services provider. If the connection name already exists for that provider, the URI must match its connection information. The scheme '''ssh''' can be used for the Built-In SSH provider. The scheme '''file''' can be used for the local file system.
371
372To view or edit existing connections, see the '''Remote Development''' > '''Remote Connections''' preferences page. On this page the user can enter a password for the connection.
373
374Under the Connection Node element, at least one Trace Group element must be defined.
375
376===== Trace Group =====
377
378'''Root path''': The absolute root path from where traces will be fetched. For example, ''/home/user'' or ''/C/Users/user''.
379
380'''Recursive''': Check this box to search for traces recursively in the root path.
381
382Under the Trace Group element, at least one Trace element must be defined.
383
384===== Trace =====
385
386'''File pattern''': A regular expression pattern to match against the file name of traces found under the root path. If the '''Recursive''' option is used, the pattern must match against the relative path of the trace, using forward-slash as a path separator. Files that do not match this pattern are ignored. If multiple Trace elements have a matching pattern, the first matching element will be used, and therefore the most specific patterns should be listed first. Following are some pattern examples:
387
388* <pre><nowiki>.*</nowiki></pre> matches any trace in any folder
389* <pre><nowiki>[^/]*\.log</nowiki></pre> matches traces with .log extension in the root path folder
390* <pre><nowiki>.*\.log</nowiki></pre> matches traces with .log extension in any folder
391* <pre><nowiki>folder-[^/]*/[^/]*\.log</nowiki></pre> matches traces with .log extension in folders matching a pattern
392* <pre><nowiki>(.*/)?filename</nowiki></pre> matches traces with a specific name in any folder
393
394'''Trace Type''': The trace type to assign to the traces after fetching, or '''<Automatic Detection>''' to determine the trace type automatically. Note that traces whose trace type can not be assigned according to this setting are not deleted after fetching.
395
396==== Profile editing and management ====
397
398Right-click a profile element to bring up its context menu. A '''New''' child element of the appropriate type can be created. Select '''Delete''' to delete a node, or '''Cut''', '''Copy''' and '''Paste''' to move or copy elements from one profile element to another. The keyboard shortcuts can also be used.
399
400Press the '''Add''' button to create a new element of the same type and following the selected element, or a new profile if the selection is empty.
401
402Press the '''Remove''' button to delete the selected profile elements.
403
404Press the '''Import''' button to import profiles from a previously exported XML file.
405
406Press the '''Export''' button to export the selected profiles to an XML file.
407
408Press the '''Move Up''' or '''Move Down''' buttons to reorder the selected profile element.
409
410The filter text box can be used to filter profiles based on the profile name or connection node.
411
412When the remote profile information is valid and complete, press the '''OK''' button to save the remote profiles preferences.
413
414[[Image:images/RemoteProfilesPreferencesPageFull.png]]
415
416==== Selecting remote traces ====
417
418Back in the '''Remote Profiles''' wizard page, select the desired profile and click '''Next >'''. Clicking '''Finish''' at this point will automatically select and download all matching traces.
419
420[[Image:images/RemoteProfileWizardPageNext.png]]
421
422If required, the selected remote connections are created and connection is established. The user may be prompted for a password. This can be avoided by storing the password for the connection in the '''Remote Connections''' preference page.
423
424[[Image:images/FetchRemoteTracesPassword.png]]
425
426The root path of every Trace Group is scanned for matching files. The result is shown in the '''Remote Traces''' wizard page.
427
428[[Image:images/RemoteTracesWizardPage.png]]
429
430Select the traces to fetch by checking or unchecking the desired connection node, trace group, folder or individual trace. Click '''Finish''' to complete the operation.
431
432If any name conflict occurs, the user will be prompted to rename, overwrite or skip the trace, unless the '''Overwrite existing trace without warning''' option was checked in the '''Remote Profiles''' wizard page.
433
434The downloaded traces will be imported to the initially selected project folder. They will be stored under a folder structure with the pattern ''<connection name>/<path>/<trace name>'' where the path is the trace's remote path relative to its trace group's root path.
435
436[[Image:images/FetchRemoteTracesProject.png]]
437
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438=== Selecting a Trace Type ===
439
61fd6eae 440If no trace type was selected a trace type has to be associated to a trace before it can be opened. To select a trace type select the relevant trace and click the right mouse button. In the context-sensitive menu, select '''Select Trace Type...''' menu item. A sub-menu will show will all available trace type categories. From the relevant category select the required trace type. The examples, below show how to select the '''Common Trace Format''' types '''Linux Kernel Trace''' and '''Generic CTF trace'''.
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441
442[[Image:images/SelectLTTngKernelTraceType.png]]
443
444[[Image:images/SelectGenericCTFTraceType.png]]
445
446After selecting the trace type, the trace icon will be updated with the corresponding trace type icon.
447
448[[Image:images/ExplorerWithAssociatedTraceType.png]]
449
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450=== Opening a Trace or Experiment ===
451
19178c82 452A trace or experiment can be opened by double-clicking the left mouse button on the trace or experiment in the '''Project Explorer''' view. Alternatively, select the trace or experiment in the in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Open''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu. If there is no trace type set for a file resource then the file will be opened in the default editor associated with this file type.
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453
454[[Image:images/OpenTraceAction.png]]
455
456When opening a trace or experiment, all currently opened views which are relevant for the corresponding trace type will be updated.
457
458If a trace resource is a file (and not a directory), then the '''Open With''' menu item is available in the context-sensitive menu and can be used to open the trace source file with any applicable internal or external editor. In that case the trace will not be processed by the tracing application.
459
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460=== Creating a Experiment ===
461
43d4f823 462An experiment consists in an arbitrary number of aggregated traces for purpose of correlation. In the degenerate case, an experiment can consist of a single trace. The experiment provides a unified, time-ordered stream of the individual trace events.
ff25eb47 463
43d4f823 464To create an experiment, select the folder '''Experiments''' and click the right mouse button. Then select '''New...'''.
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465
466[[Image:images/NewExperimentAction.png]]
467
43d4f823 468A new display will open for entering the experiment name. Type the name of the experiment in the text field '''Experiment Name''' and the click on '''OK'''.
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469
470[[Image:images/NewExperimentDialog.png]]
471
472=== Selecting Traces for an Experiment ===
473
43d4f823 474After creating an experiment, traces need to be added to the experiment. To select traces for an experiment select the newly create experiment and click the right mouse button. Select '''Select Traces...''' from the context sensitive menu.
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475
476[[Image:images/SelectTracesAction.png]]
477
eb879a47 478A new dialog box will open with a list of available traces. The filter text box can be used to quickly find traces. Use buttons '''Select All''' or '''Deselect All''' to select or deselect all traces. Select the traces to add from the list and then click on '''Finish'''.
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479
480[[Image:images/SelectTracesDialog.png]]
481
482Now the selected traces will be linked to the experiment and will be shown under the '''Experiments''' folder.
483
484[[Image:images/ExplorerWithExperiment.png]]
485
43b509ac 486Alternatively, traces can be added to an experiment using [[#Drag_and_Drop | Drag and Drop]].
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487
488=== Removing Traces from an Experiment ===
489
43d4f823 490To remove one or more traces for an experiment select the trace(s) to remove under the Experiment folder and click the right mouse button. Select '''Remove''' from the context sensitive menu.
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491
492[[Image:images/RemoveTracesAction.png]]
493
494After that the selected trace(s) are removed from the experiment. Note that the traces are still in the '''Traces''' folder.
495
496=== Renaming a Trace or Experiment ===
497
43d4f823 498Traces and Experiment can be renamed from the '''Project Explorer''' view. To rename a trace or experiment select the relevant trace and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Rename...''' from the context sensitive menu. The trace or experiment needs to be closed in order to do this operation.
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499
500[[Image:images/RenameTraceAction.png]]
ff25eb47 501
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502A new dialog box will show for entering a new name. Enter a new trace or experiment name respectively in the relevant text field and click on '''OK'''. If the new name already exists the dialog box will show an error and a different name has to be entered.
503
504[[Image:images/RenameTraceDialog.png]]
ff25eb47 505
43d4f823 506[[Image:images/RenameExperimentDialog.png]]
ff25eb47 507
43d4f823 508After successful renaming the new name will show in the '''Project Explorer'''. In case of a trace all reference links to that trace will be updated too. Note that linked traces only changes the display name, the underlying trace resource will stay the original name.
ff25eb47 509
43b509ac 510Note that all supplementary files will be also handled accordingly (see also [[#Deleting Supplementary Files | Deleting Supplementary Files]]).
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511
512=== Copying a Trace or Experiment ===
513
43d4f823 514To copy a trace or experiment select the relevant trace or experiment in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Copy...''' from the context sensitive menu.
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515
516[[Image:images/CopyTraceAction.png]]
ff25eb47 517
43d4f823 518A new dialog box will show for entering a new name. Enter a new trace or experiment name respectively in the relevant text field and click on '''OK'''. If the new name already exists the dialog box will show an error and a different name has to be entered.
ff25eb47 519
43d4f823 520[[Image:images/CopyTraceDialog.png]]
ff25eb47 521
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522[[Image:images/CopyExperimentDialog.png]]
523
524After successful copy operation the new trace or experiment respectively will show in the '''Project Explorer'''. In case of a linked trace, the copied trace will be a link to the original trace too.
ff25eb47 525
43b509ac 526Note that the directory for all supplementary files will be copied, too. (see also [[#Deleting Supplementary Files | Deleting Supplementary Files]]).
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527
528=== Deleting a Trace or Experiment ===
529
43d4f823 530To delete a trace or experiment select the relevant trace or experiment in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Delete...''' from the context sensitive menu. The trace or experiment needs to be closed in order to do this operation.
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531
532[[Image:images/DeleteExperimentAction.png]]
43d4f823 533
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534A confirmation dialog box will open. To perform the deletion press '''OK''' otherwise select '''Cancel'''.
535
536[[Image:images/DeleteExperimentConfirmationDialog.png]]
537
43d4f823 538After successful operation the selected trace or experiment will be removed from the project. In case of a linked trace only the link will be removed. The actual trace resource remain on the disk.
ff25eb47 539
43b509ac 540Note that the directory for all supplementary files will be deleted, too. (see also [[#Deleting Supplementary Files | Deleting Supplementary Files]]).
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541
542=== Deleting Supplementary Files ===
543
07ed89d6 544Supplementary files are by definition trace specific files that accompany a trace. These file could be temporary files, persistent indexes or any other persistent data files created by the LTTng integration in Eclipse during parsing a trace. For the LTTng 2.0 trace viewer a persistent state history of the Linux Kernel is created and is stored under the name '''stateHistory.ht'''. The statistics for all traces are stored under '''statistics.ht'''. Other state systems may appear in the same folder as more custom views are added.
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545
546All supplementary file are hidden from the user and are handled internally by the TMF. However, there is a possibility to delete the supplementary files so that there are recreated when opening a trace.
547
e03c29a7 548To delete all supplementary files from one or many traces and experiments, select the relevant traces and experiments in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select the '''Delete Supplementary Files...''' menu item from the context-sensitive menu.
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549
550[[Image:images/DeleteSupplementaryFilesAction.png]]
551
e03c29a7 552A new dialog box will open with a list of supplementary files, grouped under the trace or experiment they belong to. Select the file(s) to delete from the list and press '''OK'''. The traces and experiments that need to be closed in order to do this operation will automatically be closed.
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553
554[[Image:images/DeleteSupplementaryFilesDialog.png]]
555
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556=== Link with Editor ===
557
558The tracing projects support the feature '''Link With Editor''' of the Project Explorer view. With this feature it is now possible to<br/>
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559* select a trace element in the Project Explorer view and the corresponding [[#Events Editor | Events Editor]] will get focus if the relevant trace is open.
560* select an [[#Events Editor | Events Editor]] and the corresponding trace element will be highlighted in the Project Explorer view.
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561
562To enable or disable this feature toggle the '''Link With Editor''' button of the Project Explorer view as shown below.
563
564[[Image:images/TMF_LinkWithEditor.png]]
565
07ed89d6 566== Events Editor ==
ff25eb47 567
07ed89d6 568The Events editor shows the basic trace data elements (events) in a tabular format. The editors can be dragged in the editor area so that several traces may be shown side by side. These traces are synchronized by timestamp.
ff25eb47 569
07ed89d6 570[[Image:images/LTTng2EventsEditor.png]]
ff25eb47 571
43d4f823 572The header displays the current trace (or experiment) name.
ff25eb47 573
99ebac8b 574The columns of the table are defined by the fields (aspects) of the specific trace type. These are the defaults:
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575
576* '''Timestamp''': the event timestamp
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577* '''Type''': the event type
578* '''Contents''': the fields (or payload) of this event
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579
580The first row of the table is the header row a.k.a. the Search and Filter row.
581
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582The highlighted event is the ''current event'' and is synchronized with the other views. If you select another event, the other views will be updated accordingly. The properties view will display a more detailed view of the selected event.
583
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584An event range can be selected by holding the '''Shift''' key while clicking another event or using any of the cursor keys ('''Up'''', '''Down''', '''PageUp''', '''PageDown''', '''Home''', '''End'''). The first and last events in the selection will be used to determine the current selected time range for synchronization with the other views.
585
07ed89d6 586[[Image:images/LTTng2EventProperties.png]]
ff25eb47 587
07ed89d6 588The Events editor can be closed, disposing a trace. When this is done, all the views displaying the information will be updated with the trace data of the next event editor tab. If all the editor tabs are closed, then the views will display their empty states.
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589
590=== Searching and Filtering ===
591
592Searching and filtering of events in the table can be performed by entering matching conditions in one or multiple columns in the header row (the first row below the column header).
593
594To toggle between searching and filtering, click on the 'search' ([[Image:images/TmfEventSearch.gif]]) or 'filter' ([[Image:images/TmfEventFilter.gif]]) icon in the header row's left margin, or right-click on the header row and select '''Show Filter Bar''' or '''Show Search Bar''' in the context menu.
595
596To apply a matching condition to a specific column, click on the column's header row cell, type in a [http://download.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html regular expression] and press the '''ENTER''' key. You can also enter a simple text string and it will be automatically be replaced with a 'contains' regular expression.
597
598When matching conditions are applied to two or more columns, all conditions must be met for the event to match (i.e. 'and' behavior).
599
600To clear all matching conditions in the header row, press the '''DEL''' key.
601
602==== Searching ====
603
604When a searching condition is applied to the header row, the table will select the next matching event starting from the top currently displayed event. Wrapping will occur if there is no match until the end of the trace.
605
fe178c39 606All matching events will have a 'search match' icon in their left margin. Non-matching events will be dimmed. The characters in each column which match the regular expression will be highlighted.
ff25eb47 607
fe178c39 608[[Image:images/TraceEditor-Search.png]]
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609
610Pressing the '''ENTER''' key will search and select the next matching event. Pressing the '''SHIFT-ENTER''' key will search and select the previous matching event. Wrapping will occur in both directions.
611
612Press '''ESC''' to cancel an ongoing search.
613
614Press '''DEL''' to clear the header row and reset all events to normal.
615
616==== Filtering ====
617
fe178c39 618When a filtering condition is entered in the head row, the table will clear all events and fill itself with matching events as they are found from the beginning of the trace. The characters in each column which match the regular expression will be highlighted.
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619
620A status row will be displayed before and after the matching events, dynamically showing how many matching events were found and how many events were processed so far. Once the filtering is completed, the status row icon in the left margin will change from a 'stop' to a 'filter' icon.
621
fe178c39 622[[Image:images/TraceEditor-Filter.png]]
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623
624Press '''ESC''' to stop an ongoing filtering. In this case the status row icon will remain as a 'stop' icon to indicate that not all events were processed.
625
626Press '''DEL''' or right-click on the table and select '''Clear Filters''' from the context menu to clear the header row and remove the filtering. All trace events will be now shown in the table. Note that the currently selected event will remain selected even after the filter is removed.
627
628You can also search on the subset of filtered events by toggling the header row to the Search Bar while a filter is applied. Searching and filtering conditions are independent of each other.
629
630==== Bookmarking ====
631
632Any event of interest can be tagged with a bookmark.
633
634To add a bookmark, double-click the left margin next to an event, or right-click the margin and select '''Add bookmark...'''. Alternatively use the '''Edit''' > '''Add bookmark...''' menu. Edit the bookmark description as desired and press '''OK'''.
635
636The bookmark will be displayed in the left margin, and hovering the mouse over the bookmark icon will display the description in a tooltip.
637
638The bookmark will be added to the '''Bookmarks''' view. In this view the bookmark description can be edited, and the bookmark can be deleted. Double-clicking the bookmark or selecting '''Go to''' from its context menu will open the trace or experiment and go directly to the event that was bookmarked.
639
640To remove a bookmark, double-click its icon, select '''Remove Bookmark''' from the left margin context menu, or select '''Delete''' from the Bookmarks view.
641
642[[Image:images/Bookmarks.png]]
643
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644=== Copy to Clipboard ===
645
646The text of selected events can be copied to the clipboard by right-clicking on the table and selecting '''Copy to Clipboard''' in the context menu. The clipboard contents will be prefixed by the column header names. For every event in the table selection, the column text will be copied to the clipboard. The column text will be tab-separated. Hidden columns will not be included in the clipboard contents.
647
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648=== Event Source Lookup ===
649
650For CTF traces using specification v1.8.2 or above, information can optionally be embedded in the trace to indicate the source of a trace event. This is accessed through the event context menu by right-clicking on an event in the table.
651
029df6e3 652==== Source Code ====
c2a48401 653
029df6e3 654If a source file is available in the trace for the selected event, the item '''Open Source Code''' is shown in the context menu. Selecting this menu item will attempt to find the source file in all opened projects in the workspace. If multiple candidates exist, a selection dialog will be shown to the user. The selected source file will be opened, at the correct line, in its default language editor. If no candidate is found, an error dialog is shown displaying the source code information.
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655
656==== EMF Model ====
657
658If an EMF model URI is available in the trace for the selected event, the item '''Open Model Element''' is shown in the context menu. Selecting this menu item will attempt to open the model file in the project specified in the URI. The model file will be opened in its default model editor. If the model file is not found, an error dialog is shown displaying the URI information.
659
312094ed 660=== Exporting To Text ===
99ebac8b 661
43b509ac 662It is possible to export the content of the trace to a text file based on the columns displayed in the events table. If a filter (see '''[[#Filtering| Filtering]]''') was defined prior exporting only events that match the filter will be exported to the file. To export the trace to text, press the right mouse button on the events table. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Export To Text...''' menu option. A file locater dialog will open. Fill in the file name and location and then press on '''OK'''. A window with a progress bar will open till the export is finished.
312094ed 663
e03c29a7 664''Note'': The columns in the text file are separated by tabs.
312094ed 665
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666=== Refreshing of Trace ===
667It's possible to refresh the content of the trace and resume indexing in case the current open trace was updated on the media. To refresh the trace, right-click into the table and select menu item '''Refresh'''. Alternatively, press key '''F5'''.
668
7e802456 669=== Collapsing of Repetitive Events ===
99ebac8b 670
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671The implementation for collapsing of repetitive events is trace type specific and is only available for certain trace types. For example, a trace type could allow collapsing of consecutive events that have the same event content but not the same timestamp. If a trace type supports this feature then it is possible to select the '''Collapse Events''' menu item after pressing the right mouse button in the table.
672
673When the collapsing of events is executing, the table will clear all events and fill itself with all relevant events. If the collapse condition is met, the first column of the table will show the number of times this event was repeated consecutively.
674
675[[Image:images/TablePreCollapse.png]]
676
677A status row will be displayed before and after the events, dynamically showing how many non-collapsed events were found and how many events were processed so far. Once the collapsing is completed, the status row icon in the left margin will change from a 'stop' to a 'filter' icon.
678
679[[Image:images/TablePostCollapse.png]]
680
681To clear collapsing, press the right mouse button in the table and select menu item '''Clear Filters''' in the context sensitive menu. ''Note'' that collapsing is also removed when another filter is applied to the table.
682
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683=== Customization ===
684
685The table columns can be reordered by the user by dragging the column headers. This column order is saved when the editor is closed. The setting applies to all traces of the same trace type.
686
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687The table columns can be hidden or restored by right-clicking on any column header and clicking on an item in the context menu to toggle its state. Clicking '''Show All''' will restore all table columns.
688
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689The table font can be customized by the user by changing the preference in '''Window''' > '''Preferences''' > '''General''' > '''Appearance''' > '''Colors and Fonts''' > '''Tracing''' > '''Trace event table font'''.
690
691The search and filter highlight color can be customized by the user by changing the preference in '''Window''' > '''Preferences''' > '''General''' > '''Appearance''' > '''Colors and Fonts''' > '''Tracing''' > '''Trace event table highlight color'''.
b676f661 692
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693== Histogram View ==
694
7ebb6832 695The Histogram View displays the trace events distribution with respect to time. When streaming a trace, this view is dynamically updated as the events are received. The time axis is aligned with other views that support automatic time axis alignment (see [[#Automatic Time Axis Alignment | Automatic Time Axis Alignment]]).
ff25eb47 696
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697[[Image:images/HistogramView.png]]
698
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699The '''Align Views''' toggle button [[Image:images/link.gif]] in the local toolbar allows to disable and enable the automatic time axis alignment of time-based views. Disabling the alignment in the Histogram view will disable this feature across all the views because it's a workspace preference.
700
95aa81ef 701The '''Hide Lost Events''' toggle button [[Image:images/hide_lost_events.gif]] in the local toolbar allows to hide the bars of lost events. When the button is selected it can be toggled again to show the lost events.
ff25eb47 702
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703The '''Activate Trace Coloring''' toggle button [[Image:images/show_hist_traces.gif]] in the local toolbar allows to use separate colors for each trace of an experiment. Note that this feature is not available if your experiment contains more than twenty two traces. When activated, a legend is displayed at the bottom on the histogram view.
704
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705On the top left, there are three text controls:
706
707* '''Selection Start''': Displays the start time of the current selection
708* '''Selection End''': Displays the end time of the current selection
709* '''Window Span''': Displays the current zoom window size in seconds
710
711The controls can be used to modify their respective value. After validation, the other controls and views will be synchronized and updated accordingly. To modify both selection times simultaneously, press the link icon [[Image:images/link.gif]] which disables the '''Selection End''' control input.
712
713The large (full) histogram, at the bottom, shows the event distribution over the whole trace or set of traces. It also has a smaller semi-transparent orange window, with a cross-hair, that shows the current zoom window.
714
7ebb6832 715The smaller (zoom) histogram, on top right, corresponds to the current zoom window, a sub-range of the event set. The window size can be adjusted by dragging the sash left beside the zoom window.
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716
717The x-axis of each histogram corresponds to the event timestamps. The start time and end time of the histogram range is displayed. The y-axis shows the maximum number of events in the corresponding histogram bars.
ff25eb47 718
1fdff3c5 719The vertical blue line(s) show the current selection time (or range). If applicable, the region in the selection range will be shaded.
ff25eb47 720
1fdff3c5 721The mouse can be used to control the histogram:
ff25eb47 722
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723* '''Left-click''': Set a selection time
724* '''Left-drag''': Set a selection range
725* '''Shift-left-click or drag''': Extend or shrink the selection range
ff25eb47 726
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727* '''Middle-click or Ctrl-left-click''': Center the zoom window on mouse (full histogram only)
728* '''Middle-drag or Ctrl-left-drag''': Move the zoom window
ff25eb47 729
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730* '''Right-drag''': Set the zoom window
731* '''Shift-right-click or drag''': Extend or shrink the zoom window (full histogram only)
ff25eb47 732
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733* '''Mouse wheel up''': Zoom in
734* '''Mouse wheel down''': Zoom out
ff25eb47 735
1fdff3c5 736Hovering the mouse over an histogram bar pops up an information window that displays the start/end time of the corresponding bar, as well as the number of events (and lost events) it represents. If the mouse is over the selection range, the selection span in seconds is displayed.
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737
738In each histogram, the following keys are handled:
739
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740* '''Left Arrow''': Moves the current event to the previous non-empty bar
741* '''Right Arrow''': Moves the current event to the next non-empty bar
742* '''Home''': Sets the current time to the first non-empty bar
32adc12c 743* '''End''': Sets the current time to the last non-empty histogram bar
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744* '''Plus (+)''': Zoom in
745* '''Minus (-)''': Zoom out
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746
747== Statistics View ==
748
00421e5e 749The Statistics View displays the various event counters that are collected when analyzing a trace. The data is organized per trace. After opening a trace, the element '''Statistics''' is added under the '''Tmf Statistics Analysis''' tree element in the Project Explorer. To open the view, double-click the '''Statistics''' tree element. Alternatively, select '''Statistics''' under '''Tracing''' within the '''Show View''' window ('''Window''' -> '''Show View''' -> '''Other...'''). This view shows 3 columns: ''Level'' ''Events total'' and ''Events in selected time range''. After parsing a trace the view will display the number of events per event type in the second column and in the third, the currently selected time range's event type distribution is shown. The cells where the number of events are printed also contain a colored bar with a number that indicates the percentage of the event count in relation to the total number of events. The statistics is collected for the whole trace. This view is part of the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)''' and is generic. It will work for any trace type extensions. For the LTTng 2.0 integration the Statistics view will display statistics as shown below.:
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750
751[[Image:images/LTTng2StatisticsView.png]]
752
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753By default, the statistics use a state system, therefore will load very quickly once the state system is written to the disk as a supplementary file.
754
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755== Colors View ==
756
757[[Image:images/ColorsView.png]]
758
759The Colors view allows the user to define a prioritized list of color settings.
760
761A color setting associates a foreground and background color (used in any events table), and a tick color (used in the Time Chart view), with an event filter.
762
763In an events table, any event row that matches the event filter of a color setting will be displayed with the specified foreground and background colors. If the event matches multiple filters, the color setting with the highest priority will be used.
764
765The same principle applies to the event tick colors in the Time Chart view. If a tick represents many events, the tick color of the highest priority matching event will be used.
766
767Color settings can be inserted, deleted, reordered, imported and exported using the buttons in the Colors view toolbar. Changes to the color settings are applied immediately, and are persisted to disk.
768
769== Filters View ==
770
771[[Image:images/FiltersView.png]]
772
773The Filters view allows the user to define preset filters that can be applied to any events table.
774
c6f6512e 775The filters can be more complex than what can be achieved with the filter header row in the events table. The filter is defined in a tree node structure, where the node types can be any of '''TRACETYPE''', '''AND''', '''OR''', '''CONTAINS''', '''EQUALS''', '''MATCHES''' or '''COMPARE'''. Some nodes types have restrictions on their possible children in the tree.
ff25eb47 776
4cc0dbca 777The '''TRACETYPE''' node filters against the trace type of the trace as defined in a plug-in extension or in a custom parser. When used, any child node will have its ''type'' combo box fixed and its ''aspect'' combo box restricted to the possible aspects of that trace type.
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778
779The '''AND''' node applies the logical ''and'' condition on all of its children. All children conditions must be true for the filter to match. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition.
780
781The '''OR''' node applies the logical ''or'' condition on all of its children. At least one children condition must be true for the filter to match. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition.
782
4cc0dbca 783The '''CONTAINS''' node matches when the specified event ''aspect'' value contains the specified ''value'' string. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition. The condition can be case sensitive or insensitive. The ''type'' combo box restricts the possible aspects to those of the specified trace type.
ff25eb47 784
4cc0dbca 785The '''EQUALS''' node matches when the specified event ''aspect'' value equals exactly the specified ''value'' string. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition. The condition can be case sensitive or insensitive. The ''type'' combo box restricts the possible aspects to those of the specified trace type.
ff25eb47 786
4cc0dbca 787The '''MATCHES''' node matches when the specified event ''aspect'' value matches against the specified ''regular expression''. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition. The ''type'' combo box restricts the possible aspects to those of the specified trace type.
ff25eb47 788
4cc0dbca 789The '''COMPARE''' node matches when the specified event ''aspect'' value compared with the specified ''value'' gives the specified ''result''. The result can be set to ''smaller than'', ''equal'' or ''greater than''. The type of comparison can be numerical, alphanumerical or based on time stamp. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition. The ''type'' combo box restricts the possible aspects to those of the specified trace type.
ff25eb47 790
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791For numerical comparisons, strings prefixed by "0x", "0X" or "#" are treated as hexadecimal numbers and strings prefixed by "0" are treated as octal numbers.
792
793For time stamp comparisons, strings are treated as seconds with or without fraction of seconds. This corresponds to the '''TTT''' format in the '''Time Format''' preferences. The value for a selected event can be found in the '''Properties''' view under the ''Timestamp'' property. The common 'Timestamp' aspect can always be used for time stamp comparisons regardless of its time format.
794
795Filters can be added, deleted, imported and exported using the buttons in the Filters view toolbar. The nodes in the view can be Cut (Ctrl-X), Copied (Ctrl-C) and Pasted (Ctrl-V) by using the buttons in the toolbar or by using the key bindings. This makes it easier to quickly build new filters from existing ones. Changes to the preset filters are only applied and persisted to disk when the '''Save filters''' button is pressed.
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796
797To apply a saved preset filter in an events table, right-click on the table and select '''Apply preset filter...''' > ''filter name''.
798
799== Time Chart View ==
800
801[[Image:images/TimeChartView.png]]
802
7ebb6832 803The Time Chart view allows the user to visualize every open trace in a common time chart. Each trace is display in its own row and ticks are display for every punctual event. As the user zooms using the mouse wheel or by right-clicking and dragging in the time scale, more detailed event data is computed from the traces. The time axis is aligned with other views that support automatic time axis alignment (see [[#Automatic Time Axis Alignment | Automatic Time Axis Alignment]]).
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804
805Time synchronization is enabled between the time chart view and other trace viewers such as the events table.
806
807Color settings defined in the Colors view can be used to change the tick color of events displayed in the Time Chart view.
808
809When a search is applied in the events table, the ticks corresponding to matching events in the Time Chart view are decorated with a marker below the tick.
810
811When a bookmark is applied in the events table, the ticks corresponding to the bookmarked event in the Time Chart view is decorated with a bookmark above the tick.
812
813When a filter is applied in the events table, the non-matching ticks are removed from the Time Chart view.
814
32adc12c 815The Time Chart only supports traces that are opened in an editor. The use of an editor is specified in the plug-in extension for that trace type, or is enabled by default for custom traces.
ff25eb47 816
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817The '''Align Views''' toggle button [[Image:images/link.gif]] in the local toolbar allows to disable and enable the automatic time axis alignment of time-based views. Disabling the alignment in the this view will disable this feature across all the views because it's a workspace preference.
818
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819== State System Explorer View ==
820
821The State System Explorer view allows the user to inspect the state interval values of every attribute of a state system at a particular time.
822
823The view shows a tree of currently selected traces and their registered state system IDs. For each state system the tree structure of attributes is displayed. The attribute name, quark, value, start and end time, and full attribute path are shown for each attribute.
824
32adc12c 825To modify the time of attributes shown in the view, select a different current time in other views that support time synchronization (e.g. event table, histogram view). When a time range is selected, this view uses the begin time.
e8251298 826
43d4f823 827== Custom Parsers ==
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828
829Custom parser wizards allow the user to define their own parsers for text or XML traces. The user defines how the input should be parsed into internal trace events and identifies the event fields that should be created and displayed. Traces created using a custom parser can be correlated with other built-in traces or traces added by plug-in extension.
830
831=== Creating a custom text parser ===
43d4f823 832
ff25eb47 833The '''New Custom Text Parser''' wizard can be used to create a custom parser for text logs. It can be launched several ways:
43d4f823 834
ff25eb47 835* Select '''File''' &gt; '''New''' &gt; '''Other...''' &gt; '''Tracing''' &gt; '''Custom Text Parser'''
e03c29a7 836* Open the '''[[#Managing custom parsers|Manage Custom Parsers]]''' dialog, select the '''Text''' radio button and click the '''New...''' button
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837
838[[Image:images/CustomTextParserInput.png]]
839
840Fill out the first wizard page with the following information:
841
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842* '''Category:''' Enter a category name for the trace type.
843* '''Trace type:''' Enter a name for the trace type, which is also the name of the custom parser.
ff25eb47 844* '''Time Stamp format:''' Enter the date and time pattern that will be used to output the Time Stamp.<br>
61fd6eae 845Note: information about date and time patterns can be found here: [../reference/api/org/eclipse/tracecompass/tmf/core/timestamp/TmfTimestampFormat.html TmfTimestampFormat]
43d4f823 846
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847Click the '''Add next line''', '''Add child line''' or '''Remove line''' buttons to create a new line of input or delete it. For each line of input, enter the following information:
848
849* '''Regular expression:''' Enter a regular expression that should match the input line in the log, using capturing groups to extract the data.<br>
850Note: information about date and time patterns can be found here: [http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html]
851
852* '''Cardinality:''' Enter the minimum and maximum number of lines matching this line's regular expression that must be found in the log. At least the minimum number of lines must be found before the parser will consider the next line. Child lines will always be considered first.
853
854<u>Important note:</u> The custom parsers identify a log entry when the first line's regular expression matches (Root Line n). Each subsequent text line in the log is attempted to be matched against the regular expression of the parser's input lines in the order that they are defined (Line n.*). Only the first matching input line will be used to process the captured data to be stored in the log entry. When a text line matches a Root Line's regular expression, a new log entry is started.
43d4f823 855
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856Click the '''Add group''' or '''Remove group''' buttons to define the data extracted from the capturing groups in the line's regular expression. For each group, enter the following information:
857
858* '''Name combo:''' Select a name for the extracted data:
43d4f823 859** '''Time Stamp''': Select this option to identify the time stamp data. The input's data and time pattern must be entered in the format: text box.
ff25eb47 860** '''Message''': Select this option to identify the main log entry's message. This is usually a group which could have text of greater length.
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861** '''Other''': Select this option to identify any non-standard data. The name must be entered in the name: text box.
862
ff25eb47 863* '''Action combo:''' Select the action to be performed on the extracted data:
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864** '''Set''': Select this option to overwrite the data for the chosen name when there is a match for this group.
865** '''Append''': Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this group.
ff25eb47 866** '''Append with |''' : Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this group, using a | separator between matches.
43d4f823 867
ff25eb47 868The '''Preview input''' text box can be used to enter any log data that will be processed against the defined custom parser. When the wizard is invoked from a selected log file resource, this input will be automatically filled with the file contents.
43d4f823 869
ff25eb47 870The '''Preview:''' text field of each capturing group and of the Time Stamp will be filled from the parsed data of the first matching log entry.
43d4f823 871
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872In the '''Preview input''' text box, the matching entries are highlighted with different colors:
873
874* <code><span style="background:#FFFF00">&nbsp;Yellow&nbsp;</span></code> : indicates uncaptured text in a matching line.
875* <code><span style="background:#00FF00">&nbsp;Green&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></code> : indicates a captured group in the matching line's regular expression for which a custom parser group is defined. This data will be stored by the custom parser.
876* <code><span style="background:#FF00FF">&nbsp;Magenta</span></code> : indicates a captured group in the matching line's regular expression for which there is no custom parser group defined. This data will be lost.
877* <code>&nbsp;White&nbsp;&nbsp;</code> : indicates a non-matching line.
878
879The first line of a matching entry is highlighted with darker colors.
43d4f823 880
ff25eb47 881By default only the first matching entry will be highlighted. To highlight all matching entries in the preview input data, click the '''Highlight All''' button. This might take a few seconds to process, depending on the input size.
43d4f823 882
efa5fe79 883Click the '''Next >''' button to go to the second page of the wizard.
43d4f823 884
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885[[Image:images/CustomTextParserOutput.png]]
886
887On this page, the list of default and custom data is shown, along with a preview of the custom parser log table output.
888
889The custom data output can be modified by the following options:
890
891* '''Visibility:''' Select or unselect the checkbox to display the custom data or hide it.
892
893* '''Column order:''' Click '''Move before''' or '''Move after''' to change the display order of custom data.
894
895The table at the bottom of the page shows a preview of the custom parser log table output according to the selected options, using the matching entries of the previous page's '''Preview input''' log data.
43d4f823 896
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897Click the '''Finish''' button to close the wizard and save the custom parser.
898
899=== Creating a custom XML parser ===
900
901The '''New Custom XML Parser''' wizard can be used to create a custom parser for XML logs. It can be launched several ways:
902
903* Select '''File''' &gt; '''New''' &gt; '''Other...''' &gt; '''Tracing''' &gt; '''Custom XML Parser'''
e03c29a7 904* Open the '''[[#Managing custom parsers|Manage Custom Parsers]]''' dialog, select the '''XML''' radio button and click the '''New...''' button
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905
906[[Image:images/CustomXMLParserInput.png]]
907
908Fill out the first wizard page with the following information:
909
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910* '''Category:''' Enter a category name for the trace type.
911* '''Trace type:''' Enter a name for the trace type, which is also the name of the custom parser.
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912* '''Time Stamp format:''' Enter the date and time pattern that will be used to output the Time Stamp.<br>
913
61fd6eae 914Note: information about date and time patterns can be found here: [../reference/api/org/eclipse/tracecompass/tmf/core/timestamp/TmfTimestampFormat.html TmfTimestampFormat]
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915
916Click the '''Add document element''' button to create a new document element and enter a name for the root-level document element of the XML file.
917
918Click the '''Add child''' button to create a new element of input to the document element or any other element. For each element, enter the following information:
919
920* '''Element name:''' Enter a name for the element that must match an element of the XML file.
921* '''Log entry:''' Select this checkbox to identify an element which represents a log entry. Each element with this name in the XML file will be parsed to a new log entry. At least one log entry element must be identified in the XML document. Log entry elements cannot be nested.
922* '''Name combo:''' Select a name for the extracted data:
43d4f823 923** '''Ignore''': Select this option to ignore the extracted element's data at this level. It is still possible to extract data from this element's child elements.
ff25eb47 924** '''Time Stamp''': Select this option to identify the time stamp data. The input's data and time pattern must be entered in the format: text box.
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925** '''Message''': Select this option to identify the main log entry's message. This is usually an input which could have text of greater length.
926** '''Other''': Select this option to identify any non-standard data. The name must be entered in the name: text box. It does not have to match the element name.
ff25eb47 927* '''Action combo:''' Select the action to be performed on the extracted data:
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928** '''Set''': Select this option to overwrite the data for the chosen name when there is a match for this element.
929** '''Append''': Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element.
930** '''Append with |''' : Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element, using a | separator between matches.
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931
932Note: An element's extracted data 'value' is a parsed string representation of all its attributes, children elements and their own values. To extract more specific information from an element, ignore its data value and extract the data from one or many of its attributes and children elements.
933
934Click the '''Add attribute''' button to create a new attribute input from the document element or any other element. For each attribute, enter the following information:
935
936* '''Attribute name:''' Enter a name for the attribute that must match an attribute of this element in the XML file.
937* '''Name combo:''' Select a name for the extracted data:
938** '''Time Stamp''': Select this option to identify the time stamp data. The input's data and time pattern must be entered in the format: text box.
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939** '''Message''': Select this option to identify the main log entry's message. This is usually an input which could have text of greater length.
940** '''Other''': Select this option to identify any non-standard data. The name must be entered in the name: text box. It does not have to match the element name.
ff25eb47 941* '''Action combo:''' Select the action to be performed on the extracted data:
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942** '''Set''': Select this option to overwrite the data for the chosen name when there is a match for this element.
943** '''Append''': Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element.
944** '''Append with |''' : Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element, using a | separator between matches.
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945
946Note: A log entry can inherited input data from its parent elements if the data is extracted at a higher level.
947
948Click the '''Feeling lucky''' button to automatically and recursively create child elements and attributes for the current element, according to the XML element data found in the '''Preview input''' text box, if any.
949
950Click the '''Remove element''' or '''Remove attribute''' buttons to remove the extraction of this input data. Take note that all children elements and attributes are also removed.
951
952The '''Preview input''' text box can be used to enter any XML log data that will be processed against the defined custom parser. When the wizard is invoked from a selected log file resource, this input will be automatically filled with the file contents.
953
954The '''Preview:''' text field of each capturing element and attribute and of the Time Stamp will be filled from the parsed data of the first matching log entry. Also, when creating a new child element or attribute, its element or attribute name will be suggested if possible from the preview input data.
955
efa5fe79 956Click the '''Next >''' button to go to the second page of the wizard.
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957
958[[Image:images/CustomXMLParserOutput.png]]
959
960On this page, the list of default and custom data is shown, along with a preview of the custom parser log table output.
961
962The custom data output can be modified by the following options:
963
964* '''Visibility:''' Select or unselect the checkbox to display the custom data or hide it.
965* '''Column order:''' Click '''Move before''' or '''Move before''' to change the display order of custom data.
966
967The table at the bottom of the page shows a preview of the custom parser log table output according to the selected options, using the matching entries of the previous page's '''Preview input''' log data.
968
969Click the '''Finish''' button to close the wizard and save the custom parser.
970
971=== Managing custom parsers ===
972
973The '''Manage Custom Parsers''' dialog is used to manage the list of custom parsers used by the tool. To open the dialog:
974
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975* Open the '''Project Explorer''' view.
976* Select '''Manage Custom Parsers...''' from the '''Traces''' folder context menu, or from a trace's '''Select Trace Type...''' context sub-menu.
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977
978[[Image:images/ManageCustomParsers.png]]
43d4f823 979
ff25eb47 980The ordered list of currently defined custom parsers for the selected type is displayed on the left side of the dialog.
43d4f823 981
ff25eb47 982To change the type of custom parser to manage, select the '''Text''' or '''XML''' radio button.
43d4f823 983
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984The following actions can be performed from this dialog:
985
986* New...
43d4f823 987
ff25eb47 988Click the '''New...''' button to launch the '''New Custom Parser''' wizard.
43d4f823 989
ff25eb47 990* Edit...
43d4f823 991
ff25eb47 992Select a custom parser from the list and click the '''Edit...''' button to launch the '''Edit Custom Parser''' wizard.
43d4f823 993
ff25eb47 994* Delete
43d4f823 995
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996Select a custom parser from the list and click the '''Delete''' button to remove the custom parser.
997
998* Import...
43d4f823 999
97205e65 1000Click the '''Import...''' button and select a file from the opened file dialog to import all its custom parsers. If any parser conflicts with an existing built-in or custom trace type, the user will be prompted to skip or rename the imported parser.
43d4f823 1001
ff25eb47 1002* Export...
43d4f823 1003
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1004Select a custom parser from the list, click the '''Export...''' button and enter or select a file in the opened file dialog to export the custom parser. Note that if an existing file containing custom parsers is selected, the custom parser will be appended to the file.
1005
1006=== Opening a trace using a custom parser ===
1007
e03c29a7 1008Once a custom parser has been created, any [[#Importing Traces to the Project|imported trace]] file can be opened and parsed using it.
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1009
1010To do so:
43d4f823 1011
ff25eb47 1012* Select a trace in the '''Project Explorer''' view
97205e65 1013* Right-click the trace and select '''Select Trace Type...''' &gt; ''category name'' &gt; ''parser name''
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1014* Double-click the trace or right-click it and select '''Open'''
1015
1016The trace will be opened in an editor showing the events table, and an entry will be added for it in the Time Chart view.
1017
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1018== Automatic Time Axis Alignment ==
1019
1020Trace Compass supports automatic alignment of the time axis for time base views. The user now can resize the time window of one view and all other open views will align to the new window size and position. The automatic alignment is optional and can be disabled and enabled using the '''Align Views''' toolbar button. Disabling or enabling it in one view it will disable and enable it for all view since it's a workspace wide setting.
1021
1022[[Image:images/TimeAlignment_sash.png]]
1023
e5b63e7d 1024= LTTng Tracer Control =
ff25eb47 1025
80f680be 1026The LTTng Tracer Control in Eclipse for the LTTng Tracer toolchain version v2.0 (or later) is done using SSH and requires an SSH server to be running on the remote host. For the SSH connection the SSH implementation of Remote Services is used. The functions to control the LTTng tracer (e.g. start and stop), either locally or remotely, are available from a dedicated Control View.
ff25eb47 1027
43b509ac 1028In the following sections the LTTng 2.0 tracer control integration in Eclipse is described. Please refer to the LTTng 2.0 tracer control command line manual for more details and descriptions about all commands and their command line parameters [[#References | References]].
ff25eb47 1029
e5b63e7d 1030== Control View ==
43d4f823 1031To open the Control View, select '''Window->Show View->Other...->LTTng->Control View''.
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1032
1033[[Image:images/LTTngControlView.png]]
1034
e5b63e7d 1035=== Creating a New Connection to a Remote Host ===
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1036
1037To connect to a remote host, select the '''New Connection''' button in the Control View.
1038
1039[[Image:images/LTTngControlViewConnect.png]]
1040
80f680be 1041A new dialog is opened for selecting a remote connection. You can also edit or define a remote connection from here.
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1042
1043[[Image:images/LTTng2NewConnection.png]]
1044
80f680be 1045To define a new remote host using the default SSH service, select '''Buit-in SSH''' and then select '''Create...'''. This will start the standard '''New Connection''' wizard provided by the Remote Services plugin. Similar, to edit the definition of a remote connection, select '''Edit...''' and use the '''Edit Connection''' wizard provided by the SSH service. In case you have installed an additional adapter for the Remote Services, you can choose to define a remote connection based on this adapter.
ff25eb47 1046
80f680be 1047[[Image:images/LTTng2NewRemoteConnection.png]]
ff25eb47 1048
80f680be 1049To use an existing connection definition, select the relevant entry in the tree and then select '''Ok'''.
43d4f823 1050
80f680be 1051[[Image:images/LTTng2SelectConnection.png]]
ff25eb47 1052
80f680be 1053A new display will show for providing the user name and password. This display only opens if no password had been saved before. Enter user name and password in the '''Password Required''' dialog box and select '''Ok'''.
ff25eb47 1054
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1055[[Image:images/LTTng2EnterPassword.png]]
1056
1057After pressing '''Ok''' the SSH connection will be established and after successful login the Control View implementation retrieves the LTTng Tracer Control information. This information will be displayed in the Control View in form of a tree structure.
1058
1059[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewFilled.png]]
1060
1061The top level tree node is the representation of the remote connection (host). The connection name of the connection will be displayed. Depending on the connection state different icons are displayed. If the node is '''CONNECTED''' the icon is shown [[Image:images/Target_connected.gif]], otherwise (states '''CONNECTING''', '''DISCONNNECTING''' or '''DISCONNECTED''' the icon is [[Image:images/Target_disconnected.gif]].
1062
43d4f823 1063Under the host level two folder groups are located. The first one is the '''Provider''' group. The second one is the '''Sessions''' group.
ff25eb47 1064
43d4f823 1065Under the '''Provider''' group all trace providers are displayed. Trace providers are '''Kernel''' and any user space application that supports UST tracing. Under each provider a corresponding list of events are displayed.
ff25eb47 1066
43d4f823 1067Under the '''Sessions''' group all current sessions will be shown. The level under the sessions show the configured domains. Currently the LTTng 2.0 Tracer Toolchan supports domain '''Kernel''' and '''UST global'''. Under each domain the configured channels will be displayed. The last level is under the channels where the configured events are displayed.
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1068
1069Each session can be '''ACTIVE''' or '''INACTIVE'''. Active means that tracing has been started, inactive means that the tracing has been stopped. Depending on the state of a session a different icon is displayed. The icon for an active session is [[Image:images/Session_active.gif]]. The icon for an inactive session is [[Image:images/Session_inactive.gif]].
1070
1071Each channel can be '''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED'''. An enabled channel means that all configured events of that channel will be traced and a disabled channel won't trace any of its configured events. Different icons are displayed depending on the state of the channel. The icon for an enabled channel is [[Image:images/Channel.gif]] and the icon for a disabled channel is [[Image:images/Channel_disabled.gif]].
1072
1073Events within a channel can be in state '''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED'''. Enabled events are stored in the trace when passed during program execution. Disabled events on the other hand won't be traced. Depending on the state of the event the icons for the event is different. An enabled event has the icon [[Image:images/Event_enabled.gif]] and a disabled event the icon [[Image:images/Event_disabled.gif]].
1074
e5b63e7d 1075=== Disconnecting from a Remote Host ===
ff25eb47 1076
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1077To disconnect from a remote host, select the host in the Control View and press the '''Disconnect''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Disconnect''' button.
1078
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1079[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewDisconnect.png]]
1080
e5b63e7d 1081=== Connecting to a Remote Host ===
ff25eb47 1082
43b509ac 1083To connect to a remote host, select the host in the Control View and press the '''Connect''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Connect''' button. This will start the connection process as discribed in [[#Creating a New Connection to a Remote Host | Creating a New Connection to a Remote Host]].
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1084
1085[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewConnect.png]]
1086
e5b63e7d 1087=== Deleting to a Remote Host Connection ===
ff25eb47 1088
07ed89d6 1089To delete a remote host connection, select the host in the Control View and press the '''Delete''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Delete''' button. For that command to be active the connection state has to be '''DISCONNECTED''' and the trace has to be closed.
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1090
1091[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewDelete.png]]
1092
e5b63e7d 1093=== Creating a Tracing Session ===
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1094To create a tracing session, select the tree node '''Sessions''' and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Create Session...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
1095
1096[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionAction.png]]
1097
43d4f823 1098A dialog box will open for entering information about the session to be created.
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1099
1100[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionDialog.png]]
1101
1102Fill in the '''Session Name''' and optionally the '''Session Path''' and press '''Ok'''. Upon successful operation a new session will be created and added under the tree node '''Sessions'''.
1103
e5b63e7d 1104=== Creating a Tracing Session With Advanced Options ===
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1105LTTng Tools version v2.1.0 introduces the possibility to configure the trace output location at session creation time. The trace can be stored in the (tracer) local file system or can be transferred over the network.
1106
43b509ac 1107To create a tracing session and configure the trace output, open the trace session dialog as described in chapter [[#Creating a Tracing Session | Creating a Tracing Session]]. A dialog box will open for entering information about the session to be created.
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1108
1109[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionDialog_Advanced.png]]
1110
1111The button '''Advanced >>>''' will only show if the remote host has LTTng Tools v2.1.0 installed. To configure the trace output select the '''Advanced >>>''' button. The Dialog box will be shown new fields to configure the trace output location.
1112
1113[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionDialog_TracePath.png]]
1114
1115By default, the button '''Use same protocol and address for data and control''' is selected which allows to configure the same '''Protocol''' and '''Address''' for both data URL and control URL.
1116
1117If button '''Use same protocol and address for data and control''' is selected the '''Protocol''' can be '''net''' for the default network protocol which is TCP (IPv4), '''net6''' for the default network protocol which is TCP (IPv6) and '''file''' for the local file system. For '''net''' and '''net6''' the port can be configured. Enter a value in '''Port''' for data and control URL or keep them empty for the default port to be used. Using '''file''' as protocol no port can be configured and the text fields are disabled.
1118
1119If button '''Use same protocol and address for data and control''' is not selected the '''Protocol''' can be '''net''' for the default network protocol which is TCP (IPv4), '''net6''' for the default network protocol which is TCP (IPv6), '''tcp''' for the network protocol TCP (IPv4) and '''tcp6''' for the network protocol TCP (IPv6). Note that for '''net''' and '''net6''' always the default port is used and hence the port text fields are disabled. To configure non-default ports use '''tcp''' or '''tcp6'''.
1120
43b509ac 1121The text field '''Trace Path''' allows for specifying the path relative to the location defined by the '''relayd''' or relative to the location specified by the '''Address''' when using protocol '''file'''. For more information about the '''relayd''' see '''LTTng relayd User Manual''' in chapter [[#References | References]].
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1122
1123To create a session with advanced options, fill in the relevant parameters and press '''Ok'''. Upon successful operation a new session will be created and added under the tree node '''Sessions'''.
1124
e5b63e7d 1125=== Creating a Snapshot Tracing Session ===
43b509ac 1126LTTng Tools version v2.3.0 introduces the possibility to create snapshot tracing sessions. After starting tracing the trace events are not stored on disk or over the network. They are only transfered to disk or over the network when the user records a snapshot. To create such a snapshot session, open the trace session dialog as described in chapter [[#Creating a Tracing Session | Creating a Tracing Session]].
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1127
1128[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionDialog_Snapshot.png]]
1129
81d5dc3a 1130Fill in all necessary information, select the radio button for '''Snapshot Mode''' and press '''Ok'''. By default, the location for the snapshot output will be on the host where the host is located.
589d0d33 1131
43b509ac 1132Refer to chapter [[#Recording a Snapshot | Recording a Snapshot]] for how to create a snapshot.
589d0d33 1133
61fd6eae 1134=== Creating a Live Tracing Session ===
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1135LTTng Tools version v2.4.0 introduces the possibility to create live tracing sessions. The live mode allows you to stream the trace and view it while it's being recorded. To create such a live session, open the trace session dialog as described in chapter [[#Creating a Tracing Session | Creating a Tracing Session]].
1136
1137[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionDialog_Live.png]]
1138
1139In the advanced options, it is possible to set the '''Live Delay'''. The '''Live Delay''' is the delay in micro seconds before the data is flushed and streamed.
1140
1141[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionDialog_Live_Advanced.png]]
1142
1143Fill in all necessary information, select the radio button for '''Live Mode''' and press '''Ok'''.
1144
e5b63e7d 1145=== Enabling Channels - General ===
ff25eb47 1146
43d4f823 1147Enabling channels can be done using a session tree node when the domain hasn't be created in the session or, alternatively on a domain tree node of a session in case the domain is already available.
ff25eb47 1148
e5b63e7d 1149=== Enabling Channels On Session Level ===
ff25eb47 1150
43d4f823 1151To enable a channel, select the tree node of the relevant session and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Channel...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
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1152
1153[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelAction.png]]
1154
1155A dialog box will open for entering information about the channel to be created.
1156
1157[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelDialog.png]]
1158
e799e5f3 1159By default the domain '''Kernel''' is selected. To create a UST channel, select '''UST''' under the domain section. The label <Default> in any text box indicates that the default value of the tracer will be configured. To initialize the dialog box press button '''Default'''.
43d4f823 1160
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1161If required update the following channel information and then press '''Ok'''.
1162
43d4f823 1163* '''Channel Name''': The name of the channel.
ff25eb47 1164* '''Sub Buffer size''': The size of the sub-buffers of the channel (in bytes).
83051fc3 1165* '''Number of Sub Buffers''': The number of sub-buffers of the channel.
ff25eb47 1166* '''Switch Timer Interval''': The switch timer interval.
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1167* '''Read Timer Interval''': The read timer interval.
1168* '''Discard Mode''': '''Overwrite''' events in buffer or '''Discard''' new events when buffer is full.
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1169
1170Upon successful operation, the requested domain will be created under the session tree node as well as the requested channel will be added under the domain. The channel will be '''ENABLED'''.
1171
e5b63e7d 1172=== Configuring Trace File Rotation ===
e799e5f3 1173
83051fc3 1174Since LTTng Tools v2.2.0 it is possible to set the maximum size of trace files and the maximum number of them. These options are located in the same dialog box that is used for enabling channels.
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1175
1176[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelDialogFileRotation.png]]
1177
1178* '''Maximum size of trace files''': The maximum size of trace files
1179* '''Maximum number of trace files''': The maximum number of trace files
1180
e5b63e7d 1181=== Configuring per UID and per PID Buffers (UST only) ===
e799e5f3 1182
83051fc3 1183Since LTTng Tools v2.2.0 it is possible to configure the type of buffers for '''UST''' application. It is now possible to choose between per '''UID''' buffers (per user ID) and per '''PID''' buffers (per process ID) using the dialog box for enabling channels.
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1184
1185[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelDialogPerUIDBuffers.png]]
1186
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1187* '''Per PID buffers''': To activate the per PID buffers option for UST channels
1188* '''Per UID buffers''': To activate the per UID buffers option for UST channels
e799e5f3 1189
83051fc3 1190If no buffer type is selected then the default value of the tracer will be configured.
e799e5f3 1191
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1192Note that '''Global shared buffers''' is only for kernel channel and is pre-selected when '''Kernel''' is selected in the dalog box.
1193
e5b63e7d 1194=== Configuring Periodical Flush for metadata Channel ===
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1195
1196Since LTTng Tools v2.2.0 it is possible to configure periodical flush for the metadata channel. To set this, use the checkbox '''Configure metadata channel''' then fill the switch timer interval.
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1197
1198[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelDialogMetadataFlush.png]]
1199
e5b63e7d 1200=== Enabling Channels On Domain Level ===
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1201
1202Once a domain is available, channels can be enabled directly using the domain. To enable a channel under an existing domain, select the tree node of the relevant domain and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Channel...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
1203
1204[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelOnDomainAction.png]]
1205
83051fc3 1206The dialog box for enabling channel will open for entering information about the channel to be created. Note that the domain is pre-selected and cannot be changed. Fill the relevant information and press '''Ok'''.
ff25eb47 1207
e5b63e7d 1208=== Enabling and Disabling Channels ===
ff25eb47 1209
43d4f823 1210To disable one or more enabled channels, select the tree nodes of the relevant channels and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Disable Channel''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu.
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1211
1212[[Image:images/LTTng2DisableChannelAction.png]]
1213
1214Upon successful operation, the selected channels will be '''DISABLED''' and the icons for the channels will be updated.
1215
1216To enable one or more disabled channels, select the tree nodes of the relevant channels and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Channel''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu.
1217
1218[[Image:images/LTTng2EnableChannelAction.png]]
1219
1220Upon successful operation, the selected channels will be '''ENABLED''' and the icons for the channels will be updated.
1221
e5b63e7d 1222=== Enabling Events - General ===
ff25eb47 1223
43d4f823 1224Enabling events can be done using different levels in the tree node. It can be done on the session, domain level and channel level. For the case of session or domain, i.e. when no specific channels is assigned then enabling of events is done on the default channel with the name '''channel0''' which created, if not already exists, by the LTTng tracer control on the server side.
ff25eb47 1225
e5b63e7d 1226=== Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level ===
ff25eb47 1227
43d4f823 1228To enable events, select the tree node of the relevant session and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Event (default channel)...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
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1229
1230[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnSessionAction.png]]
1231
1232A dialog box will open for entering information about events to be enabled.
1233
1234[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnSessionDialog.png]]
1235
1236By default the domain '''Kernel''' is selected and the kernel specific data sections are created. From this dialog box kernel '''Tracepoint''' events, '''System calls (Syscall)''', a '''Dynamic Probe''' or a '''Dynamic Function entry/return''' probe can be enabled. Note that events of one of these types at a time can be enabled.
1237
1238To enable '''Tracepoint''' events, first select the corresponding '''Select''' button, then select either all tracepoins (select '''All''') or select selectively one or more tracepoints in the displayed tree of tracepoints and finally press '''Ok'''.
1239
1240[[Image:images/LTTng2TracepointEventsDialog.png]]
1241
1242Upon successful operation, the domain '''Kernel''' will be created in the tree (if neccessary), the default channel with name "channel0" will be added under the domain (if necessary) as well as all requested events of type '''TRACEPOINT''' under the channel. The channel and events will be '''ENABLED'''.
1243
1244[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledKernelTracepoints.png]]
1245
43d4f823 1246To enable all '''Syscalls''', select the corresponding '''Select''' button and press '''Ok'''.
ff25eb47 1247
43d4f823 1248[[Image:images/LTTng2SyscallsDialog.png]]
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1249
1250Upon successful operation, the event with the name '''syscalls''' and event type '''SYSCALL''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''Kernel''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
1251
1252[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledKernelSyscalls.png]]
1253
1254To enable a '''Dynamic Probe''' event, select the corresponding '''Select''' button, fill the '''Event Name''' and '''Probe''' fields and press '''Ok'''. Note that the probe can be an address, symbol or a symbol+offset where the address and offset can be octal (0NNN...), decimal (NNN...) or hexadecimal (0xNNN...).
1255
1256[[Image:images/LTTng2ProbeEventDialog.png]]
1257
1258Upon successful operation, the dynamic probe event with the given name and event type '''PROBE''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''Kernel''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
1259
1260[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledKernelProbeEvent.png]]
1261
1262To enable a '''Dynamic Function entry/return Probe''' event, select the corresponding '''Select''' button, fill the '''Event Name''' and '''Function''' fields and press '''Ok'''. Note that the funtion probe can be an address, symbol or a symbol+offset where the address and offset can be octal (0NNN...), decimal (NNN...) or hexadecimal (0xNNN...).
1263
1264[[Image:images/LTTng2FunctionEventDialog.png]]
1265
1266Upon successful operation, the dynamic function probe event with the given name and event type '''PROBE''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''Kernel''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
1267
1268[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledFunctionProbeEvent.png]]
1269
e5b63e7d 1270=== Enabling UST Events On Session Level ===
ff25eb47 1271
43b509ac 1272For enabling UST events, first open the enable events dialog as described in section [[#Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level | Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level]] and select domain '''UST'''.
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1273
1274To enable '''Tracepoint''' events, first select the corresponding '''Select''' button, then select either all tracepoins (select '''All''') or select selectively one or more tracepoints in the displayed tree of tracepoints and finally press '''Ok'''.
1275
1276[[Image:images/LTTng2UstTracepointEventsDialog.png]]
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1277
1278Upon successful operation, the domain '''UST global''' will be created in the tree (if neccessary), the default channel with name "channel0" will be added under the domain (if necessary) as well as all requested events under the channel. The channel and events will be '''ENABLED'''. Note that for the case that '''All''' tracepoints were selected the wildcard '''*''' is used which will be shown in the Control View as below.
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1279
1280[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledAllUstTracepoints.png]]
1281
1282For UST it is possible to enable '''Tracepoint''' events using a wildcard. To enable '''Tracepoint''' events with a wildcard, select first the corresponding '''Select''' button, fill the '''Wildcard''' field and press '''Ok'''.
1283
43d4f823 1284[[Image:images/LTTng2UstWildcardEventsDialog.png]]
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1285
1286Upon successful operation, the event with the given wildcard and event type '''TRACEPOINT''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''UST global''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
1287
1288[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledUstWildcardEvents.png]]
1289
1290For UST it is possible to enable '''Tracepoint''' events using log levels. To enable '''Tracepoint''' events using log levels, select first the corresponding '''Select''' button, select a log level from the drop down menu, fill in the relevant information (see below) and press '''Ok'''.
1291
43d4f823 1292* '''Event Name''': Name to display
ff25eb47 1293* '''loglevel''': To specify if a range of log levels (0 to selected log level) shall be configured
43d4f823 1294* '''loglevel-only''': To specify that only the specified log level shall be configured
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1295
1296[[Image:images/LTTng2UstLoglevelEventsDialog.png]]
1297
1298Upon successful operation, the event with the given event name and event type '''TRACEPOINT''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''UST global''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
1299
1300[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledUstLoglevelEvents.png]]
1301
e5b63e7d 1302=== Enabling Events On Domain Level ===
ff25eb47 1303
43d4f823 1304Kernel events can also be enabled on the domain level. For that select the relevant domain tree node, click the right mouse button and the select '''Enable Event (default channel)...'''. A new dialog box will open for providing information about the events to be enabled. Depending on the domain, '''Kernel''' or '''UST global''', the domain specifc fields are shown and the domain selector is preselected and read-only.
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1305
1306[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnDomainAction.png]]
1307
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1308To enable events for domain '''Kernel''' follow the instructions in section [[#Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level | Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level]], for domain '''UST global''', see section [[#Enabling UST Events On Session Level | Enabling UST Events On Session Level]].
1309The events will be add to the default channel '''channel0'''. This channel will be created by on the server side if neccessary.
ff25eb47 1310
e5b63e7d 1311=== Enabling Events On Channel Level ===
ff25eb47 1312
43b509ac 1313Kernel events can also be enabled on the channel level. If necessary, create a channel as described in sections [[#Enabling Channels On Session Level | Enabling Channels On Session Level]] or [[#Enabling Channels On Domain Level | Enabling Channels On Domain Level]].
ff25eb47 1314
43d4f823 1315Then select the relevant channel tree node, click the right mouse button and the select '''Enable Event...'''. A new dialog box will open for providing information about the events to be enabled. Depending on the domain, '''Kernel''' or '''UST global''', the domain specifc fields are shown and the domain selector is preselected and read-only.
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1316
1317[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnChannelAction.png]]
1318
43b509ac 1319To enable events for domain '''Kernel''' follow the instructions in section [[#Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level | Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level]], for domain '''UST global''' [[#Enabling UST Events On Session Level | Enabling UST Events On Session Level]].
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1320
1321When enabling events on the channel level, the events will be add to the selected channel.
1322
e5b63e7d 1323=== Enabling and Disabling Events ===
ff25eb47 1324
43d4f823 1325To disable one or more enabled events, select the tree nodes of the relevant events and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Disable Event''' menu item in the context-sensitive menu.
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1326
1327[[Image:images/LTTng2DisableEventAction.png]]
1328
1329Upon successful operation, the selected events will be '''DISABLED''' and the icons for these events will be updated.
1330
1331To enable one or more disabled events, select the tree nodes of the relevant events and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Event''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu.
1332
1333[[Image:images/LTTng2EnableEventAction.png]]
1334
1335Upon successful operation, the selected events will be '''ENABLED''' and the icons for these events will be updated.
1336
1337'''Note''': There is currently a limitation for kernel event of type '''SYSCALL'''. This kernel event can not be disabled. An error will appear when trying to disable this type of event. A work-around for that is to have the syscall event in a separate channel and disable the channel instead of the event.
1338
e5b63e7d 1339=== Enabling Tracepoint Events From Provider ===
ff25eb47 1340
43b509ac 1341It is possible to enable events of type '''Tracepoint''' directly from the providers and assign the enabled event to a session and channel. Before doing that a session has to be created as described in section [[#Creating a Tracing Session | Creating a Tracing Session]]. Also, if other than default channel '''channel0''' is required, create a channel as described in sections [[#Enabling Channels On Session Level | Enabling Channels On Session Level]] or [[#Enabling Channels On Domain Level | Enabling Channels On Domain Level]].
ff25eb47 1342
43d4f823 1343To assign tracepoint events to a session and channel, select the events to be enabled under the provider (e.g. provider '''Kernel'''), click right mouse button and then select '''Enable Event...''' menu item from the context sensitive menu.
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1344
1345[[Image:images/LTTng2AssignEventAction.png]]
1346
43d4f823
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1347A new display will open for defining the session and channel.
1348
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1349[[Image:images/LTTng2AssignEventDialog.png]]
1350
43d4f823 1351Select a session from the '''Session List''' drop-down menu, a channel from the '''Channel List''' drop-down menu and the press '''Ok'''. Upon successful operation, the selected events will be added to the selected session and channel of the domain that the selected provider belongs to. In case that there was no channel available, the domain and the default channel '''channel0''' will be created for corresponding session. The newly added events will be '''ENABLED'''.
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1352
1353[[Image:images/LTTng2AssignedEvents.png]]
1354
e268662d 1355=== Configuring Filter Expression When Enabling Events ===
52e76353 1356
e268662d 1357It is possible to provide a filter expression when enabling events for UST or Kernel. This feature has been available for UST since LTTng v2.1.0 and for Kernel since v2.7.0. To configure a filter expression, open the enable event dialog as described in previous chapters [[#Enabling UST Events On Session Level | Enabling UST Events On Session Level]], [[#Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level | Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level]], [[#Enabling Events On Domain Level | Enabling Events On Domain Level]] or [[#Enabling Events On Channel Level | Enabling Events On Channel Level]]. Then configure the relevant events and enter the filter expression in the '''Filter Expression''' text field.
52e76353 1358
e268662d 1359[[Image:images/LTTng2EnableEventWithFilter.png]] [[Image:images/LTTng2EnableEventWithKernelFilter.png]]
52e76353 1360
e268662d 1361Alternatively, open the dialog box for assigning events to a session and channel described in [[#Enabling Tracepoint Events From Provider | Enabling Tracepoint Events From Provider]] and enter the filter expression in the '''Filter Expression''' text field.
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1362
1363[[Image:images/LTTng2AssignEventDialogWithFilter.png]]
1364
43b509ac 1365For the syntax of the filter expression refer to the '''LTTng Tracer Control Command Line Tool User Manual''' of chapter [[#References |References]].
52e76353 1366
e5b63e7d 1367=== Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain ===
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1368
1369It is possible to add contexts to channels and events. Adding contexts on channels and events from the domain level, will enable the specified contexts to all channels of the domain and all their events. To add contexts on the domain level, select a domain, click right mouse button on a domain tree node (e.g. provider '''Kernel''') and select the menu item '''Add Context...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
1370
1371[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextOnDomainAction.png]]
1372
1373A new display will open for selecting one or more contexts to add.
1374
1375[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextDialog.png]]
1376
43d4f823 1377The tree shows all available context that can be added. Select one or more context and the press '''Ok'''. Upon successful operation, the selected context will be added to all channels and their events of the selected domain.
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1378
1379'''Note''': The LTTng UST tracer only supports contexts '''procname''', '''pthread_id''', '''vpid''' '''vtid'''. Adding any other contexts in the UST domina will fail.
1380
e5b63e7d 1381=== Adding Contexts to All Events of a Channel ===
ff25eb47 1382
43d4f823 1383Adding contexts on channels and events from the channel level, will enable the specified contexts to all events of the selected channel. To add contexts on the channel level, select a channel, click right mouse button on a channel tree node and select the menu item '''Add Context...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
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1384
1385[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextOnChannelAction.png]]
1386
43b509ac 1387A new display will open for selecting one or more contexts to add. Select one or more contexts as described in chapter [[#Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain | Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain]]. Upon successful operation, the selected context will be added to all channels and their events of the selected domain. '''Note''' that the LTTng 2.0 tracer control on the remote host doesn't provide a way to retrieve added contexts. Hence it's not possible to display the context information in the GUI.
ff25eb47 1388
e5b63e7d 1389=== Adding Contexts to an Event of a Specific Channel ===
ff25eb47 1390
bd9f92a8 1391Adding contexts to an event of a channel is only available in LTTng Tools versions v2.0.0-2.1.x. The menu option won't be visible for LTTng Tools version v2.2.0 or later. To add contexts on an event select an event of a channel, click right mouse button on the corresponding event tree node and select the menu item '''Add Context...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
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1392
1393[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextToEventsAction.png]]
1394
43b509ac 1395A new display will open for selecting one or more contexts to add. Select one or more contexts as described in chapter [[#Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain | Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain]]. Upon successful operation, the selected context will be added to the selected event.
ff25eb47 1396
e5b63e7d 1397=== Start Tracing ===
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1398
1399To start tracing, select one or more sessions to start in the Control View and press the '''Start''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button on the session tree nodes. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Start''' menu item.
1400
1401[[Image:images/LTTng2StartTracingAction.png]]
1402
43d4f823 1403Upon successful operation, the tracing session will be '''ACTIVE''' and the icon of the session will be updated.
ff25eb47 1404
e5b63e7d 1405=== Recording a Snapshot ===
589d0d33 1406
43b509ac 1407LTTng Tools version v2.3.0 introduces the possibility to create snapshot tracing sessions. After creating a snapshot session (see [[#Creating a Snapshot Tracing Session | Creating a Snapshot Tracing Session]]) and starting tracing (see [[#Start Tracing | Start Tracing]]) it possible to record snapshots. To record a snapshot select one or more sessions and press the '''Record Snapshot''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button on the session tree nodes. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Recored Snapshot''' menu item.
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1408
1409[[Image:images/LTTng2RecordSnapshotAction.png]]
1410
43b509ac 1411This action can be executed many times. It is possible to import the recorded snpshots to a tracing project. The trace session might be '''ACTIVE''' or '''INACTIVE''' for that. Refer to section [[#Importing Session Traces to a Tracing Project | Importing Session Traces to a Tracing Project]] on how to import a trace to a tracing project.
589d0d33 1412
e5b63e7d 1413=== Stop Tracing ===
ff25eb47 1414
589d0d33 1415To stop tracing, select one or more sessions to stop in the Control View and press the '''Stop''' button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on the session tree node. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Stop''' menu item.
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1416
1417[[Image:images/LTTng2StopTracingAction.png]]
1418
1419Upon successful operation, the tracing session will be '''INACTIVE''' and the icon of the session will be updated.
1420
e5b63e7d 1421=== Destroying a Tracing Session ===
ff25eb47 1422
43d4f823 1423To destroy a tracing session, select one or more sessions to destroy in the Control View and press the '''Destroy''' button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on the session tree node. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Destroy...''' menu item. Note that the session has to be '''INACTIVE''' for this operation.
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1424
1425[[Image:images/LTTng2DestroySessionAction.png]]
1426
43d4f823 1427A confirmation dialog box will open. Click on '''Ok''' to destroy the session otherwise click on '''Cancel'''.
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1428
1429[[Image:images/LTTng2DestroyConfirmationDialog.png]]
1430
1431Upon successful operation, the tracing session will be destroyed and removed from the tree.
1432
e5b63e7d 1433=== Refreshing the Node Information ===
ff25eb47 1434
43d4f823 1435To refresh the remote host information, select any node in the tree of the Control View and press the '''Refresh''' button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on any tree node. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Refresh''' menu item.
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1436
1437[[Image:images/LTTng2RefreshAction.png]]
1438
1439Upon successful operation, the tree in the Control View will be refreshed with the remote host configuration.
1440
e5b63e7d 1441=== Importing Session Traces to a Tracing Project ===
ff25eb47 1442
43d4f823 1443To import traces from a tracing session, select the relevant session and click on the '''Import''' Button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on the session tree node and select the menu item '''Import...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
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1444
1445[[Image:images/LTTng2ImportAction.png]]
1446
1447A new display will open for selecting the traces to import.
1448
1449[[Image:images/LTTng2ImportDialog.png]]
1450
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1451By default all traces are selected. A default project with the name '''Remote''' is selected which will be created if necessary. Update the list of traces to be imported, if necessary, by selecting and deselecting the relevant traces in the tree viewer. Use buttons '''Select All''' or '''Deselect All''' to select or deselect all traces. Also if needed, change the tracing project from the '''Available Projects''' combo box. The option '''Create Experiment''' will create an experiment with all imported traces. By default, the experiment name is the session name. One can change the experiment name by typing a new name in the text box beside the option.
1452
1453Then press button '''Finish'''. Upon successful import operation the selected traces will be stored in the '''Traces''' directory of the specified tracing project. A directory with the connection name will be created under the '''Traces''' directory. Underneath that, the session directory structure as well as the trace names will be preserved in the destination tracing project. For '''Kernel''' traces the trace type '''Linux Kernel Trace''' and for '''UST''' traces the trace type '''LTTng UST Trace''' will be set. From the '''Project Explorer''' view, the trace can be analyzed further.
cd9821de 1454
b9c84b9c 1455'''Note''': If a trace already exists with the same name in the destination directory, the user can choose to rename the imported trace, overwrite the original trace or skip the trace. When rename is chosen, a number is appended to the trace name, for example kernel becomes kernel(2).
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1456
1457[[Image:images/LTTng2ImportOverwriteConfirmationDialog.png]]
1458
b9c84b9c 1459If one selects '''Rename All''', '''Overwrite All''' or '''Skip All''' the choice will be applied for all traces with a name conflict.
ff25eb47 1460
e5b63e7d 1461=== Importing Network Traces to a Tracing Project ===
52e76353 1462
43b509ac 1463Since LTTng Tools v2.1.0 it is possible to store traces over the network. To import network traces, execute the '''Import''' action as described in chapter [[#Importing Session Traces to a Tracing Project | Importing Session Traces to a Tracing Project]]. For network traces the '''Import Trace Wizard''' will be displayed. Follow the instructions in chapter [[#Importing | Importing]] to import the network traces of the current session.
52e76353 1464
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1465=== Saving Tracing Sessions ===
1466Since LTTng Tools v2.5.0 it is possible to save tracing sessions. The LTTng Tools command-line tool will save the sessions to XML files located by default in a subdirectory of the user's home directory. The Trace Compass '''Control''' view integration for this feature will also store this session profile file into the user's Trace Compass workspace. This will allow user's to re-use session profiles across remote nodes. To save one or more sessions, select the tree nodes of the relevant sessions and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Save...''' entry of the context-sensitive menu.
1467
1468[[Image:images/LTTng2SaveAction.png]]
1469
1470A new display will open for saving the sessions.
1471
1472[[Image:images/LTTng2SaveDialog.png]]
1473
1474By default the '''force''' button is selected that will overwrite any conflicting session profile files on the remote node. Click on '''Ok''' to save the session(s) otherwise click on '''Cancel'''. Upon successful operation, the session profile files will be saved on the remote node and then will be downloaded to the user's Trace Compass workspace. In the case that a session XML file already exists in the workspace the user will be prompted to skip or overwrite the existing profile file.
1475
1476=== Loading Tracing Sessions ===
1477Since LTTng Tools v2.5.0 it is possible to load tracing sessions. The Trace Compass '''Control''' view integrations for this feature will allow to load session profiles that are located in the user's Trace Compass workspace, or alternatively, that are located on the remote node. In the first case the session profiles will be uploaded to the remote node before the load command is executed.
1478
1479To load one or more sessions, select the tree node '''Sessions''' and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Load...''' entry of the context-sensitive menu.
1480
1481[[Image:images/LTTng2LoadAction.png]]
1482
1483A new display will open for loading session profiles.
1484
1485[[Image:images/LTTng2LoadDialog.png]]
1486
d9ce6f2b 1487By default the '''Local''' button and '''force''' buttons are selected and session profile files of the user's workspace will be listed. Select one or more profiles, update the '''force''' button if needed and then click '''Ok'''. This will upload the session profile files to the remote node. If a session profile file with the same name already exist on the remote node, it will be overwritten. If the '''force''' button is selected any existing session with a conflicting name will be destroyed and a new one will be created.
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1488
1489Alternatively, one can select the '''Remote''' button to list all available session profile files on the remote node. To load one of the remote session profiles, select one or more profiles, update the '''force''' button if needed and then click '''Ok'''.
1490
1491[[Image:images/LTTng2LoadRemoteDialog.png]]
1492
1493Upon successful operation, the tracing sessions of the selected session profiles are created and added under the tree node '''Sessions''' the '''Control''' view.
1494
1495=== Managing Tracing Session Profiles ===
1496The '''LTTng Remote Profiles''' preference page is used to manage the list of LTTng session profiles that are stored in the user's Trace Compass workspace. To open the preference page, select the '''Manage...''' button of the '''Load Sessions''' dialog described in chapter [[#Loading Tracing Sessions |Loading Tracing Sessions]]. Alternatively, select '''Window -> Preferences''' from the top level menu and go to '''Tracing -> LTTng Remote Profiles'''.
1497
1498[[Image:images/LTTng2ManageSessionConfig.png]]
1499
1500The following actions can be performed from this dialog:
1501
1502* Delete
1503
1504Select one or more LTTng session profiles from the list and click the '''Delete''' button to remove the profile from the Trace Compass workspace. The user will be prompted to confirm the deletion.
1505
1506* Import...
1507
1508Click the '''Import...''' button and select a file from the opened file dialog to import a session profile file. If the file name conflicts with an existing profile file, the user will be prompted to skip or overwrite the existing profile file.
1509* Export...
1510
1511Select one or more session profile files from the list, click the '''Export...''' button and enter or select a directory in the opened directory dialog to export the profile files. If the file name conflicts with an existing profile file in the destination directory, the user will be prompted to skip or overwrite the existing profile file.
1512
e5b63e7d 1513== Properties View ==
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1514
1515The Control View provides property information of selected tree component. Depending on the selected tree component different properties are displayed in the property view. For example, when selecting the node level the property view will be filled as followed:
43d4f823 1516
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1517[[Image:images/LTTng2PropertyView.png]]
1518
1519'''List of properties''':
1520
1521* '''Host''' Properties
1522** '''Connection Name''': The alias name to be displayed in the Control View.
1523** '''Host Name''': The IP address or DNS name of the remote system.
1524** '''State''': The state of the connection ('''CONNECTED''', '''CONNECTING''', '''DISCONNNECTING''' or '''DISCONNECTED''').
1525* '''Kernel Provider''' Properties
1526** '''Provider Name''': The name of the provider.
1527* '''UST Provider''' Properties
1528** '''Provider Name''': The name of the provider.
1529** '''Process ID''': The process ID of the provider.
1530* '''Event''' Properties (Provider)
1531** '''Event Name''': The name of the event.
1532** '''Event Type''': The event type ('''TRACEPOINT''' only).
52e76353 1533** '''Fields''': Shows a list of fields defined for the selected event. (UST only, since support for LTTng Tools v2.1.0)
43d4f823 1534** '''Log Level''': The log level of the event.
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1535* '''Session''' Properties
1536** '''Session Name''': The name of the Session.
589d0d33 1537** '''Session Path''': The path on the remote host where the traces will be stored. (Not shown for snapshot sessions).
ff25eb47 1538** '''State''': The state of the session ('''ACTIVE''' or '''INACTIVE''')
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1539** '''Snapshot ID''': The snapshot ID. (Only shown for snapshot sessions).
1540** '''Snapshot Name''': The name of the snapshot output configuration. (Only shown for snapshot sessions).
1541** '''Snapshot Path''': The path where the snapshot session is located. (Only shown for snapshot sessions).
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1542* '''Domain''' Properties
1543** '''Domain Name''': The name of the domain.
ca8c54b3 1544** '''Buffer Type''': The buffer type of the domain.
ff25eb47 1545* '''Channel''' Properties
43d4f823 1546** '''Channel Name''': The name of the channel.
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1547** '''Number of Sub Buffers''': The number of sub-buffers of the channel.
1548** '''Output type''': The output type for the trace (e.g. ''splice()'' or ''mmap()'')
1549** '''Overwrite Mode''': The channel overwrite mode ('''true''' for overwrite mode, '''false''' for discard)
1550** '''Read Timer Interval''': The read timer interval.
1551** '''State''': The channel state ('''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED''')
1552** '''Sub Buffer size''': The size of the sub-buffers of the channel (in bytes).
1553** '''Switch Timer Interval''': The switch timer interval.
43d4f823 1554* '''Event''' Properties (Channel)
ff25eb47 1555** '''Event Name''': The name of the event.
52e76353 1556** '''Event Type''': The event type ('''TRACEPOINT''', '''SYSCALL''' or '''PROBE''').
e5b63e7d 1557** '''Log Level''': The log level of the event. (For LTTng Tools v2.4.0 or later, '''<=''' prior the log level name will indicate a range of log levels and '''==''' a single log level.)
ff25eb47 1558** '''State''': The Event state ('''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED''')
52e76353 1559** '''Filter''': Shows '''with filter''' if a filter expression is configured else property '''Filter''' is omitted. (since support for LTTng Tools v2.1.0)
ff25eb47 1560
e5b63e7d 1561== LTTng Tracer Control Preferences ==
ff25eb47 1562
24f01030 1563Several LTTng 2.0 tracer control preferences exists which can be configured. To configure these preferences, select '''Window -> Preferences''' from the top level menu. The preference display will open. Then select '''Tracing -> LTTng Tracer Control Preferences'''. This preferences page allows the user to specify the tracing group of the user and to specify the command execution timeout as well as it allows the user to configure the logging of LTTng 2.0 tracer control commands and results to a file.
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1564
1565[[Image:images/LTTng2Preferences.png]]
1566
4bdf5f96 1567To change the tracing group of the user which will be specified on each command line, enter the new group name in the '''Tracing Group''' text field and click button '''OK'''. The default tracing group is '''tracing''' and can be restored by pressing the '''Restore Defaults''' button.
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1568
1569[[Image:images/LTTng2PreferencesGroup.png]]
1570
4bdf5f96 1571To configure logging of trace control commands and the corresponding command result to a file, selected the button '''Logging'''. To append to an existing log file, select the '''Append''' button. Deselect the '''Append''' button to overwrite any existing log file. It's possible to specify a verbose level. There are 3 levels with inceasing verbosity from '''Level 1''' to '''Level 3'''. To change the verbosity level, select the relevant level or select '''None'''. If '''None''' is selected only commands and command results are logged. Then press on button '''OK'''. The log file will be stored in the users home directory with the name ''lttng_tracer_control.log''. The name and location cannot be changed. To reset to default preferences, click on the button '''Restore Defaults'''.
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1572
1573[[Image:images/LTTng2PreferencesLogging.png]]
1574
24f01030 1575To configure the LTTng command execution timeout, select '''Tracing -> Remote Connection Preferences''' and enter a timeout value into the text field '''Command Timeout (in seconds)'''. Then press on button '''OK'''. To reset to the default value of 15 seconds, click on the button '''Restore Defaults'''.
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1576
1577[[Image:images/LTTng2PreferencesTimeout.png]]
1578
8d4e0791 1579
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1580= LTTng Kernel Analysis =
1581
1582Historically, LTTng was developped to trace the Linux kernel and, over time, a number of kernel-oriented analysis views were developped and organized in a perspective.
1583
1584This section presents a description of the LTTng Kernel Perspective.
1585
1586== LTTng Kernel Perspective ==
1587
43b509ac 1588The '''LTTng Kernel''' perspective is built upon the [[#Tracing_Perspective | Tracing Perspective]], re-organizes them slightly and adds the following views:
ff25eb47 1589
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1590* [[#Control_Flow_View | Control Flow View]] - to visualize processes state transitions
1591* [[#Resources_View | Resources View]] - to visualize system resources state transitions
1592* [[#LTTng_Tracer_Control | LTTng Tracer Control]] - to configure LTTng tracing sessions remotely
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1593
1594[[Image:images/LTTngKernelPerspective.png]]
1595
1596
1597The perspective can be opened from the Eclipse Open Perspective dialog ('''Window > Open Perspective... > Other''').
1598
1599
1600[[Image:images/OpenLTTngKernelPerspective.png]]
1601
1602== Control Flow View ==
1603
61fd6eae 1604The '''''Control Flow''''' view is a LTTng-specific view that shows per-process events graphically. The Linux Kernel Analysis is executed the first time a LTTng Kernel is opened. After opening the trace, the element '''Control Flow''' is added under the '''Linux Kernel Analysis''' tree element in the Project Explorer. To open the view, double-click the '''Control Flow''' tree element.
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1605
1606[[Image:images/Cfv_show_view.png]]
1607
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1608Alternatively, select ''Control Flow'' under ''LTTng'' within the ''Show View'' window ('''Window''' -> '''Show View''' -> '''Other...'''):
1609
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1610You should get something like this:
1611
1612[[Image:images/Cfv_global.png]]
1613
7ebb6832 1614The view is divided into the following important sections: '''process tree and information''', '''control flow''' and the '''toolbar'''. The time axis is aligned with other views that support automatic time axis alignment (see [[#Automatic Time Axis Alignment | Automatic Time Axis Alignment]]).
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1615
1616The following sections provide detailed information for each part of the Control Flow View.
1617
cbc9608c 1618=== Process tree and information ===
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1619
1620Processes are organized as a tree within this view. This way, child and parent processes are easy to identify.
1621
1622[[Image:images/Cfv_process_tree.png]]
1623
1624The layout is based on the states computed from the trace events.
1625
cbc9608c 1626A given process may be shown at different places within the tree since the nodes are '''unique (TID, birth time) couples'''. This means that if process B of parent A dies, you'll still see it in the tree. If process A forks process B again, it will be shown as a different node since it won't have the same birth time (and probably not the same TID). This has the advantage that the tree, once loaded, never changes: horizontal scrolling within the [[#Control flow|control flow]] remains possible.
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1627
1628The TID column shows the process node's '''thread ID''' and the PTID column shows its '''parent thread ID''' (nothing is shown if the process has no parent).
1629
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1630It is possible to sort the columns of the tree by clicking on the column header. Subsequent clicking will change the sort order. The hierarchy, i.e. the parent-child relationship is kept. When opening a trace for the first time, the processes are sorted by '''birth time'''. The sort order and column will be preserved when switching between open traces. Note that when opening an experiment the processes will be sorted within each trace.
1631
cbc9608c 1632=== Control flow ===
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1633
1634This part of the Control Flow View is probably the most interesting one. Using the mouse, you can navigate through the trace (go left, right) and zoom on a specific region to inspect its details.
1635
b812d14f 1636The colored bars you see represent '''states''' for the associated process node. When a process state changes in time, so does the color. For state '''SYSCALL''' the name of the system call is displayed in the state bar. States colors legend is available through a [[#Toolbar|toolbar button]]:
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1637
1638[[Image:images/Cfv_legend.png]]
1639
1640This dark yellow is what you'll see most of the time since scheduling puts processes on hold while others run.
1641
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1642The vertical blue line with T1 above it is the '''current selection indicator'''. When a time range is selected, the region between the begin and end time of the selection will be shaded and two lines with T1 and T2 above will be displayed. The time stamps corresponding to T1, T2 and their delta are shown in the status line when the mouse is hovering over the control flow.
1643
03ab8eeb 1644Arrows can be displayed that follow the execution of each CPU across processes. The arrows indicate when the scheduler switches from one process to another for a given CPU. The CPU being followed is indicated on the state tooltip. When the scheduler switches to and from the idle process, the arrow skips to the next process which executes on the CPU after the idle process. Note that an appropriate zoom level is required for all arrows to be displayed.
cbc9608c 1645
03ab8eeb 1646The display of arrows is optional and can be toggled using the '''Hide Arrows''' toolbar button. It is also possible to follow a CPU's execution across state changes and the scheduler's process switching using the '''Follow CPU Forward/Backward''' toolbar buttons.
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1647
1648==== Using the mouse ====
1649
1650The states flow is usable with the mouse. The following actions are set:
1651
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1652* '''left-click''': select a time or time range begin time
1653* '''Shift-left-click''': select a time range end time
1654* '''left-drag horizontally''': select a time range or change the time range begin or end time
1655* '''middle-drag or Ctrl-left-drag horizontally''': pan left or right
1656* '''right-drag horizontally''': [[#Zoom region|zoom region]]
ff25eb47 1657* '''click on a colored bar''': the associated process node is selected and the current time indicator is moved where the click happened
e5552166 1658* '''mouse wheel up/down''': scroll up or down
494c9b22 1659* '''Shift-mouse wheel up/down''': scroll left or right
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1660* '''Ctrl-mouse wheel up/down''': zoom in or out horizontally
1661* '''Shift-Ctrl-mouse wheel up/down''': zoom in or out vertically
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1662* '''drag the time ruler horizontally''': zoom in or out with fixed start time
1663* '''double-click the time ruler''': reset zoom to full range
ff25eb47 1664
e03c29a7 1665When the current time indicator is changed (when clicking in the states flow), all the other views are '''synchronized'''. For example, the [[#LTTng Kernel Events Editor|Events Editor]] will show the event matching the current time indicator. The reverse behaviour is also implemented: selecting an event within the Events View will update the Control Flow View current time indicator.
ff25eb47 1666
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1667==== Using the keyboard ====
1668
1669The states flow is usable with the keyboard. The following actions are set:
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1670*'''arrow-right key''': selects the next state for the selected process
1671*'''arrow-left key''': selects the previous state for the selected process
1672*'''Shift + arrow-right key''': updates the selection end time of the current selection range by selecting the next state of the current process
1673*'''Shift + arrow-left key''': updates the selection end time of the current selection range by selecting the previous state of the current process
1674*'''.''': selects the next active marker
1675*''',''': selects the previous active marker
1676*'''Shift + .''': updates the selection end time of the current selection range by selecting the next active marker boundary
1677*'''Shift + ,''': updates the selection end time of the current selection range by selecting the previous active marker boundary
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1678*'''arrow-down''': selects the next process
1679*'''arrow-up''': selects the previous process
1680*'''Page Down''': selects the process down one page
1681*'''Page Up''': selects the process up one page
1682*'''Home''': selects the first process
1683*'''End''': selects the last process
1684*'''Enter''': toggles the expansion state of the current process in the tree
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1685*'''+''': Zoom-in horizontally
1686*'''-''': Zoom-out horizontally
1687*'''Ctrl + +''': Zoom-in vertically
1688*'''Ctrl + -''': Zoom-out vertically
1689*'''Ctrl + 0''': Reset the vertical zoom
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1690
1691When the selection indicators are changed, all the other views are '''synchronized'''. For example, the [[#LTTng Kernel Events Editor|Events Editor]] will show the event matching the current time indicator. The reverse behaviour is also implemented: selecting an event within the Events View will update the Control Flow View current time indicator.
1692
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1693==== Incomplete regions ====
1694
1695You'll notice '''small dots''' over the colored bars at some places:
1696
1697[[Image:images/Cfv_small_dots.png]]
1698
1699Those dots mean the underlying region is '''incomplete''': there's not enough pixels to view all the events. In other words, you have to zoom in.
1700
1701When zooming in, small dots start to disappear:
1702
1703[[Image:images/Cfv_zoom.png]]
1704
1705When no dots are left, you are viewing '''all the events and states''' within that region.
1706
1707==== Zoom region ====
1708
32adc12c 1709To zoom in on a specific region, '''right-click and drag''' in order to draw a time range:
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1710
1711[[Image:images/Cfv_zoom_region.png]]
1712
1713The states flow horizontal space will only show the selected region.
1714
1715==== Tooltips ====
1716
1717Hover the cursor over a colored bar and a '''tooltip''' will pop up:
1718
1719[[Image:images/Cfv_tooltip.png]]
1720
1721The tooltip indicates:
1722
1723* the process name
1724* the pointed state name
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1725* the CPU (if applicable)
1726* the system call name (if applicable)
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1727* the pointed state date and start/stop times
1728* the pointed state duration (seconds)
1729
1730=== Toolbar ===
1731
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1732<!-- Keep in sync with ref:resource-view-toolbar -->
1733
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1734The Control Flow View '''toolbar''', located at the top right of the view, has shortcut buttons to perform common actions:
1735
cbc9608c 1736{|
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1737| [[Image:images/link.gif]]
1738| Align Views
d51a8310 1739| Disable and enable the automatic time axis alignment of time-based views. Disabling the alignment in this view will disable this feature across all the views because it's a workspace preference.
7ebb6832 1740|-
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1741| [[Image:images/filter_items.gif]]
1742| Show View Filter
68471013 1743| Opens the process filter dialog. Filter settings will be preserved when switching between open traces.
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1744|-
1745| [[Image:images/show_legend.gif]]
1746| Show Legend
d51a8310 1747| Displays the states legend.
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1748|-
1749| [[Image:images/home_nav.gif]]
1750| Reset the Time Scale to Default
d51a8310 1751| Resets the zoom window to the full range.
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1752|-
1753| [[Image:images/prev_event.gif]]
1754| Select Previous Event
56b24426 1755| Selects the previous state for the selected process. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
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1756|-
1757| [[Image:images/next_event.gif]]
1758| Select Next Event
56b24426 1759| Selects the next state for the selected process. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
cbc9608c 1760|-
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1761| [[Image:images/add_bookmark.gif]]
1762| Add Bookmark...
1763| Adds a bookmark at the current selection range. A bookmark is a user-defined interval marker. The '''Add Bookmark''' dialog is opened where the user can enter a description and choose the highlighting color and alpha (transparency) value. This button is replaced by the '''Remove Bookmark''' button if the current selection range corresponds to an existing bookmark. The bookmarks can also be managed in the '''Bookmark View'''.
1764|-
1765| [[Image:images/remove_bookmark.gif]]
1766| Remove Bookmark
1767| Removes the bookmark at the current selection range. This button replaces the '''Add Bookmark''' when the current selection range corresponds to an existing bookmark.
1768|-
1769| [[Image:images/prev_bookmark.gif]]
1770| Previous Marker
1771| Selects the previous active marker. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
1772|-
1773| [[Image:images/next_bookmark.gif]]
1774| Next Marker
1775| Selects the next active marker. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range. Clicking the button drop-down arrow will open a menu where marker categories can be made active or inactive for navigation. To toggle the display of a marker category, use the '''View Menu''' instead.
1776|-
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1777| [[Image:images/prev_menu.gif]]
1778| Select Previous Process
d51a8310 1779| Selects the previous process.
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1780|-
1781| [[Image:images/next_menu.gif]]
1782| Select Next Process
d51a8310 1783| Selects the next process.
cbc9608c
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1784|-
1785| [[Image:images/zoomin_nav.gif]]
1786| Zoom In
d51a8310 1787| Zooms in on the selection by 50%.
cbc9608c
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1788|-
1789| [[Image:images/zoomout_nav.gif]]
1790| Zoom Out
d51a8310 1791| Zooms out on the selection by 50%.
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1792|-
1793| [[Image:images/hide_arrows.gif]]
1794| Hide Arrows
d51a8310 1795| Toggles the display of arrows on or off.
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1796|-
1797| [[Image:images/follow_arrow_bwd.gif]]
03ab8eeb 1798| Follow CPU Backward
56b24426 1799| Selects the previous state following CPU execution across processes. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
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1800|-
1801| [[Image:images/follow_arrow_fwd.gif]]
03ab8eeb 1802| Follow CPU Forward
56b24426 1803| Selects the next state following CPU execution across processes. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
cbc9608c 1804|}
b812d14f 1805
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1806View Menu
1807
1808{|
1809|
1810| Show Markers
84648ea7 1811| A marker highlights a time interval. A marker can be used for instance to indicate a time range where lost events occurred or to bookmark an interesting interval for future reference. Selecting a category name will toggle the visibility of markers of that category.
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1812|}
1813
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1814=== Marker Axis ===
1815
1816The marker axis is visible only when at least one marker category with markers for the current trace is shown.
1817
1818The marker axis displays one row per marker category. Each marker's time range and/or label (if applicable) are drawn on the marker axis.
1819
1820Clicking on any marker's time range or label will set the current time selection to the marker's time or time range.
1821
1822Clicking on the "X" icon to the left of the marker category name will hide this marker category from the time graph. It can be shown again using the corresponding '''Show Markers''' menu item in the view menu.
1823
1824The marker axis can be collapsed and expanded by clicking on the icon at the top left of the marker axis. The marker axis can be completely removed by hiding all available marker categories.
d51a8310 1825
ff25eb47 1826== Resources View ==
cbc9608c 1827
61fd6eae 1828This view is specific to LTTng kernel traces. The Linux Kernel Analysis is executed the first time a LTTng Kernel is opened. After opening the trace, the element '''Resources''' is added under the '''Linux Kernel Analysis''' tree element of the Project Explorer. To open the view, double-click the '''Resources''' tree element.
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1829
1830Alternatively, go in '''Window''' -> '''Show View''' -> '''Other...''' and select '''LTTng/Resources''' in the list.
ff25eb47 1831
e03c29a7 1832[[Image:images/Rv_example.png|Example of resources view with all trace points and syscalls enabled]]
ff25eb47 1833
7ebb6832 1834This view shows the state of system resources i.e. if changes occurred during the trace either on '''CPUs''', '''IRQs''' or '''soft IRQs''', it will appear in this view. The left side of the view present a list of resources that are affected by at least one event of the trace. The right side illustrate the state in which each resource is at some point in time. For state '''USERMODE''' it also prints the process name in the state bar. For state '''SYSCALL''' the name of the system call is
b812d14f 1835displayed in the state region.
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1836
1837Just like other views, according to which trace points and system calls are activated, the content of this view may change from one trace to another.
1838
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1839The time axis is aligned with other views that support automatic time axis alignment (see [[#Automatic Time Axis Alignment | Automatic Time Axis Alignment]]).
1840
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1841Each state are represented by one color so it is faster to say what is happening.
1842
1843[[Image:images/Rv_legend.png|Color for each state]]
1844
1845To go through the state of a resource, you first have to select the resource and the timestamp that interest you. For the latter, you can pick some time before the interesting part of the trace.
1846
1847[[Image:images/RV_infobox1.png|Shows the state of an IRQ]]
1848
56b24426 1849Then, by selecting '''Next Event''', it will show the next state transition and the event that occurred at this time.
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1850
1851[[Image:images/RV_infobox2.png|Shows the next state of the IRQ]]
1852
43b509ac 1853This view is also synchronized with the others : [[#Histogram_View | Histogram View]], [[#LTTng_Kernel_Events_Editor | Events Editor]], [[#Control_Flow_View | Control Flow View]], etc.
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1854
1855=== Navigation ===
1856
56b24426 1857See Control Flow View's '''[[#Using_the_mouse | Using the mouse]]''', '''[[#Using_the_keyboard | Using the keyboard]]''' and '''[[#Zoom_region | Zoom region]]'''.
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1858
1859=== Incomplete regions ===
1860
43b509ac 1861See Control Flow View's '''[[#Incomplete_regions | Incomplete regions]]'''.
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1862
1863=== Toolbar ===
1864
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1865<!-- ref:resource-view-toolbar -->
1866
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1867The Resources View '''toolbar''', located at the top right of the view, has shortcut buttons to perform common actions:
1868
cbc9608c 1869{|
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1870| [[Image:images/link.gif]]
1871| Align Views
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1872| Disable and enable the automatic time axis alignment of time-based views. Disabling the alignment in this view will disable this feature across all the views because it's a workspace preference.
1873|-
1874| [[Image:images/filter_items.gif]]
1875| Show View Filter
68471013 1876| Opens the resources filter dialog. Filter settings will be preserved when switching between open traces.
7ebb6832 1877|-
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1878| [[Image:images/show_legend.gif]]
1879| Show Legend
d51a8310 1880| Displays the states legend.
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1881|-
1882| [[Image:images/home_nav.gif]]
1883| Reset the Time Scale to Default
d51a8310 1884| Resets the zoom window to the full range.
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1885|-
1886| [[Image:images/prev_event.gif]]
1887| Select Previous Event
56b24426 1888| Selects the previous state for the selected resource. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
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1889|-
1890| [[Image:images/next_event.gif]]
1891| Select Next Event
56b24426 1892| Selects the next state for the selected resource. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
cbc9608c 1893|-
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1894| [[Image:images/add_bookmark.gif]]
1895| Add Bookmark...
1896| Adds a bookmark at the current selection range. A bookmark is a user-defined interval marker. The '''Add Bookmark''' dialog is opened where the user can enter a description and choose the highlighting color and alpha (transparency) value. This button is replaced by the '''Remove Bookmark''' button if the current selection range corresponds to an existing bookmark. The bookmarks can also be managed in the '''Bookmark View'''.
1897|-
1898| [[Image:images/remove_bookmark.gif]]
1899| Remove Bookmark
1900| Removes the bookmark at the current selection range. This button replaces the '''Add Bookmark''' when the current selection range corresponds to an existing bookmark.
1901|-
1902| [[Image:images/prev_bookmark.gif]]
1903| Previous Marker
1904| Selects the previous active marker. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range.
1905|-
1906| [[Image:images/next_bookmark.gif]]
1907| Next Marker
1908| Selects the next active marker. Pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection range. Clicking the button drop-down arrow will open a menu where marker categories can be made active or inactive for navigation.
1909|-
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1910| [[Image:images/prev_menu.gif]]
1911| Select Previous Resource
1912| Selects the previous resource
1913|-
1914| [[Image:images/next_menu.gif]]
1915| Select Next Resource
1916| Selects the next resource
1917|-
1918| [[Image:images/zoomin_nav.gif]]
1919| Zoom In
d51a8310 1920| Zooms in on the selection by 50%.
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1921|-
1922| [[Image:images/zoomout_nav.gif]]
1923| Zoom Out
d51a8310 1924| Zooms out on the selection by 50%.
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1925|}
1926
1927View Menu
1928
1929{|
1930|
1931| Show Markers
84648ea7 1932| A marker highlights a time interval. A marker can be used for instance to indicate a time range where lost events occurred or to bookmark an interesting interval for future reference. Selecting a category name will toggle the visibility of markers of that category.
cbc9608c 1933|}
ff25eb47 1934
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1935=== Marker Axis ===
1936
1937See Control Flow View's '''[[#Marker_Axis | Marker Axis]]'''.
d51a8310 1938
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1939== LTTng CPU Usage View ==
1940
61fd6eae 1941The CPU Usage analysis and view is specific to LTTng Kernel traces. The CPU usage is derived from a kernel trace as long as the '''sched_switch''' event was enabled during the collection of the trace. This analysis is executed the first time that the CPU Usage view is opened after opening the trace. To open the view, double-click on the '''CPU Usage''' tree element under the '''Linux Kernel Analysis''' tree element of the Project Explorer.
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1942
1943[[Image:images/LTTng_OpenCpuUsageView.png]]
1944
1945Now, the CPU Usage view will show:
1946
1947[[Image:images/LTTng_CpuUsageView.png]]
1948
7ebb6832 1949The view is divided into the following important sections: '''Process Information''' and the '''CPU Usage Chart'''. The time axis is aligned with other views that support automatic time axis alignment (see [[#Automatic Time Axis Alignment | Automatic Time Axis Alignment]]).
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1950
1951
1952=== Process Information ===
1953The Process Information is displayed on the left side of the view and shows all threads that were executing on all available CPUs in the current time range. For each process, it shows in different columns the thread ID (TID), process name (Process), the average (%) execution time and the actual execution time (Time) during the current time range. It shows all threads that were executing on the CPUs in the current time range.
1954
1955
1956=== CPU Usage Chart ===
1957
1958The CPU Usage Chart on the right side of the view, plots the total time spent on all CPUs of all processes and the time of the selected process.
1959
1960
1961==== Using the mouse ====
1962
1963The CPU Usage chart is usable with the mouse. The following actions are set:
1964
1965* '''left-click''': select a time or time range begin time
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1966* '''left-drag horizontally''': select a time range or change the time range begin or end time
1967* '''middle-drag''': pan left or right
1968* '''right-drag horizontally''': zoom region
1969* '''mouse wheel up/down''': zoom in or out
1970
1971
1972==== Tooltips ====
1973
1974Hover the cursor over a line of the chart and a tooltip will pop up with the following information:
1975* '''time''': current time of mouse position
1976* '''Total''': The total CPU usage
1977
1978
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1979==== Toolbar ====
1980
1981The CPU Usage View '''toolbar''', located at the top right of the view, has shortcut buttons to perform common actions:
708adb96 1982
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1983{|
1984| [[Image:images/link.gif]]
1985| Align Views
1986| Disable and enable the automatic time axis alignment of time-based views. Disabling the alignment in the this view will disable this feature across all the views because it's a workspace preference
1987|-
1988|}
1989
1990[[Image:images/LTTng_CpuUsageViewToolTip.png]]
708adb96 1991
07ed89d6 1992== LTTng Kernel Events Editor ==
ff25eb47 1993
43b509ac 1994The LTTng Kernel Events editor '''is''' the plain TMF [[#Events_Editor | Events Editor]], except that it provides its own specialized viewer to replace the standard one. In short, it has exactly the same behaviour but the layout is slightly different:
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1995
1996* '''Timestamp''': the event timestamp
1997* '''Channel''': the event channel (data collector)
99ebac8b 1998* '''CPU''': the CPU on which the event was taken
ff25eb47 1999* '''Event Type''': the event type (or kernel marker)
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2000* '''Contents''': the fields (or payload) of this event
2001* '''TID''': The ID of the thread this event belongs to
2002* '''Prio''': The priority of the thread this event belongs to
ff25eb47 2003
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2004[[Image:images/LTTng2EventsEditor.png]]
2005
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2006= LTTng-UST Analyses =
2007
2008The Userspace traces are taken on an application level. With kernel traces, you know what events you will have as the domain is known and cloistered. Userspace traces can contain pretty much anything. Some analyses are offered if certain events are enabled.
2009
2010== Call Stack View ==
2011
2012The Call Stack view allows the user to visualize the call stack per thread over time, if the application and trace provide this information.
2013
2014To open this view go in '''Window''' -> '''Show View''' -> '''Other...''' and select '''Tracing/Call Stack''' in the list. The view shows the call stack information for the currently selected trace. Conversely, you can select a trace and expand it in the '''Project Explorer''' then expand '''LTTng-UST CallStack Analysis''' (the trace must be loaded) and open '''Call Stack'''.
2015
2016The table on the left-hand side of the view shows the threads and call stack. The function name, depth, entry and exit time and duration are shown for the call stack at the selected time.
2017
2018Double-clicking on a function entry in the table will zoom the time graph to the selected function's range of execution.
2019
2020The time graph on the right-hand side of the view shows the call stack state graphically over time. The function name is visible on each call stack event if size permits. The color of each call stack event is randomly assigned based on the function name, allowing for easy identification of repeated calls to the same function.
2021
2022Clicking on the time graph will set the current time and consequently update the table with the current call stack information.
2023
2024Shift-clicking on the time graph will select a time range. When the selection is a time range, the begin time is used to update the stack information.
2025
2026Double-clicking on a call stack event will zoom the time graph to the selected function's range of execution.
2027
56b24426 2028Clicking the '''Select Next Event''' or '''Select Previous Event''' or using the left and right arrows will navigate to the next or previous call stack event, and select the function currently at the top of the call stack. Note that pressing the '''Shift''' key at the same time will update the selection end time of the current selection.
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2029
2030Clicking the '''Import Mapping File''' ([[Image:images/import.gif]]) icon will open a file selection dialog, allowing you to import a text file containing mappings from function addresses to function names. If the callstack provider for the current trace type only provides function addresses, a mapping file will be required to get the function names in the view. See the following sections for an example with LTTng-UST traces.
2031
2032=== Using the Callstack View with LTTng-UST traces ===
2033
2034There is support in the LTTng-UST integration plugin to display the callstack of applications traced with the ''liblttng-ust-cyg-profile.so'' library (see the ''liblttng-ust-cyg-profile'' man page for additional information). To do so, you need to:
2035
2036* Recompile your application with "''-g -finstrument-functions''".
2037* Add the ''vtid'' and ''procname'' contexts to your trace session. See the [[#Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain]] section. Or if using the command-line:
2038** <pre>lttng add-context -u -t vtid -t procname</pre>
2039* Preload the ''liblttng-ust-cyg-profile'' library when running your program:
2040** <pre>LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/liblttng-ust-cyg-profile.so ./myprogram</pre>
2041
2042Once you load the resulting trace, making sure it's set to the ''Common Trace Format - LTTng UST Trace'' type, the Callstack View should be populated with the relevant information. However, since GCC's cyg-profile instrumentation only provides function addresses, and not names, an additional step is required to get the function names showing in the view. The following section explains how to do so.
2043
2044=== Importing a function name mapping file for LTTng-UST traces ===
2045
2046If you followed the steps in the previous section, you should have a Callstack View populated with function entries and exits. However, the view will display the function addresses instead of names in the intervals, which are not very useful by themselves. To get the actual function names, you need to:
2047
2048* Generate a mapping file from the binary, using:
2049** <pre>nm myprogram > mapping.txt</pre>
2050* Click the '''Import Mapping File''' ([[Image:images/import.gif]]) button in the Callstack View, and select the ''mapping.txt'' file that was just created.
2051
a9b1f367
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2052(If you are dealing with C++ executables, you may want to use ''nm --demangle'' instead to get readable function names.)
2053
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2054The view should now update to display the function names instead. Make sure the binary used for taking the trace is the one used for this step too (otherwise, there is a good chance of the addresses not being the same).
2055
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2056=== Navigation ===
2057
2058See Control Flow View's '''[[#Using_the_mouse | Using the mouse]]''', '''[[#Using_the_keyboard | Using the keyboard]]''' and '''[[#Zoom_region | Zoom region]]'''.
2059
2060=== Marker Axis ===
2061
2062See Control Flow View's '''[[#Marker_Axis | Marker Axis]]'''.
2063
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2064== Memory Usage ==
2065
2066The Memory Usage view allows the user to visualize the active memory usage per thread over time, if the application and trace provide this information.
2067
2068The view shows the memory consumption for the currently selected trace.
2069
2070The time chart plots heap memory usage graphically over time. There is one line per process, unassigned memory usage is mapped to "Other".
2071
2072In this implementation, the user needs to trace while hooking the ''liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper'' by running ''LD_PRELOAD=liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper.so'' '''<exename>'''. This will add tracepoints to memory allocation and freeing to the heap, NOT shared memory or stack usage. If the contexts '''vtid''' and '''procname''' are enabled, then the view will associate the heap usage to processes. As detailed earlier, to enable the contexts, see the [[#Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain]] section. Or if using the command-line:
2073* <pre>lttng add-context -u -t vtid -t procname</pre>
2074
2075If thread information is available the view will look like this:
2076
2077[[Image:images/memoryUsage/memory-usage-multithread.png]]
2078
2079If thread information is not available it will look like this:
2080
2081[[Image:images/memoryUsage/memory-usage-no-thread-info.png]]
2082
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2083The time axis is aligned with other views that support automatic time axis alignment (see [[#Automatic Time Axis Alignment | Automatic Time Axis Alignment]]).
2084
2085Please note this view will not show shared memory or stack memory usage.
2086
2087=== Using the mouse ===
2088
2089The Memory Usage chart is usable with the mouse. The following actions are set:
2090
2091* '''left-click''': select a time or time range begin time
2092* '''left-drag horizontally''': select a time range or change the time range begin or end time
2093* '''middle-drag''': pan left or right
2094* '''right-drag horizontally''': zoom region
2095* '''mouse wheel up/down''': zoom in or out
2096
2097
2098=== Toolbar ===
2099
2100The Memory Usage View '''toolbar''', located at the top right of the view, has shortcut buttons to perform common actions:
2101
2102{|
2103| [[Image:images/link.gif]]
2104| Align Views
2105| Disable and enable the automatic time axis alignment of time-based views. Disabling the alignment in the this view will disable this feature across all the views because it's a workspace preference
2106|-
2107|}
2108
2109[[Image:images/LTTng_CpuUsageViewToolTip.png]]
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2110
2111Please note this view will not show shared memory or stack memory usage.
2112
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2113= Trace synchronization =
2114
2115It is possible to synchronize traces from different machines so that they have the same time reference. Events from the reference trace will have the same timestamps as usual, but the events from traces synchronized with the first one will have their timestamps transformed according to the formula obtained after synchronization.
2116
2117== Obtain synchronizable traces ==
2118
2119To synchronize traces from different machines, they need to exchange packets through the network and have events enabled such that the data can be matched from one trace to the other. For now, only TCP packets can be matched between two traces.
2120
2121LTTng traces that can be synchronized are obtained using one of two methods (both methods are compatible):
2122
2123=== LTTng-module network tracepoint with complete data ===
2124
2125The tracepoints '''net_dev_queue''' and '''netif_receive_skb''' will be used for synchronization. Both tracepoints are available in lttng-modules since version 2.2, but they do not contain sufficient data to be used to synchronize traces.
2126
2127An experimental branch introduces this extra data: lttng-modules will need to be compiled by hand.
2128
2129Obtain the source code for the experimental lttng-modules
2130
2131 # git clone git://git.dorsal.polymtl.ca/~gbastien/lttng-modules.git
2132 # cd lttng-modules
2133
2134Checkout the ''net_data_experimental'' branch, compile and install lttng-modules as per the lttng-modules documentation
2135
2136 # git checkout net_data_experimental
2137 # make
2138 # sudo make modules_install
2139 # sudo depmod -a
2140
2141This experimental branch adds IP, IPv6 and TCP header data to the tracepoints. Packets received and sent with other protocols do not have this extra header data, but all packets are captured.
2142
2143=== LTTng-modules addons kernel module with dynamic tracepoints ===
2144
2145This method adds dynamic instrumentation on TCP packets via extra kernel modules. Only TCP packets are captured.
2146
2147Obtain the source code, along with lttng-modules
2148
2149 # git clone https://github.com/giraldeau/lttng-modules.git
2150 # cd lttng-modules
2151
2152Checkout the addons branch, compile and install lttng-modules as per the lttng-modules documentation. The ''make'' command will fail at first with a message about the unset SYSMAP variable. Instructions on how to generate a System.map are mentioned in the error message.
2153
2154 # git checkout addons
2155 # make
2156 # (follow the instructions to obtain the System.map file and set the SYSMAP variable)
2157 # make
2158 # sudo make modules_install
2159 # sudo depmod -a
2160
2161The lttng-addons modules must be inserted manually for the TCP tracepoints to be made available.
2162
2163 # sudo modprobe lttng-addons
2164 # sudo modprobe lttng-probe-addons
2165
2166The following tracepoints will be available
2167
2168 # sudo lttng list -k
2169 Kernel events:
2170 -------------
2171 ...
2172 inet_sock_create (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2173 inet_sock_delete (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2174 inet_sock_clone (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2175 inet_accept (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2176 inet_connect (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2177 inet_sock_local_in (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2178 inet_sock_local_out (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2179 ...
2180
2181The ones used for trace synchronization are '''inet_sock_local_in''' and '''inet_sock_local_out'''.
2182
61fd6eae 2183== Synchronize traces in Trace Compass ==
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2184
2185In order to synchronize traces, create a new experiment and select all traces that need to be synchronized. Right-click on the experiment and select '''Synchronize traces'''. For each trace whose time needs to be transformed, a new trace named as the original but followed by a '_' will be created with the transformed timestamps, and the original trace will be replaced in the experiment. The original trace can still be accessed under the '''Traces''' folder.
2186
e03c29a7 2187[[Image:images/Sync_menu.png|Right-click synchronize traces to perform the trace synchronization]]
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2188
2189When opening the experiment now, all the views will be synchronized. The following screenshot presents the differences in the filtered Control Flow View before and after the time synchronization.
2190
e03c29a7 2191[[Image:images/Sync_cfv.png|Example of Control Flow View before and after trace synchronization]]
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2192
2193Information on the quality of the synchronization, the timestamp transformation formula and some synchronization statistics can be visualized in the '''Synchronization''' view. To open the '''Synchronization''' view, use the Eclipse Show View dialog ('''Window''' -> '''Show View''' -> '''Other...'''). Then select '''Synchronization''' under '''Tracing'''.
2194
e03c29a7 2195[[Image:images/Sync_view.png|Example of Synchronization view]]
fc3177d9 2196
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2197= Time offsetting =
2198
2199The time offsetting feature allows the user to apply a fixed offset to all event timestamps in a trace. It can be used, for example, to adjust the start time of a trace, or to manually align the timestamp of events from different traces.
2200
2201== Basic mode ==
2202
2203If the time offset to apply is known, it can be applied directly to the trace. In the '''Project Explorer''' view, select a trace, right-click and select '''Apply Time Offset...'''. It is also possible to select multiple traces, experiments or trace folders. All contained traces will be selected.
2204
2205[[Image:images/TimeOffsetApply.png|Apply Time Offset menu]]
2206
2207The dialog opens, in '''Basic''' mode.
2208
2209[[Image:images/TimeOffsetBasicDialog.png|Apply Time Offset dialog - Basic mode]]
2210
2211Enter a time offset to apply in the '''Offset in seconds''' column, with or without decimals. Then press the '''OK''' button.
2212
2213[[Image:images/TimeOffsetBasicDialogFilled.png|Apply Time Offset dialog - Basic mode - filled]]
2214
2215The time offset is applied to the trace and can be seen in the '''time offset''' property in the '''Properties''' view when the trace is selected.
2216
2217The applied time offset is added to any time offset or time transformation formula currently set for the trace, and the resulting offset replaces any previous setting.
2218
2219== Advanced mode ==
2220
2221The time offset can also be computed using selected trace events or manually entered timestamps. After selecting one or more traces in the '''Project Explorer''' view, right-click and select '''Apply Time Offset...'''. In the opened dialog, select the '''Advanced''' button.
2222
2223[[Image:images/TimeOffsetAdvancedDialog.png|Apply Time Offset dialog - Advanced mode]]
2224
2225Double-clicking a trace name will open the trace in an editor. The '''Reference Time''' will be set to the trace start time. Selecting any event in the trace editor will set the '''Reference Time''' for that trace to the event's timestamp.
2226
2227Selecting an event or a time in any view or editor that supports time synchronization will set the '''Target Time''' for every trace in the dialog.
2228
2229Pressing the '''<<''' button will compute the time offset that should be applied in order to make the reference time align to the target time, provided that both fields are set.
2230
2231The '''Reference Time''', '''Target Time''' and '''Offset in seconds''' fields can also be edited and entered manually.
2232
2233To synchronize two events from different traces, first select an event in the trace to which the time offset should be applied, which will set its '''Reference Time''' field.
2234
2235[[Image:images/TimeOffsetAdvancedSetReference.png|Apply Time Offset dialog - Set Reference Time]]
2236
2237Then select a corresponding event in the second trace, which will set the '''Target Time''' field for the first trace.
2238
2239[[Image:images/TimeOffsetAdvancedSetTarget.png|Apply Time Offset dialog - Set Target Time]]
2240
2241Finally, press the '''<<''' button, which will automatically compute the time offset that should be applied in order to make the first event's timestamp align to the second event's timestamp.
2242
2243[[Image:images/TimeOffsetAdvancedComputeOffset.png|Apply Time Offset dialog - Compute Offset]]
2244
2245Then press the '''OK''' button. The time offset is applied to the trace and can be seen in the '''time offset''' property in the '''Properties''' view when the trace is selected.
2246
2247The applied time offset is added to any time offset or time transformation formula currently set for the trace, and the resulting offset replaces any previous setting.
2248
2249[[Image:images/TimeOffsetProperty.png|Time Offset - Properties view]]
2250
2251== Clearing time offset ==
2252
2253The time offset previously applied can be cleared to reset the trace to its original timestamps. In the '''Project Explorer''' view, select a trace, right-click and select '''Clear Time Offset'''. It is also possible to select multiple traces, experiments or trace folders. All contained traces will be affected.
2254
2255The time offset or any time transformation formula will be deleted.
2256
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2257= Timestamp formatting =
2258
43d4f823 2259Most views that show timestamps are displayed in the same time format. The unified timestamp format can be changed in the Preferences page. To get to that page, click on '''Window''' -> '''Preferences''' -> '''Tracing''' -> '''Time Format'''. Then a window will show the time format preferences.
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2260
2261[[Image:images/TmfTimestampFormatPage.png]]
2262
2263The preference page has several subsections:
2264
2265* '''Current Format''' a format string generated by the page
2266* '''Sample Display''' an example of a timestamp formatted with the '''Current Format''' string.
c1cd9635 2267* '''Time Zone''' the time zone to use when displaying the time. The value '''Local time''' corresponds to the local, system-configured, time zone.
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2268* '''Data and Time format''' how to format the date (days/months/years) and the time (hours/minutes/seconds)
2269* '''Sub-second format''' how much precision is shown for the sub-second units
2270* '''Date delimiter''' the character used to delimit the date units such as months and years
2271* '''Time delimiter''' the character to separate super-second time units such as seconds and minutes
2272* '''Sub-Second Delimiter''' the character to separate the sub-second groups such as milliseconds and nanoseconds
2273* '''Restore Defaults''' restores the system settings
2274* '''Apply''' apply changes
2275
2276This will update all the displayed timestamps.
ff25eb47 2277
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2278= Data driven analysis =
2279
2280It is possible to define custom trace analyses and a way to view them in an XML format. These kind of analyses allow doing more with the trace data than what the default analyses shipped with TMF offer. It can be customized to a specific problem, and fine-tuned to show exactly what you're looking for.
2281
d570387a
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2282== Managing XML files containing analyses ==
2283
2284The '''Manage XML Analyses''' dialog is used to manage the list of XML files containing analysis. To open the dialog:
2285
2286* Open the '''Project Explorer''' view.
2287* Select '''Manage XML Analyses...''' from the '''Traces''' folder context menu.
2288
2289[[Image:images/ManageXMLAnalysis.png]]
2290
2291The list of currently defined XML analyses is displayed on the left side of the dialog.
2292
2293The following actions can be performed from this dialog:
2294
2295* Import
2296
2297Click the '''Import''' button and select a file from the opened file dialog to import an XML file containing an analysis. The file will be validated before importing it and if successful, the new analysis and views will be shown under the traces for which they apply. You will need to close any already opened traces and re-open them before the new analysis can be executed. If an invalid file is selected, an error message will be displayed to the user.
2298
2299* Export
2300
2301Select an XML file from the list, click the '''Export''' button and enter or select a file in the opened file dialog to export the XML analysis. Note that if an existing file containing an analysis is selected, its content will be replaced with the analysis to export.
2302
2303* Delete
2304
2305Select an XML file from the list and click the '''Delete''' button to remove the XML file. Deleting an XML file will close all the traces for which this analysis applies and remove the analysis.
2306
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2307== Defining XML components ==
2308
2309To define XML components, you need to create a new XML file and use the XSD that comes with the XML plugin.
2310
61fd6eae 2311''For now, the XSD is only available through the source code in org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.analysis.xml.core/src/org/eclipse/tracecompass/tmf/analysis/xml/core/module/xmlDefinition.xsd''.
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2312
2313An empty file, with no content yet would look like this:
2314
2315<pre>
2316<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2317<tmfxml xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
2318 xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="xmlDefinition.xsd">
2319
2320</tmfxml>
2321</pre>
2322
2323== Defining an XML state provider ==
2324
2325The state system is a component of TMF which can track the states of different elements of the system over the duration of a trace. To build this state system, events have to go chronologically through a state provider, which defines what changes are caused by the event to the system.
2326
2327The state system obtained by the state provider can then be used to populate data-driven views without having to re-read the trace, or to query specific timestamps in the trace without needing to access the trace file.
2328
2329=== Definitions and example ===
2330
61fd6eae 2331Before we start, we'll define a few terms used in the following sections. The interested reader should read the [https://wiki.eclipse.org/index.php/Trace_Compass#User_Guides Tmf Developer Guide] for more complete description of the state system and state providers.
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2332
2333* The '''state system''' can be viewed as a model of the system, where the different elements (attributes) can be seen as a tree, and their evolution (states) is tracked through time.
2334
2335* '''Attribute''': An attribute is the smallest element of the model that can be in any particular state. Since many attributes may have the same name, each attribute is represented by its full path in the attribute tree.
2336
2337* '''State''': A state is a value assigned to an attribute at a given time. Each model has its own state values.
2338
2339* '''Attribute tree''': Elements in the model can be placed in a tree-like structure, for logical grouping. Each element in the tree can have both children and a state. Also, the tree is just a logical structure, all elements may be top-level elements.
2340
2341* '''State history''': Whereas the attribute tree may be seen as the first dimension of the state system, the state history is the second dimension, over time. It tracks the intervals at which an attribute was in a given state.
2342
2343In the following sections, we'll use an example trace with the following events:
2344
2345* start(number): A new task with ID 'number' just started.
2346* execute(number, fct_name): The task with ID 'number' is executing a critical section named 'fct_name'.
2347* wait(number): The task with ID 'number' cannot execute a critical section and needs to wait for it.
2348* exec_end(fct_name): A task finished executing the critical section named 'fct_name'.
2349* stop(number): The task with ID 'number' has just finished.
2350
2351=== Determining the state system structure ===
2352
2353The first thing to do is to determine the attribute tree we'll use to represent the model of the system. The attribute tree is like a file system with directories and files, where files are logically gathered in the same parent directory. There is no one good way to build a tree, the logic will depend on the situation and on the person defining it.
2354
2355The generated state system may be used later on to populate views, so attributes of the tree could be grouped in such a way as to make it easy to reach them with a simple path. The view will then be more simple.
2356
2357In our example case, we'll want to track the status of each task and, for each critical section, which task is running them.
2358
2359<pre>
2360|- Tasks
2361| |- 1
2362| |- 2
2363| ...
2364|- Critical section
2365 |- Crit_sect1
2366 |- Crit_sect2
2367 ...
2368</pre>
2369
2370Then we determine how each event will affect the state of the attributes. But first, let's ask ourselves what values should each state take.
2371
2372Let's see with the tree:
2373
2374<pre>
2375|- Tasks -> Empty
2376| |- 1 -> Each task can be in one of
2377| |- 2 RUNNING, CRITICAL, WAITING
2378| ...
2379|- Critical section -> Empty
2380 |- Crit_sect1 -> Each critical section will hold the currently running task number
2381 |- Crit_sect2
2382 ...
2383</pre>
2384
2385Then we determine how each event will affect the state of the attributes. In the attribute paths below, elements in {} are values coming from the trace event, while strings are constants. For the sake of simplicity, we'll say "update attribute", but if an attribute does not exist, it will be created.
2386
2387* start(number): Update state value of attribute "Tasks/{number}" to "RUNNING".
2388* execute(number, fct_name): Update state value of attribute "Tasks/{number}" to "CRITICAL" and Update attribute "Critical section/{fct_name}" to "{number}".
2389* wait(number): Update state value of attribute "Tasks/{number}" to "WAITING".
2390* exec_end(fct_name): Update state value of attribute "Tasks/{valueOf Critical section/{fct_name}}" to RUNNING and update "Critical section/{fct_name}" to null.
2391* stop(number): Update state value of attribute "Tasks/{number}" to null.
2392
2393=== Writing the XML state provider ===
2394
2395Once the model is done at a high level, it is time to translate it to an XML data-driven analysis. For details on how to use each XML element, refer to the documentation available in the XSD files. Some elements will be commented on below.
2396
2397First define the state provider element.
2398
2399The "version" attribute indicates which version of the state system is defined here. Once a state provider has been defined for a trace type, it will typically be used by a team of people and it may be modified over time. This version number should be bumped each time a new version of the state provider is published. This will force a rebuild of any existing state histories (if applicable) whose version number is different from the current one.
2400
2401The "id" attribute uniquely identifies this state provider, and the analysis that will contain it.
2402
2403<pre>
2404<stateProvider version="0" id="my.test.state.provider">
2405</pre>
2406
2407Optional header information can be added to the state provider. A "traceType" should be defined to tell TMF which trace type this analysis will apply to. If no tracetype is specified, the analysis will appear under every trace. A "label" can optionally be added to have a more user-friendly name for the analysis.
2408
2409<pre>
2410<head>
2411 <traceType id="my.trace.id" />
2412 <label value="My test analysis" />
2413</head>
2414</pre>
2415
2416If pre-defined values will be used in the state provider, they must be defined before the state providers. They can then be referred to in the state changes by name, preceded by the '$' sign. It is not necessary to use pre-defined values, the state change can use values like (100, 101, 102) directly.
2417
2418<pre>
2419<definedValue name="RUNNING" value="100" />
2420<definedValue name="CRITICAL" value="101" />
2421<definedValue name="WAITING" value="102" />
2422</pre>
2423
2424The following event handler shows what to do with the event named ''start''. It causes one state change. The sequence of '''stateAttribute''' elements represents the path to the attribute in the attribute tree, each element being one level of the tree. The '''stateValue''' indicates which value to assign to the attribute at the given path. The "$RUNNING" value means it will use the predefined value named RUNNING above.
2425
2426Suppose the actual event is ''start(3)''. The result of this state change is that at the time of the event, the state system attribute "Tasks/3" will have value 100.
2427
2428<pre>
2429<eventHandler eventName="start">
2430 <stateChange>
2431 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Tasks" />
2432 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="number" />
2433 <stateValue type="int" value="$RUNNING" />
2434 </stateChange>
2435</eventHandler>
2436</pre>
2437
2438The full XML file for the example above would look like this:
2439
2440<pre>
2441<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
61fd6eae 2442<tmfxml xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="../../org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.analysis.xml.core/src/org/eclipse/tracecompass/tmf/analysis/xml/core/module/xmlDefinition.xsd">
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2443 <stateProvider version="0" id="my.test.state.provider">
2444 <head>
2445 <traceType id="my.trace.id" />
2446 <label value="My test analysis" />
2447 </head>
2448
2449 <definedValue name="RUNNING" value="100" />
2450 <definedValue name="CRITICAL" value="101" />
2451 <definedValue name="WAITING" value="102" />
2452
2453 <eventHandler eventName="start">
2454 <stateChange>
2455 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Tasks" />
2456 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="number" />
2457 <stateValue type="int" value="$RUNNING" />
2458 </stateChange>
2459 </eventHandler>
2460 <eventHandler eventName="execute">
2461 <stateChange>
2462 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Tasks" />
2463 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="number" />
2464 <stateValue type="int" value="$CRITICAL" />
2465 </stateChange>
2466 <stateChange>
2467 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Critical section" />
2468 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="fct_name" />
2469 <stateValue type="eventField" value="number" />
2470 </stateChange>
2471 </eventHandler>
2472 <eventHandler eventName="wait">
2473 <stateChange>
2474 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Tasks" />
2475 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="number" />
2476 <stateValue type="int" value="$WAITING" />
2477 </stateChange>
2478 </eventHandler>
2479 <eventHandler eventName="exec_end">
2480 <stateChange>
2481 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Tasks" />
2482 <stateAttribute type="query">
2483 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Critical section" />
2484 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="fct_name" />
2485 </stateAttribute>
2486 <stateValue type="int" value="$RUNNING" />
2487 </stateChange>
2488 <stateChange>
2489 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Critical section" />
2490 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="fct_name" />
2491 <stateValue type="null" />
2492 </stateChange>
2493 </eventHandler>
2494 <eventHandler eventName="stop">
2495 <stateChange>
2496 <stateAttribute type="constant" value="Tasks" />
2497 <stateAttribute type="eventField" value="number" />
2498 <stateValue type="null" />
2499 </stateChange>
2500 </eventHandler>
2501 </stateProvider>
2502</tmfxml>
2503</pre>
2504
2505=== Debugging the XML state provider ===
2506
43b509ac 2507To debug the state system that was generated by the XML state provider, one could use the [[#State System Explorer View | State System Explorer View]], along with the events editor. By selecting an event, you can see what changes this event caused and the states of other attributes at the time.
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2508
2509If there are corrections to make, you may modify the XML state provider file, and re-import it. To re-run the analysis, you must first delete the supplementary files by right-clicking on your trace, and selecting ''Delete supplementary files...''. Check you analysis's .ht file, so that the analysis will be run again when the trace is reopened. The supplementary file deletion will have closed the trace, so it needs to be opened again to use the newly imported analysis file.
2510
2511If modifications are made to the XML state provider after it has been "published", the '''version''' attribute of the '''xmlStateProvider''' element should be updated. This avoids having to delete each trace's supplementary file manually. If the saved state system used a previous version, it will automatically be rebuilt from the XML file.
2512
2513== Defining an XML time graph view ==
2514
2515A time graph view is a view divided in two, with a tree viewer on the left showing information on the different entries to display and a Gantt-like viewer on the right, showing the state of the entries over time. The [[#Control_Flow_View | Control Flow View]] is an example of a time graph view.
2516
43b509ac 2517Such views can be defined in XML using the data in the state system. The state system itself could have been built by an XML-defined state provider or by any pre-defined Java analysis. It only requires knowing the structure of the state system, which can be explored using the [[#State System Explorer View | State System Explorer View]] (or programmatically using the methods in ''ITmfStateSystem'').
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2518
2519In the example above, suppose we want to display the status for each task. In the state system, it means the path of the entries to display is "Tasks/*". The attribute whose value should be shown in the Gantt chart is the entry attribute itself. So the XML to display these entries would be as such:
2520
2521<pre>
2522<entry path="Tasks/*">
2523 <display type="self" />
2524</entry>
2525</pre>
2526
2527But first, the view has to be declared. It has an ID, to uniquely identify this view among all the available XML files.
2528
2529<pre>
2530<timeGraphView id="my.test.time.graph.view">
2531</pre>
2532
2533Optional header information can be added to the view. '''analysis''' elements will associate the view only to the analysis identified by the "id" attribute. It can be either the ID of the state provider, like in this case, or the analysis ID of any analysis defined in Java. If no analysis is specified, the view will appear under every analysis with a state system. The '''label''' element allows to give a more user-friendly name to the view. The label does not have to be unique. As long as the ID is unique, views for different analyses can use the same name.
2534
2535<pre>
2536<head>
2537 <analysis id="my.test.state.provider" />
2538 <label value="My Sample XML View" />
2539</head>
2540</pre>
2541
2542Also, if the values of the attributes to display are known, they can be defined, along with a text to explain them and a color to draw them with. Note that the values are the same as defined in the state provider, but the name does not have to be the same. While in the state provider, a simple constant string makes sense to use in state changes. But in the view, the name will appear in the legend, so a user-friendly text is more appropriate.
2543
2544<pre>
2545<definedValue name="The process is running" value="100" color="#118811" />
2546<definedValue name="Critical section" value="101" color="#881111" />
2547<definedValue name="Waiting for critical section" value="102" color="#AEB522" />
2548</pre>
2549
2550Here is the full XML for the time graph view:
2551
2552<pre>
61fd6eae 2553<tmfxml xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="../../org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.analysis.xml.core/src/org/eclipse/tracecompass/tmf/analysis/xml/core/module/xmlDefinition.xsd">
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2554 <timeGraphView id="my.test.time.graph.view">
2555 <head>
2556 <analysis id="my.test.state.provider" />
2557 <label value="My Sample XML View" />
2558 </head>
2559
2560 <definedValue name="The process is running" value="100" color="#118811" />
2561 <definedValue name="Critical section" value="101" color="#881111" />
2562 <definedValue name="Waiting for critical section" value="102" color="#AEB522" />
2563
2564 <entry path="Tasks/*">
2565 <display type="self" />
2566 </entry>
2567 </timeGraphView>
2568</tmfxml>
2569</pre>
2570
2571The following screenshot shows the result of the preceding example on a test trace. The trace used, as well as the XML file are available [http://secretaire.dorsal.polymtl.ca/~gbastien/Xml4Traces/XML_documentation_example.tar.gz here].
2572
2573[[Image:images/Xml_analysis_screenshot.png| XML analysis with view]]
2574
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2575== Defining an XML XY chart ==
2576
2577An XY chart displays series as a set of numerical values over time. The X-axis represents the time and is synchronized with the trace's current time range. The Y-axis can be any numerical value.
2578
2579Such views can be defined in XML using the data in the state system. The state system itself could have been built by an XML-defined state provider or by any pre-defined Java analysis. It only requires knowing the structure of the state system, which can be explored using the [[#State System Explorer View | State System Explorer View]] (or programmatically using the methods in ''ITmfStateSystem'').
2580
61fd6eae 2581We will use the Linux Kernel Analysis on LTTng kernel traces to show an example XY chart. In this state system, the status of each CPU is a numerical value. We will display this value as the Y axis of the series. There will be one series per CPU. The XML to display these entries would be as such:
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2582
2583<pre>
2584<entry path="CPUs/*">
2585 <display type="constant" value="Status" />
2586 <name type="self" />
2587</entry>
2588</pre>
2589
2590But first, the view has to be declared. It has an ID, to uniquely identify this view among all the available XML files.
2591
2592<pre>
2593<xyView id="my.test.xy.chart.view">
2594</pre>
2595
2596Like for the time graph views, optional header information can be added to the view. '''analysis''' elements will associate the view only to the analysis identified by the "id" attribute. It can be either the ID of the state provider, like in this case, or the analysis ID of any analysis defined in Java. If no analysis is specified, the view will appear under every analysis with a state system. The '''label''' element allows to give a more user-friendly name to the view. The label does not have to be unique. As long as the ID is unique, views for different analyses can use the same name.
2597
2598<pre>
2599<head>
61fd6eae 2600 <analysis id="org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.analysis" />
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2601 <label value="CPU status XY view" />
2602</head>
2603</pre>
2604
2605Here is the full XML for the XY Chart that displays the CPU status over time of an LTTng Kernel Trace:
2606
2607<pre>
61fd6eae 2608<tmfxml xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="../../org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.analysis.xml.core/src/org/eclipse/tracecompass/tmf/analysis/xml/core/module/xmlDefinition.xsd">
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2609 <xyView id="my.test.xy.chart.view">
2610 <head>
61fd6eae 2611 <analysis id="org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.analysis" />
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2612 <label value="CPU status XY view" />
2613 </head>
2614
2615 <entry path="CPUs/*">
2616 <display type="constant" value="Status" />
2617 <name type="self" />
2618 </entry>
2619 </xyView>
2620</tmfxml>
2621</pre>
2622
2623The following screenshot shows the result of the preceding example on a LTTng Kernel Trace.
2624
2625[[Image:images/XML_xy_chart.png| XML XY chart]]
2626
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2627= Latency Analyses =
2628
2629Trace Compass offers a feature called Latency analysis. This allows an analysis to return intervals and these intervals will be displayed in four different views. An example analysis is provided with kernel system call latencies being provided. The available views are:
2630
2631* System Call Latencies
2632A '''table''' of the raw latencies. This view is useful to inspect individual latencies.
2633
2634 [[Image:images/LatenciesTable.png| Latency Table example - System Call Latencies]]
2635
2636
2637* System Call Latency vs Time
2638A time aligned '''scatter chart''' of the latencies with respect to the current window range. This view is useful to see the overall form of the latencies as they arrive.
2639
2640[[Image:images/LatenciesScatter.png| Latency Scatter Chart example - System Call Latency vs Time]]
2641
2642
2643* System Call Latency Statistics
2644A view of the total '''statistics''' of the latencies. These show the ''minimum'', ''maximum'', ''average'' and ''standard deviation'' of the latencies when applicable. This tool is useful for finding the outliers on a per-category basis.
2645
2646[[Image:images/LatenciesStatistics.png| Latency Statistics example - System Call Latency Statistics]]
2647
2648
726b0b91 2649* System Call Density
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2650A '''density''' view, analyzing the current time range. This is useful to find global outliers.
2651
2652[[Image:images/LatenciesDensity.png| Latency Densities example - System Call Density]]
2653
726b0b91
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2654= Virtual Machine Analysis =
2655
2656Virtual environments are usually composed of host machines, who each run an hypervisor program on which one or many guests can be run. Tracing a guest machine alone can often yield some strange results as from its point of view, it has full use of the resources, but in reality, most resources are shared with the host and other guests.
2657
2658To better understand what is happening in such an environment, it is necessary to trace all the machines involved, guests and hosts, and correlate this information in an experiment that will display a complete view of the virtualized environment.
2659
2660== Virtual Machine Experiment ==
2661
2662A trace has to be taken for each machine, guest and host, in the virtualized environment. The host trace is the most important to have, as missing guests will only give an incomplete view of the system, but missing hosts usually won't allow to identify the hypervisor, nor determine when a guest is preempted from the host CPUs. The virtual machine analysis only makes sense if the host trace is available.
2663
2664Once all the traces are imported in Trace Compass, they can be [[#Creating a Experiment | added to an experiment]]. The type of the experiment should by set to '''Virtual Machine Experiment''' by clicking on the right mouse button over the experiment name, then selecting '''Select Experiment Type...'''.
2665
2666[[Image:images/vmAnalysis/VM_experiment.png | Virtual Machine Experiment]]
2667
2668Depending on the hypervisor used, traces might need to be [[#Trace synchronization | synchronized]] so that they have the same time reference and their events can be correctly correlated.
2669
2670== Virtual CPU View ==
2671
2672The Virtual CPU view shows the status of CPUs and threads on guests augmented with the preemption and hypervisor data we get from the host.
2673
2674In the image below, we see for the virtual CPU status that it has a few more states than the CPUs in the [[#Resources View | Resources View]]: in red and purple respectively, when the virtual CPU is running hypervisor code and when the CPU is preempted on the host.
2675
2676The entries for each thread of the machine corresponds to the one from the [[#Control flow | Control Flow View]], augmented with the data from the Virtual CPU, so that we see that even though it is running from the guest's point of view, it is actually not running when the Virtual CPU it runs on is in preempted or hypervisor mode.
2677
2678[[Image:images/vmAnalysis/VM_CPU_view.png | Virtual CPU view]]
2679
2680== Hypervisor-specific Tracing ==
2681
2682In order to be able to correlate data from the guests and hosts traces, each hypervisor supported by Trace Compass requires some specific events, that are sometimes not available in the default installation of the tracer.
2683
2684The following sections describe how to obtain traces for each hypervisor.
2685
2686=== Qemu/KVM ===
2687
2688The Qemu/KVM hypervisor require extra tracepoints not yet shipped in LTTng for both guests and hosts, as well as compilation with the full kernel source tree on the host, to have access to kvm_entry/kvm_exit events on x86.
2689
2690Obtain the source code with extra tracepoints, along with lttng-modules
2691
2692 # git clone https://github.com/giraldeau/lttng-modules.git
2693 # cd lttng-modules
2694
2695Checkout the addons branch, compile and install lttng-modules as per the lttng-modules documentation.
2696
2697 # git checkout addons
2698 # make
2699 # sudo make modules_install
2700 # sudo depmod -a
2701
2702On the host, to have complete kvm tracepoints support, the make command has to include the full kernel tree. So first, you'll need to obtain the kernel source tree. See your distribution's documentation on how to get it. This will compile extra modules, including lttng-probe-kvm-x86, which we need.
2703
2704 # make KERNELDIR=/path/to/kernel/dir
2705
2706The lttng addons modules must be inserted manually for the virtual machine extra tracepoints to be available:
2707
2708 # sudo modprobe lttng-addons
2709 # sudo modprobe lttng-vmsync-host # on the host
2710 # sudo modprobe lttng-vmsync-guest # on the guest
2711
2712The following tracepoints will be available
2713
2714 # sudo lttng list -k
2715 Kernel events:
2716 -------------
2717 ...
2718 kvm_entry (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2719 kvm_exit (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint)
2720 vmsync_gh_guest (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint) # on the guest
2721 vmsync_hg_guest (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint) # on the guest
2722 vmsync_gh_host (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint) # on the host
2723 vmsync_hg_host (loglevel: TRACE_EMERG (0)) (type: tracepoint) # on the host
2724 ...
2725
2726Host and guests can now be traced together and their traces added to an experiment. Because each guest has a different clock than the host, it is necessary to synchronize the traces together. Unfortunately, automatic synchronization with the virtual machine events is not completely implemented yet, so another kind of synchronization needs to be done, with TCP packets for instance. See section on [[#Trace synchronization | trace synchronization]] for information on how to obtain synchronizable traces.
24eb1856 2727
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2728= Limitations =
2729
07ed89d6 2730* When parsing text traces, the timestamps are assumed to be in the local time zone. This means that when combining it to CTF binary traces, there could be offsets by a few hours depending on where the traces were taken and where they were read.
52e76353 2731* LTTng Tools v2.1.0 introduced the command line options ''--no-consumer'' and ''--disable-consumer'' for session creation as well as the commands ''enable-consumer'' and ''disable-consumer''. The LTTng Tracer Control in Eclipse doesn't support these options and commands because they will obsolete in LTTng Tools v2.2.0 and because the procedure for session creation offers already all relevant advanced parameters.
ff25eb47 2732
43d4f823 2733= How to use LTTng to diagnose problems =
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2734
2735LTTng is a tracer, it will give an enormous amount of information about the system it is running on. This means it can solve many types of problems.
2736
43d4f823 2737The following are examples of problems that can be solved with a tracer.
ff25eb47 2738
43d4f823 2739== Random stutters ==
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BH
2740
2741Bob is running a computer program and it stutters periodically every 2 minutes. The CPU load is relatively low and Bob isn't running low on RAM.
2742
2743He decides to trace his complete system for 10 minutes. He opens the LTTng view in eclipse. From the control, he creates a session and enables all kernel tracepoints.
2744
2745He now has a 10 GB trace file. He imports the trace to his viewer and loads it up.
2746
2747A cursory look at the histogram bar on the bottom show relatively even event distribution, there are no interesting spikes, so he will have to dig deeper to find the issue. If he had seen a spike every 2 minutes, there would be strong chances this would be the first thing to investigate as it would imply a lot of kernel activity at the same period as his glitch, this would have been a path to investigate.
2748
2749As Bob suspects that he may be having some hardware raising IRQs or some other hardware based issue and adding delays. He looks at the ressource view and doesn't see anything abnormal.
2750
61fd6eae 2751Bob did note an exact second one glitch occurred: 11:58:03. He zooms into the time range or 11:58:02-11:58:04 using the histogram. He is happy to see the time is human readable local wall clock time and no longer in "nanseconds since the last reboot". <br>In the resource view, once again, he sees many soft irqs being raised at the same time, around the time his GUI would freeze. He changes views and looks at the control flow view at that time and sees a process spending a lot of time in the kernel: FooMonitor- his temperature monitoring software.
ff25eb47 2752
61fd6eae 2753At this point he closes FooMonitor and notices the bug disappeared. He could call it a day but he wants to see what was causing the system to freeze. He cannot justify closing a piece of software without understanding the issue. It may be a conflict that HIS software is causing after all.
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2754
2755The system freezes around the time this program is running. He clicks on the process in the control flow view and looks at the corresponding events in the detailed events view. He sees: open - read - close repeated hundreds of times on the same file. The file being read was /dev/HWmonitor. He sends a report to the FooMonitor team and warns his team that FooMonitor was glitching their performance.
2756
61fd6eae 2757The FooMonitor team finds that they were calling a system bus call that would halt a CPU while reading the temperature so that the core would not induce an 0.1 degree error in the reading, by disabling this feature, they improve their software and stop the glitches from occurring on their custommer's machine. They also optimize their code to open the file read and clone it once.
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2758
2759By using system wide kernel tracing, even without deep kernel knowledge Bob was able to isolate a bug in a rogue piece of software in his system.
2760
43d4f823 2761== Slow I/O ==
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BH
2762
2763Alice is running her server. She noticed that one of her nodes was slowing down, and wasn't sure why, upon reading the trace she noticed that her time between a block request and complete was around 10ms.
2764
2765This is abnormal, normally her server handles IOs in under 100us, since they are quite local.
2766
2767She walks up to the server and hears the hard drive thrashing, This prompts her to look up in the events view the sectors being read in the block complete requests. There are her requests interleaved with other ones at the opposite side of the hard drive.
2768
2769She sees the tracer writing but there is another process that is writing to the server disk non stop. She looks in the control flow view and sees that there's a program from another fellow engineer, "Wally" that is writing in his home in a loop "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.".
2770
2771Alice kills the program, and immediately the server speeds up. She then goes to discuss this with Wally and implements strict hard disk quotas on the server.
2772
2773= References =
2774
61fd6eae
MAL
2775* [http://www.eclipse.org/tracecompass Trace Compass project]
2776* [https://wiki.eclipse.org/index.php/Trace_Compass#User_Guides Trace Compass User Guides]
ff25eb47 2777* [http://www.lttng.org/ LTTng project]
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2778* [http://lttng.org/files/doc/man-pages/man1/lttng.1.html LTTng Tracer Control Command Line Tool User Manual]
2779* [http://lttng.org/files/doc/man-pages/man8/lttng-relayd.8.html LTTng relayd User Manual]
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