Fix: cleanup indef guards following the rename
[lttng-tools.git] / doc / quickstart.txt
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1NOTES:
2--------------
3
42011-12-12: For user-space tracing, only the global UST domain ("-u" alone) is
5supported meaning that if you enable a tracepoint for user-space it will be
6enabled for all applications for the current tracing session you are working
7on.
8
9QUICKSTART
10--------------
11
12This is a quick start guide for the complete LTTng tool chain. This is divided
13in three sections respectively kernel tracing, user-space tracing and reading a
14trace.
15
16See the README file for installation procedure or use the various Linux
17distribution packages.
18
19In order to trace the kernel, you'll need the lttng-modules 2.0 compiled and
20installed. See http://lttng.org/lttng2.0 for more instructions for that part.
21For user-space tracing, you'll need an instrumented application with lttng-ust
222.0.
23
24lttng-tools provide a session daemon (lttng-sessiond) that acts as a tracing
25registry. To trace any instrumented applications or the kernel, a registered
26tracing session is needed beforehand. To interact with the session daemon and a
27tracing session, you should use the lttng command line UI (lttng). It is also
28possible to use the liblttngctl library for tracing control (lttng.h).
29
30Here is a list of some powerful features the LTTng 2.0 kernel tracer offers:
31
32 * Kprobes support
33 * Function Tracer support
34 * Context information support (add context data to an event)
35 * Perf counter support
36 * Tracepoint support
37
38And for the LTTng UST 2.0 tracer:
39
40 * Applications registration
41 * Automatic tracepoints activation upon app. registration
42 * Context information support
43 * Safe buffers after application crash
44 * Per-user tracing (root access *not* mandatory)
45
46The next sections explains how to do tracing :)
47
48Kernel Tracing
49--------------
50
51You can start the session daemon by invoking the command "lttng-sessiond", or
52let the lttng command line tool do it for you. The session daemon loads the
53LTTng tracer modules for you if those modules can be found on your system. If
54they are not found, the kernel tracing feature will be unavailable.
55
56List available kernel events:
57
58# lttng list -k
59
601) Create a tracing session. The .lttng directory will be created with .lttngrc
61file in $HOME containing the session name (here 'mysession') you are working
62on.
63
64# lttng create mysession
65
66If you have multiple sessions, you can change the current session by using
67
68# lttng set-session myothersession
69
702) Enable all tracepoints and all system call events.
71
72# lttng enable-event -a -k
73
743) Enable tracepoint event(s). Here for example, we want only
75'sched_switch' and 'sched_wakeup' events for the kernel (-k/--kernel).
76
77# lttng enable-event sched_switch,sched_wakeup -k
78
79or enable ALL tracepoint events:
80
81# lttng enable-event -a -k --tracepoint
82
834) Enable all system call event(s).
84
85# lttng enable-event -a -k --syscall
86
875) Enable kprobes and/or the function tracer with lttng
88
89This is a new feature made possible by the new LTTng 2.0 kernel tracer. You can
90enable a dynamic probe and data will be output in the trace along side with
91your tracing data.
92
93# lttng enable-event aname -k --probe symbol+0x0
94
95or
96
97# lttng enable-event aname -k --probe 0xffff7260695
98
99Either an <address> or a <symbol+offset> can be used for probes.
100
101You can also enable function tracer, which uses the Ftrace API (by Steven
102Rostedt). Again, data will be output in the trace.
103
104# lttng enable-event aname -k --function <symbol_name>
105
1066) Enable context information for an event:
107
108This is also a new feature which allows you to add context information to an
109event. For example, you can add the PID along with the event information:
110
111# lttng add-context -k -e sched_switch -t pid
112
113At this point, you will have to look at 'lttng add-context --help' for all
114possible context type.
115
116You can on the same line activate multiple context:
117
118# lttng add-context -k -e sched_switch -t pid -t nice -t tid
119
1207) Enable perf counter for an event:
121
122Again, a new powerful feature is the possibility to add perf counter data
123(using the perf API by Ingo Molnar and Thomas Gleixner) to the trace on a per
124event basis. Let say we want to get the CPU cycles at each event:
125
126# lttng add-context -k -e sched_switch -t perf:cpu-cycles
127
128You'll have to use the add-context help for all possible perf counter values.
129
1308) Start tracing:
131
132# lttng start
133
134Tracing is in progress at this point and traces will be written in
135$HOME/lttng-traces/mysession-<date>-<time>
136
137NOTE: It will start tracing for *all* domain(s).
138
1399) Stop tracing:
140
141# lttng stop
142
143NOTE: At this point, you can restart the trace (lttng start), enable/disable
144events or just go take a break and come back 3 days later to start it again :).
145You can also read the trace since the buffers are flushed on stop command.
146
14710) Destroy your session after you are done with tracing
148
149# lttng destroy
150
151See Reading a trace section below to read you trace(s).
152
153User-space Tracing
154--------------
155
156Like kernel tracing, you can start the session daemon by invoking the command
157"lttng-sessiond", or let the lttng command line tool do it for you.
158
159NOTE: You do *not* need root credentials in order to tracer user-space
160applications. However, if you run the session daemon under non-root user
161rights, only applications of that user will be traced.
162
163So, after instrumenting you applications with LTTng-ust 2.0
164(http://lttng.org/lttng2.0), upon startup, it will automatically register to
165the session daemon. If there is none running, it will simply wait on a seperate
166thread for a session daemon to appear and then register.
167
168Start your instrumented application at any time but at least before starting
169tracing :).
170
171List available registered applications:
172
173$ lttng list -u
174
1751) Create a tracing session. The .lttng directory will be created with a
176.lttngrc file in $HOME containing the session name (here 'mysession') you are
177working on.
178
179$ lttng create mysession
180
181If you have multiple sessions, you can change the current session by using:
182
183$ lttng set-session myothersession
184
1852) Enable all tracepoints for the global UST domain ("-u" alone).
186
187$ lttng enable-event -a -u
188
189or enable a single tracepoint event.
190
191$ lttng enable-event ust_tests_hello:tptest -u
192
1933) This is also a new feature which allows you to add context information to an
194event. For example, you can add the PID along with the event information:
195
196$ lttng add-context -t pid -e ust_tests_hello:tptest -u
197
198At this point, you will have to look at 'lttng add-context --help' for all
199possible context type.
200
201You can on the same line activate multiple context:
202
203$ lttng add-context -u -e ust_tests_hello:tptest -t pid -t nice -t tid
204
2054) Start tracing:
206
207$ lttng start
208
209Tracing is in progress at this point and traces will be written in the session
210directory.
211
212NOTE: It will start tracing for *all* domain(s).
213
2145) Stop tracing:
215
216$ lttng stop
217
218NOTE: At this point, you can restart the trace (lttng start), enable/disable
219events or just go take a break and come back 3 days later to start it again :).
220You can also read the trace since the buffers are flushed on stop command.
221
2226) Destroy your session after you are done with tracing
223
224$ lttng destroy
225
226See "Reading a trace" section below to read you trace(s).
227
228
229Reading a trace
230--------------
231
232The tool "Babeltrace" can be used to dump your binary trace into a
233human-readable text format. Please see http://www.efficios.com/babeltrace and
234git tree http://git.efficios.com/?p=babeltrace.git
235
236# babeltrace $HOME/lttng-traces/mysession-<date>-<time> | less
237
238VoilĂ !
239
240Please report any bugs/comments on our mailing list (lttng-dev@lists.lttng.org)
241or you can go on our IRC channel at irc.oftc.net, channel #lttng
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