update endian -> byte_order
[ctf.git] / common-trace-format-proposal.txt
... / ...
CommitLineData
1
2RFC: Common Trace Format (CTF) Proposal (pre-v1.7)
3
4Mathieu Desnoyers, EfficiOS Inc.
5
6The goal of the present document is to propose a trace format that suits the
7needs of the embedded, telecom, high-performance and kernel communities. It is
8based on the Common Trace Format Requirements (v1.4) document. It is designed to
9allow traces to be natively generated by the Linux kernel, Linux user-space
10applications written in C/C++, and hardware components. One major element of
11CTF is the Trace Stream Description Language (TSDL) which flexibility
12enables description of various binary trace stream layouts.
13
14The latest version of this document can be found at:
15
16 git tree: git://git.efficios.com/ctf.git
17 gitweb: http://git.efficios.com/?p=ctf.git
18
19A reference implementation of a library to read and write this trace format is
20being implemented within the BabelTrace project, a converter between trace
21formats. The development tree is available at:
22
23 git tree: git://git.efficios.com/babeltrace.git
24 gitweb: http://git.efficios.com/?p=babeltrace.git
25
26
271. Preliminary definitions
28
29 - Event Trace: An ordered sequence of events.
30 - Event Stream: An ordered sequence of events, containing a subset of the
31 trace event types.
32 - Event Packet: A sequence of physically contiguous events within an event
33 stream.
34 - Event: This is the basic entry in a trace. (aka: a trace record).
35 - An event identifier (ID) relates to the class (a type) of event within
36 an event stream.
37 e.g. event: irq_entry.
38 - An event (or event record) relates to a specific instance of an event
39 class.
40 e.g. event: irq_entry, at time X, on CPU Y
41 - Source Architecture: Architecture writing the trace.
42 - Reader Architecture: Architecture reading the trace.
43
44
452. High-level representation of a trace
46
47A trace is divided into multiple event streams. Each event stream contains a
48subset of the trace event types.
49
50The final output of the trace, after its generation and optional transport over
51the network, is expected to be either on permanent or temporary storage in a
52virtual file system. Because each event stream is appended to while a trace is
53being recorded, each is associated with a separate file for output. Therefore,
54a stored trace can be represented as a directory containing one file per stream.
55
56A metadata event stream contains information on trace event types
57expressed in the Trace Stream Description Language (TSDL). It describes:
58
59- Trace version.
60- Types available.
61- Per-stream event header description.
62- Per-stream event header selection.
63- Per-stream event context fields.
64- Per-event
65 - Event type to stream mapping.
66 - Event type to name mapping.
67 - Event type to ID mapping.
68 - Event fields description.
69
70
713. Event stream
72
73An event stream is divided in contiguous event packets of variable size. These
74subdivisions have a variable size. An event packet can contain a certain
75amount of padding at the end. The stream header is repeated at the
76beginning of each event packet. The rationale for the event stream
77design choices is explained in Appendix B. Stream Header Rationale.
78
79The event stream header will therefore be referred to as the "event packet
80header" throughout the rest of this document.
81
82
834. Types
84
85Types are organized as type classes. Each type class belong to either of two
86kind of types: basic types or compound types.
87
884.1 Basic types
89
90A basic type is a scalar type, as described in this section. It includes
91integers, GNU/C bitfields, enumerations, and floating point values.
92
934.1.1 Type inheritance
94
95Type specifications can be inherited to allow deriving types from a
96type class. For example, see the uint32_t named type derived from the "integer"
97type class below ("Integers" section). Types have a precise binary
98representation in the trace. A type class has methods to read and write these
99types, but must be derived into a type to be usable in an event field.
100
1014.1.2 Alignment
102
103We define "byte-packed" types as aligned on the byte size, namely 8-bit.
104We define "bit-packed" types as following on the next bit, as defined by the
105"Integers" section.
106
107All basic types, except bitfields, are either aligned on an architecture-defined
108specific alignment or byte-packed, depending on the architecture preference.
109Architectures providing fast unaligned write byte-packed basic types to save
110space, aligning each type on byte boundaries (8-bit). Architectures with slow
111unaligned writes align types on specific alignment values. If no specific
112alignment is declared for a type, it is assumed to be bit-packed for
113integers with size not multiple of 8 bits and for gcc bitfields. All
114other types are byte-packed.
115
116Metadata attribute representation of a specific alignment:
117
118 align = value; /* value in bits */
119
1204.1.3 Byte order
121
122By default, the native endianness of the source architecture the trace is used.
123Byte order can be overridden for a basic type by specifying a "byte_order"
124attribute. Typical use-case is to specify the network byte order (big endian:
125"be") to save data captured from the network into the trace without conversion.
126If not specified, the byte order is native.
127
128Metadata representation:
129
130 byte_order = native OR network OR be OR le; /* network and be are aliases */
131
1324.1.4 Size
133
134Type size, in bits, for integers and floats is that returned by "sizeof()" in C
135multiplied by CHAR_BIT.
136We require the size of "char" and "unsigned char" types (CHAR_BIT) to be fixed
137to 8 bits for cross-endianness compatibility.
138
139Metadata representation:
140
141 size = value; (value is in bits)
142
1434.1.5 Integers
144
145Signed integers are represented in two-complement. Integer alignment, size,
146signedness and byte ordering are defined in the metadata. Integers aligned on
147byte size (8-bit) and with length multiple of byte size (8-bit) correspond to
148the C99 standard integers. In addition, integers with alignment and/or size that
149are _not_ a multiple of the byte size are permitted; these correspond to the C99
150standard bitfields, with the added specification that the CTF integer bitfields
151have a fixed binary representation. A MIT-licensed reference implementation of
152the CTF portable bitfields is available at:
153
154 http://git.efficios.com/?p=babeltrace.git;a=blob;f=include/babeltrace/bitfield.h
155
156Binary representation of integers:
157
158- On little and big endian:
159 - Within a byte, high bits correspond to an integer high bits, and low bits
160 correspond to low bits.
161- On little endian:
162 - Integer across multiple bytes are placed from the less significant to the
163 most significant.
164 - Consecutive integers are placed from lower bits to higher bits (even within
165 a byte).
166- On big endian:
167 - Integer across multiple bytes are placed from the most significant to the
168 less significant.
169 - Consecutive integers are placed from higher bits to lower bits (even within
170 a byte).
171
172This binary representation is derived from the bitfield implementation in GCC
173for little and big endian. However, contrary to what GCC does, integers can
174cross units boundaries (no padding is required). Padding can be explicitely
175added (see 4.1.6 GNU/C bitfields) to follow the GCC layout if needed.
176
177Metadata representation:
178
179 integer {
180 signed = true OR false; /* default false */
181 byte_order = native OR network OR be OR le; /* default native */
182 size = value; /* value in bits, no default */
183 align = value; /* value in bits */
184 }
185
186Example of type inheritance (creation of a uint32_t named type):
187
188typealias integer {
189 size = 32;
190 signed = false;
191 align = 32;
192} := uint32_t;
193
194Definition of a named 5-bit signed bitfield:
195
196typealias integer {
197 size = 5;
198 signed = true;
199 align = 1;
200} := int5_t;
201
2024.1.6 GNU/C bitfields
203
204The GNU/C bitfields follow closely the integer representation, with a
205particularity on alignment: if a bitfield cannot fit in the current unit, the
206unit is padded and the bitfield starts at the following unit. The unit size is
207defined by the size of the type "unit_type".
208
209Metadata representation:
210
211 unit_type name:size:
212
213As an example, the following structure declared in C compiled by GCC:
214
215struct example {
216 short a:12;
217 short b:5;
218};
219
220The example structure is aligned on the largest element (short). The second
221bitfield would be aligned on the next unit boundary, because it would not fit in
222the current unit.
223
2244.1.7 Floating point
225
226The floating point values byte ordering is defined in the metadata.
227
228Floating point values follow the IEEE 754-2008 standard interchange formats.
229Description of the floating point values include the exponent and mantissa size
230in bits. Some requirements are imposed on the floating point values:
231
232- FLT_RADIX must be 2.
233- mant_dig is the number of digits represented in the mantissa. It is specified
234 by the ISO C99 standard, section 5.2.4, as FLT_MANT_DIG, DBL_MANT_DIG and
235 LDBL_MANT_DIG as defined by <float.h>.
236- exp_dig is the number of digits represented in the exponent. Given that
237 mant_dig is one bit more than its actual size in bits (leading 1 is not
238 needed) and also given that the sign bit always takes one bit, exp_dig can be
239 specified as:
240
241 - sizeof(float) * CHAR_BIT - FLT_MANT_DIG
242 - sizeof(double) * CHAR_BIT - DBL_MANT_DIG
243 - sizeof(long double) * CHAR_BIT - LDBL_MANT_DIG
244
245Metadata representation:
246
247floating_point {
248 exp_dig = value;
249 mant_dig = value;
250 byte_order = native OR network OR be OR le;
251}
252
253Example of type inheritance:
254
255typealias floating_point {
256 exp_dig = 8; /* sizeof(float) * CHAR_BIT - FLT_MANT_DIG */
257 mant_dig = 24; /* FLT_MANT_DIG */
258 byte_order = native;
259} := float;
260
261TODO: define NaN, +inf, -inf behavior.
262
2634.1.8 Enumerations
264
265Enumerations are a mapping between an integer type and a table of strings. The
266numerical representation of the enumeration follows the integer type specified
267by the metadata. The enumeration mapping table is detailed in the enumeration
268description within the metadata. The mapping table maps inclusive value ranges
269(or single values) to strings. Instead of being limited to simple
270"value -> string" mappings, these enumerations map
271"[ start_value ... end_value ] -> string", which map inclusive ranges of
272values to strings. An enumeration from the C language can be represented in
273this format by having the same start_value and end_value for each element, which
274is in fact a range of size 1. This single-value range is supported without
275repeating the start and end values with the value = string declaration.
276
277enum name : integer_type {
278 somestring = start_value1 ... end_value1,
279 "other string" = start_value2 ... end_value2,
280 yet_another_string, /* will be assigned to end_value2 + 1 */
281 "some other string" = value,
282 ...
283};
284
285If the values are omitted, the enumeration starts at 0 and increment of 1 for
286each entry:
287
288enum name : unsigned int {
289 ZERO,
290 ONE,
291 TWO,
292 TEN = 10,
293 ELEVEN,
294};
295
296Overlapping ranges within a single enumeration are implementation defined.
297
298A nameless enumeration can be declared as a field type or as part of a typedef:
299
300enum : integer_type {
301 ...
302}
303
304Enumerations omitting the container type ": integer_type" use the "int"
305type (for compatibility with C99). The "int" type must be previously
306declared. E.g.:
307
308typealias integer { size = 32; align = 32; signed = true } := int;
309
310enum {
311 ...
312}
313
314
3154.2 Compound types
316
317Compound are aggregation of type declarations. Compound types include
318structures, variant, arrays, sequences, and strings.
319
3204.2.1 Structures
321
322Structures are aligned on the largest alignment required by basic types
323contained within the structure. (This follows the ISO/C standard for structures)
324
325Metadata representation of a named structure:
326
327struct name {
328 field_type field_name;
329 field_type field_name;
330 ...
331};
332
333Example:
334
335struct example {
336 integer { /* Nameless type */
337 size = 16;
338 signed = true;
339 align = 16;
340 } first_field_name;
341 uint64_t second_field_name; /* Named type declared in the metadata */
342};
343
344The fields are placed in a sequence next to each other. They each possess a
345field name, which is a unique identifier within the structure.
346
347A nameless structure can be declared as a field type or as part of a typedef:
348
349struct {
350 ...
351}
352
3534.2.2 Variants (Discriminated/Tagged Unions)
354
355A CTF variant is a selection between different types. A CTF variant must
356always be defined within the scope of a structure or within fields
357contained within a structure (defined recursively). A "tag" enumeration
358field must appear in either the same lexical scope, prior to the variant
359field (in field declaration order), in an uppermost lexical scope (see
360Section 7.3.1), or in an uppermost dynamic scope (see Section 7.3.2).
361The type selection is indicated by the mapping from the enumeration
362value to the string used as variant type selector. The field to use as
363tag is specified by the "tag_field", specified between "< >" after the
364"variant" keyword for unnamed variants, and after "variant name" for
365named variants.
366
367The alignment of the variant is the alignment of the type as selected by the tag
368value for the specific instance of the variant. The alignment of the type
369containing the variant is independent of the variant alignment. The size of the
370variant is the size as selected by the tag value for the specific instance of
371the variant.
372
373A named variant declaration followed by its definition within a structure
374declaration:
375
376variant name {
377 field_type sel1;
378 field_type sel2;
379 field_type sel3;
380 ...
381};
382
383struct {
384 enum : integer_type { sel1, sel2, sel3, ... } tag_field;
385 ...
386 variant name <tag_field> v;
387}
388
389An unnamed variant definition within a structure is expressed by the following
390metadata:
391
392struct {
393 enum : integer_type { sel1, sel2, sel3, ... } tag_field;
394 ...
395 variant <tag_field> {
396 field_type sel1;
397 field_type sel2;
398 field_type sel3;
399 ...
400 } v;
401}
402
403Example of a named variant within a sequence that refers to a single tag field:
404
405variant example {
406 uint32_t a;
407 uint64_t b;
408 short c;
409};
410
411struct {
412 enum : uint2_t { a, b, c } choice;
413 variant example <choice> v[unsigned int];
414}
415
416Example of an unnamed variant:
417
418struct {
419 enum : uint2_t { a, b, c, d } choice;
420 /* Unrelated fields can be added between the variant and its tag */
421 int32_t somevalue;
422 variant <choice> {
423 uint32_t a;
424 uint64_t b;
425 short c;
426 struct {
427 unsigned int field1;
428 uint64_t field2;
429 } d;
430 } s;
431}
432
433Example of an unnamed variant within an array:
434
435struct {
436 enum : uint2_t { a, b, c } choice;
437 variant <choice> {
438 uint32_t a;
439 uint64_t b;
440 short c;
441 } v[10];
442}
443
444Example of a variant type definition within a structure, where the defined type
445is then declared within an array of structures. This variant refers to a tag
446located in an upper lexical scope. This example clearly shows that a variant
447type definition referring to the tag "x" uses the closest preceding field from
448the lexical scope of the type definition.
449
450struct {
451 enum : uint2_t { a, b, c, d } x;
452
453 typedef variant <x> { /*
454 * "x" refers to the preceding "x" enumeration in the
455 * lexical scope of the type definition.
456 */
457 uint32_t a;
458 uint64_t b;
459 short c;
460 } example_variant;
461
462 struct {
463 enum : int { x, y, z } x; /* This enumeration is not used by "v". */
464 example_variant v; /*
465 * "v" uses the "enum : uint2_t { a, b, c, d }"
466 * tag.
467 */
468 } a[10];
469}
470
4714.2.3 Arrays
472
473Arrays are fixed-length. Their length is declared in the type declaration within
474the metadata. They contain an array of "inner type" elements, which can refer to
475any type not containing the type of the array being declared (no circular
476dependency). The length is the number of elements in an array.
477
478Metadata representation of a named array:
479
480typedef elem_type name[length];
481
482A nameless array can be declared as a field type within a structure, e.g.:
483
484 uint8_t field_name[10];
485
486
4874.2.4 Sequences
488
489Sequences are dynamically-sized arrays. They start with an integer that specify
490the length of the sequence, followed by an array of "inner type" elements.
491The length is the number of elements in the sequence.
492
493Metadata representation for a named sequence:
494
495typedef elem_type name[length_type];
496
497A nameless sequence can be declared as a field type, e.g.:
498
499long field_name[int];
500
501The length type follows the integer types specifications, and the sequence
502elements follow the "array" specifications.
503
5044.2.5 Strings
505
506Strings are an array of bytes of variable size and are terminated by a '\0'
507"NULL" character. Their encoding is described in the metadata. In absence of
508encoding attribute information, the default encoding is UTF-8.
509
510Metadata representation of a named string type:
511
512typealias string {
513 encoding = UTF8 OR ASCII;
514} := name;
515
516A nameless string type can be declared as a field type:
517
518string field_name; /* Use default UTF8 encoding */
519
5205. Event Packet Header
521
522The event packet header consists of two part: one is mandatory and have a fixed
523layout. The second part, the "event packet context", has its layout described in
524the metadata.
525
526- Aligned on page size. Fixed size. Fields either aligned or packed (depending
527 on the architecture preference).
528 No padding at the end of the event packet header. Native architecture byte
529 ordering.
530
531Fixed layout (event packet header):
532
533- Magic number (CTF magic numbers: 0xC1FC1FC1 and its reverse endianness
534 representation: 0xC11FFCC1) It needs to have a non-symmetric bytewise
535 representation. Used to distinguish between big and little endian traces (this
536 information is determined by knowing the endianness of the architecture
537 reading the trace and comparing the magic number against its value and the
538 reverse, 0xC11FFCC1). This magic number specifies that we use the CTF metadata
539 description language described in this document. Different magic numbers
540 should be used for other metadata description languages.
541- Trace UUID, used to ensure the event packet match the metadata used.
542 (note: we cannot use a metadata checksum because metadata can be appended to
543 while tracing is active)
544- Stream ID, used as reference to stream description in metadata.
545
546Metadata-defined layout (event packet context):
547
548- Event packet content size (in bytes).
549- Event packet size (in bytes, includes padding).
550- Event packet content checksum (optional). Checksum excludes the event packet
551 header.
552- Per-stream event packet sequence count (to deal with UDP packet loss). The
553 number of significant sequence counter bits should also be present, so
554 wrap-arounds are deal with correctly.
555- Timestamp at the beginning and timestamp at the end of the event packet.
556 Both timestamps are written in the packet header, but sampled respectively
557 while (or before) writing the first event and while (or after) writing the
558 last event in the packet. The inclusive range between these timestamps should
559 include all event timestamps assigned to events contained within the packet.
560- Events discarded count
561 - Snapshot of a per-stream free-running counter, counting the number of
562 events discarded that were supposed to be written in the stream prior to
563 the first event in the event packet.
564 * Note: producer-consumer buffer full condition should fill the current
565 event packet with padding so we know exactly where events have been
566 discarded.
567- Lossless compression scheme used for the event packet content. Applied
568 directly to raw data. New types of compression can be added in following
569 versions of the format.
570 0: no compression scheme
571 1: bzip2
572 2: gzip
573 3: xz
574- Cypher used for the event packet content. Applied after compression.
575 0: no encryption
576 1: AES
577- Checksum scheme used for the event packet content. Applied after encryption.
578 0: no checksum
579 1: md5
580 2: sha1
581 3: crc32
582
5835.1 Event Packet Header Fixed Layout Description
584
585The event packet header layout is indicated by the trace packet.header
586field. Here is an example structure type for the packet header with the
587fields typically expected:
588
589struct event_packet_header {
590 uint32_t magic;
591 uint8_t trace_uuid[16];
592 uint32_t stream_id;
593};
594
595trace {
596 ...
597 packet.header := struct event_packet_header;
598};
599
600If a packet header lacks the "magic" number field, the trace endianness
601needs to be specified in the trace "byte_order" metadata attribute.
602
603If the trace_uuid is not present, no validation that the metadata
604actually corresponds to the stream is performed.
605
606If the stream_id packet header field is missing, the trace can only
607contain a single stream. Its "id" field can be left out, and its events
608don't need to declare a "stream_id" field.
609
610
6115.2 Event Packet Context Description
612
613Event packet context example. These are declared within the stream declaration
614in the metadata. All these fields are optional except for "content_size" and
615"packet_size", which must be present in the context.
616
617An example event packet context type:
618
619struct event_packet_context {
620 uint64_t timestamp_begin;
621 uint64_t timestamp_end;
622 uint32_t checksum;
623 uint32_t stream_packet_count;
624 uint32_t events_discarded;
625 uint32_t cpu_id;
626 uint32_t/uint16_t content_size;
627 uint32_t/uint16_t packet_size;
628 uint8_t stream_packet_count_bits; /* Significant counter bits */
629 uint8_t compression_scheme;
630 uint8_t encryption_scheme;
631 uint8_t checksum_scheme;
632};
633
634
6356. Event Structure
636
637The overall structure of an event is:
638
6391 - Stream Packet Context (as specified by the stream metadata)
640 2 - Event Header (as specified by the stream metadata)
641 3 - Stream Event Context (as specified by the stream metadata)
642 4 - Event Context (as specified by the event metadata)
643 5 - Event Payload (as specified by the event metadata)
644
645This structure defines an implicit dynamic scoping, where variants
646located in inner structures (those with a higher number in the listing
647above) can refer to the fields of outer structures (with lower number in
648the listing above). See Section 7.3 TSDL Scopes for more detail.
649
6506.1 Event Header
651
652Event headers can be described within the metadata. We hereby propose, as an
653example, two types of events headers. Type 1 accommodates streams with less than
65431 event IDs. Type 2 accommodates streams with 31 or more event IDs.
655
656One major factor can vary between streams: the number of event IDs assigned to
657a stream. Luckily, this information tends to stay relatively constant (modulo
658event registration while trace is being recorded), so we can specify different
659representations for streams containing few event IDs and streams containing
660many event IDs, so we end up representing the event ID and timestamp as densely
661as possible in each case.
662
663The header is extended in the rare occasions where the information cannot be
664represented in the ranges available in the standard event header. They are also
665used in the rare occasions where the data required for a field could not be
666collected: the flag corresponding to the missing field within the missing_fields
667array is then set to 1.
668
669Types uintX_t represent an X-bit unsigned integer.
670
671
6726.1.1 Type 1 - Few event IDs
673
674 - Aligned on 32-bit (or 8-bit if byte-packed, depending on the architecture
675 preference).
676 - Native architecture byte ordering.
677 - For "compact" selection
678 - Fixed size: 32 bits.
679 - For "extended" selection
680 - Size depends on the architecture and variant alignment.
681
682struct event_header_1 {
683 /*
684 * id: range: 0 - 30.
685 * id 31 is reserved to indicate an extended header.
686 */
687 enum : uint5_t { compact = 0 ... 30, extended = 31 } id;
688 variant <id> {
689 struct {
690 uint27_t timestamp;
691 } compact;
692 struct {
693 uint32_t id; /* 32-bit event IDs */
694 uint64_t timestamp; /* 64-bit timestamps */
695 } extended;
696 } v;
697};
698
699
7006.1.2 Type 2 - Many event IDs
701
702 - Aligned on 16-bit (or 8-bit if byte-packed, depending on the architecture
703 preference).
704 - Native architecture byte ordering.
705 - For "compact" selection
706 - Size depends on the architecture and variant alignment.
707 - For "extended" selection
708 - Size depends on the architecture and variant alignment.
709
710struct event_header_2 {
711 /*
712 * id: range: 0 - 65534.
713 * id 65535 is reserved to indicate an extended header.
714 */
715 enum : uint16_t { compact = 0 ... 65534, extended = 65535 } id;
716 variant <id> {
717 struct {
718 uint32_t timestamp;
719 } compact;
720 struct {
721 uint32_t id; /* 32-bit event IDs */
722 uint64_t timestamp; /* 64-bit timestamps */
723 } extended;
724 } v;
725};
726
727
7286.2 Event Context
729
730The event context contains information relative to the current event. The choice
731and meaning of this information is specified by the metadata "stream" and
732"event" information. The "stream" context is applied to all events within the
733stream. The "stream" context structure follows the event header. The "event"
734context is applied to specific events. Its structure follows the "stream"
735context stucture.
736
737An example of stream-level event context is to save the event payload size with
738each event, or to save the current PID with each event. These are declared
739within the stream declaration within the metadata:
740
741 stream {
742 ...
743 event {
744 ...
745 context := struct {
746 uint pid;
747 uint16_t payload_size;
748 };
749 }
750 };
751
752An example of event-specific event context is to declare a bitmap of missing
753fields, only appended after the stream event context if the extended event
754header is selected. NR_FIELDS is the number of fields within the event (a
755numeric value).
756
757 event {
758 context = struct {
759 variant <id> {
760 struct { } compact;
761 struct {
762 uint1_t missing_fields[NR_FIELDS]; /* missing event fields bitmap */
763 } extended;
764 } v;
765 };
766 ...
767 }
768
7696.3 Event Payload
770
771An event payload contains fields specific to a given event type. The fields
772belonging to an event type are described in the event-specific metadata
773within a structure type.
774
7756.3.1 Padding
776
777No padding at the end of the event payload. This differs from the ISO/C standard
778for structures, but follows the CTF standard for structures. In a trace, even
779though it makes sense to align the beginning of a structure, it really makes no
780sense to add padding at the end of the structure, because structures are usually
781not followed by a structure of the same type.
782
783This trick can be done by adding a zero-length "end" field at the end of the C
784structures, and by using the offset of this field rather than using sizeof()
785when calculating the size of a structure (see Appendix "A. Helper macros").
786
7876.3.2 Alignment
788
789The event payload is aligned on the largest alignment required by types
790contained within the payload. (This follows the ISO/C standard for structures)
791
792
7937. Trace Stream Description Language (TSDL)
794
795The Trace Stream Description Language (TSDL) allows expression of the
796binary trace streams layout in a C99-like Domain Specific Language
797(DSL).
798
799
8007.1 Metadata
801
802The trace stream layout description is located in the trace meta-data.
803The meta-data is itself located in a stream identified by its name:
804"metadata".
805
806It is made of "event packets", which each start with an event packet
807header. The event type within the metadata stream have no event header
808nor event context. Each event only contains a "string" payload without
809any null-character. The events are packed one next to another. Each
810event packet start with an event packet header, which contains, amongst
811other fields, the magic number, trace UUID and packet length. In the
812event packet header, the trace UUID is represented as an array of bytes.
813Within the string-based metadata description, the trace UUID is
814represented as a string of hexadecimal digits and dashes "-".
815
816The metadata can be parsed by reading characters within the metadata
817stream, for each packet starting after the packet header, for the length
818of the packet payload specified in the header. Text contained within
819"/*" and "*/", as well as within "//" and end of line, are treated as
820comments. Boolean values can be represented as true, TRUE, or 1 for
821true, and false, FALSE, or 0 for false.
822
823
8247.2 Declaration vs Definition
825
826A declaration associates a layout to a type, without specifying where
827this type is located in the event structure hierarchy (see Section 6).
828This therefore includes typedef, typealias, as well as all type
829specifiers. In certain circumstances (typedef, structure field and
830variant field), a declaration is followed by a declarator, which specify
831the newly defined type name (for typedef), or the field name (for
832declarations located within structure and variants). Array and sequence,
833declared with square brackets ("[" "]"), are part of the declarator,
834similarly to C99. The enumeration base type is specified by
835": enum_base", which is part of the type specifier. The variant tag
836name, specified between "<" ">", is also part of the type specifier.
837
838A definition associates a type to a location in the event structure
839hierarchy (see Section 6). This association is denoted by ":=", as shown
840in Section 7.3.
841
842
8437.3 TSDL Scopes
844
845TSDL uses two different types of scoping: a lexical scope is used for
846declarations and type definitions, and a dynamic scope is used for
847variants references to tag fields.
848
8497.3.1 Lexical Scope
850
851Each of "trace", "stream", "event", "struct" and "variant" have their own
852nestable declaration scope, within which types can be declared using "typedef"
853and "typealias". A root declaration scope also contains all declarations
854located outside of any of the aforementioned declarations. An inner
855declaration scope can refer to type declared within its container
856lexical scope prior to the inner declaration scope. Redefinition of a
857typedef or typealias is not valid, although hiding an upper scope
858typedef or typealias is allowed within a sub-scope.
859
8607.3.2 Dynamic Scope
861
862A dynamic scope consists in the lexical scope augmented with the
863implicit event structure definition hierarchy presented at Section 6.
864The dynamic scope is only used for variant tag definitions. It is used
865at definition time to look up the location of the tag field associated
866with a variant.
867
868Therefore, variants in lower levels in the dynamic scope (e.g. event
869context) can refer to a tag field located in upper levels (e.g. in the
870event header) by specifying, in this case, the associated tag with
871<header.field_name>. This allows, for instance, the event context to
872define a variant referring to the "id" field of the event header as
873selector.
874
875The target dynamic scope must be specified explicitly when referring to
876a field outside of the local static scope. The dynamic scope prefixes
877are thus:
878
879 - Trace Packet Header: <trace.packet.header. >,
880 - Stream Packet Context: <stream.packet.context. >,
881 - Event Header: <stream.event.header. >,
882 - Stream Event Context: <stream.event.context. >,
883 - Event Context: <event.context. >,
884 - Event Payload: <event.fields. >.
885
886Multiple declarations of the same field name within a single scope is
887not valid. It is however valid to re-use the same field name in
888different scopes. There is no possible conflict, because the dynamic
889scope must be specified when a variant refers to a tag field located in
890a different dynamic scope.
891
892The information available in the dynamic scopes can be thought of as the
893current tracing context. At trace production, information about the
894current context is saved into the specified scope field levels. At trace
895consumption, for each event, the current trace context is therefore
896readable by accessing the upper dynamic scopes.
897
898
8997.4 TSDL Examples
900
901The grammar representing the TSDL metadata is presented in Appendix C.
902TSDL Grammar. This section presents a rather ligher reading that
903consists in examples of TSDL metadata, with template values.
904
905Note that the trace endianness is usually extracted from the packet
906header magic number. The "byte_order" field is only needed when the magic
907number packet header field is not present.
908
909The stream "id" can be left out if there is only one stream in the
910trace. The event "id" field can be left out if there is only one event
911in a stream.
912
913trace {
914 major = value; /* Trace format version */
915 minor = value;
916 uuid = "aaaaaaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaaaaaaaaaa"; /* Trace UUID */
917 byte_order = be OR le; /* Endianness (optional) */
918 packet.header := struct {
919 uint32_t magic;
920 uint8_t trace_uuid[16];
921 uint32_t stream_id;
922 };
923};
924
925stream {
926 id = stream_id;
927 /* Type 1 - Few event IDs; Type 2 - Many event IDs. See section 6.1. */
928 event.header := event_header_1 OR event_header_2;
929 event.context := struct {
930 ...
931 };
932 packet.context := struct {
933 ...
934 };
935};
936
937event {
938 name = event_name;
939 id = value; /* Numeric identifier within the stream */
940 stream = stream_id;
941 context := struct {
942 ...
943 };
944 fields := struct {
945 ...
946 };
947};
948
949/* More detail on types in section 4. Types */
950
951/*
952 * Named types:
953 *
954 * Type declarations behave similarly to the C standard.
955 */
956
957typedef aliased_type_specifiers new_type_declarators;
958
959/* e.g.: typedef struct example new_type_name[10]; */
960
961/*
962 * typealias
963 *
964 * The "typealias" declaration can be used to give a name (including
965 * pointer declarator specifier) to a type. It should also be used to
966 * map basic C types (float, int, unsigned long, ...) to a CTF type.
967 * Typealias is a superset of "typedef": it also allows assignment of a
968 * simple variable identifier to a type.
969 */
970
971typealias type_class {
972 ...
973} := type_specifiers type_declarator;
974
975/*
976 * e.g.:
977 * typealias integer {
978 * size = 32;
979 * align = 32;
980 * signed = false;
981 * } := struct page *;
982 *
983 * typealias integer {
984 * size = 32;
985 * align = 32;
986 * signed = true;
987 * } := int;
988 */
989
990struct name {
991 ...
992};
993
994variant name {
995 ...
996};
997
998enum name : integer_type {
999 ...
1000};
1001
1002
1003/*
1004 * Unnamed types, contained within compound type fields, typedef or typealias.
1005 */
1006
1007struct {
1008 ...
1009}
1010
1011variant {
1012 ...
1013}
1014
1015enum : integer_type {
1016 ...
1017}
1018
1019typedef type new_type[length];
1020
1021struct {
1022 type field_name[length];
1023}
1024
1025typedef type new_type[length_type];
1026
1027struct {
1028 type field_name[length_type];
1029}
1030
1031integer {
1032 ...
1033}
1034
1035floating_point {
1036 ...
1037}
1038
1039struct {
1040 integer_type field_name:size; /* GNU/C bitfield */
1041}
1042
1043struct {
1044 string field_name;
1045}
1046
1047
1048A. Helper macros
1049
1050The two following macros keep track of the size of a GNU/C structure without
1051padding at the end by placing HEADER_END as the last field. A one byte end field
1052is used for C90 compatibility (C99 flexible arrays could be used here). Note
1053that this does not affect the effective structure size, which should always be
1054calculated with the header_sizeof() helper.
1055
1056#define HEADER_END char end_field
1057#define header_sizeof(type) offsetof(typeof(type), end_field)
1058
1059
1060B. Stream Header Rationale
1061
1062An event stream is divided in contiguous event packets of variable size. These
1063subdivisions allow the trace analyzer to perform a fast binary search by time
1064within the stream (typically requiring to index only the event packet headers)
1065without reading the whole stream. These subdivisions have a variable size to
1066eliminate the need to transfer the event packet padding when partially filled
1067event packets must be sent when streaming a trace for live viewing/analysis.
1068An event packet can contain a certain amount of padding at the end. Dividing
1069streams into event packets is also useful for network streaming over UDP and
1070flight recorder mode tracing (a whole event packet can be swapped out of the
1071buffer atomically for reading).
1072
1073The stream header is repeated at the beginning of each event packet to allow
1074flexibility in terms of:
1075
1076 - streaming support,
1077 - allowing arbitrary buffers to be discarded without making the trace
1078 unreadable,
1079 - allow UDP packet loss handling by either dealing with missing event packet
1080 or asking for re-transmission.
1081 - transparently support flight recorder mode,
1082 - transparently support crash dump.
1083
1084The event stream header will therefore be referred to as the "event packet
1085header" throughout the rest of this document.
1086
1087
1088C. TSDL Grammar
1089
1090/*
1091 * Common Trace Format (CTF) Trace Stream Description Language (TSDL) Grammar.
1092 *
1093 * Inspired from the C99 grammar:
1094 * http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1124.pdf (Annex A)
1095 * and c++1x grammar (draft)
1096 * http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2011/n3291.pdf (Annex A)
1097 *
1098 * Specialized for CTF needs by including only constant and declarations from
1099 * C99 (excluding function declarations), and by adding support for variants,
1100 * sequences and CTF-specific specifiers. Enumeration container types
1101 * semantic is inspired from c++1x enum-base.
1102 */
1103
11041) Lexical grammar
1105
11061.1) Lexical elements
1107
1108token:
1109 keyword
1110 identifier
1111 constant
1112 string-literal
1113 punctuator
1114
11151.2) Keywords
1116
1117keyword: is one of
1118
1119const
1120char
1121double
1122enum
1123event
1124floating_point
1125float
1126integer
1127int
1128long
1129short
1130signed
1131stream
1132string
1133struct
1134trace
1135typealias
1136typedef
1137unsigned
1138variant
1139void
1140_Bool
1141_Complex
1142_Imaginary
1143
1144
11451.3) Identifiers
1146
1147identifier:
1148 identifier-nondigit
1149 identifier identifier-nondigit
1150 identifier digit
1151
1152identifier-nondigit:
1153 nondigit
1154 universal-character-name
1155 any other implementation-defined characters
1156
1157nondigit:
1158 _
1159 [a-zA-Z] /* regular expression */
1160
1161digit:
1162 [0-9] /* regular expression */
1163
11641.4) Universal character names
1165
1166universal-character-name:
1167 \u hex-quad
1168 \U hex-quad hex-quad
1169
1170hex-quad:
1171 hexadecimal-digit hexadecimal-digit hexadecimal-digit hexadecimal-digit
1172
11731.5) Constants
1174
1175constant:
1176 integer-constant
1177 enumeration-constant
1178 character-constant
1179
1180integer-constant:
1181 decimal-constant integer-suffix-opt
1182 octal-constant integer-suffix-opt
1183 hexadecimal-constant integer-suffix-opt
1184
1185decimal-constant:
1186 nonzero-digit
1187 decimal-constant digit
1188
1189octal-constant:
1190 0
1191 octal-constant octal-digit
1192
1193hexadecimal-constant:
1194 hexadecimal-prefix hexadecimal-digit
1195 hexadecimal-constant hexadecimal-digit
1196
1197hexadecimal-prefix:
1198 0x
1199 0X
1200
1201nonzero-digit:
1202 [1-9]
1203
1204integer-suffix:
1205 unsigned-suffix long-suffix-opt
1206 unsigned-suffix long-long-suffix
1207 long-suffix unsigned-suffix-opt
1208 long-long-suffix unsigned-suffix-opt
1209
1210unsigned-suffix:
1211 u
1212 U
1213
1214long-suffix:
1215 l
1216 L
1217
1218long-long-suffix:
1219 ll
1220 LL
1221
1222digit-sequence:
1223 digit
1224 digit-sequence digit
1225
1226hexadecimal-digit-sequence:
1227 hexadecimal-digit
1228 hexadecimal-digit-sequence hexadecimal-digit
1229
1230enumeration-constant:
1231 identifier
1232 string-literal
1233
1234character-constant:
1235 ' c-char-sequence '
1236 L' c-char-sequence '
1237
1238c-char-sequence:
1239 c-char
1240 c-char-sequence c-char
1241
1242c-char:
1243 any member of source charset except single-quote ('), backslash
1244 (\), or new-line character.
1245 escape-sequence
1246
1247escape-sequence:
1248 simple-escape-sequence
1249 octal-escape-sequence
1250 hexadecimal-escape-sequence
1251 universal-character-name
1252
1253simple-escape-sequence: one of
1254 \' \" \? \\ \a \b \f \n \r \t \v
1255
1256octal-escape-sequence:
1257 \ octal-digit
1258 \ octal-digit octal-digit
1259 \ octal-digit octal-digit octal-digit
1260
1261hexadecimal-escape-sequence:
1262 \x hexadecimal-digit
1263 hexadecimal-escape-sequence hexadecimal-digit
1264
12651.6) String literals
1266
1267string-literal:
1268 " s-char-sequence-opt "
1269 L" s-char-sequence-opt "
1270
1271s-char-sequence:
1272 s-char
1273 s-char-sequence s-char
1274
1275s-char:
1276 any member of source charset except double-quote ("), backslash
1277 (\), or new-line character.
1278 escape-sequence
1279
12801.7) Punctuators
1281
1282punctuator: one of
1283 [ ] ( ) { } . -> * + - < > : ; ... = ,
1284
1285
12862) Phrase structure grammar
1287
1288primary-expression:
1289 identifier
1290 constant
1291 string-literal
1292 ( unary-expression )
1293
1294postfix-expression:
1295 primary-expression
1296 postfix-expression [ unary-expression ]
1297 postfix-expression . identifier
1298 postfix-expressoin -> identifier
1299
1300unary-expression:
1301 postfix-expression
1302 unary-operator postfix-expression
1303
1304unary-operator: one of
1305 + -
1306
1307assignment-operator:
1308 =
1309
1310type-assignment-operator:
1311 :=
1312
1313constant-expression:
1314 unary-expression
1315
1316constant-expression-range:
1317 constant-expression ... constant-expression
1318
13192.2) Declarations:
1320
1321declaration:
1322 declaration-specifiers declarator-list-opt ;
1323 ctf-specifier ;
1324
1325declaration-specifiers:
1326 storage-class-specifier declaration-specifiers-opt
1327 type-specifier declaration-specifiers-opt
1328 type-qualifier declaration-specifiers-opt
1329
1330declarator-list:
1331 declarator
1332 declarator-list , declarator
1333
1334abstract-declarator-list:
1335 abstract-declarator
1336 abstract-declarator-list , abstract-declarator
1337
1338storage-class-specifier:
1339 typedef
1340
1341type-specifier:
1342 void
1343 char
1344 short
1345 int
1346 long
1347 float
1348 double
1349 signed
1350 unsigned
1351 _Bool
1352 _Complex
1353 _Imaginary
1354 struct-specifier
1355 variant-specifier
1356 enum-specifier
1357 typedef-name
1358 ctf-type-specifier
1359
1360struct-specifier:
1361 struct identifier-opt { struct-or-variant-declaration-list-opt }
1362 struct identifier
1363
1364struct-or-variant-declaration-list:
1365 struct-or-variant-declaration
1366 struct-or-variant-declaration-list struct-or-variant-declaration
1367
1368struct-or-variant-declaration:
1369 specifier-qualifier-list struct-or-variant-declarator-list ;
1370 declaration-specifiers storage-class-specifier declaration-specifiers declarator-list ;
1371 typealias declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list := declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list ;
1372 typealias declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list := declarator-list ;
1373
1374specifier-qualifier-list:
1375 type-specifier specifier-qualifier-list-opt
1376 type-qualifier specifier-qualifier-list-opt
1377
1378struct-or-variant-declarator-list:
1379 struct-or-variant-declarator
1380 struct-or-variant-declarator-list , struct-or-variant-declarator
1381
1382struct-or-variant-declarator:
1383 declarator
1384 declarator-opt : constant-expression
1385
1386variant-specifier:
1387 variant identifier-opt variant-tag-opt { struct-or-variant-declaration-list }
1388 variant identifier variant-tag
1389
1390variant-tag:
1391 < identifier >
1392
1393enum-specifier:
1394 enum identifier-opt { enumerator-list }
1395 enum identifier-opt { enumerator-list , }
1396 enum identifier
1397 enum identifier-opt : declaration-specifiers { enumerator-list }
1398 enum identifier-opt : declaration-specifiers { enumerator-list , }
1399
1400enumerator-list:
1401 enumerator
1402 enumerator-list , enumerator
1403
1404enumerator:
1405 enumeration-constant
1406 enumeration-constant = constant-expression
1407 enumeration-constant = constant-expression-range
1408
1409type-qualifier:
1410 const
1411
1412declarator:
1413 pointer-opt direct-declarator
1414
1415direct-declarator:
1416 identifier
1417 ( declarator )
1418 direct-declarator [ type-specifier ]
1419 direct-declarator [ constant-expression ]
1420
1421abstract-declarator:
1422 pointer-opt direct-abstract-declarator
1423
1424direct-abstract-declarator:
1425 identifier-opt
1426 ( abstract-declarator )
1427 direct-abstract-declarator [ type-specifier ]
1428 direct-abstract-declarator [ constant-expression ]
1429 direct-abstract-declarator [ ]
1430
1431pointer:
1432 * type-qualifier-list-opt
1433 * type-qualifier-list-opt pointer
1434
1435type-qualifier-list:
1436 type-qualifier
1437 type-qualifier-list type-qualifier
1438
1439typedef-name:
1440 identifier
1441
14422.3) CTF-specific declarations
1443
1444ctf-specifier:
1445 event { ctf-assignment-expression-list-opt }
1446 stream { ctf-assignment-expression-list-opt }
1447 trace { ctf-assignment-expression-list-opt }
1448 typealias declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list := declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list ;
1449 typealias declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list := declarator-list ;
1450
1451ctf-type-specifier:
1452 floating_point { ctf-assignment-expression-list-opt }
1453 integer { ctf-assignment-expression-list-opt }
1454 string { ctf-assignment-expression-list-opt }
1455
1456ctf-assignment-expression-list:
1457 ctf-assignment-expression
1458 ctf-assignment-expression-list ; ctf-assignment-expression
1459
1460ctf-assignment-expression:
1461 unary-expression assignment-operator unary-expression
1462 unary-expression type-assignment-operator type-specifier
1463 declaration-specifiers storage-class-specifier declaration-specifiers declarator-list
1464 typealias declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list := declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list
1465 typealias declaration-specifiers abstract-declarator-list := declarator-list
This page took 0.02576 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.