doc: Bug 495211: Update developer guide signal reference
[deliverable/tracecompass.git] / doc / org.eclipse.tracecompass.doc.dev / doc / Developer-Guide.mediawiki
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2= Table of Contents =
3
4__TOC__
5
73844f9c 6= Introduction =
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8The purpose of '''Trace Compass''' is to facilitate the integration of tracing
9and monitoring tools into Eclipse, to provide out-of-the-box generic
10functionalities/views and provide extension mechanisms of the base
11functionalities for application specific purposes.
12
13This guide goes over the internal components of the Trace Compass framework. It
14should help developers trying to add new capabilities (support for new trace
15type, new analysis or views, etc.) to the framework. End-users, using the RCP
16for example, should not have to worry about the concepts explained here.
067490ab 17
73844f9c 18= Implementing a New Trace Type =
6f182760 19
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20The framework can easily be extended to support more trace types. To make a new
21trace type, one must define the following items:
6f182760 22
73844f9c 23* The event type
414dd7f4 24* The trace type
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25* The trace context
26* The trace location
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27* The ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.tracetype'' plug-in extension point
28* (Optional) The ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.tracetypeui'' plug-in extension point
6f182760 29
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30The '''event type''' must implement an ''ITmfEvent'' or extend a class that
31implements an ''ITmfEvent''. Typically it will extend ''TmfEvent''. The event
32type must contain all the data of an event.
33
414dd7f4 34The '''trace type''' must be of an ''ITmfTrace'' type. The ''TmfTrace'' class
c0f11b83 35will supply many background operations so that the reader only needs to
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36implement certain functions. This includes the ''event aspects'' for events of
37this trace type. See the section below.
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38
39The '''trace context''' can be seen as the internals of an iterator. It is
40required by the trace reader to parse events as it iterates the trace and to
41keep track of its rank and location. It can have a timestamp, a rank, a file
42position, or any other element, it should be considered to be ephemeral.
43
44The '''trace location''' is an element that is cloned often to store
45checkpoints, it is generally persistent. It is used to rebuild a context,
46therefore, it needs to contain enough information to unambiguously point to one
47and only one event. Finally the ''tracetype'' plug-in extension associates a
48given trace, non-programmatically to a trace type for use in the UI.
49
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50== Event Aspects ==
51
52In Trace Compass, an ''event aspect'' represents any type of information that
53can be extracted from a trace event. The simple case is information that is
54present directly in the event. For example, the timestamp of an event, a field
55of an LTTng event, or the "payload" that is on the same line of a text trace
56entry. But it could also be the result of an indirect operation, for example a
57state system query at the timestamp of the given event (see the section
58[[#Generic State System]]).
59
60All aspects should implement the '''ITmfEventAspect''' interface. The important
61method in there is ''resolve(ITmfEvent)'', which tells this aspect what to
62output for a given event. The singleton pattern fits well for pre-defined aspect
63classes, in general.
64
65The aspects defined for a trace type determine the initial columns in the Event
66Table, as well as the elements on which the trace can be filtered, among other
67things.
68
69=== Base and custom aspects ===
70
71Some base aspects are defined in '''TmfTrace#BASE_ASPECTS'''. They use generic
72methods found in '''ITmfEvent''', so they should be applicable for any event
73type defined in the framework. If one does not override
74'''TmfTrace#getEventAspects''', then only the base aspects will be used with
75this trace.
76
77Overriding the method does not append to this list, it replaces it. So if you
78wish to define additional aspects for a new trace type, do not forget to include
79the BASE_ASPECTS you want to use, if any, within the list.
80
81The order of the elements in the returned ''Iterable'' may matter to other
82components. For instance, the initial ordering of the columns in the Events
83Table will match it.
84
85Defining additional aspects allows to expose more data from the trace events
86without having to update all the views using the aspects API.
87
88=== Creating event aspects programmatically ===
89
90Another advantage of event aspects is that they can be created programmatically,
91without having to modify the base trace or event classes. A new analysis
92applying to a pre-existing trace type may wish to define additional aspects to
93make its job easier.
94
95While the notion of event aspects should not be exposed to users directly, it is
96possible to create new aspects based on user input. For example, an "event
97field" dialog could ask the user to enter a field name, which would then create
98an aspect that would look for the value of a field with this name in every
99event. The user could then be able to display or filter on this aspect.
100
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101== Optional Trace Type Attributes ==
102
103After defining the trace type as described in the previous chapters it is
104possible to define optional attributes for the trace type.
105
106=== Default Editor ===
107
108The '''defaultEditor''' attribute of the '''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.tracetypeui'''
109extension point allows for configuring the editor to use for displaying the
110events. If omitted, the ''TmfEventsEditor'' is used as default.
111
112To configure an editor, first add the '''defaultEditor''' attribute to the trace
113type in the extension definition. This can be done by selecting the trace type
114in the plug-in manifest editor. Then click the right mouse button and select
115'''New -> defaultEditor''' in the context sensitive menu. Then select the newly
116added attribute. Now you can specify the editor id to use on the right side of
117the manifest editor. For example, this attribute could be used to implement an
118extension of the class ''org.eclipse.ui.part.MultiPageEditor''. The first page
119could use the ''TmfEventsEditor''' to display the events in a table as usual and
120other pages can display other aspects of the trace.
121
122=== Events Table Type ===
123
124The '''eventsTableType''' attribute of the '''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.tracetypeui'''
125extension point allows for configuring the events table class to use in the
126default events editor. If omitted, the default events table will be used.
127
128To configure a trace type specific events table, first add the
129'''eventsTableType''' attribute to the trace type in the extension definition.
130This can be done by selecting the trace type in the plug-in manifest editor.
131Then click the right mouse button and select '''New -> eventsTableType''' in the
132context sensitive menu. Then select the newly added attribute and click on
133''class'' on the right side of the manifest editor. The new class wizard will
134open. The ''superclass'' field will be already filled with the class ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.viewers.events.TmfEventsTable''.
135
136By using this attribute, a table with different columns than the default columns
137can be defined. See the class
138''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.gdbtrace.ui.views.events.GdbEventsTable''
139for an example implementation.
140
141== Other Considerations ==
142
143Other views and components may provide additional features that are active only
144when the event or trace type class implements certain additional interfaces.
145
146=== Collapsing of repetitive events ===
147
148By implementing the interface
149''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.event.collapse.ITmfCollapsibleEvent'' the
150event table will allow to collapse repetitive events by selecting the menu item
151'''Collapse Events''' after pressing the right mouse button in the table.
152
153== Best Practices ==
154
155* Do not load the whole trace in RAM, it will limit the size of the trace that can be read.
156* Reuse as much code as possible, it makes the trace format much easier to maintain.
157* Use Eclipse's editor instead of editing the XML directly.
158* Do not forget Java supports only signed data types, there may be special care needed to handle unsigned data.
159* If the support for your trace has custom UI elements (like icons, views, etc.), split the core and UI parts in separate plugins, named identically except for a ''.core'' or ''.ui'' suffix.
160** Implement the ''tmf.core.tracetype'' extension in the core plugin, and the ''tmf.ui.tracetypeui'' extension in the UI plugin if applicable.
6f182760 161
73844f9c 162== An Example: Nexus-lite parser ==
6f182760 163
73844f9c 164=== Description of the file ===
6f182760 165
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166This is a very small subset of the nexus trace format, with some changes to make
167it easier to read. There is one file. This file starts with 64 Strings
168containing the event names, then an arbitrarily large number of events. The
169events are each 64 bits long. the first 32 are the timestamp in microseconds,
170the second 32 are split into 6 bits for the event type, and 26 for the data
171payload.
6f182760 172
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173The trace type will be made of two parts, part 1 is the event description, it is
174just 64 strings, comma separated and then a line feed.
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175
176<pre>
73844f9c 177Startup,Stop,Load,Add, ... ,reserved\n
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178</pre>
179
73844f9c 180Then there will be the events in this format
6f182760 181
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182{| width= "85%"
183|style="width: 50%; background-color: #ffffcc;"|timestamp (32 bits)
184|style="width: 10%; background-color: #ffccff;"|type (6 bits)
185|style="width: 40%; background-color: #ccffcc;"|payload (26 bits)
186|-
187|style="background-color: #ffcccc;" colspan="3"|64 bits total
188|}
6f182760 189
73844f9c 190all events will be the same size (64 bits).
6f182760 191
73844f9c 192=== NexusLite Plug-in ===
6f182760 193
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194Create a '''New''', '''Project...''', '''Plug-in Project''', set the title to
195'''com.example.nexuslite''', click '''Next >''' then click on '''Finish'''.
6f182760 196
73844f9c 197Now the structure for the Nexus trace Plug-in is set up.
6f182760 198
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199Add a dependency to TMF core and UI by opening the '''MANIFEST.MF''' in
200'''META-INF''', selecting the '''Dependencies''' tab and '''Add ...'''
201'''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core''' and '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui'''.
6f182760 202
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203[[Image:images/NTTAddDepend.png]]<br>
204[[Image:images/NTTSelectProjects.png]]<br>
6f182760 205
73844f9c 206Now the project can access TMF classes.
6f182760 207
73844f9c 208=== Trace Event ===
6f182760 209
73844f9c 210The '''TmfEvent''' class will work for this example. No code required.
6f182760 211
73844f9c 212=== Trace Reader ===
6f182760 213
73844f9c 214The trace reader will extend a '''TmfTrace''' class.
6f182760 215
73844f9c 216It will need to implement:
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73844f9c 218* validate (is the trace format valid?)
6f182760 219
73844f9c 220* initTrace (called as the trace is opened
6f182760 221
73844f9c 222* seekEvent (go to a position in the trace and create a context)
6f182760 223
73844f9c 224* getNext (implemented in the base class)
6f182760 225
73844f9c 226* parseEvent (read the next element in the trace)
6f182760 227
c3181353 228For reference, there is an example implementation of the Nexus Trace file in
b23631ef 229org.eclipse.tracecompass.tracing.examples.core.trace.nexus.NexusTrace.java.
6f182760 230
b23631ef 231In this example, the '''validate''' function first checks if the file
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232exists, then makes sure that it is really a file, and not a directory. Then we
233attempt to read the file header, to make sure that it is really a Nexus Trace.
d3c2bf8d 234If that check passes, we return a TraceValidationStatus with a confidence of 20.
6f182760 235
d3c2bf8d 236Typically, TraceValidationStatus confidences should range from 1 to 100. 1 meaning
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237"there is a very small chance that this trace is of this type", and 100 meaning
238"it is this type for sure, and cannot be anything else". At run-time, the
d3c2bf8d 239auto-detection will pick the type which returned the highest confidence. So
c3181353 240checks of the type "does the file exist?" should not return a too high
d3c2bf8d 241confidence. If confidence 0 is returned the auto-detection won't pick this type.
6f182760 242
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243Here we used a confidence of 20, to leave "room" for more specific trace types
244in the Nexus format that could be defined in TMF.
6f182760 245
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246The '''initTrace''' function will read the event names, and find where the data
247starts. After this, the number of events is known, and since each event is 8
248bytes long according to the specs, the seek is then trivial.
6f182760 249
73844f9c 250The '''seek''' here will just reset the reader to the right location.
6f182760 251
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252The '''parseEvent''' method needs to parse and return the current event and
253store the current location.
6f182760 254
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255The '''getNext''' method (in base class) will read the next event and update the
256context. It calls the '''parseEvent''' method to read the event and update the
257location. It does not need to be overridden and in this example it is not. The
258sequence of actions necessary are parse the next event from the trace, create an
259'''ITmfEvent''' with that data, update the current location, call
260'''updateAttributes''', update the context then return the event.
6f182760 261
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262Traces will typically implement an index, to make seeking faster. The index can
263be rebuilt every time the trace is opened. Alternatively, it can be saved to
264disk, to make future openings of the same trace quicker. To do so, the trace
265object can implement the '''ITmfPersistentlyIndexable''' interface.
266
73844f9c 267=== Trace Context ===
6f182760 268
73844f9c 269The trace context will be a '''TmfContext'''
6f182760 270
73844f9c 271=== Trace Location ===
6f182760 272
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273The trace location will be a long, representing the rank in the file. The
274'''TmfLongLocation''' will be the used, once again, no code is required.
6f182760 275
c0f11b83 276=== The ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.tracetype'' and ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.tracetypeui'' plug-in extension points ===
6f182760 277
b23631ef 278One should use the ''tmf.core.tracetype'' extension point in their own plug-in.
c3181353 279In this example, the Nexus trace plug-in will be modified.
6f182760 280
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281The '''plugin.xml''' file in the ui plug-in needs to be updated if one wants
282users to access the given event type. It can be updated in the Eclipse plug-in
283editor.
6f182760 284
c3181353 285# In Extensions tab, add the '''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.tracetype''' extension point.
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286[[Image:images/NTTExtension.png]]<br>
287[[Image:images/NTTTraceType.png]]<br>
288[[Image:images/NTTExtensionPoint.png]]<br>
6f182760 289
73844f9c 290# Add in the '''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.tracetype''' extension a new type. To do that, '''right click''' on the extension then in the context menu, go to '''New >''', '''type'''.
6f182760 291
73844f9c 292[[Image:images/NTTAddType.png]]<br>
6f182760 293
73844f9c 294The '''id''' is the unique identifier used to refer to the trace.
6f182760 295
73844f9c 296The '''name''' is the field that shall be displayed when a trace type is selected.
6f182760 297
73844f9c 298The '''trace type''' is the canonical path refering to the class of the trace.
6f182760 299
73844f9c 300The '''event type''' is the canonical path refering to the class of the events of a given trace.
6f182760 301
73844f9c 302The '''category''' (optional) is the container in which this trace type will be stored.
6f182760 303
c0f11b83 304# (Optional) To also add UI-specific properties to your trace type, use the '''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.tracetypeui''' extension. To do that, '''right click''' on the extension then in the context menu, go to '''New >''', '''type'''.
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305
306The '''tracetype''' here is the '''id''' of the
307''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.tracetype'' mentioned above.
308
309The '''icon''' is the image to associate with that trace type.
6f182760 310
73844f9c 311In the end, the extension menu should look like this.
6f182760 312
73844f9c 313[[Image:images/NTTPluginxmlComplete.png]]<br>
6f182760 314
c3181353 315= View Tutorial =
6f182760 316
73844f9c 317This tutorial describes how to create a simple view using the TMF framework and the SWTChart library. SWTChart is a library based on SWT that can draw several types of charts including a line chart which we will use in this tutorial. We will create a view containing a line chart that displays time stamps on the X axis and the corresponding event values on the Y axis.
6f182760 318
73844f9c 319This tutorial will cover concepts like:
6f182760 320
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321* Extending TmfView
322* Signal handling (@TmfSignalHandler)
323* Data requests (TmfEventRequest)
324* SWTChart integration
6f182760 325
b23631ef 326'''Note''': Trace Compass 0.1.0 provides base implementations for generating SWTChart viewers and views. For more details please refer to chapter [[#TMF Built-in Views and Viewers]].
c3181353 327
73844f9c 328=== Prerequisites ===
6f182760 329
b23631ef 330The tutorial is based on Eclipse 4.4 (Eclipse Luna), Trace Compass 0.1.0 and SWTChart 0.7.0. If you are using TMF from the source repository, SWTChart is already included in the target definition file (see org.eclipse.tracecompass.target). You can also install it manually by using the Orbit update site. http://download.eclipse.org/tools/orbit/downloads/
6f182760 331
73844f9c 332=== Creating an Eclipse UI Plug-in ===
6f182760 333
b23631ef 334To create a new project with name org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.sample.ui select '''File -> New -> Project -> Plug-in Development -> Plug-in Project'''. <br>
73844f9c 335[[Image:images/Screenshot-NewPlug-inProject1.png]]<br>
6f182760 336
73844f9c 337[[Image:images/Screenshot-NewPlug-inProject2.png]]<br>
6f182760 338
73844f9c 339[[Image:images/Screenshot-NewPlug-inProject3.png]]<br>
6f182760 340
73844f9c 341=== Creating a View ===
6f182760 342
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343To open the plug-in manifest, double-click on the MANIFEST.MF file. <br>
344[[Image:images/SelectManifest.png]]<br>
6f182760 345
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346Change to the Dependencies tab and select '''Add...''' of the ''Required Plug-ins'' section. A new dialog box will open. Next find plug-in ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core'' and press '''OK'''<br>
347Following the same steps, add ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui'' and ''org.swtchart''.<br>
73844f9c 348[[Image:images/AddDependencyTmfUi.png]]<br>
6f182760 349
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350Change to the Extensions tab and select '''Add...''' of the ''All Extension'' section. A new dialog box will open. Find the view extension ''org.eclipse.ui.views'' and press '''Finish'''.<br>
351[[Image:images/AddViewExtension1.png]]<br>
6f182760 352
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353To create a view, click the right mouse button. Then select '''New -> view'''<br>
354[[Image:images/AddViewExtension2.png]]<br>
6f182760 355
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356A new view entry has been created. Fill in the fields ''id'' and ''name''. For ''class'' click on the '''class hyperlink''' and it will show the New Java Class dialog. Enter the name ''SampleView'', change the superclass to ''TmfView'' and click Finish. This will create the source file and fill the ''class'' field in the process. We use TmfView as the superclass because it provides extra functionality like getting the active trace, pinning and it has support for signal handling between components.<br>
357[[Image:images/FillSampleViewExtension.png]]<br>
6f182760 358
73844f9c 359This will generate an empty class. Once the quick fixes are applied, the following code is obtained:
6f182760 360
73844f9c 361<pre>
b23631ef 362package org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.sample.ui;
6f182760 363
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364import org.eclipse.swt.widgets.Composite;
365import org.eclipse.ui.part.ViewPart;
6f182760 366
73844f9c 367public class SampleView extends TmfView {
6f182760 368
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369 public SampleView(String viewName) {
370 super(viewName);
371 // TODO Auto-generated constructor stub
372 }
6f182760 373
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374 @Override
375 public void createPartControl(Composite parent) {
376 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
6f182760 377
73844f9c 378 }
6f182760 379
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380 @Override
381 public void setFocus() {
382 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
6f182760 383
73844f9c 384 }
6f182760 385
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386}
387</pre>
6f182760 388
73844f9c 389This creates an empty view, however the basic structure is now is place.
6f182760 390
73844f9c 391=== Implementing a view ===
6f182760 392
73844f9c 393We will start by adding a empty chart then it will need to be populated with the trace data. Finally, we will make the chart more visually pleasing by adjusting the range and formating the time stamps.
6f182760 394
73844f9c 395==== Adding an Empty Chart ====
6f182760 396
73844f9c 397First, we can add an empty chart to the view and initialize some of its components.
6f182760 398
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399<pre>
400 private static final String SERIES_NAME = "Series";
401 private static final String Y_AXIS_TITLE = "Signal";
402 private static final String X_AXIS_TITLE = "Time";
403 private static final String FIELD = "value"; // The name of the field that we want to display on the Y axis
b23631ef 404 private static final String VIEW_ID = "org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.sample.ui.view";
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405 private Chart chart;
406 private ITmfTrace currentTrace;
6f182760 407
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408 public SampleView() {
409 super(VIEW_ID);
410 }
6f182760 411
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412 @Override
413 public void createPartControl(Composite parent) {
414 chart = new Chart(parent, SWT.BORDER);
415 chart.getTitle().setVisible(false);
416 chart.getAxisSet().getXAxis(0).getTitle().setText(X_AXIS_TITLE);
417 chart.getAxisSet().getYAxis(0).getTitle().setText(Y_AXIS_TITLE);
418 chart.getSeriesSet().createSeries(SeriesType.LINE, SERIES_NAME);
419 chart.getLegend().setVisible(false);
420 }
6f182760 421
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422 @Override
423 public void setFocus() {
424 chart.setFocus();
425 }
426</pre>
6f182760 427
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428The view is prepared. Run the Example. To launch the an Eclipse Application select the ''Overview'' tab and click on '''Launch an Eclipse Application'''<br>
429[[Image:images/RunEclipseApplication.png]]<br>
6f182760 430
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431A new Eclipse application window will show. In the new window go to '''Windows -> Show View -> Other... -> Other -> Sample View'''.<br>
432[[Image:images/ShowViewOther.png]]<br>
6f182760 433
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434You should now see a view containing an empty chart<br>
435[[Image:images/EmptySampleView.png]]<br>
6f182760 436
73844f9c 437==== Signal Handling ====
6f182760 438
73844f9c 439We would like to populate the view when a trace is selected. To achieve this, we can use a signal hander which is specified with the '''@TmfSignalHandler''' annotation.
6f182760 440
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441<pre>
442 @TmfSignalHandler
443 public void traceSelected(final TmfTraceSelectedSignal signal) {
6f182760 444
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445 }
446</pre>
067490ab 447
73844f9c 448==== Requesting Data ====
067490ab 449
73844f9c 450Then we need to actually gather data from the trace. This is done asynchronously using a ''TmfEventRequest''
067490ab 451
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452<pre>
453 @TmfSignalHandler
454 public void traceSelected(final TmfTraceSelectedSignal signal) {
455 // Don't populate the view again if we're already showing this trace
456 if (currentTrace == signal.getTrace()) {
457 return;
458 }
459 currentTrace = signal.getTrace();
067490ab 460
73844f9c 461 // Create the request to get data from the trace
067490ab 462
73844f9c 463 TmfEventRequest req = new TmfEventRequest(TmfEvent.class,
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464 TmfTimeRange.ETERNITY, 0, ITmfEventRequest.ALL_DATA,
465 ITmfEventRequest.ExecutionType.BACKGROUND) {
067490ab 466
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467 @Override
468 public void handleData(ITmfEvent data) {
469 // Called for each event
470 super.handleData(data);
471 }
067490ab 472
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473 @Override
474 public void handleSuccess() {
475 // Request successful, not more data available
476 super.handleSuccess();
477 }
478
479 @Override
480 public void handleFailure() {
481 // Request failed, not more data available
482 super.handleFailure();
483 }
484 };
485 ITmfTrace trace = signal.getTrace();
486 trace.sendRequest(req);
487 }
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488</pre>
489
73844f9c 490==== Transferring Data to the Chart ====
067490ab 491
73844f9c 492The chart expects an array of doubles for both the X and Y axis values. To provide that, we can accumulate each event's time and value in their respective list then convert the list to arrays when all events are processed.
067490ab 493
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494<pre>
495 TmfEventRequest req = new TmfEventRequest(TmfEvent.class,
f2072ab5
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496 TmfTimeRange.ETERNITY, 0, ITmfEventRequest.ALL_DATA,
497 ITmfEventRequest.ExecutionType.BACKGROUND) {
067490ab 498
73844f9c
PT
499 ArrayList<Double> xValues = new ArrayList<Double>();
500 ArrayList<Double> yValues = new ArrayList<Double>();
067490ab 501
73844f9c
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502 @Override
503 public void handleData(ITmfEvent data) {
504 // Called for each event
505 super.handleData(data);
506 ITmfEventField field = data.getContent().getField(FIELD);
507 if (field != null) {
508 yValues.add((Double) field.getValue());
509 xValues.add((double) data.getTimestamp().getValue());
510 }
511 }
067490ab 512
73844f9c
PT
513 @Override
514 public void handleSuccess() {
515 // Request successful, not more data available
516 super.handleSuccess();
067490ab 517
73844f9c
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518 final double x[] = toArray(xValues);
519 final double y[] = toArray(yValues);
067490ab 520
73844f9c
PT
521 // This part needs to run on the UI thread since it updates the chart SWT control
522 Display.getDefault().asyncExec(new Runnable() {
067490ab 523
73844f9c
PT
524 @Override
525 public void run() {
526 chart.getSeriesSet().getSeries()[0].setXSeries(x);
527 chart.getSeriesSet().getSeries()[0].setYSeries(y);
067490ab 528
73844f9c
PT
529 chart.redraw();
530 }
067490ab 531
73844f9c
PT
532 });
533 }
067490ab 534
73844f9c
PT
535 /**
536 * Convert List<Double> to double[]
537 */
538 private double[] toArray(List<Double> list) {
539 double[] d = new double[list.size()];
540 for (int i = 0; i < list.size(); ++i) {
541 d[i] = list.get(i);
542 }
067490ab 543
73844f9c
PT
544 return d;
545 }
546 };
547</pre>
067490ab 548
73844f9c 549==== Adjusting the Range ====
067490ab 550
73844f9c 551The chart now contains values but they might be out of range and not visible. We can adjust the range of each axis by computing the minimum and maximum values as we add events.
067490ab 552
73844f9c 553<pre>
067490ab 554
73844f9c
PT
555 ArrayList<Double> xValues = new ArrayList<Double>();
556 ArrayList<Double> yValues = new ArrayList<Double>();
557 private double maxY = -Double.MAX_VALUE;
558 private double minY = Double.MAX_VALUE;
559 private double maxX = -Double.MAX_VALUE;
560 private double minX = Double.MAX_VALUE;
067490ab 561
73844f9c
PT
562 @Override
563 public void handleData(ITmfEvent data) {
564 super.handleData(data);
565 ITmfEventField field = data.getContent().getField(FIELD);
566 if (field != null) {
567 Double yValue = (Double) field.getValue();
568 minY = Math.min(minY, yValue);
569 maxY = Math.max(maxY, yValue);
570 yValues.add(yValue);
067490ab 571
73844f9c
PT
572 double xValue = (double) data.getTimestamp().getValue();
573 xValues.add(xValue);
574 minX = Math.min(minX, xValue);
575 maxX = Math.max(maxX, xValue);
576 }
577 }
067490ab 578
73844f9c
PT
579 @Override
580 public void handleSuccess() {
581 super.handleSuccess();
582 final double x[] = toArray(xValues);
583 final double y[] = toArray(yValues);
067490ab 584
73844f9c
PT
585 // This part needs to run on the UI thread since it updates the chart SWT control
586 Display.getDefault().asyncExec(new Runnable() {
067490ab 587
73844f9c
PT
588 @Override
589 public void run() {
590 chart.getSeriesSet().getSeries()[0].setXSeries(x);
591 chart.getSeriesSet().getSeries()[0].setYSeries(y);
067490ab 592
73844f9c
PT
593 // Set the new range
594 if (!xValues.isEmpty() && !yValues.isEmpty()) {
595 chart.getAxisSet().getXAxis(0).setRange(new Range(0, x[x.length - 1]));
596 chart.getAxisSet().getYAxis(0).setRange(new Range(minY, maxY));
597 } else {
598 chart.getAxisSet().getXAxis(0).setRange(new Range(0, 1));
599 chart.getAxisSet().getYAxis(0).setRange(new Range(0, 1));
600 }
601 chart.getAxisSet().adjustRange();
067490ab 602
73844f9c
PT
603 chart.redraw();
604 }
605 });
606 }
607</pre>
067490ab 608
73844f9c 609==== Formatting the Time Stamps ====
067490ab 610
73844f9c 611To display the time stamps on the X axis nicely, we need to specify a format or else the time stamps will be displayed as ''long''. We use TmfTimestampFormat to make it consistent with the other TMF views. We also need to handle the '''TmfTimestampFormatUpdateSignal''' to make sure that the time stamps update when the preferences change.
067490ab 612
73844f9c
PT
613<pre>
614 @Override
615 public void createPartControl(Composite parent) {
616 ...
067490ab 617
73844f9c
PT
618 chart.getAxisSet().getXAxis(0).getTick().setFormat(new TmfChartTimeStampFormat());
619 }
067490ab 620
73844f9c
PT
621 public class TmfChartTimeStampFormat extends SimpleDateFormat {
622 private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
623 @Override
624 public StringBuffer format(Date date, StringBuffer toAppendTo, FieldPosition fieldPosition) {
625 long time = date.getTime();
626 toAppendTo.append(TmfTimestampFormat.getDefaulTimeFormat().format(time));
627 return toAppendTo;
628 }
629 }
067490ab 630
73844f9c
PT
631 @TmfSignalHandler
632 public void timestampFormatUpdated(TmfTimestampFormatUpdateSignal signal) {
633 // Called when the time stamp preference is changed
634 chart.getAxisSet().getXAxis(0).getTick().setFormat(new TmfChartTimeStampFormat());
635 chart.redraw();
636 }
637</pre>
067490ab 638
73844f9c 639We also need to populate the view when a trace is already selected and the view is opened. We can reuse the same code by having the view send the '''TmfTraceSelectedSignal''' to itself.
067490ab 640
73844f9c
PT
641<pre>
642 @Override
643 public void createPartControl(Composite parent) {
644 ...
067490ab 645
73844f9c
PT
646 ITmfTrace trace = getActiveTrace();
647 if (trace != null) {
648 traceSelected(new TmfTraceSelectedSignal(this, trace));
649 }
650 }
651</pre>
067490ab 652
73844f9c 653The view is now ready but we need a proper trace to test it. For this example, a trace was generated using LTTng-UST so that it would produce a sine function.<br>
067490ab 654
73844f9c 655[[Image:images/SampleView.png]]<br>
067490ab 656
73844f9c 657In summary, we have implemented a simple TMF view using the SWTChart library. We made use of signals and requests to populate the view at the appropriate time and we formated the time stamps nicely. We also made sure that the time stamp format is updated when the preferences change.
067490ab 658
c3181353
MK
659== TMF Built-in Views and Viewers ==
660
b23631ef 661TMF provides base implementations for several types of views and viewers for generating custom X-Y-Charts, Time Graphs, or Trees. They are well integrated with various TMF features such as reading traces and time synchronization with other views. They also handle mouse events for navigating the trace and view, zooming or presenting detailed information at mouse position. The code can be found in the TMF UI plug-in ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui''. See below for a list of relevant java packages:
c3181353
MK
662
663* Generic
b23631ef 664** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views'': Common TMF view base classes
c3181353 665* X-Y-Chart
b23631ef
MAL
666** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.viewers.xycharts'': Common base classes for X-Y-Chart viewers based on SWTChart
667** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.viewers.xycharts.barcharts'': Base classes for bar charts
668** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.viewers.xycharts.linecharts'': Base classes for line charts
c3181353 669* Time Graph View
b23631ef 670** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.widgets.timegraph'': Base classes for time graphs e.g. Gantt-charts
c3181353 671* Tree Viewer
b23631ef 672** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.viewers.tree'': Base classes for TMF specific tree viewers
c3181353
MK
673
674Several features in TMF and the Eclipse LTTng integration are using this framework and can be used as example for further developments:
675* X-Y- Chart
b23631ef
MAL
676** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.lttng2.ust.ui.views.memusage.MemUsageView.java''
677** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.cpuusage.CpuUsageView.java''
678** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tracing.examples.ui.views.histogram.NewHistogramView.java''
c3181353 679* Time Graph View
b23631ef
MAL
680** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.controlflow.ControlFlowView.java''
681** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.resources.ResourcesView.java''
c3181353 682* Tree Viewer
b23631ef
MAL
683** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.statesystem.TmfStateSystemExplorer.java''
684** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.cpuusage.CpuUsageComposite.java''
c3181353 685
9ccb80d6
JCK
686== Timing Analysis Views and Viewers ==
687
688Trace Compass provides base implementations for timing views and viewers for generating Latency Tables, Scatter Charts, Density Graphs and Statistics Tables. They are well integrated with various Trace Compass features such as reading traces and time synchronization with other views. They also handle mouse events for navigating the trace and view, zooming or presenting detailed information at mouse position. The code can be found in the Analysis Timing plug-in ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.timing.ui''. See below for a list of relevant java packages:
689
690* Latency Table
691** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.timing.ui.views.segmentstore.table'': Base classes for Latency Tables
692* Scatter Chart
693** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.tmfChartView.java'': Common base classes for X-Y-Chart viewers based on SWTChart
694** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.timing.ui.views.segmentstore.scatter'': Base classes for Scatter Charts
695* Density Graph
696** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.timing.ui.views.segmentstore.density'': Base classes for Density Graphs
697* Statistics Table
698** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.analysis.timing.ui.views.segmentstore.statistics'': Base classes for Statistics Tables
699
700Several features in Trace Compass are using this framework and can be used as example for further development:
701
702* Latency Table
703** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.latency.SystemCallLatencyView.java''
704** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.tmf.analysis.xml.ui.views.latency.PatternLatencyTableView.java''
705* Scatter Chart
706** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.latency.SystemCallLatencyScatterView.java''
707** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.tmf.analysis.xml.ui.views.latency.PatternScatterGraphView.java''
708* Density Graph
709** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.latency.SystemCallLatencyDensityView.java''
710** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.tmf.analysis.xml.ui.views.latency.PatternDensityView.java''
711
712* Statistics Table
713** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.analysis.os.linux.ui.views.latency.statistics.SystemCallLatencyStatisticsView.java''
714** ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.tmf.analysis.xml.ui.views.latency.PatternStatisticsView.java''
715
73844f9c 716= Component Interaction =
067490ab 717
73844f9c 718TMF provides a mechanism for different components to interact with each other using signals. The signals can carry information that is specific to each signal.
067490ab 719
73844f9c 720The TMF Signal Manager handles registration of components and the broadcasting of signals to their intended receivers.
067490ab 721
73844f9c 722Components can register as VIP receivers which will ensure they will receive the signal before non-VIP receivers.
067490ab 723
73844f9c 724== Sending Signals ==
067490ab 725
73844f9c 726In order to send a signal, an instance of the signal must be created and passed as argument to the signal manager to be dispatched. Every component that can handle the signal will receive it. The receivers do not need to be known by the sender.
067490ab 727
73844f9c
PT
728<pre>
729TmfExampleSignal signal = new TmfExampleSignal(this, ...);
730TmfSignalManager.dispatchSignal(signal);
731</pre>
067490ab 732
73844f9c 733If the sender is an instance of the class TmfComponent, the broadcast method can be used:
067490ab
AM
734
735<pre>
73844f9c
PT
736TmfExampleSignal signal = new TmfExampleSignal(this, ...);
737broadcast(signal);
738</pre>
067490ab 739
73844f9c 740== Receiving Signals ==
067490ab 741
73844f9c 742In order to receive any signal, the receiver must first be registered with the signal manager. The receiver can register as a normal or VIP receiver.
067490ab 743
73844f9c
PT
744<pre>
745TmfSignalManager.register(this);
746TmfSignalManager.registerVIP(this);
747</pre>
067490ab 748
73844f9c 749If the receiver is an instance of the class TmfComponent, it is automatically registered as a normal receiver in the constructor.
067490ab 750
73844f9c 751When the receiver is destroyed or disposed, it should deregister itself from the signal manager.
067490ab 752
73844f9c
PT
753<pre>
754TmfSignalManager.deregister(this);
755</pre>
067490ab 756
73844f9c 757To actually receive and handle any specific signal, the receiver must use the @TmfSignalHandler annotation and implement a method that will be called when the signal is broadcast. The name of the method is irrelevant.
067490ab 758
73844f9c
PT
759<pre>
760@TmfSignalHandler
761public void example(TmfExampleSignal signal) {
762 ...
763}
067490ab
AM
764</pre>
765
73844f9c 766The source of the signal can be used, if necessary, by a component to filter out and ignore a signal that was broadcast by itself when the component is also a receiver of the signal but only needs to handle it when it was sent by another component or another instance of the component.
067490ab 767
73844f9c
PT
768== Signal Throttling ==
769
770It is possible for a TmfComponent instance to buffer the dispatching of signals so that only the last signal queued after a specified delay without any other signal queued is sent to the receivers. All signals that are preempted by a newer signal within the delay are discarded.
771
772The signal throttler must first be initialized:
067490ab
AM
773
774<pre>
73844f9c
PT
775final int delay = 100; // in ms
776TmfSignalThrottler throttler = new TmfSignalThrottler(this, delay);
777</pre>
067490ab 778
73844f9c 779Then the sending of signals should be queued through the throttler:
067490ab 780
73844f9c
PT
781<pre>
782TmfExampleSignal signal = new TmfExampleSignal(this, ...);
783throttler.queue(signal);
784</pre>
067490ab 785
73844f9c 786When the throttler is no longer needed, it should be disposed:
067490ab 787
73844f9c
PT
788<pre>
789throttler.dispose();
790</pre>
067490ab 791
73844f9c 792== Signal Reference ==
067490ab 793
73844f9c 794The following is a list of built-in signals defined in the framework.
067490ab 795
73844f9c 796=== TmfStartSynchSignal ===
067490ab 797
73844f9c 798''Purpose''
067490ab 799
73844f9c 800This signal is used to indicate the start of broadcasting of a signal. Internally, the data provider will not fire event requests until the corresponding TmfEndSynchSignal signal is received. This allows coalescing of requests triggered by multiple receivers of the broadcast signal.
067490ab 801
73844f9c 802''Senders''
067490ab 803
73844f9c 804Sent by TmfSignalManager before dispatching a signal to all receivers.
067490ab 805
73844f9c 806''Receivers''
067490ab 807
73844f9c 808Received by TmfDataProvider.
067490ab 809
73844f9c 810=== TmfEndSynchSignal ===
067490ab 811
73844f9c 812''Purpose''
067490ab 813
73844f9c 814This signal is used to indicate the end of broadcasting of a signal. Internally, the data provider fire all pending event requests that were received and buffered since the corresponding TmfStartSynchSignal signal was received. This allows coalescing of requests triggered by multiple receivers of the broadcast signal.
067490ab 815
73844f9c 816''Senders''
067490ab 817
73844f9c 818Sent by TmfSignalManager after dispatching a signal to all receivers.
067490ab 819
73844f9c 820''Receivers''
067490ab 821
73844f9c 822Received by TmfDataProvider.
067490ab 823
73844f9c 824=== TmfTraceOpenedSignal ===
067490ab 825
73844f9c 826''Purpose''
067490ab 827
73844f9c 828This signal is used to indicate that a trace has been opened in an editor.
067490ab 829
73844f9c 830''Senders''
067490ab 831
73844f9c 832Sent by a TmfEventsEditor instance when it is created.
067490ab 833
73844f9c 834''Receivers''
067490ab 835
73844f9c 836Received by TmfTrace, TmfExperiment, TmfTraceManager and every view that shows trace data. Components that show trace data should handle this signal.
067490ab 837
73844f9c 838=== TmfTraceSelectedSignal ===
067490ab 839
73844f9c 840''Purpose''
067490ab 841
73844f9c 842This signal is used to indicate that a trace has become the currently selected trace.
067490ab 843
73844f9c 844''Senders''
067490ab 845
73844f9c 846Sent by a TmfEventsEditor instance when it receives focus. Components can send this signal to make a trace editor be brought to front.
067490ab 847
73844f9c 848''Receivers''
067490ab 849
73844f9c 850Received by TmfTraceManager and every view that shows trace data. Components that show trace data should handle this signal.
067490ab 851
73844f9c 852=== TmfTraceClosedSignal ===
067490ab 853
73844f9c 854''Purpose''
067490ab 855
73844f9c 856This signal is used to indicate that a trace editor has been closed.
067490ab 857
73844f9c 858''Senders''
067490ab 859
73844f9c 860Sent by a TmfEventsEditor instance when it is disposed.
067490ab 861
73844f9c 862''Receivers''
067490ab 863
73844f9c 864Received by TmfTraceManager and every view that shows trace data. Components that show trace data should handle this signal.
067490ab 865
73844f9c 866=== TmfTraceRangeUpdatedSignal ===
067490ab 867
73844f9c 868''Purpose''
067490ab 869
73844f9c 870This signal is used to indicate that the valid time range of a trace has been updated. This triggers indexing of the trace up to the end of the range. In the context of streaming, this end time is considered a safe time up to which all events are guaranteed to have been completely received. For non-streaming traces, the end time is set to infinity indicating that all events can be read immediately. Any processing of trace events that wants to take advantage of request coalescing should be triggered by this signal.
067490ab 871
73844f9c 872''Senders''
11252342 873
73844f9c 874Sent by TmfExperiment and non-streaming TmfTrace. Streaming traces should send this signal in the TmfTrace subclass when a new safe time is determined by a specific implementation.
067490ab 875
73844f9c 876''Receivers''
067490ab 877
73844f9c 878Received by TmfTrace, TmfExperiment and components that process trace events. Components that need to process trace events should handle this signal.
067490ab 879
73844f9c 880=== TmfTraceUpdatedSignal ===
067490ab 881
73844f9c 882''Purpose''
067490ab 883
73844f9c 884This signal is used to indicate that new events have been indexed for a trace.
067490ab 885
73844f9c 886''Senders''
067490ab 887
73844f9c 888Sent by TmfCheckpointIndexer when new events have been indexed and the number of events has changed.
067490ab 889
73844f9c 890''Receivers''
067490ab 891
73844f9c 892Received by components that need to be notified of a new trace event count.
067490ab 893
97c71024 894=== TmfSelectionRangeUpdatedSignal ===
067490ab 895
73844f9c 896''Purpose''
067490ab 897
421b90a1
BH
898This signal is used to indicate that a new time or time range has been
899selected. It contains a begin and end time. If a single time is selected then
900the begin and end time are the same.
067490ab 901
73844f9c 902''Senders''
067490ab 903
421b90a1 904Sent by any component that allows the user to select a time or time range.
067490ab 905
73844f9c 906''Receivers''
067490ab 907
421b90a1 908Received by any component that needs to be notified of the currently selected time or time range.
067490ab 909
97c71024 910=== TmfWindowRangeUpdatedSignal ===
067490ab 911
73844f9c 912''Purpose''
067490ab 913
73844f9c 914This signal is used to indicate that a new time range window has been set.
067490ab 915
73844f9c 916''Senders''
067490ab 917
73844f9c 918Sent by any component that allows the user to set a time range window.
067490ab 919
73844f9c 920''Receivers''
067490ab 921
73844f9c 922Received by any component that needs to be notified of the current visible time range window.
067490ab 923
73844f9c 924=== TmfEventFilterAppliedSignal ===
067490ab 925
73844f9c 926''Purpose''
067490ab 927
73844f9c 928This signal is used to indicate that a filter has been applied to a trace.
067490ab 929
73844f9c 930''Senders''
067490ab 931
73844f9c 932Sent by TmfEventsTable when a filter is applied.
067490ab 933
73844f9c 934''Receivers''
067490ab 935
73844f9c 936Received by any component that shows trace data and needs to be notified of applied filters.
067490ab 937
73844f9c 938=== TmfEventSearchAppliedSignal ===
067490ab 939
73844f9c 940''Purpose''
067490ab 941
73844f9c 942This signal is used to indicate that a search has been applied to a trace.
067490ab 943
73844f9c 944''Senders''
067490ab 945
73844f9c 946Sent by TmfEventsTable when a search is applied.
067490ab 947
73844f9c 948''Receivers''
067490ab 949
73844f9c 950Received by any component that shows trace data and needs to be notified of applied searches.
067490ab 951
73844f9c 952=== TmfTimestampFormatUpdateSignal ===
067490ab 953
73844f9c 954''Purpose''
067490ab 955
73844f9c 956This signal is used to indicate that the timestamp format preference has been updated.
067490ab 957
73844f9c 958''Senders''
067490ab 959
73844f9c 960Sent by TmfTimestampFormat when the default timestamp format preference is changed.
067490ab 961
73844f9c 962''Receivers''
067490ab 963
73844f9c 964Received by any component that needs to refresh its display for the new timestamp format.
067490ab 965
73844f9c 966=== TmfStatsUpdatedSignal ===
067490ab 967
73844f9c 968''Purpose''
067490ab 969
73844f9c 970This signal is used to indicate that the statistics data model has been updated.
067490ab 971
73844f9c 972''Senders''
067490ab 973
73844f9c 974Sent by statistic providers when new statistics data has been processed.
067490ab 975
73844f9c 976''Receivers''
067490ab 977
73844f9c 978Received by statistics viewers and any component that needs to be notified of a statistics update.
067490ab 979
2c20bbb3
VP
980=== TmfPacketStreamSelected ===
981
982''Purpose''
983
984This signal is used to indicate that the user has selected a packet stream to analyze.
985
986''Senders''
987
988Sent by the Stream List View when the user selects a new packet stream.
989
990''Receivers''
991
992Received by views that analyze packet streams.
993
631d02eb
PT
994=== TmfStartAnalysisSignal ===
995
996''Purpose''
997
998This signal is used to indicate that an analysis has started.
999
1000''Senders''
1001
1002Sent by an analysis module when it starts to execute the analyis.
1003
1004''Receivers''
1005
1006Received by components that need to be notified of the start of an analysis
1007or that need to receive the analysis module.
1008
1009=== TmfCpuSelectedSignal ===
1010
1011''Purpose''
1012
1013This signal is used to indicate that the user has selected a CPU core.
1014
1015''Senders''
1016
1017Sent by any component that allows the user to select a CPU.
1018
1019''Receivers''
1020
1021Received by viewers that show information specific to a selected CPU.
1022
1023=== TmfThreadSelectedSignal ===
1024
1025''Purpose''
1026
1027This signal is used to indicate that the user has selected a thread.
1028
1029''Senders''
1030
1031Sent by any component that allows the user to select a thread.
1032
1033''Receivers''
1034
1035Received by viewers that show information specific to a selected thread.
1036
1037=== TmfTraceSynchronizedSignal ===
1038
1039''Purpose''
1040
1041This signal is used to indicate that trace synchronization has been completed.
1042
1043''Senders''
1044
1045Sent by the experiment after trace synchronization.
1046
1047''Receivers''
1048
1049Received by any component that needs to be notified of trace synchronization.
1050
73844f9c 1051== Debugging ==
067490ab 1052
b23631ef 1053TMF has built-in Eclipse tracing support for the debugging of signal interaction between components. To enable it, open the '''Run/Debug Configuration...''' dialog, select a configuration, click the '''Tracing''' tab, select the plug-in '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core''', and check the '''signal''' item.
067490ab 1054
73844f9c 1055All signals sent and received will be logged to the file TmfTrace.log located in the Eclipse home directory.
067490ab 1056
73844f9c 1057= Generic State System =
067490ab 1058
73844f9c 1059== Introduction ==
067490ab 1060
73844f9c
PT
1061The Generic State System is a utility available in TMF to track different states
1062over the duration of a trace. It works by first sending some or all events of
1063the trace into a state provider, which defines the state changes for a given
1064trace type. Once built, views and analysis modules can then query the resulting
1065database of states (called "state history") to get information.
067490ab 1066
73844f9c
PT
1067For example, let's suppose we have the following sequence of events in a kernel
1068trace:
067490ab 1069
73844f9c
PT
1070 10 s, sys_open, fd = 5, file = /home/user/myfile
1071 ...
1072 15 s, sys_read, fd = 5, size=32
1073 ...
1074 20 s, sys_close, fd = 5
067490ab 1075
73844f9c 1076Now let's say we want to implement an analysis module which will track the
2c20bbb3 1077amount of bytes read and written to each file. Here, of course the sys_read is
73844f9c
PT
1078interesting. However, by just looking at that event, we have no information on
1079which file is being read, only its fd (5) is known. To get the match
1080fd5 = /home/user/myfile, we have to go back to the sys_open event which happens
10815 seconds earlier.
067490ab 1082
73844f9c
PT
1083But since we don't know exactly where this sys_open event is, we will have to go
1084back to the very start of the trace, and look through events one by one! This is
1085obviously not efficient, and will not scale well if we want to analyze many
1086similar patterns, or for very large traces.
067490ab 1087
73844f9c
PT
1088A solution in this case would be to use the state system to keep track of the
1089amount of bytes read/written to every *filename* (instead of every file
1090descriptor, like we get from the events). Then the module could ask the state
1091system "what is the amount of bytes read for file "/home/user/myfile" at time
109216 s", and it would return the answer "32" (assuming there is no other read
1093than the one shown).
067490ab 1094
73844f9c 1095== High-level components ==
067490ab 1096
73844f9c
PT
1097The State System infrastructure is composed of 3 parts:
1098* The state provider
1099* The central state system
1100* The storage backend
067490ab 1101
73844f9c
PT
1102The state provider is the customizable part. This is where the mapping from
1103trace events to state changes is done. This is what you want to implement for
1104your specific trace type and analysis type. It's represented by the
1105ITmfStateProvider interface (with a threaded implementation in
1106AbstractTmfStateProvider, which you can extend).
067490ab 1107
73844f9c
PT
1108The core of the state system is exposed through the ITmfStateSystem and
1109ITmfStateSystemBuilder interfaces. The former allows only read-only access and
1110is typically used for views doing queries. The latter also allows writing to the
1111state history, and is typically used by the state provider.
067490ab 1112
73844f9c
PT
1113Finally, each state system has its own separate backend. This determines how the
1114intervals, or the "state history", are saved (in RAM, on disk, etc.) You can
1115select the type of backend at construction time in the TmfStateSystemFactory.
067490ab 1116
73844f9c 1117== Definitions ==
067490ab 1118
73844f9c
PT
1119Before we dig into how to use the state system, we should go over some useful
1120definitions:
067490ab 1121
73844f9c 1122=== Attribute ===
067490ab 1123
73844f9c
PT
1124An attribute is the smallest element of the model that can be in any particular
1125state. When we refer to the "full state", in fact it means we are interested in
1126the state of every single attribute of the model.
067490ab 1127
73844f9c 1128=== Attribute Tree ===
067490ab 1129
73844f9c
PT
1130Attributes in the model can be placed in a tree-like structure, a bit like files
1131and directories in a file system. However, note that an attribute can always
1132have both a value and sub-attributes, so they are like files and directories at
1133the same time. We are then able to refer to every single attribute with its
1134path in the tree.
067490ab 1135
b23631ef 1136For example, in the attribute tree for Linux kernel traces, we use the following
73844f9c 1137attributes, among others:
067490ab 1138
73844f9c
PT
1139<pre>
1140|- Processes
1141| |- 1000
1142| | |- PPID
1143| | |- Exec_name
1144| |- 1001
1145| | |- PPID
1146| | |- Exec_name
1147| ...
1148|- CPUs
1149 |- 0
1150 | |- Status
1151 | |- Current_pid
1152 ...
1153</pre>
067490ab 1154
73844f9c
PT
1155In this model, the attribute "Processes/1000/PPID" refers to the PPID of process
1156with PID 1000. The attribute "CPUs/0/Status" represents the status (running,
1157idle, etc.) of CPU 0. "Processes/1000/PPID" and "Processes/1001/PPID" are two
1158different attribute, even though their base name is the same: the whole path is
1159the unique identifier.
067490ab 1160
73844f9c
PT
1161The value of each attribute can change over the duration of the trace,
1162independently of the other ones, and independently of its position in the tree.
067490ab 1163
73844f9c
PT
1164The tree-like organization is optional, all attributes could be at the same
1165level. But it's possible to put them in a tree, and it helps make things
1166clearer.
067490ab 1167
73844f9c 1168=== Quark ===
067490ab 1169
73844f9c
PT
1170In addition to a given path, each attribute also has a unique integer
1171identifier, called the "quark". To continue with the file system analogy, this
1172is like the inode number. When a new attribute is created, a new unique quark
1173will be assigned automatically. They are assigned incrementally, so they will
1174normally be equal to their order of creation, starting at 0.
067490ab 1175
73844f9c
PT
1176Methods are offered to get the quark of an attribute from its path. The API
1177methods for inserting state changes and doing queries normally use quarks
1178instead of paths. This is to encourage users to cache the quarks and re-use
1179them, which avoids re-walking the attribute tree over and over, which avoids
1180unneeded hashing of strings.
067490ab 1181
73844f9c 1182=== State value ===
067490ab 1183
73844f9c
PT
1184The path and quark of an attribute will remain constant for the whole duration
1185of the trace. However, the value carried by the attribute will change. The value
1186of a specific attribute at a specific time is called the state value.
067490ab 1187
7d59bbef 1188In the TMF implementation, state values can be integers, longs, doubles, or strings.
73844f9c
PT
1189There is also a "null value" type, which is used to indicate that no particular
1190value is active for this attribute at this time, but without resorting to a
1191'null' reference.
067490ab 1192
73844f9c
PT
1193Any other type of value could be used, as long as the backend knows how to store
1194it.
067490ab 1195
73844f9c
PT
1196Note that the TMF implementation also forces every attribute to always carry the
1197same type of state value. This is to make it simpler for views, so they can
1198expect that an attribute will always use a given type, without having to check
1199every single time. Null values are an exception, they are always allowed for all
1200attributes, since they can safely be "unboxed" into all types.
067490ab 1201
73844f9c 1202=== State change ===
067490ab 1203
73844f9c
PT
1204A state change is the element that is inserted in the state system. It consists
1205of:
1206* a timestamp (the time at which the state change occurs)
1207* an attribute (the attribute whose value will change)
1208* a state value (the new value that the attribute will carry)
067490ab 1209
73844f9c
PT
1210It's not an object per se in the TMF implementation (it's represented by a
1211function call in the state provider). Typically, the state provider will insert
1212zero, one or more state changes for every trace event, depending on its event
1213type, payload, etc.
067490ab 1214
73844f9c
PT
1215Note, we use "timestamp" here, but it's in fact a generic term that could be
1216referred to as "index". For example, if a given trace type has no notion of
1217timestamp, the event rank could be used.
067490ab 1218
73844f9c 1219In the TMF implementation, the timestamp is a long (64-bit integer).
067490ab 1220
73844f9c 1221=== State interval ===
067490ab 1222
73844f9c
PT
1223State changes are inserted into the state system, but state intervals are the
1224objects that come out on the other side. Those are stocked in the storage
1225backend. A state interval represents a "state" of an attribute we want to track.
1226When doing queries on the state system, intervals are what is returned. The
1227components of a state interval are:
1228* Start time
1229* End time
1230* State value
1231* Quark
067490ab 1232
73844f9c
PT
1233The start and end times represent the time range of the state. The state value
1234is the same as the state value in the state change that started this interval.
1235The interval also keeps a reference to its quark, although you normally know
1236your quark in advance when you do queries.
f5b8868d 1237
73844f9c 1238=== State history ===
f5b8868d 1239
73844f9c
PT
1240The state history is the name of the container for all the intervals created by
1241the state system. The exact implementation (how the intervals are stored) is
1242determined by the storage backend that is used.
f5b8868d 1243
c550d16a 1244Some backends will use a state history that is persistent on disk, others do not.
73844f9c
PT
1245When loading a trace, if a history file is available and the backend supports
1246it, it will be loaded right away, skipping the need to go through another
1247construction phase.
f5b8868d 1248
73844f9c 1249=== Construction phase ===
f5b8868d 1250
73844f9c
PT
1251Before we can query a state system, we need to build the state history first. To
1252do so, trace events are sent one-by-one through the state provider, which in
1253turn sends state changes to the central component, which then creates intervals
1254and stores them in the backend. This is called the construction phase.
f5b8868d 1255
73844f9c
PT
1256Note that the state system needs to receive its events into chronological order.
1257This phase will end once the end of the trace is reached.
f5b8868d 1258
73844f9c
PT
1259Also note that it is possible to query the state system while it is being build.
1260Any timestamp between the start of the trace and the current end time of the
1261state system (available with ITmfStateSystem#getCurrentEndTime()) is a valid
1262timestamp that can be queried.
f5b8868d 1263
73844f9c 1264=== Queries ===
f5b8868d 1265
73844f9c
PT
1266As mentioned previously, when doing queries on the state system, the returned
1267objects will be state intervals. In most cases it's the state *value* we are
1268interested in, but since the backend has to instantiate the interval object
1269anyway, there is no additional cost to return the interval instead. This way we
1270also get the start and end times of the state "for free".
f5b8868d 1271
73844f9c 1272There are two types of queries that can be done on the state system:
f5b8868d 1273
73844f9c 1274==== Full queries ====
f5b8868d 1275
73844f9c
PT
1276A full query means that we want to retrieve the whole state of the model for one
1277given timestamp. As we remember, this means "the state of every single attribute
1278in the model". As parameter we only need to pass the timestamp (see the API
1279methods below). The return value will be an array of intervals, where the offset
1280in the array represents the quark of each attribute.
f5b8868d 1281
73844f9c 1282==== Single queries ====
f5b8868d 1283
73844f9c
PT
1284In other cases, we might only be interested in the state of one particular
1285attribute at one given timestamp. For these cases it's better to use a
1286single query. For a single query. we need to pass both a timestamp and a
1287quark in parameter. The return value will be a single interval, representing
1288the state that this particular attribute was at that time.
f5b8868d 1289
73844f9c
PT
1290Single queries are typically faster than full queries (but once again, this
1291depends on the backend that is used), but not by much. Even if you only want the
1292state of say 10 attributes out of 200, it could be faster to use a full query
1293and only read the ones you need. Single queries should be used for cases where
1294you only want one attribute per timestamp (for example, if you follow the state
1295of the same attribute over a time range).
f5b8868d 1296
f5b8868d 1297
73844f9c 1298== Relevant interfaces/classes ==
f5b8868d 1299
73844f9c
PT
1300This section will describe the public interface and classes that can be used if
1301you want to use the state system.
f5b8868d 1302
b23631ef 1303=== Main classes in org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.statesystem ===
f5b8868d 1304
73844f9c 1305==== ITmfStateProvider / AbstractTmfStateProvider ====
f5b8868d 1306
73844f9c
PT
1307ITmfStateProvider is the interface you have to implement to define your state
1308provider. This is where most of the work has to be done to use a state system
1309for a custom trace type or analysis type.
f5b8868d 1310
73844f9c
PT
1311For first-time users, it's recommended to extend AbstractTmfStateProvider
1312instead. This class takes care of all the initialization mumbo-jumbo, and also
1313runs the event handler in a separate thread. You will only need to implement
1314eventHandle, which is the call-back that will be called for every event in the
1315trace.
f5b8868d 1316
73844f9c
PT
1317For an example, you can look at StatsStateProvider in the TMF tree, or at the
1318small example below.
f5b8868d 1319
73844f9c 1320==== TmfStateSystemFactory ====
f5b8868d 1321
73844f9c
PT
1322Once you have defined your state provider, you need to tell your trace type to
1323build a state system with this provider during its initialization. This consists
1324of overriding TmfTrace#buildStateSystems() and in there of calling the method in
1325TmfStateSystemFactory that corresponds to the storage backend you want to use
1326(see the section [[#Comparison of state system backends]]).
f5b8868d 1327
73844f9c
PT
1328You will have to pass in parameter the state provider you want to use, which you
1329should have defined already. Each backend can also ask for more configuration
1330information.
f5b8868d 1331
73844f9c
PT
1332You must then call registerStateSystem(id, statesystem) to make your state
1333system visible to the trace objects and the views. The ID can be any string of
1334your choosing. To access this particular state system, the views or modules will
1335need to use this ID.
f5b8868d 1336
73844f9c
PT
1337Also, don't forget to call super.buildStateSystems() in your implementation,
1338unless you know for sure you want to skip the state providers built by the
1339super-classes.
f5b8868d 1340
73844f9c
PT
1341You can look at how LttngKernelTrace does it for an example. It could also be
1342possible to build a state system only under certain conditions (like only if the
1343trace contains certain event types).
f5b8868d 1344
f5b8868d 1345
73844f9c 1346==== ITmfStateSystem ====
f5b8868d 1347
73844f9c
PT
1348ITmfStateSystem is the main interface through which views or analysis modules
1349will access the state system. It offers a read-only view of the state system,
1350which means that no states can be inserted, and no attributes can be created.
1351Calling TmfTrace#getStateSystems().get(id) will return you a ITmfStateSystem
1352view of the requested state system. The main methods of interest are:
f5b8868d 1353
73844f9c 1354===== getQuarkAbsolute()/getQuarkRelative() =====
f5b8868d 1355
73844f9c
PT
1356Those are the basic quark-getting methods. The goal of the state system is to
1357return the state values of given attributes at given timestamps. As we've seen
1358earlier, attributes can be described with a file-system-like path. The goal of
1359these methods is to convert from the path representation of the attribute to its
1360quark.
f5b8868d 1361
73844f9c
PT
1362Since quarks are created on-the-fly, there is no guarantee that the same
1363attributes will have the same quark for two traces of the same type. The views
1364should always query their quarks when dealing with a new trace or a new state
1365provider. Beyond that however, quarks should be cached and reused as much as
1366possible, to avoid potentially costly string re-hashing.
f5b8868d 1367
73844f9c
PT
1368getQuarkAbsolute() takes a variable amount of Strings in parameter, which
1369represent the full path to the attribute. Some of them can be constants, some
c550d16a 1370can come programmatically, often from the event's fields.
f5b8868d 1371
73844f9c
PT
1372getQuarkRelative() is to be used when you already know the quark of a certain
1373attribute, and want to access on of its sub-attributes. Its first parameter is
1374the origin quark, followed by a String varagrs which represent the relative path
1375to the final attribute.
f5b8868d 1376
73844f9c
PT
1377These two methods will throw an AttributeNotFoundException if trying to access
1378an attribute that does not exist in the model.
f5b8868d 1379
73844f9c
PT
1380These methods also imply that the view has the knowledge of how the attribute
1381tree is organized. This should be a reasonable hypothesis, since the same
1382analysis plugin will normally ship both the state provider and the view, and
1383they will have been written by the same person. In other cases, it's possible to
1384use getSubAttributes() to explore the organization of the attribute tree first.
f5b8868d 1385
73844f9c 1386===== waitUntilBuilt() =====
f5b8868d 1387
73844f9c
PT
1388This is a simple method used to block the caller until the construction phase of
1389this state system is done. If the view prefers to wait until all information is
1390available before starting to do queries (to get all known attributes right away,
1391for example), this is the guy to call.
f5b8868d 1392
73844f9c 1393===== queryFullState() =====
f5b8868d 1394
73844f9c
PT
1395This is the method to do full queries. As mentioned earlier, you only need to
1396pass a target timestamp in parameter. It will return a List of state intervals,
1397in which the offset corresponds to the attribute quark. This will represent the
1398complete state of the model at the requested time.
f5b8868d 1399
73844f9c 1400===== querySingleState() =====
f5b8868d 1401
73844f9c
PT
1402The method to do single queries. You pass in parameter both a timestamp and an
1403attribute quark. This will return the single state matching this
1404timestamp/attribute pair.
f5b8868d 1405
73844f9c
PT
1406Other methods are available, you are encouraged to read their Javadoc and see if
1407they can be potentially useful.
f5b8868d 1408
73844f9c 1409==== ITmfStateSystemBuilder ====
f5b8868d 1410
73844f9c
PT
1411ITmfStateSystemBuilder is the read-write interface to the state system. It
1412extends ITmfStateSystem itself, so all its methods are available. It then adds
1413methods that can be used to write to the state system, either by creating new
1414attributes of inserting state changes.
f5b8868d 1415
73844f9c
PT
1416It is normally reserved for the state provider and should not be visible to
1417external components. However it will be available in AbstractTmfStateProvider,
1418in the field 'ss'. That way you can call ss.modifyAttribute() etc. in your state
1419provider to write to the state.
f5b8868d 1420
73844f9c 1421The main methods of interest are:
f5b8868d 1422
73844f9c 1423===== getQuark*AndAdd() =====
f5b8868d 1424
73844f9c
PT
1425getQuarkAbsoluteAndAdd() and getQuarkRelativeAndAdd() work exactly like their
1426non-AndAdd counterparts in ITmfStateSystem. The difference is that the -AndAdd
1427versions will not throw any exception: if the requested attribute path does not
1428exist in the system, it will be created, and its newly-assigned quark will be
1429returned.
f5b8868d 1430
73844f9c
PT
1431When in a state provider, the -AndAdd version should normally be used (unless
1432you know for sure the attribute already exist and don't want to create it
1433otherwise). This means that there is no need to define the whole attribute tree
1434in advance, the attributes will be created on-demand.
f5b8868d 1435
73844f9c 1436===== modifyAttribute() =====
f5b8868d 1437
73844f9c
PT
1438This is the main state-change-insertion method. As was explained before, a state
1439change is defined by a timestamp, an attribute and a state value. Those three
1440elements need to be passed to modifyAttribute as parameters.
f5b8868d 1441
73844f9c
PT
1442Other state change insertion methods are available (increment-, push-, pop- and
1443removeAttribute()), but those are simply convenience wrappers around
1444modifyAttribute(). Check their Javadoc for more information.
f5b8868d 1445
73844f9c 1446===== closeHistory() =====
f5b8868d 1447
73844f9c
PT
1448When the construction phase is done, do not forget to call closeHistory() to
1449tell the backend that no more intervals will be received. Depending on the
1450backend type, it might have to save files, close descriptors, etc. This ensures
c550d16a 1451that a persistent file can then be re-used when the trace is opened again.
f5b8868d 1452
73844f9c
PT
1453If you use the AbstractTmfStateProvider, it will call closeHistory()
1454automatically when it reaches the end of the trace.
f5b8868d 1455
73844f9c 1456=== Other relevant interfaces ===
f5b8868d 1457
b23631ef 1458==== ITmfStateValue ====
f5b8868d 1459
73844f9c
PT
1460This is the interface used to represent state values. Those are used when
1461inserting state changes in the provider, and is also part of the state intervals
1462obtained when doing queries.
f5b8868d 1463
73844f9c 1464The abstract TmfStateValue class contains the factory methods to create new
7d59bbef
JCK
1465state values of either int, long, double or string types. To retrieve the real
1466object inside the state value, one can use the .unbox* methods.
f5b8868d 1467
73844f9c 1468Note: Do not instantiate null values manually, use TmfStateValue.nullValue()
f5b8868d 1469
b23631ef 1470==== ITmfStateInterval ====
f5b8868d 1471
73844f9c
PT
1472This is the interface to represent the state intervals, which are stored in the
1473state history backend, and are returned when doing state system queries. A very
1474simple implementation is available in TmfStateInterval. Its methods should be
1475self-descriptive.
f5b8868d 1476
73844f9c 1477=== Exceptions ===
f5b8868d 1478
b23631ef 1479The following exceptions, found in o.e.t.statesystem.core.exceptions, are related to
73844f9c 1480state system activities.
f5b8868d 1481
73844f9c 1482==== AttributeNotFoundException ====
f5b8868d 1483
73844f9c
PT
1484This is thrown by getQuarkRelative() and getQuarkAbsolute() (but not byt the
1485-AndAdd versions!) when passing an attribute path that is not present in the
1486state system. This is to ensure that no new attribute is created when using
1487these versions of the methods.
f5b8868d 1488
73844f9c
PT
1489Views can expect some attributes to be present, but they should handle these
1490exceptions for when the attributes end up not being in the state system (perhaps
1491this particular trace didn't have a certain type of events, etc.)
f5b8868d 1492
73844f9c 1493==== StateValueTypeException ====
f5b8868d 1494
73844f9c
PT
1495This exception will be thrown when trying to unbox a state value into a type
1496different than its own. You should always check with ITmfStateValue#getType()
1497beforehand if you are not sure about the type of a given state value.
f5b8868d 1498
73844f9c 1499==== TimeRangeException ====
f5b8868d 1500
73844f9c
PT
1501This exception is thrown when trying to do a query on the state system for a
1502timestamp that is outside of its range. To be safe, you should check with
1503ITmfStateSystem#getStartTime() and #getCurrentEndTime() for the current valid
1504range of the state system. This is especially important when doing queries on
1505a state system that is currently being built.
f5b8868d 1506
73844f9c 1507==== StateSystemDisposedException ====
f5b8868d 1508
73844f9c
PT
1509This exception is thrown when trying to access a state system that has been
1510disposed, with its dispose() method. This can potentially happen at shutdown,
1511since Eclipse is not always consistent with the order in which the components
1512are closed.
f5b8868d 1513
f5b8868d 1514
73844f9c 1515== Comparison of state system backends ==
f5b8868d 1516
73844f9c
PT
1517As we have seen in section [[#High-level components]], the state system needs
1518a storage backend to save the intervals. Different implementations are
1519available when building your state system from TmfStateSystemFactory.
f5b8868d 1520
73844f9c
PT
1521Do not confuse full/single queries with full/partial history! All backend types
1522should be able to handle any type of queries defined in the ITmfStateSystem API,
1523unless noted otherwise.
f5b8868d 1524
73844f9c 1525=== Full history ===
2819a797 1526
73844f9c
PT
1527Available with TmfStateSystemFactory#newFullHistory(). The full history uses a
1528History Tree data structure, which is an optimized structure store state
1529intervals on disk. Once built, it can respond to queries in a ''log(n)'' manner.
2819a797 1530
73844f9c
PT
1531You need to specify a file at creation time, which will be the container for
1532the history tree. Once it's completely built, it will remain on disk (until you
1533delete the trace from the project). This way it can be reused from one session
1534to another, which makes subsequent loading time much faster.
2819a797 1535
73844f9c
PT
1536This the backend used by the LTTng kernel plugin. It offers good scalability and
1537performance, even at extreme sizes (it's been tested with traces of sizes up to
1538500 GB). Its main downside is the amount of disk space required: since every
1539single interval is written to disk, the size of the history file can quite
1540easily reach and even surpass the size of the trace itself.
2819a797 1541
73844f9c 1542=== Null history ===
2819a797 1543
73844f9c
PT
1544Available with TmfStateSystemFactory#newNullHistory(). As its name implies the
1545null history is in fact an absence of state history. All its query methods will
1546return null (see the Javadoc in NullBackend).
2819a797 1547
73844f9c 1548Obviously, no file is required, and almost no memory space is used.
2819a797 1549
73844f9c
PT
1550It's meant to be used in cases where you are not interested in past states, but
1551only in the "ongoing" one. It can also be useful for debugging and benchmarking.
2819a797 1552
73844f9c 1553=== In-memory history ===
2819a797 1554
73844f9c 1555Available with TmfStateSystemFactory#newInMemHistory(). This is a simple wrapper
7d59bbef
JCK
1556using a TreeSet to store all state intervals in memory. The implementation at
1557the moment is quite simple, it will perform a binary search on entries when
1558doing queries to find the ones that match.
2819a797 1559
73844f9c
PT
1560The advantage of this method is that it's very quick to build and query, since
1561all the information resides in memory. However, you are limited to 2^31 entries
1562(roughly 2 billions), and depending on your state provider and trace type, that
1563can happen really fast!
2819a797 1564
73844f9c
PT
1565There are no safeguards, so if you bust the limit you will end up with
1566ArrayOutOfBoundsException's everywhere. If your trace or state history can be
1567arbitrarily big, it's probably safer to use a Full History instead.
2819a797 1568
73844f9c 1569=== Partial history ===
2819a797 1570
73844f9c
PT
1571Available with TmfStateSystemFactory#newPartialHistory(). The partial history is
1572a more advanced form of the full history. Instead of writing all state intervals
1573to disk like with the full history, we only write a small fraction of them, and
1574go back to read the trace to recreate the states in-between.
2819a797 1575
73844f9c
PT
1576It has a big advantage over a full history in terms of disk space usage. It's
1577very possible to reduce the history tree file size by a factor of 1000, while
1578keeping query times within a factor of two. Its main downside comes from the
1579fact that you cannot do efficient single queries with it (they are implemented
1580by doing full queries underneath).
2819a797 1581
73844f9c
PT
1582This makes it a poor choice for views like the Control Flow view, where you do
1583a lot of range queries and single queries. However, it is a perfect fit for
1584cases like statistics, where you usually do full queries already, and you store
1585lots of small states which are very easy to "compress".
2819a797 1586
73844f9c 1587However, it can't really be used until bug 409630 is fixed.
2819a797 1588
7d59bbef
JCK
1589== State System Operations ==
1590
1591TmfStateSystemOperations is a static class that implements additional
1592statistical operations that can be performed on attributes of the state system.
1593
1594These operations require that the attribute be one of the numerical values
1595(int, long or double).
1596
1597The speed of these operations can be greatly improved for large data sets if
1598the attribute was inserted in the state system as a mipmap attribute. Refer to
1599the [[#Mipmap feature | Mipmap feature]] section.
1600
1601===== queryRangeMax() =====
1602
1603This method returns the maximum numerical value of an attribute in the
1604specified time range. The attribute must be of type int, long or double.
1605Null values are ignored. The returned value will be of the same state value
1606type as the base attribute, or a null value if there is no state interval
1607stored in the given time range.
1608
1609===== queryRangeMin() =====
1610
1611This method returns the minimum numerical value of an attribute in the
1612specified time range. The attribute must be of type int, long or double.
1613Null values are ignored. The returned value will be of the same state value
1614type as the base attribute, or a null value if there is no state interval
1615stored in the given time range.
1616
1617===== queryRangeAverage() =====
1618
1619This method returns the average numerical value of an attribute in the
1620specified time range. The attribute must be of type int, long or double.
1621Each state interval value is weighted according to time. Null values are
1622counted as zero. The returned value will be a double primitive, which will
1623be zero if there is no state interval stored in the given time range.
1624
73844f9c 1625== Code example ==
2819a797 1626
73844f9c
PT
1627Here is a small example of code that will use the state system. For this
1628example, let's assume we want to track the state of all the CPUs in a LTTng
1629kernel trace. To do so, we will watch for the "sched_switch" event in the state
1630provider, and will update an attribute indicating if the associated CPU should
1631be set to "running" or "idle".
2819a797 1632
73844f9c
PT
1633We will use an attribute tree that looks like this:
1634<pre>
1635CPUs
1636 |--0
1637 | |--Status
1638 |
1639 |--1
1640 | |--Status
1641 |
1642 | 2
1643 | |--Status
1644...
1645</pre>
2819a797 1646
73844f9c
PT
1647The second-level attributes will be named from the information available in the
1648trace events. Only the "Status" attributes will carry a state value (this means
1649we could have just used "1", "2", "3",... directly, but we'll do it in a tree
1650for the example's sake).
2819a797 1651
73844f9c
PT
1652Also, we will use integer state values to represent "running" or "idle", instead
1653of saving the strings that would get repeated every time. This will help in
1654reducing the size of the history file.
2819a797 1655
b23631ef
MAL
1656First we will define a state provider in MyStateProvider. Then, we define an
1657analysis module that takes care of creating the state provider. The analysis
1658module will also contain code that can query the state system.
2819a797 1659
73844f9c 1660=== State Provider ===
2819a797 1661
73844f9c 1662<pre>
c550d16a
PT
1663import static org.eclipse.tracecompass.common.core.NonNullUtils.checkNotNull;
1664import org.eclipse.jdt.annotation.NonNull;
b23631ef
MAL
1665import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.exceptions.AttributeNotFoundException;
1666import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.exceptions.StateValueTypeException;
1667import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.exceptions.TimeRangeException;
1668import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.statevalue.ITmfStateValue;
1669import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.statevalue.TmfStateValue;
1670import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.event.ITmfEvent;
1671import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.statesystem.AbstractTmfStateProvider;
1672import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.trace.ITmfTrace;
1673import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ctf.core.event.CtfTmfEvent;
2819a797 1674
73844f9c
PT
1675/**
1676 * Example state system provider.
1677 *
1678 * @author Alexandre Montplaisir
1679 */
1680public class MyStateProvider extends AbstractTmfStateProvider {
2819a797 1681
73844f9c
PT
1682 /** State value representing the idle state */
1683 public static ITmfStateValue IDLE = TmfStateValue.newValueInt(0);
2819a797 1684
73844f9c
PT
1685 /** State value representing the running state */
1686 public static ITmfStateValue RUNNING = TmfStateValue.newValueInt(1);
2819a797 1687
73844f9c
PT
1688 /**
1689 * Constructor
1690 *
1691 * @param trace
1692 * The trace to which this state provider is associated
1693 */
c550d16a
PT
1694 public MyStateProvider(@NonNull ITmfTrace trace) {
1695 super(trace, "Example"); //$NON-NLS-1$
73844f9c 1696 /*
c550d16a 1697 * The second parameter here is not important, it's only used to name a
73844f9c
PT
1698 * thread internally.
1699 */
1700 }
2819a797 1701
73844f9c
PT
1702 @Override
1703 public int getVersion() {
1704 /*
1705 * If the version of an existing file doesn't match the version supplied
1706 * in the provider, a rebuild of the history will be forced.
1707 */
1708 return 1;
1709 }
2819a797 1710
73844f9c
PT
1711 @Override
1712 public MyStateProvider getNewInstance() {
1713 return new MyStateProvider(getTrace());
1714 }
2819a797 1715
73844f9c
PT
1716 @Override
1717 protected void eventHandle(ITmfEvent ev) {
1718 /*
1719 * AbstractStateChangeInput should have already checked for the correct
1720 * class type.
1721 */
1722 CtfTmfEvent event = (CtfTmfEvent) ev;
2819a797 1723
73844f9c
PT
1724 final long ts = event.getTimestamp().getValue();
1725 Integer nextTid = ((Long) event.getContent().getField("next_tid").getValue()).intValue();
1726
1727 try {
1728
b23631ef 1729 if (event.getType().getName().equals("sched_switch")) {
c550d16a 1730 ITmfStateSystemBuilder ss = checkNotNull(getStateSystemBuilder());
73844f9c
PT
1731 int quark = ss.getQuarkAbsoluteAndAdd("CPUs", String.valueOf(event.getCPU()), "Status");
1732 ITmfStateValue value;
1733 if (nextTid > 0) {
1734 value = RUNNING;
1735 } else {
1736 value = IDLE;
1737 }
1738 ss.modifyAttribute(ts, value, quark);
1739 }
1740
1741 } catch (TimeRangeException e) {
1742 /*
1743 * This should not happen, since the timestamp comes from a trace
1744 * event.
1745 */
1746 throw new IllegalStateException(e);
1747 } catch (AttributeNotFoundException e) {
1748 /*
1749 * This should not happen either, since we're only accessing a quark
1750 * we just created.
1751 */
1752 throw new IllegalStateException(e);
1753 } catch (StateValueTypeException e) {
1754 /*
1755 * This wouldn't happen here, but could potentially happen if we try
1756 * to insert mismatching state value types in the same attribute.
1757 */
1758 e.printStackTrace();
1759 }
1760
1761 }
1762
1763}
1764</pre>
1765
b23631ef 1766=== Analysis module definition ===
73844f9c
PT
1767
1768<pre>
b23631ef 1769import static org.eclipse.tracecompass.common.core.NonNullUtils.checkNotNull;
2819a797 1770
73844f9c
PT
1771import java.util.List;
1772
b23631ef
MAL
1773import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.exceptions.AttributeNotFoundException;
1774import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.exceptions.StateSystemDisposedException;
1775import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.exceptions.TimeRangeException;
1776import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.interval.ITmfStateInterval;
1777import org.eclipse.tracecompass.statesystem.core.statevalue.ITmfStateValue;
1778import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.statesystem.ITmfStateProvider;
1779import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.statesystem.TmfStateSystemAnalysisModule;
1780import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.trace.ITmfTrace;
73844f9c
PT
1781
1782/**
b23631ef 1783 * Class showing examples of a StateSystemAnalysisModule with state system queries.
73844f9c
PT
1784 *
1785 * @author Alexandre Montplaisir
1786 */
b23631ef 1787public class MyStateSystemAnalysisModule extends TmfStateSystemAnalysisModule {
73844f9c 1788
b23631ef
MAL
1789 @Override
1790 protected ITmfStateProvider createStateProvider() {
1791 ITmfTrace trace = checkNotNull(getTrace());
1792 return new MyStateProvider(trace);
1793 }
73844f9c 1794
b23631ef
MAL
1795 @Override
1796 protected StateSystemBackendType getBackendType() {
1797 return StateSystemBackendType.FULL;
2819a797
MK
1798 }
1799
73844f9c
PT
1800 /**
1801 * Example method of querying one attribute in the state system.
1802 *
1803 * We pass it a cpu and a timestamp, and it returns us if that cpu was
1804 * executing a process (true/false) at that time.
1805 *
1806 * @param cpu
1807 * The CPU to check
1808 * @param timestamp
1809 * The timestamp of the query
1810 * @return True if the CPU was running, false otherwise
1811 */
1812 public boolean cpuIsRunning(int cpu, long timestamp) {
2819a797 1813 try {
b23631ef
MAL
1814 int quark = getStateSystem().getQuarkAbsolute("CPUs", String.valueOf(cpu), "Status");
1815 ITmfStateValue value = getStateSystem().querySingleState(timestamp, quark).getStateValue();
2819a797 1816
73844f9c
PT
1817 if (value.equals(MyStateProvider.RUNNING)) {
1818 return true;
1819 }
2819a797 1820
73844f9c
PT
1821 /*
1822 * Since at this level we have no guarantee on the contents of the state
1823 * system, it's important to handle these cases correctly.
1824 */
1825 } catch (AttributeNotFoundException e) {
1826 /*
1827 * Handle the case where the attribute does not exist in the state
1828 * system (no CPU with this number, etc.)
1829 */
73844f9c
PT
1830 } catch (TimeRangeException e) {
1831 /*
1832 * Handle the case where 'timestamp' is outside of the range of the
1833 * history.
1834 */
73844f9c
PT
1835 } catch (StateSystemDisposedException e) {
1836 /*
1837 * Handle the case where the state system is being disposed. If this
1838 * happens, it's normally when shutting down, so the view can just
1839 * return immediately and wait it out.
1840 */
1841 }
1842 return false;
2819a797
MK
1843 }
1844
2819a797 1845
73844f9c
PT
1846 /**
1847 * Example method of using a full query.
1848 *
1849 * We pass it a timestamp, and it returns us how many CPUs were executing a
1850 * process at that moment.
1851 *
1852 * @param timestamp
1853 * The target timestamp
1854 * @return The amount of CPUs that were running at that time
1855 */
1856 public int getNbRunningCpus(long timestamp) {
1857 int count = 0;
2819a797 1858
73844f9c
PT
1859 try {
1860 /* Get the list of the quarks we are interested in. */
b23631ef 1861 List<Integer> quarks = getStateSystem().getQuarks("CPUs", "*", "Status");
2819a797 1862
73844f9c
PT
1863 /*
1864 * Get the full state at our target timestamp (it's better than
1865 * doing an arbitrary number of single queries).
1866 */
b23631ef 1867 List<ITmfStateInterval> state = getStateSystem().queryFullState(timestamp);
2819a797 1868
73844f9c
PT
1869 /* Look at the value of the state for each quark */
1870 for (Integer quark : quarks) {
1871 ITmfStateValue value = state.get(quark).getStateValue();
1872 if (value.equals(MyStateProvider.RUNNING)) {
1873 count++;
1874 }
2819a797 1875 }
73844f9c
PT
1876
1877 } catch (TimeRangeException e) {
1878 /*
1879 * Handle the case where 'timestamp' is outside of the range of the
1880 * history.
1881 */
73844f9c
PT
1882 } catch (StateSystemDisposedException e) {
1883 /* Handle the case where the state system is being disposed. */
2819a797 1884 }
73844f9c 1885 return count;
2819a797
MK
1886 }
1887}
1888</pre>
1889
7d59bbef
JCK
1890== Mipmap feature ==
1891
1892The mipmap feature allows attributes to be inserted into the state system with
1893additional computations performed to automatically store sub-attributes that
1894can later be used for statistical operations. The mipmap has a resolution which
1895represents the number of state attribute changes that are used to compute the
1896value at the next mipmap level.
1897
1898The supported mipmap features are: max, min, and average. Each one of these
1899features requires that the base attribute be a numerical state value (int, long
1900or double). An attribute can be mipmapped for one or more of the features at
1901the same time.
1902
1903To use a mipmapped attribute in queries, call the corresponding methods of the
1904static class [[#State System Operations | TmfStateSystemOperations]].
1905
1906=== AbstractTmfMipmapStateProvider ===
1907
1908AbstractTmfMipmapStateProvider is an abstract provider class that allows adding
1909features to a specific attribute into a mipmap tree. It extends AbstractTmfStateProvider.
1910
1911If a provider wants to add mipmapped attributes to its tree, it must extend
1912AbstractTmfMipmapStateProvider and call modifyMipmapAttribute() in the event
1913handler, specifying one or more mipmap features to compute. Then the structure
1914of the attribute tree will be :
1915
1916<pre>
1917|- <attribute>
1918| |- <mipmapFeature> (min/max/avg)
1919| | |- 1
1920| | |- 2
1921| | |- 3
1922| | ...
1923| | |- n (maximum mipmap level)
1924| |- <mipmapFeature> (min/max/avg)
1925| | |- 1
1926| | |- 2
1927| | |- 3
1928| | ...
1929| | |- n (maximum mipmap level)
1930| ...
1931</pre>
1932
73844f9c 1933= UML2 Sequence Diagram Framework =
2819a797 1934
73844f9c
PT
1935The purpose of the UML2 Sequence Diagram Framework of TMF is to provide a framework for generation of UML2 sequence diagrams. It provides
1936*UML2 Sequence diagram drawing capabilities (i.e. lifelines, messages, activations, object creation and deletion)
1937*a generic, re-usable Sequence Diagram View
1938*Eclipse Extension Point for the creation of sequence diagrams
1939*callback hooks for searching and filtering within the Sequence Diagram View
1940*scalability<br>
1941The following chapters describe the Sequence Diagram Framework as well as a reference implementation and its usage.
2819a797 1942
73844f9c 1943== TMF UML2 Sequence Diagram Extensions ==
2819a797 1944
73844f9c 1945In the UML2 Sequence Diagram Framework an Eclipse extension point is defined so that other plug-ins can contribute code to create sequence diagram.
2819a797 1946
73844f9c 1947'''Identifier''': org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.uml2SDLoader<br>
73844f9c
PT
1948'''Description''': This extension point aims to list and connect any UML2 Sequence Diagram loader.<br>
1949'''Configuration Markup''':<br>
2819a797 1950
73844f9c
PT
1951<pre>
1952<!ELEMENT extension (uml2SDLoader)+>
1953<!ATTLIST extension
1954point CDATA #REQUIRED
1955id CDATA #IMPLIED
1956name CDATA #IMPLIED
1957>
1958</pre>
2819a797 1959
73844f9c
PT
1960*point - A fully qualified identifier of the target extension point.
1961*id - An optional identifier of the extension instance.
1962*name - An optional name of the extension instance.
2819a797 1963
73844f9c
PT
1964<pre>
1965<!ELEMENT uml2SDLoader EMPTY>
1966<!ATTLIST uml2SDLoader
1967id CDATA #REQUIRED
1968name CDATA #REQUIRED
1969class CDATA #REQUIRED
1970view CDATA #REQUIRED
1971default (true | false)
1972</pre>
2819a797 1973
73844f9c
PT
1974*id - A unique identifier for this uml2SDLoader. This is not mandatory as long as the id attribute cannot be retrieved by the provider plug-in. The class attribute is the one on which the underlying algorithm relies.
1975*name - An name of the extension instance.
b23631ef
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1976*class - The implementation of this UML2 SD viewer loader. The class must implement org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.load.IUml2SDLoader.
1977*view - The view ID of the view that this loader aims to populate. Either org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.SDView itself or a extension of org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.SDView.
73844f9c 1978*default - Set to true to make this loader the default one for the view; in case of several default loaders, first one coming from extensions list is taken.
2819a797 1979
2819a797 1980
73844f9c 1981== Management of the Extension Point ==
2819a797 1982
73844f9c
PT
1983The TMF UI plug-in is responsible for evaluating each contribution to the extension point.
1984<br>
1985<br>
1986With this extension point, a loader class is associated with a Sequence Diagram View. Multiple loaders can be associated to a single Sequence Diagram View. However, additional means have to be implemented to specify which loader should be used when opening the view. For example, an eclipse action or command could be used for that. This additional code is not necessary if there is only one loader for a given Sequence Diagram View associated and this loader has the attribute "default" set to "true". (see also [[#Using one Sequence Diagram View with Multiple Loaders | Using one Sequence Diagram View with Multiple Loaders]])
2819a797 1987
73844f9c 1988== Sequence Diagram View ==
2819a797 1989
b23631ef 1990For this extension point a Sequence Diagram View has to be defined as well. The Sequence Diagram View class implementation is provided by the plug-in ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui'' (''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.SDView'') and can be used as is or can also be sub-classed. For that, a view extension has to be added to the ''plugin.xml''.
2819a797 1991
73844f9c 1992=== Supported Widgets ===
2819a797 1993
73844f9c 1994The loader class provides a frame containing all the UML2 widgets to be displayed. The following widgets exist:
2819a797 1995
73844f9c
PT
1996*Lifeline
1997*Activation
1998*Synchronous Message
1999*Asynchronous Message
2000*Synchronous Message Return
2001*Asynchronous Message Return
2002*Stop
2819a797 2003
73844f9c 2004For a lifeline, a category can be defined. The lifeline category defines icons, which are displayed in the lifeline header.
2819a797 2005
73844f9c 2006=== Zooming ===
2819a797 2007
73844f9c 2008The Sequence Diagram View allows the user to zoom in, zoom out and reset the zoom factor.
2819a797 2009
73844f9c 2010=== Printing ===
2819a797 2011
73844f9c 2012It is possible to print the whole sequence diagram as well as part of it.
2819a797 2013
73844f9c 2014=== Key Bindings ===
2819a797 2015
73844f9c
PT
2016*SHIFT+ALT+ARROW-DOWN - to scroll down within sequence diagram one view page at a time
2017*SHIFT+ALT+ARROW-UP - to scroll up within sequence diagram one view page at a time
2018*SHIFT+ALT+ARROW-RIGHT - to scroll right within sequence diagram one view page at a time
2019*SHIFT+ALT+ARROW-LEFT - to scroll left within sequence diagram one view page at a time
2020*SHIFT+ALT+ARROW-HOME - to jump to the beginning of the selected message if not already visible in page
2021*SHIFT+ALT+ARROW-END - to jump to the end of the selected message if not already visible in page
2022*CTRL+F - to open find dialog if either the basic or extended find provider is defined (see [[#Using the Find Provider Interface | Using the Find Provider Interface]])
2023*CTRL+P - to open print dialog
067490ab 2024
73844f9c 2025=== Preferences ===
5f7ef209 2026
73844f9c
PT
2027The UML2 Sequence Diagram Framework provides preferences to customize the appearance of the Sequence Diagram View. The color of all widgets and text as well as the fonts of the text of all widget can be adjust. Amongst others the default lifeline width can be alternated. To change preferences select '''Windows->Preferences->Tracing->UML2 Sequence Diagrams'''. The following preference page will show:<br>
2028[[Image:images/SeqDiagramPref.png]] <br>
2029After changing the preferences select '''OK'''.
067490ab 2030
73844f9c 2031=== Callback hooks ===
067490ab 2032
73844f9c
PT
2033The Sequence Diagram View provides several callback hooks so that extension can provide application specific functionality. The following interfaces can be provided:
2034* Basic find provider or extended find Provider<br> For finding within the sequence diagram
2035* Basic filter provider and extended Filter Provider<br> For filtering within the sequnce diagram.
2036* Basic paging provider or advanced paging provider<br> For scalability reasons, used to limit number of displayed messages
2037* Properies provider<br> To provide properties of selected elements
2038* Collapse provider <br> To collapse areas of the sequence diagram
067490ab 2039
73844f9c 2040== Tutorial ==
067490ab 2041
73844f9c 2042This tutorial describes how to create a UML2 Sequence Diagram Loader extension and use this loader in the in Eclipse.
067490ab 2043
73844f9c 2044=== Prerequisites ===
067490ab 2045
0c54f1fe 2046The tutorial is based on Eclipse 4.4 (Eclipse Luna) and TMF 3.0.0.
067490ab 2047
73844f9c 2048=== Creating an Eclipse UI Plug-in ===
067490ab 2049
b23631ef 2050To create a new project with name org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.sample.ui select '''File -> New -> Project -> Plug-in Development -> Plug-in Project'''. <br>
73844f9c 2051[[Image:images/Screenshot-NewPlug-inProject1.png]]<br>
067490ab 2052
73844f9c 2053[[Image:images/Screenshot-NewPlug-inProject2.png]]<br>
067490ab 2054
73844f9c 2055[[Image:images/Screenshot-NewPlug-inProject3.png]]<br>
067490ab 2056
73844f9c 2057=== Creating a Sequence Diagram View ===
067490ab 2058
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2059To open the plug-in manifest, double-click on the MANIFEST.MF file. <br>
2060[[Image:images/SelectManifest.png]]<br>
5f7ef209 2061
b23631ef 2062Change to the Dependencies tab and select '''Add...''' of the ''Required Plug-ins'' section. A new dialog box will open. Next find plug-ins ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui'' and ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core'' and then press '''OK'''<br>
73844f9c 2063[[Image:images/AddDependencyTmfUi.png]]<br>
067490ab 2064
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PT
2065Change to the Extensions tab and select '''Add...''' of the ''All Extension'' section. A new dialog box will open. Find the view extension ''org.eclipse.ui.views'' and press '''Finish'''.<br>
2066[[Image:images/AddViewExtension1.png]]<br>
067490ab 2067
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2068To create a Sequence Diagram View, click the right mouse button. Then select '''New -> view'''<br>
2069[[Image:images/AddViewExtension2.png]]<br>
32897d73 2070
b23631ef 2071A new view entry has been created. Fill in the fields ''id'', ''name'' and ''class''. Note that for ''class'' the SD view implementation (''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.SDView'') of the TMF UI plug-in is used.<br>
73844f9c 2072[[Image:images/FillSampleSeqDiagram.png]]<br>
32897d73 2073
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2074The view is prepared. Run the Example. To launch the an Eclipse Application select the ''Overview'' tab and click on '''Launch an Eclipse Application'''<br>
2075[[Image:images/RunEclipseApplication.png]]<br>
32897d73 2076
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2077A new Eclipse application window will show. In the new window go to '''Windows -> Show View -> Other... -> Other -> Sample Sequence Diagram'''.<br>
2078[[Image:images/ShowViewOther.png]]<br>
32897d73 2079
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2080The Sequence Diagram View will open with an blank page.<br>
2081[[Image:images/BlankSampleSeqDiagram.png]]<br>
32897d73 2082
73844f9c 2083Close the Example Application.
32897d73 2084
73844f9c 2085=== Defining the uml2SDLoader Extension ===
32897d73 2086
73844f9c 2087After defining the Sequence Diagram View it's time to create the ''uml2SDLoader'' Extension. <br>
32897d73 2088
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2089To create the loader extension, change to the Extensions tab and select '''Add...''' of the ''All Extension'' section. A new dialog box will open. Find the extension ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui.uml2SDLoader'' and press '''Finish'''.<br>
2090[[Image:images/AddTmfUml2SDLoader.png]]<br>
32897d73 2091
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2092A new 'uml2SDLoader'' extension has been created. Fill in fields ''id'', ''name'', ''class'', ''view'' and ''default''. Use ''default'' equal true for this example. For the view add the id of the Sequence Diagram View of chapter [[#Creating a Sequence Diagram View | Creating a Sequence Diagram View]]. <br>
2093[[Image:images/FillSampleLoader.png]]<br>
32897d73 2094
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2095Then click on ''class'' (see above) to open the new class dialog box. Fill in the relevant fields and select '''Finish'''. <br>
2096[[Image:images/NewSampleLoaderClass.png]]<br>
32897d73 2097
b23631ef 2098A new Java class will be created which implements the interface ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.load.IUml2SDLoader''.<br>
32897d73 2099
73844f9c 2100<pre>
b23631ef 2101package org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.sample.ui;
32897d73 2102
b23631ef
MAL
2103import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.SDView;
2104import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.load.IUml2SDLoader;
32897d73 2105
73844f9c 2106public class SampleLoader implements IUml2SDLoader {
32897d73 2107
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2108 public SampleLoader() {
2109 // TODO Auto-generated constructor stub
2110 }
32897d73 2111
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2112 @Override
2113 public void dispose() {
2114 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
32897d73 2115
73844f9c 2116 }
32897d73 2117
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2118 @Override
2119 public String getTitleString() {
2120 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
2121 return null;
2122 }
32897d73 2123
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2124 @Override
2125 public void setViewer(SDView arg0) {
2126 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
32897d73 2127
73844f9c 2128 }
32897d73
AM
2129</pre>
2130
73844f9c 2131=== Implementing the Loader Class ===
32897d73 2132
73844f9c 2133Next is to implement the methods of the IUml2SDLoader interface method. The following code snippet shows how to create the major sequence diagram elements. Please note that no time information is stored.<br>
32897d73 2134
73844f9c 2135<pre>
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2136package org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.sample.ui;
2137
2138import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.SDView;
2139import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.AsyncMessage;
2140import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.AsyncMessageReturn;
2141import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.EllipsisMessage;
2142import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.ExecutionOccurrence;
2143import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.Frame;
2144import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.Lifeline;
2145import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.Stop;
2146import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.SyncMessage;
2147import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.core.SyncMessageReturn;
2148import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.load.IUml2SDLoader;
32897d73 2149
73844f9c 2150public class SampleLoader implements IUml2SDLoader {
32897d73 2151
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2152 private SDView fSdView;
2153
2154 public SampleLoader() {
2155 }
32897d73 2156
73844f9c
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2157 @Override
2158 public void dispose() {
2159 }
32897d73 2160
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2161 @Override
2162 public String getTitleString() {
2163 return "Sample Diagram";
2164 }
32897d73 2165
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2166 @Override
2167 public void setViewer(SDView arg0) {
2168 fSdView = arg0;
2169 createFrame();
2170 }
2171
2172 private void createFrame() {
32897d73 2173
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2174 Frame testFrame = new Frame();
2175 testFrame.setName("Sample Frame");
32897d73 2176
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2177 /*
2178 * Create lifelines
2179 */
2180
2181 Lifeline lifeLine1 = new Lifeline();
2182 lifeLine1.setName("Object1");
2183 testFrame.addLifeLine(lifeLine1);
2184
2185 Lifeline lifeLine2 = new Lifeline();
2186 lifeLine2.setName("Object2");
2187 testFrame.addLifeLine(lifeLine2);
2188
32897d73 2189
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PT
2190 /*
2191 * Create Sync Message
2192 */
2193 // Get new occurrence on lifelines
2194 lifeLine1.getNewEventOccurrence();
2195
2196 // Get Sync message instances
2197 SyncMessage start = new SyncMessage();
2198 start.setName("Start");
2199 start.setEndLifeline(lifeLine1);
2200 testFrame.addMessage(start);
32897d73 2201
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2202 /*
2203 * Create Sync Message
2204 */
2205 // Get new occurrence on lifelines
2206 lifeLine1.getNewEventOccurrence();
2207 lifeLine2.getNewEventOccurrence();
2208
2209 // Get Sync message instances
2210 SyncMessage syn1 = new SyncMessage();
2211 syn1.setName("Sync Message 1");
2212 syn1.setStartLifeline(lifeLine1);
2213 syn1.setEndLifeline(lifeLine2);
2214 testFrame.addMessage(syn1);
32897d73 2215
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2216 /*
2217 * Create corresponding Sync Message Return
2218 */
2219
2220 // Get new occurrence on lifelines
2221 lifeLine1.getNewEventOccurrence();
2222 lifeLine2.getNewEventOccurrence();
32897d73 2223
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2224 SyncMessageReturn synReturn1 = new SyncMessageReturn();
2225 synReturn1.setName("Sync Message Return 1");
2226 synReturn1.setStartLifeline(lifeLine2);
2227 synReturn1.setEndLifeline(lifeLine1);
2228 synReturn1.setMessage(syn1);
2229 testFrame.addMessage(synReturn1);
2230
2231 /*
2232 * Create Activations (Execution Occurrence)
2233 */
2234 ExecutionOccurrence occ1 = new ExecutionOccurrence();
2235 occ1.setStartOccurrence(start.getEventOccurrence());
2236 occ1.setEndOccurrence(synReturn1.getEventOccurrence());
2237 lifeLine1.addExecution(occ1);
2238 occ1.setName("Activation 1");
2239
2240 ExecutionOccurrence occ2 = new ExecutionOccurrence();
2241 occ2.setStartOccurrence(syn1.getEventOccurrence());
2242 occ2.setEndOccurrence(synReturn1.getEventOccurrence());
2243 lifeLine2.addExecution(occ2);
2244 occ2.setName("Activation 2");
2245
2246 /*
2247 * Create Sync Message
2248 */
2249 // Get new occurrence on lifelines
2250 lifeLine1.getNewEventOccurrence();
2251 lifeLine2.getNewEventOccurrence();
2252
2253 // Get Sync message instances
2254 AsyncMessage asyn1 = new AsyncMessage();
2255 asyn1.setName("Async Message 1");
2256 asyn1.setStartLifeline(lifeLine1);
2257 asyn1.setEndLifeline(lifeLine2);
2258 testFrame.addMessage(asyn1);
32897d73 2259
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2260 /*
2261 * Create corresponding Sync Message Return
2262 */
2263
2264 // Get new occurrence on lifelines
2265 lifeLine1.getNewEventOccurrence();
2266 lifeLine2.getNewEventOccurrence();
32897d73 2267
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2268 AsyncMessageReturn asynReturn1 = new AsyncMessageReturn();
2269 asynReturn1.setName("Async Message Return 1");
2270 asynReturn1.setStartLifeline(lifeLine2);
2271 asynReturn1.setEndLifeline(lifeLine1);
2272 asynReturn1.setMessage(asyn1);
2273 testFrame.addMessage(asynReturn1);
2274
2275 /*
2276 * Create a note
2277 */
2278
2279 // Get new occurrence on lifelines
2280 lifeLine1.getNewEventOccurrence();
2281
0c54f1fe 2282 EllipsisMessage info = new EllipsisMessage();
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2283 info.setName("Object deletion");
2284 info.setStartLifeline(lifeLine2);
2285 testFrame.addNode(info);
2286
2287 /*
2288 * Create a Stop
2289 */
2290 Stop stop = new Stop();
2291 stop.setLifeline(lifeLine2);
2292 stop.setEventOccurrence(lifeLine2.getNewEventOccurrence());
2293 lifeLine2.addNode(stop);
2294
2295 fSdView.setFrame(testFrame);
2296 }
2297}
2298</pre>
32897d73 2299
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2300Now it's time to run the example application. To launch the Example Application select the ''Overview'' tab and click on '''Launch an Eclipse Application'''<br>
2301[[Image:images/SampleDiagram1.png]] <br>
32897d73 2302
73844f9c 2303=== Adding time information ===
32897d73 2304
b23631ef 2305To add time information in sequence diagram the timestamp has to be set for each message. The sequence diagram framework uses the ''TmfTimestamp'' class of plug-in ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core''. Use ''setTime()'' on each message ''SyncMessage'' since start and end time are the same. For each ''AsyncMessage'' set start and end time separately by using methods ''setStartTime'' and ''setEndTime''. For example: <br>
32897d73 2306
73844f9c
PT
2307<pre>
2308 private void createFrame() {
2309 //...
b2c971ec
MK
2310 start.setTime(TmfTimestamp.create(1000, -3));
2311 syn1.setTime(TmfTimestamp.create(1005, -3));
2312 synReturn1.setTime(TmfTimestamp.create(1050, -3));
2313 asyn1.setStartTime(TmfTimestamp.create(1060, -3));
2314 asyn1.setEndTime(TmfTimestamp.create(1070, -3));
2315 asynReturn1.setStartTime(TmfTimestamp.create(1060, -3));
2316 asynReturn1.setEndTime(TmfTimestamp.create(1070, -3));
73844f9c
PT
2317 //...
2318 }
2319</pre>
32897d73 2320
73844f9c 2321When running the example application, a time compression bar on the left appears which indicates the time elapsed between consecutive events. The time compression scale shows where the time falls between the minimum and maximum delta times. The intensity of the color is used to indicate the length of time, namely, the deeper the intensity, the higher the delta time. The minimum and maximum delta times are configurable through the collbar menu ''Configure Min Max''. The time compression bar and scale may provide an indication about which events consumes the most time. By hovering over the time compression bar a tooltip appears containing more information. <br>
32897d73 2322
73844f9c 2323[[Image:images/SampleDiagramTimeComp.png]] <br>
32897d73 2324
73844f9c 2325By hovering over a message it will show the time information in the appearing tooltip. For each ''SyncMessage'' it shows its time occurrence and for each ''AsyncMessage'' it shows the start and end time.
32897d73 2326
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2327[[Image:images/SampleDiagramSyncMessage.png]] <br>
2328[[Image:images/SampleDiagramAsyncMessage.png]] <br>
32897d73 2329
0c54f1fe 2330To see the time elapsed between 2 messages, select one message and hover over a second message. A tooltip will show with the delta in time. Note if the second message is before the first then a negative delta is displayed. Note that for ''AsyncMessage'' the end time is used for the delta calculation.<br>
73844f9c 2331[[Image:images/SampleDiagramMessageDelta.png]] <br>
32897d73 2332
73844f9c 2333=== Default Coolbar and Menu Items ===
32897d73 2334
73844f9c
PT
2335The Sequence Diagram View comes with default coolbar and menu items. By default, each sequence diagram shows the following actions:
2336* Zoom in
2337* Zoom out
2338* Reset Zoom Factor
2339* Selection
2340* Configure Min Max (drop-down menu only)
2341* Navigation -> Show the node end (drop-down menu only)
2342* Navigation -> Show the node start (drop-down menu only)
32897d73 2343
73844f9c 2344[[Image:images/DefaultCoolbarMenu.png]]<br>
32897d73 2345
73844f9c 2346=== Implementing Optional Callbacks ===
32897d73 2347
73844f9c 2348The following chapters describe how to use all supported provider interfaces.
32897d73 2349
73844f9c 2350==== Using the Paging Provider Interface ====
32897d73 2351
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2352For scalability reasons, the paging provider interfaces exists to limit the number of messages displayed in the Sequence Diagram View at a time. For that, two interfaces exist, the basic paging provider and the advanced paging provider. When using the basic paging interface, actions for traversing page by page through the sequence diagram of a trace will be provided.
2353<br>
2354To use the basic paging provider, first the interface methods of the ''ISDPagingProvider'' have to be implemented by a class. (i.e. ''hasNextPage()'', ''hasPrevPage()'', ''nextPage()'', ''prevPage()'', ''firstPage()'' and ''endPage()''. Typically, this is implemented in the loader class. Secondly, the provider has to be set in the Sequence Diagram View. This will be done in the ''setViewer()'' method of the loader class. Lastly, the paging provider has to be removed from the view, when the ''dispose()'' method of the loader class is called.
32897d73 2355
73844f9c
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2356<pre>
2357public class SampleLoader implements IUml2SDLoader, ISDPagingProvider {
2358 //...
b23631ef 2359 private int page = 0;
73844f9c
PT
2360
2361 @Override
2362 public void dispose() {
2363 if (fSdView != null) {
2364 fSdView.resetProviders();
2365 }
2366 }
2367
2368 @Override
2369 public void setViewer(SDView arg0) {
2370 fSdView = arg0;
2371 fSdView.setSDPagingProvider(this);
2372 createFrame();
2373 }
2374
2375 private void createSecondFrame() {
2376 Frame testFrame = new Frame();
2377 testFrame.setName("SecondFrame");
2378 Lifeline lifeline = new Lifeline();
2379 lifeline.setName("LifeLine 0");
2380 testFrame.addLifeLine(lifeline);
2381 lifeline = new Lifeline();
2382 lifeline.setName("LifeLine 1");
2383 testFrame.addLifeLine(lifeline);
2384 for (int i = 1; i < 5; i++) {
2385 SyncMessage message = new SyncMessage();
2386 message.autoSetStartLifeline(testFrame.getLifeline(0));
2387 message.autoSetEndLifeline(testFrame.getLifeline(0));
2388 message.setName((new StringBuilder("Message ")).append(i).toString());
2389 testFrame.addMessage(message);
2390
2391 SyncMessageReturn messageReturn = new SyncMessageReturn();
2392 messageReturn.autoSetStartLifeline(testFrame.getLifeline(0));
2393 messageReturn.autoSetEndLifeline(testFrame.getLifeline(0));
2394
2395 testFrame.addMessage(messageReturn);
2396 messageReturn.setName((new StringBuilder("Message return ")).append(i).toString());
2397 ExecutionOccurrence occ = new ExecutionOccurrence();
2398 occ.setStartOccurrence(testFrame.getSyncMessage(i - 1).getEventOccurrence());
2399 occ.setEndOccurrence(testFrame.getSyncMessageReturn(i - 1).getEventOccurrence());
2400 testFrame.getLifeline(0).addExecution(occ);
2401 }
2402 fSdView.setFrame(testFrame);
2403 }
32897d73 2404
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2405 @Override
2406 public boolean hasNextPage() {
2407 return page == 0;
2408 }
32897d73 2409
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2410 @Override
2411 public boolean hasPrevPage() {
2412 return page == 1;
2413 }
32897d73 2414
73844f9c
PT
2415 @Override
2416 public void nextPage() {
2417 page = 1;
2418 createSecondFrame();
2419 }
32897d73 2420
73844f9c
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2421 @Override
2422 public void prevPage() {
2423 page = 0;
2424 createFrame();
2425 }
32897d73 2426
73844f9c
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2427 @Override
2428 public void firstPage() {
2429 page = 0;
2430 createFrame();
2431 }
32897d73 2432
73844f9c
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2433 @Override
2434 public void lastPage() {
2435 page = 1;
2436 createSecondFrame();
2437 }
2438 //...
2439}
32897d73 2440
73844f9c 2441</pre>
32897d73 2442
73844f9c 2443When running the example application, new actions will be shown in the coolbar and the coolbar menu. <br>
32897d73 2444
73844f9c 2445[[Image:images/PageProviderAdded.png]]
32897d73 2446
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2447<br><br>
2448To use the advanced paging provider, the interface ''ISDAdvancePagingProvider'' has to be implemented. It extends the basic paging provider. The methods ''currentPage()'', ''pagesCount()'' and ''pageNumberChanged()'' have to be added.
2449<br>
2450
2451==== Using the Find Provider Interface ====
32897d73 2452
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2453For finding nodes in a sequence diagram two interfaces exists. One for basic finding and one for extended finding. The basic find comes with a dialog box for entering find criteria as regular expressions. This find criteria can be used to execute the find. Find criteria a persisted in the Eclipse workspace.
2454<br>
2455For the extended find provider interface a ''org.eclipse.jface.action.Action'' class has to be provided. The actual find handling has to be implemented and triggered by the action.
2456<br>
2457Only on at a time can be active. If the extended find provder is defined it obsoletes the basic find provider.
2458<br>
2459To use the basic find provider, first the interface methods of the ''ISDFindProvider'' have to be implemented by a class. Typically, this is implemented in the loader class. Add the ISDFindProvider to the list of implemented interfaces, implement the methods ''find()'' and ''cancel()'' and set the provider in the ''setViewer()'' method as well as remove the provider in the ''dispose()'' method of the loader class. Please note that the ''ISDFindProvider'' extends the interface ''ISDGraphNodeSupporter'' which methods (''isNodeSupported()'' and ''getNodeName()'') have to be implemented, too. The following shows an example implementation. Please note that only search for lifelines and SynchMessage are supported. The find itself will always find only the first occurrence the pattern to match.
32897d73 2460
73844f9c
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2461<pre>
2462public class SampleLoader implements IUml2SDLoader, ISDPagingProvider, ISDFindProvider {
32897d73 2463
73844f9c
PT
2464 //...
2465 @Override
2466 public void dispose() {
2467 if (fSdView != null) {
2468 fSdView.resetProviders();
2469 }
2470 }
32897d73 2471
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PT
2472 @Override
2473 public void setViewer(SDView arg0) {
2474 fSdView = arg0;
2475 fSdView.setSDPagingProvider(this);
2476 fSdView.setSDFindProvider(this);
2477 createFrame();
2478 }
32897d73 2479
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PT
2480 @Override
2481 public boolean isNodeSupported(int nodeType) {
2482 switch (nodeType) {
2483 case ISDGraphNodeSupporter.LIFELINE:
2484 case ISDGraphNodeSupporter.SYNCMESSAGE:
2485 return true;
32897d73 2486
73844f9c
PT
2487 default:
2488 break;
2489 }
2490 return false;
2491 }
2492
2493 @Override
2494 public String getNodeName(int nodeType, String loaderClassName) {
2495 switch (nodeType) {
2496 case ISDGraphNodeSupporter.LIFELINE:
2497 return "Lifeline";
2498 case ISDGraphNodeSupporter.SYNCMESSAGE:
2499 return "Sync Message";
2500 }
2501 return "";
2502 }
32897d73 2503
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2504 @Override
2505 public boolean find(Criteria criteria) {
2506 Frame frame = fSdView.getFrame();
2507 if (criteria.isLifeLineSelected()) {
2508 for (int i = 0; i < frame.lifeLinesCount(); i++) {
2509 if (criteria.matches(frame.getLifeline(i).getName())) {
2510 fSdView.getSDWidget().moveTo(frame.getLifeline(i));
2511 return true;
2512 }
2513 }
2514 }
2515 if (criteria.isSyncMessageSelected()) {
2516 for (int i = 0; i < frame.syncMessageCount(); i++) {
2517 if (criteria.matches(frame.getSyncMessage(i).getName())) {
2518 fSdView.getSDWidget().moveTo(frame.getSyncMessage(i));
2519 return true;
2520 }
2521 }
2522 }
2523 return false;
2524 }
32897d73 2525
73844f9c
PT
2526 @Override
2527 public void cancel() {
2528 // reset find parameters
2529 }
2530 //...
2531}
2532</pre>
32897d73 2533
73844f9c
PT
2534When running the example application, the find action will be shown in the coolbar and the coolbar menu. <br>
2535[[Image:images/FindProviderAdded.png]]
32897d73 2536
73844f9c
PT
2537To find a sequence diagram node press on the find button of the coolbar (see above). A new dialog box will open. Enter a regular expression in the ''Matching String'' text box, select the node types (e.g. Sync Message) and press '''Find'''. If found the corresponding node will be selected. If not found the dialog box will indicate not found. <br>
2538[[Image:images/FindDialog.png]]<br>
32897d73 2539
73844f9c 2540Note that the find dialog will be opened by typing the key shortcut CRTL+F.
32897d73 2541
73844f9c 2542==== Using the Filter Provider Interface ====
32897d73 2543
0c54f1fe 2544For filtering of sequence diagram elements two interfaces exist. One basic for filtering and one for extended filtering. The basic filtering comes with two dialog for entering filter criteria as regular expressions and one for selecting the filter to be used. Multiple filters can be active at a time. Filter criteria are persisted in the Eclipse workspace.
73844f9c
PT
2545<br>
2546To use the basic filter provider, first the interface method of the ''ISDFilterProvider'' has to be implemented by a class. Typically, this is implemented in the loader class. Add the ''ISDFilterProvider'' to the list of implemented interfaces, implement the method ''filter()''and set the provider in the ''setViewer()'' method as well as remove the provider in the ''dispose()'' method of the loader class. Please note that the ''ISDFindProvider'' extends the interface ''ISDGraphNodeSupporter'' which methods (''isNodeSupported()'' and ''getNodeName()'') have to be implemented, too. <br>
2547Note that no example implementation of ''filter()'' is provided.
2548<br>
32897d73 2549
73844f9c
PT
2550<pre>
2551public class SampleLoader implements IUml2SDLoader, ISDPagingProvider, ISDFindProvider, ISDFilterProvider {
32897d73 2552
73844f9c
PT
2553 //...
2554 @Override
2555 public void dispose() {
2556 if (fSdView != null) {
2557 fSdView.resetProviders();
2558 }
2559 }
32897d73 2560
73844f9c
PT
2561 @Override
2562 public void setViewer(SDView arg0) {
2563 fSdView = arg0;
2564 fSdView.setSDPagingProvider(this);
2565 fSdView.setSDFindProvider(this);
2566 fSdView.setSDFilterProvider(this);
2567 createFrame();
2568 }
32897d73 2569
73844f9c 2570 @Override
b23631ef 2571 public boolean filter(List<FilterCriteria> list) {
73844f9c
PT
2572 return false;
2573 }
2574 //...
2575}
2576</pre>
32897d73 2577
73844f9c
PT
2578When running the example application, the filter action will be shown in the coolbar menu. <br>
2579[[Image:images/HidePatternsMenuItem.png]]
32897d73 2580
73844f9c
PT
2581To filter select the '''Hide Patterns...''' of the coolbar menu. A new dialog box will open. <br>
2582[[Image:images/DialogHidePatterns.png]]
32897d73 2583
73844f9c
PT
2584To Add a new filter press '''Add...'''. A new dialog box will open. Enter a regular expression in the ''Matching String'' text box, select the node types (e.g. Sync Message) and press '''Create''''. <br>
2585[[Image:images/DialogHidePatterns.png]] <br>
32897d73 2586
73844f9c 2587Now back at the Hide Pattern dialog. Select one or more filter and select '''OK'''.
32897d73 2588
73844f9c 2589To use the extended filter provider, the interface ''ISDExtendedFilterProvider'' has to be implemented. It will provide a ''org.eclipse.jface.action.Action'' class containing the actual filter handling and filter algorithm.
32897d73 2590
73844f9c 2591==== Using the Extended Action Bar Provider Interface ====
32897d73 2592
73844f9c
PT
2593The extended action bar provider can be used to add customized actions to the Sequence Diagram View.
2594To use the extended action bar provider, first the interface method of the interface ''ISDExtendedActionBarProvider'' has to be implemented by a class. Typically, this is implemented in the loader class. Add the ''ISDExtendedActionBarProvider'' to the list of implemented interfaces, implement the method ''supplementCoolbarContent()'' and set the provider in the ''setViewer()'' method as well as remove the provider in the ''dispose()'' method of the loader class. <br>
32897d73 2595
73844f9c
PT
2596<pre>
2597public class SampleLoader implements IUml2SDLoader, ISDPagingProvider, ISDFindProvider, ISDFilterProvider, ISDExtendedActionBarProvider {
2598 //...
2599
2600 @Override
2601 public void dispose() {
2602 if (fSdView != null) {
2603 fSdView.resetProviders();
2604 }
2605 }
32897d73 2606
73844f9c
PT
2607 @Override
2608 public void setViewer(SDView arg0) {
2609 fSdView = arg0;
2610 fSdView.setSDPagingProvider(this);
2611 fSdView.setSDFindProvider(this);
2612 fSdView.setSDFilterProvider(this);
2613 fSdView.setSDExtendedActionBarProvider(this);
2614 createFrame();
2615 }
32897d73 2616
73844f9c
PT
2617 @Override
2618 public void supplementCoolbarContent(IActionBars iactionbars) {
2619 Action action = new Action("Refresh") {
2620 @Override
2621 public void run() {
2622 System.out.println("Refreshing...");
2623 }
2624 };
2625 iactionbars.getMenuManager().add(action);
2626 iactionbars.getToolBarManager().add(action);
2627 }
2628 //...
2629}
2630</pre>
32897d73 2631
73844f9c
PT
2632When running the example application, all new actions will be added to the coolbar and coolbar menu according to the implementation of ''supplementCoolbarContent()''<br>.
2633For the example above the coolbar and coolbar menu will look as follows.
32897d73 2634
73844f9c 2635[[Image:images/SupplCoolbar.png]]
32897d73 2636
73844f9c 2637==== Using the Properties Provider Interface====
32897d73 2638
73844f9c 2639This interface can be used to provide property information. A property provider which returns an ''IPropertyPageSheet'' (see ''org.eclipse.ui.views'') has to be implemented and set in the Sequence Diagram View. <br>
32897d73 2640
73844f9c 2641To use the property provider, first the interface method of the ''ISDPropertiesProvider'' has to be implemented by a class. Typically, this is implemented in the loader class. Add the ''ISDPropertiesProvider'' to the list of implemented interfaces, implement the method ''getPropertySheetEntry()'' and set the provider in the ''setViewer()'' method as well as remove the provider in the ''dispose()'' method of the loader class. Please note that no example is provided here.
32897d73 2642
73844f9c
PT
2643Please refer to the following Eclipse articles for more information about properties and tabed properties.
2644*[http://www.eclipse.org/articles/Article-Properties-View/properties-view.html | Take control of your properties]
2645*[http://www.eclipse.org/articles/Article-Tabbed-Properties/tabbed_properties_view.html | The Eclipse Tabbed Properties View]
32897d73 2646
73844f9c 2647==== Using the Collapse Provider Interface ====
32897d73 2648
73844f9c 2649This interface can be used to define a provider which responsibility is to collapse two selected lifelines. This can be used to hide a pair of lifelines.
32897d73 2650
73844f9c 2651To use the collapse provider, first the interface method of the ''ISDCollapseProvider'' has to be implemented by a class. Typically, this is implemented in the loader class. Add the ISDCollapseProvider to the list of implemented interfaces, implement the method ''collapseTwoLifelines()'' and set the provider in the ''setViewer()'' method as well as remove the provider in the ''dispose()'' method of the loader class. Please note that no example is provided here.
32897d73 2652
73844f9c 2653==== Using the Selection Provider Service ====
32897d73 2654
73844f9c 2655The Sequence Diagram View comes with a build in selection provider service. To this service listeners can be added. To use the selection provider service, the interface ''ISelectionListener'' of plug-in ''org.eclipse.ui'' has to implemented. Typically this is implemented in loader class. Firstly, add the ''ISelectionListener'' interface to the list of implemented interfaces, implement the method ''selectionChanged()'' and set the listener in method ''setViewer()'' as well as remove the listener in the ''dispose()'' method of the loader class.
32897d73 2656
73844f9c
PT
2657<pre>
2658public class SampleLoader implements IUml2SDLoader, ISDPagingProvider, ISDFindProvider, ISDFilterProvider, ISDExtendedActionBarProvider, ISelectionListener {
32897d73 2659
73844f9c
PT
2660 //...
2661 @Override
2662 public void dispose() {
2663 if (fSdView != null) {
2664 PlatformUI.getWorkbench().getActiveWorkbenchWindow().getSelectionService().removePostSelectionListener(this);
2665 fSdView.resetProviders();
2666 }
2667 }
32897d73 2668
73844f9c
PT
2669 @Override
2670 public String getTitleString() {
2671 return "Sample Diagram";
2672 }
32897d73 2673
73844f9c
PT
2674 @Override
2675 public void setViewer(SDView arg0) {
2676 fSdView = arg0;
2677 PlatformUI.getWorkbench().getActiveWorkbenchWindow().getSelectionService().addPostSelectionListener(this);
2678 fSdView.setSDPagingProvider(this);
2679 fSdView.setSDFindProvider(this);
2680 fSdView.setSDFilterProvider(this);
2681 fSdView.setSDExtendedActionBarProvider(this);
32897d73 2682
73844f9c
PT
2683 createFrame();
2684 }
32897d73 2685
73844f9c
PT
2686 @Override
2687 public void selectionChanged(IWorkbenchPart part, ISelection selection) {
2688 ISelection sel = PlatformUI.getWorkbench().getActiveWorkbenchWindow().getSelectionService().getSelection();
2689 if (sel != null && (sel instanceof StructuredSelection)) {
2690 StructuredSelection stSel = (StructuredSelection) sel;
2691 if (stSel.getFirstElement() instanceof BaseMessage) {
2692 BaseMessage syncMsg = ((BaseMessage) stSel.getFirstElement());
2693 System.out.println("Message '" + syncMsg.getName() + "' selected.");
2694 }
2695 }
2696 }
2697
2698 //...
2699}
2700</pre>
32897d73 2701
73844f9c 2702=== Printing a Sequence Diagram ===
32897d73 2703
73844f9c 2704To print a the whole sequence diagram or only parts of it, select the Sequence Diagram View and select '''File -> Print...''' or type the key combination ''CTRL+P''. A new print dialog will open. <br>
32897d73 2705
73844f9c 2706[[Image:images/PrintDialog.png]] <br>
32897d73 2707
73844f9c 2708Fill in all the relevant information, select '''Printer...''' to choose the printer and the press '''OK'''.
32897d73 2709
73844f9c 2710=== Using one Sequence Diagram View with Multiple Loaders ===
32897d73 2711
73844f9c 2712A Sequence Diagram View definition can be used with multiple sequence diagram loaders. However, the active loader to be used when opening the view has to be set. For this define an Eclipse action or command and assign the current loader to the view. Here is a code snippet for that:
32897d73 2713
73844f9c
PT
2714<pre>
2715public class OpenSDView extends AbstractHandler {
2716 @Override
2717 public Object execute(ExecutionEvent event) throws ExecutionException {
2718 try {
2719 IWorkbenchPage persp = TmfUiPlugin.getDefault().getWorkbench().getActiveWorkbenchWindow().getActivePage();
2720 SDView view = (SDView) persp.showView("org.eclipse.linuxtools.ust.examples.ui.componentinteraction");
b23631ef 2721 LoadersManager.getLoadersManager().createLoader("org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.impl.TmfUml2SDSyncLoader", view);
73844f9c
PT
2722 } catch (PartInitException e) {
2723 throw new ExecutionException("PartInitException caught: ", e);
2724 }
2725 return null;
2726 }
2727}
2728</pre>
32897d73 2729
73844f9c 2730=== Downloading the Tutorial ===
32897d73 2731
b23631ef 2732Use the following link to download the source code of the tutorial [https://wiki.eclipse.org/images/7/79/SamplePluginTC.zip Plug-in of Tutorial].
32897d73 2733
73844f9c 2734== Integration of Tracing and Monitoring Framework with Sequence Diagram Framework ==
32897d73 2735
73844f9c 2736In the previous sections the Sequence Diagram Framework has been described and a tutorial was provided. In the following sections the integration of the Sequence Diagram Framework with other features of TMF will be described. Together it is a powerful framework to analyze and visualize content of traces. The integration is explained using the reference implementation of a UML2 sequence diagram loader which part of the TMF UI delivery. The reference implementation can be used as is, can be sub-classed or simply be an example for other sequence diagram loaders to be implemented.
32897d73 2737
73844f9c 2738=== Reference Implementation ===
32897d73 2739
73844f9c 2740A Sequence Diagram View Extension is defined in the plug-in TMF UI as well as a uml2SDLoader Extension with the reference loader.
32897d73 2741
73844f9c 2742[[Image:images/ReferenceExtensions.png]]
32897d73 2743
73844f9c 2744=== Used Sequence Diagram Features ===
32897d73 2745
73844f9c
PT
2746Besides the default features of the Sequence Diagram Framework, the reference implementation uses the following additional features:
2747*Advanced paging
2748*Basic finding
2749*Basic filtering
2750*Selection Service
32897d73 2751
73844f9c 2752==== Advanced paging ====
32897d73 2753
73844f9c 2754The reference loader implements the interface ''ISDAdvancedPagingProvider'' interface. Please refer to section [[#Using the Paging Provider Interface | Using the Paging Provider Interface]] for more details about the advanced paging feature.
32897d73 2755
73844f9c 2756==== Basic finding ====
32897d73 2757
73844f9c 2758The reference loader implements the interface ''ISDFindProvider'' interface. The user can search for ''Lifelines'' and ''Interactions''. The find is done across pages. If the expression to match is not on the current page a new thread is started to search on other pages. If expression is found the corresponding page is shown as well as the searched item is displayed. If not found then a message is displayed in the ''Progress View'' of Eclipse. Please refer to section [[#Using the Find Provider Interface | Using the Find Provider Interface]] for more details about the basic find feature.
32897d73 2759
73844f9c 2760==== Basic filtering ====
32897d73 2761
73844f9c 2762The reference loader implements the interface ''ISDFilterProvider'' interface. The user can filter on ''Lifelines'' and ''Interactions''. Please refer to section [[#Using the Filter Provider Interface | Using the Filter Provider Interface]] for more details about the basic filter feature.
32897d73 2763
73844f9c 2764==== Selection Service ====
32897d73 2765
73844f9c 2766The reference loader implements the interface ''ISelectionListener'' interface. When an interaction is selected a ''TmfTimeSynchSignal'' is broadcast (see [[#TMF Signal Framework | TMF Signal Framework]]). Please also refer to section [[#Using the Selection Provider Service | Using the Selection Provider Service]] for more details about the selection service and .
32897d73 2767
73844f9c 2768=== Used TMF Features ===
32897d73 2769
73844f9c
PT
2770The reference implementation uses the following features of TMF:
2771*TMF Experiment and Trace for accessing traces
2772*Event Request Framework to request TMF events from the experiment and respective traces
2773*Signal Framework for broadcasting and receiving TMF signals for synchronization purposes
32897d73 2774
73844f9c 2775==== TMF Experiment and Trace for accessing traces ====
32897d73 2776
73844f9c 2777The reference loader uses TMF Experiments to access traces and to request data from the traces.
32897d73 2778
73844f9c 2779==== TMF Event Request Framework ====
32897d73 2780
73844f9c 2781The reference loader use the TMF Event Request Framework to request events from the experiment and its traces.
32897d73 2782
b23631ef 2783When opening a trace (which is triggered by signal ''TmfTraceSelectedSignal'') or when opening the Sequence Diagram View after a trace had been opened previously, a TMF background request is initiated to index the trace and to fill in the first page of the sequence diagram. The purpose of the indexing is to store time ranges for pages with 10000 messages per page. This allows quickly to move to certain pages in a trace without having to re-parse from the beginning. The request is called indexing request.
32897d73 2784
73844f9c 2785When switching pages, the a TMF foreground event request is initiated to retrieve the corresponding events from the experiment. It uses the time range stored in the index for the respective page.
32897d73 2786
73844f9c 2787A third type of event request is issued for finding specific data across pages.
32897d73 2788
73844f9c 2789==== TMF Signal Framework ====
32897d73 2790
0c54f1fe 2791The reference loader extends the class ''TmfComponent''. By doing that the loader is registered as a TMF signal handler for sending and receiving TMF signals. The loader implements signal handlers for the following TMF signals:
73844f9c
PT
2792*''TmfTraceSelectedSignal''
2793This signal indicates that a trace or experiment was selected. When receiving this signal the indexing request is initiated and the first page is displayed after receiving the relevant information.
0c54f1fe 2794*''TmfTraceClosedSignal''
73844f9c
PT
2795This signal indicates that a trace or experiment was closed. When receiving this signal the loader resets its data and a blank page is loaded in the Sequence Diagram View.
2796*''TmfTimeSynchSignal''
0c54f1fe 2797This signal is used to indicate that a new time or time range has been selected. It contains a begin and end time. If a single time is selected then the begin and end time are the same. When receiving this signal the corresponding message matching the begin time is selected in the Sequence Diagram View. If necessary, the page is changed.
73844f9c
PT
2798*''TmfRangeSynchSignal''
2799This signal indicates that a new time range is in focus. When receiving this signal the loader loads the page which corresponds to the start time of the time range signal. The message with the start time will be in focus.
32897d73 2800
73844f9c 2801Besides acting on receiving signals, the reference loader is also sending signals. A ''TmfTimeSynchSignal'' is broadcasted with the timestamp of the message which was selected in the Sequence Diagram View. ''TmfRangeSynchSignal'' is sent when a page is changed in the Sequence Diagram View. The start timestamp of the time range sent is the timestamp of the first message. The end timestamp sent is the timestamp of the first message plus the current time range window. The current time range window is the time window that was indicated in the last received ''TmfRangeSynchSignal''.
32897d73 2802
73844f9c 2803=== Supported Traces ===
32897d73 2804
73844f9c 2805The reference implementation is able to analyze traces from a single component that traces the interaction with other components. For example, a server node could have trace information about its interaction with client nodes. The server node could be traced and then analyzed using TMF and the Sequence Diagram Framework of TMF could used to visualize the interactions with the client nodes.<br>
32897d73 2806
73844f9c 2807Note that combined traces of multiple components, that contain the trace information about the same interactions are not supported in the reference implementation!
32897d73 2808
73844f9c 2809=== Trace Format ===
32897d73 2810
b23631ef 2811The reference implementation in class ''TmfUml2SDSyncLoader'' in package ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.views.uml2sd.impl'' analyzes events from type ''ITmfEvent'' and creates events type ''ITmfSyncSequenceDiagramEvent'' if the ''ITmfEvent'' contains all relevant information information. The parsing algorithm looks like as follows:
32897d73 2812
73844f9c
PT
2813<pre>
2814 /**
2815 * @param tmfEvent Event to parse for sequence diagram event details
2816 * @return sequence diagram event if details are available else null
2817 */
2818 protected ITmfSyncSequenceDiagramEvent getSequenceDiagramEvent(ITmfEvent tmfEvent){
2819 //type = .*RECEIVE.* or .*SEND.*
2820 //content = sender:<sender name>:receiver:<receiver name>,signal:<signal name>
2821 String eventType = tmfEvent.getType().toString();
2822 if (eventType.contains(Messages.TmfUml2SDSyncLoader_EventTypeSend) || eventType.contains(Messages.TmfUml2SDSyncLoader_EventTypeReceive)) {
2823 Object sender = tmfEvent.getContent().getField(Messages.TmfUml2SDSyncLoader_FieldSender);
2824 Object receiver = tmfEvent.getContent().getField(Messages.TmfUml2SDSyncLoader_FieldReceiver);
2825 Object name = tmfEvent.getContent().getField(Messages.TmfUml2SDSyncLoader_FieldSignal);
2826 if ((sender instanceof ITmfEventField) && (receiver instanceof ITmfEventField) && (name instanceof ITmfEventField)) {
2827 ITmfSyncSequenceDiagramEvent sdEvent = new TmfSyncSequenceDiagramEvent(tmfEvent,
2828 ((ITmfEventField) sender).getValue().toString(),
2829 ((ITmfEventField) receiver).getValue().toString(),
2830 ((ITmfEventField) name).getValue().toString());
32897d73 2831
73844f9c
PT
2832 return sdEvent;
2833 }
2834 }
2835 return null;
32897d73 2836 }
32897d73
AM
2837</pre>
2838
0c54f1fe 2839The analysis looks for event type Strings containing ''SEND'' and ''RECEIVE''. If event type matches these key words, the analyzer will look for strings ''sender'', ''receiver'' and ''signal'' in the event fields of type ''ITmfEventField''. If all the data is found a sequence diagram event can be created using this information. Note that Sync Messages are assumed, which means start and end time are the same.
32897d73 2840
73844f9c 2841=== How to use the Reference Implementation ===
32897d73 2842
0c54f1fe 2843An example CTF (Common Trace Format) trace is provided that contains trace events with sequence diagram information. To download the reference trace, use the following link: [https://wiki.eclipse.org/images/3/35/ReferenceTrace.zip Reference Trace].
32897d73 2844
b23631ef 2845Run an Eclipse application with Trace Compass 0.1.0 or later installed. To open the Reference Sequence Diagram View, select '''Windows -> Show View -> Other... -> Tracing -> Sequence Diagram''' <br>
73844f9c 2846[[Image:images/ShowTmfSDView.png]]<br>
32897d73 2847
0c54f1fe 2848A blank Sequence Diagram View will open.
32897d73 2849
0c54f1fe
BH
2850Then import the reference trace to the '''Project Explorer''' using the '''Import Trace Package...''' menu option.<br>
2851[[Image:images/ImportTracePackage.png]]
2852
2853Next, open the trace by double-clicking on the trace element in the '''Project Explorer'''. The trace will be opened and the Sequence Diagram view will be filled.
73844f9c 2854[[Image:images/ReferenceSeqDiagram.png]]<br>
32897d73 2855
0c54f1fe 2856Now the reference implementation can be explored. To demonstrate the view features try the following things:
73844f9c
PT
2857*Select a message in the Sequence diagram. As result the corresponding event will be selected in the Events View.
2858*Select an event in the Events View. As result the corresponding message in the Sequence Diagram View will be selected. If necessary, the page will be changed.
2859*In the Events View, press key ''End''. As result, the Sequence Diagram view will jump to the last page.
2860*In the Events View, press key ''Home''. As result, the Sequence Diagram view will jump to the first page.
2861*In the Sequence Diagram View select the find button. Enter the expression '''REGISTER.*''', select '''Search for Interaction''' and press '''Find'''. As result the corresponding message will be selected in the Sequence Diagram and the corresponding event in the Events View will be selected. Select again '''Find''' the next occurrence of will be selected. Since the second occurrence is on a different page than the first, the corresponding page will be loaded.
2862* In the Sequence Diagram View, select menu item '''Hide Patterns...'''. Add the filter '''BALL.*''' for '''Interaction''' only and select '''OK'''. As result all messages with name ''BALL_REQUEST'' and ''BALL_REPLY'' will be hidden. To remove the filter, select menu item '''Hide Patterns...''', deselect the corresponding filter and press '''OK'''. All the messages will be shown again.<br>
2863
73844f9c 2864=== Extending the Reference Loader ===
32897d73 2865
b23631ef 2866In some case it might be necessary to change the implementation of the analysis of each ''TmfEvent'' for the generation of ''Sequence Diagram Events''. For that just extend the class ''TmfUml2SDSyncLoader'' and overwrite the method ''protected ITmfSyncSequenceDiagramEvent getSequenceDiagramEvent(ITmfEvent tmfEvent)'' with your own implementation.
32897d73 2867
73844f9c 2868= CTF Parser =
32897d73 2869
73844f9c
PT
2870== CTF Format ==
2871CTF is a format used to store traces. It is self defining, binary and made to be easy to write to.
2872Before going further, the full specification of the CTF file format can be found at http://www.efficios.com/ .
32897d73 2873
73844f9c 2874For the purpose of the reader some basic description will be given. A CTF trace typically is made of several files all in the same folder.
32897d73 2875
73844f9c
PT
2876These files can be split into two types :
2877* Metadata
2878* Event streams
32897d73 2879
73844f9c 2880=== Metadata ===
b23631ef 2881The metadata is either raw text or packetized text. It is TSDL encoded. it contains a description of the type of data in the event streams. It can grow over time if new events are added to a trace but it will never overwrite what is already there.
32897d73 2882
73844f9c
PT
2883=== Event Streams ===
2884The event streams are a file per stream per cpu. These streams are binary and packet based. The streams store events and event information (ie lost events) The event data is stored in headers and field payloads.
32897d73 2885
73844f9c 2886So if you have two streams (channels) "channel1" and "channel2" and 4 cores, you will have the following files in your trace directory: "channel1_0" , "channel1_1" , "channel1_2" , "channel1_3" , "channel2_0" , "channel2_1" , "channel2_2" & "channel2_3"
32897d73 2887
73844f9c
PT
2888== Reading a trace ==
2889In order to read a CTF trace, two steps must be done.
2890* The metadata must be read to know how to read the events.
2891* the events must be read.
32897d73 2892
b23631ef 2893The metadata is a written in a subset of the C language called TSDL. To read it, first it is depacketized (if it is not in plain text) then the raw text is parsed by an antlr grammar. The parsing is done in two phases. There is a lexer (CTFLexer.g) which separated the metatdata text into tokens. The tokens are then pattern matched using the parser (CTFParser.g) to form an AST. This AST is walked through using "IOStructGen.java" to populate streams and traces in trace parent object.
32897d73 2894
73844f9c
PT
2895When the metadata is loaded and read, the trace object will be populated with 3 items:
2896* the event definitions available per stream: a definition is a description of the datatype.
2897* the event declarations available per stream: this will save declaration creation on a per event basis. They will all be created in advance, just not populated.
2898* the beginning of a packet index.
32897d73 2899
b23631ef 2900Now all the trace readers for the event streams have everything they need to read a trace. They will each point to one file, and read the file from packet to packet. Every time the trace reader changes packet, the index is updated with the new packet's information. The readers are in a priority queue and sorted by timestamp. This ensures that the events are read in a sequential order. They are also sorted by file name so that in the eventuality that two events occur at the same time, they stay in the same order.
32897d73 2901
73844f9c 2902== Seeking in a trace ==
b23631ef 2903The reason for maintaining an index is to speed up seeks. In the case that a user wishes to seek to a certain timestamp, they just have to find the index entry that contains the timestamp, and go there to iterate in that packet until the proper event is found. this will reduce the searches time by an order of 8000 for a 256k packet size (kernel default).
32897d73 2904
73844f9c
PT
2905== Interfacing to TMF ==
2906The trace can be read easily now but the data is still awkward to extract.
32897d73 2907
73844f9c
PT
2908=== CtfLocation ===
2909A location in a given trace, it is currently the timestamp of a trace and the index of the event. The index shows for a given timestamp if it is the first second or nth element.
32897d73 2910
73844f9c
PT
2911=== CtfTmfTrace ===
2912The CtfTmfTrace is a wrapper for the standard CTF trace that allows it to perform the following actions:
2913* '''initTrace()''' create a trace
2914* '''validateTrace()''' is the trace a CTF trace?
2915* '''getLocationRatio()''' how far in the trace is my location?
2916* '''seekEvent()''' sets the cursor to a certain point in a trace.
2917* '''readNextEvent()''' reads the next event and then advances the cursor
2918* '''getTraceProperties()''' gets the 'env' structures of the metadata
2919
2920=== CtfIterator ===
2921The CtfIterator is a wrapper to the CTF file reader. It behaves like an iterator on a trace. However, it contains a file pointer and thus cannot be duplicated too often or the system will run out of file handles. To alleviate the situation, a pool of iterators is created at the very beginning and stored in the CtfTmfTrace. They can be retried by calling the GetIterator() method.
2922
2923=== CtfIteratorManager ===
2924Since each CtfIterator will have a file reader, the OS will run out of handles if too many iterators are spawned. The solution is to use the iterator manager. This will allow the user to get an iterator. If there is a context at the requested position, the manager will return that one, if not, a context will be selected at random and set to the correct location. Using random replacement minimizes contention as it will settle quickly at a new balance point.
2925
2926=== CtfTmfContext ===
2927The CtfTmfContext implements the ITmfContext type. It is the CTF equivalent of TmfContext. It has a CtfLocation and points to an iterator in the CtfTmfTrace iterator pool as well as the parent trace. it is made to be cloned easily and not affect system resources much. Contexts behave much like C file pointers (FILE*) but they can be copied until one runs out of RAM.
2928
2929=== CtfTmfTimestamp ===
2930The CtfTmfTimestamp take a CTF time (normally a long int) and outputs the time formats it as a TmfTimestamp, allowing it to be compared to other timestamps. The time is stored with the UTC offset already applied. It also features a simple toString() function that allows it to output the time in more Human readable ways: "yyyy/mm/dd/hh:mm:ss.nnnnnnnnn ns" for example. An additional feature is the getDelta() function that allows two timestamps to be substracted, showing the time difference between A and B.
2931
2932=== CtfTmfEvent ===
2933The CtfTmfEvent is an ITmfEvent that is used to wrap event declarations and event definitions from the CTF side into easier to read and parse chunks of information. It is a final class with final fields made to be newed very often without incurring performance costs. Most of the information is already available. It should be noted that one type of event can appear called "lost event" these are synthetic events that do not exist in the trace. They will not appear in other trace readers such as babeltrace.
2934
2935=== Other ===
2936There are other helper files that format given events for views, they are simpler and the architecture does not depend on them.
2937
2938=== Limitations ===
1270c4f5 2939For the moment live CTF trace reading is not supported.
32897d73 2940
fc3177d9
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2941= Event matching and trace synchronization =
2942
2943Event matching consists in taking an event from a trace and linking it to another event in a possibly different trace. The example that comes to mind is matching network packets sent from one traced machine to another traced machine. These matches can be used to synchronize traces.
2944
2945Trace synchronization consists in taking traces, taken on different machines, with a different time reference, and finding the formula to transform the timestamps of some of the traces, so that they all have the same time reference.
2946
2947== Event matching interfaces ==
2948
b23631ef 2949Here's a description of the major parts involved in event matching. These classes are all in the ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.event.matching'' package:
fc3177d9
GB
2950
2951* '''ITmfEventMatching''': Controls the event matching process
2952* '''ITmfMatchEventDefinition''': Describes how events are matched
2953* '''IMatchProcessingUnit''': Processes the matched events
2954
2955== Implementation details and how to extend it ==
2956
2957=== ITmfEventMatching interface and derived classes ===
2958
2959This interface and its default abstract implementation '''TmfEventMatching''' control the event matching itself. Their only public method is ''matchEvents''. The class needs to manage how to setup the traces, and any initialization or finalization procedures.
2960
2961The abstract class generates an event request for each trace from which events are matched and waits for the request to complete before calling the one from another trace. The ''handleData'' method from the request calls the ''matchEvent'' method that needs to be implemented in children classes.
2962
2963Class '''TmfNetworkEventMatching''' is a concrete implementation of this interface. It applies to all use cases where a ''in'' event can be matched with a ''out' event (''in'' and ''out'' can be the same event, with different data). It creates a '''TmfEventDependency''' between the source and destination events. The dependency is added to the processing unit.
2964
2965To match events requiring other mechanisms (for instance, a series of events can be matched with another series of events), one would need to implement another class either extending '''TmfEventMatching''' or implementing '''ITmfEventMatching'''. It would most probably also require a new '''ITmfMatchEventDefinition''' implementation.
2966
2967=== ITmfMatchEventDefinition interface and its derived classes ===
2968
2969These are the classes that describe how to actually match specific events together.
2970
2971The '''canMatchTrace''' method will tell if a definition is compatible with a given trace.
2972
b23631ef 2973The '''getEventKey''' method will return a key for an event that uniquely identifies this event and will match the key from another event.
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2974
2975Typically, there would be a match definition abstract class/interface per event matching type.
2976
2977The interface '''ITmfNetworkMatchDefinition''' adds the ''getDirection'' method to indicate whether this event is a ''in'' or ''out'' event to be matched with one from the opposite direction.
2978
b23631ef 2979As examples, two concrete network match definitions have been implemented in the ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.lttng2.kernel.core.event.matching'' package for two compatible methods of matching TCP packets (See the Trace Compass User Guide on ''trace synchronization'' for information on those matching methods). Each one tells which events need to be present in the metadata of a CTF trace for this matching method to be applicable. It also returns the field values from each event that will uniquely match 2 events together.
fc3177d9
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2980
2981=== IMatchProcessingUnit interface and derived classes ===
2982
b23631ef 2983While matching events is an exercise in itself, it's what to do with the match that really makes this functionality interesting. This is the job of the '''IMatchProcessingUnit''' interface.
fc3177d9
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2984
2985'''TmfEventMatches''' provides a default implementation that only stores the matches to count them. When a new match is obtained, the ''addMatch'' is called with the match and the processing unit can do whatever needs to be done with it.
2986
2987A match processing unit can be an analysis in itself. For example, trace synchronization is done through such a processing unit. One just needs to set the processing unit in the TmfEventMatching constructor.
2988
2989== Code examples ==
2990
2991=== Using network packets matching in an analysis ===
2992
2993This example shows how one can create a processing unit inline to create a link between two events. In this example, the code already uses an event request, so there is no need here to call the ''matchEvents'' method, that will only create another request.
2994
2995<pre>
2996class MyAnalysis extends TmfAbstractAnalysisModule {
2997
2998 private TmfNetworkEventMatching tcpMatching;
2999
3000 ...
3001
3002 protected void executeAnalysis() {
3003
3004 IMatchProcessingUnit matchProcessing = new IMatchProcessingUnit() {
3005 @Override
3006 public void matchingEnded() {
3007 }
3008
3009 @Override
3010 public void init(ITmfTrace[] fTraces) {
3011 }
3012
3013 @Override
3014 public int countMatches() {
3015 return 0;
3016 }
3017
3018 @Override
3019 public void addMatch(TmfEventDependency match) {
3020 log.debug("we got a tcp match! " + match.getSourceEvent().getContent() + " " + match.getDestinationEvent().getContent());
3021 TmfEvent source = match.getSourceEvent();
3022 TmfEvent destination = match.getDestinationEvent();
3023 /* Create a link between the two events */
3024 }
3025 };
3026
3027 ITmfTrace[] traces = { getTrace() };
3028 tcpMatching = new TmfNetworkEventMatching(traces, matchProcessing);
3029 tcpMatching.initMatching();
3030
3031 MyEventRequest request = new MyEventRequest(this, i);
3032 getTrace().sendRequest(request);
3033 }
3034
3035 public void analyzeEvent(TmfEvent event) {
3036 ...
3037 tcpMatching.matchEvent(event, 0);
3038 ...
3039 }
3040
3041 ...
3042
3043}
3044
3045class MyEventRequest extends TmfEventRequest {
3046
3047 private final MyAnalysis analysis;
3048
3049 MyEventRequest(MyAnalysis analysis, int traceno) {
3050 super(CtfTmfEvent.class,
3051 TmfTimeRange.ETERNITY,
3052 0,
3053 TmfDataRequest.ALL_DATA,
3054 ITmfDataRequest.ExecutionType.FOREGROUND);
3055 this.analysis = analysis;
3056 }
3057
3058 @Override
3059 public void handleData(final ITmfEvent event) {
3060 super.handleData(event);
3061 if (event != null) {
3062 analysis.analyzeEvent(event);
3063 }
3064 }
3065}
3066</pre>
3067
3068=== Match network events from UST traces ===
3069
3070Suppose a client-server application is instrumented using LTTng-UST. Traces are collected on the server and some clients on different machines. The traces can be synchronized using network event matching.
3071
3072The following metadata describes the events:
3073
3074<pre>
3075 event {
3076 name = "myapp:send";
3077 id = 0;
3078 stream_id = 0;
3079 loglevel = 13;
3080 fields := struct {
3081 integer { size = 32; align = 8; signed = 1; encoding = none; base = 10; } _sendto;
3082 integer { size = 64; align = 8; signed = 1; encoding = none; base = 10; } _messageid;
3083 integer { size = 64; align = 8; signed = 1; encoding = none; base = 10; } _data;
3084 };
3085 };
3086
3087 event {
3088 name = "myapp:receive";
3089 id = 1;
3090 stream_id = 0;
3091 loglevel = 13;
3092 fields := struct {
3093 integer { size = 32; align = 8; signed = 1; encoding = none; base = 10; } _from;
3094 integer { size = 64; align = 8; signed = 1; encoding = none; base = 10; } _messageid;
3095 integer { size = 64; align = 8; signed = 1; encoding = none; base = 10; } _data;
3096 };
3097 };
3098</pre>
3099
3100One would need to write an event match definition for those 2 events as follows:
3101
3102<pre>
3103public class MyAppUstEventMatching implements ITmfNetworkMatchDefinition {
3104
3105 @Override
3106 public Direction getDirection(ITmfEvent event) {
3107 String evname = event.getType().getName();
3108 if (evname.equals("myapp:receive")) {
3109 return Direction.IN;
3110 } else if (evname.equals("myapp:send")) {
3111 return Direction.OUT;
3112 }
3113 return null;
3114 }
3115
3116 @Override
b23631ef
MAL
3117 public IEventMatchingKey getEventKey(ITmfEvent event) {
3118 IEventMatchingKey key;
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3119
3120 if (evname.equals("myapp:receive")) {
b23631ef
MAL
3121 key = new MyEventMatchingKey(event.getContent().getField("from").getValue(),
3122 event.getContent().getField("messageid").getValue());
fc3177d9 3123 } else {
b23631ef
MAL
3124 key = new MyEventMatchingKey(event.getContent().getField("sendto").getValue(),
3125 event.getContent().getField("messageid").getValue());
fc3177d9
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3126 }
3127
b23631ef 3128 return key;
fc3177d9
GB
3129 }
3130
3131 @Override
3132 public boolean canMatchTrace(ITmfTrace trace) {
3133 if (!(trace instanceof CtfTmfTrace)) {
3134 return false;
3135 }
3136 CtfTmfTrace ktrace = (CtfTmfTrace) trace;
3137 String[] events = { "myapp:receive", "myapp:send" };
3138 return ktrace.hasAtLeastOneOfEvents(events);
3139 }
3140
3141 @Override
3142 public MatchingType[] getApplicableMatchingTypes() {
3143 MatchingType[] types = { MatchingType.NETWORK };
3144 return types;
3145 }
3146
3147}
3148</pre>
3149
3150Somewhere in code that will be executed at the start of the plugin (like in the Activator), the following code will have to be run:
3151
3152<pre>
3153TmfEventMatching.registerMatchObject(new MyAppUstEventMatching());
3154</pre>
3155
3156Now, only adding the traces in an experiment and clicking the '''Synchronize traces''' menu element would synchronize the traces using the new definition for event matching.
3157
3158== Trace synchronization ==
3159
b23631ef 3160Trace synchronization classes and interfaces are located in the ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core.synchronization'' package.
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3161
3162=== Synchronization algorithm ===
3163
3164Synchronization algorithms are used to synchronize traces from events matched between traces. After synchronization, traces taken on different machines with different time references see their timestamps modified such that they all use the same time reference (typically, the time of at least one of the traces). With traces from different machines, it is impossible to have perfect synchronization, so the result is a best approximation that takes network latency into account.
3165
3166The abstract class '''SynchronizationAlgorithm''' is a processing unit for matches. New synchronization algorithms must extend this one, it already contains the functions to get the timestamp transforms for different traces.
3167
3168The ''fully incremental convex hull'' synchronization algorithm is the default synchronization algorithm.
3169
3170While the synchronization system provisions for more synchronization algorithms, there is not yet a way to select one, the experiment's trace synchronization uses the default algorithm. To test a new synchronization algorithm, the synchronization should be called directly like this:
3171
3172<pre>
3173SynchronizationAlgorithm syncAlgo = new MyNewSynchronizationAlgorithm();
3174syncAlgo = SynchronizationManager.synchronizeTraces(syncFile, traces, syncAlgo, true);
3175</pre>
3176
3177=== Timestamp transforms ===
3178
3179Timestamp transforms are the formulae used to transform the timestamps from a trace into the reference time. The '''ITmfTimestampTransform''' is the interface to implement to add a new transform.
3180
3181The following classes implement this interface:
3182
3183* '''TmfTimestampTransform''': default transform. It cannot be instantiated, it has a single static object TmfTimestampTransform.IDENTITY, which returns the original timestamp.
3184* '''TmfTimestampTransformLinear''': transforms the timestamp using a linear formula: ''f(t) = at + b'', where ''a'' and ''b'' are computed by the synchronization algorithm.
3185
3186One could extend the interface for other timestamp transforms, for instance to have a transform where the formula would change over the course of the trace.
3187
3188== Todo ==
3189
3190Here's a list of features not yet implemented that would enhance trace synchronization and event matching:
3191
3192* Ability to select a synchronization algorithm
3193* Implement a better way to select the reference trace instead of arbitrarily taking the first in alphabetical order (for instance, the minimum spanning tree algorithm by Masoume Jabbarifar (article on the subject not published yet))
3194* Ability to join traces from the same host so that even if one of the traces is not synchronized with the reference trace, it will take the same timestamp transform as the one on the same machine.
3195* Instead of having the timestamp transforms per trace, have the timestamp transform as part of an experiment context, so that the trace's specific analysis, like the state system, are in the original trace, but are transformed only when needed for an experiment analysis.
3196* Add more views to display the synchronization information (only textual statistics are available for now)
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3197
3198= Analysis Framework =
3199
3200Analysis modules are useful to tell the user exactly what can be done with a trace. The analysis framework provides an easy way to access and execute the modules and open the various outputs available.
3201
3202Analyses can have parameters they can use in their code. They also have outputs registered to them to display the results from their execution.
3203
3204== Creating a new module ==
3205
3206All analysis modules must implement the '''IAnalysisModule''' interface from the o.e.l.tmf.core project. An abstract class, '''TmfAbstractAnalysisModule''', provides a good base implementation. It is strongly suggested to use it as a superclass of any new analysis.
3207
3208=== Example ===
3209
b23631ef 3210This example shows how to add a simple analysis module for an LTTng kernel trace with two parameters. It also specifies two mandatory events by overriding '''getAnalysisRequirements'''. The analysis requirements are further explained in the section [[#Providing requirements to analyses]].
42f1f820
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3211
3212<pre>
3213public class MyLttngKernelAnalysis extends TmfAbstractAnalysisModule {
3214
3215 public static final String PARAM1 = "myparam";
3216 public static final String PARAM2 = "myotherparam";
3217
3218 @Override
b23631ef
MAL
3219 public Iterable<TmfAnalysisRequirement> getAnalysisRequirements() {
3220
ae3fb471
BH
3221 // initialize the requirement: events
3222 Set<@NonNull String> requiredEvents = ImmutableSet.of("sched_switch", "sched_wakeup");
3223 TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement eventsReq = new TmfAnalysisEventRequirement(requiredEvents, PriorityLevel.MANDATORY);
42f1f820 3224
ae3fb471 3225 return ImmutableList.of(eventsReq);
42f1f820
GB
3226 }
3227
3228 @Override
3229 protected void canceling() {
3230 /* The job I am running in is being cancelled, let's clean up */
3231 }
3232
3233 @Override
3234 protected boolean executeAnalysis(final IProgressMonitor monitor) {
3235 /*
3236 * I am running in an Eclipse job, and I already know I can execute
3237 * on a given trace.
3238 *
3239 * In the end, I will return true if I was successfully completed or
3240 * false if I was either interrupted or something wrong occurred.
3241 */
3242 Object param1 = getParameter(PARAM1);
3243 int param2 = (Integer) getParameter(PARAM2);
3244 }
3245
3246 @Override
3247 public Object getParameter(String name) {
3248 Object value = super.getParameter(name);
3249 /* Make sure the value of param2 is of the right type. For sake of
3250 simplicity, the full parameter format validation is not presented
3251 here */
3252 if ((value != null) && name.equals(PARAM2) && (value instanceof String)) {
3253 return Integer.parseInt((String) value);
3254 }
3255 return value;
3256 }
3257
3258}
3259</pre>
3260
3261=== Available base analysis classes and interfaces ===
3262
3263The following are available as base classes for analysis modules. They also extend the abstract '''TmfAbstractAnalysisModule'''
3264
3265* '''TmfStateSystemAnalysisModule''': A base analysis module that builds one state system. A module extending this class only needs to provide a state provider and the type of state system backend to use. All state systems should now use this base class as it also contains all the methods to actually create the state sytem with a given backend.
3266
3267The following interfaces can optionally be implemented by analysis modules if they use their functionalities. For instance, some utility views, like the State System Explorer, may have access to the module's data through these interfaces.
3268
3269* '''ITmfAnalysisModuleWithStateSystems''': Modules implementing this have one or more state systems included in them. For example, a module may "hide" 2 state system modules for its internal workings. By implementing this interface, it tells that it has state systems and can return them if required.
3270
3271=== How it works ===
3272
3273Analyses are managed through the '''TmfAnalysisManager'''. The analysis manager is a singleton in the application and keeps track of all available analysis modules, with the help of '''IAnalysisModuleHelper'''. It can be queried to get the available analysis modules, either all of them or only those for a given tracetype. The helpers contain the non-trace specific information on an analysis module: its id, its name, the tracetypes it applies to, etc.
3274
3275When a trace is opened, the helpers for the applicable analysis create new instances of the analysis modules. The analysis are then kept in a field of the trace and can be executed automatically or on demand.
3276
3277The analysis is executed by calling the '''IAnalysisModule#schedule()''' method. This method makes sure the analysis is executed only once and, if it is already running, it won't start again. The analysis itself is run inside an Eclipse job that can be cancelled by the user or the application. The developer must consider the progress monitor that comes as a parameter of the '''executeAnalysis()''' method, to handle the proper cancellation of the processing. The '''IAnalysisModule#waitForCompletion()''' method will block the calling thread until the analysis is completed. The method will return whether the analysis was successfully completed or if it was cancelled.
3278
3279A running analysis can be cancelled by calling the '''IAnalysisModule#cancel()''' method. This will set the analysis as done, so it cannot start again unless it is explicitly reset. This is done by calling the protected method '''resetAnalysis'''.
3280
3281== Telling TMF about the analysis module ==
3282
3283Now that the analysis module class exists, it is time to hook it to the rest of TMF so that it appears under the traces in the project explorer. The way to do so is to add an extension of type ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.analysis'' to a plugin, either through the ''Extensions'' tab of the Plug-in Manifest Editor or by editing directly the plugin.xml file.
3284
3285The following code shows what the resulting plugin.xml file should look like.
3286
3287<pre>
3288<extension
3289 point="org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.analysis">
3290 <module
3291 id="my.lttng.kernel.analysis.id"
3292 name="My LTTng Kernel Analysis"
3293 analysis_module="my.plugin.package.MyLttngKernelAnalysis"
3294 automatic="true">
3295 <parameter
3296 name="myparam">
3297 </parameter>
3298 <parameter
3299 default_value="3"
3300 name="myotherparam">
3301 <tracetype
b23631ef 3302 class="org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.core.trace.LttngKernelTrace">
42f1f820
GB
3303 </tracetype>
3304 </module>
3305</extension>
3306</pre>
3307
3308This defines an analysis module where the ''analysis_module'' attribute corresponds to the module class and must implement IAnalysisModule. This module has 2 parameters: ''myparam'' and ''myotherparam'' which has default value of 3. The ''tracetype'' element tells which tracetypes this analysis applies to. There can be many tracetypes. Also, the ''automatic'' attribute of the module indicates whether this analysis should be run when the trace is opened, or wait for the user's explicit request.
3309
3310Note that with these extension points, it is possible to use the same module class for more than one analysis (with different ids and names). That is a desirable behavior. For instance, a third party plugin may add a new tracetype different from the one the module is meant for, but on which the analysis can run. Also, different analyses could provide different results with the same module class but with different default values of parameters.
3311
3312== Attaching outputs and views to the analysis module ==
3313
3314Analyses will typically produce outputs the user can examine. Outputs can be a text dump, a .dot file, an XML file, a view, etc. All output types must implement the '''IAnalysisOutput''' interface.
3315
0c043a90 3316An output can be registered to an analysis module at any moment by calling the '''IAnalysisModule#registerOutput()''' method. Analyses themselves may know what outputs are available and may register them in the analysis constructor or after analysis completion.
42f1f820
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3317
3318The various concrete output types are:
3319
3320* '''TmfAnalysisViewOutput''': It takes a view ID as parameter and, when selected, opens the view.
3321
0c043a90
GB
3322=== Using the extension point to add outputs ===
3323
3324Analysis outputs can also be hooked to an analysis using the same extension point ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.analysis'' in the plugin.xml file. Outputs can be matched either to a specific analysis identified by an ID, or to all analysis modules extending or implementing a given class or interface.
3325
3326The following code shows how to add a view output to the analysis defined above directly in the plugin.xml file. This extension does not have to be in the same plugin as the extension defining the analysis. Typically, an analysis module can be defined in a core plugin, along with some outputs that do not require UI elements. Other outputs, like views, who need UI elements, will be defined in a ui plugin.
3327
3328<pre>
3329<extension
3330 point="org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.analysis">
3331 <output
b23631ef 3332 class="org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.analysis.TmfAnalysisViewOutput"
0c043a90
GB
3333 id="my.plugin.package.ui.views.myView">
3334 <analysisId
3335 id="my.lttng.kernel.analysis.id">
3336 </analysisId>
3337 </output>
3338 <output
b23631ef 3339 class="org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui.analysis.TmfAnalysisViewOutput"
0c043a90
GB
3340 id="my.plugin.package.ui.views.myMoreGenericView">
3341 <analysisModuleClass
3342 class="my.plugin.package.core.MyAnalysisModuleClass">
3343 </analysisModuleClass>
3344 </output>
3345</extension>
3346</pre>
3347
42f1f820
GB
3348== Providing help for the module ==
3349
3350For now, the only way to provide a meaningful help message to the user is by overriding the '''IAnalysisModule#getHelpText()''' method and return a string that will be displayed in a message box.
3351
3352What still needs to be implemented is for a way to add a full user/developer documentation with mediawiki text file for each module and automatically add it to Eclipse Help. Clicking on the Help menu item of an analysis module would open the corresponding page in the help.
3353
3354== Using analysis parameter providers ==
3355
3356An analysis may have parameters that can be used during its execution. Default values can be set when describing the analysis module in the plugin.xml file, or they can use the '''IAnalysisParameterProvider''' interface to provide values for parameters. '''TmfAbstractAnalysisParamProvider''' provides an abstract implementation of this interface, that automatically notifies the module of a parameter change.
3357
3358=== Example parameter provider ===
3359
3360The following example shows how to have a parameter provider listen to a selection in the LTTng kernel Control Flow view and send the thread id to the analysis.
3361
3362<pre>
3363public class MyLttngKernelParameterProvider extends TmfAbstractAnalysisParamProvider {
3364
3365 private ControlFlowEntry fCurrentEntry = null;
3366
3367 private static final String NAME = "My Lttng kernel parameter provider"; //$NON-NLS-1$
3368
3369 private ISelectionListener selListener = new ISelectionListener() {
3370 @Override
3371 public void selectionChanged(IWorkbenchPart part, ISelection selection) {
3372 if (selection instanceof IStructuredSelection) {
3373 Object element = ((IStructuredSelection) selection).getFirstElement();
3374 if (element instanceof ControlFlowEntry) {
3375 ControlFlowEntry entry = (ControlFlowEntry) element;
3376 setCurrentThreadEntry(entry);
3377 }
3378 }
3379 }
3380 };
3381
3382 /*
3383 * Constructor
3384 */
b23631ef 3385 public MyLttngKernelParameterProvider() {
42f1f820
GB
3386 super();
3387 registerListener();
3388 }
3389
3390 @Override
3391 public String getName() {
3392 return NAME;
3393 }
3394
3395 @Override
3396 public Object getParameter(String name) {
3397 if (fCurrentEntry == null) {
3398 return null;
3399 }
3400 if (name.equals(MyLttngKernelAnalysis.PARAM1)) {
b23631ef 3401 return fCurrentEntry.getThreadId();
42f1f820
GB
3402 }
3403 return null;
3404 }
3405
3406 @Override
3407 public boolean appliesToTrace(ITmfTrace trace) {
3408 return (trace instanceof LttngKernelTrace);
3409 }
3410
3411 private void setCurrentThreadEntry(ControlFlowEntry entry) {
3412 if (!entry.equals(fCurrentEntry)) {
3413 fCurrentEntry = entry;
3414 this.notifyParameterChanged(MyLttngKernelAnalysis.PARAM1);
3415 }
3416 }
3417
3418 private void registerListener() {
3419 final IWorkbench wb = PlatformUI.getWorkbench();
3420
3421 final IWorkbenchPage activePage = wb.getActiveWorkbenchWindow().getActivePage();
3422
3423 /* Add the listener to the control flow view */
3424 view = activePage.findView(ControlFlowView.ID);
3425 if (view != null) {
3426 view.getSite().getWorkbenchWindow().getSelectionService().addPostSelectionListener(selListener);
3427 view.getSite().getWorkbenchWindow().getPartService().addPartListener(partListener);
3428 }
3429 }
3430
3431}
3432</pre>
3433
3434=== Register the parameter provider to the analysis ===
3435
3436To have the parameter provider class register to analysis modules, it must first register through the analysis manager. It can be done in a plugin's activator as follows:
3437
3438<pre>
3439@Override
3440public void start(BundleContext context) throws Exception {
3441 /* ... */
3442 TmfAnalysisManager.registerParameterProvider("my.lttng.kernel.analysis.id", MyLttngKernelParameterProvider.class)
3443}
3444</pre>
3445
3446where '''MyLttngKernelParameterProvider''' will be registered to analysis ''"my.lttng.kernel.analysis.id"''. When the analysis module is created, the new module will register automatically to the singleton parameter provider instance. Only one module is registered to a parameter provider at a given time, the one corresponding to the currently selected trace.
3447
b1de2f7d
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3448== Providing requirements to analyses ==
3449
3450=== Analysis requirement provider API ===
3451
ae3fb471 3452A requirement defines the needs of an analysis. For example, an analysis could need an event named ''"sched_switch"'' in order to be properly executed. The requirements are represented by extending the class '''TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement'''. Since '''IAnalysisModule''' extends the '''IAnalysisRequirementProvider''' interface, all analysis modules must provide their requirements. If the analysis module extends '''TmfAbstractAnalysisModule''', it has the choice between overriding the requirements getter ('''IAnalysisRequirementProvider#getAnalysisRequirements()''') or not, since the abstract class returns an empty collection by default (no requirements).
b1de2f7d
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3453
3454=== Requirement values ===
3455
930f102b
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3456Each concrete analysis requirement class will define how a requirement is verified on a given trace.
3457When creating a requirement, the developer will specify a set of values for that class.
3458With an 'event' type requirement, a trace generator like the LTTng Control could automatically
3459enable the required events.
3460Another point we have to take into consideration is the priority level when creating a requirement object.
ae3fb471
BH
3461The enum '''TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement#PriorityLevel''' gives the choice
3462between '''PriorityLevel#OPTIONAL''', '''PriorityLevel#ALL_OR_NOTHING''',
3463'''PriorityLevel#AT_LEAST_ONE''' or '''PriorityLevel#MANDATORY'''. That way, we
3464can tell if an analysis can run without a value or not.
3465
3466
930f102b
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3467To create a requirement one has the choice to extend the abstract class
3468'''TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement''' or use the existing implementations:
3469'''TmfAnalysisEventRequirement''' (will verify the presence of events identified by name),
3470'''TmfAnalysisEventFieldRequirement''' (will verify the presence of fields for some or all events) or
3471'''TmfCompositeAnalysisRequirement''' (join requirements together with one of the priority levels).
b1de2f7d
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3472
3473Moreover, information can be added to requirements. That way, the developer can explicitly give help details at the requirement level instead of at the analysis level (which would just be a general help text). To add information to a requirement, the method '''TmfAnalysisRequirement#addInformation()''' must be called. Adding information is not mandatory.
3474
3475=== Example of providing requirements ===
3476
ae3fb471
BH
3477In this example, we will implement a method that initializes a requirement object
3478and return it in the '''IAnalysisRequirementProvider#getAnalysisRequirements()'''
3479getter. The example method will return a set with three requirements.
3480The first one will indicate a mandatory event needed by a specific analysis,
3481the second one will tell an optional event name and the third will indicate
3482mandatory event fields for the given event type.
3483
3484Note that in LTTng event contexts are considered as event fields. Using the
3485'''TmfAnalysisEventFieldRequirement''' it's possible to define requirements
3486on event contexts (see 3rd requirement in example below).
b1de2f7d
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3487
3488<pre>
ae3fb471
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3489 @Override
3490 public @NonNull Iterable<@NonNull TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement> getAnalysisRequirements() {
b1de2f7d 3491
ae3fb471
BH
3492 /* Requirement on event name */
3493 Set<@NonNull String> requiredEvents = ImmutableSet.of("sched_wakeup");
3494 TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement eventsReq1 = new TmfAnalysisEventRequirement(requiredEvents, PriorityLevel.MANDATORY);
b1de2f7d 3495
ae3fb471
BH
3496 requiredEvents = ImmutableSet.of("sched_switch");
3497 TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement eventsReq2 = new TmfAnalysisEventRequirement(requiredEvents, PriorityLevel.OPTIONAL);
b1de2f7d 3498
ae3fb471
BH
3499 /* An information about the events */
3500 eventsReq2.addInformation("The event sched_wakeup is optional because it's not properly handled by this analysis yet.");
b1de2f7d 3501
ae3fb471
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3502 /* Requirement on event fields */
3503 Set<@NonNull String> requiredEventFields = ImmutableSet.of("context._procname", "context._ip");
930f102b 3504 TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement eventFieldRequirement = new TmfAnalysisEventFieldRequirement(
ae3fb471
BH
3505 "event name",
3506 requiredEventFields,
3507 PriorityLevel.MANDATORY);
b1de2f7d 3508
930f102b 3509 Set<TmfAbstractAnalysisRequirement> requirements = ImmutableSet.of(eventsReq1, eventsReq2, eventFieldRequirement);
ae3fb471
BH
3510 return requirements;
3511 }
b1de2f7d
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3512</pre>
3513
3514
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3515== TODO ==
3516
3517Here's a list of features not yet implemented that would improve the analysis module user experience:
3518
3519* Implement help using the Eclipse Help facility (without forgetting an eventual command line request)
3520* The abstract class '''TmfAbstractAnalysisModule''' executes an analysis as a job, but nothing compels a developer to do so for an analysis implementing the '''IAnalysisModule''' interface. We should force the execution of the analysis as a job, either from the trace itself or using the TmfAnalysisManager or by some other mean.
3521* Views and outputs are often registered by the analysis themselves (forcing them often to be in the .ui packages because of the views), because there is no other easy way to do so. We should extend the analysis extension point so that .ui plugins or other third-party plugins can add outputs to a given analysis that resides in the core.
3522* Improve the user experience with the analysis:
3523** Allow the user to select which analyses should be available, per trace or per project.
3524** Allow the user to view all available analyses even though he has no imported traces.
3525** Allow the user to generate traces for a given analysis, or generate a template to generate the trace that can be sent as parameter to the tracer.
3526** Give the user a visual status of the analysis: not executed, in progress, completed, error.
3527** Give a small screenshot of the output as icon for it.
3528** Allow to specify parameter values from the GUI.
b1de2f7d
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3529* Add the possibility for an analysis requirement to be composed of another requirement.
3530* Generate a trace session from analysis requirements.
a59835d4 3531
8542f7a5
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3532= TMF Remote API =
3533The TMF remote API is based on the remote services implementation of the Eclipse PTP project. It comes with a built-in SSH implementation based JSch as well as with support for a local connection. The purpose of this API is to provide a programming interface to the PTP remote services implementation for connection handling, command-line execution and file transfer handling. It provides utility functions to simplify repetitive tasks.
3534
3535The TMF Remote API can be used for remote trace control, fetching of traces from a remote host into the Eclipse Tracing project or uploading files to the remote host. For example, the LTTng tracer control feature uses the TMF remote API to control an LTTng host remotely and to download corresponding traces.
3536
3537In the following chapters the relevant classes and features of the TMF remote API is described.
3538
3539== Prerequisites ==
3540
3541To use the TMF remote API one has to add the relevant plug-in dependencies to a plug-in project. To create a plug-in project see chapter [[#Creating an Eclipse UI Plug-in]].
3542
3543To add plug-in dependencies double-click on the MANIFEST.MF file. Change to the Dependencies tab and select '''Add...''' of the ''Required Plug-ins'' section. A new dialog box will open. Next find plug-in ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.remote.core'' and press '''OK'''. Follow the same steps, add ''org.eclipse.remote.core''. If UI elements are needed in the plug-in also add ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.remote.ui'' and ''org.eclipse.remote.ui''.
3544
3545== TmfRemoteConnectionFactory ==
3546This class is a utility class for creating ''IRemoteConnection'' instances of PTP programatically. It also provides access methods to the OSGI remote services of PTP.
3547
3548=== Accessing the remote services manager (OSGI service) ===
3549The main entry point into the PTP remote services system is the ''IRemoteServicesManager'' OSGI service. It provides a list of connection types and the global list of all connections.
3550
3551To access an OSGI service, use the method '''getService()''' of the '''TmfRemoteConnectionFactory''' class:
3552
3553<pre>
3554IRemoteServicesManager manager = TmfRemoteConnectionFactory.getService(IRemoteServicesManager.class);
3555</pre>
3556
3557=== Obtaining a IRemoteConnection ===
3558To obtain an '''IRemoteConnection''' instance use the method '''TmfRemoteConnectionFactory.getRemoteConnection(String remoteServicesId, String name)''', where ''remoteServicesId'' is the ID of service ID for the connection, and ''name'' the name of the connection. For built-in SSH the ''remoteServicesId'' is "org.eclipse.remote.JSch".
3559
3560<pre>
3561IRemoteConnection connection = TmfRemoteConnectionFactory.getRemoteConnection("org.eclipse.remote.JSch", "My Connection");
3562</pre>
3563
3564Note that the connection needs to be created beforehand using the Remote Connection wizard implementation ('''Window -> Preferences -> Remote Development -> Remote Connection''') in the Eclipse application that executes this plug-in. For more information about creating connections using the Remote Connections feature of PTP refer to [http://help.eclipse.org/luna/index.jsp?topic=%2Forg.eclipse.ptp.doc.user%2Fhtml%2FremoteTools.html&anchor=remote link]. Alternatively it can be created programmatically using the corresponding API of TMF ([[#Creating an IRemoteConnection instance]]).
3565
3566To obtain an '''IRemoteConnection''' instance use method '''TmfRemoteConnectionFactory.getLocalConnection()'''.
3567<pre>
3568IRemoteConnection connection = TmfRemoteConnectionFactory.getLocalConnection();
3569</pre>
3570
3571=== Creating an IRemoteConnection instance ===
3572It is possible to create an '''IRemoteConnection''' instance programmatically using the '''TmfRemoteConnectionFactory'''. Right now only build-in SSH or Local connection is supported.
3573
3574To create an '''IRemoteConnection''' instance use the method '''createConnection(URI hostURI, String name)''' of class '''TmfRemoteConnectionFactory''', where ''hostURI'' is the URI of the remote connection, and ''name'' the name of the connection. For a built-in SSH use:
3575<pre>
3576import org.eclipse.remote.core.IRemoteConnection;
3577...
3578 try {
3579 URI hostUri = URIUtil.fromString("ssh://userID@127.0.0.1:22");
3580 IRemoteConnection connection = TmfRemoteConnectionFactory.createConnection(hostUri, "MyHost");
3581 } catch (URISyntaxException e) {
3582 return new Status(IStatus.ERROR, "my.plugin.id", "URI syntax error", e);
3583 } catch (RemoteConnectionException e) {
3584 return new Status(IStatus.ERROR, "my.plugin.id", "Connection cannot be created", e);
3585 }
3586...
3587</pre>
3588
3589Note that if a connection already exists with the given name then this connection will be returned.
3590
3591=== Providing a connection factory ===
3592Right now only build-in SSH or Local connection of PTP is supported. If one wants to provide another connection factory with a different remote service implementation use the interface '''IConnectionFactory''' to implement a new connection factory class. Then, register the new factory to '''TmfRemoteConnectionFactory''' using method '''registerConnectionFactory(String connectionTypeId, IConnectionFactory factory)''', where ''connectionTypeId'' is a unique ID and ''factory'' is the corresponding connection factory implementation.
3593
3594== RemoteSystemProxy ==
3595The purpose of the RemoteSystemProxy is to handle the connection state of '''IRemoteConnection''' (connect/disconnect). Before opening a connection it checks if the connection had been open previously. If it was open, disconnecting the proxy will not close the connection. This is useful if multiple components using the same connection at the same time for different features (e.g. Tracer Control and remote fetching of traces) without impacting each other.
3596
3597=== Creating a RemoteSystemProxy ===
3598Once one has an '''IRemoteConnection''' instance a '''RemoteSystemProxy''' can be constructed by:
3599<pre>
3600// Get local connection (for example)
3601IRemoteConnection connection = TmfRemoteConnectionFactory.getLocalConnection();
3602RemoteSystemProxy proxy = new RemoteSystemProxy(connection);
3603</pre>
3604
3605=== Opening the remote connection ===
3606To open the connection call method '''connect()''':
3607<pre>
3608 proxy.connect();
3609</pre>
3610
3611This will open the connection. If the connection has been previously opened then it will immediately return.
3612
3613=== Closing the remote connection ===
3614To close the connection call method '''disconnect()''':
3615<pre>
3616 proxy.disconnect();
3617</pre>
3618
3619Note: This will close the connection if the connection was opened by this proxy. Otherwise it will stay open.
3620
3621=== Disposing the remote connection ===
3622If a remote system proxy is not needed anymore the proxy instance needs to be disposed by calling method '''dispose()'''. This may close the connection if the connection was opened by this proxy. Otherwise it will stay open.
3623
3624<pre>
3625 proxy.dispose();
3626</pre>
3627
3628=== Checking the connection state ===
3629
3630To check the connection state use method '''isConnected()''' of the '''RemoteSystemProxy''' class.
3631
3632<pre>
3633 if (proxy.isConnected()) {
3634 // do something
3635 }
3636</pre>
3637
3638
3639=== Retrieving the IRemoteConnection instance ===
3640To retrieve the '''IRemoteConnection''' instance use the '''getRemoteConnection()''' method of the '''RemoteSystemProxy''' class. Using this instance relevant features of the remote connection implementation can be accessed, for example remote file service ('''IRemoteFileService''') or remote process service ('''IRemoteProcessService''').
3641
3642<pre>
3643import org.eclipse.remote.core.IRemoteConnection;
3644import org.eclipse.remote.core.IRemoteFileService;
3645...
3646 IRemoteRemoteConnection connection = proxy.getRemoteConnection();
3647 IRemoteFileService fileService = connection.getService(IRemoteFileService.class);
3648 if (fileService != null) {
3649 // do something (e.g. download or upload a file)
3650 }
3651</pre>
3652
3653<pre>
3654import org.eclipse.remote.core.IRemoteConnection;
3655import org.eclipse.remote.core.IRemoteFileService;
3656...
3657 IRemoteRemoteConnection connection = proxy.getRemoteConnection();
3658 IRemoteFileService processService = connection.getService(IRemoteProcessService.class);
3659 if (processService != null) {
3660 // do something (e.g. execute command)
3661 }
3662</pre>
3663
3664=== Obtaining a command shell ===
3665The TMF remote API provides a Command shell implementation to execute remote command-line commands. To obtain a command-line shell use the RemoteSystemProxy.
3666
3667<pre>
3668import org.eclipse.remote.core.IRemoteConnection;
3669import org.eclipse.remote.core.IRemoteFileService;
3670import org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.remote.core.shell.ICommandShell
3671...
3672 ICommandShell shell = proxy.createCommandShell();
3673 ICommandInput command = fCommandShell.createCommand();
3674 command.add("ls");
3675 command.add("-l");
3676 ICommandResult result = shell.executeCommand(command, new NullProgressMonitor);
3677 System.out.println("Return value: " result.getResult());
3678 for (String line : result.getOutput()) {
3679 System.out.println(line);
3680 }
3681 for (String line : result.getErrorOutput()) {
3682 System.err.println(line);
3683 }
3684 shell.dispose();
3685</pre>
3686
3687Note that the shell needs to be disposed if not needed anymore.
3688
3689Note for creating a command with parameters using the '''CommandInput''' class, add the command and each parameter separately instead of using one single String.
a59835d4
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3690
3691= Performance Tests =
3692
3693Performance testing allows to calculate some metrics (CPU time, Memory Usage, etc) that some part of the code takes during its execution. These metrics can then be used as is for information on the system's execution, or they can be compared either with other execution scenarios, or previous runs of the same scenario, for instance, after some optimization has been done on the code.
3694
3695For automatic performance metric computation, we use the ''org.eclipse.test.performance'' plugin, provided by the Eclipse Test Feature.
3696
3697== Add performance tests ==
3698
3699=== Where ===
3700
3701Performance tests are unit tests and they are added to the corresponding unit tests plugin. To separate performance tests from unit tests, a separate source folder, typically named ''perf'', is added to the plug-in.
3702
3703Tests are to be added to a package under the ''perf'' directory, the package name would typically match the name of the package it is testing. For each package, a class named '''AllPerfTests''' would list all the performance tests classes inside this package. And like for unit tests, a class named '''AllPerfTests''' for the plug-in would list all the packages' '''AllPerfTests''' classes.
3704
b23631ef 3705When adding performance tests for the first time in a plug-in, the plug-in's '''AllPerfTests''' class should be added to the global list of performance tests, found in package ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.alltests'', in class '''RunAllPerfTests'''. This will ensure that performance tests for the plug-in are run along with the other performance tests
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3706
3707=== How ===
3708
3709TMF is using the org.eclipse.test.performance framework for performance tests. Using this, performance metrics are automatically taken and, if many runs of the tests are run, average and standard deviation are automatically computed. Results can optionally be stored to a database for later use.
3710
3711Here is an example of how to use the test framework in a performance test:
3712
3713<pre>
3714public class AnalysisBenchmark {
3715
3716 private static final String TEST_ID = "org.eclipse.linuxtools#LTTng kernel analysis";
3717 private static final CtfTmfTestTrace testTrace = CtfTmfTestTrace.TRACE2;
3718 private static final int LOOP_COUNT = 10;
3719
3720 /**
3721 * Performance test
3722 */
3723 @Test
3724 public void testTrace() {
3725 assumeTrue(testTrace.exists());
3726
3727 /** Create a new performance meter for this scenario */
3728 Performance perf = Performance.getDefault();
3729 PerformanceMeter pm = perf.createPerformanceMeter(TEST_ID);
3730
3731 /** Optionally, tag this test for summary or global summary on a given dimension */
3732 perf.tagAsSummary(pm, "LTTng Kernel Analysis", Dimension.CPU_TIME);
3733 perf.tagAsGlobalSummary(pm, "LTTng Kernel Analysis", Dimension.CPU_TIME);
3734
3735 /** The test will be run LOOP_COUNT times */
3736 for (int i = 0; i < LOOP_COUNT; i++) {
3737
3738 /** Start each run of the test with new objects to avoid different code paths */
2c7fb5af 3739 try (IAnalysisModule module = new KernelAnalysis();
a59835d4
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3740 LttngKernelTrace trace = new LttngKernelTrace()) {
3741 module.setId("test");
3742 trace.initTrace(null, testTrace.getPath(), CtfTmfEvent.class);
3743 module.setTrace(trace);
3744
3745 /** The analysis execution is being tested, so performance metrics
3746 * are taken before and after the execution */
3747 pm.start();
3748 TmfTestHelper.executeAnalysis(module);
3749 pm.stop();
3750
3751 /*
3752 * Delete the supplementary files, so next iteration rebuilds
3753 * the state system.
3754 */
3755 File suppDir = new File(TmfTraceManager.getSupplementaryFileDir(trace));
3756 for (File file : suppDir.listFiles()) {
3757 file.delete();
3758 }
3759
3760 } catch (TmfAnalysisException | TmfTraceException e) {
3761 fail(e.getMessage());
3762 }
3763 }
3764
3765 /** Once the test has been run many times, committing the results will
3766 * calculate average, standard deviation, and, if configured, save the
3767 * data to a database */
3768 pm.commit();
3769 }
3770}
3771
3772</pre>
3773
3774For more information, see [http://wiki.eclipse.org/Performance/Automated_Tests The Eclipse Performance Test How-to]
3775
3b8ab983 3776Some rules to help write performance tests are explained in section [[#ABC of performance testing | ABC of performance testing]].
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3777
3778=== Run a performance test ===
3779
3780Performance tests are unit tests, so, just like unit tests, they can be run by right-clicking on a performance test class and selecting ''Run As'' -> ''Junit Plug-in Test''.
3781
3782By default, if no database has been configured, results will be displayed in the Console at the end of the test.
3783
3784Here is the sample output from the test described in the previous section. It shows all the metrics that have been calculated during the test.
3785
3786<pre>
3787Scenario 'org.eclipse.linuxtools#LTTng kernel analysis' (average over 10 samples):
3788 System Time: 3.04s (95% in [2.77s, 3.3s]) Measurable effect: 464ms (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of mean: 94)
3789 Used Java Heap: -1.43M (95% in [-33.67M, 30.81M]) Measurable effect: 57.01M (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of stdev: 6401)
3790 Working Set: 14.43M (95% in [-966.01K, 29.81M]) Measurable effect: 27.19M (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of stdev: 6400)
3791 Elapsed Process: 3.04s (95% in [2.77s, 3.3s]) Measurable effect: 464ms (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of mean: 94)
3792 Kernel time: 621ms (95% in [586ms, 655ms]) Measurable effect: 60ms (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of mean: 39)
3793 CPU Time: 6.06s (95% in [5.02s, 7.09s]) Measurable effect: 1.83s (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of mean: 365)
3794 Hard Page Faults: 0 (95% in [0, 0]) Measurable effect: 0 (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of stdev: 6400)
3795 Soft Page Faults: 9.27K (95% in [3.28K, 15.27K]) Measurable effect: 10.6K (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of mean: 5224)
3796 Text Size: 0 (95% in [0, 0])
3797 Data Size: 0 (95% in [0, 0])
3798 Library Size: 32.5M (95% in [-12.69M, 77.69M]) Measurable effect: 79.91M (1.3 SDs) (required sample size for an effect of 5% of stdev: 6401)
3799</pre>
3800
3801Results from performance tests can be saved automatically to a derby database. Derby can be run either in embedded mode, locally on a machine, or on a server. More information on setting up derby for performance tests can be found here: [http://wiki.eclipse.org/Performance/Automated_Tests The Eclipse Performance Test How-to]. The following documentation will show how to configure an Eclipse run configuration to store results on a derby database located on a server.
3802
3803Note that to store results in a derby database, the ''org.apache.derby'' plug-in must be available within your Eclipse. Since it is an optional dependency, it is not included in the target definition. It can be installed via the '''Orbit''' repository, in ''Help'' -> ''Install new software...''. If the '''Orbit''' repository is not listed, click on the latest one from [http://download.eclipse.org/tools/orbit/downloads/] and copy the link under ''Orbit Build Repository''.
3804
3805To store the data to a database, it needs to be configured in the run configuration. In ''Run'' -> ''Run configurations..'', under ''Junit Plug-in Test'', find the run configuration that corresponds to the test you wish to run, or create one if it is not present yet.
3806
3807In the ''Arguments'' tab, in the box under ''VM Arguments'', add on separate lines the following information
3808
3809<pre>
3810-Declipse.perf.dbloc=//javaderby.dorsal.polymtl.ca
3811-Declipse.perf.config=build=mybuild;host=myhost;config=linux;jvm=1.7
3812</pre>
3813
3814The ''eclipse.perf.dbloc'' parameter is the url (or filename) of the derby database. The database is by default named ''perfDB'', with username and password ''guest''/''guest''. If the database does not exist, it will be created, initialized and populated.
3815
3816The ''eclipse.perf.config'' parameter identifies a '''variation''': It typically identifies the build on which is it run (commitId and/or build date, etc), the machine (host) on which it is run, the configuration of the system (for example Linux or Windows), the jvm etc. That parameter is a list of ';' separated key-value pairs. To be backward-compatible with the Eclipse Performance Tests Framework, the 4 keys mentioned above are mandatory, but any key-value pairs can be used.
3817
3818== ABC of performance testing ==
3819
3820Here follow some rules to help design good and meaningful performance tests.
3821
3822=== Determine what to test ===
3823
3824For tests to be significant, it is important to choose what exactly is to be tested and make sure it is reproducible every run. To limit the amount of noise caused by the TMF framework, the performance test code should be tweaked so that only the method under test is run. For instance, a trace should not be "opened" (by calling the ''traceOpened()'' method) to test an analysis, since the ''traceOpened'' method will also trigger the indexing and the execution of all applicable automatic analysis.
3825
3826For each code path to test, multiple scenarios can be defined. For instance, an analysis could be run on different traces, with different sizes. The results will show how the system scales and/or varies depending on the objects it is executed on.
3827
3828The number of '''samples''' used to compute the results is also important. The code to test will typically be inside a '''for''' loop that runs exactly the same code each time for a given number of times. All objects used for the test must start in the same state at each iteration of the loop. For instance, any trace used during an execution should be disposed of at the end of the loop, and any supplementary file that may have been generated in the run should be deleted.
3829
3830Before submitting a performance test to the code review, you should run it a few times (with results in the Console) and see if the standard deviation is not too large and if the results are reproducible.
3831
3832=== Metrics descriptions and considerations ===
3833
3834CPU time: CPU time represent the total time spent on CPU by the current process, for the time of the test execution. It is the sum of the time spent by all threads. On one hand, it is more significant than the elapsed time, since it should be the same no matter how many CPU cores the computer has. But since it calculates the time of every thread, one has to make sure that only threads related to what is being tested are executed during that time, or else the results will include the times of those other threads. For an application like TMF, it is hard to control all the threads, and empirically, it is found to vary a lot more than the system time from one run to the other.
3835
b23631ef 3836System time (Elapsed time): The time between the start and the end of the execution. It will vary depending on the parallelization of the threads and the load of the machine.
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3837
3838Kernel time: Time spent in kernel mode
3839
e7e04cb1 3840Used Java Heap: It is the difference between the memory used at the beginning of the execution and at the end. This metric may be useful to calculate the overall size occupied by the data generated by the test run, by forcing a garbage collection before taking the metrics at the beginning and at the end of the execution. But it will not show the memory used throughout the execution. There can be a large standard deviation. The reason for this is that when benchmarking methods that trigger tasks in different threads, like signals and/or analysis, these other threads might be in various states at each run of the test, which will impact the memory usage calculated. When using this metric, either make sure the method to test does not trigger external threads or make sure you wait for them to finish.
2c20bbb3
VP
3841
3842= Network Tracing =
3843
3844== Adding a protocol ==
3845
3846Supporting a new network protocol in TMF is straightforward. Minimal effort is required to support new protocols. In this tutorial, the UDP protocol will be added to the list of supported protocols.
3847
3848=== Architecture ===
3849
3850All the TMF pcap-related code is divided in three projects (not considering the tests plugins):
b23631ef
MAL
3851* '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core''', which contains the parser that will read pcap files and constructs the different packets from a ByteBuffer. It also contains means to build packet streams, which are conversation (list of packets) between two endpoints. To add a protocol, almost all of the work will be in that project.
3852* '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.pcap.core''', which contains TMF-specific concepts and act as a wrapper between TMF and the pcap parsing library. It only depends on org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.core and org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core. To add a protocol, one file must be edited in this project.
3853* '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.pcap.ui''', which contains all TMF pcap UI-specific concepts, such as the views and perspectives. No work is needed in that project.
2c20bbb3
VP
3854
3855=== UDP Packet Structure ===
3856
3857The UDP is a transport-layer protocol that does not guarantee message delivery nor in-order message reception. A UDP packet (datagram) has the following [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_Datagram_Protocol#Packet_structure structure]:
3858
3859{| class="wikitable" style="margin: 0 auto; text-align: center;"
3860|-
3861! style="border-bottom:none; border-right:none;"| ''Offsets''
3862! style="border-left:none;"| Octet
3863! colspan="8" | 0
3864! colspan="8" | 1
3865! colspan="8" | 2
3866! colspan="8" | 3
3867|-
3868! style="border-top: none" | Octet
3869! <tt>Bit</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;0</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;1</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;2</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;3</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;4</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;5</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;6</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;7</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;8</tt>!!<tt>&nbsp;9</tt>!!<tt>10</tt>!!<tt>11</tt>!!<tt>12</tt>!!<tt>13</tt>!!<tt>14</tt>!!<tt>15</tt>!!<tt>16</tt>!!<tt>17</tt>!!<tt>18</tt>!!<tt>19</tt>!!<tt>20</tt>!!<tt>21</tt>!!<tt>22</tt>!!<tt>23</tt>!!<tt>24</tt>!!<tt>25</tt>!!<tt>26</tt>!!<tt>27</tt>!!<tt>28</tt>!!<tt>29</tt>!!<tt>30</tt>!!<tt>31</tt>
3870|-
3871! 0
3872!<tt> 0</tt>
3873| colspan="16" style="background:#fdd;"| Source port || colspan="16"| Destination port
3874|-
3875! 4
3876!<tt>32</tt>
3877| colspan="16"| Length || colspan="16" style="background:#fdd;"| Checksum
3878|}
3879
3880Knowing that, we can define an UDPPacket class that contains those fields.
3881
3882=== Creating the UDPPacket ===
3883
b23631ef 3884First, in org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core, create a new package named '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core.protocol.name''' with name being the name of the new protocol. In our case name is udp so we create the package '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core.protocol.udp'''. All our work is going in this package.
2c20bbb3
VP
3885
3886In this package, we create a new class named UDPPacket that extends Packet. All new protocol must define a packet type that extends the abstract class Packet. We also add different fields:
3887* ''Packet'' '''fChildPacket''', which is the packet encapsulated by this UDP packet, if it exists. This field will be initialized by findChildPacket().
3888* ''ByteBuffer'' '''fPayload''', which is the payload of this packet. Basically, it is the UDP packet without its header.
3889* ''int'' '''fSourcePort''', which is an unsigned 16-bits field, that contains the source port of the packet (see packet structure).
3890* ''int'' '''fDestinationPort''', which is an unsigned 16-bits field, that contains the destination port of the packet (see packet structure).
3891* ''int'' '''fTotalLength''', which is an unsigned 16-bits field, that contains the total length (header + payload) of the packet.
3892* ''int'' '''fChecksum''', which is an unsigned 16-bits field, that contains a checksum to verify the integrity of the data.
3893* ''UDPEndpoint'' '''fSourceEndpoint''', which contains the source endpoint of the UDPPacket. The UDPEndpoint class will be created later in this tutorial.
3894* ''UDPEndpoint'' '''fDestinationEndpoint''', which contains the destination endpoint of the UDPPacket.
3895* ''ImmutableMap<String, String>'' '''fFields''', which is a map that contains all the packet fields (see in data structure) which assign a field name with its value. Those values will be displayed on the UI.
3896
3897We also create the UDPPacket(PcapFile file, @Nullable Packet parent, ByteBuffer packet) constructor. The parameters are:
3898* ''PcapFile'' '''file''', which is the pcap file to which this packet belongs.
3899* ''Packet'' '''parent''', which is the packet encasulating this UDPPacket
3900* ''ByteBuffer'' '''packet''', which is a ByteBuffer that contains all the data necessary to initialize the fields of this UDPPacket. We will retrieve bytes from it during object construction.
3901
3902The following class is obtained:
3903
3904<pre>
b23631ef 3905package org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core.protocol.udp;
2c20bbb3
VP
3906
3907import java.nio.ByteBuffer;
3908import java.util.Map;
3909
b23631ef
MAL
3910import org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.pcap.core.endpoint.ProtocolEndpoint;
3911import org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.pcap.core.packet.BadPacketException;
3912import org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.pcap.core.packet.Packet;
2c20bbb3
VP
3913
3914public class UDPPacket extends Packet {
3915
3916 private final @Nullable Packet fChildPacket;
3917 private final @Nullable ByteBuffer fPayload;
3918
3919 private final int fSourcePort;
3920 private final int fDestinationPort;
3921 private final int fTotalLength;
3922 private final int fChecksum;
3923
3924 private @Nullable UDPEndpoint fSourceEndpoint;
3925 private @Nullable UDPEndpoint fDestinationEndpoint;
3926
3927 private @Nullable ImmutableMap<String, String> fFields;
3928
3929 /**
3930 * Constructor of the UDP Packet class.
3931 *
3932 * @param file
3933 * The file that contains this packet.
3934 * @param parent
3935 * The parent packet of this packet (the encapsulating packet).
3936 * @param packet
3937 * The entire packet (header and payload).
3938 * @throws BadPacketException
3939 * Thrown when the packet is erroneous.
3940 */
3941 public UDPPacket(PcapFile file, @Nullable Packet parent, ByteBuffer packet) throws BadPacketException {
b23631ef 3942 super(file, parent, PcapProtocol.UDP);
2c20bbb3
VP
3943 // TODO Auto-generated constructor stub
3944 }
3945
3946
3947 @Override
3948 public Packet getChildPacket() {
3949 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3950 return null;
3951 }
3952
3953 @Override
3954 public ByteBuffer getPayload() {
3955 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3956 return null;
3957 }
3958
3959 @Override
3960 public boolean validate() {
3961 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3962 return false;
3963 }
3964
3965 @Override
3966 protected Packet findChildPacket() throws BadPacketException {
3967 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3968 return null;
3969 }
3970
3971 @Override
3972 public ProtocolEndpoint getSourceEndpoint() {
3973 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3974 return null;
3975 }
3976
3977 @Override
3978 public ProtocolEndpoint getDestinationEndpoint() {
3979 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3980 return null;
3981 }
3982
3983 @Override
3984 public Map<String, String> getFields() {
3985 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3986 return null;
3987 }
3988
3989 @Override
3990 public String getLocalSummaryString() {
3991 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3992 return null;
3993 }
3994
3995 @Override
3996 protected String getSignificationString() {
3997 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
3998 return null;
3999 }
4000
4001 @Override
4002 public boolean equals(Object obj) {
4003 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
4004 return false;
4005 }
4006
4007 @Override
4008 public int hashCode() {
4009 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
4010 return 0;
4011 }
4012
4013}
4014</pre>
4015
4016Now, we implement the constructor. It is done in four steps:
4017* We initialize fSourceEndpoint, fDestinationEndpoint and fFields to null, since those are lazy-loaded. This allows faster construction of the packet and thus faster parsing.
4018* We initialize fSourcePort, fDestinationPort, fTotalLength, fChecksum using ByteBuffer packet. Thanks to the packet data structure, we can simply retrieve packet.getShort() to get the value. Since there is no unsigned in Java, special care is taken to avoid negative number. We use the utility method ConversionHelper.unsignedShortToInt() to convert it to an integer, and initialize the fields.
4019* Now that the header is parsed, we take the rest of the ByteBuffer packet to initialize the payload, if there is one. To do this, we simply generate a new ByteBuffer starting from the current position.
4020* We initialize the field fChildPacket using the method findChildPacket()
4021
4022The following constructor is obtained:
4023<pre>
4024 public UDPPacket(PcapFile file, @Nullable Packet parent, ByteBuffer packet) throws BadPacketException {
4025 super(file, parent, Protocol.UDP);
4026
4027 // The endpoints and fFields are lazy loaded. They are defined in the get*Endpoint()
4028 // methods.
4029 fSourceEndpoint = null;
4030 fDestinationEndpoint = null;
4031 fFields = null;
4032
4033 // Initialize the fields from the ByteBuffer
4034 packet.order(ByteOrder.BIG_ENDIAN);
4035 packet.position(0);
4036
4037 fSourcePort = ConversionHelper.unsignedShortToInt(packet.getShort());
4038 fDestinationPort = ConversionHelper.unsignedShortToInt(packet.getShort());
4039 fTotalLength = ConversionHelper.unsignedShortToInt(packet.getShort());
4040 fChecksum = ConversionHelper.unsignedShortToInt(packet.getShort());
4041
4042 // Initialize the payload
4043 if (packet.array().length - packet.position() > 0) {
4044 byte[] array = new byte[packet.array().length - packet.position()];
4045 packet.get(array);
4046
4047 ByteBuffer payload = ByteBuffer.wrap(array);
4048 payload.order(ByteOrder.BIG_ENDIAN);
4049 payload.position(0);
4050 fPayload = payload;
4051 } else {
4052 fPayload = null;
4053 }
4054
4055 // Find child
4056 fChildPacket = findChildPacket();
4057
4058 }
4059</pre>
4060
4061Then, we implement the following methods:
4062* ''public Packet'' '''getChildPacket()''': simple getter of fChildPacket
4063* ''public ByteBuffer'' '''getPayload()''': simple getter of fPayload
4064* ''public boolean'' '''validate()''': method that checks if the packet is valid. In our case, the packet is valid if the retrieved checksum fChecksum and the real checksum (that we can compute using the fields and payload of UDPPacket) are the same.
4065* ''protected Packet'' '''findChildPacket()''': method that create a new packet if a encapsulated protocol is found. For instance, based on the fDestinationPort, it could determine what the encapsulated protocol is and creates a new packet object.
4066* ''public ProtocolEndpoint'' '''getSourceEndpoint()''': method that initializes and returns the source endpoint.
4067* ''public ProtocolEndpoint'' '''getDestinationEndpoint()''': method that initializes and returns the destination endpoint.
4068* ''public Map<String, String>'' '''getFields()''': method that initializes and returns the map containing the fields matched to their value.
4069* ''public String'' '''getLocalSummaryString()''': method that returns a string summarizing the most important fields of the packet. There is no need to list all the fields, just the most important one. This will be displayed on UI.
4070* ''protected String'' '''getSignificationString()''': method that returns a string describing the meaning of the packet. If there is no particular meaning, it is possible to return getLocalSummaryString().
4071* public boolean'' '''equals(Object obj)''': Object's equals method.
4072* public int'' '''hashCode()''': Object's hashCode method.
4073
4074We get the following code:
4075<pre>
4076 @Override
4077 public @Nullable Packet getChildPacket() {
4078 return fChildPacket;
4079 }
4080
4081 @Override
4082 public @Nullable ByteBuffer getPayload() {
4083 return fPayload;
4084 }
4085
4086 /**
4087 * Getter method that returns the UDP Source Port.
4088 *
4089 * @return The source Port.
4090 */
4091 public int getSourcePort() {
4092 return fSourcePort;
4093 }
4094
4095 /**
4096 * Getter method that returns the UDP Destination Port.
4097 *
4098 * @return The destination Port.
4099 */
4100 public int getDestinationPort() {
4101 return fDestinationPort;
4102 }
4103
4104 /**
4105 * {@inheritDoc}
4106 *
4107 * See http://www.iana.org/assignments/service-names-port-numbers/service-
4108 * names-port-numbers.xhtml or
4109 * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_TCP_and_UDP_port_numbers
4110 */
4111 @Override
4112 protected @Nullable Packet findChildPacket() throws BadPacketException {
4113 // When more protocols are implemented, we can simply do a switch on the fDestinationPort field to find the child packet.
4114 // For instance, if the destination port is 80, then chances are the HTTP protocol is encapsulated. We can create a new HTTP
4115 // packet (after some verification that it is indeed the HTTP protocol).
4116 ByteBuffer payload = fPayload;
4117 if (payload == null) {
4118 return null;
4119 }
4120
4121 return new UnknownPacket(getPcapFile(), this, payload);
4122 }
4123
4124 @Override
4125 public boolean validate() {
4126 // Not yet implemented. ATM, we consider that all packets are valid.
4127 // TODO Implement it. We can compute the real checksum and compare it to fChecksum.
4128 return true;
4129 }
4130
4131 @Override
4132 public UDPEndpoint getSourceEndpoint() {
4133 @Nullable
4134 UDPEndpoint endpoint = fSourceEndpoint;
4135 if (endpoint == null) {
4136 endpoint = new UDPEndpoint(this, true);
4137 }
4138 fSourceEndpoint = endpoint;
4139 return fSourceEndpoint;
4140 }
4141
4142 @Override
4143 public UDPEndpoint getDestinationEndpoint() {
4144 @Nullable UDPEndpoint endpoint = fDestinationEndpoint;
4145 if (endpoint == null) {
4146 endpoint = new UDPEndpoint(this, false);
4147 }
4148 fDestinationEndpoint = endpoint;
4149 return fDestinationEndpoint;
4150 }
4151
4152 @Override
4153 public Map<String, String> getFields() {
4154 ImmutableMap<String, String> map = fFields;
4155 if (map == null) {
4156 @SuppressWarnings("null")
4157 @NonNull ImmutableMap<String, String> newMap = ImmutableMap.<String, String> builder()
4158 .put("Source Port", String.valueOf(fSourcePort)) //$NON-NLS-1$
4159 .put("Destination Port", String.valueOf(fDestinationPort)) //$NON-NLS-1$
4160 .put("Length", String.valueOf(fTotalLength) + " bytes") //$NON-NLS-1$ //$NON-NLS-2$
4161 .put("Checksum", String.format("%s%04x", "0x", fChecksum)) //$NON-NLS-1$ //$NON-NLS-2$ //$NON-NLS-3$
4162 .build();
4163 fFields = newMap;
4164 return newMap;
4165 }
4166 return map;
4167 }
4168
4169 @Override
4170 public String getLocalSummaryString() {
4171 return "Src Port: " + fSourcePort + ", Dst Port: " + fDestinationPort; //$NON-NLS-1$ //$NON-NLS-2$
4172 }
4173
4174 @Override
4175 protected String getSignificationString() {
4176 return "Source Port: " + fSourcePort + ", Destination Port: " + fDestinationPort; //$NON-NLS-1$ //$NON-NLS-2$
4177 }
4178
4179 @Override
4180 public int hashCode() {
4181 final int prime = 31;
4182 int result = 1;
4183 result = prime * result + fChecksum;
4184 final Packet child = fChildPacket;
4185 if (child != null) {
4186 result = prime * result + child.hashCode();
4187 } else {
4188 result = prime * result;
4189 }
4190 result = prime * result + fDestinationPort;
4191 final ByteBuffer payload = fPayload;
4192 if (payload != null) {
4193 result = prime * result + payload.hashCode();
4194 } else {
4195 result = prime * result;
4196 }
4197 result = prime * result + fSourcePort;
4198 result = prime * result + fTotalLength;
4199 return result;
4200 }
4201
4202 @Override
4203 public boolean equals(@Nullable Object obj) {
4204 if (this == obj) {
4205 return true;
4206 }
4207 if (obj == null) {
4208 return false;
4209 }
4210 if (getClass() != obj.getClass()) {
4211 return false;
4212 }
4213 UDPPacket other = (UDPPacket) obj;
4214 if (fChecksum != other.fChecksum) {
4215 return false;
4216 }
4217 final Packet child = fChildPacket;
4218 if (child != null) {
4219 if (!child.equals(other.fChildPacket)) {
4220 return false;
4221 }
4222 } else {
4223 if (other.fChildPacket != null) {
4224 return false;
4225 }
4226 }
4227 if (fDestinationPort != other.fDestinationPort) {
4228 return false;
4229 }
4230 final ByteBuffer payload = fPayload;
4231 if (payload != null) {
4232 if (!payload.equals(other.fPayload)) {
4233 return false;
4234 }
4235 } else {
4236 if (other.fPayload != null) {
4237 return false;
4238 }
4239 }
4240 if (fSourcePort != other.fSourcePort) {
4241 return false;
4242 }
4243 if (fTotalLength != other.fTotalLength) {
4244 return false;
4245 }
4246 return true;
4247 }
4248</pre>
4249
4250The UDPPacket class is implemented. We now have the define the UDPEndpoint.
4251
4252=== Creating the UDPEndpoint ===
4253
4254For the UDP protocol, an endpoint will be its source or its destination port, depending if it is the source endpoint or destination endpoint. Knowing that, we can create our UDPEndpoint class.
4255
4256We create in our package a new class named UDPEndpoint that extends ProtocolEndpoint. We also add a field: fPort, which contains the source or destination port. We finally add a constructor public ExampleEndpoint(Packet packet, boolean isSourceEndpoint):
4257* ''Packet'' '''packet''': the packet to build the endpoint from.
4258* ''boolean'' '''isSourceEndpoint''': whether the endpoint is the source endpoint or destination endpoint.
4259
4260We obtain the following unimplemented class:
4261
4262<pre>
b23631ef 4263package org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core.protocol.udp;
2c20bbb3 4264
b23631ef
MAL
4265import org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.pcap.core.endpoint.ProtocolEndpoint;
4266import org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.pcap.core.packet.Packet;
2c20bbb3
VP
4267
4268public class UDPEndpoint extends ProtocolEndpoint {
4269
4270 private final int fPort;
4271
4272 public UDPEndpoint(Packet packet, boolean isSourceEndpoint) {
4273 super(packet, isSourceEndpoint);
4274 // TODO Auto-generated constructor stub
4275 }
4276
4277 @Override
4278 public int hashCode() {
4279 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
4280 return 0;
4281 }
4282
4283 @Override
4284 public boolean equals(Object obj) {
4285 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
4286 return false;
4287 }
4288
4289 @Override
4290 public String toString() {
4291 // TODO Auto-generated method stub
4292 return null;
4293 }
4294
4295}
4296</pre>
4297
4298For the constructor, we simply initialize fPort. If isSourceEndpoint is true, then we take packet.getSourcePort(), else we take packet.getDestinationPort().
4299
4300<pre>
4301 /**
4302 * Constructor of the {@link UDPEndpoint} class. It takes a packet to get
4303 * its endpoint. Since every packet has two endpoints (source and
4304 * destination), the isSourceEndpoint parameter is used to specify which
4305 * endpoint to take.
4306 *
4307 * @param packet
4308 * The packet that contains the endpoints.
4309 * @param isSourceEndpoint
4310 * Whether to take the source or the destination endpoint of the
4311 * packet.
4312 */
4313 public UDPEndpoint(UDPPacket packet, boolean isSourceEndpoint) {
4314 super(packet, isSourceEndpoint);
4315 fPort = isSourceEndpoint ? packet.getSourcePort() : packet.getDestinationPort();
4316 }
4317</pre>
4318
4319Then we implement the methods:
4320* ''public int'' '''hashCode()''': method that returns an integer based on the fields value. In our case, it will return an integer depending on fPort, and the parent endpoint that we can retrieve with getParentEndpoint().
4321* ''public boolean'' '''equals(Object obj)''': method that returns true if two objects are equals. In our case, two UDPEndpoints are equal if they both have the same fPort and have the same parent endpoint that we can retrieve with getParentEndpoint().
4322* ''public String'' '''toString()''': method that returns a description of the UDPEndpoint as a string. In our case, it will be a concatenation of the string of the parent endpoint and fPort as a string.
4323
4324<pre>
4325 @Override
4326 public int hashCode() {
4327 final int prime = 31;
4328 int result = 1;
4329 ProtocolEndpoint endpoint = getParentEndpoint();
4330 if (endpoint == null) {
4331 result = 0;
4332 } else {
4333 result = endpoint.hashCode();
4334 }
4335 result = prime * result + fPort;
4336 return result;
4337 }
4338
4339 @Override
4340 public boolean equals(@Nullable Object obj) {
4341 if (this == obj) {
4342 return true;
4343 }
4344 if (!(obj instanceof UDPEndpoint)) {
4345 return false;
4346 }
4347
4348 UDPEndpoint other = (UDPEndpoint) obj;
4349
4350 // Check on layer
4351 boolean localEquals = (fPort == other.fPort);
4352 if (!localEquals) {
4353 return false;
4354 }
4355
4356 // Check above layers.
4357 ProtocolEndpoint endpoint = getParentEndpoint();
4358 if (endpoint != null) {
4359 return endpoint.equals(other.getParentEndpoint());
4360 }
4361 return true;
4362 }
4363
4364 @Override
4365 public String toString() {
4366 ProtocolEndpoint endpoint = getParentEndpoint();
4367 if (endpoint == null) {
4368 @SuppressWarnings("null")
4369 @NonNull String ret = String.valueOf(fPort);
4370 return ret;
4371 }
4372 return endpoint.toString() + '/' + fPort;
4373 }
4374</pre>
4375
4376=== Registering the UDP protocol ===
4377
b23631ef 4378The last step is to register the new protocol. There are three places where the protocol has to be registered. First, the parser has to know that a new protocol has been added. This is defined in the enum org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.pcap.core.protocol.PcapProtocol. Simply add the protocol name here, along with a few arguments:
2c20bbb3
VP
4379* ''String'' '''longname''', which is the long version of name of the protocol. In our case, it is "User Datagram Protocol".
4380* ''String'' '''shortName''', which is the shortened name of the protocol. In our case, it is "UDP".
7a0ecb40 4381* ''Layer'' '''layer''', which is the layer to which the protocol belongs in the OSI model. In our case, this is the layer 4.
2c20bbb3
VP
4382* ''boolean'' '''supportsStream''', which defines whether or not the protocol supports packet streams. In our case, this is set to true.
4383
7a0ecb40 4384Thus, the following line is added in the PcapProtocol enum:
2c20bbb3 4385<pre>
7a0ecb40 4386 UDP("User Datagram Protocol", "udp", Layer.LAYER_4, true),
2c20bbb3
VP
4387</pre>
4388
b23631ef 4389Also, TMF has to know about the new protocol. This is defined in org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.tmf.pcap.core.protocol.TmfPcapProtocol. We simply add it, with a reference to the corresponding protocol in PcapProtocol. Thus, the following line is added in the TmfPcapProtocol enum:
2c20bbb3 4390<pre>
7a0ecb40 4391 UDP(PcapProtocol.UDP),
2c20bbb3
VP
4392</pre>
4393
87e8cb47
MK
4394You will also have to update the ''ProtocolConversion'' class to register the protocol in the switch statements. Thus, for UDP, we add:
4395<pre>
4396 case UDP:
7a0ecb40 4397 return TmfPcapProtocol.UDP;
87e8cb47
MK
4398</pre>
4399and
4400<pre>
4401 case UDP:
7a0ecb40 4402 return PcapProtocol.UDP;
87e8cb47
MK
4403</pre>
4404
2c20bbb3
VP
4405Finally, all the protocols that could be the parent of the new protocol (in our case, IPv4 and IPv6) have to be notified of the new protocol. This is done by modifying the findChildPacket() method of the packet class of those protocols. For instance, in IPv4Packet, we add a case in the switch statement of findChildPacket, if the Protocol number matches UDP's protocol number at the network layer:
4406<pre>
4407 @Override
4408 protected @Nullable Packet findChildPacket() throws BadPacketException {
4409 ByteBuffer payload = fPayload;
4410 if (payload == null) {
4411 return null;
4412 }
4413
4414 switch (fIpDatagramProtocol) {
4415 case IPProtocolNumberHelper.PROTOCOL_NUMBER_TCP:
4416 return new TCPPacket(getPcapFile(), this, payload);
4417 case IPProtocolNumberHelper.PROTOCOL_NUMBER_UDP:
4418 return new UDPPacket(getPcapFile(), this, payload);
4419 default:
4420 return new UnknownPacket(getPcapFile(), this, payload);
4421 }
4422 }
4423</pre>
4424
4425The new protocol has been added. Running TMF should work just fine, and the new protocol is now recognized.
4426
4427== Adding stream-based views ==
4428
4429To add a stream-based View, simply monitor the TmfPacketStreamSelectedSignal in your view. It contains the new stream that you can retrieve with signal.getStream(). You must then make an event request to the current trace to get the events, and use the stream to filter the events of interest. Therefore, you must also monitor TmfTraceOpenedSignal, TmfTraceClosedSignal and TmfTraceSelectedSignal. Examples of stream-based views include a view that represents the packets as a sequence diagram, or that shows the TCP connection state based on the packets SYN/ACK/FIN/RST flags. A (very very very early) draft of such a view can be found at https://git.eclipse.org/r/#/c/31054/.
4430
4431== TODO ==
4432
4433* Add more protocols. At the moment, only four protocols are supported. The following protocols would need to be implemented: ARP, SLL, WLAN, USB, IPv6, ICMP, ICMPv6, IGMP, IGMPv6, SCTP, DNS, FTP, HTTP, RTP, SIP, SSH and Telnet. Other VoIP protocols would be nice.
4434* Add a network graph view. It would be useful to produce graphs that are meaningful to network engineers, and that they could use (for presentation purpose, for instance). We could use the XML-based analysis to do that!
4435* Add a Stream Diagram view. This view would represent a stream as a Sequence Diagram. It would be updated when a TmfNewPacketStreamSignal is thrown. It would be easy to see the packet exchange and the time delta between each packet. Also, when a packet is selected in the Stream Diagram, it should be selected in the event table and its content should be shown in the Properties View. See https://git.eclipse.org/r/#/c/31054/ for a draft of such a view.
4436* Make adding protocol more "plugin-ish", via extension points for instance. This would make it easier to support new protocols, without modifying the source code.
4437* Control dumpcap directly from eclipse, similar to how LTTng is controlled in the Control View.
4438* Support pcapng. See: http://www.winpcap.org/ntar/draft/PCAP-DumpFileFormat.html for the file format.
b23631ef 4439* Add SWTBOT tests to org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.pcap.ui
2c20bbb3 4440* Add a Raw Viewer, similar to Wireshark. We could use the “Show Raw” in the event editor to do that.
b23631ef 4441* Externalize strings in org.eclipse.tracecompass.pcap.core. At the moment, all the strings are hardcoded. It would be good to externalize them all.
d099cd5a
PT
4442
4443= Markers =
4444
4445Markers are annotations that are defined with a time range, a color, a category and an optional label. The markers are displayed in the time graph of any view that extends ''AbstractTimeGraphView''. The markers are drawn as a line or a region (in case the time range duration is not zero) of the given color, which can have an alpha value to use transparency. The markers can be drawn in the foreground (above time graph states) or in the background (below time graph states). An optional label can be drawn in the the time scale area.
4446
4447The developer can add trace-specific markers and/or view-specific markers.
4448
4449== Trace-specific markers ==
4450
4451Trace-specific markers can be added by registering an ''IAdapterFactory'' with the TmfTraceAdapterManager. The adapter factory must provide adapters of the ''IMarkerEventSource'' class for a given ''ITmfTrace'' object. The adapter factory can be registered for traces of a certain class (which will include sub-classes of the given class) or it can be registered for traces of a certain trace type id (as defined in the ''org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core.tracetype'' extension point).
4452
4453The adapter factory can be registered in the ''Activator'' of the plug-in that introduces it, in the ''start()'' method, and unregistered in the ''stop()'' method.
4454
4455It is recommended to extend the ''AbstractTmfTraceAdapterFactory'' class when creating the adapter factory. This will ensure that a single instance of the adapter is created for a specific trace and reused by all components that need the adapter, and that the adapter is disposed when the trace is closed.
4456
4457The adapter implementing the ''IMarkerEventSource'' interface must provide two methods:
4458
4459* ''getMarkerCategories()'' returns a list of category names which will be displayed to the user, who can then enable or disable markers on a per-category basis.
4460
4461* ''getMarkerList()'' returns a list of markers instances of class ''IMarkerEvent'' for the given category and time range. The resolution can be used to limit the number of markers returned for the current zoom level, and the progress monitor can be checked for early cancellation of the marker computation.
4462
4463The trace-specific markers for a particular trace will appear in all views extending ''AbstractTimeGraphView'' when that trace (or an experiment containing that trace) is selected.
4464
4465An example of a trace-specific markers implementation can be seen by examining classes ''LostEventsMarkerEventSourceFactory'', ''LostEventsMarkerEventSource'' and ''Activator'' in the ''org.eclipse.tracecompass.tmf.ui'' plug-in.
4466
4467== View-specific markers ==
4468
4469View-specific markers can by added in sub-classes of ''AbstractTimeGraphView'' by implementing the following two methods:
4470
4471* ''getViewMarkerCategories()'' returns a list of category names which will be displayed to the user, who can then enable or disable markers on a per-category basis.
4472
4473* ''getViewMarkerList()'' returns a list of markers instances of class ''IMarkerEvent'' for the given time range. The resolution can be used to limit the number of markers returned for the current zoom level, and the progress monitor can be checked for early cancellation of the marker computation.
5442d45d
GB
4474
4475= Virtual Machine Analysis =
4476
4477Virtualized environment are becoming more popular and understanding them can be challenging as machines share resources (CPU, disks, memory, etc), but from their point of view, they are running on bare metal. Tracing all the machines (guests and hosts) in a virtualized environment allows information to be correlated between all the nodes to better understand the system. See the User documentation for more info on this analysis.
4478
4479The virtual machine analysis has been implemented in the following plugins:
4480
4481* '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.core''' contains the virtual machine analysis itself, the model of the virtualized environment, as well as its implementation for different hypervisors.
4482* '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.ui''' contains the views for the analysis.
4483
4484== Adding support for an hypervisor ==
4485
4486Supporting a new hypervisor in Trace Compass requires implementing the model for this new hypervisor. The following sections will describe for each part of the model what has to be considered, what information we need to have, etc. Note that each hypervisor will require some work and investigation. The information might already be available as a single tracepoint for some, while other may require many tracepoints. It is also possible that some will require to add tracepoints, either to the kernel, or the hypervisor code itself, in which case a userspace trace (LTTng UST) might be necessary to get all the information.
4487
4488=== Virtual CPU analysis ===
4489
4490This analysis tracks the state of the virtual CPUs in conjunction with the physical CPU it is running on. For this, we need the following information:
4491
4492* A way to link a virtual CPU on a guest with a process on the host, such that it is possible to determine when the virtual CPU is preempted on the host. If trace data does not provide this information, some hypervisors have a command line option to dump that information. Manually feeding that information to the analysis is not supported now though.
4493* A way to differentiate between hypervisor mode and normal mode for the virtual CPU. A virtual CPU usually runs within a process on the host, but sometimes that process may need to run hypervisor-specific code. That is called '''hypervisor mode'''. During that time, no code from the guest itself is run. Typically, the process is running on the host (not preempted), but from the guest's point of view, the virtual CPU should be preempted.
4494
4495A model implementation for a new hypervisor will need to implement class '''IVirtualMachineModel''', that can be found in package '''org.eclipse.tracecompass.internal.lttng2.kernel.core.analysis.vm.model'''. See the javadoc in the class itself for more information on what each method does.
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