7 lttng - LTTng 2 tracer control command-line tool
13 *lttng* [option:--group='GROUP'] [option:--mi='TYPE'] [option:--no-sessiond | option:--sessiond-path='PATH']
14 [option:--quiet | option:-v | option:-vv | option:-vvv] '<<commands,COMMAND>>' ['COMMAND OPTIONS']
19 The http://lttng.org/[_Linux Trace Toolkit: next generation_] is an open
20 source software package used for correlated tracing of the Linux kernel,
21 user applications, and user libraries.
23 LTTng consists of Linux kernel modules (for Linux kernel tracing) and
24 dynamically loaded libraries (for user application and library tracing).
26 An LTTng _session daemon_, man:lttng-sessiond(8), receives
27 commands from the command-line interface `lttng` to control the LTTng
28 tracers. All interactions with the LTTng tracers happen through the
29 `lttng` tool or through the liblttng-ctl library shipped with the
32 A _tracing domain_ is a tracer category. There are five available
33 domains. For some commands, the domain needs to be specified with a
34 command-line option. The domain options are:
36 nloption:-j, nloption:--jul::
37 Apply command to the `java.util.logging` (JUL) domain.
39 nloption:-k, nloption:--kernel::
40 Apply command to the Linux kernel domain.
42 nloption:-l, nloption:--log4j::
43 Apply command to the https://logging.apache.org/log4j/1.2/[Apache log4j 1.2]
46 nloption:-p, nloption:--python::
47 Apply command to the https://www.python.org/[Python] domain.
49 nloption:-u, nloption:--userspace::
50 Apply command to the user space domain (application using
51 liblttng-ust directly; see man:lttng-ust(3)).
53 The LTTng session daemon is a tracing registry which allows the user to
54 interact with multiple tracers (kernel and user space) within the same
55 container, a _tracing session_. Traces can be gathered from the Linux
56 kernel and/or from instrumented applications (see
57 man:lttng-ust(3)). You can aggregate and read the events of LTTng
58 traces using man:babeltrace(1).
60 To trace the Linux kernel, the session daemon needs to be running as
61 `root`. LTTng uses a _tracing group_ to allow specific users to interact
62 with the root session daemon. The default tracing group name is
63 `tracing`. You can use the option:--group option to set the tracing
66 Session daemons can coexist. You can have a session daemon running as
67 user Alice that can be used to trace her applications alongside a root
68 session daemon or a session daemon running as user Bob.
70 NOTE: It is highly recommended to start the session daemon at boot time
71 for stable and long-term tracing.
73 User applications instrumented with LTTng automatically register to the
74 root session daemon and to user session daemons. This allows any session
75 daemon to list the available traceable applications and event sources
76 (see man:lttng-list(1)).
78 By default, the man:lttng-create(1) command automatically spawns a
79 user session daemon if none is currently running. The
80 option:--no-sessiond general option can be set to avoid this.
85 option:-g, option:--group='GROUP'::
86 Use 'GROUP' as Unix tracing group (default: `tracing`).
88 option:-m, option:--mi='TYPE'::
89 Print the command's result using the machine interface type 'TYPE'
90 instead of a human-readable output.
92 Supported types: `xml`.
94 The machine interface (MI) mode converts the traditional pretty-printing
95 to a machine output syntax. The MI mode provides a change-resistant way
96 to access information generated by the `lttng` command-line program.
98 When using the MI mode, the data is printed to the standard output.
99 Errors and warnings are printed on the standard error with the
100 pretty-print default format.
102 If any error occurs during the execution of a command, the return value
103 of the command will be different than 0. In this case, `lttng` does
104 :not: guarantee the syntax and data validity of the generated MI output.
106 For the `xml` MI type, an XML schema definition (XSD) file used for
107 validation is available: see the `src/common/mi_lttng.xsd` file in
108 the LTTng-tools source tree.
110 option:-n, option:--no-sessiond::
111 Do not automatically spawn a session daemon.
113 option:-q, option:--quiet::
114 Suppress all messages, including warnings and errors.
116 option:--sessiond-path='PATH'::
117 Set the session daemon binary's absolute path to 'PATH'.
119 option:-v, option:--verbose::
122 Three levels of verbosity are available, which are triggered by
123 appending additional `v` letters to the option
124 (that is, `-vv` and `-vvv`).
129 option:-h, option:--help::
132 option:--list-commands::
133 List available commands.
135 option:--list-options::
136 List available general options.
138 option:-V, option:--version::
145 The following commands also have their own nloption:--help option.
150 man:lttng-create(1)::
153 man:lttng-destroy(1)::
159 man:lttng-metadata(1)::
160 {cmd_descr_metadata}.
165 man:lttng-set-session(1)::
166 {cmd_descr_set_session}.
171 man:lttng-add-context(1)::
172 {cmd_descr_add_context}.
174 man:lttng-disable-channel(1)::
175 {cmd_descr_disable_channel}.
177 man:lttng-enable-channel(1)::
178 {cmd_descr_enable_channel}.
183 man:lttng-disable-event(1)::
184 {cmd_descr_disable_event}.
186 man:lttng-enable-event(1)::
187 {cmd_descr_enable_event}.
195 man:lttng-status(1)::
201 man:lttng-snapshot(1)::
202 {cmd_descr_snapshot}.
216 man:lttng-untrack(1)::
222 man:lttng-calibrate(1)::
223 {cmd_descr_calibrate}.
228 man:lttng-version(1)::
235 include::common-cmd-footer.txt[]
240 man:lttng-sessiond(8),