+LTTng-UST
+=========
+
+The LTTng User Space Tracing (LTTng-UST) library allows any C/C++
+application to be instrumented for and traced by
+[LTTng](http://lttng.org/). LTTng-UST also includes a logging
+back-end for Java applications and various dynamically loadable
+user space tracing helpers for any application.
+
+
+Prerequisites
+-------------
+
+LTTng-UST depends on [liburcu](http://urcu.so/) v0.7.2 at build and
+run times.
+
+
+Building
+--------
+
+### Prerequisites
+
+This source tree is based on the Autotools suite from GNU to simplify
+portability. Here are some things you should have on your system in order to
+compile the Git repository tree:
+
+ - GNU Autotools (Automake >= 1.10, Autoconf >= 2.50, Autoheader >= 2.50;
+ make sure your system-wide `automake` points to a recent version!)
+ - [GNU Libtool](http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/) >= 2.2
+ - Perl (optional: needed for `make check` and tests)
+
+If you get the tree from the Git repository, you will need to run
+
+ ./bootstrap
+
+in its root. It calls all the GNU tools needed to prepare the tree
+configuration.
+
+To build LTTng-UST, do:
+
+ ./configure
+ make
+ sudo make install
+ sudo ldconfig
+
+**Note:** the `configure` script sets `/usr/local` as the default prefix for
+files it installs. However, this path is not part of most distributions'
+default library path, which will cause builds depending on `liblttng-ust`
+to fail unless `-L/usr/local/lib` is added to `LDFLAGS`. You may provide a
+custom prefix to `configure` by using the `--prefix` switch
+(e.g., `--prefix=/usr`). LTTng-UST needs to be a shared library, _even if_
+the tracepoint probe provider is statically linked into the application.
+
+
+Using
+-----
+
+First of all, create an instrumentation header following the
+[tracepoint examples](doc/examples).
+
+There are two ways to compile the tracepoint provider and link it with
+your application: statically or dynamically. Please follow carefully one
+or the other method.
+
+
+### Static linking
+
+This method links the tracepoint provider with the application,
+either directly or through a static library (`.a`):
+
+ 1. Into exactly one unit (C/C++ source file) of your _application_,
+ define `TRACEPOINT_DEFINE` and include the tracepoint provider
+ header.
+ 2. Include the tracepoint provider header into all C/C++ files using
+ the provider and insert tracepoints using the `tracepoint()` macro.
+ 3. Use `-I.` when compiling the unit defining `TRACEPOINT_DEFINE`
+ (e.g., `tp.c`).
+ 4. Link the application with `-ldl` on Linux, or with `-lc` on BSD,
+ and with `-llttng-ust`.
+
+Example:
+
+ gcc -c -I. tp.c
+ gcc -c some-source.c
+ gcc -c other-source.c
+ gcc -o my-app tp.o some-source.o other-source.o -ldl -llttng-ust
+
+Run the application directly:
+
+ ./my-app
+
+Other relevant examples:
+
+ - [`doc/examples/easy-ust`](doc/examples/easy-ust)
+ - [`doc/examples/hello-static-lib`](doc/examples/hello-static-lib)
+
+
+### Dynamic loading
+
+This method decouples the tracepoint provider from the application,
+making it dynamically loadable.
+
+ 1. Into exactly one unit of your _application_, define
+ `TRACEPOINT_DEFINE` _and_ `TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE`,
+ then include the tracepoint provider header.
+ 2. Include the tracepoint provider header into all C/C++ files using
+ the provider and insert tracepoints using the `tracepoint()` macro.
+ 3. Use `-I.` and `-fpic` when compiling the tracepoint provider
+ (e.g., `tp.c`).
+ 4. Link the tracepoint provider with `-llttng-ust` and make it a
+ shared object with `-shared`.
+ 5. Link the application with `-ldl` on Linux, or with `-lc` on BSD.
+
+Example:
+
+ gcc -c -I. -fpic tp.c
+ gcc -o tp.so -shared tp.o -llttng-ust
+ gcc -o my-app some-source.c other-source.c -ldl
+
+To run _without_ LTTng-UST support:
+
+ ./my-app
+
+To run with LTTng-UST support (register your tracepoint provider,
+`tp.so`):
+
+ LD_PRELOAD=./tp.so ./my-app
+
+You could also use `libdl` directly in your application and `dlopen()`
+your tracepoint provider shared object (`tp.so`) to make LTTng-UST
+tracing possible.
+
+Other relevant examples:
+
+ - [`doc/examples/demo`](doc/examples/demo)
+
+
+### Controlling tracing and viewing traces
+
+Use [LTTng-tools](https://lttng.org/download) to control the tracer.
+Use [Babeltrace](https://lttng.org/babeltrace) to print traces as a
+human-readable text log.
+
+
+### Environment variables and compile flags
+
+ - `liblttng-ust` debug can be activated by setting the environment
+ variable `LTTNG_UST_DEBUG` when launching the user application. It
+ can also be enabled at build time by compiling LTTng-UST with
+ `-DLTTNG_UST_DEBUG`.
+ - The environment variable `LTTNG_UST_REGISTER_TIMEOUT` can be used to
+ specify how long the applications should wait for the session
+ daemon _registration done_ command before proceeding to execute the
+ main program. The default is 3000 ms (3 seconds). The timeout value
+ is specified in milliseconds. The value 0 means _don't wait_. The
+ value -1 means _wait forever_. Setting this environment variable to 0
+ is recommended for applications with time constraints on the process
+ startup time.
+ - The compilation flag `-DLTTNG_UST_DEBUG_VALGRIND` should be enabled
+ at build time to allow `liblttng-ust` to be used with Valgrind
+ (side-effect: disables per-CPU buffering).
+
+
+### Notes
+
+#### C++ support
+
+Since LTTng-UST 2.3, both tracepoints and tracepoint providers can be
+compiled in C++. To compile tracepoint probes in C++, you need
+G++ >= 4.7 or Clang.
+
+
+Contact
+-------
+
+Maintainer: [Mathieu Desnoyers](mailto:mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com)
+
+Mailing list: [`lttng-dev@lists.lttng.org`](https://lttng.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lttng-dev)
+
+
+Package contents
+----------------
+
+This package contains the following elements:
+
+ - `doc`: LTTng-UST documentation and examples.
+ - `include`: the public header files that will be installed on the
+ system.
+ - `liblttng-ust`: the actual userspace tracing library that must be
+ linked to the instrumented programs.
+ - `liblttng-ust-comm`: a static library shared between `liblttng-ust`
+ and LTTng-tools, that provides functions that allow these components
+ to communicate together.
+ - `liblttng-ust-ctl`: a library to control tracing in other processes;
+ used by LTTng-tools.
+ - `liblttng-ust-cyg-profile`: a library that can be preloaded (using
+ `LD_PRELOAD`) to instrument function entries and exits when the target
+ application is built with the GCC flag `-finstrument-functions`.
+ - `liblttng-ust-dl`: a library that can be preloaded to instrument
+ calls to `dlopen()` and `dlclose()`.
+ - `liblttng-ust-fork`: a library that is preloaded and that hijacks
+ calls to several system calls in order to trace across these calls.
+ It _has_ to be preloaded in order to hijack calls. In contrast,
+ `liblttng-ust` may be linked at build time.
+ - `liblttng-ust-java`: a simple library that uses JNI to allow tracing
+ in Java programs.
+ - `liblttng-ust-jul`: a package that includes a JNI library and a JAR
+ library to provide an LTTng-UST logging back-end for Java application
+ using Java Util Logging.
+ - `liblttng-ust-libc-wrapper`: an example library that can be
+ preloaded to instrument some calls to libc (currently `malloc()` and
+ `free()`) and to POSIX threads (mutexes currently instrumented) in
+ any program without need to recompile it.
+ - `libringbuffer`: the ring buffer implementation used within LTTng-UST.
+ - `snprintf`: an asynchronous signal-safe version of `snprintf()`.
+ - `tests`: various test programs.
+ - `tools`: home of `lttng-gen-tp`.