Add support for filters in Time Chart view
[deliverable/tracecompass.git] / org.eclipse.linuxtools.lttng.help / doc / User-Guide.mediawiki
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1
2= Overview =
3
4LTTng (Linux Trace Toolkit, next generation) is a highly efficient tracing tool for Linux that can be used to track down kernel and application performance issues as well as troubleshoot problems involving multiple concurrent processes and threads. It consists of a set of kernel modules, daemons - to collect the raw tracing data - and a set of tools to control, visualize and analyze the generated data. It also provides support for user space application instrumentation.
5
6For more information about LTTng, refer to the project [http://lttng.org site]
7
8'''Note''': This User Guide covers the integration of the latest LTTng (v2.0) in Eclipse. The legacy version (v0.x) of both the tracer and the LTTng integration are no longer being maintained but are still available for download. The User Guide for the legacy LTTng integration is available [http://wiki.eclipse.org/index.php/Linux_Tools_Project/LTTng/User_Guide here].
9
10== About Tracing ==
11
12Tracing is a troubleshooting technique used to understand the behavior of an instrumented application by collecting information on its execution path. A tracer is the software used for tracing. Tracing can be used to troubleshoot a wide range of bugs that are otherwise extremely challenging. These include, for example, performance problems in complex parallel systems or real-time systems.
13
14Tracing is similar to logging: it consists in recording events that happen in a system at selected execution locations. However, compared to logging, it is generally aimed at developers and it usually records low-level events at a high rate. Tracers can typically generate thousands of events per second. The generated traces can easily contain millions of events and have sizes from many megabytes to tens of gigabytes. Tracers must therefore be optimized to handle a lot of data while having a small impact on the system.
15
16Traces may include events from the operating system kernel (IRQ handler entry/exit, system call entry/exit, scheduling activity, network activity, etc). They can also consists of application events (a.k.a UST - User Space Tracing) or a mix of the two.
17
18For the maximum level of detail, tracing events may be viewed like a log file. However, trace analyzers and viewers are available to derive useful information from the raw data. These programs must be specially designed to handle quickly the enormous amount of data a trace may contain.
19
20== LTTng integration ==
21
22The LTTng plug-in for Eclipse provides an Eclipse integration for the control of the LTTng tracer as well as fetching and visualization of the traces produced. It also provides the foundation for user-defined analysis tools.
23
24The LTTng Eclipse plug-in provides the following views:
25
26* ''Project'' - an extension to the standard Eclipse Project view tailored for tracing projects
27* ''Control'' - to control the tracer and configure the tracepoints
28* ''Events'' - a versatile view that presents the raw events in tabular format with support for searching, filtering and bookmarking
29* ''Statistics'' - a view that that provides simple statistics on event occurrences by type
30* ''Histogram'' - a view that displays the event density with respect to time in traces
31
32These views can be extended or tailored for specific trace types (e.g. kernel, HW, user app).
33
34At present, the LTTng Eclipse plug-in for Eclipse supports the following kernel-oriented analysis:
35
36* ''Control Flow'' - to visualize processes state transitions
37* ''Resources'' - to visualize system resources state transitions
38
39Although the control and fetching parts are targeted at the LTTng tracer, the underlying framework can also be used to process any trace that complies with the ''Common Trace Format'' ([http://www.efficios.com/ctf CTF]). CTF specifies a very efficient and compact binary trace format that is meant to be application-, architecture-, and language-agnostic.
40
41== Features ==
42
43The LTTng Eclipse plug-in has a number of features to allow efficient handling of very large traces (and sets of large traces):
44
45* Support for arbitrarily large traces (larger than available memory)
46* Support for correlating multiple time-ordered traces
47* Support for zooming down to the nanosecond on any part of a trace or set of traces
48* Views synchronization of currently selected event
49* Efficient searching and filtering of events
50* Support for trace bookmarks
51
52There is also support for the integration of non-LTTng trace types:
53
54* Built-in CTF parser
55* Dynamic creation of customized parsers (for XML and text traces)
56
57= Installation =
58
59This section describes the installation of the LTTng tracer and the LTTng Eclipse plug-ins as well as their dependencies.
60
61== LTTng Tracer ==
62
63While the Eclipse plug-ins can run on the standard Eclipse platforms (Linux, Mac, Windows), the LTTng tracer and its accompanying tools run on Linux.
64
65The tracer and tools have been available for download in Ubuntu since 12.04. They can easily be installed with the following command:
66
67<pre>
68 > sudo apt-get install lttng-tools
69</pre>
70
71For other distributions, older Ubuntu distributions, or the latest, bleeding edge LTTng tracer, please refer to the [http://lttng.org/download LTTng website] for installation information.
72
73'''Note''': The LTTng tracer (and accompanying tools) is required only if you want to create your own traces (the usual case). If you intend to simply analyze existing traces then it is not necessary to install the tracer.
74
75== LTTng Eclipse Plug-ins ==
76
77The easiest way to install the LTTng plug-ins for Eclipse is through the Software Updates and Add-ons menu. For information on how to use this menu, refer to this [http://wiki.eclipse.org/Linux_Tools_Project/PluginInstallHelp#Installing_Updates_From_the_Linux_Tools_Update_Site link].
78
79The legacy (''Classic'' :-)) Eclipse LTTng (v0.x) is also available as an optional download. Refer to [http://wiki.eclipse.org/index.php/Linux_Tools_Project/LTTng/User_Guide here] for installation and verification instructions.
80
81The LTTng plug-ins are structured as a stack of features/plug-ins as following:
82
83* '''CTF''' - A CTF parser that can also be used as a standalone component
84** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.ctf
85** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.ctf.core, org.eclipse.linuxtools.ctf.parser
86
87* '''TMF''' - ''Tracing and Monitoring Framework'' a framework for generic trace processing
88** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf
89** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.core, org.eclipse.linuxtools.tmf.ui
90
91* '''LTTng''' - The wrapper for the LTTng tracer control. Can be used for kernel or application tracing.
92** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.lttng2
93** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.lttng2.core, org.eclipse.linuxtools.lttng2.ui
94
95* '''LTTng Kernel''' - Analysis components specific to Linux kernel traces
96** ''Feature'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.lttng2.kernel
97** ''Plug-ins'': org.eclipse.linuxtools.lttng2.kernel.core, org.eclipse.linuxtools.lttng2.kernel.ui
98
99== LTTng Eclipse Dependencies ==
100
101The Eclipse LTTng controls the LTTng tracer through an ''ssh'' connection even if the tracer is running locally (the 'degenerate' case).
102
103Therefore, the target system (where the tracer runs) needs to run an ''ssh'' server as well as ''sftp'' server (for file transfer) to which you have permission to connect.
104
105On the host side (where Eclipse is running), you also need to have Eclipse RSE (Remote System Explorer) installed to handle the SSH connection and transport. The RSE can be installed the standard way (''Help'' > ''Install New Software...'' > ''General Purpose Tools'' > ''Remote System Explorer End-User Runtime'').
106
107== Installation Verification ==
108
109Here are the quick steps to verify that your installation is functional:
110
111* Start Eclipse
112* Open the LTTng perspective
113* Create a Tracing project
114** Right-click in the Project view and select "New Project"
115** Enter the name of your project (e.g. "MyLTTngProject")
116** The project will be created. It will contain 2 empty folders: "Traces" and "Experiments"
117* Import a sample trace
118** Right-click on the newly created project "Traces" folder and select "Import..."
119** Navigate to the sample LTTng trace that you want to visualize
120** Select that trace (check box), select the trace type (e.g. CTF: Kernel Trace), and press "Finish"
121** The newly imported trace should appear under the Traces folder
122* Visualize the trace
123** Expand the Traces folder
124** Double-click on the trace
125** The trace should load and the views be populated
126
127If an error message is displayed, you might want to double-check that the trace type is correctly set (right-click on the trace and "Select Trace Type...").
128
129Refer to [[#Tracing Perspective | Tracing Perspective]] for detailed description of the views and their usage.
130
131To download sample LTTng traces, go to [http://lttng.org/download]. At the bottom of the page there is a link to some sample LTTng 2.0 kernel traces.
132
133= LTTng =
134
135== Tracing Perspective ==
136
137The '''Tracing''' perspective is part of the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)''' and groups the following views:
138
139* [[#Project_View | Project View]]
140* [[#Events_View | Events View]]
141* [[#Histogram_View | Histogram View]]
142* [[#Statistics_View | Statistics View]]
143
144The views are synchronized i.e. selecting an event, a timestamp, a time range, etc will update the other views accordingly.
145
146[[Image:images/TracingPerspective.png]]
147
148The perspective can be opened from the Eclipse Open Perspective dialog ('''Window > Open Perspective... > Other''').
149
150[[Image:images/ShowTracingPerspective.png]]
151
152On top to these views, the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)''' feature provides a set of generic tracing specific views, such as:
153
154* [[#Colors_View | Colors View]]
155* [[#Filters_View | Filters View]]
156* [[#Time_Chart_View | Time Chart View]]
157* [[#Environment_Variables_View | Environment Variables View]]
158* [[#Custom Parser | Custom Parser]]
159
160To open one of the above '''Tracing''' view, use the Eclipse Show View dialog ('''Window > Show View > Other...'''. Then select the relevant view from the '''Tracing'''.
161
162[[Image:images/ShowTracingViews.png]]
163
164Additionally, the '''LTTng''' feature provides a '''LTTng Tracer Control'''. It comes with a dedicated '''Control View'''.
165
166* [[#LTTng_Tracer_Control | LTTng Tracer Control]]
167
168== Project View ==
169The project view is the standard Eclipse Project Explorer. '''Tracing''' projects are well integrated in the Eclipse's Common Navigator Framework. The Project Explorer shows '''Tracing''' project with a small "T" decorator in the upper right of the project folder icon.
170
171=== Creating a Tracing Project ===
172A new '''Tracing''' project can be created using the New Tracing Project wizard. To create a new '''Tracing''' select '''File > New > Project...''' from the main menu bar or alternatively form the context-sensitive menu (click with right mouse button in the '''Project Explorer'''.
173
174The first page of project wizard will open.
175
176[[Image:images/NewTracingProjectPage1.png]]
177
178In the list of project categories, expand category '''Tracing''' and select '''Tracing Project''' and the click on '''Next >'''. A second page of the wizard will show. Now enter the a name in the field '''Project Name''', select a location if required and the press on '''Finish'''.
179
180[[Image:images/NewTracingProjectPage2.png]]
181
182A new project will appear in the '''Project Explorer''' view.
183
184[[Image:images/NewProjectExplorer.png]]
185
186Tracing projects have two sub-folders: '''Traces''' which holds the individual traces, and '''Experiments''' which holds sets of traces that we want to correlate.
187
188=== Importing Traces in a Project ===
189
190The '''Traces''' folder holds the set of traces available for experiments. To import a trace to the traces folder, select the Traces folder and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Import...''' menu item in the context-sensitive menu.
191
192[[Image:images/ProjectImportTraceAction.png]]
193
194A new display will show for selecting traces to import. By default, it shows the correct destination directory where the traces will be imported to. Now, specify the location of the traces by entering the path directly in the '''Source Directory''' or by browsing the file system (click on button browse). Then select the traces to import in the list of files and folders. Optionally, select the '''Trace Type''' from the drop-down menu, select or deselect the checkboxes for '''Overwrite existing trace without warning''' and '''Create links into workspace'''. When all options are configured, click on '''Finish'''.
195
196Note, that traces of certain types (e.g. LTTng Kernel) are actually a composite of multiple channel traces grouped under a folder. It is the folder that has to be imported.
197
198[[Image:images/ProjectImportTraceDialog.png]]
199
200Upon successful importing the traces will be stored in the '''Traces''' folder. If a trace type was selected in the import dialog, then the corresponding icon will be displayed. Linked traces will have a little arrow as decorator on the right bottom corner.
201
202Note that trace type is an extension point of the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)'''. Depending on the which features are loaded, the list of trace types can vary.
203
204=== Selecting a Trace Type ===
205
206If no trace type was selected a trace type as to be associated to a trace before it can be opened. To select a trace type select the relevant trace and click the right mouse button. In the context-sensitive menu, select '''Select Trace Type...''' menu item. A sub-menu will show will all available trace type categories. From the relevant category select the required trace type. The examples, below show how to select the '''Common Trace Format''' types '''LTTng Kernel''' and '''Generic CTF trace'''.
207
208[[Image:images/SelectLTTngKernelTraceType.png]]
209
210[[Image:images/SelectGenericCTFTraceType.png]]
211
212After selecting the trace type, the trace icon will be updated with the corresponding trace type icon.
213
214[[Image:images/ExplorerWithAssociatedTraceType.png]]
215
216=== Creating a Experiment ===
217
218An experiment consists in an arbitrary number of aggregated traces for purpose of correlation. In the degenerate case, an experiment can consist of a single trace. The experiment provides a unified, time-ordered stream of the individual trace events.
219
220To create an experiment, select the folder '''Experiments''' and click the right mouse button. Then select '''New...'''.
221
222[[Image:images/NewExperimentAction.png]]
223
224A new display will open for entering the experiment name. Type the name of the experiment in the text field '''Experiment Name''' and the click on '''OK'''.
225
226[[Image:images/NewExperimentDialog.png]]
227
228=== Selecting Traces for an Experiment ===
229
230After creating an experiment, traces need to be added to the experiment. To select traces for an experiment select the newly create experiment and click the right mouse button. Select '''Select Traces...''' from the context sensitive menu.
231
232[[Image:images/SelectTracesAction.png]]
233
234A new dialog box will open with a list of available traces. Select the traces to add from the list and then click on '''Finish'''.
235
236[[Image:images/SelectTracesDialog.png]]
237
238Now the selected traces will be linked to the experiment and will be shown under the '''Experiments''' folder.
239
240[[Image:images/ExplorerWithExperiment.png]]
241
242Alternatively, traces can be added to an experiment using [[#Drag_and_Drop | Drag and Drop]].
243
244=== Removing Traces from an Experiment ===
245
246To remove one or more traces for an experiment select the trace(s) to remove under the Experiment folder and click the right mouse button. Select '''Remove''' from the context sensitive menu.
247
248[[Image:images/RemoveTracesAction.png]]
249
250After that the selected trace(s) are removed from the experiment. Note that the traces are still in the '''Traces''' folder.
251
252=== Renaming a Trace or Experiment ===
253
254Traces and Experiment can be renamed from the '''Project Explorer''' view. To rename a trace or experiment select the relevant trace and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Rename...''' from the context sensitive menu.
255
256[[Image:images/RenameTraceAction.png]]
257
258A new dialog box will show for entering a new name. Enter a new trace or experiment name respectively in the relevant text field and click on '''OK'''. If the new name already exists the dialog box will show an error and a different name has to be entered.
259
260[[Image:images/RenameTraceDialog.png]]
261
262[[Image:images/RenameExperimentDialog.png]]
263
264After successful renaming the new name will show in the '''Project Explorer'''. In case of a trace all reference links to that trace will be updated too. Note that linked traces only changes the display name, the underlying trace resource will stay the original name.
265
266Note that all supplementary files will be also handled accordingly (see also [[#Deleting Supplementary Files | Deleting Supplementary Files]]).
267
268=== Copying a Trace or Experiment ===
269
270To copy a trace or experiment select the relevant trace or experiment in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Copy...''' from the context sensitive menu.
271
272[[Image:images/CopyTraceAction.png]]
273
274A new dialog box will show for entering a new name. Enter a new trace or experiment name respectively in the relevant text field and click on '''OK'''. If the new name already exists the dialog box will show an error and a different name has to be entered.
275
276[[Image:images/CopyTraceDialog.png]]
277
278[[Image:images/CopyExperimentDialog.png]]
279
280After successful copy operation the new trace or experiment respectively will show in the '''Project Explorer'''. In case of a linked trace, the copied trace will be a link to the original trace too.
281
282Note that the directory for all supplementary files will be copied, too. (see also [[#Deleting Supplementary Files | Deleting Supplementary Files]]).
283
284=== Deleting a Trace or Experiment ===
285
286To delete a trace or experiment select the relevant trace or experiment in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Delete...''' from the context sensitive menu.
287
288[[Image:images/DeleteExperimentAction.png]]
289
290A confirmation dialog box will open. To perform the deletion press '''OK''' otherwise select '''Cancel'''.
291
292[[Image:images/DeleteExperimentConfirmationDialog.png]]
293
294After successful operation the selected trace or experiment will be removed from the project. In case of a linked trace only the link will be removed. The actual trace resource remain on the disk.
295
296Note that the directory for all supplementary files will be deleted, too. (see also [[#Deleting Supplementary Files | Deleting Supplementary Files]]).
297
298=== Deleting Supplementary Files ===
299
300Supplementary files are by definition trace specific files that accompany a trace. These file could be temporary files, persistent indexes or any other persistent data files created by the LTTng integration in Eclipse during parsing a trace. For the LTTng 2.0 trace viewer a persistent state history of the Linux Kernel is created and is stored under the name '''stateHistroy.ht'''.
301
302All supplementary file are hidden from the user and are handled internally by the TMF. However, there is a possibility to delete the supplementary files so that there are recreated when opening a trace.
303
304To delete all supplementary files from a single trace, select the relevant trace in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select the '''Delete Supplementary Files...''' menu item from the context-sensitive menu.
305
306[[Image:images/DeleteSupplementaryFilesAction.png]]
307
308A new dialog box will open with a list of supplementary files. Select the file(s) to delete from the list and press '''OK'''.
309
310[[Image:images/DeleteSupplementaryFilesDialog.png]]
311
312To delete all supplementary files from all traces of a experiment, select the relevant experiment in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. In the context-sensitive menu select '''Delete Supplementary Files...''' menu item.
313
314A new dialog box will open with a list of supplementary files. Note that the supplementary files are prefixed with the trace name to indicate the trace they belong to. Select the file(s) to delete from the list and press '''OK'''.
315
316[[Image:images/DeleteExpSupplementaryFilesDialog.png]]
317
318=== Opening a Trace or Experiment ===
319
320A trace or experiment can be open by double-clicking the left mouse button on the trace or experiment in the '''Project Explorer''' view. Alternatively, select the trace or experiment in the in the '''Project Explorer''' view and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Open''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu.
321
322[[Image:images/OpenTraceAction.png]]
323
324When opening a trace or experiment all currently open view will be filled which are defined for the corresponding trace type. Additionally, an internal index will be created for fast navigation within a trace. For LTTng 2.0 kernel traces a persistent state history will also be build. This state history will be used in different views to display kernel state information.
325
326=== Drag and Drop ===
327
328Traces can be also be imported to a project by dragging from another tracing project and dropping to the project's trace folder. The trace will be copied and the trace type will be set.
329
330Any resource can be dragged and dropped from a non-tracing project, and any file or folder can be dragged from an external tool, into a tracing project's trace folder. The resource will be copied or imported as a new trace, however the trace type will be unknown and need to be set manually by the user.
331
332It is also possible to drop a trace, resource, file or folder into an existing experiment. If the item does not already exist as a trace in the project's trace folder, it will first be copied or imported, then the trace will be added to the experiment.
333
334== Events View ==
335
336The Events view shows the basic trace data in chronological order in a tabular format.
337
338When opened, the Events view displays the events of the currently selected trace or experiment.
339
340The header displays the current trace (or experiment) name.
341
342Being part of the '''Tracing and Monitoring''' Framework, the default table displays the following fields:
343
344* '''Timestamp''': the event timestamp
345* '''Source''': the source of the event
346* '''Type''': the event type and localization
347* '''Reference''' the event reference
348* '''Content''': the raw event content
349
350The first row of the table is the header row a.k.a. the Search and Filter row.
351
352[[Image:images/DefaultEventsView.png]]
353
354The highlighted event is the ''current event'' and is synchronized with the other views. If you select another event, the other views will be synchronized accordingly.
355
356=== Searching and Filtering ===
357
358Searching and filtering of events in the table can be performed by entering matching conditions in one or multiple columns in the header row (the first row below the column header).
359
360To toggle between searching and filtering, click on the 'search' ([[Image:images/TmfEventSearch.gif]]) or 'filter' ([[Image:images/TmfEventFilter.gif]]) icon in the header row's left margin, or right-click on the header row and select '''Show Filter Bar''' or '''Show Search Bar''' in the context menu.
361
362To apply a matching condition to a specific column, click on the column's header row cell, type in a [http://download.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html regular expression] and press the '''ENTER''' key. You can also enter a simple text string and it will be automatically be replaced with a 'contains' regular expression.
363
364When matching conditions are applied to two or more columns, all conditions must be met for the event to match (i.e. 'and' behavior).
365
366To clear all matching conditions in the header row, press the '''DEL''' key.
367
368==== Searching ====
369
370When a searching condition is applied to the header row, the table will select the next matching event starting from the top currently displayed event. Wrapping will occur if there is no match until the end of the trace.
371
372All matching events will have a 'search match' icon in their left margin. Non-matching events will be dimmed.
373
374[[Image:images/DefaultTmfEvents-Search.png]]
375
376Pressing the '''ENTER''' key will search and select the next matching event. Pressing the '''SHIFT-ENTER''' key will search and select the previous matching event. Wrapping will occur in both directions.
377
378Press '''ESC''' to cancel an ongoing search.
379
380Press '''DEL''' to clear the header row and reset all events to normal.
381
382==== Filtering ====
383
384When a filtering condition is entered in the head row, the table will clear all events and fill itself with matching events as they are found from the beginning of the trace.
385
386A status row will be displayed before and after the matching events, dynamically showing how many matching events were found and how many events were processed so far. Once the filtering is completed, the status row icon in the left margin will change from a 'stop' to a 'filter' icon.
387
388[[Image:images/DefaultTmfEvents-Filter.png]]
389
390Press '''ESC''' to stop an ongoing filtering. In this case the status row icon will remain as a 'stop' icon to indicate that not all events were processed.
391
392Press '''DEL''' or right-click on the table and select '''Clear Filters''' from the context menu to clear the header row and remove the filtering. All trace events will be now shown in the table. Note that the currently selected event will remain selected even after the filter is removed.
393
394You can also search on the subset of filtered events by toggling the header row to the Search Bar while a filter is applied. Searching and filtering conditions are independent of each other.
395
396==== Bookmarking ====
397
398Any event of interest can be tagged with a bookmark.
399
400To add a bookmark, double-click the left margin next to an event, or right-click the margin and select '''Add bookmark...'''. Alternatively use the '''Edit''' > '''Add bookmark...''' menu. Edit the bookmark description as desired and press '''OK'''.
401
402The bookmark will be displayed in the left margin, and hovering the mouse over the bookmark icon will display the description in a tooltip.
403
404The bookmark will be added to the '''Bookmarks''' view. In this view the bookmark description can be edited, and the bookmark can be deleted. Double-clicking the bookmark or selecting '''Go to''' from its context menu will open the trace or experiment and go directly to the event that was bookmarked.
405
406To remove a bookmark, double-click its icon, select '''Remove Bookmark''' from the left margin context menu, or select '''Delete''' from the Bookmarks view.
407
408[[Image:images/Bookmarks.png]]
409
410== Histogram View ==
411
412The Histogram View displays the trace events distribution with respect to time. When streaming a trace, this view is dynamically updated as the events are received.
413
414
415[[Image:images/HistogramView.png]]
416
417
418On the top left, there are two data controls:
419
420* '''Current Event (sec)''': Displays the timestamp of the currently selected event
421* '''Window Span (sec)''': Displays the current time range window size
422
423Both control can be used to modify their respective value. After validation, the other controls and views will be synchronized and updated accordingly.
424
425
426The large histogram, at the bottom, shows the event distribution over the whole trace or set of traces. It also has a smaller semi-transparent window, with a cross-hair, that shows the currently selected time range window. The time range window can be zoomed in/out by using the mouse wheel. It can also be selected by the mouse and dragged to another region of the trace.
427
428The smaller histogram, on top right, corresponds to the currently selected time range window, a sub-range of the event set. Its size can also be zoomed in/out using the mouse wheel.
429
430The x-axis of each histogram corresponds to the events timestamps. The timestamp of the first and the last event of the respective ranges is displayed. The y-axis of each histogram shows the minimum/maximum number of events in the corresponding histogram bars.
431
432The dashed vertical magenta bar, on the right, shows the position of the last event. The dashed vertical red bar shows the relative position of the currently selected event. The current event can be changed by clicking on the histogram.
433
434Hovering the mouse over an histogram bar pops up an information window that displays the start/end time of the corresponding bar as well as the number of events it represents.
435
436In each histogram, the following keys are handled:
437
438* '''Left''': Moves the current event to the previous non-empty bar
439* '''Right''': Moves the current event to the next non-empty bar
440* '''Home''': Displays the current event to the first histogram bar
441* '''End''': Displays the current event to the last non-empty histogram bar
442
443== Statistics View ==
444
445The Statistics View displays the various event counters that are collected when analyzing a trace. The data is organized per trace. To open the Statistics View, select Windows -> Show View -> Other... -> Tracing -> Statistics. A new view will open with the name Statistics. This view shows 2 columns: ''Level'' and ''Number of Events''. After parsing a trace the view will display the number of events per event type. The cells where the number of events are printed also contain a colored bar that indicates the percentage of the event count in relation to the total number of events. The statistics is collected for the whole trace. This view is part of the '''Tracing and Monitoring Framework (TMF)''' and is generic. It will work for any trace type extensions. For the LTTng 2.0 integration the Statistics view will display statistics as shown below.:
446
447[[Image:images/LTTng2StatisticsView.png]]
448
449== Colors View ==
450
451[[Image:images/ColorsView.png]]
452
453The Colors view allows the user to define a prioritized list of color settings.
454
455A color setting associates a foreground and background color (used in any events table), and a tick color (used in the Time Chart view), with an event filter.
456
457In an events table, any event row that matches the event filter of a color setting will be displayed with the specified foreground and background colors. If the event matches multiple filters, the color setting with the highest priority will be used.
458
459The same principle applies to the event tick colors in the Time Chart view. If a tick represents many events, the tick color of the highest priority matching event will be used.
460
461Color settings can be inserted, deleted, reordered, imported and exported using the buttons in the Colors view toolbar. Changes to the color settings are applied immediately, and are persisted to disk.
462
463== Filters View ==
464
465[[Image:images/FiltersView.png]]
466
467The Filters view allows the user to define preset filters that can be applied to any events table.
468
469The filters can be more complex than what can be achieved with the filter header row in the events table. The filter is defined in a tree node structure, where the node types can be any of '''EVENTTYPE''', '''AND''', '''OR''', '''CONTAINS''', '''EQUALS''', '''MATCHES''' or '''COMPARE'''. Some nodes types have restrictions on their possible children in the tree.
470
471The '''EVENTTYPE''' node filters against the event type of the trace as defined in a plugin extension or in a custom parsers. When used, any child node will have its field combo box restricted to the possible fields of that event type.
472
473The '''AND''' node applies the logical ''and'' condition on all of its children. All children conditions must be true for the filter to match. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition.
474
475The '''OR''' node applies the logical ''or'' condition on all of its children. At least one children condition must be true for the filter to match. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition.
476
477The '''CONTAINS''' node matches when the specified event ''field'' value contains the specified ''value'' string. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition. The condition can be case sensitive or insensitive.
478
479The '''EQUALS''' node matches when the specified event ''field'' value equals exactly the specified ''value'' string. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition. The condition can be case sensitive or insensitive.
480
481The '''MATCHES''' node matches when the specified event ''field'' value matches against the specified ''regular expression''. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition.
482
483The '''COMPARE''' node matches when the specified event ''field'' value compared with the specified ''value'' gives the specified ''result''. The result can be set to ''smaller than'', ''equal'' or ''greater than''. The type of comparison can be numerical, alphanumerical or based on time stamp. A ''not'' operator can be applied to invert the condition.
484
485Filters can be added, deleted, imported and exported using the buttons in the Filters view toolbar. Changes to the preset filters are only applied and persisted to disk when the '''save filters''' button is pressed.
486
487To apply a saved preset filter in an events table, right-click on the table and select '''Apply preset filter...''' > ''filter name''.
488
489== Time Chart View ==
490
491[[Image:images/TimeChartView.png]]
492
493The Time Chart view allows the user to visualize every open trace in a common time chart. Each trace is display in its own row and ticks are display for every punctual event. As the user zooms using the mouse wheel or by right-clicking and dragging in the time scale, more detailed event data is computed from the traces.
494
495Time synchronization is enabled between the time chart view and other trace viewers such as the events table.
496
497Color settings defined in the Colors view can be used to change the tick color of events displayed in the Time Chart view.
498
499When a search is applied in the events table, the ticks corresponding to matching events in the Time Chart view are decorated with a marker below the tick.
500
501When a bookmark is applied in the events table, the ticks corresponding to the bookmarked event in the Time Chart view is decorated with a bookmark above the tick.
502
503When a filter is applied in the events table, the non-matching ticks are removed from the Time Chart view.
504
505The Time Chart only supports traces that are opened in an editor. The use of an editor is specified in the plugin extension for that trace type, or is enabled by default for custom traces.
506
507== Environment Variables View ==
508A new feature of CTF traces is their ability to store user defined data that is not to be placed in an event. It is generally data that is per-trace specific, such as the tracer version and the trace domain. It will be populated when a trace is loaded if the trace has environment variables. <br>
509[[Image:images/environment_variables.png]]<br>
510The above picture shows a trace loaded that was collevcted with the '''lttng-modules''' version '''2'''.'''0'''.'''0''' tracer. It is a '''kernel''' trace of the '''3.2.0-18-generic''' '''linux''' kernel.
511
512== Custom Parser ==
513
514Custom parser wizards allow the user to define their own parsers for text or XML traces. The user defines how the input should be parsed into internal trace events and identifies the event fields that should be created and displayed. Traces created using a custom parser can be correlated with other built-in traces or traces added by plug-in extension.
515
516=== Creating a custom text parser ===
517
518The '''New Custom Text Parser''' wizard can be used to create a custom parser for text logs. It can be launched several ways:
519
520* Select '''File''' &gt; '''New''' &gt; '''Other...''' &gt; '''Tracing''' &gt; '''Custom Text Parser'''
521* Open the '''Manage Custom Parsers''' dialog from the '''Project Explorer''' view menu, select the '''Text''' radio button and click the '''New...''' button
522
523[[Image:images/CustomTextParserInput.png]]
524
525Fill out the first wizard page with the following information:
526
527* '''Log type:''' Enter a name for the custom log entries, which is also the name of the custom parser.
528* '''Time Stamp format:''' Enter the date and time pattern that will be used to output the Time Stamp.<br>
529Note: information about date and time patterns can be found here: [http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html]
530
531Click the '''Add next line''', '''Add child line''' or '''Remove line''' buttons to create a new line of input or delete it. For each line of input, enter the following information:
532
533* '''Regular expression:''' Enter a regular expression that should match the input line in the log, using capturing groups to extract the data.<br>
534Note: information about date and time patterns can be found here: [http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html]
535
536* '''Cardinality:''' Enter the minimum and maximum number of lines matching this line's regular expression that must be found in the log. At least the minimum number of lines must be found before the parser will consider the next line. Child lines will always be considered first.
537
538<u>Important note:</u> The custom parsers identify a log entry when the first line's regular expression matches (Root Line n). Each subsequent text line in the log is attempted to be matched against the regular expression of the parser's input lines in the order that they are defined (Line n.*). Only the first matching input line will be used to process the captured data to be stored in the log entry. When a text line matches a Root Line's regular expression, a new log entry is started.
539
540Click the '''Add group''' or '''Remove group''' buttons to define the data extracted from the capturing groups in the line's regular expression. For each group, enter the following information:
541
542* '''Name combo:''' Select a name for the extracted data:
543** '''Time Stamp''': Select this option to identify the time stamp data. The input's data and time pattern must be entered in the format: text box.
544** '''Message''': Select this option to identify the main log entry's message. This is usually a group which could have text of greater length.
545** '''Other''': Select this option to identify any non-standard data. The name must be entered in the name: text box.
546
547* '''Action combo:''' Select the action to be performed on the extracted data:
548** '''Set''': Select this option to overwrite the data for the chosen name when there is a match for this group.
549** '''Append''': Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this group.
550** '''Append with |''' : Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this group, using a | separator between matches.
551
552The '''Preview input''' text box can be used to enter any log data that will be processed against the defined custom parser. When the wizard is invoked from a selected log file resource, this input will be automatically filled with the file contents.
553
554The '''Preview:''' text field of each capturing group and of the Time Stamp will be filled from the parsed data of the first matching log entry.
555
556In the '''Preview input''' text box, the matching entries are highlighted with different colors:
557
558* <code><span style="background:#FFFF00">&nbsp;Yellow&nbsp;</span></code> : indicates uncaptured text in a matching line.
559* <code><span style="background:#00FF00">&nbsp;Green&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></code> : indicates a captured group in the matching line's regular expression for which a custom parser group is defined. This data will be stored by the custom parser.
560* <code><span style="background:#FF00FF">&nbsp;Magenta</span></code> : indicates a captured group in the matching line's regular expression for which there is no custom parser group defined. This data will be lost.
561* <code>&nbsp;White&nbsp;&nbsp;</code> : indicates a non-matching line.
562
563The first line of a matching entry is highlighted with darker colors.
564
565By default only the first matching entry will be highlighted. To highlight all matching entries in the preview input data, click the '''Highlight All''' button. This might take a few seconds to process, depending on the input size.
566
567Click the '''Next''' button to go to the second page of the wizard.
568
569[[Image:images/CustomTextParserOutput.png]]
570
571On this page, the list of default and custom data is shown, along with a preview of the custom parser log table output.
572
573The custom data output can be modified by the following options:
574
575* '''Visibility:''' Select or unselect the checkbox to display the custom data or hide it.
576
577* '''Column order:''' Click '''Move before''' or '''Move after''' to change the display order of custom data.
578
579The table at the bottom of the page shows a preview of the custom parser log table output according to the selected options, using the matching entries of the previous page's '''Preview input''' log data.
580
581Click the '''Finish''' button to close the wizard and save the custom parser.
582
583=== Creating a custom XML parser ===
584
585The '''New Custom XML Parser''' wizard can be used to create a custom parser for XML logs. It can be launched several ways:
586
587* Select '''File''' &gt; '''New''' &gt; '''Other...''' &gt; '''Tracing''' &gt; '''Custom XML Parser'''
588* Open the '''Manage Custom Parsers''' dialog from the '''Project Explorer''' view menu, select the '''XML''' radio button and click the '''New...''' button
589
590[[Image:images/CustomXMLParserInput.png]]
591
592Fill out the first wizard page with the following information:
593
594* '''Log type:''' Enter a name for the custom log entries, which is also the name of the custom parser.
595* '''Time Stamp format:''' Enter the date and time pattern that will be used to output the Time Stamp.<br>
596
597Note: information about date and time patterns can be found here: [http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html]
598
599Click the '''Add document element''' button to create a new document element and enter a name for the root-level document element of the XML file.
600
601Click the '''Add child''' button to create a new element of input to the document element or any other element. For each element, enter the following information:
602
603* '''Element name:''' Enter a name for the element that must match an element of the XML file.
604* '''Log entry:''' Select this checkbox to identify an element which represents a log entry. Each element with this name in the XML file will be parsed to a new log entry. At least one log entry element must be identified in the XML document. Log entry elements cannot be nested.
605* '''Name combo:''' Select a name for the extracted data:
606** '''Ignore''': Select this option to ignore the extracted element's data at this level. It is still possible to extract data from this element's child elements.
607** '''Time Stamp''': Select this option to identify the time stamp data. The input's data and time pattern must be entered in the format: text box.
608** '''Message''': Select this option to identify the main log entry's message. This is usually an input which could have text of greater length.
609** '''Other''': Select this option to identify any non-standard data. The name must be entered in the name: text box. It does not have to match the element name.
610* '''Action combo:''' Select the action to be performed on the extracted data:
611** '''Set''': Select this option to overwrite the data for the chosen name when there is a match for this element.
612** '''Append''': Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element.
613** '''Append with |''' : Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element, using a | separator between matches.
614
615Note: An element's extracted data 'value' is a parsed string representation of all its attributes, children elements and their own values. To extract more specific information from an element, ignore its data value and extract the data from one or many of its attributes and children elements.
616
617Click the '''Add attribute''' button to create a new attribute input from the document element or any other element. For each attribute, enter the following information:
618
619* '''Attribute name:''' Enter a name for the attribute that must match an attribute of this element in the XML file.
620* '''Name combo:''' Select a name for the extracted data:
621** '''Time Stamp''': Select this option to identify the time stamp data. The input's data and time pattern must be entered in the format: text box.
622** '''Message''': Select this option to identify the main log entry's message. This is usually an input which could have text of greater length.
623** '''Other''': Select this option to identify any non-standard data. The name must be entered in the name: text box. It does not have to match the element name.
624* '''Action combo:''' Select the action to be performed on the extracted data:
625** '''Set''': Select this option to overwrite the data for the chosen name when there is a match for this element.
626** '''Append''': Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element.
627** '''Append with |''' : Select this option to append to the data with the chosen name, if any, when there is a match for this element, using a | separator between matches.
628
629Note: A log entry can inherited input data from its parent elements if the data is extracted at a higher level.
630
631Click the '''Feeling lucky''' button to automatically and recursively create child elements and attributes for the current element, according to the XML element data found in the '''Preview input''' text box, if any.
632
633Click the '''Remove element''' or '''Remove attribute''' buttons to remove the extraction of this input data. Take note that all children elements and attributes are also removed.
634
635The '''Preview input''' text box can be used to enter any XML log data that will be processed against the defined custom parser. When the wizard is invoked from a selected log file resource, this input will be automatically filled with the file contents.
636
637The '''Preview:''' text field of each capturing element and attribute and of the Time Stamp will be filled from the parsed data of the first matching log entry. Also, when creating a new child element or attribute, its element or attribute name will be suggested if possible from the preview input data.
638
639Click the '''Next''' button to go to the second page of the wizard.
640
641[[Image:images/CustomXMLParserOutput.png]]
642
643On this page, the list of default and custom data is shown, along with a preview of the custom parser log table output.
644
645The custom data output can be modified by the following options:
646
647* '''Visibility:''' Select or unselect the checkbox to display the custom data or hide it.
648* '''Column order:''' Click '''Move before''' or '''Move before''' to change the display order of custom data.
649
650The table at the bottom of the page shows a preview of the custom parser log table output according to the selected options, using the matching entries of the previous page's '''Preview input''' log data.
651
652Click the '''Finish''' button to close the wizard and save the custom parser.
653
654=== Managing custom parsers ===
655
656The '''Manage Custom Parsers''' dialog is used to manage the list of custom parsers used by the tool. To open the dialog:
657
658* Select '''Manage Custom Parsers''' from the '''Project Explorer''' view menu.
659
660[[Image:images/ManageCustomParsers.png]]
661
662The ordered list of currently defined custom parsers for the selected type is displayed on the left side of the dialog.
663
664To change the type of custom parser to manage, select the '''Text''' or '''XML''' radio button.
665
666The following actions can be performed from this dialog:
667
668* New...
669
670Click the '''New...''' button to launch the '''New Custom Parser''' wizard.
671
672* Edit...
673
674Select a custom parser from the list and click the '''Edit...''' button to launch the '''Edit Custom Parser''' wizard.
675
676* Delete
677
678Select a custom parser from the list and click the '''Delete''' button to remove the custom parser.
679
680* Import...
681
682Click the '''Import...''' button and select a file from the opened file dialog to import all its custom parsers.
683
684* Export...
685
686Select a custom parser from the list, click the '''Export...''' button and enter or select a file in the opened file dialog to export the custom parser. Note that if an existing file containing custom parsers is selected, the custom parser will be appended to the file.
687
688=== Opening a trace using a custom parser ===
689
690Once a custom parser has been created, any [[#Importing Traces in a Project|imported trace]] file can be opened and parsed using it.
691
692To do so:
693
694* Select a trace in the '''Project Explorer''' view
695* Right-click the trace and select '''Select Trace Type...''' &gt; '''Custom Text''' or '''Custom XML''' &gt; ''parser name''
696* Double-click the trace or right-click it and select '''Open'''
697
698The trace will be opened in an editor showing the events table, and an entry will be added for it in the Time Chart view.
699
700== LTTng Tracer Control ==
701
702The LTTng Tracer Control in Eclipse for the LTTng Tracer toolchain version v2.0 (or later) is done using SSH and requires an SSH server to be running on the remote host. For the SSH connection the SSH implementation of RSE is used. For that a new System Type was defined using the corresponding RSE extension. The functions to control the LTTng tracer (e.g. start and stop), either locally or remotely, are available from a dedicated Control View.
703
704In the following sections the LTTng 2.0 tracer control integration in Eclipse is described. Please refer to the LTTng 2.0 tracer control command line manual for more details and descriptions about all commands and their command line parameters [[#References | References]].
705
706=== Control View ===
707To open the Control View, select '''Window->Show View->Other...->LTTng->Control View''.
708
709[[Image:images/LTTngControlView.png]]
710
711==== Creating a New Connection to a Remote Host ====
712
713To connect to a remote host, select the '''New Connection''' button in the Control View.
714
715[[Image:images/LTTngControlViewConnect.png]]
716
717A new display will show for entering the remote host information. A drop down menu will filled with all existing host information which were used before. To enter the host information either select one of the hosts in the drop down menu or enter the host information manually.
718
719[[Image:images/LTTng2NewConnection.png]]
720
721To use an existing connection definition, select the relevant entry in the drop-down menu and then select '''Ok'''.
722
723[[Image:images/LTTng2SelectConnection.png]]
724
725To enter the host information manually select first the button '''Edit connection information'''. Then the text fields '''Connection Name''' and '''Host Name''' will enabled. Enter the relevant information and then select '''Ok'''.
726
727[[Image:images/LTTng2EditConnection.png]]
728
729A new display will show for providing the user name and password. This display only opens if no password had been saved before. Enter user name and password in the '''Enter Password''' dialog box and select '''Ok'''.
730
731The '''Host Name''' holds the IP address or DNS name of the remote system.
732The '''Connection Name''' is the alias name to be displayed in the Control View.
733
734[[Image:images/LTTng2EnterPassword.png]]
735
736After pressing '''Ok''' the SSH connection will be established and after successful login the Control View implementation retrieves the LTTng Tracer Control information. This information will be displayed in the Control View in form of a tree structure.
737
738[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewFilled.png]]
739
740The top level tree node is the representation of the remote connection (host). The connection name of the connection will be displayed. Depending on the connection state different icons are displayed. If the node is '''CONNECTED''' the icon is shown [[Image:images/Target_connected.gif]], otherwise (states '''CONNECTING''', '''DISCONNNECTING''' or '''DISCONNECTED''' the icon is [[Image:images/Target_disconnected.gif]].
741
742Under the host level two folder groups are located. The first one is the '''Provider''' group. The second one is the '''Sessions''' group.
743
744Under the '''Provider''' group all trace providers are displayed. Trace providers are '''Kernel''' and any user space application that supports UST tracing. Under each provider a corresponding list of events are displayed.
745
746Under the '''Sessions''' group all current sessions will be shown. The level under the sessions show the configured domains. Currently the LTTng 2.0 Tracer Toolchan supports domain '''Kernel''' and '''UST global'''. Under each domain the configured channels will be displayed. The last level is under the channels where the configured events are displayed.
747
748Each session can be '''ACTIVE''' or '''INACTIVE'''. Active means that tracing has been started, inactive means that the tracing has been stopped. Depending on the state of a session a different icon is displayed. The icon for an active session is [[Image:images/Session_active.gif]]. The icon for an inactive session is [[Image:images/Session_inactive.gif]].
749
750Each channel can be '''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED'''. An enabled channel means that all configured events of that channel will be traced and a disabled channel won't trace any of its configured events. Different icons are displayed depending on the state of the channel. The icon for an enabled channel is [[Image:images/Channel.gif]] and the icon for a disabled channel is [[Image:images/Channel_disabled.gif]].
751
752Events within a channel can be in state '''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED'''. Enabled events are stored in the trace when passed during program execution. Disabled events on the other hand won't be traced. Depending on the state of the event the icons for the event is different. An enabled event has the icon [[Image:images/Event_enabled.gif]] and a disabled event the icon [[Image:images/Event_disabled.gif]].
753
754==== Disconnecting from a Remote Host ====
755
756To disconnect from a remote host, select the host in the Control View and press the '''Disconnect''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Disconnect''' button.
757
758[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewDisconnect.png]]
759
760==== Connecting to a Remote Host ====
761
762To connect to a remote host, select the host in the Control View and press the '''Connect''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Connect''' button. This will start the connection process as discribed in [[#Creating a New Connection to a Remote Host | Creating a New Connection to a Remote Host]].
763
764[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewConnect.png]]
765
766==== Deleting to a Remote Host Connection ====
767
768To delete a remote host connection, select the host in the Control View and press the '''Delete''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Delete''' button. For that command to be active the connection state has to be '''DISCONNECTED'''.
769
770[[Image:images/LTTng2ControlViewDelete.png]]
771
772==== Creating a Tracing Session ====
773To create a tracing session, select the tree node '''Sessions''' and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Create Session...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
774
775[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionAction.png]]
776
777A dialog box will open for entering information about the session to be created.
778
779[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateSessionDialog.png]]
780
781Fill in the '''Session Name''' and optionally the '''Session Path''' and press '''Ok'''. Upon successful operation a new session will be created and added under the tree node '''Sessions'''.
782
783==== Enabling Channels - General ====
784
785Enabling channels can be done using a session tree node when the domain hasn't be created in the session or, alternatively on a domain tree node of a session in case the domain is already available.
786
787==== Enabling Channels On Session Level ====
788
789To enable a channel, select the tree node of the relevant session and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Channel...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
790
791[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelAction.png]]
792
793A dialog box will open for entering information about the channel to be created.
794
795[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelDialog.png]]
796
797By default the domain '''Kernel''' is selected and the corresponding default values are shown. To create a UST channel, select '''UST''' under the domain section. To get the default values of UST, then press button '''Default'''.
798
799If required update the following channel information and then press '''Ok'''.
800
801* '''Channel Name''': The name of the channel.
802* '''Number of Sub Buffers''': The number of sub-buffers of the channel.
803* '''Overwrite Mode''': The channel overwrite mode ('''true''' or '''false''')
804* '''Read Timer Interval''': The read timer interval.
805* '''Sub Buffer size''': The size of the sub-buffers of the channel (in bytes).
806* '''Switch Timer Interval''': The switch timer interval.
807
808Upon successful operation, the requested domain will be created under the session tree node as well as the requested channel will be added under the domain. The channel will be '''ENABLED'''.
809
810==== Enabling Channels On Domain Level ====
811
812Once a domain is available, channels can be enabled directly using the domain. To enable a channel under an existing domain, select the tree node of the relevant domain and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Channel...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
813
814[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelOnDomainAction.png]]
815
816The dialog box for enabling channel will open for entering information about the channel to be created. Note that the domain is pre-selected and cannot be changed.
817
818[[Image:images/LTTng2CreateChannelOnDomainDialog.png]]
819
820Fill the relevant information and press '''Ok'''.
821
822==== Enabling and Disabling Channels ====
823
824To disable one or more enabled channels, select the tree nodes of the relevant channels and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Disable Channel''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu.
825
826[[Image:images/LTTng2DisableChannelAction.png]]
827
828Upon successful operation, the selected channels will be '''DISABLED''' and the icons for the channels will be updated.
829
830To enable one or more disabled channels, select the tree nodes of the relevant channels and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Channel''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu.
831
832[[Image:images/LTTng2EnableChannelAction.png]]
833
834Upon successful operation, the selected channels will be '''ENABLED''' and the icons for the channels will be updated.
835
836==== Enabling Events - General ====
837
838Enabling events can be done using different levels in the tree node. It can be done on the session, domain level and channel level. For the case of session or domain, i.e. when no specific channels is assigned then enabling of events is done on the default channel with the name '''channel0''' which created, if not already exists, by the LTTng tracer control on the server side.
839
840==== Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level ====
841
842To enable events, select the tree node of the relevant session and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Event (default channel)...''' button of the context-sensitive menu.
843
844[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnSessionAction.png]]
845
846A dialog box will open for entering information about events to be enabled.
847
848[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnSessionDialog.png]]
849
850By default the domain '''Kernel''' is selected and the kernel specific data sections are created. From this dialog box kernel '''Tracepoint''' events, '''System calls (Syscall)''', a '''Dynamic Probe''' or a '''Dynamic Function entry/return''' probe can be enabled. Note that events of one of these types at a time can be enabled.
851
852To enable '''Tracepoint''' events, first select the corresponding '''Select''' button, then select either all tracepoins (select '''All''') or select selectively one or more tracepoints in the displayed tree of tracepoints and finally press '''Ok'''.
853
854[[Image:images/LTTng2TracepointEventsDialog.png]]
855
856Upon successful operation, the domain '''Kernel''' will be created in the tree (if neccessary), the default channel with name "channel0" will be added under the domain (if necessary) as well as all requested events of type '''TRACEPOINT''' under the channel. The channel and events will be '''ENABLED'''.
857
858[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledKernelTracepoints.png]]
859
860To enable all '''Syscalls''', select the corresponding '''Select''' button and press '''Ok'''.
861
862[[Image:images/LTTng2SyscallsDialog.png]]
863
864Upon successful operation, the event with the name '''syscalls''' and event type '''SYSCALL''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''Kernel''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
865
866[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledKernelSyscalls.png]]
867
868To enable a '''Dynamic Probe''' event, select the corresponding '''Select''' button, fill the '''Event Name''' and '''Probe''' fields and press '''Ok'''. Note that the probe can be an address, symbol or a symbol+offset where the address and offset can be octal (0NNN...), decimal (NNN...) or hexadecimal (0xNNN...).
869
870[[Image:images/LTTng2ProbeEventDialog.png]]
871
872Upon successful operation, the dynamic probe event with the given name and event type '''PROBE''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''Kernel''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
873
874[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledKernelProbeEvent.png]]
875
876To enable a '''Dynamic Function entry/return Probe''' event, select the corresponding '''Select''' button, fill the '''Event Name''' and '''Function''' fields and press '''Ok'''. Note that the funtion probe can be an address, symbol or a symbol+offset where the address and offset can be octal (0NNN...), decimal (NNN...) or hexadecimal (0xNNN...).
877
878[[Image:images/LTTng2FunctionEventDialog.png]]
879
880Upon successful operation, the dynamic function probe event with the given name and event type '''PROBE''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''Kernel''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
881
882[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledFunctionProbeEvent.png]]
883
884==== Enabling UST Events On Session Level ====
885
886For enabling UST events, first open the enable events dialog as described in section [[#Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level | Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level]] and select domain '''UST'''.
887
888To enable '''Tracepoint''' events, first select the corresponding '''Select''' button, then select either all tracepoins (select '''All''') or select selectively one or more tracepoints in the displayed tree of tracepoints and finally press '''Ok'''.
889
890[[Image:images/LTTng2UstTracepointEventsDialog.png]]
891
892Upon successful operation, the domain '''UST global''' will be created in the tree (if neccessary), the default channel with name "channel0" will be added under the domain (if necessary) as well as all requested events under the channel. The channel and events will be '''ENABLED'''. Note that for the case that '''All''' tracepoints were selected the wildcard '''*''' is used which will be shown in the Control View as below.
893
894[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledAllUstTracepoints.png]]
895
896For UST it is possible to enable '''Tracepoint''' events using a wildcard. To enable '''Tracepoint''' events with a wildcard, select first the corresponding '''Select''' button, fill the '''Wildcard''' field and press '''Ok'''.
897
898[[Image:images/LTTng2UstWildcardEventsDialog.png]]
899
900Upon successful operation, the event with the given wildcard and event type '''TRACEPOINT''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''UST global''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
901
902[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledUstWildcardEvents.png]]
903
904For UST it is possible to enable '''Tracepoint''' events using log levels. To enable '''Tracepoint''' events using log levels, select first the corresponding '''Select''' button, select a log level from the drop down menu, fill in the relevant information (see below) and press '''Ok'''.
905
906* '''Event Name''': Name to display
907* '''loglevel''': To specify if a range of log levels (0 to selected log level) shall be configured
908* '''loglevel-only''': To specify that only the specified log level shall be configured
909
910[[Image:images/LTTng2UstLoglevelEventsDialog.png]]
911
912Upon successful operation, the event with the given event name and event type '''TRACEPOINT''' will be added under the default channel (channel0). If necessary the domain '''UST global''' and the channel '''channel0''' will be created.
913
914[[Image:images/LTTng2EnabledUstLoglevelEvents.png]]
915
916==== Enabling Events On Domain Level ====
917
918Kernel events can also be enabled on the domain level. For that select the relevant domain tree node, click the right mouse button and the select '''Enable Event (default channel)...'''. A new dialog box will open for providing information about the events to be enabled. Depending on the domain, '''Kernel''' or '''UST global''', the domain specifc fields are shown and the domain selector is preselected and read-only.
919
920[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnDomainAction.png]]
921
922To enable events for domain '''Kernel''' follow the instructions in section [[#Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level | Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level]], for domain '''UST global''' [[#Enabling UST Events On Session Level | Enabling UST Events On Session Level]].
923
924When enabling events on the domain level, the events will be add to the default channel '''channel0'''. This channel will be created by on the server side if neccessary.
925
926==== Enabling Events On Channel Level ====
927
928Kernel events can also be enabled on the channel level. If necessary, create a channel as described in sections [[#Enabling Channels On Session Level | Creating Channels On Session Level]] or [[#Enabling Channels On Domain Level | Creating Channels On Domain Level]].
929
930Then select the relevant channel tree node, click the right mouse button and the select '''Enable Event...'''. A new dialog box will open for providing information about the events to be enabled. Depending on the domain, '''Kernel''' or '''UST global''', the domain specifc fields are shown and the domain selector is preselected and read-only.
931
932[[Image:images/LTTng2EventOnChannelAction.png]]
933
934To enable events for domain '''Kernel''' follow the instructions in section [[#Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level | Enabling Kernel Events On Session Level]], for domain '''UST global''' [[#Enabling UST Events On Session Level | Enabling UST Events On Session Level]].
935
936When enabling events on the channel level, the events will be add to the selected channel.
937
938==== Enabling and Disabling Events ====
939
940To disable one or more enabled events, select the tree nodes of the relevant events and click the right mouse button. Then select '''Disable Event''' menu item in the context-sensitive menu.
941
942[[Image:images/LTTng2DisableEventAction.png]]
943
944Upon successful operation, the selected events will be '''DISABLED''' and the icons for these events will be updated.
945
946To enable one or more disabled events, select the tree nodes of the relevant events and press the right mouse button. Then select the '''Enable Event''' menu item of the context-sensitive menu.
947
948[[Image:images/LTTng2EnableEventAction.png]]
949
950Upon successful operation, the selected events will be '''ENABLED''' and the icons for these events will be updated.
951
952'''Note''': There is currently a limitation for kernel event of type '''SYSCALL'''. This kernel event can not be disabled. An error will appear when trying to disable this type of event. A work-around for that is to have the syscall event in a separate channel and disable the channel instead of the event.
953
954==== Enabling Tracepoint Events From Provider ====
955
956It is possible to enable events of type '''Tracepoint''' directly from the providers and assign the enabled event to a session and channel. Before doing that a session has to be created as described in section [[#Creating a Tracing Session | Creating a Tracing Session]]. Also, if other than default channel '''channel0''' is required, create a channel as described in sections [[#Enabling Channels On Session Level | Creating Channels On Session Level]] or [[#Enabling Channels On Domain Level | Creating Channels On Domain Level]].
957
958To assign tracepoint events to a session and channel, select the events to be enabled under the provider (e.g. provider '''Kernel'''), click right mouse button and then select '''Enable Event...''' menu item from the context sensitive menu.
959
960[[Image:images/LTTng2AssignEventAction.png]]
961
962A new display will open for defining the session and channel.
963
964[[Image:images/LTTng2AssignEventDialog.png]]
965
966Select a session from the '''Session List''' drop-down menu, a channel from the '''Channel List''' drop-down menu and the press '''Ok'''. Upon successful operation, the selected events will be added to the selected session and channel of the domain that the selected provider belongs to. In case that there was no channel available, the domain and the default channel '''channel0''' will be created for corresponding session. The newly added events will be '''ENABLED'''.
967
968[[Image:images/LTTng2AssignedEvents.png]]
969
970==== Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain ====
971
972It is possible to add contexts to channels and events. Adding contexts on channels and events from the domain level, will enable the specified contexts to all channels of the domain and all their events. To add contexts on the domain level, select a domain, click right mouse button on a domain tree node (e.g. provider '''Kernel''') and select the menu item '''Add Context...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
973
974[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextOnDomainAction.png]]
975
976A new display will open for selecting one or more contexts to add.
977
978[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextDialog.png]]
979
980The tree shows all available context that can be added. Select one or more context and the press '''Ok'''. Upon successful operation, the selected context will be added to all channels and their events of the selected domain.
981
982'''Note''': The LTTng UST tracer only supports contexts '''procname''', '''pthread_id''', '''vpid''' '''vtid'''. Adding any other contexts in the UST domina will fail.
983
984==== Adding Contexts to All Events of a Channel ====
985
986Adding contexts on channels and events from the channel level, will enable the specified contexts to all events of the selected channel. To add contexts on the channel level, select a channel, click right mouse button on a channel tree node and select the menu item '''Add Context...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
987
988[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextOnChannelAction.png]]
989
990A new display will open for selecting one or more contexts to add. Select one or more contexts as described in chapter [[#Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain | Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain]]. Upon successful operation, the selected context will be added to all channels and their events of the selected domain. '''Note''' that the LTTng 2.0 tracer control on the remote host doesn't provide a way to retrieve added contexts. Hence it's not possible to display the context information in the GUI.
991
992==== Adding Contexts to a Event of a Specific Channel ====
993
994Adding contexts to a event of a channel, select an event of a channel, click right mouse button on the corresponding event tree node and select the menu item '''Add Context...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
995
996[[Image:images/LTTng2AddContextToEventsAction.png]]
997
998A new display will open for selecting one or more contexts to add. Select one or more contexts as described in chapter [[#Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain | Adding Contexts to Channels and Events of a Domain]]. Upon successful operation, the selected context will be added to the selected event.
999
1000==== Start Tracing ====
1001
1002To start tracing, select one or more sessions to start in the Control View and press the '''Start''' button. Alternatively, press the right mouse button on the session tree nodes. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Start''' menu item.
1003
1004[[Image:images/LTTng2StartTracingAction.png]]
1005
1006Upon successful operation, the tracing session will be '''ACTIVE''' and the icon of the session will be updated.
1007
1008==== Stop Tracing ====
1009
1010To stop tracing, select one or more sessions to stop in the Control View and press the '''Stop''' button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on the session tree nodes. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Stop''' menu item.
1011
1012[[Image:images/LTTng2StopTracingAction.png]]
1013
1014Upon successful operation, the tracing session will be '''INACTIVE''' and the icon of the session will be updated.
1015
1016==== Destroying a Tracing Session ====
1017
1018To destroy a tracing session, select one or more sessions to destroy in the Control View and press the '''Destroy''' button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on the session tree node. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Destroy...''' menu item. Note that the session has to be '''INACTIVE''' for this operation.
1019
1020[[Image:images/LTTng2DestroySessionAction.png]]
1021
1022A confirmation dialog box will open. Click on '''Ok''' to destroy the session otherwise click on '''Cancel'''.
1023
1024[[Image:images/LTTng2DestroyConfirmationDialog.png]]
1025
1026Upon successful operation, the tracing session will be destroyed and removed from the tree.
1027
1028==== Refreshing the Node Information ====
1029
1030To refresh the remote host information, select any node in the tree of the Control View and press the '''Refresh''' button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on any tree node. A context-sensitive menu will show. Then select the '''Refresh''' menu item.
1031
1032[[Image:images/LTTng2RefreshAction.png]]
1033
1034Upon successful operation, the tree in the Control View will be refreshed with the remote host configuration.
1035
1036==== Quantifing LTTng overhead (Calibrate) ====
1037
1038The LTTng calibrate command can be used to find out the combined average overhead of the LTTng tracer and the instrumentation mechanisms used. For now, the only calibration implemented is that of the kernel function
1039instrumentation (kretprobes). To run the calibrate command, select the a domain (e.g. '''Kernel'''), click the right mouse button on the domain tree node. A context-sensitive menu will show. Select the '''Calibrate''' menu item.
1040
1041[[Image:images/LTTng2CalibrateAction.png]]
1042
1043Upon successful operation, the calibrate command is executed and relevant information is stored in the trace. Note: that the trace has to be active so that to command as any effect.
1044
1045==== Importing Session Traces to a Tracing Project ====
1046
1047To import traces from a tracing session, select the relevant session and click on the '''Import''' Button. Alternatively, click the right mouse button on the session tree node and select the menu item '''Import...''' from the context-sensitive menu.
1048
1049[[Image:images/LTTng2ImportAction.png]]
1050
1051A new display will open for selecting the traces to import.
1052
1053[[Image:images/LTTng2ImportDialog.png]]
1054
1055Select the trace to be imported by selecting the relevant traces in the tree viewer, select a tracing project from the '''Available Projects''' combo box and select the Overwrite button ('''Overwrite existing trace without warning''') if required. Then press button '''Ok'''. Upon successful import operation the the selected traces will be stored in the '''Traces''' directory of the specified tracing project. From the '''Project Explorer''' view, the trace can be analyzed further.
1056
1057'''Note''': If the overwrite button ('''Overwrite existing trace without warning''') was not selected and a trace with the same name of a trace to be imported already exists in the project, then a new confirmation dialog box will open.
1058
1059[[Image:images/LTTng2ImportOverwriteConfirmationDialog.png]]
1060
1061To Overwrite select the '''Overwrite''' Button and press '''Ok'''.
1062
1063If the existing trace should not be overwritten select, then select the '''Rename''' option of the confirmation dialog box above, enter a new name and then press '''Ok'''.
1064
1065[[Image:images/LTTng2ImportRenameDialog.png]]
1066
1067=== Properties View ===
1068
1069The Control View provides property information of selected tree component. Depending on the selected tree component different properties are displayed in the property view. For example, when selecting the node level the property view will be filled as followed:
1070
1071[[Image:images/LTTng2PropertyView.png]]
1072
1073'''List of properties''':
1074
1075* '''Host''' Properties
1076** '''Connection Name''': The alias name to be displayed in the Control View.
1077** '''Host Name''': The IP address or DNS name of the remote system.
1078** '''State''': The state of the connection ('''CONNECTED''', '''CONNECTING''', '''DISCONNNECTING''' or '''DISCONNECTED''').
1079* '''Kernel Provider''' Properties
1080** '''Provider Name''': The name of the provider.
1081* '''UST Provider''' Properties
1082** '''Provider Name''': The name of the provider.
1083** '''Process ID''': The process ID of the provider.
1084* '''Event''' Properties (Provider)
1085** '''Event Name''': The name of the event.
1086** '''Event Type''': The event type ('''TRACEPOINT''' only).
1087** '''Log Level''': The log level of the event.
1088* '''Session''' Properties
1089** '''Session Name''': The name of the Session.
1090** '''Session Path''': The path on the remote host where the traces will be stored.
1091** '''State''': The state of the session ('''ACTIVE''' or '''INACTIVE''')
1092* '''Domain''' Properties
1093** '''Domain Name''': The name of the domain.
1094* '''Channel''' Properties
1095** '''Channel Name''': The name of the channel.
1096** '''Number of Sub Buffers''': The number of sub-buffers of the channel.
1097** '''Output type''': The output type for the trace (e.g. ''splice()'' or ''mmap()'')
1098** '''Overwrite Mode''': The channel overwrite mode ('''true''' for overwrite mode, '''false''' for discard)
1099** '''Read Timer Interval''': The read timer interval.
1100** '''State''': The channel state ('''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED''')
1101** '''Sub Buffer size''': The size of the sub-buffers of the channel (in bytes).
1102** '''Switch Timer Interval''': The switch timer interval.
1103* '''Event''' Properties (Channel)
1104** '''Event Name''': The name of the event.
1105** '''Event Type''': The event type ('''TRACEPOINT''', '''SYSCALL''' or '''PROBE''')..
1106** '''Log Level''': The log level of the event.
1107** '''State''': The Event state ('''ENABLED''' or '''DISABLED''')
1108
1109=== LTTng Tracer Control Preferences ===
1110
1111Serveral LTTng 2.0 tracer control preferences exists which can be configured. To configure these preferences, select '''Window->Preferences''' from the top level menu. The preference display will open. Then select '''Tracing->LTTng Tracer Control Preferences'''. This preferences page allows the user to specify the tracing group of the user and allows the user to configure the logging of LTTng 2.0 tracer control commands and results to a file.
1112
1113[[Image:images/LTTng2Preferences.png]]
1114
1115To change the tracing group of the user which will be specified on each command line, enter the new group name in the '''Tracing Group''' text field and click ok. The default tracing group is '''tracing''' and can be restored by pressing the '''Restore Defaults''' button.
1116
1117[[Image:images/LTTng2PreferencesGroup.png]]
1118
1119To configure logging of trace control commands and the corresponding command result to a file, selected the button '''Logging'''. To append to an existing log file, select the '''Append''' button. Deselect the '''Append''' button to overwrite any existing log file. It's possible to specify a verbose level. There are 3 levels with inceasing verbosity from '''Level 1''' to '''Level 3'''. To change the verbosity level, select the relevant level or select '''None'''. If '''None''' is selected only commands and command results are logged. Then press on button '''Ok'''. The log file will be stored in the users home directory with the name ''lttng_tracer_control.log''. The name and location cannot be changed. To reset to default preferences, click on the button '''Restore Defaults'''.
1120
1121[[Image:images/LTTng2PreferencesLogging.png]]
1122
1123= LTTng Kernel Analysis =
1124
1125Historically, LTTng was developped to trace the Linux kernel and, over time, a number of kernel-oriented analysis views were developped and organized in a perspective.
1126
1127This section presents a description of the LTTng Kernel Perspective.
1128
1129== LTTng Kernel Perspective ==
1130
1131The '''LTTng Kernel''' perspective is built upon the [[#Tracing_Perspective | Tracing Perspective]], re-organizes them slightly and adds the following views:
1132
1133* [[#Control_Flow_View | Control Flow View]] - to visualize processes state transitions
1134* [[#Resources_View | Resources View]] - to visualize system resources state transitions
1135
1136
1137[[Image:images/LTTngKernelPerspective.png]]
1138
1139
1140The perspective can be opened from the Eclipse Open Perspective dialog ('''Window > Open Perspective... > Other''').
1141
1142
1143[[Image:images/OpenLTTngKernelPerspective.png]]
1144
1145== Control Flow View ==
1146
1147The '''''Control Flow View''''' is a LTTng-specific view that shows per-process events graphically. To enable it, select ''Control Flow'' under ''LTTng'' within the ''Show View'' window ('''Window''' -> '''Show View''' -> '''Other...'''):
1148
1149[[Image:images/Cfv_show_view.png]]
1150
1151You should get something like this:
1152
1153[[Image:images/Cfv_global.png]]
1154
1155The view is divided into the following important sections: '''<span style="color: #C84545;">process tree</span>''', '''<span style="color: #A1C81A;">process TID, PTID and birth time</span>''', '''<span style="color: #67A3DC;">states flow</span>''' and the '''<span style="color: #AD77D7;">toolbar</span>'''.
1156
1157The following sections provide detailed information for each part of the Control Flow View.
1158
1159=== Process tree and informations ===
1160
1161Processes are organized as a tree within this view. This way, child and parent processes are easy to identify.
1162
1163[[Image:images/Cfv_process_tree.png]]
1164
1165The layout is based on the states computed from the trace events.
1166
1167A given process may be shown at different places within the tree since the nodes are '''unique (TID, birth time) couples'''. This means that if process B of parent A dies, you'll still see it in the tree. If process A forks process B again, it will be shown as a different node since it won't have the same birth time (and probably not the same TID). This has the advantage that the tree, once loaded, never changes: horizontal scrolling within the [[#States flow|states flow]] remains possible.
1168
1169The TID column shows the process node's '''thread ID''' and the PTID column shows its '''parent thread ID''' (nothing is shown if the process has no parent).
1170
1171=== States flow ===
1172
1173This part of the Control Flow View is probably the most interesting one. Using the mouse, you can navigate through the trace (go left, right) and zoom on a specific region to inspect its details.
1174
1175The colored bars you see represent '''states''' for the associated process node. When a process state changes in time, so does the color. States colors legend is available through a [[#Toolbar|toolbar button]]:
1176
1177[[Image:images/Cfv_legend.png]]
1178
1179This dark yellow is what you'll see most of the time since scheduling puts processes on hold while others run.
1180
1181The vertical blue line is the '''current time indicator'''.
1182
1183==== Using the mouse ====
1184
1185The states flow is usable with the mouse. The following actions are set:
1186
1187* '''drag horizontally''': pan left or right
1188* '''click on a colored bar''': the associated process node is selected and the current time indicator is moved where the click happened
1189* '''mouse wheel up/down''': zoom in or out
1190* '''drag the time ruler horizontally''': zoom in or out
1191* '''drag the time ruler horizontally with the right button''': [[#Zoom region|zoom region]]
1192* '''double-click the time ruler''': reset zoom
1193
1194When the current time indicator is changed (when clicking in the states flow), all the other views are '''synchronized'''. For example, the [[#Events_View_2|Events View]] will show the event matching the current time indicator. The reverse behaviour is also implemented: selecting an event within the Events View will update the Control Flow View current time indicator.
1195
1196==== Incomplete regions ====
1197
1198You'll notice '''small dots''' over the colored bars at some places:
1199
1200[[Image:images/Cfv_small_dots.png]]
1201
1202Those dots mean the underlying region is '''incomplete''': there's not enough pixels to view all the events. In other words, you have to zoom in.
1203
1204When zooming in, small dots start to disappear:
1205
1206[[Image:images/Cfv_zoom.png]]
1207
1208When no dots are left, you are viewing '''all the events and states''' within that region.
1209
1210==== Zoom region ====
1211
1212To zoom in on a specific region, '''right-click and drag the time ruler''' in order to draw a time range:
1213
1214[[Image:images/Cfv_zoom_region.png]]
1215
1216The states flow horizontal space will only show the selected region.
1217
1218==== Tooltips ====
1219
1220Hover the cursor over a colored bar and a '''tooltip''' will pop up:
1221
1222[[Image:images/Cfv_tooltip.png]]
1223
1224The tooltip indicates:
1225
1226* the process name
1227* the pointed state name
1228* the pointed state date and start/stop times
1229* the pointed state duration (seconds)
1230
1231=== Toolbar ===
1232
1233The Control Flow View '''toolbar''', located at the top right of the view, has shortcut buttons to perform common actions:
1234
1235[[Image:images/Cfv_toolbar.png]]
1236
1237The '''Previous event''' and '''Next event''' buttons update the current time indicator so that it's on the previous or next event.
1238
1239The '''Previous process''' and '''Next process''' buttons select the previous and next process node within the process tree.
1240
1241== Resources View ==
1242This view is specific to kernel trace. To open it, go in '''Window''' -> '''Show View''' -> '''Other...''' and select '''LTTng/Resources''' in the list.
1243
1244[[Image:images/Rv example.png| Example of resources view with all trace points and syscalls enabled]]
1245
1246This view shows the state of system resources i.e. if changes occured during the trace either on '''CPUs''', '''IRQs''' or '''soft IRQs''', it will appear in this view. The left side of the view present a list of resources that are affected by at least one event of the trace. The right side illustrate the state in which each resource is at some point in time.
1247
1248Just like other views, according to which trace points and system calls are activated, the content of this view may change from one trace to another.
1249
1250Each state are represented by one color so it is faster to say what is happening.
1251
1252[[Image:images/Rv_legend.png|Color for each state]]
1253
1254To go through the state of a resource, you first have to select the resource and the timestamp that interest you. For the latter, you can pick some time before the interesting part of the trace.
1255
1256[[Image:images/RV_infobox1.png|Shows the state of an IRQ]]
1257
1258Then, by selecting '''Next Event''', it will show the next state transition and the event that occured at this time.
1259
1260[[Image:images/RV_infobox2.png|Shows the next state of the IRQ]]
1261
1262This view is also synchronized with the others : [[#Histogram_View | histogram]], [[#Events_View_2 | events view]], [[#Control_Flow_View | control flow view]], etc.
1263
1264=== Navigation ===
1265
1266See Control Flow View's '''[[#Using_the_mouse|Using the mouse]]''' and '''[[#Zoom_region|Zoom region]]'''.
1267
1268=== Incomplete regions ===
1269
1270See Control Flow View's '''[[#Incomplete_regions|Incomplete regions]]'''.
1271
1272=== Toolbar ===
1273
1274See Control Flow View's '''[[#Toolbar|Toolbar]]'''.
1275
1276== Events View ==
1277
1278The LTTng Kernel Events View '''is''' the plain TMF [[#Events_View | Events Views]] except that it provide its own specialized viewer to replace the standard one. In short, it has exactly the same behaviour but the layout is slightly different:
1279
1280* '''Timestamp''': the event timestamp
1281* '''Channel''': the event channel (data collector)
1282* '''Event Type''': the event type (or kernel marker)
1283* '''Content''': the raw event content
1284
1285
1286[[Image:images/LTTngKernelEventsViewer.png]]
1287
1288= Limitations =
1289
1290TBD
1291
1292= How to use LTTng to diagnose problems =
1293
1294LTTng is a tracer, it will give an enormous amount of information about the system it is running on. This means it can solve many types of problems.
1295
1296The following are examples of problems that can be solved with a tracer.
1297
1298== Random stutters ==
1299
1300Bob is running a computer program and it stutters periodically every 2 minutes. The CPU load is relatively low and Bob isn't running low on RAM.
1301
1302He decides to trace his complete system for 10 minutes. He opens the LTTng view in eclipse. From the control, he creates a session and enables all kernel tracepoints.
1303
1304He now has a 10 GB trace file. He imports the trace to his viewer and loads it up.
1305
1306A cursory look at the histogram bar on the bottom show relatively even event distribution, there are no interesting spikes, so he will have to dig deeper to find the issue. If he had seen a spike every 2 minutes, there would be strong chances this would be the first thing to investigate as it would imply a lot of kernel activity at the same period as his glitch, this would have been a path to investigate.
1307
1308As Bob suspects that he may be having some hardware raising IRQs or some other hardware based issue and adding delays. He looks at the ressource view and doesn't see anything abnormal.
1309
1310Bob did note an exact second one glitch occured: 11:58:03. He zooms into the time range or 11:58:02-11:58:04 using the histogram.He is happy to see the time is human readable local wall clock time and no longer in "nanseconds since the last reboot". <br>In the resource view, once again, he sees many soft irqs being raised at the same time, around the time his gui would freeze. He changes views and looks at the control flow view at that time and sees a process spending a lot of time in the kernel: FooMonitor- his temperature monitoring software.
1311
1312At this point he closes FooMonitor and notices the bug dissapeared. He could call it a day but he wants to see what was causing the system to freeze. He cannot justify closing a piece of software without understanding the issue. It may be a conflict that HIS software is causing after all.
1313
1314The system freezes around the time this program is running. He clicks on the process in the control flow view and looks at the corresponding events in the detailed events view. He sees: open - read - close repeated hundreds of times on the same file. The file being read was /dev/HWmonitor. He sends a report to the FooMonitor team and warns his team that FooMonitor was glitching their performance.
1315
1316The FooMonitor team finds that they were calling a system bus call that would halt a cpu while reading the temperature so that the core would not induce an 0.1 degree error in the reading, by disabling this feature, they improve their software and stop the glitches from occurring on their custommer's machine. They also optimize their code to open the file read and clone it once.
1317
1318By using system wide kernel tracing, even without deep kernel knowledge Bob was able to isolate a bug in a rogue piece of software in his system.
1319
1320== Slow I/O ==
1321
1322Alice is running her server. She noticed that one of her nodes was slowing down, and wasn't sure why, upon reading the trace she noticed that her time between a block request and complete was around 10ms.
1323
1324This is abnormal, normally her server handles IOs in under 100us, since they are quite local.
1325
1326She walks up to the server and hears the hard drive thrashing, This prompts her to look up in the events view the sectors being read in the block complete requests. There are her requests interleaved with other ones at the opposite side of the hard drive.
1327
1328She sees the tracer writing but there is another process that is writing to the server disk non stop. She looks in the control flow view and sees that there's a program from another fellow engineer, "Wally" that is writing in his home in a loop "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.".
1329
1330Alice kills the program, and immediately the server speeds up. She then goes to discuss this with Wally and implements strict hard disk quotas on the server.
1331
1332= References =
1333
1334* [http://www.eclipse.org/linuxtools/projectPages/lttng/ Linux Tools - LTTng integration]
1335* [http://www.lttng.org/ LTTng project]
1336* [http://lttng.org/files/doc/man-pages/man1/lttng.1.html LTTng 2.0 Tracer Control Command Line Tool]
1337* [http://wiki.eclipse.org/Linux_Tools_Project/TMF/User_Guide TMF User Guide]
1338
1339= Updating This Document =
1340
1341This document is maintained in a collaborative wiki. If you wish to update or modify this document please visit [http://wiki.eclipse.org/index.php/Linux_Tools_Project/LTTng2/User_Guide http://wiki.eclipse.org/Linux_Tools_Project/LTTng2/User_Guide]
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