LTTNG-STOP(1) | LTTng Manual | LTTNG-STOP(1) |
lttng-stop - Stop LTTng tracers
lttng [GENERAL OPTIONS] stop [--no-wait] [SESSION]
The lttng stop command stops the various LTTng tracers for a given active tracing session.
Stopping the LTTng tracers has the effect that all enabled event rules within enabled channels cannot make event sources emit trace events anymore.
A tracing session with no running tracers is said to be inactive. Inactive tracing sessions can be set active using the lttng-start(1) command.
If SESSION is omitted, the LTTng tracers are stopped for the current tracing session (see lttng-create(1) for more information about the current tracing session). Otherwise, they are stopped for the existing tracing session named SESSION. lttng list outputs all the existing tracing sessions (see lttng-list(1)).
By default, the lttng stop command ensures that the tracing session’s trace data is valid before returning to the prompt. With the --no-wait option, the command finishes immediately, hence a local trace might not be valid when the command is done. In this case, there is no way to know when the trace becomes valid.
If at least one rotation occurred during the chosen tracing session’s lifetime (see lttng-rotate(1) and lttng-enable-rotation(1)), the lttng stop command renames the current trace chunk subdirectory and prints the renamed path. Although it is safe to read the content of this renamed subdirectory while the tracing session remains inactive (until the next lttng-start(1)), it is NOT a trace chunk archive: you need to destroy the tracing session with lttng-destroy(1) or make a rotation with lttng-rotate(1) to archive it.
General options are described in lttng(1).
-n, --no-wait
-h, --help
This option, like lttng-help(1), attempts to launch /usr/bin/man to view the command’s man page. The path to the man pager can be overridden by the LTTNG_MAN_BIN_PATH environment variable.
--list-options
LTTNG_ABORT_ON_ERROR
LTTNG_HOME
LTTNG_MAN_BIN_PATH
LTTNG_SESSION_CONFIG_XSD_PATH
LTTNG_SESSIOND_PATH
The --sessiond-path option has precedence over this environment variable.
Note that the lttng-create(1) command can spawn an LTTng session daemon automatically if none is running. See lttng-sessiond(8) for the environment variables influencing the execution of the session daemon.
$LTTNG_HOME/.lttngrc
This is where the per-user current tracing session is stored between executions of lttng(1). The current tracing session can be set with lttng-set-session(1). See lttng-create(1) for more information about tracing sessions.
$LTTNG_HOME/lttng-traces
$LTTNG_HOME/.lttng
$LTTNG_HOME/.lttng/sessions
/etc/lttng/sessions
$LTTNG_HOME defaults to $HOME when not explicitly set.
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If you encounter any issue or usability problem, please report it on the LTTng bug tracker <https://bugs.lttng.org/projects/lttng-tools>.
This program is part of the LTTng-tools project.
LTTng-tools is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 2 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html>. See the LICENSE <https://github.com/lttng/lttng-tools/blob/master/LICENSE> file for details.
Special thanks to Michel Dagenais and the DORSAL laboratory <http://www.dorsal.polymtl.ca/> at École Polytechnique de Montréal for the LTTng journey.
Also thanks to the Ericsson teams working on tracing which helped us greatly with detailed bug reports and unusual test cases.
18 January 2018 | LTTng 2.12.3 |