tpoint(8) | System Manager's Manual | tpoint(8) |
tpoint - trace a given tracepoint. Static tracing. Uses Linux ftrace.
tpoint [-hHsv] [-d secs] [-p PID] [-L TID] tracepoint [filter]
tpoint -l
This will enable a given tracepoint, print events, then disable the tracepoint when the program ends. This is like a simple version of the "perf" command for printing live tracepoint events only. Wildcards are currently not supported. If for any reason tpoint(8) is insufficient, use the more powerful perf command for tracing tracepoints instead.
Beware of feedback loops: tracing tcp functions over an ssh session, or writing ext4 events to an ext4 file system. For the former, tcp trace data could be redirected to a file (as in the usage message). For the latter, trace to the screen or a different file system.
Since this uses ftrace, only the root user can use this tool.
FTRACE CONFIG and tracepoints, which you may already have enabled and available on recent kernels.
The ftrace buffer has a fixed size per-CPU (see /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/buffer_size_kb). If you think events are missing, try increasing that size.
The output format depends on the kernel version, and headings can be printed using -H. The format is the same as the ftrace function trace format, described in the kernel source under Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt.
Typical fields are:
This can generate a lot of trace data quickly, depending on the frequency of the traced events. Such data will cause performance overheads. This also works without buffering by default, printing function events as they happen (uses trace_pipe), context switching and consuming CPU to do so. If needed, you can try the "-d secs" option, which buffers events instead, reducing overhead. If you think the buffer option is losing events, try increasing the buffer size (buffer_size_kb).
Before using tpoint(8), you can use perf_events to count the rate of events for the tracepoint of interest, to gauge overhead. For example:
perf stat -e block:block_rq_issue -a sleep 5
That counts the occurrences of the block:block_rq_issue tracepoint for 5 seconds.
Also consider using perf_events, which manages buffers differently and more efficiently, for higher frequency applications.
This is from the perf-tools collection:
Also look under the examples directory for a text file containing example usage, output, and commentary for this tool.
Linux
Unstable - in development.
Brendan Gregg
2014-07-20 | USER COMMANDS |