LTTNG-ROTATE(1) | LTTng Manual | LTTNG-ROTATE(1) |
lttng-rotate - Archive the current trace chunk of an LTTng recording session
lttng [GENERAL OPTIONS] rotate [--no-wait] [SESSION]
The lttng rotate command archives to the file system the current trace chunk of:
With the SESSION argument
Without the SESSION argument
This action is called a recording session rotation.
See lttng-concepts(7) to learn more about the recording session rotation and trace chunk concepts.
You can use the rotate command:
See lttng-concepts(7) to learn more about the activity of a recording session.
By default, the rotate command ensures that LTTng finished performing the recording session rotation before it prints the path of the archived trace chunk and exits. The printed path is absolute when the recording session was created in normal mode and relative to the base output directory of the relay daemon (see the --output option of lttng-relayd(8)) when it was created in network streaming mode (see lttng-create(1)).
Make the command exit immediately with the --no-wait option. In this case, there’s no easy way to know when the current trace chunk becomes archived, and the command does NOT print the path of the archived trace chunk.
Because LTTng flushes the current sub-buffers of the selected recording session when it performs a recording session rotation, archived trace chunks are never redundant, that is, they do not overlap over time like snapshots can (see lttng-snapshot(1)). Also, a rotation does NOT directly cause discarded event records or packets.
A rotate-session trigger action can also rotate a recording session (see lttng-add-trigger(1)).
See the “EXAMPLES” section below for usage examples.
Important
You may only use the rotate command when:
See lttng(1) for GENERAL OPTIONS.
-n, --no-wait
-h, --help
This option attempts to launch /usr/bin/man to view this manual page. Override the manual pager path with the LTTNG_MAN_BIN_PATH environment variable.
--list-options
0
1
2
3
4
LTTNG_ABORT_ON_ERROR
LTTNG_HOME
Defaults to $HOME.
Useful when the Unix user running the commands has a non-writable home directory.
LTTNG_MAN_BIN_PATH
LTTNG_SESSION_CONFIG_XSD_PATH
LTTNG_SESSIOND_PATH
The --sessiond-path general option overrides this environment variable.
$LTTNG_HOME/.lttngrc
This is where LTTng stores the name of the Unix user’s current recording session between executions of lttng(1). lttng-create(1) and lttng-set-session(1) set the current recording session.
$LTTNG_HOME/lttng-traces
Override this path with the --output option of the lttng-create(1) command.
$LTTNG_HOME/.lttng
$LTTNG_HOME/.lttng/sessions
/etc/lttng/sessions
Note
$LTTNG_HOME defaults to the value of the HOME environment variable.
Example 1. Rotate the current recording session.
$ lttng rotate
Example 2. Rotate a specific recording session.
$ lttng rotate my-session
Example 3. Rotate the current recording session without waiting for completion.
See the --no-wait option.
$ lttng rotate --no-wait
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.
lttng(1), lttng-disable-rotation(1), lttng-enable-rotation(1), lttng-concepts(7)
14 June 2021 | LTTng 2.13.9 |