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Linux/Documentation/trace/ftrace.rst

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Diff markup

Differences between /Documentation/trace/ftrace.rst (Version linux-6.12-rc7) and /Documentation/trace/ftrace.rst (Version linux-3.10.108)


  1 ========================                          
  2 ftrace - Function Tracer                          
  3 ========================                          
  4                                                   
  5 Copyright 2008 Red Hat Inc.                       
  6                                                   
  7 :Author:   Steven Rostedt <srostedt@redhat.com>    
  8 :License:  The GNU Free Documentation License,    
  9           (dual licensed under the GPL v2)        
 10 :Original Reviewers:  Elias Oltmanns, Randy Du    
 11                       John Kacur, and David Te    
 12                                                   
 13 - Written for: 2.6.28-rc2                         
 14 - Updated for: 3.10                               
 15 - Updated for: 4.13 - Copyright 2017 VMware In    
 16 - Converted to rst format - Changbin Du <changb    
 17                                                   
 18 Introduction                                      
 19 ------------                                      
 20                                                   
 21 Ftrace is an internal tracer designed to help     
 22 designers of systems to find what is going on     
 23 It can be used for debugging or analyzing late    
 24 performance issues that take place outside of     
 25                                                   
 26 Although ftrace is typically considered the fu    
 27 is really a framework of several assorted trac    
 28 There's latency tracing to examine what occurs    
 29 disabled and enabled, as well as for preemptio    
 30 a task is woken to the task is actually schedu    
 31                                                   
 32 One of the most common uses of ftrace is the e    
 33 Throughout the kernel is hundreds of static ev    
 34 can be enabled via the tracefs file system to     
 35 going on in certain parts of the kernel.          
 36                                                   
 37 See events.rst for more information.              
 38                                                   
 39                                                   
 40 Implementation Details                            
 41 ----------------------                            
 42                                                   
 43 See Documentation/trace/ftrace-design.rst for     
 44                                                   
 45                                                   
 46 The File System                                   
 47 ---------------                                   
 48                                                   
 49 Ftrace uses the tracefs file system to hold th    
 50 well as the files to display output.              
 51                                                   
 52 When tracefs is configured into the kernel (wh    
 53 option will do) the directory /sys/kernel/trac    
 54 this directory, you can add to your /etc/fstab    
 55                                                   
 56  tracefs       /sys/kernel/tracing       trace    
 57                                                   
 58 Or you can mount it at run time with::            
 59                                                   
 60  mount -t tracefs nodev /sys/kernel/tracing       
 61                                                   
 62 For quicker access to that directory you may w    
 63 it::                                              
 64                                                   
 65  ln -s /sys/kernel/tracing /tracing               
 66                                                   
 67 .. attention::                                    
 68                                                   
 69   Before 4.1, all ftrace tracing control files    
 70   file system, which is typically located at /    
 71   For backward compatibility, when mounting th    
 72   the tracefs file system will be automaticall    
 73                                                   
 74   /sys/kernel/debug/tracing                       
 75                                                   
 76   All files located in the tracefs file system    
 77   debugfs file system directory as well.          
 78                                                   
 79 .. attention::                                    
 80                                                   
 81   Any selected ftrace option will also create     
 82   The rest of the document will assume that yo    
 83   (cd /sys/kernel/tracing) and will only conce    
 84   directory and not distract from the content     
 85   "/sys/kernel/tracing" path name.                
 86                                                   
 87 That's it! (assuming that you have ftrace conf    
 88                                                   
 89 After mounting tracefs you will have access to    
 90 of ftrace. Here is a list of some of the key f    
 91                                                   
 92                                                   
 93  Note: all time values are in microseconds.       
 94                                                   
 95   current_tracer:                                 
 96                                                   
 97         This is used to set or display the cur    
 98         that is configured. Changing the curre    
 99         the ring buffer content as well as the    
100                                                   
101   available_tracers:                              
102                                                   
103         This holds the different types of trac    
104         have been compiled into the kernel. Th    
105         tracers listed here can be configured     
106         echoing their name into current_tracer    
107                                                   
108   tracing_on:                                     
109                                                   
110         This sets or displays whether writing     
111         ring buffer is enabled. Echo 0 into th    
112         the tracer or 1 to enable it. Note, th    
113         writing to the ring buffer, the tracin    
114         still be occurring.                       
115                                                   
116         The kernel function tracing_off() can     
117         kernel to disable writing to the ring     
118         set this file to "0". User space can r    
119         echoing "1" into the file.                
120                                                   
121         Note, the function and event trigger "    
122         set this file to zero and stop tracing    
123         be re-enabled by user space using this    
124                                                   
125   trace:                                          
126                                                   
127         This file holds the output of the trac    
128         readable format (described below). Ope    
129         writing with the O_TRUNC flag clears t    
130         Note, this file is not a consumer. If     
131         (no tracer running, or tracing_on is z    
132         the same output each time it is read.     
133         it may produce inconsistent results as    
134         the entire buffer without consuming it    
135                                                   
136   trace_pipe:                                     
137                                                   
138         The output is the same as the "trace"     
139         file is meant to be streamed with live    
140         Reads from this file will block until     
141         retrieved.  Unlike the "trace" file, t    
142         consumer. This means reading from this    
143         sequential reads to display more curre    
144         data is read from this file, it is con    
145         will not be read again with a sequenti    
146         "trace" file is static, and if the tra    
147         adding more data, it will display the     
148         information every time it is read.        
149                                                   
150   trace_options:                                  
151                                                   
152         This file lets the user control the am    
153         that is displayed in one of the above     
154         files. Options also exist to modify ho    
155         or events work (stack traces, timestam    
156                                                   
157   options:                                        
158                                                   
159         This is a directory that has a file fo    
160         trace option (also in trace_options).     
161         or cleared by writing a "1" or "0" res    
162         corresponding file with the option nam    
163                                                   
164   tracing_max_latency:                            
165                                                   
166         Some of the tracers record the max lat    
167         For example, the maximum time that int    
168         The maximum time is saved in this file    
169         stored, and displayed by "trace". A ne    
170         recorded if the latency is greater tha    
171         (in microseconds).                        
172                                                   
173         By echoing in a time into this file, n    
174         unless it is greater than the time in     
175                                                   
176   tracing_thresh:                                 
177                                                   
178         Some latency tracers will record a tra    
179         latency is greater than the number in     
180         Only active when the file contains a n    
181         (in microseconds)                         
182                                                   
183   buffer_percent:                                 
184                                                   
185         This is the watermark for how much the    
186         before a waiter is woken up. That is,     
187         blocking read syscall on one of the pe    
188         will block until the given amount of d    
189         is in the ring buffer before it wakes     
190         controls how the splice system calls a    
191                                                   
192           0   - means to wake up as soon as th    
193           50  - means to wake up when roughly     
194                 are full.                         
195           100 - means to block until the ring     
196                 about to start overwriting the    
197                                                   
198   buffer_size_kb:                                 
199                                                   
200         This sets or displays the number of ki    
201         buffer holds. By default, the trace bu    
202         for each CPU. The displayed number is     
203         CPU buffer and not total size of all b    
204         trace buffers are allocated in pages (    
205         that the kernel uses for allocation, u    
206         A few extra pages may be allocated to     
207         meta-data. If the last page allocated     
208         than requested, the rest of the page w    
209         making the actual allocation bigger th    
210         ( Note, the size may not be a multiple    
211         due to buffer management meta-data. )     
212                                                   
213         Buffer sizes for individual CPUs may v    
214         (see "per_cpu/cpu0/buffer_size_kb" bel    
215         this file will show "X".                  
216                                                   
217   buffer_total_size_kb:                           
218                                                   
219         This displays the total combined size     
220                                                   
221   buffer_subbuf_size_kb:                          
222                                                   
223         This sets or displays the sub buffer s    
224         into several same size "sub buffers".     
225         the size of the sub buffer. Normally,     
226         architecture's page (4K on x86). The s    
227         at the start which also limits the siz    
228         the sub buffer is a page size, no even    
229         size minus the sub buffer meta data.      
230                                                   
231         Note, the buffer_subbuf_size_kb is a w    
232         minimum size of the subbuffer. The ker    
233         implementation details, or simply fail    
234         not handle the request.                   
235                                                   
236         Changing the sub buffer size allows fo    
237         page size.                                
238                                                   
239         Note: When changing the sub-buffer siz    
240         data in the ring buffer and the snapsh    
241                                                   
242   free_buffer:                                    
243                                                   
244         If a process is performing tracing, an    
245         shrunk "freed" when the process is fin    
246         killed by a signal, this file can be u    
247         of this file, the ring buffer will be     
248         Having a process that is tracing also     
249         exits its file descriptor for this fil    
250         the ring buffer will be "freed".          
251                                                   
252         It may also stop tracing if disable_on    
253                                                   
254   tracing_cpumask:                                
255                                                   
256         This is a mask that lets the user only    
257         The format is a hex string representin    
258                                                   
259   set_ftrace_filter:                              
260                                                   
261         When dynamic ftrace is configured in (    
262         section below "dynamic ftrace"), the c    
263         modified (code text rewrite) to disabl    
264         function profiler (mcount). This lets     
265         in with practically no overhead in per    
266         has a side effect of enabling or disab    
267         to be traced. Echoing names of functio    
268         will limit the trace to only those fun    
269         This influences the tracers "function"    
270         and thus also function profiling (see     
271                                                   
272         The functions listed in "available_fil    
273         can be written into this file.            
274                                                   
275         This interface also allows for command    
276         "Filter commands" section for more det    
277                                                   
278         As a speed up, since processing string    
279         and requires a check of all functions     
280         an index can be written into this file    
281         written will instead select the same c    
282         of the "available_filter_functions" fi    
283                                                   
284   set_ftrace_notrace:                             
285                                                   
286         This has an effect opposite to that of    
287         set_ftrace_filter. Any function that i    
288         be traced. If a function exists in bot    
289         and set_ftrace_notrace, the function w    
290                                                   
291   set_ftrace_pid:                                 
292                                                   
293         Have the function tracer only trace th    
294         listed in this file.                      
295                                                   
296         If the "function-fork" option is set,     
297         PID is listed in this file forks, the     
298         automatically be added to this file, a    
299         traced by the function tracer as well.    
300         cause PIDs of tasks that exit to be re    
301                                                   
302   set_ftrace_notrace_pid:                         
303                                                   
304         Have the function tracer ignore thread    
305         this file.                                
306                                                   
307         If the "function-fork" option is set,     
308         PID is listed in this file forks, the     
309         automatically be added to this file, a    
310         traced by the function tracer as well.    
311         cause PIDs of tasks that exit to be re    
312                                                   
313         If a PID is in both this file and "set    
314         file takes precedence, and the thread     
315                                                   
316   set_event_pid:                                  
317                                                   
318         Have the events only trace a task with    
319         Note, sched_switch and sched_wake_up w    
320         listed in this file.                      
321                                                   
322         To have the PIDs of children of tasks     
323         added on fork, enable the "event-fork"    
324         cause the PIDs of tasks to be removed     
325         exits.                                    
326                                                   
327   set_event_notrace_pid:                          
328                                                   
329         Have the events not trace a task with     
330         Note, sched_switch and sched_wakeup wi    
331         in this file, even if a thread's PID i    
332         sched_switch or sched_wakeup events al    
333         be traced.                                
334                                                   
335         To have the PIDs of children of tasks     
336         added on fork, enable the "event-fork"    
337         cause the PIDs of tasks to be removed     
338         exits.                                    
339                                                   
340   set_graph_function:                             
341                                                   
342         Functions listed in this file will cau    
343         tracer to only trace these functions a    
344         they call. (See the section "dynamic f    
345         Note, set_ftrace_filter and set_ftrace    
346         what functions are being traced.          
347                                                   
348   set_graph_notrace:                              
349                                                   
350         Similar to set_graph_function, but wil    
351         tracing when the function is hit until    
352         This makes it possible to ignore traci    
353         by a specific function.                   
354                                                   
355   available_filter_functions:                     
356                                                   
357         This lists the functions that ftrace h    
358         These are the function names that you     
359         "set_ftrace_filter", "set_ftrace_notra    
360         "set_graph_function", or "set_graph_no    
361         (See the section "dynamic ftrace" belo    
362                                                   
363   available_filter_functions_addrs:               
364                                                   
365         Similar to available_filter_functions,    
366         for each function. The displayed addre    
367         and can differ from /proc/kallsyms add    
368                                                   
369   dyn_ftrace_total_info:                          
370                                                   
371         This file is for debugging purposes. T    
372         have been converted to nops and are av    
373                                                   
374   enabled_functions:                              
375                                                   
376         This file is more for debugging ftrace    
377         in seeing if any function has a callba    
378         Not only does the trace infrastructure    
379         trace utility, but other subsystems mi    
380         displays all functions that have a cal    
381         as well as the number of callbacks tha    
382         Note, a callback may also call multipl    
383         not be listed in this count.              
384                                                   
385         If the callback registered to be trace    
386         the "save regs" attribute (thus even m    
387         will be displayed on the same line as     
388         is returning registers.                   
389                                                   
390         If the callback registered to be trace    
391         the "ip modify" attribute (thus the re    
392         an 'I' will be displayed on the same l    
393         can be overridden.                        
394                                                   
395         If a non ftrace trampoline is attached    
396         Note, normal ftrace trampolines can al    
397         "direct" trampoline can be attached to    
398                                                   
399         Some architectures can not call direct    
400         the ftrace ops function located above     
401         such cases an 'O' will be displayed.      
402                                                   
403         If a function had either the "ip modif    
404         it in the past, a 'M' will be shown. T    
405         used to know if a function was every m    
406         and can be used for debugging.            
407                                                   
408         If the architecture supports it, it wi    
409         is being directly called by the functi    
410         than 1 it most likely will be ftrace_o    
411                                                   
412         If the callback of a function jumps to    
413         specific to the callback and which is     
414         its address will be printed as well as    
415         trampoline calls.                         
416                                                   
417   touched_functions:                              
418                                                   
419         This file contains all the functions t    
420         to it via the ftrace infrastructure. I    
421         enabled_functions but shows all functi    
422         traced.                                   
423                                                   
424         To see any function that has every bee    
425         direct trampoline, one can perform the    
426                                                   
427         grep ' M ' /sys/kernel/tracing/touched    
428                                                   
429   function_profile_enabled:                       
430                                                   
431         When set it will enable all functions     
432         tracer, or if configured, the function    
433         keep a histogram of the number of func    
434         and if the function graph tracer was c    
435         track of the time spent in those funct    
436         content can be displayed in the files:    
437                                                   
438         trace_stat/function<cpu> ( function0,     
439                                                   
440   trace_stat:                                     
441                                                   
442         A directory that holds different traci    
443                                                   
444   kprobe_events:                                  
445                                                   
446         Enable dynamic trace points. See kprob    
447                                                   
448   kprobe_profile:                                 
449                                                   
450         Dynamic trace points stats. See kprobe    
451                                                   
452   max_graph_depth:                                
453                                                   
454         Used with the function graph tracer. T    
455         it will trace into a function. Setting    
456         one will show only the first kernel fu    
457         from user space.                          
458                                                   
459   printk_formats:                                 
460                                                   
461         This is for tools that read the raw fo    
462         the ring buffer references a string, o    
463         is recorded into the buffer and not th    
464         tools from knowing what that string wa    
465         and address for the string allowing to    
466         the strings were.                         
467                                                   
468   saved_cmdlines:                                 
469                                                   
470         Only the pid of the task is recorded i    
471         the event specifically saves the task     
472         makes a cache of pid mappings to comms    
473         comms for events. If a pid for a comm     
474         "<...>" is displayed in the output.       
475                                                   
476         If the option "record-cmd" is set to "    
477         will not be saved during recording. By    
478                                                   
479   saved_cmdlines_size:                            
480                                                   
481         By default, 128 comms are saved (see "    
482         increase or decrease the amount of com    
483         the number of comms to cache into this    
484                                                   
485   saved_tgids:                                    
486                                                   
487         If the option "record-tgid" is set, on    
488         the Task Group ID of a task is saved i    
489         the thread to its TGID. By default, th    
490         disabled.                                 
491                                                   
492   snapshot:                                       
493                                                   
494         This displays the "snapshot" buffer an    
495         take a snapshot of the current running    
496         See the "Snapshot" section below for m    
497                                                   
498   stack_max_size:                                 
499                                                   
500         When the stack tracer is activated, th    
501         maximum stack size it has encountered.    
502         See the "Stack Trace" section below.      
503                                                   
504   stack_trace:                                    
505                                                   
506         This displays the stack back trace of     
507         that was encountered when the stack tr    
508         See the "Stack Trace" section below.      
509                                                   
510   stack_trace_filter:                             
511                                                   
512         This is similar to "set_ftrace_filter"    
513         functions the stack tracer will check.    
514                                                   
515   trace_clock:                                    
516                                                   
517         Whenever an event is recorded into the    
518         "timestamp" is added. This stamp comes    
519         clock. By default, ftrace uses the "lo    
520         clock is very fast and strictly per cp    
521         systems it may not be monotonic with r    
522         CPUs. In other words, the local clocks    
523         with local clocks on other CPUs.          
524                                                   
525         Usual clocks for tracing::                
526                                                   
527           # cat trace_clock                       
528           [local] global counter x86-tsc          
529                                                   
530         The clock with the square brackets aro    
531                                                   
532         local:                                    
533                 Default clock, but may not be     
534                                                   
535         global:                                   
536                 This clock is in sync with all    
537                 be a bit slower than the local    
538                                                   
539         counter:                                  
540                 This is not a clock at all, bu    
541                 counter. It counts up one by o    
542                 with all CPUs. This is useful     
543                 know exactly the order events     
544                 each other on different CPUs.     
545                                                   
546         uptime:                                   
547                 This uses the jiffies counter     
548                 is relative to the time since     
549                                                   
550         perf:                                     
551                 This makes ftrace use the same    
552                 Eventually perf will be able t    
553                 and this will help out in inte    
554                                                   
555         x86-tsc:                                  
556                 Architectures may define their    
557                 example, x86 uses its own TSC     
558                                                   
559         ppc-tb:                                   
560                 This uses the powerpc timebase    
561                 This is in sync across CPUs an    
562                 to correlate events across hyp    
563                 tb_offset is known.               
564                                                   
565         mono:                                     
566                 This uses the fast monotonic c    
567                 which is monotonic and is subj    
568                                                   
569         mono_raw:                                 
570                 This is the raw monotonic cloc    
571                 which is monotonic but is not     
572                 and ticks at the same rate as     
573                                                   
574         boot:                                     
575                 This is the boot clock (CLOCK_    
576                 fast monotonic clock, but also    
577                 suspend. Since the clock acces    
578                 tracing in the suspend path, s    
579                 if clock is accessed after the    
580                 the fast mono clock is updated    
581                 appears to happen slightly soo    
582                 Also on 32-bit systems, it's p    
583                 sees a partial update. These e    
584                 processing should be able to h    
585                 ktime_get_boot_fast_ns() funct    
586                                                   
587         tai:                                      
588                 This is the tai clock (CLOCK_T    
589                 clock time. However, this cloc    
590                 discontinuities and backwards     
591                 seconds. Since the clock acces    
592                 side effects are possible. The    
593                 readouts in case the internal     
594                 by setting the system time or     
595                 These effects are rare and pos    
596                 handle them. See comments in t    
597                 function for more information.    
598                                                   
599         To set a clock, simply echo the clock     
600                                                   
601           # echo global > trace_clock             
602                                                   
603         Setting a clock clears the ring buffer    
604         "snapshot" buffer.                        
605                                                   
606   trace_marker:                                   
607                                                   
608         This is a very useful file for synchro    
609         with events happening in the kernel. W    
610         this file will be written into the ftr    
611                                                   
612         It is useful in applications to open t    
613         of the application and just reference     
614         for the file::                            
615                                                   
616                 void trace_write(const char *f    
617                 {                                 
618                         va_list ap;               
619                         char buf[256];            
620                         int n;                    
621                                                   
622                         if (trace_fd < 0)         
623                                 return;           
624                                                   
625                         va_start(ap, fmt);        
626                         n = vsnprintf(buf, 256    
627                         va_end(ap);               
628                                                   
629                         write(trace_fd, buf, n    
630                 }                                 
631                                                   
632         start::                                   
633                                                   
634                 trace_fd = open("trace_marker"    
635                                                   
636         Note: Writing into the trace_marker fi    
637               that are written into /sys/kerne    
638               See "Event triggers" in Document    
639               example in Documentation/trace/h    
640                                                   
641   trace_marker_raw:                               
642                                                   
643         This is similar to trace_marker above,    
644         to be written to it, where a tool can     
645         from trace_pipe_raw.                      
646                                                   
647   uprobe_events:                                  
648                                                   
649         Add dynamic tracepoints in programs.      
650         See uprobetracer.rst                      
651                                                   
652   uprobe_profile:                                 
653                                                   
654         Uprobe statistics. See uprobetrace.txt    
655                                                   
656   instances:                                      
657                                                   
658         This is a way to make multiple trace b    
659         events can be recorded in different bu    
660         See "Instances" section below.            
661                                                   
662   events:                                         
663                                                   
664         This is the trace event directory. It     
665         (also known as static tracepoints) tha    
666         into the kernel. It shows what event t    
667         and how they are grouped by system. Th    
668         files at various levels that can enabl    
669         when a "1" is written to them.            
670                                                   
671         See events.rst for more information.      
672                                                   
673   set_event:                                      
674                                                   
675         By echoing in the event into this file    
676                                                   
677         See events.rst for more information.      
678                                                   
679   available_events:                               
680                                                   
681         A list of events that can be enabled i    
682                                                   
683         See events.rst for more information.      
684                                                   
685   timestamp_mode:                                 
686                                                   
687         Certain tracers may change the timesta    
688         logging trace events into the event bu    
689         different modes can coexist within a b    
690         effect when an event is logged determi    
691         is used for that event.  The default t    
692         'delta'.                                  
693                                                   
694         Usual timestamp modes for tracing:        
695                                                   
696           # cat timestamp_mode                    
697           [delta] absolute                        
698                                                   
699           The timestamp mode with the square b    
700           one in effect.                          
701                                                   
702           delta: Default timestamp mode - time    
703                  a per-buffer timestamp.          
704                                                   
705           absolute: The timestamp is a full ti    
706                  against some other value.  As    
707                  space and is less efficient.     
708                                                   
709   hwlat_detector:                                 
710                                                   
711         Directory for the Hardware Latency Det    
712         See "Hardware Latency Detector" sectio    
713                                                   
714   per_cpu:                                        
715                                                   
716         This is a directory that contains the     
717                                                   
718   per_cpu/cpu0/buffer_size_kb:                    
719                                                   
720         The ftrace buffer is defined per_cpu.     
721         buffer for each CPU to allow writes to    
722         and free from cache bouncing. These bu    
723         size buffers. This file is similar to     
724         file, but it only displays or sets the    
725         specific CPU. (here cpu0).                
726                                                   
727   per_cpu/cpu0/trace:                             
728                                                   
729         This is similar to the "trace" file, b    
730         the data specific for the CPU. If writ    
731         the specific CPU buffer.                  
732                                                   
733   per_cpu/cpu0/trace_pipe                         
734                                                   
735         This is similar to the "trace_pipe" fi    
736         read, but it will only display (and co    
737         for the CPU.                              
738                                                   
739   per_cpu/cpu0/trace_pipe_raw                     
740                                                   
741         For tools that can parse the ftrace ri    
742         the trace_pipe_raw file can be used to    
743         from the ring buffer directly. With th    
744         system call, the buffer data can be qu    
745         a file or to the network where a serve    
746         data.                                     
747                                                   
748         Like trace_pipe, this is a consuming r    
749         reads will always produce different da    
750                                                   
751   per_cpu/cpu0/snapshot:                          
752                                                   
753         This is similar to the main "snapshot"    
754         snapshot the current CPU (if supported    
755         the content of the snapshot for a give    
756         written to, only clears this CPU buffe    
757                                                   
758   per_cpu/cpu0/snapshot_raw:                      
759                                                   
760         Similar to the trace_pipe_raw, but wil    
761         from the snapshot buffer for the given    
762                                                   
763   per_cpu/cpu0/stats:                             
764                                                   
765         This displays certain stats about the     
766                                                   
767         entries:                                  
768                 The number of events that are     
769                                                   
770         overrun:                                  
771                 The number of lost events due     
772                 the buffer was full.              
773                                                   
774         commit overrun:                           
775                 Should always be zero.            
776                 This gets set if so many event    
777                 event (ring buffer is re-entra    
778                 buffer and starts dropping eve    
779                                                   
780         bytes:                                    
781                 Bytes actually read (not overw    
782                                                   
783         oldest event ts:                          
784                 The oldest timestamp in the bu    
785                                                   
786         now ts:                                   
787                 The current timestamp             
788                                                   
789         dropped events:                           
790                 Events lost due to overwrite o    
791                                                   
792         read events:                              
793                 The number of events read.        
794                                                   
795 The Tracers                                       
796 -----------                                       
797                                                   
798 Here is the list of current tracers that may b    
799                                                   
800   "function"                                      
801                                                   
802         Function call tracer to trace all kern    
803                                                   
804   "function_graph"                                
805                                                   
806         Similar to the function tracer except     
807         function tracer probes the functions o    
808         whereas the function graph tracer trac    
809         and exit of the functions. It then pro    
810         to draw a graph of function calls simi    
811         source.                                   
812                                                   
813   "blk"                                           
814                                                   
815         The block tracer. The tracer used by t    
816         application.                              
817                                                   
818   "hwlat"                                         
819                                                   
820         The Hardware Latency tracer is used to    
821         produces any latency. See "Hardware La    
822         below.                                    
823                                                   
824   "irqsoff"                                       
825                                                   
826         Traces the areas that disable interrup    
827         the trace with the longest max latency    
828         See tracing_max_latency. When a new ma    
829         it replaces the old trace. It is best     
830         trace with the latency-format option e    
831         happens automatically when the tracer     
832                                                   
833   "preemptoff"                                    
834                                                   
835         Similar to irqsoff but traces and reco    
836         time for which preemption is disabled.    
837                                                   
838   "preemptirqsoff"                                
839                                                   
840         Similar to irqsoff and preemptoff, but    
841         records the largest time for which irq    
842         is disabled.                              
843                                                   
844   "wakeup"                                        
845                                                   
846         Traces and records the max latency tha    
847         the highest priority task to get sched    
848         it has been woken up.                     
849         Traces all tasks as an average develop    
850                                                   
851   "wakeup_rt"                                     
852                                                   
853         Traces and records the max latency tha    
854         RT tasks (as the current "wakeup" does    
855         for those interested in wake up timing    
856                                                   
857   "wakeup_dl"                                     
858                                                   
859         Traces and records the max latency tha    
860         a SCHED_DEADLINE task to be woken (as     
861         "wakeup_rt" does).                        
862                                                   
863   "mmiotrace"                                     
864                                                   
865         A special tracer that is used to trace    
866         It will trace all the calls that a mod    
867         hardware. Everything it writes and rea    
868         as well.                                  
869                                                   
870   "branch"                                        
871                                                   
872         This tracer can be configured when tra    
873         calls within the kernel. It will trace    
874         unlikely branch is hit and if it was c    
875         of being correct.                         
876                                                   
877   "nop"                                           
878                                                   
879         This is the "trace nothing" tracer. To    
880         tracers from tracing simply echo "nop"    
881         current_tracer.                           
882                                                   
883 Error conditions                                  
884 ----------------                                  
885                                                   
886   For most ftrace commands, failure modes are     
887   using standard return codes.                    
888                                                   
889   For other more involved commands, extended e    
890   available via the tracing/error_log file.  F    
891   support it, reading the tracing/error_log fi    
892   display more detailed information about what    
893   information is available.  The tracing/error    
894   error log displaying a small number (current    
895   for the last (8) failed commands.               
896                                                   
897   The extended error information and usage tak    
898   this example::                                  
899                                                   
900     # echo xxx > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/sc    
901     echo: write error: Invalid argument           
902                                                   
903     # cat /sys/kernel/tracing/error_log           
904     [ 5348.887237] location: error: Couldn't y    
905       Command: xxx                                
906                ^                                  
907     [ 7517.023364] location: error: Bad rrr: s    
908       Command: ppp qqq                            
909                    ^                              
910                                                   
911   To clear the error log, echo the empty strin    
912                                                   
913     # echo > /sys/kernel/tracing/error_log        
914                                                   
915 Examples of using the tracer                      
916 ----------------------------                      
917                                                   
918 Here are typical examples of using the tracers    
919 them only with the tracefs interface (without     
920 user-land utilities).                             
921                                                   
922 Output format:                                    
923 --------------                                    
924                                                   
925 Here is an example of the output format of the    
926                                                   
927   # tracer: function                              
928   #                                               
929   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 140080/    
930   #                                               
931   #                              _-----=> irqs    
932   #                             / _----=> need    
933   #                            | / _---=> hard    
934   #                            || / _--=> pree    
935   #                            ||| /     delay    
936   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTA    
937   #              | |       |   ||||       |       
938               bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.9936    
939               bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.9936    
940               bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.9936    
941               sshd-1974  [003] .... 17284.9936    
942               bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.9936    
943               bash-1977  [000] ...1 17284.9936    
944               bash-1977  [000] ...1 17284.9936    
945               bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.9936    
946               bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.9936    
947               sshd-1974  [003] .... 17284.9936    
948               ....                                
949                                                   
950 A header is printed with the tracer name that     
951 the trace. In this case the tracer is "functio    
952 number of events in the buffer as well as the     
953 that were written. The difference is the numbe    
954 lost due to the buffer filling up (250280 - 14    
955 lost).                                            
956                                                   
957 The header explains the content of the events.    
958 PID "1977", the CPU that it was running on "00    
959 (explained below), the timestamp in <secs>.<us    
960 function name that was traced "sys_close" and     
961 called this function "system_call_fastpath". T    
962 at which the function was entered.                
963                                                   
964 Latency trace format                              
965 --------------------                              
966                                                   
967 When the latency-format option is enabled or w    
968 tracers is set, the trace file gives somewhat     
969 why a latency happened. Here is a typical trac    
970                                                   
971   # tracer: irqsoff                               
972   #                                               
973   # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test    
974   # ------------------------------------------    
975   # latency: 259 us, #4/4, CPU#2 | (M:preempt     
976   #    -----------------                          
977   #    | task: ps-6143 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0     
978   #    -----------------                          
979   #  => started at: __lock_task_sighand           
980   #  => ended at:   _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestor    
981   #                                               
982   #                                               
983   #                  _------=> CPU#               
984   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off           
985   #                | / _----=> need-resched       
986   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq    
987   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth      
988   #                |||| /     delay               
989   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller         
990   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /              
991         ps-6143    2d...    0us!: trace_hardir    
992         ps-6143    2d..1  259us+: trace_hardir    
993         ps-6143    2d..1  263us+: time_hardirq    
994         ps-6143    2d..1  306us : <stack trace    
995    => trace_hardirqs_on_caller                    
996    => trace_hardirqs_on                           
997    => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore                 
998    => do_task_stat                                
999    => proc_tgid_stat                              
1000    => proc_single_show                           
1001    => seq_read                                   
1002    => vfs_read                                   
1003    => sys_read                                   
1004    => system_call_fastpath                       
1005                                                  
1006                                                  
1007 This shows that the current tracer is "irqsof    
1008 for which interrupts were disabled. It gives     
1009 never changes) and the version of the kernel     
1010 (3.8). Then it displays the max latency in mi    
1011 of trace entries displayed and the total numb    
1012 VP, KP, SP, and HP are always zero and are re    
1013 #P is the number of online CPUs (#P:4).          
1014                                                  
1015 The task is the process that was running when    
1016 occurred. (ps pid: 6143).                        
1017                                                  
1018 The start and stop (the functions in which th    
1019 disabled and enabled respectively) that cause    
1020                                                  
1021   - __lock_task_sighand is where the interrup    
1022   - _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore is where they    
1023                                                  
1024 The next lines after the header are the trace    
1025 explains which is which.                         
1026                                                  
1027   cmd: The name of the process in the trace.     
1028                                                  
1029   pid: The PID of that process.                  
1030                                                  
1031   CPU#: The CPU which the process was running    
1032                                                  
1033   irqs-off: 'd' interrupts are disabled. '.'     
1034         .. caution:: If the architecture does    
1035                 read the irq flags variable,     
1036                 be printed here.                 
1037                                                  
1038   need-resched:                                  
1039         - 'N' both TIF_NEED_RESCHED and PREEM    
1040         - 'n' only TIF_NEED_RESCHED is set,      
1041         - 'p' only PREEMPT_NEED_RESCHED is se    
1042         - '.' otherwise.                         
1043                                                  
1044   hardirq/softirq:                               
1045         - 'Z' - NMI occurred inside a hardirq    
1046         - 'z' - NMI is running                   
1047         - 'H' - hard irq occurred inside a so    
1048         - 'h' - hard irq is running              
1049         - 's' - soft irq is running              
1050         - '.' - normal context.                  
1051                                                  
1052   preempt-depth: The level of preempt_disable    
1053                                                  
1054 The above is mostly meaningful for kernel dev    
1055                                                  
1056   time:                                          
1057         When the latency-format option is ena    
1058         output includes a timestamp relative     
1059         trace. This differs from the output w    
1060         is disabled, which includes an absolu    
1061                                                  
1062   delay:                                         
1063         This is just to help catch your eye a    
1064         needs to be fixed to be only relative    
1065         The marks are determined by the diffe    
1066         current trace and the next trace.        
1067                                                  
1068           - '$' - greater than 1 second          
1069           - '@' - greater than 100 millisecon    
1070           - '*' - greater than 10 millisecond    
1071           - '#' - greater than 1000 microseco    
1072           - '!' - greater than 100 microsecon    
1073           - '+' - greater than 10 microsecond    
1074           - ' ' - less than or equal to 10 mi    
1075                                                  
1076   The rest is the same as the 'trace' file.      
1077                                                  
1078   Note, the latency tracers will usually end     
1079   to easily find where the latency occurred.     
1080                                                  
1081 trace_options                                    
1082 -------------                                    
1083                                                  
1084 The trace_options file (or the options direct    
1085 what gets printed in the trace output, or man    
1086 To see what is available, simply cat the file    
1087                                                  
1088   cat trace_options                              
1089         print-parent                             
1090         nosym-offset                             
1091         nosym-addr                               
1092         noverbose                                
1093         noraw                                    
1094         nohex                                    
1095         nobin                                    
1096         noblock                                  
1097         nofields                                 
1098         trace_printk                             
1099         annotate                                 
1100         nouserstacktrace                         
1101         nosym-userobj                            
1102         noprintk-msg-only                        
1103         context-info                             
1104         nolatency-format                         
1105         record-cmd                               
1106         norecord-tgid                            
1107         overwrite                                
1108         nodisable_on_free                        
1109         irq-info                                 
1110         markers                                  
1111         noevent-fork                             
1112         function-trace                           
1113         nofunction-fork                          
1114         nodisplay-graph                          
1115         nostacktrace                             
1116         nobranch                                 
1117                                                  
1118 To disable one of the options, echo in the op    
1119 "no"::                                           
1120                                                  
1121   echo noprint-parent > trace_options            
1122                                                  
1123 To enable an option, leave off the "no"::        
1124                                                  
1125   echo sym-offset > trace_options                
1126                                                  
1127 Here are the available options:                  
1128                                                  
1129   print-parent                                   
1130         On function traces, display the calli    
1131         function as well as the function bein    
1132         ::                                       
1133                                                  
1134           print-parent:                          
1135            bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simp    
1136                                                  
1137           noprint-parent:                        
1138            bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simp    
1139                                                  
1140                                                  
1141   sym-offset                                     
1142         Display not only the function name, b    
1143         offset in the function. For example,     
1144         seeing just "ktime_get", you will see    
1145         "ktime_get+0xb/0x20".                    
1146         ::                                       
1147                                                  
1148           sym-offset:                            
1149            bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simp    
1150                                                  
1151   sym-addr                                       
1152         This will also display the function a    
1153         as the function name.                    
1154         ::                                       
1155                                                  
1156           sym-addr:                              
1157            bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simp    
1158                                                  
1159   verbose                                        
1160         This deals with the trace file when t    
1161         latency-format option is enabled.        
1162         ::                                       
1163                                                  
1164             bash  4000 1 0 00000000 00010a95     
1165             (+0.000ms): simple_strtoul (kstrt    
1166                                                  
1167   raw                                            
1168         This will display raw numbers. This o    
1169         use with user applications that can t    
1170         numbers better than having it done in    
1171                                                  
1172   hex                                            
1173         Similar to raw, but the numbers will     
1174                                                  
1175   bin                                            
1176         This will print out the formats in ra    
1177                                                  
1178   block                                          
1179         When set, reading trace_pipe will not    
1180                                                  
1181   fields                                         
1182         Print the fields as described by thei    
1183         option than using hex, bin or raw, as    
1184         of the content of the event.             
1185                                                  
1186   trace_printk                                   
1187         Can disable trace_printk() from writi    
1188                                                  
1189   trace_printk_dest                              
1190         Set to have trace_printk() and simila    
1191         write into this instance. Note, only     
1192         this set. By setting this flag, it cl    
1193         of the instance that had it set previ    
1194         level trace has this set, and will ge    
1195         instance has it set then clears it.      
1196                                                  
1197         This flag cannot be cleared by the to    
1198         default instance. The only way the to    
1199         cleared, is by it being set in anothe    
1200                                                  
1201   annotate                                       
1202         It is sometimes confusing when the CP    
1203         and one CPU buffer had a lot of event    
1204         a shorter time frame, were another CP    
1205         a few events, which lets it have olde    
1206         the trace is reported, it shows the o    
1207         and it may look like only one CPU ran    
1208         oldest events). When the annotate opt    
1209         display when a new CPU buffer started    
1210                                                  
1211                           <idle>-0     [001]     
1212                           <idle>-0     [001]     
1213                           <idle>-0     [001]     
1214                 ##### CPU 2 buffer started ##    
1215                           <idle>-0     [002]     
1216                           <idle>-0     [001]     
1217                           <idle>-0     [001]     
1218                                                  
1219   userstacktrace                                 
1220         This option changes the trace. It rec    
1221         stacktrace of the current user space     
1222         each trace event.                        
1223                                                  
1224   sym-userobj                                    
1225         when user stacktrace are enabled, loo    
1226         object the address belongs to, and pr    
1227         relative address. This is especially     
1228         ASLR is on, otherwise you don't get a    
1229         resolve the address to object/file/li    
1230         the app is no longer running             
1231                                                  
1232         The lookup is performed when you read    
1233         trace,trace_pipe. Example::              
1234                                                  
1235                   a.out-1623  [000] 40874.465    
1236                   x494] <- /root/a.out[+0x4a8    
1237                                                  
1238                                                  
1239   printk-msg-only                                
1240         When set, trace_printk()s will only s    
1241         and not their parameters (if trace_bp    
1242         trace_bputs() was used to save the tr    
1243                                                  
1244   context-info                                   
1245         Show only the event data. Hides the c    
1246         timestamp, CPU, and other useful data    
1247                                                  
1248   latency-format                                 
1249         This option changes the trace output.    
1250         the trace displays additional informa    
1251         latency, as described in "Latency tra    
1252                                                  
1253   pause-on-trace                                 
1254         When set, opening the trace file for     
1255         writing to the ring buffer (as if tra    
1256         This simulates the original behavior     
1257         When the file is closed, tracing will    
1258                                                  
1259   hash-ptr                                       
1260         When set, "%p" in the event printk fo    
1261         hashed pointer value instead of real     
1262         This will be useful if you want to fi    
1263         value is corresponding to the real va    
1264                                                  
1265   record-cmd                                     
1266         When any event or tracer is enabled,     
1267         in the sched_switch trace point to fi    
1268         with mapped pids and comms. But this     
1269         overhead, and if you only care about     
1270         name of the task, disabling this opti    
1271         impact of tracing. See "saved_cmdline    
1272                                                  
1273   record-tgid                                    
1274         When any event or tracer is enabled,     
1275         in the sched_switch trace point to fi    
1276         mapped Thread Group IDs (TGID) mappin    
1277         "saved_tgids".                           
1278                                                  
1279   overwrite                                      
1280         This controls what happens when the t    
1281         full. If "1" (default), the oldest ev    
1282         discarded and overwritten. If "0", th    
1283         events are discarded.                    
1284         (see per_cpu/cpu0/stats for overrun a    
1285                                                  
1286   disable_on_free                                
1287         When the free_buffer is closed, traci    
1288         stop (tracing_on set to 0).              
1289                                                  
1290   irq-info                                       
1291         Shows the interrupt, preempt count, n    
1292         When disabled, the trace looks like::    
1293                                                  
1294                 # tracer: function               
1295                 #                                
1296                 # entries-in-buffer/entries-w    
1297                 #                                
1298                 #           TASK-PID   CPU#      
1299                 #              | |       |       
1300                           <idle>-0     [002]     
1301                           <idle>-0     [002]     
1302                           <idle>-0     [002]     
1303                                                  
1304                                                  
1305   markers                                        
1306         When set, the trace_marker is writabl    
1307         When disabled, the trace_marker will     
1308         on write.                                
1309                                                  
1310   event-fork                                     
1311         When set, tasks with PIDs listed in s    
1312         the PIDs of their children added to s    
1313         tasks fork. Also, when tasks with PID    
1314         their PIDs will be removed from the f    
1315                                                  
1316         This affects PIDs listed in set_event    
1317                                                  
1318   function-trace                                 
1319         The latency tracers will enable funct    
1320         if this option is enabled (default it    
1321         it is disabled, the latency tracers d    
1322         functions. This keeps the overhead of    
1323         when performing latency tests.           
1324                                                  
1325   function-fork                                  
1326         When set, tasks with PIDs listed in s    
1327         have the PIDs of their children added    
1328         when those tasks fork. Also, when tas    
1329         set_ftrace_pid exit, their PIDs will     
1330         file.                                    
1331                                                  
1332         This affects PIDs in set_ftrace_notra    
1333                                                  
1334   display-graph                                  
1335         When set, the latency tracers (irqsof    
1336         use function graph tracing instead of    
1337                                                  
1338   stacktrace                                     
1339         When set, a stack trace is recorded a    
1340         is recorded.                             
1341                                                  
1342   branch                                         
1343         Enable branch tracing with the tracer    
1344         tracer along with the currently set t    
1345         with the "nop" tracer is the same as     
1346         "branch" tracer.                         
1347                                                  
1348 .. tip:: Some tracers have their own options.    
1349        file when the tracer is active. They a    
1350        options directory.                        
1351                                                  
1352                                                  
1353 Here are the per tracer options:                 
1354                                                  
1355 Options for function tracer:                     
1356                                                  
1357   func_stack_trace                               
1358         When set, a stack trace is recorded a    
1359         function that is recorded. NOTE! Limi    
1360         that are recorded before enabling thi    
1361         "set_ftrace_filter" otherwise the sys    
1362         will be critically degraded. Remember    
1363         this option before clearing the funct    
1364                                                  
1365 Options for function_graph tracer:               
1366                                                  
1367  Since the function_graph tracer has a slight    
1368  it has its own options to control what is di    
1369                                                  
1370   funcgraph-overrun                              
1371         When set, the "overrun" of the graph     
1372         displayed after each function traced.    
1373         overrun, is when the stack depth of t    
1374         is greater than what is reserved for     
1375         Each task has a fixed array of functi    
1376         trace in the call graph. If the depth    
1377         calls exceeds that, the function is n    
1378         The overrun is the number of function    
1379         due to exceeding this array.             
1380                                                  
1381   funcgraph-cpu                                  
1382         When set, the CPU number of the CPU w    
1383         occurred is displayed.                   
1384                                                  
1385   funcgraph-overhead                             
1386         When set, if the function takes longe    
1387         A certain amount, then a delay marker    
1388         displayed. See "delay" above, under t    
1389         header description.                      
1390                                                  
1391   funcgraph-proc                                 
1392         Unlike other tracers, the process' co    
1393         is not displayed by default, but inst    
1394         when a task is traced in and out duri    
1395         switch. Enabling this options has the    
1396         of each process displayed at every li    
1397                                                  
1398   funcgraph-duration                             
1399         At the end of each function (the retu    
1400         the duration of the amount of time in    
1401         function is displayed in microseconds    
1402                                                  
1403   funcgraph-abstime                              
1404         When set, the timestamp is displayed     
1405                                                  
1406   funcgraph-irqs                                 
1407         When disabled, functions that happen     
1408         interrupt will not be traced.            
1409                                                  
1410   funcgraph-tail                                 
1411         When set, the return event will inclu    
1412         that it represents. By default this i    
1413         only a closing curly bracket "}" is d    
1414         the return of a function.                
1415                                                  
1416   funcgraph-retval                               
1417         When set, the return value of each tr    
1418         will be printed after an equal sign "    
1419         this is off.                             
1420                                                  
1421   funcgraph-retval-hex                           
1422         When set, the return value will alway    
1423         in hexadecimal format. If the option     
1424         the return value is an error code, it    
1425         in signed decimal format; otherwise i    
1426         printed in hexadecimal format. By def    
1427         is off.                                  
1428                                                  
1429   sleep-time                                     
1430         When running function graph tracer, t    
1431         the time a task schedules out in its     
1432         When enabled, it will account time th    
1433         scheduled out as part of the function    
1434                                                  
1435   graph-time                                     
1436         When running function profiler with f    
1437         to include the time to call nested fu    
1438         not set, the time reported for the fu    
1439         include the time the function itself     
1440         time for functions that it called.       
1441                                                  
1442 Options for blk tracer:                          
1443                                                  
1444   blk_classic                                    
1445         Shows a more minimalistic output.        
1446                                                  
1447                                                  
1448 irqsoff                                          
1449 -------                                          
1450                                                  
1451 When interrupts are disabled, the CPU can not    
1452 external event (besides NMIs and SMIs). This     
1453 interrupt from triggering or the mouse interr    
1454 the kernel know of a new mouse event. The res    
1455 with the reaction time.                          
1456                                                  
1457 The irqsoff tracer tracks the time for which     
1458 disabled. When a new maximum latency is hit,     
1459 the trace leading up to that latency point so    
1460 new maximum is reached, the old saved trace i    
1461 new trace is saved.                              
1462                                                  
1463 To reset the maximum, echo 0 into tracing_max    
1464 an example::                                     
1465                                                  
1466   # echo 0 > options/function-trace              
1467   # echo irqsoff > current_tracer                
1468   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
1469   # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency                 
1470   # ls -ltr                                      
1471   [...]                                          
1472   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
1473   # cat trace                                    
1474   # tracer: irqsoff                              
1475   #                                              
1476   # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-tes    
1477   # -----------------------------------------    
1478   # latency: 16 us, #4/4, CPU#0 | (M:preempt     
1479   #    -----------------                         
1480   #    | task: swapper/0-0 (uid:0 nice:0 poli    
1481   #    -----------------                         
1482   #  => started at: run_timer_softirq            
1483   #  => ended at:   run_timer_softirq            
1484   #                                              
1485   #                                              
1486   #                  _------=> CPU#              
1487   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
1488   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
1489   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
1490   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
1491   #                |||| /     delay              
1492   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
1493   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
1494     <idle>-0       0d.s2    0us+: _raw_spin_l    
1495     <idle>-0       0dNs3   17us : _raw_spin_u    
1496     <idle>-0       0dNs3   17us+: trace_hardi    
1497     <idle>-0       0dNs3   25us : <stack trac    
1498    => _raw_spin_unlock_irq                       
1499    => run_timer_softirq                          
1500    => __do_softirq                               
1501    => call_softirq                               
1502    => do_softirq                                 
1503    => irq_exit                                   
1504    => smp_apic_timer_interrupt                   
1505    => apic_timer_interrupt                       
1506    => rcu_idle_exit                              
1507    => cpu_idle                                   
1508    => rest_init                                  
1509    => start_kernel                               
1510    => x86_64_start_reservations                  
1511    => x86_64_start_kernel                        
1512                                                  
1513 Here we see that we had a latency of 16 micro    
1514 very good). The _raw_spin_lock_irq in run_tim    
1515 interrupts. The difference between the 16 and    
1516 timestamp 25us occurred because the clock was    
1517 between the time of recording the max latency    
1518 recording the function that had that latency.    
1519                                                  
1520 Note the above example had function-trace not    
1521 function-trace, we get a much larger output::    
1522                                                  
1523  with echo 1 > options/function-trace            
1524                                                  
1525   # tracer: irqsoff                              
1526   #                                              
1527   # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-tes    
1528   # -----------------------------------------    
1529   # latency: 71 us, #168/168, CPU#3 | (M:pree    
1530   #    -----------------                         
1531   #    | task: bash-2042 (uid:0 nice:0 policy    
1532   #    -----------------                         
1533   #  => started at: ata_scsi_queuecmd            
1534   #  => ended at:   ata_scsi_queuecmd            
1535   #                                              
1536   #                                              
1537   #                  _------=> CPU#              
1538   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
1539   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
1540   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
1541   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
1542   #                |||| /     delay              
1543   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
1544   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
1545       bash-2042    3d...    0us : _raw_spin_l    
1546       bash-2042    3d...    0us : add_preempt    
1547       bash-2042    3d..1    1us : ata_scsi_fi    
1548       bash-2042    3d..1    1us : __ata_scsi_    
1549       bash-2042    3d..1    2us : ata_find_de    
1550       bash-2042    3d..1    2us : ata_qc_new_    
1551       bash-2042    3d..1    3us : ata_sg_init    
1552       bash-2042    3d..1    4us : ata_scsi_rw    
1553       bash-2042    3d..1    4us : ata_build_r    
1554   [...]                                          
1555       bash-2042    3d..1   67us : delay_tsc <    
1556       bash-2042    3d..1   67us : add_preempt    
1557       bash-2042    3d..2   67us : sub_preempt    
1558       bash-2042    3d..1   67us : add_preempt    
1559       bash-2042    3d..2   68us : sub_preempt    
1560       bash-2042    3d..1   68us+: ata_bmdma_s    
1561       bash-2042    3d..1   71us : _raw_spin_u    
1562       bash-2042    3d..1   71us : _raw_spin_u    
1563       bash-2042    3d..1   72us+: trace_hardi    
1564       bash-2042    3d..1  120us : <stack trac    
1565    => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore                
1566    => ata_scsi_queuecmd                          
1567    => scsi_dispatch_cmd                          
1568    => scsi_request_fn                            
1569    => __blk_run_queue_uncond                     
1570    => __blk_run_queue                            
1571    => blk_queue_bio                              
1572    => submit_bio_noacct                          
1573    => submit_bio                                 
1574    => submit_bh                                  
1575    => __ext3_get_inode_loc                       
1576    => ext3_iget                                  
1577    => ext3_lookup                                
1578    => lookup_real                                
1579    => __lookup_hash                              
1580    => walk_component                             
1581    => lookup_last                                
1582    => path_lookupat                              
1583    => filename_lookup                            
1584    => user_path_at_empty                         
1585    => user_path_at                               
1586    => vfs_fstatat                                
1587    => vfs_stat                                   
1588    => sys_newstat                                
1589    => system_call_fastpath                       
1590                                                  
1591                                                  
1592 Here we traced a 71 microsecond latency. But     
1593 functions that were called during that time.     
1594 enabling function tracing, we incur an added     
1595 overhead may extend the latency times. But ne    
1596 trace has provided some very helpful debuggin    
1597                                                  
1598 If we prefer function graph output instead of    
1599 display-graph option::                           
1600                                                  
1601  with echo 1 > options/display-graph             
1602                                                  
1603   # tracer: irqsoff                              
1604   #                                              
1605   # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 4.20.0-rc    
1606   # -----------------------------------------    
1607   # latency: 3751 us, #274/274, CPU#0 | (M:de    
1608   #    -----------------                         
1609   #    | task: bash-1507 (uid:0 nice:0 policy    
1610   #    -----------------                         
1611   #  => started at: free_debug_processing        
1612   #  => ended at:   return_to_handler            
1613   #                                              
1614   #                                              
1615   #                                       _--    
1616   #                                      / _-    
1617   #                                     | / _    
1618   #                                     || /     
1619   #                                     ||| /    
1620   #   REL TIME      CPU  TASK/PID       ||||     
1621   #      |          |     |    |        ||||     
1622           0 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d...     
1623           0 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1     
1624           1 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2     
1625           2 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2     
1626           2 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2     
1627           3 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2     
1628           3 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2     
1629           3 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2     
1630           4 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2     
1631   [...]                                          
1632        3750 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1     
1633        3750 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1     
1634        3764 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1     
1635       bash-1507    0d..1 3792us : <stack trac    
1636    => free_debug_processing                      
1637    => __slab_free                                
1638    => kmem_cache_free                            
1639    => vm_area_free                               
1640    => remove_vma                                 
1641    => exit_mmap                                  
1642    => mmput                                      
1643    => begin_new_exec                             
1644    => load_elf_binary                            
1645    => search_binary_handler                      
1646    => __do_execve_file.isra.32                   
1647    => __x64_sys_execve                           
1648    => do_syscall_64                              
1649    => entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe             
1650                                                  
1651 preemptoff                                       
1652 ----------                                       
1653                                                  
1654 When preemption is disabled, we may be able t    
1655 interrupts but the task cannot be preempted a    
1656 priority task must wait for preemption to be     
1657 before it can preempt a lower priority task.     
1658                                                  
1659 The preemptoff tracer traces the places that     
1660 Like the irqsoff tracer, it records the maxim    
1661 which preemption was disabled. The control of    
1662 is much like the irqsoff tracer.                 
1663 ::                                               
1664                                                  
1665   # echo 0 > options/function-trace              
1666   # echo preemptoff > current_tracer             
1667   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
1668   # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency                 
1669   # ls -ltr                                      
1670   [...]                                          
1671   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
1672   # cat trace                                    
1673   # tracer: preemptoff                           
1674   #                                              
1675   # preemptoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-    
1676   # -----------------------------------------    
1677   # latency: 46 us, #4/4, CPU#1 | (M:preempt     
1678   #    -----------------                         
1679   #    | task: sshd-1991 (uid:0 nice:0 policy    
1680   #    -----------------                         
1681   #  => started at: do_IRQ                       
1682   #  => ended at:   do_IRQ                       
1683   #                                              
1684   #                                              
1685   #                  _------=> CPU#              
1686   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
1687   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
1688   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
1689   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
1690   #                |||| /     delay              
1691   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
1692   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
1693       sshd-1991    1d.h.    0us+: irq_enter <    
1694       sshd-1991    1d..1   46us : irq_exit <-    
1695       sshd-1991    1d..1   47us+: trace_preem    
1696       sshd-1991    1d..1   52us : <stack trac    
1697    => sub_preempt_count                          
1698    => irq_exit                                   
1699    => do_IRQ                                     
1700    => ret_from_intr                              
1701                                                  
1702                                                  
1703 This has some more changes. Preemption was di    
1704 interrupt came in (notice the 'h'), and was e    
1705 But we also see that interrupts have been dis    
1706 the preempt off section and leaving it (the '    
1707 interrupts were enabled in the mean time or s    
1708 was over.                                        
1709 ::                                               
1710                                                  
1711   # tracer: preemptoff                           
1712   #                                              
1713   # preemptoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-    
1714   # -----------------------------------------    
1715   # latency: 83 us, #241/241, CPU#1 | (M:pree    
1716   #    -----------------                         
1717   #    | task: bash-1994 (uid:0 nice:0 policy    
1718   #    -----------------                         
1719   #  => started at: wake_up_new_task             
1720   #  => ended at:   task_rq_unlock               
1721   #                                              
1722   #                                              
1723   #                  _------=> CPU#              
1724   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
1725   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
1726   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
1727   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
1728   #                |||| /     delay              
1729   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
1730   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
1731       bash-1994    1d..1    0us : _raw_spin_l    
1732       bash-1994    1d..1    0us : select_task    
1733       bash-1994    1d..1    1us : __rcu_read_    
1734       bash-1994    1d..1    1us : source_load    
1735       bash-1994    1d..1    1us : source_load    
1736   [...]                                          
1737       bash-1994    1d..1   12us : irq_enter <    
1738       bash-1994    1d..1   12us : rcu_irq_ent    
1739       bash-1994    1d..1   13us : add_preempt    
1740       bash-1994    1d.h1   13us : exit_idle <    
1741       bash-1994    1d.h1   13us : hrtimer_int    
1742       bash-1994    1d.h1   13us : _raw_spin_l    
1743       bash-1994    1d.h1   14us : add_preempt    
1744       bash-1994    1d.h2   14us : ktime_get_u    
1745   [...]                                          
1746       bash-1994    1d.h1   35us : lapic_next_    
1747       bash-1994    1d.h1   35us : irq_exit <-    
1748       bash-1994    1d.h1   36us : sub_preempt    
1749       bash-1994    1d..2   36us : do_softirq     
1750       bash-1994    1d..2   36us : __do_softir    
1751       bash-1994    1d..2   36us : __local_bh_    
1752       bash-1994    1d.s2   37us : add_preempt    
1753       bash-1994    1d.s3   38us : _raw_spin_u    
1754       bash-1994    1d.s3   39us : sub_preempt    
1755       bash-1994    1d.s2   39us : call_timer_    
1756   [...]                                          
1757       bash-1994    1dNs2   81us : cpu_needs_a    
1758       bash-1994    1dNs2   82us : __local_bh_    
1759       bash-1994    1dNs2   82us : sub_preempt    
1760       bash-1994    1dN.2   82us : idle_cpu <-    
1761       bash-1994    1dN.2   83us : rcu_irq_exi    
1762       bash-1994    1dN.2   83us : sub_preempt    
1763       bash-1994    1.N.1   84us : _raw_spin_u    
1764       bash-1994    1.N.1   84us+: trace_preem    
1765       bash-1994    1.N.1  104us : <stack trac    
1766    => sub_preempt_count                          
1767    => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore                
1768    => task_rq_unlock                             
1769    => wake_up_new_task                           
1770    => do_fork                                    
1771    => sys_clone                                  
1772    => stub_clone                                 
1773                                                  
1774                                                  
1775 The above is an example of the preemptoff tra    
1776 function-trace set. Here we see that interrup    
1777 the entire time. The irq_enter code lets us k    
1778 an interrupt 'h'. Before that, the functions     
1779 show that it is not in an interrupt, but we c    
1780 functions themselves that this is not the cas    
1781                                                  
1782 preemptirqsoff                                   
1783 --------------                                   
1784                                                  
1785 Knowing the locations that have interrupts di    
1786 preemption disabled for the longest times is     
1787 sometimes we would like to know when either p    
1788 interrupts are disabled.                         
1789                                                  
1790 Consider the following code::                    
1791                                                  
1792     local_irq_disable();                         
1793     call_function_with_irqs_off();               
1794     preempt_disable();                           
1795     call_function_with_irqs_and_preemption_of    
1796     local_irq_enable();                          
1797     call_function_with_preemption_off();         
1798     preempt_enable();                            
1799                                                  
1800 The irqsoff tracer will record the total leng    
1801 call_function_with_irqs_off() and                
1802 call_function_with_irqs_and_preemption_off().    
1803                                                  
1804 The preemptoff tracer will record the total l    
1805 call_function_with_irqs_and_preemption_off()     
1806 call_function_with_preemption_off().             
1807                                                  
1808 But neither will trace the time that interrup    
1809 preemption is disabled. This total time is th    
1810 not schedule. To record this time, use the pr    
1811 tracer.                                          
1812                                                  
1813 Again, using this trace is much like the irqs    
1814 tracers.                                         
1815 ::                                               
1816                                                  
1817   # echo 0 > options/function-trace              
1818   # echo preemptirqsoff > current_tracer         
1819   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
1820   # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency                 
1821   # ls -ltr                                      
1822   [...]                                          
1823   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
1824   # cat trace                                    
1825   # tracer: preemptirqsoff                       
1826   #                                              
1827   # preemptirqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.    
1828   # -----------------------------------------    
1829   # latency: 100 us, #4/4, CPU#3 | (M:preempt    
1830   #    -----------------                         
1831   #    | task: ls-2230 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0    
1832   #    -----------------                         
1833   #  => started at: ata_scsi_queuecmd            
1834   #  => ended at:   ata_scsi_queuecmd            
1835   #                                              
1836   #                                              
1837   #                  _------=> CPU#              
1838   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
1839   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
1840   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
1841   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
1842   #                |||| /     delay              
1843   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
1844   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
1845         ls-2230    3d...    0us+: _raw_spin_l    
1846         ls-2230    3...1  100us : _raw_spin_u    
1847         ls-2230    3...1  101us+: trace_preem    
1848         ls-2230    3...1  111us : <stack trac    
1849    => sub_preempt_count                          
1850    => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore                
1851    => ata_scsi_queuecmd                          
1852    => scsi_dispatch_cmd                          
1853    => scsi_request_fn                            
1854    => __blk_run_queue_uncond                     
1855    => __blk_run_queue                            
1856    => blk_queue_bio                              
1857    => submit_bio_noacct                          
1858    => submit_bio                                 
1859    => submit_bh                                  
1860    => ext3_bread                                 
1861    => ext3_dir_bread                             
1862    => htree_dirblock_to_tree                     
1863    => ext3_htree_fill_tree                       
1864    => ext3_readdir                               
1865    => vfs_readdir                                
1866    => sys_getdents                               
1867    => system_call_fastpath                       
1868                                                  
1869                                                  
1870 The trace_hardirqs_off_thunk is called from a    
1871 interrupts are disabled in the assembly code.    
1872 function tracing, we do not know if interrupt    
1873 within the preemption points. We do see that     
1874 preemption enabled.                              
1875                                                  
1876 Here is a trace with function-trace set::        
1877                                                  
1878   # tracer: preemptirqsoff                       
1879   #                                              
1880   # preemptirqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.    
1881   # -----------------------------------------    
1882   # latency: 161 us, #339/339, CPU#3 | (M:pre    
1883   #    -----------------                         
1884   #    | task: ls-2269 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0    
1885   #    -----------------                         
1886   #  => started at: schedule                     
1887   #  => ended at:   mutex_unlock                 
1888   #                                              
1889   #                                              
1890   #                  _------=> CPU#              
1891   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
1892   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
1893   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
1894   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
1895   #                |||| /     delay              
1896   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
1897   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
1898   kworker/-59      3...1    0us : __schedule     
1899   kworker/-59      3d..1    0us : rcu_preempt    
1900   kworker/-59      3d..1    1us : add_preempt    
1901   kworker/-59      3d..2    1us : deactivate_    
1902   kworker/-59      3d..2    1us : dequeue_tas    
1903   kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : update_rq_c    
1904   kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : dequeue_tas    
1905   kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : update_curr    
1906   kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : update_min_    
1907   kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : cpuacct_cha    
1908   kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : __rcu_read_    
1909   kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : __rcu_read_    
1910   kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : update_cfs_    
1911   kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : clear_buddi    
1912   kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : account_ent    
1913   kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : update_min_    
1914   kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : update_cfs_    
1915   kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : hrtick_upda    
1916   kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : wq_worker_s    
1917   kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : kthread_dat    
1918   kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : put_prev_ta    
1919   kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : pick_next_t    
1920   kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : clear_buddi    
1921   kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : set_next_en    
1922   kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : update_stat    
1923         ls-2269    3d..2    7us : finish_task    
1924         ls-2269    3d..2    7us : _raw_spin_u    
1925         ls-2269    3d..2    8us : do_IRQ <-re    
1926         ls-2269    3d..2    8us : irq_enter <    
1927         ls-2269    3d..2    8us : rcu_irq_ent    
1928         ls-2269    3d..2    9us : add_preempt    
1929         ls-2269    3d.h2    9us : exit_idle <    
1930   [...]                                          
1931         ls-2269    3d.h3   20us : sub_preempt    
1932         ls-2269    3d.h2   20us : irq_exit <-    
1933         ls-2269    3d.h2   21us : sub_preempt    
1934         ls-2269    3d..3   21us : do_softirq     
1935         ls-2269    3d..3   21us : __do_softir    
1936         ls-2269    3d..3   21us+: __local_bh_    
1937         ls-2269    3d.s4   29us : sub_preempt    
1938         ls-2269    3d.s5   29us : sub_preempt    
1939         ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : do_IRQ <-re    
1940         ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : irq_enter <    
1941         ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : rcu_irq_ent    
1942   [...]                                          
1943         ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : rcu_irq_ent    
1944         ls-2269    3d.s5   32us : add_preempt    
1945         ls-2269    3d.H5   32us : exit_idle <    
1946         ls-2269    3d.H5   32us : handle_irq     
1947         ls-2269    3d.H5   32us : irq_to_desc    
1948         ls-2269    3d.H5   33us : handle_fast    
1949   [...]                                          
1950         ls-2269    3d.s5  158us : _raw_spin_u    
1951         ls-2269    3d.s3  158us : net_rps_act    
1952         ls-2269    3d.s3  159us : __local_bh_    
1953         ls-2269    3d.s3  159us : sub_preempt    
1954         ls-2269    3d..3  159us : idle_cpu <-    
1955         ls-2269    3d..3  159us : rcu_irq_exi    
1956         ls-2269    3d..3  160us : sub_preempt    
1957         ls-2269    3d...  161us : __mutex_unl    
1958         ls-2269    3d...  162us+: trace_hardi    
1959         ls-2269    3d...  186us : <stack trac    
1960    => __mutex_unlock_slowpath                    
1961    => mutex_unlock                               
1962    => process_output                             
1963    => n_tty_write                                
1964    => tty_write                                  
1965    => vfs_write                                  
1966    => sys_write                                  
1967    => system_call_fastpath                       
1968                                                  
1969 This is an interesting trace. It started with    
1970 scheduling out and ls taking over. But as soo    
1971 rq lock and enabled interrupts (but not preem    
1972 triggered. When the interrupt finished, it st    
1973 But while the softirq was running, another in    
1974 When an interrupt is running inside a softirq    
1975                                                  
1976                                                  
1977 wakeup                                           
1978 ------                                           
1979                                                  
1980 One common case that people are interested in    
1981 time it takes for a task that is woken to act    
1982 Now for non Real-Time tasks, this can be arbi    
1983 it nonetheless can be interesting.               
1984                                                  
1985 Without function tracing::                       
1986                                                  
1987   # echo 0 > options/function-trace              
1988   # echo wakeup > current_tracer                 
1989   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
1990   # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency                 
1991   # chrt -f 5 sleep 1                            
1992   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
1993   # cat trace                                    
1994   # tracer: wakeup                               
1995   #                                              
1996   # wakeup latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test    
1997   # -----------------------------------------    
1998   # latency: 15 us, #4/4, CPU#3 | (M:preempt     
1999   #    -----------------                         
2000   #    | task: kworker/3:1H-312 (uid:0 nice:-    
2001   #    -----------------                         
2002   #                                              
2003   #                  _------=> CPU#              
2004   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
2005   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
2006   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
2007   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
2008   #                |||| /     delay              
2009   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
2010   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
2011     <idle>-0       3dNs7    0us :      0:120:    
2012     <idle>-0       3dNs7    1us+: ttwu_do_act    
2013     <idle>-0       3d..3   15us : __schedule     
2014     <idle>-0       3d..3   15us :      0:120:    
2015                                                  
2016 The tracer only traces the highest priority t    
2017 to avoid tracing the normal circumstances. He    
2018 the kworker with a nice priority of -20 (not     
2019 just 15 microseconds from the time it woke up    
2020 ran.                                             
2021                                                  
2022 Non Real-Time tasks are not that interesting.    
2023 trace is to concentrate only on Real-Time tas    
2024                                                  
2025 wakeup_rt                                        
2026 ---------                                        
2027                                                  
2028 In a Real-Time environment it is very importa    
2029 wakeup time it takes for the highest priority    
2030 up to the time that it executes. This is also    
2031 latency". I stress the point that this is abo    
2032 also important to know the scheduling latency    
2033 but the average schedule latency is better fo    
2034 Tools like LatencyTop are more appropriate fo    
2035 measurements.                                    
2036                                                  
2037 Real-Time environments are interested in the     
2038 That is the longest latency it takes for some    
2039 and not the average. We can have a very fast     
2040 only have a large latency once in a while, bu    
2041 work well with Real-Time tasks.  The wakeup_r    
2042 to record the worst case wakeups of RT tasks.    
2043 not recorded because the tracer only records     
2044 tracing non-RT tasks that are unpredictable w    
2045 worst case latency of RT tasks (just run the     
2046 tracer for a while to see that effect).          
2047                                                  
2048 Since this tracer only deals with RT tasks, w    
2049 slightly differently than we did with the pre    
2050 Instead of performing an 'ls', we will run 's    
2051 'chrt' which changes the priority of the task    
2052 ::                                               
2053                                                  
2054   # echo 0 > options/function-trace              
2055   # echo wakeup_rt > current_tracer              
2056   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
2057   # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency                 
2058   # chrt -f 5 sleep 1                            
2059   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
2060   # cat trace                                    
2061   # tracer: wakeup                               
2062   #                                              
2063   # tracer: wakeup_rt                            
2064   #                                              
2065   # wakeup_rt latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-t    
2066   # -----------------------------------------    
2067   # latency: 5 us, #4/4, CPU#3 | (M:preempt V    
2068   #    -----------------                         
2069   #    | task: sleep-2389 (uid:0 nice:0 polic    
2070   #    -----------------                         
2071   #                                              
2072   #                  _------=> CPU#              
2073   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
2074   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
2075   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
2076   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
2077   #                |||| /     delay              
2078   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
2079   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
2080     <idle>-0       3d.h4    0us :      0:120:    
2081     <idle>-0       3d.h4    1us+: ttwu_do_act    
2082     <idle>-0       3d..3    5us : __schedule     
2083     <idle>-0       3d..3    5us :      0:120:    
2084                                                  
2085                                                  
2086 Running this on an idle system, we see that i    
2087 to perform the task switch.  Note, since the     
2088 is before the actual "switch", we stop the tr    
2089 is about to schedule in. This may change if w    
2090 end of the scheduler.                            
2091                                                  
2092 Notice that the recorded task is 'sleep' with    
2093 and it has an rt_prio of 5. This priority is     
2094 and not the internal kernel priority. The pol    
2095 SCHED_FIFO and 2 for SCHED_RR.                   
2096                                                  
2097 Note, that the trace data shows the internal     
2098 ::                                               
2099                                                  
2100   <idle>-0       3d..3    5us :      0:120:R     
2101                                                  
2102 The 0:120:R means idle was running with a nic    
2103 and in the running state 'R'. The sleep task     
2104 2389: 94:R. That is the priority is the kerne    
2105 and it too is in the running state.              
2106                                                  
2107 Doing the same with chrt -r 5 and function-tr    
2108 ::                                               
2109                                                  
2110   echo 1 > options/function-trace                
2111                                                  
2112   # tracer: wakeup_rt                            
2113   #                                              
2114   # wakeup_rt latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-t    
2115   # -----------------------------------------    
2116   # latency: 29 us, #85/85, CPU#3 | (M:preemp    
2117   #    -----------------                         
2118   #    | task: sleep-2448 (uid:0 nice:0 polic    
2119   #    -----------------                         
2120   #                                              
2121   #                  _------=> CPU#              
2122   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
2123   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
2124   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
2125   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
2126   #                |||| /     delay              
2127   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
2128   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
2129     <idle>-0       3d.h4    1us+:      0:120:    
2130     <idle>-0       3d.h4    2us : ttwu_do_act    
2131     <idle>-0       3d.h3    3us : check_preem    
2132     <idle>-0       3d.h3    3us : resched_cur    
2133     <idle>-0       3dNh3    4us : task_woken_    
2134     <idle>-0       3dNh3    4us : _raw_spin_u    
2135     <idle>-0       3dNh3    4us : sub_preempt    
2136     <idle>-0       3dNh2    5us : ttwu_stat <    
2137     <idle>-0       3dNh2    5us : _raw_spin_u    
2138     <idle>-0       3dNh2    6us : sub_preempt    
2139     <idle>-0       3dNh1    6us : _raw_spin_l    
2140     <idle>-0       3dNh1    6us : add_preempt    
2141     <idle>-0       3dNh2    7us : _raw_spin_u    
2142     <idle>-0       3dNh2    7us : sub_preempt    
2143     <idle>-0       3dNh1    7us : tick_progra    
2144     <idle>-0       3dNh1    7us : clockevents    
2145     <idle>-0       3dNh1    8us : ktime_get <    
2146     <idle>-0       3dNh1    8us : lapic_next_    
2147     <idle>-0       3dNh1    8us : irq_exit <-    
2148     <idle>-0       3dNh1    9us : sub_preempt    
2149     <idle>-0       3dN.2    9us : idle_cpu <-    
2150     <idle>-0       3dN.2    9us : rcu_irq_exi    
2151     <idle>-0       3dN.2   10us : rcu_eqs_ent    
2152     <idle>-0       3dN.2   10us : sub_preempt    
2153     <idle>-0       3.N.1   11us : rcu_idle_ex    
2154     <idle>-0       3dN.1   11us : rcu_eqs_exi    
2155     <idle>-0       3.N.1   11us : tick_nohz_i    
2156     <idle>-0       3dN.1   12us : menu_hrtime    
2157     <idle>-0       3dN.1   12us : ktime_get <    
2158     <idle>-0       3dN.1   12us : tick_do_upd    
2159     <idle>-0       3dN.1   13us : cpu_load_up    
2160     <idle>-0       3dN.1   13us : _raw_spin_l    
2161     <idle>-0       3dN.1   13us : add_preempt    
2162     <idle>-0       3dN.2   13us : __cpu_load_    
2163     <idle>-0       3dN.2   14us : sched_avg_u    
2164     <idle>-0       3dN.2   14us : _raw_spin_u    
2165     <idle>-0       3dN.2   14us : sub_preempt    
2166     <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : calc_load_n    
2167     <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : touch_softl    
2168     <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : hrtimer_can    
2169     <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : hrtimer_try    
2170     <idle>-0       3dN.1   16us : lock_hrtime    
2171     <idle>-0       3dN.1   16us : _raw_spin_l    
2172     <idle>-0       3dN.1   16us : add_preempt    
2173     <idle>-0       3dN.2   17us : __remove_hr    
2174     <idle>-0       3dN.2   17us : hrtimer_for    
2175     <idle>-0       3dN.2   17us : tick_progra    
2176     <idle>-0       3dN.2   18us : clockevents    
2177     <idle>-0       3dN.2   18us : ktime_get <    
2178     <idle>-0       3dN.2   18us : lapic_next_    
2179     <idle>-0       3dN.2   19us : _raw_spin_u    
2180     <idle>-0       3dN.2   19us : sub_preempt    
2181     <idle>-0       3dN.1   19us : hrtimer_for    
2182     <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : ktime_add_s    
2183     <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : ktime_add_s    
2184     <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : hrtimer_sta    
2185     <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : __hrtimer_s    
2186     <idle>-0       3dN.1   21us : lock_hrtime    
2187     <idle>-0       3dN.1   21us : _raw_spin_l    
2188     <idle>-0       3dN.1   21us : add_preempt    
2189     <idle>-0       3dN.2   22us : ktime_add_s    
2190     <idle>-0       3dN.2   22us : enqueue_hrt    
2191     <idle>-0       3dN.2   22us : tick_progra    
2192     <idle>-0       3dN.2   23us : clockevents    
2193     <idle>-0       3dN.2   23us : ktime_get <    
2194     <idle>-0       3dN.2   23us : lapic_next_    
2195     <idle>-0       3dN.2   24us : _raw_spin_u    
2196     <idle>-0       3dN.2   24us : sub_preempt    
2197     <idle>-0       3dN.1   24us : account_idl    
2198     <idle>-0       3dN.1   24us : account_idl    
2199     <idle>-0       3.N.1   25us : sub_preempt    
2200     <idle>-0       3.N..   25us : schedule <-    
2201     <idle>-0       3.N..   25us : __schedule     
2202     <idle>-0       3.N..   26us : add_preempt    
2203     <idle>-0       3.N.1   26us : rcu_note_co    
2204     <idle>-0       3.N.1   26us : rcu_sched_q    
2205     <idle>-0       3dN.1   27us : rcu_preempt    
2206     <idle>-0       3.N.1   27us : _raw_spin_l    
2207     <idle>-0       3dN.1   27us : add_preempt    
2208     <idle>-0       3dN.2   28us : put_prev_ta    
2209     <idle>-0       3dN.2   28us : pick_next_t    
2210     <idle>-0       3dN.2   28us : pick_next_t    
2211     <idle>-0       3dN.2   29us : dequeue_pus    
2212     <idle>-0       3d..3   29us : __schedule     
2213     <idle>-0       3d..3   30us :      0:120:    
2214                                                  
2215 This isn't that big of a trace, even with fun    
2216 so I included the entire trace.                  
2217                                                  
2218 The interrupt went off while when the system     
2219 before task_woken_rt() was called, the NEED_R    
2220 this is indicated by the first occurrence of     
2221                                                  
2222 Latency tracing and events                       
2223 --------------------------                       
2224 As function tracing can induce a much larger     
2225 seeing what happens within the latency it is     
2226 caused it. There is a middle ground, and that    
2227 events.                                          
2228 ::                                               
2229                                                  
2230   # echo 0 > options/function-trace              
2231   # echo wakeup_rt > current_tracer              
2232   # echo 1 > events/enable                       
2233   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
2234   # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency                 
2235   # chrt -f 5 sleep 1                            
2236   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
2237   # cat trace                                    
2238   # tracer: wakeup_rt                            
2239   #                                              
2240   # wakeup_rt latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-t    
2241   # -----------------------------------------    
2242   # latency: 6 us, #12/12, CPU#2 | (M:preempt    
2243   #    -----------------                         
2244   #    | task: sleep-5882 (uid:0 nice:0 polic    
2245   #    -----------------                         
2246   #                                              
2247   #                  _------=> CPU#              
2248   #                 / _-----=> irqs-off          
2249   #                | / _----=> need-resched      
2250   #                || / _---=> hardirq/softir    
2251   #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth     
2252   #                |||| /     delay              
2253   #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller        
2254   #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /             
2255     <idle>-0       2d.h4    0us :      0:120:    
2256     <idle>-0       2d.h4    0us : ttwu_do_act    
2257     <idle>-0       2d.h4    1us : sched_wakeu    
2258     <idle>-0       2dNh2    1us : hrtimer_exp    
2259     <idle>-0       2.N.2    2us : power_end:     
2260     <idle>-0       2.N.2    3us : cpu_idle: s    
2261     <idle>-0       2dN.3    4us : hrtimer_can    
2262     <idle>-0       2dN.3    4us : hrtimer_sta    
2263     <idle>-0       2.N.2    5us : rcu_utiliza    
2264     <idle>-0       2.N.2    5us : rcu_utiliza    
2265     <idle>-0       2d..3    6us : __schedule     
2266     <idle>-0       2d..3    6us :      0:120:    
2267                                                  
2268                                                  
2269 Hardware Latency Detector                        
2270 -------------------------                        
2271                                                  
2272 The hardware latency detector is executed by     
2273                                                  
2274 NOTE, this tracer will affect the performance    
2275 periodically make a CPU constantly busy with     
2276 ::                                               
2277                                                  
2278   # echo hwlat > current_tracer                  
2279   # sleep 100                                    
2280   # cat trace                                    
2281   # tracer: hwlat                                
2282   #                                              
2283   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 13/13     
2284   #                                              
2285   #                              _-----=> irq    
2286   #                             / _----=> nee    
2287   #                            | / _---=> har    
2288   #                            || / _--=> pre    
2289   #                            ||| /     dela    
2290   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
2291   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
2292              <...>-1729  [001] d...   678.473    
2293              <...>-1729  [004] d...   689.556    
2294              <...>-1729  [005] d...   714.756    
2295              <...>-1729  [001] d...   718.788    
2296              <...>-1729  [002] d...   719.796    
2297              <...>-1729  [006] d...   844.787    
2298              <...>-1729  [003] d...   849.827    
2299              <...>-1729  [007] d...   853.859    
2300              <...>-1729  [001] d...   855.874    
2301              <...>-1729  [001] d...   863.938    
2302              <...>-1729  [007] d...   878.050    
2303              <...>-1729  [007] d...   886.114    
2304                                                  
2305                                                  
2306 The above output is somewhat the same in the     
2307 interrupts disabled 'd'. Under the FUNCTION t    
2308                                                  
2309  #1                                              
2310         This is the count of events recorded     
2311         tracing_threshold (See below).           
2312                                                  
2313  inner/outer(us):   11/11                        
2314                                                  
2315       This shows two numbers as "inner latenc    
2316       runs in a loop checking a timestamp twi    
2317       the two timestamps is the "inner latenc    
2318       after the previous timestamp and the ne    
2319       the "outer latency".                       
2320                                                  
2321  ts:1581527483.343962693                         
2322                                                  
2323       The absolute timestamp that the first l    
2324                                                  
2325  count:6                                         
2326                                                  
2327       The number of times a latency was detec    
2328                                                  
2329  nmi-total:7 nmi-count:1                         
2330                                                  
2331       On architectures that support it, if an    
2332       test, the time spent in NMI is reported    
2333       microseconds).                             
2334                                                  
2335       All architectures that have NMIs will s    
2336       NMI comes in during the test.              
2337                                                  
2338 hwlat files:                                     
2339                                                  
2340   tracing_threshold                              
2341         This gets automatically set to "10" t    
2342         microseconds. This is the threshold o    
2343         needs to be detected before the trace    
2344                                                  
2345         Note, when hwlat tracer is finished (    
2346         written into "current_tracer"), the o    
2347         tracing_threshold is placed back into    
2348                                                  
2349   hwlat_detector/width                           
2350         The length of time the test runs with    
2351                                                  
2352   hwlat_detector/window                          
2353         The length of time of the window whic    
2354         runs. That is, the test will run for     
2355         microseconds per "window" microsecond    
2356                                                  
2357   tracing_cpumask                                
2358         When the test is started. A kernel th    
2359         runs the test. This thread will alter    
2360         listed in the tracing_cpumask between    
2361         (one "window"). To limit the test to     
2362         set the mask in this file to only the    
2363         should run on.                           
2364                                                  
2365 function                                         
2366 --------                                         
2367                                                  
2368 This tracer is the function tracer. Enabling     
2369 can be done from the debug file system. Make     
2370 ftrace_enabled is set; otherwise this tracer     
2371 See the "ftrace_enabled" section below.          
2372 ::                                               
2373                                                  
2374   # sysctl kernel.ftrace_enabled=1               
2375   # echo function > current_tracer               
2376   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
2377   # usleep 1                                     
2378   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
2379   # cat trace                                    
2380   # tracer: function                             
2381   #                                              
2382   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 24799/    
2383   #                                              
2384   #                              _-----=> irq    
2385   #                             / _----=> nee    
2386   #                            | / _---=> har    
2387   #                            || / _--=> pre    
2388   #                            ||| /     dela    
2389   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
2390   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
2391               bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063    
2392               bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063    
2393               bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063    
2394               bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063    
2395               bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063    
2396               bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063    
2397               bash-1994  [002] ...1  3082.063    
2398               bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063    
2399   [...]                                          
2400                                                  
2401                                                  
2402 Note: function tracer uses ring buffers to st    
2403 entries. The newest data may overwrite the ol    
2404 Sometimes using echo to stop the trace is not    
2405 the tracing could have overwritten the data t    
2406 record. For this reason, it is sometimes bett    
2407 tracing directly from a program. This allows     
2408 tracing at the point that you hit the part th    
2409 interested in. To disable the tracing directl    
2410 something like following code snippet can be     
2411                                                  
2412         int trace_fd;                            
2413         [...]                                    
2414         int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {       
2415                 [...]                            
2416                 trace_fd = open(tracing_file(    
2417                 [...]                            
2418                 if (condition_hit()) {           
2419                         write(trace_fd, "0",     
2420                 }                                
2421                 [...]                            
2422         }                                        
2423                                                  
2424                                                  
2425 Single thread tracing                            
2426 ---------------------                            
2427                                                  
2428 By writing into set_ftrace_pid you can trace     
2429 single thread. For example::                     
2430                                                  
2431   # cat set_ftrace_pid                           
2432   no pid                                         
2433   # echo 3111 > set_ftrace_pid                   
2434   # cat set_ftrace_pid                           
2435   3111                                           
2436   # echo function > current_tracer               
2437   # cat trace | head                             
2438   # tracer: function                             
2439   #                                              
2440   #           TASK-PID    CPU#    TIMESTAMP      
2441   #              | |       |          |          
2442       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254676:     
2443       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254681:     
2444       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254682:     
2445       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254683:     
2446       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254685:     
2447       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254686:     
2448   # echo > set_ftrace_pid                        
2449   # cat trace |head                              
2450   # tracer: function                             
2451   #                                              
2452   #           TASK-PID    CPU#    TIMESTAMP      
2453   #              | |       |          |          
2454   ##### CPU 3 buffer started ####                
2455       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957688:     
2456       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957689:     
2457       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957691:     
2458       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957692:     
2459       yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957693:     
2460                                                  
2461 If you want to trace a function when executin    
2462 something like this simple program.              
2463 ::                                               
2464                                                  
2465         #include <stdio.h>                       
2466         #include <stdlib.h>                      
2467         #include <sys/types.h>                   
2468         #include <sys/stat.h>                    
2469         #include <fcntl.h>                       
2470         #include <unistd.h>                      
2471         #include <string.h>                      
2472                                                  
2473         #define _STR(x) #x                       
2474         #define STR(x) _STR(x)                   
2475         #define MAX_PATH 256                     
2476                                                  
2477         const char *find_tracefs(void)           
2478         {                                        
2479                static char tracefs[MAX_PATH+1    
2480                static int tracefs_found;         
2481                char type[100];                   
2482                FILE *fp;                         
2483                                                  
2484                if (tracefs_found)                
2485                        return tracefs;           
2486                                                  
2487                if ((fp = fopen("/proc/mounts"    
2488                        perror("/proc/mounts")    
2489                        return NULL;              
2490                }                                 
2491                                                  
2492                while (fscanf(fp, "%*s %"         
2493                              STR(MAX_PATH)       
2494                              "s %99s %*s %*d     
2495                              tracefs, type) =    
2496                        if (strcmp(type, "trac    
2497                                break;            
2498                }                                 
2499                fclose(fp);                       
2500                                                  
2501                if (strcmp(type, "tracefs") !=    
2502                        fprintf(stderr, "trace    
2503                        return NULL;              
2504                }                                 
2505                                                  
2506                strcat(tracefs, "/tracing/");     
2507                tracefs_found = 1;                
2508                                                  
2509                return tracefs;                   
2510         }                                        
2511                                                  
2512         const char *tracing_file(const char *    
2513         {                                        
2514                static char trace_file[MAX_PAT    
2515                snprintf(trace_file, MAX_PATH,    
2516                return trace_file;                
2517         }                                        
2518                                                  
2519         int main (int argc, char **argv)         
2520         {                                        
2521                 if (argc < 1)                    
2522                         exit(-1);                
2523                                                  
2524                 if (fork() > 0) {                
2525                         int fd, ffd;             
2526                         char line[64];           
2527                         int s;                   
2528                                                  
2529                         ffd = open(tracing_fi    
2530                         if (ffd < 0)             
2531                                 exit(-1);        
2532                         write(ffd, "nop", 3);    
2533                                                  
2534                         fd = open(tracing_fil    
2535                         s = sprintf(line, "%d    
2536                         write(fd, line, s);      
2537                                                  
2538                         write(ffd, "function"    
2539                                                  
2540                         close(fd);               
2541                         close(ffd);              
2542                                                  
2543                         execvp(argv[1], argv+    
2544                 }                                
2545                                                  
2546                 return 0;                        
2547         }                                        
2548                                                  
2549 Or this simple script!                           
2550 ::                                               
2551                                                  
2552   #!/bin/bash                                    
2553                                                  
2554   tracefs=`sed -ne 's/^tracefs \(.*\) tracefs    
2555   echo 0 > $tracefs/tracing_on                   
2556   echo $$ > $tracefs/set_ftrace_pid              
2557   echo function > $tracefs/current_tracer        
2558   echo 1 > $tracefs/tracing_on                   
2559   exec "$@"                                      
2560                                                  
2561                                                  
2562 function graph tracer                            
2563 ---------------------------                      
2564                                                  
2565 This tracer is similar to the function tracer    
2566 probes a function on its entry and its exit.     
2567 using a dynamically allocated stack of return    
2568 task_struct. On function entry the tracer ove    
2569 address of each function traced to set a cust    
2570 original return address is stored on the stac    
2571 in the task_struct.                              
2572                                                  
2573 Probing on both ends of a function leads to s    
2574 such as:                                         
2575                                                  
2576 - measure of a function's time execution         
2577 - having a reliable call stack to draw functi    
2578                                                  
2579 This tracer is useful in several situations:     
2580                                                  
2581 - you want to find the reason of a strange ke    
2582   need to see what happens in detail on any a    
2583   ones).                                         
2584                                                  
2585 - you are experiencing weird latencies but it    
2586   find its origin.                               
2587                                                  
2588 - you want to find quickly which path is take    
2589   function                                       
2590                                                  
2591 - you just want to peek inside a working kern    
2592   what happens there.                            
2593                                                  
2594 ::                                               
2595                                                  
2596   # tracer: function_graph                       
2597   #                                              
2598   # CPU  DURATION                  FUNCTION C    
2599   # |     |   |                     |   |   |    
2600                                                  
2601    0)               |  sys_open() {              
2602    0)               |    do_sys_open() {         
2603    0)               |      getname() {           
2604    0)               |        kmem_cache_alloc    
2605    0)   1.382 us    |          __might_sleep(    
2606    0)   2.478 us    |        }                   
2607    0)               |        strncpy_from_use    
2608    0)               |          might_fault()     
2609    0)   1.389 us    |            __might_slee    
2610    0)   2.553 us    |          }                 
2611    0)   3.807 us    |        }                   
2612    0)   7.876 us    |      }                     
2613    0)               |      alloc_fd() {          
2614    0)   0.668 us    |        _spin_lock();       
2615    0)   0.570 us    |        expand_files();     
2616    0)   0.586 us    |        _spin_unlock();     
2617                                                  
2618                                                  
2619 There are several columns that can be dynamic    
2620 enabled/disabled. You can use every combinati    
2621 want, depending on your needs.                   
2622                                                  
2623 - The cpu number on which the function execut    
2624   enabled.  It is sometimes better to only tr    
2625   tracing_cpumask file) or you might sometime    
2626   function calls while cpu tracing switch.       
2627                                                  
2628         - hide: echo nofuncgraph-cpu > trace_    
2629         - show: echo funcgraph-cpu > trace_op    
2630                                                  
2631 - The duration (function's time of execution)    
2632   the closing bracket line of a function or o    
2633   than the current function in case of a leaf    
2634   enabled.                                       
2635                                                  
2636         - hide: echo nofuncgraph-duration > t    
2637         - show: echo funcgraph-duration > tra    
2638                                                  
2639 - The overhead field precedes the duration fi    
2640   reached duration thresholds.                   
2641                                                  
2642         - hide: echo nofuncgraph-overhead > t    
2643         - show: echo funcgraph-overhead > tra    
2644         - depends on: funcgraph-duration         
2645                                                  
2646   ie::                                           
2647                                                  
2648     3) # 1837.709 us |          } /* __switch    
2649     3)               |          finish_task_s    
2650     3)   0.313 us    |            _raw_spin_u    
2651     3)   3.177 us    |          }                
2652     3) # 1889.063 us |        } /* __schedule    
2653     3) ! 140.417 us  |      } /* __schedule *    
2654     3) # 2034.948 us |    } /* schedule */       
2655     3) * 33998.59 us |  } /* schedule_preempt    
2656                                                  
2657     [...]                                        
2658                                                  
2659     1)   0.260 us    |              msecs_to_    
2660     1)   0.313 us    |              __rcu_rea    
2661     1) + 61.770 us   |            }              
2662     1) + 64.479 us   |          }                
2663     1)   0.313 us    |          rcu_bh_qs();     
2664     1)   0.313 us    |          __local_bh_en    
2665     1) ! 217.240 us  |        }                  
2666     1)   0.365 us    |        idle_cpu();        
2667     1)               |        rcu_irq_exit()     
2668     1)   0.417 us    |          rcu_eqs_enter    
2669     1)   3.125 us    |        }                  
2670     1) ! 227.812 us  |      }                    
2671     1) ! 457.395 us  |    }                      
2672     1) @ 119760.2 us |  }                        
2673                                                  
2674     [...]                                        
2675                                                  
2676     2)               |    handle_IPI() {         
2677     1)   6.979 us    |                  }        
2678     2)   0.417 us    |      scheduler_ipi();     
2679     1)   9.791 us    |                }          
2680     1) + 12.917 us   |              }            
2681     2)   3.490 us    |    }                      
2682     1) + 15.729 us   |            }              
2683     1) + 18.542 us   |          }                
2684     2) $ 3594274 us  |  }                        
2685                                                  
2686 Flags::                                          
2687                                                  
2688   + means that the function exceeded 10 usecs    
2689   ! means that the function exceeded 100 usec    
2690   # means that the function exceeded 1000 use    
2691   * means that the function exceeded 10 msecs    
2692   @ means that the function exceeded 100 msec    
2693   $ means that the function exceeded 1 sec.      
2694                                                  
2695                                                  
2696 - The task/pid field displays the thread cmdl    
2697   executed the function. It is default disabl    
2698                                                  
2699         - hide: echo nofuncgraph-proc > trace    
2700         - show: echo funcgraph-proc > trace_o    
2701                                                  
2702   ie::                                           
2703                                                  
2704     # tracer: function_graph                     
2705     #                                            
2706     # CPU  TASK/PID        DURATION              
2707     # |    |    |           |   |                
2708     0)    sh-4802     |               |          
2709     0)    sh-4802     |               |          
2710     0)    sh-4802     |               |          
2711     0)    sh-4802     |   0.616 us    |          
2712     0)    sh-4802     |   0.586 us    |          
2713     0)    sh-4802     |   2.899 us    |          
2714     0)    sh-4802     |   4.040 us    |          
2715     0)    sh-4802     |   5.151 us    |          
2716     0)    sh-4802     | + 49.370 us   |          
2717                                                  
2718                                                  
2719 - The absolute time field is an absolute time    
2720   system clock since it started. A snapshot o    
2721   given on each entry/exit of functions          
2722                                                  
2723         - hide: echo nofuncgraph-abstime > tr    
2724         - show: echo funcgraph-abstime > trac    
2725                                                  
2726   ie::                                           
2727                                                  
2728     #                                            
2729     #      TIME       CPU  DURATION              
2730     #       |         |     |   |                
2731     360.774522 |   1)   0.541 us    |            
2732     360.774522 |   1)   4.663 us    |            
2733     360.774523 |   1)   0.541 us    |            
2734     360.774524 |   1)   6.796 us    |            
2735     360.774524 |   1)   7.952 us    |            
2736     360.774525 |   1)   9.063 us    |            
2737     360.774525 |   1)   0.615 us    |            
2738     360.774527 |   1)   0.578 us    |            
2739     360.774528 |   1)               |            
2740     360.774528 |   1)               |            
2741     360.774529 |   1)               |            
2742     360.774529 |   1)               |            
2743     360.774530 |   1)   0.594 us    |            
2744                                                  
2745                                                  
2746 The function name is always displayed after t    
2747 for a function if the start of that function     
2748 trace buffer.                                    
2749                                                  
2750 Display of the function name after the closin    
2751 enabled for functions whose start is in the t    
2752 allowing easier searching with grep for funct    
2753 It is default disabled.                          
2754                                                  
2755         - hide: echo nofuncgraph-tail > trace    
2756         - show: echo funcgraph-tail > trace_o    
2757                                                  
2758   Example with nofuncgraph-tail (default)::      
2759                                                  
2760     0)               |      putname() {          
2761     0)               |        kmem_cache_free    
2762     0)   0.518 us    |          __phys_addr()    
2763     0)   1.757 us    |        }                  
2764     0)   2.861 us    |      }                    
2765                                                  
2766   Example with funcgraph-tail::                  
2767                                                  
2768     0)               |      putname() {          
2769     0)               |        kmem_cache_free    
2770     0)   0.518 us    |          __phys_addr()    
2771     0)   1.757 us    |        } /* kmem_cache    
2772     0)   2.861 us    |      } /* putname() */    
2773                                                  
2774 The return value of each traced function can     
2775 an equal sign "=". When encountering system c    
2776 can be very helpful to quickly locate the fun    
2777 returns an error code.                           
2778                                                  
2779         - hide: echo nofuncgraph-retval > tra    
2780         - show: echo funcgraph-retval > trace    
2781                                                  
2782   Example with funcgraph-retval::                
2783                                                  
2784     1)               |    cgroup_migrate() {     
2785     1)   0.651 us    |      cgroup_migrate_ad    
2786     1)               |      cgroup_migrate_ex    
2787     1)               |        cpu_cgroup_can_    
2788     1)               |          cgroup_taskse    
2789     1)   0.732 us    |            cgroup_task    
2790     1)   1.232 us    |          } /* cgroup_t    
2791     1)   0.380 us    |          sched_rt_can_    
2792     1)   2.335 us    |        } /* cpu_cgroup    
2793     1)   4.369 us    |      } /* cgroup_migra    
2794     1)   7.143 us    |    } /* cgroup_migrate    
2795                                                  
2796 The above example shows that the function cpu    
2797 returned the error code -22 firstly, then we     
2798 of this function to get the root cause.          
2799                                                  
2800 When the option funcgraph-retval-hex is not s    
2801 be displayed in a smart way. Specifically, if    
2802 it will be printed in signed decimal format,     
2803 printed in hexadecimal format.                   
2804                                                  
2805         - smart: echo nofuncgraph-retval-hex     
2806         - hexadecimal: echo funcgraph-retval-    
2807                                                  
2808   Example with funcgraph-retval-hex::            
2809                                                  
2810     1)               |      cgroup_migrate()     
2811     1)   0.651 us    |        cgroup_migrate_    
2812     1)               |        cgroup_migrate_    
2813     1)               |          cpu_cgroup_ca    
2814     1)               |            cgroup_task    
2815     1)   0.732 us    |              cgroup_ta    
2816     1)   1.232 us    |            } /* cgroup    
2817     1)   0.380 us    |            sched_rt_ca    
2818     1)   2.335 us    |          } /* cpu_cgro    
2819     1)   4.369 us    |        } /* cgroup_mig    
2820     1)   7.143 us    |      } /* cgroup_migra    
2821                                                  
2822 At present, there are some limitations when u    
2823 option, and these limitations will be elimina    
2824                                                  
2825 - Even if the function return type is void, a    
2826   be printed, and you can just ignore it.        
2827                                                  
2828 - Even if return values are stored in multipl    
2829   value contained in the first register will     
2830   To illustrate, in the x86 architecture, eax    
2831   a 64-bit return value, with the lower 32 bi    
2832   upper 32 bits saved in edx. However, only t    
2833   will be recorded and printed.                  
2834                                                  
2835 - In certain procedure call standards, such a    
2836   type is smaller than a GPR, it is the respo    
2837   to perform the narrowing, and the upper bit    
2838   Therefore, it is advisable to check the cod    
2839   when using a u8 in a 64-bit GPR, bits [63:8    
2840   especially when larger types are truncated,    
2841   Here are some specific cases to illustrate     
2842                                                  
2843   **Case One**:                                  
2844                                                  
2845   The function narrow_to_u8 is defined as fol    
2846                                                  
2847         u8 narrow_to_u8(u64 val)                 
2848         {                                        
2849                 // implicitly truncated          
2850                 return val;                      
2851         }                                        
2852                                                  
2853   It may be compiled to::                        
2854                                                  
2855         narrow_to_u8:                            
2856                 < ... ftrace instrumentation     
2857                 RET                              
2858                                                  
2859   If you pass 0x123456789abcdef to this funct    
2860   it may be recorded as 0x123456789abcdef ins    
2861                                                  
2862   **Case Two**:                                  
2863                                                  
2864   The function error_if_not_4g_aligned is def    
2865                                                  
2866         int error_if_not_4g_aligned(u64 val)     
2867         {                                        
2868                 if (val & GENMASK(31, 0))        
2869                         return -EINVAL;          
2870                                                  
2871                 return 0;                        
2872         }                                        
2873                                                  
2874   It could be compiled to::                      
2875                                                  
2876         error_if_not_4g_aligned:                 
2877                 CBNZ    w0, .Lnot_aligned        
2878                 RET                     // bi    
2879                                         // [6    
2880         .Lnot_aligned:                           
2881                 MOV    x0, #-EINVAL              
2882                 RET                              
2883                                                  
2884   When passing 0x2_0000_0000 to it, the retur    
2885   0x2_0000_0000 instead of 0.                    
2886                                                  
2887 You can put some comments on specific functio    
2888 trace_printk() For example, if you want to pu    
2889 the __might_sleep() function, you just have t    
2890 <linux/ftrace.h> and call trace_printk() insi    
2891                                                  
2892         trace_printk("I'm a comment!\n")         
2893                                                  
2894 will produce::                                   
2895                                                  
2896    1)               |             __might_sle    
2897    1)               |                /* I'm a    
2898    1)   1.449 us    |             }              
2899                                                  
2900                                                  
2901 You might find other useful features for this    
2902 following "dynamic ftrace" section such as tr    
2903 functions or tasks.                              
2904                                                  
2905 dynamic ftrace                                   
2906 --------------                                   
2907                                                  
2908 If CONFIG_DYNAMIC_FTRACE is set, the system w    
2909 virtually no overhead when function tracing i    
2910 this works is the mcount function call (place    
2911 every kernel function, produced by the -pg sw    
2912 starts of pointing to a simple return. (Enabl    
2913 include the -pg switch in the compiling of th    
2914                                                  
2915 At compile time every C file object is run th    
2916 recordmcount program (located in the scripts     
2917 program will parse the ELF headers in the C o    
2918 the locations in the .text section that call     
2919 with gcc version 4.6, the -mfentry has been a    
2920 calls "__fentry__" instead of "mcount". Which    
2921 the creation of the stack frame.                 
2922                                                  
2923 Note, not all sections are traced. They may b    
2924 a notrace, or blocked another way and all inl    
2925 traced. Check the "available_filter_functions    
2926 can be traced.                                   
2927                                                  
2928 A section called "__mcount_loc" is created th    
2929 references to all the mcount/fentry call site    
2930 The recordmcount program re-links this sectio    
2931 original object. The final linking stage of t    
2932 references into a single table.                  
2933                                                  
2934 On boot up, before SMP is initialized, the dy    
2935 scans this table and updates all the location    
2936 also records the locations, which are added t    
2937 available_filter_functions list.  Modules are    
2938 are loaded and before they are executed.  Whe    
2939 unloaded, it also removes its functions from     
2940 list. This is automatic in the module unload     
2941 module author does not need to worry about it    
2942                                                  
2943 When tracing is enabled, the process of modif    
2944 tracepoints is dependent on architecture. The    
2945 kstop_machine to prevent races with the CPUs     
2946 modified (which can cause the CPU to do undes    
2947 if the modified code crosses cache (or page)     
2948 patched back to calls. But this time, they do    
2949 (which is just a function stub). They now cal    
2950 infrastructure.                                  
2951                                                  
2952 The new method of modifying the function trac    
2953 a breakpoint at the location to be modified,     
2954 the rest of the instruction not covered by th    
2955 all CPUs again, and then remove the breakpoin    
2956 version to the ftrace call site.                 
2957                                                  
2958 Some archs do not even need to monkey around     
2959 and can just slap the new code on top of the     
2960 problems with other CPUs executing it at the     
2961                                                  
2962 One special side-effect to the recording of t    
2963 traced is that we can now selectively choose     
2964 wish to trace and which ones we want the mcou    
2965 as nops.                                         
2966                                                  
2967 Two files are used, one for enabling and one     
2968 tracing of specified functions. They are:        
2969                                                  
2970   set_ftrace_filter                              
2971                                                  
2972 and                                              
2973                                                  
2974   set_ftrace_notrace                             
2975                                                  
2976 A list of available functions that you can ad    
2977 listed in:                                       
2978                                                  
2979    available_filter_functions                    
2980                                                  
2981 ::                                               
2982                                                  
2983   # cat available_filter_functions               
2984   put_prev_task_idle                             
2985   kmem_cache_create                              
2986   pick_next_task_rt                              
2987   cpus_read_lock                                 
2988   pick_next_task_fair                            
2989   mutex_lock                                     
2990   [...]                                          
2991                                                  
2992 If I am only interested in sys_nanosleep and     
2993                                                  
2994   # echo sys_nanosleep hrtimer_interrupt > se    
2995   # echo function > current_tracer               
2996   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
2997   # usleep 1                                     
2998   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
2999   # cat trace                                    
3000   # tracer: function                             
3001   #                                              
3002   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 5/5       
3003   #                                              
3004   #                              _-----=> irq    
3005   #                             / _----=> nee    
3006   #                            | / _---=> har    
3007   #                            || / _--=> pre    
3008   #                            ||| /     dela    
3009   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
3010   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
3011             usleep-2665  [001] ....  4186.475    
3012             <idle>-0     [001] d.h1  4186.475    
3013             usleep-2665  [001] d.h1  4186.475    
3014             <idle>-0     [003] d.h1  4186.475    
3015             <idle>-0     [002] d.h1  4186.475    
3016                                                  
3017 To see which functions are being traced, you     
3018 ::                                               
3019                                                  
3020   # cat set_ftrace_filter                        
3021   hrtimer_interrupt                              
3022   sys_nanosleep                                  
3023                                                  
3024                                                  
3025 Perhaps this is not enough. The filters also     
3026                                                  
3027   ``<match>*``                                   
3028         will match functions that begin with     
3029   ``*<match>``                                   
3030         will match functions that end with <m    
3031   ``*<match>*``                                  
3032         will match functions that have <match    
3033   ``<match1>*<match2>``                          
3034         will match functions that begin with     
3035                                                  
3036 .. note::                                        
3037       It is better to use quotes to enclose t    
3038       otherwise the shell may expand the para    
3039       of files in the local directory.           
3040                                                  
3041 ::                                               
3042                                                  
3043   # echo 'hrtimer_*' > set_ftrace_filter         
3044                                                  
3045 Produces::                                       
3046                                                  
3047   # tracer: function                             
3048   #                                              
3049   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 897/89    
3050   #                                              
3051   #                              _-----=> irq    
3052   #                             / _----=> nee    
3053   #                            | / _---=> har    
3054   #                            || / _--=> pre    
3055   #                            ||| /     dela    
3056   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
3057   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
3058             <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547    
3059             <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547    
3060             <idle>-0     [003] dN.2  4228.547    
3061             <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547    
3062             <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547    
3063             <idle>-0     [003] d..1  4228.547    
3064             <idle>-0     [003] d..1  4228.547    
3065             <idle>-0     [003] d..2  4228.547    
3066                                                  
3067 Notice that we lost the sys_nanosleep.           
3068 ::                                               
3069                                                  
3070   # cat set_ftrace_filter                        
3071   hrtimer_run_queues                             
3072   hrtimer_run_pending                            
3073   hrtimer_init                                   
3074   hrtimer_cancel                                 
3075   hrtimer_try_to_cancel                          
3076   hrtimer_forward                                
3077   hrtimer_start                                  
3078   hrtimer_reprogram                              
3079   hrtimer_force_reprogram                        
3080   hrtimer_get_next_event                         
3081   hrtimer_interrupt                              
3082   hrtimer_nanosleep                              
3083   hrtimer_wakeup                                 
3084   hrtimer_get_remaining                          
3085   hrtimer_get_res                                
3086   hrtimer_init_sleeper                           
3087                                                  
3088                                                  
3089 This is because the '>' and '>>' act just lik    
3090 To rewrite the filters, use '>'                  
3091 To append to the filters, use '>>'               
3092                                                  
3093 To clear out a filter so that all functions w    
3094 again::                                          
3095                                                  
3096  # echo > set_ftrace_filter                      
3097  # cat set_ftrace_filter                         
3098  #                                               
3099                                                  
3100 Again, now we want to append.                    
3101                                                  
3102 ::                                               
3103                                                  
3104   # echo sys_nanosleep > set_ftrace_filter       
3105   # cat set_ftrace_filter                        
3106   sys_nanosleep                                  
3107   # echo 'hrtimer_*' >> set_ftrace_filter        
3108   # cat set_ftrace_filter                        
3109   hrtimer_run_queues                             
3110   hrtimer_run_pending                            
3111   hrtimer_init                                   
3112   hrtimer_cancel                                 
3113   hrtimer_try_to_cancel                          
3114   hrtimer_forward                                
3115   hrtimer_start                                  
3116   hrtimer_reprogram                              
3117   hrtimer_force_reprogram                        
3118   hrtimer_get_next_event                         
3119   hrtimer_interrupt                              
3120   sys_nanosleep                                  
3121   hrtimer_nanosleep                              
3122   hrtimer_wakeup                                 
3123   hrtimer_get_remaining                          
3124   hrtimer_get_res                                
3125   hrtimer_init_sleeper                           
3126                                                  
3127                                                  
3128 The set_ftrace_notrace prevents those functio    
3129 traced.                                          
3130 ::                                               
3131                                                  
3132   # echo '*preempt*' '*lock*' > set_ftrace_no    
3133                                                  
3134 Produces::                                       
3135                                                  
3136   # tracer: function                             
3137   #                                              
3138   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 39608/    
3139   #                                              
3140   #                              _-----=> irq    
3141   #                             / _----=> nee    
3142   #                            | / _---=> har    
3143   #                            || / _--=> pre    
3144   #                            ||| /     dela    
3145   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
3146   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
3147               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3148               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3149               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3150               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3151               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3152               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3153               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3154               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3155               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3156               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3157               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3158               bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324    
3159                                                  
3160 We can see that there's no more lock or preem    
3161                                                  
3162 Selecting function filters via index             
3163 ------------------------------------             
3164                                                  
3165 Because processing of strings is expensive (t    
3166 needs to be looked up before comparing to the    
3167 an index can be used as well to enable functi    
3168 case of setting thousands of specific functio    
3169 in a list of numbers, no string processing wi    
3170 at the specific location in the internal arra    
3171 functions in the "available_filter_functions"    
3172                                                  
3173 ::                                               
3174                                                  
3175   # echo 1 > set_ftrace_filter                   
3176                                                  
3177 Will select the first function listed in "ava    
3178                                                  
3179 ::                                               
3180                                                  
3181   # head -1 available_filter_functions           
3182   trace_initcall_finish_cb                       
3183                                                  
3184   # cat set_ftrace_filter                        
3185   trace_initcall_finish_cb                       
3186                                                  
3187   # head -50 available_filter_functions | tai    
3188   x86_pmu_commit_txn                             
3189                                                  
3190   # echo 1 50 > set_ftrace_filter                
3191   # cat set_ftrace_filter                        
3192   trace_initcall_finish_cb                       
3193   x86_pmu_commit_txn                             
3194                                                  
3195 Dynamic ftrace with the function graph tracer    
3196 ---------------------------------------------    
3197                                                  
3198 Although what has been explained above concer    
3199 function tracer and the function-graph-tracer    
3200 special features only available in the functi    
3201                                                  
3202 If you want to trace only one function and al    
3203 you just have to echo its name into set_graph    
3204                                                  
3205  echo __do_fault > set_graph_function            
3206                                                  
3207 will produce the following "expanded" trace o    
3208 function::                                       
3209                                                  
3210    0)               |  __do_fault() {            
3211    0)               |    filemap_fault() {       
3212    0)               |      find_lock_page() {    
3213    0)   0.804 us    |        find_get_page();    
3214    0)               |        __might_sleep()     
3215    0)   1.329 us    |        }                   
3216    0)   3.904 us    |      }                     
3217    0)   4.979 us    |    }                       
3218    0)   0.653 us    |    _spin_lock();           
3219    0)   0.578 us    |    page_add_file_rmap()    
3220    0)   0.525 us    |    native_set_pte_at();    
3221    0)   0.585 us    |    _spin_unlock();         
3222    0)               |    unlock_page() {         
3223    0)   0.541 us    |      page_waitqueue();     
3224    0)   0.639 us    |      __wake_up_bit();      
3225    0)   2.786 us    |    }                       
3226    0) + 14.237 us   |  }                         
3227    0)               |  __do_fault() {            
3228    0)               |    filemap_fault() {       
3229    0)               |      find_lock_page() {    
3230    0)   0.698 us    |        find_get_page();    
3231    0)               |        __might_sleep()     
3232    0)   1.412 us    |        }                   
3233    0)   3.950 us    |      }                     
3234    0)   5.098 us    |    }                       
3235    0)   0.631 us    |    _spin_lock();           
3236    0)   0.571 us    |    page_add_file_rmap()    
3237    0)   0.526 us    |    native_set_pte_at();    
3238    0)   0.586 us    |    _spin_unlock();         
3239    0)               |    unlock_page() {         
3240    0)   0.533 us    |      page_waitqueue();     
3241    0)   0.638 us    |      __wake_up_bit();      
3242    0)   2.793 us    |    }                       
3243    0) + 14.012 us   |  }                         
3244                                                  
3245 You can also expand several functions at once    
3246                                                  
3247  echo sys_open > set_graph_function              
3248  echo sys_close >> set_graph_function            
3249                                                  
3250 Now if you want to go back to trace all funct    
3251 this special filter via::                        
3252                                                  
3253  echo > set_graph_function                       
3254                                                  
3255                                                  
3256 ftrace_enabled                                   
3257 --------------                                   
3258                                                  
3259 Note, the proc sysctl ftrace_enable is a big     
3260 function tracer. By default it is enabled (wh    
3261 enabled in the kernel). If it is disabled, al    
3262 disabled. This includes not only the function    
3263 also for any other uses (perf, kprobes, stack    
3264 cannot be disabled if there is a callback wit    
3265 registered.                                      
3266                                                  
3267 Please disable this with care.                   
3268                                                  
3269 This can be disable (and enabled) with::         
3270                                                  
3271   sysctl kernel.ftrace_enabled=0                 
3272   sysctl kernel.ftrace_enabled=1                 
3273                                                  
3274  or                                              
3275                                                  
3276   echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/ftrace_enabled       
3277   echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/ftrace_enabled       
3278                                                  
3279                                                  
3280 Filter commands                                  
3281 ---------------                                  
3282                                                  
3283 A few commands are supported by the set_ftrac    
3284 Trace commands have the following format::       
3285                                                  
3286   <function>:<command>:<parameter>               
3287                                                  
3288 The following commands are supported:            
3289                                                  
3290 - mod:                                           
3291   This command enables function filtering per    
3292   parameter defines the module. For example,     
3293   functions in the ext3 module are desired, r    
3294                                                  
3295    echo 'write*:mod:ext3' > set_ftrace_filter    
3296                                                  
3297   This command interacts with the filter in t    
3298   filtering based on function names. Thus, ad    
3299   in a different module is accomplished by ap    
3300   filter file. Remove specific module functio    
3301   '!'::                                          
3302                                                  
3303    echo '!writeback*:mod:ext3' >> set_ftrace_    
3304                                                  
3305   Mod command supports module globbing. Disab    
3306   functions except a specific module::           
3307                                                  
3308    echo '!*:mod:!ext3' >> set_ftrace_filter      
3309                                                  
3310   Disable tracing for all modules, but still     
3311                                                  
3312    echo '!*:mod:*' >> set_ftrace_filter          
3313                                                  
3314   Enable filter only for kernel::                
3315                                                  
3316    echo '*write*:mod:!*' >> set_ftrace_filter    
3317                                                  
3318   Enable filter for module globbing::            
3319                                                  
3320    echo '*write*:mod:*snd*' >> set_ftrace_fil    
3321                                                  
3322 - traceon/traceoff:                              
3323   These commands turn tracing on and off when    
3324   functions are hit. The parameter determines    
3325   tracing system is turned on and off. If uns    
3326   no limit. For example, to disable tracing w    
3327   is hit the first 5 times, run::                
3328                                                  
3329    echo '__schedule_bug:traceoff:5' > set_ftr    
3330                                                  
3331   To always disable tracing when __schedule_b    
3332                                                  
3333    echo '__schedule_bug:traceoff' > set_ftrac    
3334                                                  
3335   These commands are cumulative whether or no    
3336   to set_ftrace_filter. To remove a command,     
3337   and drop the parameter::                       
3338                                                  
3339    echo '!__schedule_bug:traceoff:0' > set_ft    
3340                                                  
3341   The above removes the traceoff command for     
3342   that have a counter. To remove commands wit    
3343                                                  
3344    echo '!__schedule_bug:traceoff' > set_ftra    
3345                                                  
3346 - snapshot:                                      
3347   Will cause a snapshot to be triggered when     
3348   ::                                             
3349                                                  
3350    echo 'native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot' >     
3351                                                  
3352   To only snapshot once:                         
3353   ::                                             
3354                                                  
3355    echo 'native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot:1'     
3356                                                  
3357   To remove the above commands::                 
3358                                                  
3359    echo '!native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot' >    
3360    echo '!native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot:0'    
3361                                                  
3362 - enable_event/disable_event:                    
3363   These commands can enable or disable a trac    
3364   function tracing callbacks are very sensiti    
3365   are registered, the trace point is activate    
3366   a "soft" mode. That is, the tracepoint will    
3367   just will not be traced. The event tracepoi    
3368   as long as there's a command that triggers     
3369   ::                                             
3370                                                  
3371    echo 'try_to_wake_up:enable_event:sched:sc    
3372          set_ftrace_filter                       
3373                                                  
3374   The format is::                                
3375                                                  
3376     <function>:enable_event:<system>:<event>[    
3377     <function>:disable_event:<system>:<event>    
3378                                                  
3379   To remove the events commands::                
3380                                                  
3381    echo '!try_to_wake_up:enable_event:sched:s    
3382          set_ftrace_filter                       
3383    echo '!schedule:disable_event:sched:sched_    
3384          set_ftrace_filter                       
3385                                                  
3386 - dump:                                          
3387   When the function is hit, it will dump the     
3388   ring buffer to the console. This is useful     
3389   something, and want to dump the trace when     
3390   is hit. Perhaps it's a function that is cal    
3391   fault happens and does not allow you to get    
3392                                                  
3393 - cpudump:                                       
3394   When the function is hit, it will dump the     
3395   ring buffer for the current CPU to the cons    
3396   command, it only prints out the contents of    
3397   CPU that executed the function that trigger    
3398                                                  
3399 - stacktrace:                                    
3400   When the function is hit, a stack trace is     
3401                                                  
3402 trace_pipe                                       
3403 ----------                                       
3404                                                  
3405 The trace_pipe outputs the same content as th    
3406 the effect on the tracing is different. Every    
3407 trace_pipe is consumed. This means that subse    
3408 different. The trace is live.                    
3409 ::                                               
3410                                                  
3411   # echo function > current_tracer               
3412   # cat trace_pipe > /tmp/trace.out &            
3413   [1] 4153                                       
3414   # echo 1 > tracing_on                          
3415   # usleep 1                                     
3416   # echo 0 > tracing_on                          
3417   # cat trace                                    
3418   # tracer: function                             
3419   #                                              
3420   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 0/0       
3421   #                                              
3422   #                              _-----=> irq    
3423   #                             / _----=> nee    
3424   #                            | / _---=> har    
3425   #                            || / _--=> pre    
3426   #                            ||| /     dela    
3427   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
3428   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
3429                                                  
3430   #                                              
3431   # cat /tmp/trace.out                           
3432              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3433              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3434              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3435              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3436              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3437              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3438              bash-1994  [000] ...1  5281.5689    
3439              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3440              bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.5689    
3441                                                  
3442                                                  
3443 Note, reading the trace_pipe file will block     
3444 added. This is contrary to the trace file. If    
3445 the trace file for reading, it will actually     
3446 prevent new entries from being added. The tra    
3447 not have this limitation.                        
3448                                                  
3449 trace entries                                    
3450 -------------                                    
3451                                                  
3452 Having too much or not enough data can be tro    
3453 diagnosing an issue in the kernel. The file b    
3454 used to modify the size of the internal trace    
3455 number listed is the number of entries that c    
3456 CPU. To know the full size, multiply the numb    
3457 with the number of entries.                      
3458 ::                                               
3459                                                  
3460   # cat buffer_size_kb                           
3461   1408 (units kilobytes)                         
3462                                                  
3463 Or simply read buffer_total_size_kb              
3464 ::                                               
3465                                                  
3466   # cat buffer_total_size_kb                     
3467   5632                                           
3468                                                  
3469 To modify the buffer, simple echo in a number    
3470 ::                                               
3471                                                  
3472   # echo 10000 > buffer_size_kb                  
3473   # cat buffer_size_kb                           
3474   10000 (units kilobytes)                        
3475                                                  
3476 It will try to allocate as much as possible.     
3477 much, it can cause Out-Of-Memory to trigger.     
3478 ::                                               
3479                                                  
3480   # echo 1000000000000 > buffer_size_kb          
3481   -bash: echo: write error: Cannot allocate m    
3482   # cat buffer_size_kb                           
3483   85                                             
3484                                                  
3485 The per_cpu buffers can be changed individual    
3486 ::                                               
3487                                                  
3488   # echo 10000 > per_cpu/cpu0/buffer_size_kb     
3489   # echo 100 > per_cpu/cpu1/buffer_size_kb       
3490                                                  
3491 When the per_cpu buffers are not the same, th    
3492 at the top level will just show an X             
3493 ::                                               
3494                                                  
3495   # cat buffer_size_kb                           
3496   X                                              
3497                                                  
3498 This is where the buffer_total_size_kb is use    
3499 ::                                               
3500                                                  
3501   # cat buffer_total_size_kb                     
3502   12916                                          
3503                                                  
3504 Writing to the top level buffer_size_kb will     
3505 to be the same again.                            
3506                                                  
3507 Snapshot                                         
3508 --------                                         
3509 CONFIG_TRACER_SNAPSHOT makes a generic snapsh    
3510 available to all non latency tracers. (Latenc    
3511 record max latency, such as "irqsoff" or "wak    
3512 this feature, since those are already using t    
3513 mechanism internally.)                           
3514                                                  
3515 Snapshot preserves a current trace buffer at     
3516 in time without stopping tracing. Ftrace swap    
3517 buffer with a spare buffer, and tracing conti    
3518 current (=previous spare) buffer.                
3519                                                  
3520 The following tracefs files in "tracing" are     
3521 feature:                                         
3522                                                  
3523   snapshot:                                      
3524                                                  
3525         This is used to take a snapshot and t    
3526         of the snapshot. Echo 1 into this fil    
3527         spare buffer and to take a snapshot (    
3528         the snapshot from this file in the sa    
3529         "trace" (described above in the secti    
3530         System"). Both reads snapshot and tra    
3531         in parallel. When the spare buffer is    
3532         0 frees it, and echoing else (positiv    
3533         snapshot contents.                       
3534         More details are shown in the table b    
3535                                                  
3536         +--------------+------------+--------    
3537         |status\\input |     0      |     1      
3538         +==============+============+========    
3539         |not allocated |(do nothing)| alloc+s    
3540         +--------------+------------+--------    
3541         |allocated     |    free    |    swap    
3542         +--------------+------------+--------    
3543                                                  
3544 Here is an example of using the snapshot feat    
3545 ::                                               
3546                                                  
3547   # echo 1 > events/sched/enable                 
3548   # echo 1 > snapshot                            
3549   # cat snapshot                                 
3550   # tracer: nop                                  
3551   #                                              
3552   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 71/71     
3553   #                                              
3554   #                              _-----=> irq    
3555   #                             / _----=> nee    
3556   #                            | / _---=> har    
3557   #                            || / _--=> pre    
3558   #                            ||| /     dela    
3559   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
3560   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
3561             <idle>-0     [005] d...  2440.603    
3562              sleep-2242  [005] d...  2440.603    
3563   [...]                                          
3564           <idle>-0     [002] d...  2440.70723    
3565                                                  
3566   # cat trace                                    
3567   # tracer: nop                                  
3568   #                                              
3569   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 77/77     
3570   #                                              
3571   #                              _-----=> irq    
3572   #                             / _----=> nee    
3573   #                            | / _---=> har    
3574   #                            || / _--=> pre    
3575   #                            ||| /     dela    
3576   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
3577   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
3578             <idle>-0     [007] d...  2440.707    
3579    snapshot-test-2-2229  [002] d...  2440.707    
3580   [...]                                          
3581                                                  
3582                                                  
3583 If you try to use this snapshot feature when     
3584 one of the latency tracers, you will get the     
3585 ::                                               
3586                                                  
3587   # echo wakeup > current_tracer                 
3588   # echo 1 > snapshot                            
3589   bash: echo: write error: Device or resource    
3590   # cat snapshot                                 
3591   cat: snapshot: Device or resource busy         
3592                                                  
3593                                                  
3594 Instances                                        
3595 ---------                                        
3596 In the tracefs tracing directory, there is a     
3597 This directory can have new directories creat    
3598 mkdir, and removing directories with rmdir. T    
3599 with mkdir in this directory will already con    
3600 directories after it is created.                 
3601 ::                                               
3602                                                  
3603   # mkdir instances/foo                          
3604   # ls instances/foo                             
3605   buffer_size_kb  buffer_total_size_kb  event    
3606   set_event  snapshot  trace  trace_clock  tr    
3607   trace_pipe  tracing_on                         
3608                                                  
3609 As you can see, the new directory looks simil    
3610 itself. In fact, it is very similar, except t    
3611 events are agnostic from the main directory,     
3612 instances that are created.                      
3613                                                  
3614 The files in the new directory work just like    
3615 same name in the tracing directory except the    
3616 is a separate and new buffer. The files affec    
3617 affect the main buffer with the exception of     
3618 the trace_options affect all instances and th    
3619 the same, but this may change in future relea    
3620 may become specific to the instance they resi    
3621                                                  
3622 Notice that none of the function tracer files    
3623 current_tracer and available_tracers. This is    
3624 can currently only have events enabled for th    
3625 ::                                               
3626                                                  
3627   # mkdir instances/foo                          
3628   # mkdir instances/bar                          
3629   # mkdir instances/zoot                         
3630   # echo 100000 > buffer_size_kb                 
3631   # echo 1000 > instances/foo/buffer_size_kb     
3632   # echo 5000 > instances/bar/per_cpu/cpu1/bu    
3633   # echo function > current_trace                
3634   # echo 1 > instances/foo/events/sched/sched    
3635   # echo 1 > instances/foo/events/sched/sched    
3636   # echo 1 > instances/foo/events/sched/sched    
3637   # echo 1 > instances/bar/events/irq/enable     
3638   # echo 1 > instances/zoot/events/syscalls/e    
3639   # cat trace_pipe                               
3640   CPU:2 [LOST 11745 EVENTS]                      
3641               bash-2044  [002] .... 10594.481    
3642               bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481    
3643               bash-2044  [002] d..1 10594.481    
3644               bash-2044  [002] d..1 10594.481    
3645               bash-2044  [002] d..1 10594.481    
3646               bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481    
3647               bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481    
3648               bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481    
3649               bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481    
3650               bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481    
3651               bash-2044  [002] .... 10594.481    
3652   [...]                                          
3653                                                  
3654   # cat instances/foo/trace_pipe                 
3655               bash-1998  [000] d..4   136.676    
3656               bash-1998  [000] dN.4   136.676    
3657             <idle>-0     [003] d.h3   136.676    
3658             <idle>-0     [003] d..3   136.676    
3659        rcu_preempt-9     [003] d..3   136.676    
3660               bash-1998  [000] d..4   136.677    
3661               bash-1998  [000] dN.4   136.677    
3662               bash-1998  [000] d..3   136.677    
3663        kworker/0:1-59    [000] d..4   136.677    
3664        kworker/0:1-59    [000] d..3   136.677    
3665   [...]                                          
3666                                                  
3667   # cat instances/bar/trace_pipe                 
3668        migration/1-14    [001] d.h3   138.732    
3669             <idle>-0     [001] dNh3   138.732    
3670               bash-1998  [000] d.h1   138.733    
3671               bash-1998  [000] d.h1   138.733    
3672               bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733    
3673               bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733    
3674               bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733    
3675               bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733    
3676               sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733    
3677               sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733    
3678               sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733    
3679               sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733    
3680   [...]                                          
3681                                                  
3682   # cat instances/zoot/trace                     
3683   # tracer: nop                                  
3684   #                                              
3685   # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 18996/    
3686   #                                              
3687   #                              _-----=> irq    
3688   #                             / _----=> nee    
3689   #                            | / _---=> har    
3690   #                            || / _--=> pre    
3691   #                            ||| /     dela    
3692   #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMEST    
3693   #              | |       |   ||||       |      
3694               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3695               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3696               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3697               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3698               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3699               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3700               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3701               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3702               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3703               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3704               bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733    
3705                                                  
3706 You can see that the trace of the top most tr    
3707 the function tracing. The foo instance displa    
3708 switches.                                        
3709                                                  
3710 To remove the instances, simply delete their     
3711 ::                                               
3712                                                  
3713   # rmdir instances/foo                          
3714   # rmdir instances/bar                          
3715   # rmdir instances/zoot                         
3716                                                  
3717 Note, if a process has a trace file open in o    
3718 directories, the rmdir will fail with EBUSY.     
3719                                                  
3720                                                  
3721 Stack trace                                      
3722 -----------                                      
3723 Since the kernel has a fixed sized stack, it     
3724 waste it in functions. A kernel developer mus    
3725 what they allocate on the stack. If they add     
3726 can be in danger of a stack overflow, and cor    
3727 usually leading to a system panic.               
3728                                                  
3729 There are some tools that check this, usually    
3730 periodically checking usage. But if you can p    
3731 at every function call that will become very     
3732 a function tracer, it makes it convenient to     
3733 at every function call. This is enabled via t    
3734                                                  
3735 CONFIG_STACK_TRACER enables the ftrace stack     
3736 To enable it, write a '1' into /proc/sys/kern    
3737 ::                                               
3738                                                  
3739  # echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/stack_tracer_ena    
3740                                                  
3741 You can also enable it from the kernel comman    
3742 the stack size of the kernel during boot up,     
3743 to the kernel command line parameter.            
3744                                                  
3745 After running it for a few minutes, the outpu    
3746 ::                                               
3747                                                  
3748   # cat stack_max_size                           
3749   2928                                           
3750                                                  
3751   # cat stack_trace                              
3752           Depth    Size   Location    (18 ent    
3753           -----    ----   --------               
3754     0)     2928     224   update_sd_lb_stats+    
3755     1)     2704     160   find_busiest_group+    
3756     2)     2544     256   load_balance+0xd9/0    
3757     3)     2288      80   idle_balance+0xbb/0    
3758     4)     2208     128   __schedule+0x26e/0x    
3759     5)     2080      16   schedule+0x64/0x66     
3760     6)     2064     128   schedule_timeout+0x    
3761     7)     1936     112   wait_for_common+0x9    
3762     8)     1824      16   wait_for_completion    
3763     9)     1808     128   flush_work+0xfe/0x1    
3764    10)     1680      16   tty_flush_to_ldisc+    
3765    11)     1664      48   input_available_p+0    
3766    12)     1616      48   n_tty_poll+0x6d/0x1    
3767    13)     1568      64   tty_poll+0x64/0x7f     
3768    14)     1504     880   do_select+0x31e/0x5    
3769    15)      624     400   core_sys_select+0x1    
3770    16)      224      96   sys_select+0x91/0xb    
3771    17)      128     128   system_call_fastpat    
3772                                                  
3773 Note, if -mfentry is being used by gcc, funct    
3774 they set up the stack frame. This means that     
3775 are not tested by the stack tracer when -mfen    
3776                                                  
3777 Currently, -mfentry is used by gcc 4.6.0 and     
3778                                                  
3779 More                                             
3780 ----                                             
3781 More details can be found in the source code,    
                                                      

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