From 81a97d9d9786f54c613efaee9950f037a9229f1f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Stefan Hajnoczi Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2010 15:07:09 +0100 Subject: trace: Add user documentation Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi --- docs/tracing.txt | 177 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 177 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/tracing.txt (limited to 'docs') diff --git a/docs/tracing.txt b/docs/tracing.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..ae01ff1378 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/tracing.txt @@ -0,0 +1,177 @@ += Tracing = + +== Introduction == + +This document describes the tracing infrastructure in QEMU and how to use it +for debugging, profiling, and observing execution. + +== Quickstart == + +1. Build with the 'simple' trace backend: + + ./configure --trace-backend=simple + make + +2. Enable trace events you are interested in: + + $EDITOR trace-events # remove "disable" from events you want + +3. Run the virtual machine to produce a trace file: + + qemu ... # your normal QEMU invocation + +4. Pretty-print the binary trace file: + + ./simpletrace.py trace-events trace-* + +== Trace events == + +There is a set of static trace events declared in the trace-events source +file. Each trace event declaration names the event, its arguments, and the +format string which can be used for pretty-printing: + + qemu_malloc(size_t size, void *ptr) "size %zu ptr %p" + qemu_free(void *ptr) "ptr %p" + +The trace-events file is processed by the tracetool script during build to +generate code for the trace events. Trace events are invoked directly from +source code like this: + + #include "trace.h" /* needed for trace event prototype */ + + void *qemu_malloc(size_t size) + { + void *ptr; + if (!size && !allow_zero_malloc()) { + abort(); + } + ptr = oom_check(malloc(size ? size : 1)); + trace_qemu_malloc(size, ptr); /* <-- trace event */ + return ptr; + } + +=== Declaring trace events === + +The tracetool script produces the trace.h header file which is included by +every source file that uses trace events. Since many source files include +trace.h, it uses a minimum of types and other header files included to keep +the namespace clean and compile times and dependencies down. + +Trace events should use types as follows: + + * Use stdint.h types for fixed-size types. Most offsets and guest memory + addresses are best represented with uint32_t or uint64_t. Use fixed-size + types over primitive types whose size may change depending on the host + (32-bit versus 64-bit) so trace events don't truncate values or break + the build. + + * Use void * for pointers to structs or for arrays. The trace.h header + cannot include all user-defined struct declarations and it is therefore + necessary to use void * for pointers to structs. + + * For everything else, use primitive scalar types (char, int, long) with the + appropriate signedness. + +=== Hints for adding new trace events === + +1. Trace state changes in the code. Interesting points in the code usually + involve a state change like starting, stopping, allocating, freeing. State + changes are good trace events because they can be used to understand the + execution of the system. + +2. Trace guest operations. Guest I/O accesses like reading device registers + are good trace events because they can be used to understand guest + interactions. + +3. Use correlator fields so the context of an individual line of trace output + can be understood. For example, trace the pointer returned by malloc and + used as an argument to free. This way mallocs and frees can be matched up. + Trace events with no context are not very useful. + +4. Name trace events after their function. If there are multiple trace events + in one function, append a unique distinguisher at the end of the name. + +5. Declare trace events with the "disable" keyword. Some trace events can + produce a lot of output and users are typically only interested in a subset + of trace events. Marking trace events disabled by default saves the user + from having to manually disable noisy trace events. + +== Trace backends == + +The tracetool script automates tedious trace event code generation and also +keeps the trace event declarations independent of the trace backend. The trace +events are not tightly coupled to a specific trace backend, such as LTTng or +SystemTap. Support for trace backends can be added by extending the tracetool +script. + +The trace backend is chosen at configure time and only one trace backend can +be built into the binary: + + ./configure --trace-backend=simple + +For a list of supported trace backends, try ./configure --help or see below. + +The following subsections describe the supported trace backends. + +=== Nop === + +The "nop" backend generates empty trace event functions so that the compiler +can optimize out trace events completely. This is the default and imposes no +performance penalty. + +=== Simpletrace === + +The "simple" backend supports common use cases and comes as part of the QEMU +source tree. It may not be as powerful as platform-specific or third-party +trace backends but it is portable. This is the recommended trace backend +unless you have specific needs for more advanced backends. + +==== Monitor commands ==== + +* info trace + Display the contents of trace buffer. This command dumps the trace buffer + with simple formatting. For full pretty-printing, use the simpletrace.py + script on a binary trace file. + + The trace buffer is written into until full. The full trace buffer is + flushed and emptied. This means the 'info trace' will display few or no + entries if the buffer has just been flushed. + +* info trace-events + View available trace events and their state. State 1 means enabled, state 0 + means disabled. + +* trace-event NAME on|off + Enable/disable a given trace event. + +* trace-file on|off|flush|set + Enable/disable/flush the trace file or set the trace file name. + +==== Enabling/disabling trace events programmatically ==== + +The st_change_trace_event_state() function can be used to enable or disable trace +events at runtime inside QEMU: + + #include "trace.h" + + st_change_trace_event_state("virtio_irq", true); /* enable */ + [...] + st_change_trace_event_state("virtio_irq", false); /* disable */ + +==== Analyzing trace files ==== + +The "simple" backend produces binary trace files that can be formatted with the +simpletrace.py script. The script takes the trace-events file and the binary +trace: + + ./simpletrace.py trace-events trace-12345 + +You must ensure that the same trace-events file was used to build QEMU, +otherwise trace event declarations may have changed and output will not be +consistent. + +=== LTTng Userspace Tracer === + +The "ust" backend uses the LTTng Userspace Tracer library. There are no +monitor commands built into QEMU, instead UST utilities should be used to list, +enable/disable, and dump traces. -- cgit v1.2.3