xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/tslog.4 (revision 271171e0d97b88ba2a7c3bf750c9672b484c1c13)
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26.Dd June 1, 2022
27.Dt TSLOG 4
28.Os
29.Sh NAME
30.Nm tslog
31.Nd Boot-time event tracing facility
32.Sh SYNOPSIS
33To compile this boot-time event tracing facility into the kernel,
34place the following line in the kernel configuration file:
35.Bd -ragged -offset indent
36.Cd "option TSLOG"
37.Ed
38.Sh DESCRIPTION
39.Nm
40is a boot-time event tracing facility.
41It is suitable for tracing recursive events
42based on function entries and exits.
43Its purpose is to ease pinpointing and reducing the overall
44.Fx
45boot time by generating detailed timing information.
46.Pp
47.Nm
48is able to trace the boot loader, kernel initialization, and userland processes.
49.Pp
50In userland, it records the following details for each process ID:
51.Bl -dash
52.It
53The timestamp of the
54.Xr fork 2
55which creates the given process ID and the parent process ID.
56.It
57The path passed to
58.Xr execve 2 ,
59if any.
60.It
61The first path resolved by
62.Xr namei 9 ,
63if any.
64.It
65The timestamp of the
66.Xr exit 3
67which terminates the process.
68.El
69.Sh SYSCTL VARIABLES
70The following
71.Xr sysctl 8
72variables are available:
73.Bl -tag -width indent
74.It Va debug.tslog
75Dump the
76.Nm
77buffer of recorded loader and kernel event timestamps.
78.It Va debug.tslog_user
79Dump the
80.Nm
81buffer
82of recorded userland event timestamps.
83.El
84.Sh FLAMEGRAPHS
85The
86.Nm
87buffer dumps
88can be used to generate flamegraphs of the
89.Fx
90boot process for visual analysis.
91See
92.Lk https://github.com/cperciva/freebsd-boot-profiling
93for more information.
94.Sh SEE ALSO
95.Xr dtrace 1 ,
96.Xr boottrace 4 ,
97.Xr ktr 4
98.Sh HISTORY
99.Nm
100first appeared in
101.Fx 12.0 .
102Support for tracing boot loaders and userland process
103was added in
104.Fx 14.0 .
105.Ss TSLOG vs. Boottrace
106.Nm
107is oriented towards system developers while
108.Xr boottrace 4
109is meant to be easy to use by system administrators.
110Both faciliities provide an overview of timing and resource usage of the boot
111process.
112.Ss TSLOG vs. DTrace
113.Xr dtrace 1
114is not always the right tool for profiling early kernel initialization.
115The reason is it requires some kernel subroutines
116which are not yet available early in the boot process, e.g.:
117traps, memory allocation, or thread scheduling.
118.Nm
119depends on fewer kernel subroutines than
120.Xr dtrace 1
121and because of that can trace early kernel initialization.
122.Ss TSLOG vs. KTR
123.Xr ktr 4
124has a couple of limitations which prevent it from
125being able to run at the start of the boot process.
126In contrast,
127.Nm
128is designed for logging timestamped events for boot
129profiling.
130.Sh AUTHORS
131.An -nosplit
132.Nm
133was written by
134.An Colin Percival Aq Mt cperciva@FreeBSD.org .
135.Pp
136This manual page was written by
137.An Mateusz Piotrowski Aq Mt 0mp@FreeBSD.org .
138