xref: /linux/Documentation/trace/ftrace.rst (revision 4b99990cdf9560e8a071640baf19f312e6ae02f4)
1========================
2ftrace - Function Tracer
3========================
4
5Copyright 2008 Red Hat Inc.
6
7:Author:   Steven Rostedt <srostedt@redhat.com>
8:License:  The GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2
9          (dual licensed under the GPL v2)
10:Original Reviewers:  Elias Oltmanns, Randy Dunlap, Andrew Morton,
11		      John Kacur, and David Teigland.
12
13- Written for: 2.6.28-rc2
14- Updated for: 3.10
15- Updated for: 4.13 - Copyright 2017 VMware Inc. Steven Rostedt
16- Converted to rst format - Changbin Du <changbin.du@intel.com>
17
18Introduction
19------------
20
21Ftrace is an internal tracer designed to help out developers and
22designers of systems to find what is going on inside the kernel.
23It can be used for debugging or analyzing latencies and
24performance issues that take place outside of user-space.
25
26Although ftrace is typically considered the function tracer, it
27is really a framework of several assorted tracing utilities.
28There's latency tracing to examine what occurs between interrupts
29disabled and enabled, as well as for preemption and from a time
30a task is woken to the task is actually scheduled in.
31
32One of the most common uses of ftrace is the event tracing.
33Throughout the kernel are hundreds of static event points that
34can be enabled via the tracefs file system to see what is
35going on in certain parts of the kernel.
36
37See events.rst for more information.
38
39
40Implementation Details
41----------------------
42
43See Documentation/trace/ftrace-design.rst for details for arch porters and such.
44
45
46The File System
47---------------
48
49Ftrace uses the tracefs file system to hold the control files as
50well as the files to display output.
51
52When tracefs is configured into the kernel (which selecting any ftrace
53option will do) the directory /sys/kernel/tracing will be created. To mount
54this directory, you can add to your /etc/fstab file::
55
56 tracefs       /sys/kernel/tracing       tracefs defaults        0       0
57
58Or you can mount it at run time with::
59
60 mount -t tracefs nodev /sys/kernel/tracing
61
62For quicker access to that directory you may want to make a soft link to
63it::
64
65 ln -s /sys/kernel/tracing /tracing
66
67.. attention::
68
69  Before 4.1, all ftrace tracing control files were within the debugfs
70  file system, which is typically located at /sys/kernel/debug/tracing.
71  For backward compatibility, when mounting the debugfs file system,
72  the tracefs file system will be automatically mounted at:
73
74  /sys/kernel/debug/tracing
75
76  All files located in the tracefs file system will be located in that
77  debugfs file system directory as well.
78
79.. attention::
80
81  Any selected ftrace option will also create the tracefs file system.
82  The rest of the document will assume that you are in the ftrace directory
83  (cd /sys/kernel/tracing) and will only concentrate on the files within that
84  directory and not distract from the content with the extended
85  "/sys/kernel/tracing" path name.
86
87That's it! (assuming that you have ftrace configured into your kernel)
88
89After mounting tracefs you will have access to the control and output files
90of ftrace. Here is a list of some of the key files:
91
92
93 Note: all time values are in microseconds.
94
95  current_tracer:
96
97	This is used to set or display the current tracer
98	that is configured. Changing the current tracer clears
99	the ring buffer content as well as the "snapshot" buffer.
100
101  available_tracers:
102
103	This holds the different types of tracers that
104	have been compiled into the kernel. The
105	tracers listed here can be configured by
106	echoing their name into current_tracer.
107
108  tracing_on:
109
110	This sets or displays whether writing to the trace
111	ring buffer is enabled. Echo 0 into this file to disable
112	the tracer or 1 to enable it. Note, this only disables
113	writing to the ring buffer, the tracing overhead may
114	still be occurring.
115
116	The kernel function tracing_off() can be used within the
117	kernel to disable writing to the ring buffer, which will
118	set this file to "0". User space can re-enable tracing by
119	echoing "1" into the file.
120
121	Note, the function and event trigger "traceoff" will also
122	set this file to zero and stop tracing. Which can also
123	be re-enabled by user space using this file.
124
125  trace:
126
127	This file holds the output of the trace in a human
128	readable format (described below). Opening this file for
129	writing with the O_TRUNC flag clears the ring buffer content.
130        Note, this file is not a consumer. If tracing is off
131        (no tracer running, or tracing_on is zero), it will produce
132        the same output each time it is read. When tracing is on,
133        it may produce inconsistent results as it tries to read
134        the entire buffer without consuming it.
135
136  trace_pipe:
137
138	The output is the same as the "trace" file but this
139	file is meant to be streamed with live tracing.
140	Reads from this file will block until new data is
141	retrieved.  Unlike the "trace" file, this file is a
142	consumer. This means reading from this file causes
143	sequential reads to display more current data. Once
144	data is read from this file, it is consumed, and
145	will not be read again with a sequential read. The
146	"trace" file is static, and if the tracer is not
147	adding more data, it will display the same
148	information every time it is read.
149
150  trace_options:
151
152	This file lets the user control the amount of data
153	that is displayed in one of the above output
154	files. Options also exist to modify how a tracer
155	or events work (stack traces, timestamps, etc).
156
157  options:
158
159	This is a directory that has a file for every available
160	trace option (also in trace_options). Options may also be set
161	or cleared by writing a "1" or "0" respectively into the
162	corresponding file with the option name.
163
164  tracing_max_latency:
165
166	Some of the tracers record the max latency.
167	For example, the maximum time that interrupts are disabled.
168	The maximum time is saved in this file. The max trace will also be
169	stored,	and displayed by "trace". A new max trace will only be
170	recorded if the latency is greater than the value in this file
171	(in microseconds).
172
173	By echoing in a time into this file, no latency will be recorded
174	unless it is greater than the time in this file.
175
176  tracing_thresh:
177
178	Some latency tracers will record a trace whenever the
179	latency is greater than the number in this file.
180	Only active when the file contains a number greater than 0.
181	(in microseconds)
182
183  buffer_percent:
184
185	This is the watermark for how much the ring buffer needs to be filled
186	before a waiter is woken up. That is, if an application calls a
187	blocking read syscall on one of the per_cpu trace_pipe_raw files, it
188	will block until the given amount of data specified by buffer_percent
189	is in the ring buffer before it wakes the reader up. This also
190	controls how the splice system calls are blocked on this file::
191
192	  0   - means to wake up as soon as there is any data in the ring buffer.
193	  50  - means to wake up when roughly half of the ring buffer sub-buffers
194	        are full.
195	  100 - means to block until the ring buffer is totally full and is
196	        about to start overwriting the older data.
197
198  buffer_size_kb:
199
200	This sets or displays the number of kilobytes each CPU
201	buffer holds. By default, the trace buffers are the same size
202	for each CPU. The displayed number is the size of the
203	CPU buffer and not total size of all buffers. The
204	trace buffers are allocated in pages (blocks of memory
205	that the kernel uses for allocation, usually 4 KB in size).
206	A few extra pages may be allocated to accommodate buffer management
207	meta-data. If the last page allocated has room for more bytes
208	than requested, the rest of the page will be used,
209	making the actual allocation bigger than requested or shown.
210	( Note, the size may not be a multiple of the page size
211	due to buffer management meta-data. )
212
213	Buffer sizes for individual CPUs may vary
214	(see "per_cpu/cpu0/buffer_size_kb" below), and if they do
215	this file will show "X".
216
217  buffer_total_size_kb:
218
219	This displays the total combined size of all the trace buffers.
220
221  buffer_subbuf_size_kb:
222
223	This sets or displays the sub buffer size. The ring buffer is broken up
224	into several same size "sub buffers". An event can not be bigger than
225	the size of the sub buffer. Normally, the sub buffer is the size of the
226	architecture's page (4K on x86). The sub buffer also contains meta data
227	at the start which also limits the size of an event.  That means when
228	the sub buffer is a page size, no event can be larger than the page
229	size minus the sub buffer meta data.
230
231	Note, the buffer_subbuf_size_kb is a way for the user to specify the
232	minimum size of the subbuffer. The kernel may make it bigger due to the
233	implementation details, or simply fail the operation if the kernel can
234	not handle the request.
235
236	Changing the sub buffer size allows for events to be larger than the
237	page size.
238
239	Note: When changing the sub-buffer size, tracing is stopped and any
240	data in the ring buffer and the snapshot buffer will be discarded.
241
242  free_buffer:
243
244	If a process is performing tracing, and the ring buffer	should be
245	shrunk "freed" when the process is finished, even if it were to be
246	killed by a signal, this file can be used for that purpose. On close
247	of this file, the ring buffer will be resized to its minimum size.
248	Having a process that is tracing also open this file, when the process
249	exits its file descriptor for this file will be closed, and in doing so,
250	the ring buffer will be "freed".
251
252	It may also stop tracing if disable_on_free option is set.
253
254  tracing_cpumask:
255
256	This is a mask that lets the user only trace on specified CPUs.
257	The format is a hex string representing the CPUs.
258
259  set_ftrace_filter:
260
261	When dynamic ftrace is configured in (see the
262	section below "dynamic ftrace"), the code is dynamically
263	modified (code text rewrite) to disable calling of the
264	function profiler (mcount). This lets tracing be configured
265	in with practically no overhead in performance.  This also
266	has a side effect of enabling or disabling specific functions
267	to be traced. Echoing names of functions into this file
268	will limit the trace to only those functions.
269	This influences the tracers "function" and "function_graph"
270	and thus also function profiling (see "function_profile_enabled").
271
272	The functions listed in "available_filter_functions" are what
273	can be written into this file.
274
275	This interface also allows for commands to be used. See the
276	"Filter commands" section for more details.
277
278	As a speed up, since processing strings can be quite expensive
279	and requires a check of all functions registered to tracing, instead
280	an index can be written into this file. A number (starting with "1")
281	written will instead select the same corresponding at the line position
282	of the "available_filter_functions" file.
283
284  set_ftrace_notrace:
285
286	This has an effect opposite to that of
287	set_ftrace_filter. Any function that is added here will not
288	be traced. If a function exists in both set_ftrace_filter
289	and set_ftrace_notrace,	the function will _not_ be traced.
290
291  set_ftrace_pid:
292
293	Have the function tracer only trace the threads whose PID are
294	listed in this file.
295
296	If the "function-fork" option is set, then when a task whose
297	PID is listed in this file forks, the child's PID will
298	automatically be added to this file, and the child will be
299	traced by the function tracer as well. This option will also
300	cause PIDs of tasks that exit to be removed from the file.
301
302  set_ftrace_notrace_pid:
303
304        Have the function tracer ignore threads whose PID are listed in
305        this file.
306
307        If the "function-fork" option is set, then when a task whose
308	PID is listed in this file forks, the child's PID will
309	automatically be added to this file, and the child will not be
310	traced by the function tracer as well. This option will also
311	cause PIDs of tasks that exit to be removed from the file.
312
313        If a PID is in both this file and "set_ftrace_pid", then this
314        file takes precedence, and the thread will not be traced.
315
316  set_event_pid:
317
318	Have the events only trace a task with a PID listed in this file.
319	Note, sched_switch and sched_wake_up will also trace events
320	listed in this file.
321
322	To have the PIDs of children of tasks with their PID in this file
323	added on fork, enable the "event-fork" option. That option will also
324	cause the PIDs of tasks to be removed from this file when the task
325	exits.
326
327  set_event_notrace_pid:
328
329	Have the events not trace a task with a PID listed in this file.
330	Note, sched_switch and sched_wakeup will trace threads not listed
331	in this file, even if a thread's PID is in the file if the
332        sched_switch or sched_wakeup events also trace a thread that should
333        be traced.
334
335	To have the PIDs of children of tasks with their PID in this file
336	added on fork, enable the "event-fork" option. That option will also
337	cause the PIDs of tasks to be removed from this file when the task
338	exits.
339
340  set_graph_function:
341
342	Functions listed in this file will cause the function graph
343	tracer to only trace these functions and the functions that
344	they call. (See the section "dynamic ftrace" for more details).
345	Note, set_ftrace_filter and set_ftrace_notrace still affects
346	what functions are being traced.
347
348  set_graph_notrace:
349
350	Similar to set_graph_function, but will disable function graph
351	tracing when the function is hit until it exits the function.
352	This makes it possible to ignore tracing functions that are called
353	by a specific function.
354
355  available_filter_functions:
356
357	This lists the functions that ftrace has processed and can trace.
358	These are the function names that you can pass to
359	"set_ftrace_filter", "set_ftrace_notrace",
360	"set_graph_function", or "set_graph_notrace".
361	(See the section "dynamic ftrace" below for more details.)
362
363  available_filter_functions_addrs:
364
365	Similar to available_filter_functions, but with address displayed
366	for each function. The displayed address is the patch-site address
367	and can differ from /proc/kallsyms address.
368
369  syscall_user_buf_size:
370
371	Some system call trace events will record the data from a user
372	space address that one of the parameters point to. The amount of
373	data per event is limited. This file holds the max number of bytes
374	that will be recorded into the ring buffer to hold this data.
375	The max value is currently 165.
376
377  dyn_ftrace_total_info:
378
379	This file is for debugging purposes. The number of functions that
380	have been converted to nops and are available to be traced.
381
382  enabled_functions:
383
384	This file is more for debugging ftrace, but can also be useful
385	in seeing if any function has a callback attached to it.
386	Not only does the trace infrastructure use ftrace function
387	trace utility, but other subsystems might too. This file
388	displays all functions that have a callback attached to them
389	as well as the number of callbacks that have been attached.
390	Note, a callback may also call multiple functions which will
391	not be listed in this count.
392
393	If the callback registered to be traced by a function with
394	the "save regs" attribute (thus even more overhead), an 'R'
395	will be displayed on the same line as the function that
396	is returning registers.
397
398	If the callback registered to be traced by a function with
399	the "ip modify" attribute (thus the regs->ip can be changed),
400	an 'I' will be displayed on the same line as the function that
401	can be overridden.
402
403	If a non-ftrace trampoline is attached (BPF) a 'D' will be displayed.
404	Note, normal ftrace trampolines can also be attached, but only one
405	"direct" trampoline can be attached to a given function at a time.
406
407	Some architectures can not call direct trampolines, but instead have
408	the ftrace ops function located above the function entry point. In
409	such cases an 'O' will be displayed.
410
411	If a function had either the "ip modify" or a "direct" call attached to
412	it in the past, a 'M' will be shown. This flag is never cleared. It is
413	used to know if a function was ever modified by the ftrace infrastructure,
414	and can be used for debugging.
415
416	If the architecture supports it, it will also show what callback
417	is being directly called by the function. If the count is greater
418	than 1 it most likely will be ftrace_ops_list_func().
419
420	If the callback of a function jumps to a trampoline that is
421	specific to the callback and which is not the standard trampoline,
422	its address will be printed as well as the function that the
423	trampoline calls.
424
425  touched_functions:
426
427	This file contains all the functions that ever had a function callback
428	to it via the ftrace infrastructure. It has the same format as
429	enabled_functions but shows all functions that have ever been
430	traced.
431
432	To see any function that has every been modified by "ip modify" or a
433	direct trampoline, one can perform the following command:
434
435	grep ' M ' /sys/kernel/tracing/touched_functions
436
437  function_profile_enabled:
438
439	When set it will enable all functions with either the function
440	tracer, or if configured, the function graph tracer. It will
441	keep a histogram of the number of functions that were called
442	and if the function graph tracer was configured, it will also keep
443	track of the time spent in those functions. The histogram
444	content can be displayed in the files:
445
446	trace_stat/function<cpu> ( function0, function1, etc).
447
448  trace_stat:
449
450	A directory that holds different tracing stats.
451
452  kprobe_events:
453
454	Enable dynamic trace points. See kprobetrace.rst.
455
456  kprobe_profile:
457
458	Dynamic trace points stats. See kprobetrace.rst.
459
460  max_graph_depth:
461
462	Used with the function graph tracer. This is the max depth
463	it will trace into a function. Setting this to a value of
464	one will show only the first kernel function that is called
465	from user space.
466
467  printk_formats:
468
469	This is for tools that read the raw format files. If an event in
470	the ring buffer references a string, only a pointer to the string
471	is recorded into the buffer and not the string itself. This prevents
472	tools from knowing what that string was. This file displays the string
473	and address for	the string allowing tools to map the pointers to what
474	the strings were.
475
476  saved_cmdlines:
477
478	Only the pid of the task is recorded in a trace event unless
479	the event specifically saves the task comm as well. Ftrace
480	makes a cache of pid mappings to comms to try to display
481	comms for events. If a pid for a comm is not listed, then
482	"<...>" is displayed in the output.
483
484	If the option "record-cmd" is set to "0", then comms of tasks
485	will not be saved during recording. By default, it is enabled.
486
487  saved_cmdlines_size:
488
489	By default, 128 comms are saved (see "saved_cmdlines" above). To
490	increase or decrease the amount of comms that are cached, echo
491	the number of comms to cache into this file.
492
493  saved_tgids:
494
495	If the option "record-tgid" is set, on each scheduling context switch
496	the Task Group ID of a task is saved in a table mapping the PID of
497	the thread to its TGID. By default, the "record-tgid" option is
498	disabled.
499
500  snapshot:
501
502	This displays the "snapshot" buffer and also lets the user
503	take a snapshot of the current running trace.
504	See the "Snapshot" section below for more details.
505
506  stack_max_size:
507
508	When the stack tracer is activated, this will display the
509	maximum stack size it has encountered.
510	See the "Stack Trace" section below.
511
512  stack_trace:
513
514	This displays the stack back trace of the largest stack
515	that was encountered when the stack tracer is activated.
516	See the "Stack Trace" section below.
517
518  stack_trace_filter:
519
520	This is similar to "set_ftrace_filter" but it limits what
521	functions the stack tracer will check.
522
523  trace_clock:
524
525	Whenever an event is recorded into the ring buffer, a
526	"timestamp" is added. This stamp comes from a specified
527	clock. By default, ftrace uses the "local" clock. This
528	clock is very fast and strictly per CPU, but on some
529	systems it may not be monotonic with respect to other
530	CPUs. In other words, the local clocks may not be in sync
531	with local clocks on other CPUs.
532
533	Usual clocks for tracing::
534
535	  # cat trace_clock
536	  [local] global counter x86-tsc
537
538	The clock with the square brackets around it is the one in effect.
539
540	local:
541		Default clock, but may not be in sync across CPUs
542
543	global:
544		This clock is in sync with all CPUs but may
545		be a bit slower than the local clock.
546
547	counter:
548		This is not a clock at all, but literally an atomic
549		counter. It counts up one by one, but is in sync
550		with all CPUs. This is useful when you need to
551		know exactly the order events occurred with respect to
552		each other on different CPUs.
553
554	uptime:
555		This uses the jiffies counter and the time stamp
556		is relative to the time since boot up.
557
558	perf:
559		This makes ftrace use the same clock that perf uses.
560		Eventually perf will be able to read ftrace buffers
561		and this will help out in interleaving the data.
562
563	x86-tsc:
564		Architectures may define their own clocks. For
565		example, x86 uses its own TSC cycle clock here.
566
567	ppc-tb:
568		This uses the powerpc timebase register value.
569		This is in sync across CPUs and can also be used
570		to correlate events across hypervisor/guest if
571		tb_offset is known.
572
573	s390-tod:
574		This uses the s390 TOD clock value. This clock is usually in
575		sync across virtual machines and STP-enabled machines.
576
577	mono:
578		This uses the fast monotonic clock (CLOCK_MONOTONIC)
579		which is monotonic and is subject to NTP rate adjustments.
580
581	mono_raw:
582		This is the raw monotonic clock (CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW)
583		which is monotonic but is not subject to any rate adjustments
584		and ticks at the same rate as the hardware clocksource.
585
586	boot:
587		This is the boot clock (CLOCK_BOOTTIME) and is based on the
588		fast monotonic clock, but also accounts for time spent in
589		suspend. Since the clock access is designed for use in
590		tracing in the suspend path, some side effects are possible
591		if clock is accessed after the suspend time is accounted before
592		the fast mono clock is updated. In this case, the clock update
593		appears to happen slightly sooner than it normally would have.
594		Also on 32-bit systems, it's possible that the 64-bit boot offset
595		sees a partial update. These effects are rare and post
596		processing should be able to handle them. See comments in the
597		ktime_get_boot_fast_ns() function for more information.
598
599	tai:
600		This is the tai clock (CLOCK_TAI) and is derived from the wall-
601		clock time. However, this clock does not experience
602		discontinuities and backwards jumps caused by NTP inserting leap
603		seconds. Since the clock access is designed for use in tracing,
604		side effects are possible. The clock access may yield wrong
605		readouts in case the internal TAI offset is updated e.g., caused
606		by setting the system time or using adjtimex() with an offset.
607		These effects are rare and post processing should be able to
608		handle them. See comments in the ktime_get_tai_fast_ns()
609		function for more information.
610
611	To set a clock, simply echo the clock name into this file::
612
613	  # echo global > trace_clock
614
615	Setting a clock clears the ring buffer content as well as the
616	"snapshot" buffer.
617
618  trace_marker:
619
620	This is a very useful file for synchronizing user space
621	with events happening in the kernel. Writing strings into
622	this file will be written into the ftrace buffer.
623
624	It is useful in applications to open this file at the start
625	of the application and just reference the file descriptor
626	for the file::
627
628		void trace_write(const char *fmt, ...)
629		{
630			va_list ap;
631			char buf[256];
632			int n;
633
634			if (trace_fd < 0)
635				return;
636
637			va_start(ap, fmt);
638			n = vsnprintf(buf, 256, fmt, ap);
639			va_end(ap);
640
641			write(trace_fd, buf, n);
642		}
643
644	start::
645
646		trace_fd = open("trace_marker", O_WRONLY);
647
648	Note: Writing into the trace_marker file can also initiate triggers
649	      that are written into /sys/kernel/tracing/events/ftrace/print/trigger
650	      See "Event triggers" in Documentation/trace/events.rst and an
651              example in Documentation/trace/histogram.rst (Section 3.)
652
653  trace_marker_raw:
654
655	This is similar to trace_marker above, but is meant for binary data
656	to be written to it, where a tool can be used to parse the data
657	from trace_pipe_raw.
658
659  uprobe_events:
660
661	Add dynamic tracepoints in programs.
662	See uprobetracer.rst
663
664  uprobe_profile:
665
666	Uprobe statistics. See uprobetrace.txt
667
668  instances:
669
670	This is a way to make multiple trace buffers where different
671	events can be recorded in different buffers.
672	See "Instances" section below.
673
674  events:
675
676	This is the trace event directory. It holds event tracepoints
677	(also known as static tracepoints) that have been compiled
678	into the kernel. It shows what event tracepoints exist
679	and how they are grouped by system. There are "enable"
680	files at various levels that can enable the tracepoints
681	when a "1" is written to them.
682
683	See events.rst for more information.
684
685  set_event:
686
687	By echoing in the event into this file, will enable that event.
688
689	See events.rst for more information.
690
691  show_event_filters:
692
693	A list of events that have filters. This shows the
694	system/event pair along with the filter that is attached to
695	the event.
696
697	See events.rst for more information.
698
699  show_event_triggers:
700
701	A list of events that have triggers. This shows the
702	system/event pair along with the trigger that is attached to
703	the event.
704
705	See events.rst for more information.
706
707  available_events:
708
709	A list of events that can be enabled in tracing.
710
711	See events.rst for more information.
712
713  timestamp_mode:
714
715	Certain tracers may change the timestamp mode used when
716	logging trace events into the event buffer.  Events with
717	different modes can coexist within a buffer but the mode in
718	effect when an event is logged determines which timestamp mode
719	is used for that event.  The default timestamp mode is
720	'delta'.
721
722	Usual timestamp modes for tracing:
723
724	  # cat timestamp_mode
725	  [delta] absolute
726
727	  The timestamp mode with the square brackets around it is the
728	  one in effect.
729
730	  delta: Default timestamp mode - timestamp is a delta against
731	         a per-buffer timestamp.
732
733	  absolute: The timestamp is a full timestamp, not a delta
734                 against some other value.  As such it takes up more
735                 space and is less efficient.
736
737  hwlat_detector:
738
739	Directory for the Hardware Latency Detector.
740	See "Hardware Latency Detector" section below.
741
742  per_cpu:
743
744	This is a directory that contains the trace per_cpu information.
745
746  per_cpu/cpu0/buffer_size_kb:
747
748	The ftrace buffer is defined per_cpu. That is, there's a separate
749	buffer for each CPU to allow writes to be done atomically,
750	and free from cache bouncing. These buffers may have different
751	size buffers. This file is similar to the buffer_size_kb
752	file, but it only displays or sets the buffer size for the
753	specific CPU. (here cpu0).
754
755  per_cpu/cpu0/trace:
756
757	This is similar to the "trace" file, but it will only display
758	the data specific for the CPU. If written to, it only clears
759	the specific CPU buffer.
760
761  per_cpu/cpu0/trace_pipe
762
763	This is similar to the "trace_pipe" file, and is a consuming
764	read, but it will only display (and consume) the data specific
765	for the CPU.
766
767  per_cpu/cpu0/trace_pipe_raw
768
769	For tools that can parse the ftrace ring buffer binary format,
770	the trace_pipe_raw file can be used to extract the data
771	from the ring buffer directly. With the use of the splice()
772	system call, the buffer data can be quickly transferred to
773	a file or to the network where a server is collecting the
774	data.
775
776	Like trace_pipe, this is a consuming reader, where multiple
777	reads will always produce different data.
778
779  per_cpu/cpu0/snapshot:
780
781	This is similar to the main "snapshot" file, but will only
782	snapshot the current CPU (if supported). It only displays
783	the content of the snapshot for a given CPU, and if
784	written to, only clears this CPU buffer.
785
786  per_cpu/cpu0/snapshot_raw:
787
788	Similar to the trace_pipe_raw, but will read the binary format
789	from the snapshot buffer for the given CPU.
790
791  per_cpu/cpu0/stats:
792
793	This displays certain stats about the ring buffer:
794
795	entries:
796		The number of events that are still in the buffer.
797
798	overrun:
799		The number of lost events due to overwriting when
800		the buffer was full.
801
802	commit overrun:
803		Should always be zero.
804		This gets set if so many events happened within a nested
805		event (ring buffer is re-entrant), that it fills the
806		buffer and starts dropping events.
807
808	bytes:
809		Bytes actually read (not overwritten).
810
811	oldest event ts:
812		The oldest timestamp in the buffer
813
814	now ts:
815		The current timestamp
816
817	dropped events:
818		Events lost due to overwrite option being off.
819
820	read events:
821		The number of events read.
822
823The Tracers
824-----------
825
826Here is the list of current tracers that may be configured.
827
828  "function"
829
830	Function call tracer to trace all kernel functions.
831
832  "function_graph"
833
834	Similar to the function tracer except that the
835	function tracer probes the functions on their entry
836	whereas the function graph tracer traces on both entry
837	and exit of the functions. It then provides the ability
838	to draw a graph of function calls similar to C code
839	source.
840
841	Note that the function graph calculates the timings of when the
842	function starts and returns internally and for each instance. If
843	there are two instances that run function graph tracer and traces
844	the same functions, the length of the timings may be slightly off as
845	each read the timestamp separately and not at the same time.
846
847  "blk"
848
849	The block tracer. The tracer used by the blktrace user
850	application.
851
852  "hwlat"
853
854	The Hardware Latency tracer is used to detect if the hardware
855	produces any latency. See "Hardware Latency Detector" section
856	below.
857
858  "irqsoff"
859
860	Traces the areas that disable interrupts and saves
861	the trace with the longest max latency.
862	See tracing_max_latency. When a new max is recorded,
863	it replaces the old trace. It is best to view this
864	trace with the latency-format option enabled, which
865	happens automatically when the tracer is selected.
866
867  "preemptoff"
868
869	Similar to irqsoff but traces and records the amount of
870	time for which preemption is disabled.
871
872  "preemptirqsoff"
873
874	Similar to irqsoff and preemptoff, but traces and
875	records the largest time for which irqs and/or preemption
876	is disabled.
877
878  "wakeup"
879
880	Traces and records the max latency that it takes for
881	the highest priority task to get scheduled after
882	it has been woken up.
883        Traces all tasks as an average developer would expect.
884
885  "wakeup_rt"
886
887        Traces and records the max latency that it takes for just
888        RT tasks (as the current "wakeup" does). This is useful
889        for those interested in wake up timings of RT tasks.
890
891  "wakeup_dl"
892
893	Traces and records the max latency that it takes for
894	a SCHED_DEADLINE task to be woken (as the "wakeup" and
895	"wakeup_rt" does).
896
897  "mmiotrace"
898
899	A special tracer that is used to trace binary modules.
900	It will trace all the calls that a module makes to the
901	hardware. Everything it writes and reads from the I/O
902	as well.
903
904  "branch"
905
906	This tracer can be configured when tracing likely/unlikely
907	calls within the kernel. It will trace when a likely and
908	unlikely branch is hit and if it was correct in its prediction
909	of being correct.
910
911  "nop"
912
913	This is the "trace nothing" tracer. To remove all
914	tracers from tracing simply echo "nop" into
915	current_tracer.
916
917Error conditions
918----------------
919
920  For most ftrace commands, failure modes are obvious and communicated
921  using standard return codes.
922
923  For other more involved commands, extended error information may be
924  available via the tracing/error_log file.  For the commands that
925  support it, reading the tracing/error_log file after an error will
926  display more detailed information about what went wrong, if
927  information is available.  The tracing/error_log file is a circular
928  error log displaying a small number (currently, 8) of ftrace errors
929  for the last (8) failed commands.
930
931  The extended error information and usage takes the form shown in
932  this example::
933
934    # echo xxx > /sys/kernel/tracing/events/sched/sched_wakeup/trigger
935    echo: write error: Invalid argument
936
937    # cat /sys/kernel/tracing/error_log
938    [ 5348.887237] location: error: Couldn't yyy: zzz
939      Command: xxx
940               ^
941    [ 7517.023364] location: error: Bad rrr: sss
942      Command: ppp qqq
943                   ^
944
945  To clear the error log, echo the empty string into it::
946
947    # echo > /sys/kernel/tracing/error_log
948
949Examples of using the tracer
950----------------------------
951
952Here are typical examples of using the tracers when controlling
953them only with the tracefs interface (without using any
954user-land utilities).
955
956Output format:
957--------------
958
959Here is an example of the output format of the file "trace"::
960
961  # tracer: function
962  #
963  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 140080/250280   #P:4
964  #
965  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
966  #                             / _----=> need-resched
967  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
968  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
969  #                            ||| /     delay
970  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
971  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
972              bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.993652: sys_close <-system_call_fastpath
973              bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.993653: __close_fd <-sys_close
974              bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.993653: _raw_spin_lock <-__close_fd
975              sshd-1974  [003] .... 17284.993653: __srcu_read_unlock <-fsnotify
976              bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.993654: add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock
977              bash-1977  [000] ...1 17284.993655: _raw_spin_unlock <-__close_fd
978              bash-1977  [000] ...1 17284.993656: sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
979              bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.993657: filp_close <-__close_fd
980              bash-1977  [000] .... 17284.993657: dnotify_flush <-filp_close
981              sshd-1974  [003] .... 17284.993658: sys_select <-system_call_fastpath
982              ....
983
984A header is printed with the tracer name that is represented by
985the trace. In this case the tracer is "function". Then it shows the
986number of events in the buffer as well as the total number of entries
987that were written. The difference is the number of entries that were
988lost due to the buffer filling up (250280 - 140080 = 110200 events
989lost).
990
991The header explains the content of the events. Task name "bash", the task
992PID "1977", the CPU that it was running on "000", the latency format
993(explained below), the timestamp in <secs>.<usecs> format, the
994function name that was traced "sys_close" and the parent function that
995called this function "system_call_fastpath". The timestamp is the time
996at which the function was entered.
997
998Latency trace format
999--------------------
1000
1001When the latency-format option is enabled or when one of the latency
1002tracers is set, the trace file gives somewhat more information to see
1003why a latency happened. Here is a typical trace::
1004
1005  # tracer: irqsoff
1006  #
1007  # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
1008  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1009  # latency: 259 us, #4/4, CPU#2 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1010  #    -----------------
1011  #    | task: ps-6143 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1012  #    -----------------
1013  #  => started at: __lock_task_sighand
1014  #  => ended at:   _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1015  #
1016  #
1017  #                  _------=> CPU#
1018  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
1019  #                | / _----=> need-resched
1020  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1021  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
1022  #                |||| /     delay
1023  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
1024  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
1025        ps-6143    2d...    0us!: trace_hardirqs_off <-__lock_task_sighand
1026        ps-6143    2d..1  259us+: trace_hardirqs_on <-_raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1027        ps-6143    2d..1  263us+: time_hardirqs_on <-_raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1028        ps-6143    2d..1  306us : <stack trace>
1029   => trace_hardirqs_on_caller
1030   => trace_hardirqs_on
1031   => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1032   => do_task_stat
1033   => proc_tgid_stat
1034   => proc_single_show
1035   => seq_read
1036   => vfs_read
1037   => sys_read
1038   => system_call_fastpath
1039
1040
1041This shows that the current tracer is "irqsoff" tracing the time
1042for which interrupts were disabled. It gives the trace version (which
1043never changes) and the version of the kernel upon which this was executed on
1044(3.8). Then it displays the max latency in microseconds (259 us). The number
1045of trace entries displayed and the total number (both are four: #4/4).
1046VP, KP, SP, and HP are always zero and are reserved for later use.
1047#P is the number of online CPUs (#P:4).
1048
1049The task is the process that was running when the latency
1050occurred. (ps pid: 6143).
1051
1052The start and stop (the functions in which the interrupts were
1053disabled and enabled respectively) that caused the latencies:
1054
1055  - __lock_task_sighand is where the interrupts were disabled.
1056  - _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore is where they were enabled again.
1057
1058The next lines after the header are the trace itself. The header
1059explains which is which.
1060
1061  cmd: The name of the process in the trace.
1062
1063  pid: The PID of that process.
1064
1065  CPU#: The CPU which the process was running on.
1066
1067  irqs-off: 'd' interrupts are disabled. '.' otherwise.
1068
1069  need-resched:
1070	- 'B' all, TIF_NEED_RESCHED, PREEMPT_NEED_RESCHED and TIF_RESCHED_LAZY is set,
1071	- 'N' both TIF_NEED_RESCHED and PREEMPT_NEED_RESCHED is set,
1072	- 'n' only TIF_NEED_RESCHED is set,
1073	- 'p' only PREEMPT_NEED_RESCHED is set,
1074	- 'L' both PREEMPT_NEED_RESCHED and TIF_RESCHED_LAZY is set,
1075	- 'b' both TIF_NEED_RESCHED and TIF_RESCHED_LAZY is set,
1076	- 'l' only TIF_RESCHED_LAZY is set
1077	- '.' otherwise.
1078
1079  hardirq/softirq:
1080	- 'Z' - NMI occurred inside a hardirq
1081	- 'z' - NMI is running
1082	- 'H' - hard irq occurred inside a softirq.
1083	- 'h' - hard irq is running
1084	- 's' - soft irq is running
1085	- '.' - normal context.
1086
1087  preempt-depth: The level of preempt_disabled
1088
1089The above is mostly meaningful for kernel developers.
1090
1091  time:
1092	When the latency-format option is enabled, the trace file
1093	output includes a timestamp relative to the start of the
1094	trace. This differs from the output when latency-format
1095	is disabled, which includes an absolute timestamp.
1096
1097  delay:
1098	This is just to help catch your eye a bit better. And
1099	needs to be fixed to be only relative to the same CPU.
1100	The marks are determined by the difference between this
1101	current trace and the next trace.
1102
1103	  - '$' - greater than 1 second
1104	  - '@' - greater than 100 millisecond
1105	  - '*' - greater than 10 millisecond
1106	  - '#' - greater than 1000 microsecond
1107	  - '!' - greater than 100 microsecond
1108	  - '+' - greater than 10 microsecond
1109	  - ' ' - less than or equal to 10 microsecond.
1110
1111  The rest is the same as the 'trace' file.
1112
1113  Note, the latency tracers will usually end with a back trace
1114  to easily find where the latency occurred.
1115
1116trace_options
1117-------------
1118
1119The trace_options file (or the options directory) is used to control
1120what gets printed in the trace output, or manipulate the tracers.
1121To see what is available, simply cat the file::
1122
1123  cat trace_options
1124	print-parent
1125	nosym-offset
1126	nosym-addr
1127	noverbose
1128	noraw
1129	nohex
1130	nobin
1131	noblock
1132	nofields
1133	trace_printk
1134	annotate
1135	nouserstacktrace
1136	nosym-userobj
1137	noprintk-msg-only
1138	context-info
1139	nolatency-format
1140	record-cmd
1141	norecord-tgid
1142	overwrite
1143	nodisable_on_free
1144	irq-info
1145	markers
1146	noevent-fork
1147	function-trace
1148	nofunction-fork
1149	nodisplay-graph
1150	nostacktrace
1151	nobranch
1152
1153To disable one of the options, echo in the option prepended with
1154"no"::
1155
1156  echo noprint-parent > trace_options
1157
1158To enable an option, leave off the "no"::
1159
1160  echo sym-offset > trace_options
1161
1162Here are the available options:
1163
1164  print-parent
1165	On function traces, display the calling (parent)
1166	function as well as the function being traced.
1167	::
1168
1169	  print-parent:
1170	   bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simple_strtoul <-kstrtoul
1171
1172	  noprint-parent:
1173	   bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simple_strtoul
1174
1175
1176  sym-offset
1177	Display not only the function name, but also the
1178	offset in the function. For example, instead of
1179	seeing just "ktime_get", you will see
1180	"ktime_get+0xb/0x20".
1181	::
1182
1183	  sym-offset:
1184	   bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simple_strtoul+0x6/0xa0
1185
1186  sym-addr
1187	This will also display the function address as well
1188	as the function name.
1189	::
1190
1191	  sym-addr:
1192	   bash-4000  [01]  1477.606694: simple_strtoul <c0339346>
1193
1194  verbose
1195	This deals with the trace file when the
1196        latency-format option is enabled.
1197	::
1198
1199	    bash  4000 1 0 00000000 00010a95 [58127d26] 1720.415ms \
1200	    (+0.000ms): simple_strtoul (kstrtoul)
1201
1202  raw
1203	This will display raw numbers. This option is best for
1204	use with user applications that can translate the raw
1205	numbers better than having it done in the kernel.
1206
1207  hex
1208	Similar to raw, but the numbers will be in a hexadecimal format.
1209
1210  bin
1211	This will print out the formats in raw binary.
1212
1213  block
1214	When set, reading trace_pipe will not block when polled.
1215
1216  fields
1217	Print the fields as described by their types. This is a better
1218	option than using hex, bin or raw, as it gives a better parsing
1219	of the content of the event.
1220
1221  trace_printk
1222	Can disable trace_printk() from writing into the buffer.
1223
1224  trace_printk_dest
1225	Set to have trace_printk() and similar internal tracing functions
1226	write into this instance. Note, only one trace instance can have
1227	this set. By setting this flag, it clears the trace_printk_dest flag
1228	of the instance that had it set previously. By default, the top
1229	level trace has this set, and will get it set again if another
1230	instance has it set then clears it.
1231
1232	This flag cannot be cleared by the top level instance, as it is the
1233	default instance. The only way the top level instance has this flag
1234	cleared, is by it being set in another instance.
1235
1236  copy_trace_marker
1237	If there are applications that hard code writing into the top level
1238	trace_marker file (/sys/kernel/tracing/trace_marker or trace_marker_raw),
1239	and the tooling would like it to go into an instance, this option can
1240	be used. Create an instance and set this option, and then all writes
1241	into the top level trace_marker file will also be redirected into this
1242	instance.
1243
1244	Note, by default this option is set for the top level instance. If it
1245	is disabled, then writes to the trace_marker or trace_marker_raw files
1246	will not be written into the top level file. If no instance has this
1247	option set, then a write will error with the errno of ENODEV.
1248
1249  annotate
1250	It is sometimes confusing when the CPU buffers are full
1251	and one CPU buffer had a lot of events recently, thus
1252	a shorter time frame, were another CPU may have only had
1253	a few events, which lets it have older events. When
1254	the trace is reported, it shows the oldest events first,
1255	and it may look like only one CPU ran (the one with the
1256	oldest events). When the annotate option is set, it will
1257	display when a new CPU buffer started::
1258
1259			  <idle>-0     [001] dNs4 21169.031481: wake_up_idle_cpu <-add_timer_on
1260			  <idle>-0     [001] dNs4 21169.031482: _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-add_timer_on
1261			  <idle>-0     [001] .Ns4 21169.031484: sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1262		##### CPU 2 buffer started ####
1263			  <idle>-0     [002] .N.1 21169.031484: rcu_idle_exit <-cpu_idle
1264			  <idle>-0     [001] .Ns3 21169.031484: _raw_spin_unlock <-clocksource_watchdog
1265			  <idle>-0     [001] .Ns3 21169.031485: sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
1266
1267  userstacktrace
1268	This option changes the trace. It records a
1269	stacktrace of the current user space thread after
1270	each trace event.
1271
1272  sym-userobj
1273	when user stacktrace are enabled, look up which
1274	object the address belongs to, and print a
1275	relative address. This is especially useful when
1276	ASLR is on, otherwise you don't get a chance to
1277	resolve the address to object/file/line after
1278	the app is no longer running
1279
1280	The lookup is performed when you read
1281	trace,trace_pipe. Example::
1282
1283		  a.out-1623  [000] 40874.465068: /root/a.out[+0x480] <-/root/a.out[+0
1284		  x494] <- /root/a.out[+0x4a8] <- /lib/libc-2.7.so[+0x1e1a6]
1285
1286
1287  printk-msg-only
1288	When set, trace_printk()s will only show the format
1289	and not their parameters (if trace_bprintk() or
1290	trace_bputs() was used to save the trace_printk()).
1291
1292  context-info
1293	Show only the event data. Hides the comm, PID,
1294	timestamp, CPU, and other useful data.
1295
1296  latency-format
1297	This option changes the trace output. When it is enabled,
1298	the trace displays additional information about the
1299	latency, as described in "Latency trace format".
1300
1301  pause-on-trace
1302	When set, opening the trace file for read, will pause
1303	writing to the ring buffer (as if tracing_on was set to zero).
1304	This simulates the original behavior of the trace file.
1305	When the file is closed, tracing will be enabled again.
1306
1307  hash-ptr
1308        When set, "%p" in the event printk format displays the
1309        hashed pointer value instead of real address.
1310        This will be useful if you want to find out which hashed
1311        value is corresponding to the real value in trace log.
1312
1313  bitmask-list
1314        When enabled, bitmasks are displayed as a human-readable list of
1315        ranges (e.g., 0,2-5,7) using the printk "%*pbl" format specifier.
1316        When disabled (the default), bitmasks are displayed in the
1317        traditional hexadecimal bitmap representation. The list format is
1318        particularly useful for tracing CPU masks and other large bitmasks
1319        where individual bit positions are more meaningful than their
1320        hexadecimal encoding.
1321
1322  record-cmd
1323	When any event or tracer is enabled, a hook is enabled
1324	in the sched_switch trace point to fill comm cache
1325	with mapped pids and comms. But this may cause some
1326	overhead, and if you only care about pids, and not the
1327	name of the task, disabling this option can lower the
1328	impact of tracing. See "saved_cmdlines".
1329
1330  record-tgid
1331	When any event or tracer is enabled, a hook is enabled
1332	in the sched_switch trace point to fill the cache of
1333	mapped Thread Group IDs (TGID) mapping to pids. See
1334	"saved_tgids".
1335
1336  overwrite
1337	This controls what happens when the trace buffer is
1338	full. If "1" (default), the oldest events are
1339	discarded and overwritten. If "0", then the newest
1340	events are discarded.
1341	(see per_cpu/cpu0/stats for overrun and dropped)
1342
1343  disable_on_free
1344	When the free_buffer is closed, tracing will
1345	stop (tracing_on set to 0).
1346
1347  irq-info
1348	Shows the interrupt, preempt count, need resched data.
1349	When disabled, the trace looks like::
1350
1351		# tracer: function
1352		#
1353		# entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 144405/9452052   #P:4
1354		#
1355		#           TASK-PID   CPU#      TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
1356		#              | |       |          |         |
1357			  <idle>-0     [002]  23636.756054: ttwu_do_activate.constprop.89 <-try_to_wake_up
1358			  <idle>-0     [002]  23636.756054: activate_task <-ttwu_do_activate.constprop.89
1359			  <idle>-0     [002]  23636.756055: enqueue_task <-activate_task
1360
1361
1362  markers
1363	When set, the trace_marker is writable (only by root).
1364	When disabled, the trace_marker will error with EINVAL
1365	on write.
1366
1367  event-fork
1368	When set, tasks with PIDs listed in set_event_pid will have
1369	the PIDs of their children added to set_event_pid when those
1370	tasks fork. Also, when tasks with PIDs in set_event_pid exit,
1371	their PIDs will be removed from the file.
1372
1373        This affects PIDs listed in set_event_notrace_pid as well.
1374
1375  function-trace
1376	The latency tracers will enable function tracing
1377	if this option is enabled (default it is). When
1378	it is disabled, the latency tracers do not trace
1379	functions. This keeps the overhead of the tracer down
1380	when performing latency tests.
1381
1382  function-fork
1383	When set, tasks with PIDs listed in set_ftrace_pid will
1384	have the PIDs of their children added to set_ftrace_pid
1385	when those tasks fork. Also, when tasks with PIDs in
1386	set_ftrace_pid exit, their PIDs will be removed from the
1387	file.
1388
1389        This affects PIDs in set_ftrace_notrace_pid as well.
1390
1391  display-graph
1392	When set, the latency tracers (irqsoff, wakeup, etc) will
1393	use function graph tracing instead of function tracing.
1394
1395  stacktrace
1396	When set, a stack trace is recorded after any trace event
1397	is recorded.
1398
1399  branch
1400	Enable branch tracing with the tracer. This enables branch
1401	tracer along with the currently set tracer. Enabling this
1402	with the "nop" tracer is the same as just enabling the
1403	"branch" tracer.
1404
1405.. tip:: Some tracers have their own options. They only appear in this
1406       file when the tracer is active. They always appear in the
1407       options directory.
1408
1409
1410Here are the per tracer options:
1411
1412Options for function tracer:
1413
1414  func_stack_trace
1415	When set, a stack trace is recorded after every
1416	function that is recorded. NOTE! Limit the functions
1417	that are recorded before enabling this, with
1418	"set_ftrace_filter" otherwise the system performance
1419	will be critically degraded. Remember to disable
1420	this option before clearing the function filter.
1421
1422Options for function_graph tracer:
1423
1424 Since the function_graph tracer has a slightly different output
1425 it has its own options to control what is displayed.
1426
1427  funcgraph-overrun
1428	When set, the "overrun" of the graph stack is
1429	displayed after each function traced. The
1430	overrun, is when the stack depth of the calls
1431	is greater than what is reserved for each task.
1432	Each task has a fixed array of functions to
1433	trace in the call graph. If the depth of the
1434	calls exceeds that, the function is not traced.
1435	The overrun is the number of functions missed
1436	due to exceeding this array.
1437
1438  funcgraph-cpu
1439	When set, the CPU number of the CPU where the trace
1440	occurred is displayed.
1441
1442  funcgraph-overhead
1443	When set, if the function takes longer than
1444	A certain amount, then a delay marker is
1445	displayed. See "delay" above, under the
1446	header description.
1447
1448  funcgraph-proc
1449	Unlike other tracers, the process' command line
1450	is not displayed by default, but instead only
1451	when a task is traced in and out during a context
1452	switch. Enabling this options has the command
1453	of each process displayed at every line.
1454
1455  funcgraph-duration
1456	At the end of each function (the return)
1457	the duration of the amount of time in the
1458	function is displayed in microseconds.
1459
1460  funcgraph-abstime
1461	When set, the timestamp is displayed at each line.
1462
1463  funcgraph-irqs
1464	When disabled, functions that happen inside an
1465	interrupt will not be traced.
1466
1467  funcgraph-tail
1468	When set, the return event will include the function
1469	that it represents. By default this is off, and
1470	only a closing curly bracket "}" is displayed for
1471	the return of a function.
1472
1473  funcgraph-retval
1474	When set, the return value of each traced function
1475	will be printed after an equal sign "=". By default
1476	this is off.
1477
1478  funcgraph-retval-hex
1479	When set, the return value will always be printed
1480	in hexadecimal format. If the option is not set and
1481	the return value is an error code, it will be printed
1482	in signed decimal format; otherwise it will also be
1483	printed in hexadecimal format. By default, this option
1484	is off.
1485
1486  sleep-time
1487	When running function graph tracer, to include
1488	the time a task schedules out in its function.
1489	When enabled, it will account time the task has been
1490	scheduled out as part of the function call.
1491
1492  graph-time
1493	When running function profiler with function graph tracer,
1494	to include the time to call nested functions. When this is
1495	not set, the time reported for the function will only
1496	include the time the function itself executed for, not the
1497	time for functions that it called.
1498
1499Options for blk tracer:
1500
1501  blk_classic
1502	Shows a more minimalistic output.
1503
1504
1505irqsoff
1506-------
1507
1508When interrupts are disabled, the CPU can not react to any other
1509external event (besides NMIs and SMIs). This prevents the timer
1510interrupt from triggering or the mouse interrupt from letting
1511the kernel know of a new mouse event. The result is a latency
1512with the reaction time.
1513
1514The irqsoff tracer tracks the time for which interrupts are
1515disabled. When a new maximum latency is hit, the tracer saves
1516the trace leading up to that latency point so that every time a
1517new maximum is reached, the old saved trace is discarded and the
1518new trace is saved.
1519
1520To reset the maximum, echo 0 into tracing_max_latency. Here is
1521an example::
1522
1523  # echo 0 > options/function-trace
1524  # echo irqsoff > current_tracer
1525  # echo 1 > tracing_on
1526  # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency
1527  # ls -ltr
1528  [...]
1529  # echo 0 > tracing_on
1530  # cat trace
1531  # tracer: irqsoff
1532  #
1533  # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
1534  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1535  # latency: 16 us, #4/4, CPU#0 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1536  #    -----------------
1537  #    | task: swapper/0-0 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1538  #    -----------------
1539  #  => started at: run_timer_softirq
1540  #  => ended at:   run_timer_softirq
1541  #
1542  #
1543  #                  _------=> CPU#
1544  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
1545  #                | / _----=> need-resched
1546  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1547  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
1548  #                |||| /     delay
1549  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
1550  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
1551    <idle>-0       0d.s2    0us+: _raw_spin_lock_irq <-run_timer_softirq
1552    <idle>-0       0dNs3   17us : _raw_spin_unlock_irq <-run_timer_softirq
1553    <idle>-0       0dNs3   17us+: trace_hardirqs_on <-run_timer_softirq
1554    <idle>-0       0dNs3   25us : <stack trace>
1555   => _raw_spin_unlock_irq
1556   => run_timer_softirq
1557   => __do_softirq
1558   => call_softirq
1559   => do_softirq
1560   => irq_exit
1561   => smp_apic_timer_interrupt
1562   => apic_timer_interrupt
1563   => rcu_idle_exit
1564   => cpu_idle
1565   => rest_init
1566   => start_kernel
1567   => x86_64_start_reservations
1568   => x86_64_start_kernel
1569
1570Here we see that we had a latency of 16 microseconds (which is
1571very good). The _raw_spin_lock_irq in run_timer_softirq disabled
1572interrupts. The difference between the 16 and the displayed
1573timestamp 25us occurred because the clock was incremented
1574between the time of recording the max latency and the time of
1575recording the function that had that latency.
1576
1577Note the above example had function-trace not set. If we set
1578function-trace, we get a much larger output::
1579
1580 with echo 1 > options/function-trace
1581
1582  # tracer: irqsoff
1583  #
1584  # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
1585  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1586  # latency: 71 us, #168/168, CPU#3 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1587  #    -----------------
1588  #    | task: bash-2042 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1589  #    -----------------
1590  #  => started at: ata_scsi_queuecmd
1591  #  => ended at:   ata_scsi_queuecmd
1592  #
1593  #
1594  #                  _------=> CPU#
1595  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
1596  #                | / _----=> need-resched
1597  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1598  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
1599  #                |||| /     delay
1600  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
1601  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
1602      bash-2042    3d...    0us : _raw_spin_lock_irqsave <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1603      bash-2042    3d...    0us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock_irqsave
1604      bash-2042    3d..1    1us : ata_scsi_find_dev <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1605      bash-2042    3d..1    1us : __ata_scsi_find_dev <-ata_scsi_find_dev
1606      bash-2042    3d..1    2us : ata_find_dev.part.14 <-__ata_scsi_find_dev
1607      bash-2042    3d..1    2us : ata_qc_new_init <-__ata_scsi_queuecmd
1608      bash-2042    3d..1    3us : ata_sg_init <-__ata_scsi_queuecmd
1609      bash-2042    3d..1    4us : ata_scsi_rw_xlat <-__ata_scsi_queuecmd
1610      bash-2042    3d..1    4us : ata_build_rw_tf <-ata_scsi_rw_xlat
1611  [...]
1612      bash-2042    3d..1   67us : delay_tsc <-__delay
1613      bash-2042    3d..1   67us : add_preempt_count <-delay_tsc
1614      bash-2042    3d..2   67us : sub_preempt_count <-delay_tsc
1615      bash-2042    3d..1   67us : add_preempt_count <-delay_tsc
1616      bash-2042    3d..2   68us : sub_preempt_count <-delay_tsc
1617      bash-2042    3d..1   68us+: ata_bmdma_start <-ata_bmdma_qc_issue
1618      bash-2042    3d..1   71us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1619      bash-2042    3d..1   71us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1620      bash-2042    3d..1   72us+: trace_hardirqs_on <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1621      bash-2042    3d..1  120us : <stack trace>
1622   => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1623   => ata_scsi_queuecmd
1624   => scsi_dispatch_cmd
1625   => scsi_request_fn
1626   => __blk_run_queue_uncond
1627   => __blk_run_queue
1628   => blk_queue_bio
1629   => submit_bio_noacct
1630   => submit_bio
1631   => bh_submit
1632   => __ext3_get_inode_loc
1633   => ext3_iget
1634   => ext3_lookup
1635   => lookup_real
1636   => __lookup_hash
1637   => walk_component
1638   => lookup_last
1639   => path_lookupat
1640   => filename_lookup
1641   => user_path_at_empty
1642   => user_path_at
1643   => vfs_fstatat
1644   => vfs_stat
1645   => sys_newstat
1646   => system_call_fastpath
1647
1648
1649Here we traced a 71 microsecond latency. But we also see all the
1650functions that were called during that time. Note that by
1651enabling function tracing, we incur an added overhead. This
1652overhead may extend the latency times. But nevertheless, this
1653trace has provided some very helpful debugging information.
1654
1655If we prefer function graph output instead of function, we can set
1656display-graph option::
1657
1658 with echo 1 > options/display-graph
1659
1660  # tracer: irqsoff
1661  #
1662  # irqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 4.20.0-rc6+
1663  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1664  # latency: 3751 us, #274/274, CPU#0 | (M:desktop VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1665  #    -----------------
1666  #    | task: bash-1507 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1667  #    -----------------
1668  #  => started at: free_debug_processing
1669  #  => ended at:   return_to_handler
1670  #
1671  #
1672  #                                       _-----=> irqs-off
1673  #                                      / _----=> need-resched
1674  #                                     | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1675  #                                     || / _--=> preempt-depth
1676  #                                     ||| /
1677  #   REL TIME      CPU  TASK/PID       ||||     DURATION                  FUNCTION CALLS
1678  #      |          |     |    |        ||||      |   |                     |   |   |   |
1679          0 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d... |   0.000 us    |  _raw_spin_lock_irqsave();
1680          0 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1 |   0.378 us    |    do_raw_spin_trylock();
1681          1 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2 |               |    set_track() {
1682          2 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2 |               |      save_stack_trace() {
1683          2 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2 |               |        __save_stack_trace() {
1684          3 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2 |               |          __unwind_start() {
1685          3 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2 |               |            get_stack_info() {
1686          3 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2 |   0.351 us    |              in_task_stack();
1687          4 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..2 |   1.107 us    |            }
1688  [...]
1689       3750 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1 |   0.516 us    |      do_raw_spin_unlock();
1690       3750 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1 |   0.000 us    |  _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore();
1691       3764 us |   0)   bash-1507    |  d..1 |   0.000 us    |  tracer_hardirqs_on();
1692      bash-1507    0d..1 3792us : <stack trace>
1693   => free_debug_processing
1694   => __slab_free
1695   => kmem_cache_free
1696   => vm_area_free
1697   => remove_vma
1698   => exit_mmap
1699   => mmput
1700   => begin_new_exec
1701   => load_elf_binary
1702   => search_binary_handler
1703   => __do_execve_file.isra.32
1704   => __x64_sys_execve
1705   => do_syscall_64
1706   => entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe
1707
1708preemptoff
1709----------
1710
1711When preemption is disabled, we may be able to receive
1712interrupts but the task cannot be preempted and a higher
1713priority task must wait for preemption to be enabled again
1714before it can preempt a lower priority task.
1715
1716The preemptoff tracer traces the places that disable preemption.
1717Like the irqsoff tracer, it records the maximum latency for
1718which preemption was disabled. The control of preemptoff tracer
1719is much like the irqsoff tracer.
1720::
1721
1722  # echo 0 > options/function-trace
1723  # echo preemptoff > current_tracer
1724  # echo 1 > tracing_on
1725  # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency
1726  # ls -ltr
1727  [...]
1728  # echo 0 > tracing_on
1729  # cat trace
1730  # tracer: preemptoff
1731  #
1732  # preemptoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
1733  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1734  # latency: 46 us, #4/4, CPU#1 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1735  #    -----------------
1736  #    | task: sshd-1991 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1737  #    -----------------
1738  #  => started at: do_IRQ
1739  #  => ended at:   do_IRQ
1740  #
1741  #
1742  #                  _------=> CPU#
1743  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
1744  #                | / _----=> need-resched
1745  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1746  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
1747  #                |||| /     delay
1748  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
1749  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
1750      sshd-1991    1d.h.    0us+: irq_enter <-do_IRQ
1751      sshd-1991    1d..1   46us : irq_exit <-do_IRQ
1752      sshd-1991    1d..1   47us+: trace_preempt_on <-do_IRQ
1753      sshd-1991    1d..1   52us : <stack trace>
1754   => sub_preempt_count
1755   => irq_exit
1756   => do_IRQ
1757   => ret_from_intr
1758
1759
1760This has some more changes. Preemption was disabled when an
1761interrupt came in (notice the 'h'), and was enabled on exit.
1762But we also see that interrupts have been disabled when entering
1763the preempt off section and leaving it (the 'd'). We do not know if
1764interrupts were enabled in the mean time or shortly after this
1765was over.
1766::
1767
1768  # tracer: preemptoff
1769  #
1770  # preemptoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
1771  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1772  # latency: 83 us, #241/241, CPU#1 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1773  #    -----------------
1774  #    | task: bash-1994 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1775  #    -----------------
1776  #  => started at: wake_up_new_task
1777  #  => ended at:   task_rq_unlock
1778  #
1779  #
1780  #                  _------=> CPU#
1781  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
1782  #                | / _----=> need-resched
1783  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1784  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
1785  #                |||| /     delay
1786  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
1787  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
1788      bash-1994    1d..1    0us : _raw_spin_lock_irqsave <-wake_up_new_task
1789      bash-1994    1d..1    0us : select_task_rq_fair <-select_task_rq
1790      bash-1994    1d..1    1us : __rcu_read_lock <-select_task_rq_fair
1791      bash-1994    1d..1    1us : source_load <-select_task_rq_fair
1792      bash-1994    1d..1    1us : source_load <-select_task_rq_fair
1793  [...]
1794      bash-1994    1d..1   12us : irq_enter <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
1795      bash-1994    1d..1   12us : rcu_irq_enter <-irq_enter
1796      bash-1994    1d..1   13us : add_preempt_count <-irq_enter
1797      bash-1994    1d.h1   13us : exit_idle <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
1798      bash-1994    1d.h1   13us : hrtimer_interrupt <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
1799      bash-1994    1d.h1   13us : _raw_spin_lock <-hrtimer_interrupt
1800      bash-1994    1d.h1   14us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock
1801      bash-1994    1d.h2   14us : ktime_get_update_offsets <-hrtimer_interrupt
1802  [...]
1803      bash-1994    1d.h1   35us : lapic_next_event <-clockevents_program_event
1804      bash-1994    1d.h1   35us : irq_exit <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
1805      bash-1994    1d.h1   36us : sub_preempt_count <-irq_exit
1806      bash-1994    1d..2   36us : do_softirq <-irq_exit
1807      bash-1994    1d..2   36us : __do_softirq <-call_softirq
1808      bash-1994    1d..2   36us : __local_bh_disable <-__do_softirq
1809      bash-1994    1d.s2   37us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock_irq
1810      bash-1994    1d.s3   38us : _raw_spin_unlock <-run_timer_softirq
1811      bash-1994    1d.s3   39us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
1812      bash-1994    1d.s2   39us : call_timer_fn <-run_timer_softirq
1813  [...]
1814      bash-1994    1dNs2   81us : cpu_needs_another_gp <-rcu_process_callbacks
1815      bash-1994    1dNs2   82us : __local_bh_enable <-__do_softirq
1816      bash-1994    1dNs2   82us : sub_preempt_count <-__local_bh_enable
1817      bash-1994    1dN.2   82us : idle_cpu <-irq_exit
1818      bash-1994    1dN.2   83us : rcu_irq_exit <-irq_exit
1819      bash-1994    1dN.2   83us : sub_preempt_count <-irq_exit
1820      bash-1994    1.N.1   84us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-task_rq_unlock
1821      bash-1994    1.N.1   84us+: trace_preempt_on <-task_rq_unlock
1822      bash-1994    1.N.1  104us : <stack trace>
1823   => sub_preempt_count
1824   => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1825   => task_rq_unlock
1826   => wake_up_new_task
1827   => do_fork
1828   => sys_clone
1829   => stub_clone
1830
1831
1832The above is an example of the preemptoff trace with
1833function-trace set. Here we see that interrupts were not disabled
1834the entire time. The irq_enter code lets us know that we entered
1835an interrupt 'h'. Before that, the functions being traced still
1836show that it is not in an interrupt, but we can see from the
1837functions themselves that this is not the case.
1838
1839preemptirqsoff
1840--------------
1841
1842Knowing the locations that have interrupts disabled or
1843preemption disabled for the longest times is helpful. But
1844sometimes we would like to know when either preemption and/or
1845interrupts are disabled.
1846
1847Consider the following code::
1848
1849    local_irq_disable();
1850    call_function_with_irqs_off();
1851    preempt_disable();
1852    call_function_with_irqs_and_preemption_off();
1853    local_irq_enable();
1854    call_function_with_preemption_off();
1855    preempt_enable();
1856
1857The irqsoff tracer will record the total length of
1858call_function_with_irqs_off() and
1859call_function_with_irqs_and_preemption_off().
1860
1861The preemptoff tracer will record the total length of
1862call_function_with_irqs_and_preemption_off() and
1863call_function_with_preemption_off().
1864
1865But neither will trace the time that interrupts and/or
1866preemption is disabled. This total time is the time that we can
1867not schedule. To record this time, use the preemptirqsoff
1868tracer.
1869
1870Again, using this trace is much like the irqsoff and preemptoff
1871tracers.
1872::
1873
1874  # echo 0 > options/function-trace
1875  # echo preemptirqsoff > current_tracer
1876  # echo 1 > tracing_on
1877  # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency
1878  # ls -ltr
1879  [...]
1880  # echo 0 > tracing_on
1881  # cat trace
1882  # tracer: preemptirqsoff
1883  #
1884  # preemptirqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
1885  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1886  # latency: 100 us, #4/4, CPU#3 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1887  #    -----------------
1888  #    | task: ls-2230 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1889  #    -----------------
1890  #  => started at: ata_scsi_queuecmd
1891  #  => ended at:   ata_scsi_queuecmd
1892  #
1893  #
1894  #                  _------=> CPU#
1895  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
1896  #                | / _----=> need-resched
1897  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1898  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
1899  #                |||| /     delay
1900  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
1901  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
1902        ls-2230    3d...    0us+: _raw_spin_lock_irqsave <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1903        ls-2230    3...1  100us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1904        ls-2230    3...1  101us+: trace_preempt_on <-ata_scsi_queuecmd
1905        ls-2230    3...1  111us : <stack trace>
1906   => sub_preempt_count
1907   => _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
1908   => ata_scsi_queuecmd
1909   => scsi_dispatch_cmd
1910   => scsi_request_fn
1911   => __blk_run_queue_uncond
1912   => __blk_run_queue
1913   => blk_queue_bio
1914   => submit_bio_noacct
1915   => submit_bio
1916   => bh_submit
1917   => ext3_bread
1918   => ext3_dir_bread
1919   => htree_dirblock_to_tree
1920   => ext3_htree_fill_tree
1921   => ext3_readdir
1922   => vfs_readdir
1923   => sys_getdents
1924   => system_call_fastpath
1925
1926
1927The trace_hardirqs_off_thunk is called from assembly on x86 when
1928interrupts are disabled in the assembly code. Without the
1929function tracing, we do not know if interrupts were enabled
1930within the preemption points. We do see that it started with
1931preemption enabled.
1932
1933Here is a trace with function-trace set::
1934
1935  # tracer: preemptirqsoff
1936  #
1937  # preemptirqsoff latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
1938  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
1939  # latency: 161 us, #339/339, CPU#3 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
1940  #    -----------------
1941  #    | task: ls-2269 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
1942  #    -----------------
1943  #  => started at: schedule
1944  #  => ended at:   mutex_unlock
1945  #
1946  #
1947  #                  _------=> CPU#
1948  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
1949  #                | / _----=> need-resched
1950  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
1951  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
1952  #                |||| /     delay
1953  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
1954  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
1955  kworker/-59      3...1    0us : __schedule <-schedule
1956  kworker/-59      3d..1    0us : rcu_preempt_qs <-rcu_note_context_switch
1957  kworker/-59      3d..1    1us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock_irq
1958  kworker/-59      3d..2    1us : deactivate_task <-__schedule
1959  kworker/-59      3d..2    1us : dequeue_task <-deactivate_task
1960  kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : update_rq_clock <-dequeue_task
1961  kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : dequeue_task_fair <-dequeue_task
1962  kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : update_curr <-dequeue_task_fair
1963  kworker/-59      3d..2    2us : update_min_vruntime <-update_curr
1964  kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : cpuacct_charge <-update_curr
1965  kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : __rcu_read_lock <-cpuacct_charge
1966  kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : __rcu_read_unlock <-cpuacct_charge
1967  kworker/-59      3d..2    3us : update_cfs_rq_blocked_load <-dequeue_task_fair
1968  kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : clear_buddies <-dequeue_task_fair
1969  kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : account_entity_dequeue <-dequeue_task_fair
1970  kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : update_min_vruntime <-dequeue_task_fair
1971  kworker/-59      3d..2    4us : update_cfs_shares <-dequeue_task_fair
1972  kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : hrtick_update <-dequeue_task_fair
1973  kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : wq_worker_sleeping <-__schedule
1974  kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : kthread_data <-wq_worker_sleeping
1975  kworker/-59      3d..2    5us : put_prev_task_fair <-__schedule
1976  kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : pick_next_task_fair <-pick_next_task
1977  kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : clear_buddies <-pick_next_task_fair
1978  kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : set_next_entity <-pick_next_task_fair
1979  kworker/-59      3d..2    6us : update_stats_wait_end <-set_next_entity
1980        ls-2269    3d..2    7us : finish_task_switch <-__schedule
1981        ls-2269    3d..2    7us : _raw_spin_unlock_irq <-finish_task_switch
1982        ls-2269    3d..2    8us : do_IRQ <-ret_from_intr
1983        ls-2269    3d..2    8us : irq_enter <-do_IRQ
1984        ls-2269    3d..2    8us : rcu_irq_enter <-irq_enter
1985        ls-2269    3d..2    9us : add_preempt_count <-irq_enter
1986        ls-2269    3d.h2    9us : exit_idle <-do_IRQ
1987  [...]
1988        ls-2269    3d.h3   20us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
1989        ls-2269    3d.h2   20us : irq_exit <-do_IRQ
1990        ls-2269    3d.h2   21us : sub_preempt_count <-irq_exit
1991        ls-2269    3d..3   21us : do_softirq <-irq_exit
1992        ls-2269    3d..3   21us : __do_softirq <-call_softirq
1993        ls-2269    3d..3   21us+: __local_bh_disable <-__do_softirq
1994        ls-2269    3d.s4   29us : sub_preempt_count <-_local_bh_enable_ip
1995        ls-2269    3d.s5   29us : sub_preempt_count <-_local_bh_enable_ip
1996        ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : do_IRQ <-ret_from_intr
1997        ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : irq_enter <-do_IRQ
1998        ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : rcu_irq_enter <-irq_enter
1999  [...]
2000        ls-2269    3d.s5   31us : rcu_irq_enter <-irq_enter
2001        ls-2269    3d.s5   32us : add_preempt_count <-irq_enter
2002        ls-2269    3d.H5   32us : exit_idle <-do_IRQ
2003        ls-2269    3d.H5   32us : handle_irq <-do_IRQ
2004        ls-2269    3d.H5   32us : irq_to_desc <-handle_irq
2005        ls-2269    3d.H5   33us : handle_fasteoi_irq <-handle_irq
2006  [...]
2007        ls-2269    3d.s5  158us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-rtl8139_poll
2008        ls-2269    3d.s3  158us : net_rps_action_and_irq_enable.isra.65 <-net_rx_action
2009        ls-2269    3d.s3  159us : __local_bh_enable <-__do_softirq
2010        ls-2269    3d.s3  159us : sub_preempt_count <-__local_bh_enable
2011        ls-2269    3d..3  159us : idle_cpu <-irq_exit
2012        ls-2269    3d..3  159us : rcu_irq_exit <-irq_exit
2013        ls-2269    3d..3  160us : sub_preempt_count <-irq_exit
2014        ls-2269    3d...  161us : __mutex_unlock_slowpath <-mutex_unlock
2015        ls-2269    3d...  162us+: trace_hardirqs_on <-mutex_unlock
2016        ls-2269    3d...  186us : <stack trace>
2017   => __mutex_unlock_slowpath
2018   => mutex_unlock
2019   => process_output
2020   => n_tty_write
2021   => tty_write
2022   => vfs_write
2023   => sys_write
2024   => system_call_fastpath
2025
2026This is an interesting trace. It started with kworker running and
2027scheduling out and ls taking over. But as soon as ls released the
2028rq lock and enabled interrupts (but not preemption) an interrupt
2029triggered. When the interrupt finished, it started running softirqs.
2030But while the softirq was running, another interrupt triggered.
2031When an interrupt is running inside a softirq, the annotation is 'H'.
2032
2033
2034wakeup
2035------
2036
2037One common case that people are interested in tracing is the
2038time it takes for a task that is woken to actually wake up.
2039Now for non Real-Time tasks, this can be arbitrary. But tracing
2040it nonetheless can be interesting.
2041
2042Without function tracing::
2043
2044  # echo 0 > options/function-trace
2045  # echo wakeup > current_tracer
2046  # echo 1 > tracing_on
2047  # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency
2048  # chrt -f 5 sleep 1
2049  # echo 0 > tracing_on
2050  # cat trace
2051  # tracer: wakeup
2052  #
2053  # wakeup latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
2054  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
2055  # latency: 15 us, #4/4, CPU#3 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
2056  #    -----------------
2057  #    | task: kworker/3:1H-312 (uid:0 nice:-20 policy:0 rt_prio:0)
2058  #    -----------------
2059  #
2060  #                  _------=> CPU#
2061  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
2062  #                | / _----=> need-resched
2063  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
2064  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
2065  #                |||| /     delay
2066  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
2067  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
2068    <idle>-0       3dNs7    0us :      0:120:R   + [003]   312:100:R kworker/3:1H
2069    <idle>-0       3dNs7    1us+: ttwu_do_activate.constprop.87 <-try_to_wake_up
2070    <idle>-0       3d..3   15us : __schedule <-schedule
2071    <idle>-0       3d..3   15us :      0:120:R ==> [003]   312:100:R kworker/3:1H
2072
2073The tracer only traces the highest priority task in the system
2074to avoid tracing the normal circumstances. Here we see that
2075the kworker with a nice priority of -20 (not very nice), took
2076just 15 microseconds from the time it woke up, to the time it
2077ran.
2078
2079Non Real-Time tasks are not that interesting. A more interesting
2080trace is to concentrate only on Real-Time tasks.
2081
2082wakeup_rt
2083---------
2084
2085In a Real-Time environment it is very important to know the
2086wakeup time it takes for the highest priority task that is woken
2087up to the time that it executes. This is also known as "schedule
2088latency". I stress the point that this is about RT tasks. It is
2089also important to know the scheduling latency of non-RT tasks,
2090but the average schedule latency is better for non-RT tasks.
2091Tools like LatencyTop are more appropriate for such
2092measurements.
2093
2094Real-Time environments are interested in the worst case latency.
2095That is the longest latency it takes for something to happen,
2096and not the average. We can have a very fast scheduler that may
2097only have a large latency once in a while, but that would not
2098work well with Real-Time tasks.  The wakeup_rt tracer was designed
2099to record the worst case wakeups of RT tasks. Non-RT tasks are
2100not recorded because the tracer only records one worst case and
2101tracing non-RT tasks that are unpredictable will overwrite the
2102worst case latency of RT tasks (just run the normal wakeup
2103tracer for a while to see that effect).
2104
2105Since this tracer only deals with RT tasks, we will run this
2106slightly differently than we did with the previous tracers.
2107Instead of performing an 'ls', we will run 'sleep 1' under
2108'chrt' which changes the priority of the task.
2109::
2110
2111  # echo 0 > options/function-trace
2112  # echo wakeup_rt > current_tracer
2113  # echo 1 > tracing_on
2114  # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency
2115  # chrt -f 5 sleep 1
2116  # echo 0 > tracing_on
2117  # cat trace
2118  # tracer: wakeup
2119  #
2120  # tracer: wakeup_rt
2121  #
2122  # wakeup_rt latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
2123  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
2124  # latency: 5 us, #4/4, CPU#3 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
2125  #    -----------------
2126  #    | task: sleep-2389 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:1 rt_prio:5)
2127  #    -----------------
2128  #
2129  #                  _------=> CPU#
2130  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
2131  #                | / _----=> need-resched
2132  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
2133  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
2134  #                |||| /     delay
2135  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
2136  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
2137    <idle>-0       3d.h4    0us :      0:120:R   + [003]  2389: 94:R sleep
2138    <idle>-0       3d.h4    1us+: ttwu_do_activate.constprop.87 <-try_to_wake_up
2139    <idle>-0       3d..3    5us : __schedule <-schedule
2140    <idle>-0       3d..3    5us :      0:120:R ==> [003]  2389: 94:R sleep
2141
2142
2143Running this on an idle system, we see that it only took 5 microseconds
2144to perform the task switch.  Note, since the trace point in the schedule
2145is before the actual "switch", we stop the tracing when the recorded task
2146is about to schedule in. This may change if we add a new marker at the
2147end of the scheduler.
2148
2149Notice that the recorded task is 'sleep' with the PID of 2389
2150and it has an rt_prio of 5. This priority is user-space priority
2151and not the internal kernel priority. The policy is 1 for
2152SCHED_FIFO and 2 for SCHED_RR.
2153
2154Note, that the trace data shows the internal priority (99 - rtprio).
2155::
2156
2157  <idle>-0       3d..3    5us :      0:120:R ==> [003]  2389: 94:R sleep
2158
2159The 0:120:R means idle was running with a nice priority of 0 (120 - 120)
2160and in the running state 'R'. The sleep task was scheduled in with
21612389: 94:R. That is the priority is the kernel rtprio (99 - 5 = 94)
2162and it too is in the running state.
2163
2164Doing the same with chrt -r 5 and function-trace set.
2165::
2166
2167  echo 1 > options/function-trace
2168
2169  # tracer: wakeup_rt
2170  #
2171  # wakeup_rt latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
2172  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
2173  # latency: 29 us, #85/85, CPU#3 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
2174  #    -----------------
2175  #    | task: sleep-2448 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:1 rt_prio:5)
2176  #    -----------------
2177  #
2178  #                  _------=> CPU#
2179  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
2180  #                | / _----=> need-resched
2181  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
2182  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
2183  #                |||| /     delay
2184  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
2185  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
2186    <idle>-0       3d.h4    1us+:      0:120:R   + [003]  2448: 94:R sleep
2187    <idle>-0       3d.h4    2us : ttwu_do_activate.constprop.87 <-try_to_wake_up
2188    <idle>-0       3d.h3    3us : check_preempt_curr <-ttwu_do_wakeup
2189    <idle>-0       3d.h3    3us : resched_curr <-check_preempt_curr
2190    <idle>-0       3dNh3    4us : task_woken_rt <-ttwu_do_wakeup
2191    <idle>-0       3dNh3    4us : _raw_spin_unlock <-try_to_wake_up
2192    <idle>-0       3dNh3    4us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
2193    <idle>-0       3dNh2    5us : ttwu_stat <-try_to_wake_up
2194    <idle>-0       3dNh2    5us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-try_to_wake_up
2195    <idle>-0       3dNh2    6us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
2196    <idle>-0       3dNh1    6us : _raw_spin_lock <-__run_hrtimer
2197    <idle>-0       3dNh1    6us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock
2198    <idle>-0       3dNh2    7us : _raw_spin_unlock <-hrtimer_interrupt
2199    <idle>-0       3dNh2    7us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
2200    <idle>-0       3dNh1    7us : tick_program_event <-hrtimer_interrupt
2201    <idle>-0       3dNh1    7us : clockevents_program_event <-tick_program_event
2202    <idle>-0       3dNh1    8us : ktime_get <-clockevents_program_event
2203    <idle>-0       3dNh1    8us : lapic_next_event <-clockevents_program_event
2204    <idle>-0       3dNh1    8us : irq_exit <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
2205    <idle>-0       3dNh1    9us : sub_preempt_count <-irq_exit
2206    <idle>-0       3dN.2    9us : idle_cpu <-irq_exit
2207    <idle>-0       3dN.2    9us : rcu_irq_exit <-irq_exit
2208    <idle>-0       3dN.2   10us : rcu_eqs_enter_common.isra.45 <-rcu_irq_exit
2209    <idle>-0       3dN.2   10us : sub_preempt_count <-irq_exit
2210    <idle>-0       3.N.1   11us : rcu_idle_exit <-cpu_idle
2211    <idle>-0       3dN.1   11us : rcu_eqs_exit_common.isra.43 <-rcu_idle_exit
2212    <idle>-0       3.N.1   11us : tick_nohz_idle_exit <-cpu_idle
2213    <idle>-0       3dN.1   12us : menu_hrtimer_cancel <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2214    <idle>-0       3dN.1   12us : ktime_get <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2215    <idle>-0       3dN.1   12us : tick_do_update_jiffies64 <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2216    <idle>-0       3dN.1   13us : cpu_load_update_nohz <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2217    <idle>-0       3dN.1   13us : _raw_spin_lock <-cpu_load_update_nohz
2218    <idle>-0       3dN.1   13us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock
2219    <idle>-0       3dN.2   13us : __cpu_load_update <-cpu_load_update_nohz
2220    <idle>-0       3dN.2   14us : sched_avg_update <-__cpu_load_update
2221    <idle>-0       3dN.2   14us : _raw_spin_unlock <-cpu_load_update_nohz
2222    <idle>-0       3dN.2   14us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
2223    <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : calc_load_nohz_stop <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2224    <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : touch_softlockup_watchdog <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2225    <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : hrtimer_cancel <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2226    <idle>-0       3dN.1   15us : hrtimer_try_to_cancel <-hrtimer_cancel
2227    <idle>-0       3dN.1   16us : lock_hrtimer_base.isra.18 <-hrtimer_try_to_cancel
2228    <idle>-0       3dN.1   16us : _raw_spin_lock_irqsave <-lock_hrtimer_base.isra.18
2229    <idle>-0       3dN.1   16us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock_irqsave
2230    <idle>-0       3dN.2   17us : __remove_hrtimer <-remove_hrtimer.part.16
2231    <idle>-0       3dN.2   17us : hrtimer_force_reprogram <-__remove_hrtimer
2232    <idle>-0       3dN.2   17us : tick_program_event <-hrtimer_force_reprogram
2233    <idle>-0       3dN.2   18us : clockevents_program_event <-tick_program_event
2234    <idle>-0       3dN.2   18us : ktime_get <-clockevents_program_event
2235    <idle>-0       3dN.2   18us : lapic_next_event <-clockevents_program_event
2236    <idle>-0       3dN.2   19us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-hrtimer_try_to_cancel
2237    <idle>-0       3dN.2   19us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
2238    <idle>-0       3dN.1   19us : hrtimer_forward <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2239    <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : ktime_add_safe <-hrtimer_forward
2240    <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : ktime_add_safe <-hrtimer_forward
2241    <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : hrtimer_start_range_ns <-hrtimer_start_expires.constprop.11
2242    <idle>-0       3dN.1   20us : __hrtimer_start_range_ns <-hrtimer_start_range_ns
2243    <idle>-0       3dN.1   21us : lock_hrtimer_base.isra.18 <-__hrtimer_start_range_ns
2244    <idle>-0       3dN.1   21us : _raw_spin_lock_irqsave <-lock_hrtimer_base.isra.18
2245    <idle>-0       3dN.1   21us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock_irqsave
2246    <idle>-0       3dN.2   22us : ktime_add_safe <-__hrtimer_start_range_ns
2247    <idle>-0       3dN.2   22us : enqueue_hrtimer <-__hrtimer_start_range_ns
2248    <idle>-0       3dN.2   22us : tick_program_event <-__hrtimer_start_range_ns
2249    <idle>-0       3dN.2   23us : clockevents_program_event <-tick_program_event
2250    <idle>-0       3dN.2   23us : ktime_get <-clockevents_program_event
2251    <idle>-0       3dN.2   23us : lapic_next_event <-clockevents_program_event
2252    <idle>-0       3dN.2   24us : _raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore <-__hrtimer_start_range_ns
2253    <idle>-0       3dN.2   24us : sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore
2254    <idle>-0       3dN.1   24us : account_idle_ticks <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
2255    <idle>-0       3dN.1   24us : account_idle_time <-account_idle_ticks
2256    <idle>-0       3.N.1   25us : sub_preempt_count <-cpu_idle
2257    <idle>-0       3.N..   25us : schedule <-cpu_idle
2258    <idle>-0       3.N..   25us : __schedule <-preempt_schedule
2259    <idle>-0       3.N..   26us : add_preempt_count <-__schedule
2260    <idle>-0       3.N.1   26us : rcu_note_context_switch <-__schedule
2261    <idle>-0       3.N.1   26us : rcu_sched_qs <-rcu_note_context_switch
2262    <idle>-0       3dN.1   27us : rcu_preempt_qs <-rcu_note_context_switch
2263    <idle>-0       3.N.1   27us : _raw_spin_lock_irq <-__schedule
2264    <idle>-0       3dN.1   27us : add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock_irq
2265    <idle>-0       3dN.2   28us : put_prev_task_idle <-__schedule
2266    <idle>-0       3dN.2   28us : pick_next_task_stop <-pick_next_task
2267    <idle>-0       3dN.2   28us : pick_next_task_rt <-pick_next_task
2268    <idle>-0       3dN.2   29us : dequeue_pushable_task <-pick_next_task_rt
2269    <idle>-0       3d..3   29us : __schedule <-preempt_schedule
2270    <idle>-0       3d..3   30us :      0:120:R ==> [003]  2448: 94:R sleep
2271
2272This isn't that big of a trace, even with function tracing enabled,
2273so I included the entire trace.
2274
2275The interrupt went off while when the system was idle. Somewhere
2276before task_woken_rt() was called, the NEED_RESCHED flag was set,
2277this is indicated by the first occurrence of the 'N' flag.
2278
2279Latency tracing and events
2280--------------------------
2281As function tracing can induce a much larger latency, but without
2282seeing what happens within the latency it is hard to know what
2283caused it. There is a middle ground, and that is with enabling
2284events.
2285::
2286
2287  # echo 0 > options/function-trace
2288  # echo wakeup_rt > current_tracer
2289  # echo 1 > events/enable
2290  # echo 1 > tracing_on
2291  # echo 0 > tracing_max_latency
2292  # chrt -f 5 sleep 1
2293  # echo 0 > tracing_on
2294  # cat trace
2295  # tracer: wakeup_rt
2296  #
2297  # wakeup_rt latency trace v1.1.5 on 3.8.0-test+
2298  # --------------------------------------------------------------------
2299  # latency: 6 us, #12/12, CPU#2 | (M:preempt VP:0, KP:0, SP:0 HP:0 #P:4)
2300  #    -----------------
2301  #    | task: sleep-5882 (uid:0 nice:0 policy:1 rt_prio:5)
2302  #    -----------------
2303  #
2304  #                  _------=> CPU#
2305  #                 / _-----=> irqs-off
2306  #                | / _----=> need-resched
2307  #                || / _---=> hardirq/softirq
2308  #                ||| / _--=> preempt-depth
2309  #                |||| /     delay
2310  #  cmd     pid   ||||| time  |   caller
2311  #     \   /      |||||  \    |   /
2312    <idle>-0       2d.h4    0us :      0:120:R   + [002]  5882: 94:R sleep
2313    <idle>-0       2d.h4    0us : ttwu_do_activate.constprop.87 <-try_to_wake_up
2314    <idle>-0       2d.h4    1us : sched_wakeup: comm=sleep pid=5882 prio=94 success=1 target_cpu=002
2315    <idle>-0       2dNh2    1us : hrtimer_expire_exit: hrtimer=ffff88007796feb8
2316    <idle>-0       2.N.2    2us : power_end: cpu_id=2
2317    <idle>-0       2.N.2    3us : cpu_idle: state=4294967295 cpu_id=2
2318    <idle>-0       2dN.3    4us : hrtimer_cancel: hrtimer=ffff88007d50d5e0
2319    <idle>-0       2dN.3    4us : hrtimer_start: hrtimer=ffff88007d50d5e0 function=tick_sched_timer expires=34311211000000 softexpires=34311211000000
2320    <idle>-0       2.N.2    5us : rcu_utilization: Start context switch
2321    <idle>-0       2.N.2    5us : rcu_utilization: End context switch
2322    <idle>-0       2d..3    6us : __schedule <-schedule
2323    <idle>-0       2d..3    6us :      0:120:R ==> [002]  5882: 94:R sleep
2324
2325
2326Hardware Latency Detector
2327-------------------------
2328
2329The hardware latency detector is executed by enabling the "hwlat" tracer.
2330
2331NOTE, this tracer will affect the performance of the system as it will
2332periodically make a CPU constantly busy with interrupts disabled.
2333::
2334
2335  # echo hwlat > current_tracer
2336  # sleep 100
2337  # cat trace
2338  # tracer: hwlat
2339  #
2340  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 13/13   #P:8
2341  #
2342  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
2343  #                             / _----=> need-resched
2344  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
2345  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
2346  #                            ||| /     delay
2347  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
2348  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
2349             <...>-1729  [001] d...   678.473449: #1     inner/outer(us):   11/12    ts:1581527483.343962693 count:6
2350             <...>-1729  [004] d...   689.556542: #2     inner/outer(us):   16/9     ts:1581527494.889008092 count:1
2351             <...>-1729  [005] d...   714.756290: #3     inner/outer(us):   16/16    ts:1581527519.678961629 count:5
2352             <...>-1729  [001] d...   718.788247: #4     inner/outer(us):    9/17    ts:1581527523.889012713 count:1
2353             <...>-1729  [002] d...   719.796341: #5     inner/outer(us):   13/9     ts:1581527524.912872606 count:1
2354             <...>-1729  [006] d...   844.787091: #6     inner/outer(us):    9/12    ts:1581527649.889048502 count:2
2355             <...>-1729  [003] d...   849.827033: #7     inner/outer(us):   18/9     ts:1581527654.889013793 count:1
2356             <...>-1729  [007] d...   853.859002: #8     inner/outer(us):    9/12    ts:1581527658.889065736 count:1
2357             <...>-1729  [001] d...   855.874978: #9     inner/outer(us):    9/11    ts:1581527660.861991877 count:1
2358             <...>-1729  [001] d...   863.938932: #10    inner/outer(us):    9/11    ts:1581527668.970010500 count:1 nmi-total:7 nmi-count:1
2359             <...>-1729  [007] d...   878.050780: #11    inner/outer(us):    9/12    ts:1581527683.385002600 count:1 nmi-total:5 nmi-count:1
2360             <...>-1729  [007] d...   886.114702: #12    inner/outer(us):    9/12    ts:1581527691.385001600 count:1
2361
2362
2363The above output is somewhat the same in the header. All events will have
2364interrupts disabled 'd'. Under the FUNCTION title there is:
2365
2366 #1
2367	This is the count of events recorded that were greater than the
2368	tracing_threshold (See below).
2369
2370 inner/outer(us):   11/11
2371
2372      This shows two numbers as "inner latency" and "outer latency". The test
2373      runs in a loop checking a timestamp twice. The latency detected within
2374      the two timestamps is the "inner latency" and the latency detected
2375      after the previous timestamp and the next timestamp in the loop is
2376      the "outer latency".
2377
2378 ts:1581527483.343962693
2379
2380      The absolute timestamp that the first latency was recorded in the window.
2381
2382 count:6
2383
2384      The number of times a latency was detected during the window.
2385
2386 nmi-total:7 nmi-count:1
2387
2388      On architectures that support it, if an NMI comes in during the
2389      test, the time spent in NMI is reported in "nmi-total" (in
2390      microseconds).
2391
2392      All architectures that have NMIs will show the "nmi-count" if an
2393      NMI comes in during the test.
2394
2395hwlat files:
2396
2397  tracing_threshold
2398	This gets automatically set to "10" to represent 10
2399	microseconds. This is the threshold of latency that
2400	needs to be detected before the trace will be recorded.
2401
2402	Note, when hwlat tracer is finished (another tracer is
2403	written into "current_tracer"), the original value for
2404	tracing_threshold is placed back into this file.
2405
2406  hwlat_detector/width
2407	The length of time the test runs with interrupts disabled.
2408
2409  hwlat_detector/window
2410	The length of time of the window which the test
2411	runs. That is, the test will run for "width"
2412	microseconds per "window" microseconds
2413
2414  tracing_cpumask
2415	When the test is started. A kernel thread is created that
2416	runs the test. This thread will alternate between CPUs
2417	listed in the tracing_cpumask between each period
2418	(one "window"). To limit the test to specific CPUs
2419	set the mask in this file to only the CPUs that the test
2420	should run on.
2421
2422function
2423--------
2424
2425This tracer is the function tracer. Enabling the function tracer
2426can be done from the debug file system. Make sure the
2427ftrace_enabled is set; otherwise this tracer is a nop.
2428See the "ftrace_enabled" section below.
2429::
2430
2431  # sysctl kernel.ftrace_enabled=1
2432  # echo function > current_tracer
2433  # echo 1 > tracing_on
2434  # usleep 1
2435  # echo 0 > tracing_on
2436  # cat trace
2437  # tracer: function
2438  #
2439  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 24799/24799   #P:4
2440  #
2441  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
2442  #                             / _----=> need-resched
2443  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
2444  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
2445  #                            ||| /     delay
2446  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
2447  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
2448              bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063030: mutex_unlock <-rb_simple_write
2449              bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063031: __mutex_unlock_slowpath <-mutex_unlock
2450              bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063031: __fsnotify_parent <-fsnotify_modify
2451              bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063032: fsnotify <-fsnotify_modify
2452              bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063032: __srcu_read_lock <-fsnotify
2453              bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063032: add_preempt_count <-__srcu_read_lock
2454              bash-1994  [002] ...1  3082.063032: sub_preempt_count <-__srcu_read_lock
2455              bash-1994  [002] ....  3082.063033: __srcu_read_unlock <-fsnotify
2456  [...]
2457
2458
2459Note: function tracer uses ring buffers to store the above
2460entries. The newest data may overwrite the oldest data.
2461Sometimes using echo to stop the trace is not sufficient because
2462the tracing could have overwritten the data that you wanted to
2463record. For this reason, it is sometimes better to disable
2464tracing directly from a program. This allows you to stop the
2465tracing at the point that you hit the part that you are
2466interested in. To disable the tracing directly from a C program,
2467something like following code snippet can be used::
2468
2469	int trace_fd;
2470	[...]
2471	int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
2472		[...]
2473		trace_fd = open(tracing_file("tracing_on"), O_WRONLY);
2474		[...]
2475		if (condition_hit()) {
2476			write(trace_fd, "0", 1);
2477		}
2478		[...]
2479	}
2480
2481
2482Single thread tracing
2483---------------------
2484
2485By writing into set_ftrace_pid you can trace a
2486single thread. For example::
2487
2488  # cat set_ftrace_pid
2489  no pid
2490  # echo 3111 > set_ftrace_pid
2491  # cat set_ftrace_pid
2492  3111
2493  # echo function > current_tracer
2494  # cat trace | head
2495  # tracer: function
2496  #
2497  #           TASK-PID    CPU#    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
2498  #              | |       |          |         |
2499      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254676: finish_task_switch <-thread_return
2500      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254681: hrtimer_cancel <-schedule_hrtimeout_range
2501      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254682: hrtimer_try_to_cancel <-hrtimer_cancel
2502      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254683: lock_hrtimer_base <-hrtimer_try_to_cancel
2503      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254685: fget_light <-do_sys_poll
2504      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1637.254686: pipe_poll <-do_sys_poll
2505  # echo > set_ftrace_pid
2506  # cat trace |head
2507  # tracer: function
2508  #
2509  #           TASK-PID    CPU#    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
2510  #              | |       |          |         |
2511  ##### CPU 3 buffer started ####
2512      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957688: free_poll_entry <-poll_freewait
2513      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957689: remove_wait_queue <-free_poll_entry
2514      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957691: fput <-free_poll_entry
2515      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957692: audit_syscall_exit <-sysret_audit
2516      yum-updatesd-3111  [003]  1701.957693: path_put <-audit_syscall_exit
2517
2518If you want to trace a function when executing, you could use
2519something like this simple program.
2520::
2521
2522	#include <stdio.h>
2523	#include <stdlib.h>
2524	#include <sys/types.h>
2525	#include <sys/stat.h>
2526	#include <fcntl.h>
2527	#include <unistd.h>
2528	#include <string.h>
2529
2530	#define _STR(x) #x
2531	#define STR(x) _STR(x)
2532	#define MAX_PATH 256
2533
2534	const char *find_tracefs(void)
2535	{
2536	       static char tracefs[MAX_PATH+1];
2537	       static int tracefs_found;
2538	       char type[100];
2539	       FILE *fp;
2540
2541	       if (tracefs_found)
2542		       return tracefs;
2543
2544	       if ((fp = fopen("/proc/mounts","r")) == NULL) {
2545		       perror("/proc/mounts");
2546		       return NULL;
2547	       }
2548
2549	       while (fscanf(fp, "%*s %"
2550		             STR(MAX_PATH)
2551		             "s %99s %*s %*d %*d\n",
2552		             tracefs, type) == 2) {
2553		       if (strcmp(type, "tracefs") == 0)
2554		               break;
2555	       }
2556	       fclose(fp);
2557
2558	       if (strcmp(type, "tracefs") != 0) {
2559		       fprintf(stderr, "tracefs not mounted");
2560		       return NULL;
2561	       }
2562
2563	       strcat(tracefs, "/tracing/");
2564	       tracefs_found = 1;
2565
2566	       return tracefs;
2567	}
2568
2569	const char *tracing_file(const char *file_name)
2570	{
2571	       static char trace_file[MAX_PATH+1];
2572	       snprintf(trace_file, MAX_PATH, "%s/%s", find_tracefs(), file_name);
2573	       return trace_file;
2574	}
2575
2576	int main (int argc, char **argv)
2577	{
2578		if (argc < 1)
2579		        exit(-1);
2580
2581		if (fork() > 0) {
2582		        int fd, ffd;
2583		        char line[64];
2584		        int s;
2585
2586		        ffd = open(tracing_file("current_tracer"), O_WRONLY);
2587		        if (ffd < 0)
2588		                exit(-1);
2589		        write(ffd, "nop", 3);
2590
2591		        fd = open(tracing_file("set_ftrace_pid"), O_WRONLY);
2592		        s = sprintf(line, "%d\n", getpid());
2593		        write(fd, line, s);
2594
2595		        write(ffd, "function", 8);
2596
2597		        close(fd);
2598		        close(ffd);
2599
2600		        execvp(argv[1], argv+1);
2601		}
2602
2603		return 0;
2604	}
2605
2606Or this simple script!
2607::
2608
2609  #!/bin/bash
2610
2611  tracefs=`sed -ne 's/^tracefs \(.*\) tracefs.*/\1/p' /proc/mounts`
2612  echo 0 > $tracefs/tracing_on
2613  echo $$ > $tracefs/set_ftrace_pid
2614  echo function > $tracefs/current_tracer
2615  echo 1 > $tracefs/tracing_on
2616  exec "$@"
2617
2618
2619function graph tracer
2620---------------------------
2621
2622This tracer is similar to the function tracer except that it
2623probes a function on its entry and its exit. This is done by
2624using a dynamically allocated stack of return addresses in each
2625task_struct. On function entry the tracer overwrites the return
2626address of each function traced to set a custom probe. Thus the
2627original return address is stored on the stack of return address
2628in the task_struct.
2629
2630Probing on both ends of a function leads to special features
2631such as:
2632
2633- measure of a function's time execution
2634- having a reliable call stack to draw function calls graph
2635
2636This tracer is useful in several situations:
2637
2638- you want to find the reason of a strange kernel behavior and
2639  need to see what happens in detail on any areas (or specific
2640  ones).
2641
2642- you are experiencing weird latencies but it's difficult to
2643  find its origin.
2644
2645- you want to find quickly which path is taken by a specific
2646  function
2647
2648- you just want to peek inside a working kernel and want to see
2649  what happens there.
2650
2651::
2652
2653  # tracer: function_graph
2654  #
2655  # CPU  DURATION                  FUNCTION CALLS
2656  # |     |   |                     |   |   |   |
2657
2658   0)               |  sys_open() {
2659   0)               |    do_sys_open() {
2660   0)               |      getname() {
2661   0)               |        kmem_cache_alloc() {
2662   0)   1.382 us    |          __might_sleep();
2663   0)   2.478 us    |        }
2664   0)               |        strncpy_from_user() {
2665   0)               |          might_fault() {
2666   0)   1.389 us    |            __might_sleep();
2667   0)   2.553 us    |          }
2668   0)   3.807 us    |        }
2669   0)   7.876 us    |      }
2670   0)               |      alloc_fd() {
2671   0)   0.668 us    |        _spin_lock();
2672   0)   0.570 us    |        expand_files();
2673   0)   0.586 us    |        _spin_unlock();
2674
2675
2676There are several columns that can be dynamically
2677enabled/disabled. You can use every combination of options you
2678want, depending on your needs.
2679
2680- The cpu number on which the function executed is default
2681  enabled.  It is sometimes better to only trace one cpu (see
2682  tracing_cpumask file) or you might sometimes see unordered
2683  function calls while cpu tracing switch.
2684
2685	- hide: echo nofuncgraph-cpu > trace_options
2686	- show: echo funcgraph-cpu > trace_options
2687
2688- The duration (function's time of execution) is displayed on
2689  the closing bracket line of a function or on the same line
2690  than the current function in case of a leaf one. It is default
2691  enabled.
2692
2693	- hide: echo nofuncgraph-duration > trace_options
2694	- show: echo funcgraph-duration > trace_options
2695
2696- The overhead field precedes the duration field in case of
2697  reached duration thresholds.
2698
2699	- hide: echo nofuncgraph-overhead > trace_options
2700	- show: echo funcgraph-overhead > trace_options
2701	- depends on: funcgraph-duration
2702
2703  ie::
2704
2705    3) # 1837.709 us |          } /* __switch_to */
2706    3)               |          finish_task_switch() {
2707    3)   0.313 us    |            _raw_spin_unlock_irq();
2708    3)   3.177 us    |          }
2709    3) # 1889.063 us |        } /* __schedule */
2710    3) ! 140.417 us  |      } /* __schedule */
2711    3) # 2034.948 us |    } /* schedule */
2712    3) * 33998.59 us |  } /* schedule_preempt_disabled */
2713
2714    [...]
2715
2716    1)   0.260 us    |              msecs_to_jiffies();
2717    1)   0.313 us    |              __rcu_read_unlock();
2718    1) + 61.770 us   |            }
2719    1) + 64.479 us   |          }
2720    1)   0.313 us    |          rcu_bh_qs();
2721    1)   0.313 us    |          __local_bh_enable();
2722    1) ! 217.240 us  |        }
2723    1)   0.365 us    |        idle_cpu();
2724    1)               |        rcu_irq_exit() {
2725    1)   0.417 us    |          rcu_eqs_enter_common.isra.47();
2726    1)   3.125 us    |        }
2727    1) ! 227.812 us  |      }
2728    1) ! 457.395 us  |    }
2729    1) @ 119760.2 us |  }
2730
2731    [...]
2732
2733    2)               |    handle_IPI() {
2734    1)   6.979 us    |                  }
2735    2)   0.417 us    |      scheduler_ipi();
2736    1)   9.791 us    |                }
2737    1) + 12.917 us   |              }
2738    2)   3.490 us    |    }
2739    1) + 15.729 us   |            }
2740    1) + 18.542 us   |          }
2741    2) $ 3594274 us  |  }
2742
2743Flags::
2744
2745  + means that the function exceeded 10 usecs.
2746  ! means that the function exceeded 100 usecs.
2747  # means that the function exceeded 1000 usecs.
2748  * means that the function exceeded 10 msecs.
2749  @ means that the function exceeded 100 msecs.
2750  $ means that the function exceeded 1 sec.
2751
2752
2753- The task/pid field displays the thread cmdline and pid which
2754  executed the function. It is default disabled.
2755
2756	- hide: echo nofuncgraph-proc > trace_options
2757	- show: echo funcgraph-proc > trace_options
2758
2759  ie::
2760
2761    # tracer: function_graph
2762    #
2763    # CPU  TASK/PID        DURATION                  FUNCTION CALLS
2764    # |    |    |           |   |                     |   |   |   |
2765    0)    sh-4802     |               |                  d_free() {
2766    0)    sh-4802     |               |                    call_rcu() {
2767    0)    sh-4802     |               |                      __call_rcu() {
2768    0)    sh-4802     |   0.616 us    |                        rcu_process_gp_end();
2769    0)    sh-4802     |   0.586 us    |                        check_for_new_grace_period();
2770    0)    sh-4802     |   2.899 us    |                      }
2771    0)    sh-4802     |   4.040 us    |                    }
2772    0)    sh-4802     |   5.151 us    |                  }
2773    0)    sh-4802     | + 49.370 us   |                }
2774
2775
2776- The absolute time field is an absolute timestamp given by the
2777  system clock since it started. A snapshot of this time is
2778  given on each entry/exit of functions
2779
2780	- hide: echo nofuncgraph-abstime > trace_options
2781	- show: echo funcgraph-abstime > trace_options
2782
2783  ie::
2784
2785    #
2786    #      TIME       CPU  DURATION                  FUNCTION CALLS
2787    #       |         |     |   |                     |   |   |   |
2788    360.774522 |   1)   0.541 us    |                                          }
2789    360.774522 |   1)   4.663 us    |                                        }
2790    360.774523 |   1)   0.541 us    |                                        __wake_up_bit();
2791    360.774524 |   1)   6.796 us    |                                      }
2792    360.774524 |   1)   7.952 us    |                                    }
2793    360.774525 |   1)   9.063 us    |                                  }
2794    360.774525 |   1)   0.615 us    |                                  journal_mark_dirty();
2795    360.774527 |   1)   0.578 us    |                                  __brelse();
2796    360.774528 |   1)               |                                  reiserfs_prepare_for_journal() {
2797    360.774528 |   1)               |                                    unlock_buffer() {
2798    360.774529 |   1)               |                                      wake_up_bit() {
2799    360.774529 |   1)               |                                        bit_waitqueue() {
2800    360.774530 |   1)   0.594 us    |                                          __phys_addr();
2801
2802
2803The function name is always displayed after the closing bracket
2804for a function if the start of that function is not in the
2805trace buffer.
2806
2807Display of the function name after the closing bracket may be
2808enabled for functions whose start is in the trace buffer,
2809allowing easier searching with grep for function durations.
2810It is default disabled.
2811
2812	- hide: echo nofuncgraph-tail > trace_options
2813	- show: echo funcgraph-tail > trace_options
2814
2815  Example with nofuncgraph-tail (default)::
2816
2817    0)               |      putname() {
2818    0)               |        kmem_cache_free() {
2819    0)   0.518 us    |          __phys_addr();
2820    0)   1.757 us    |        }
2821    0)   2.861 us    |      }
2822
2823  Example with funcgraph-tail::
2824
2825    0)               |      putname() {
2826    0)               |        kmem_cache_free() {
2827    0)   0.518 us    |          __phys_addr();
2828    0)   1.757 us    |        } /* kmem_cache_free() */
2829    0)   2.861 us    |      } /* putname() */
2830
2831The return value of each traced function can be displayed after
2832an equal sign "=". When encountering system call failures, it
2833can be very helpful to quickly locate the function that first
2834returns an error code.
2835
2836	- hide: echo nofuncgraph-retval > trace_options
2837	- show: echo funcgraph-retval > trace_options
2838
2839  Example with funcgraph-retval::
2840
2841    1)               |    cgroup_migrate() {
2842    1)   0.651 us    |      cgroup_migrate_add_task(); /* = 0xffff93fcfd346c00 */
2843    1)               |      cgroup_migrate_execute() {
2844    1)               |        cpu_cgroup_can_attach() {
2845    1)               |          cgroup_taskset_first() {
2846    1)   0.732 us    |            cgroup_taskset_next(); /* = 0xffff93fc8fb20000 */
2847    1)   1.232 us    |          } /* cgroup_taskset_first = 0xffff93fc8fb20000 */
2848    1)   0.380 us    |          sched_rt_can_attach(); /* = 0x0 */
2849    1)   2.335 us    |        } /* cpu_cgroup_can_attach = -22 */
2850    1)   4.369 us    |      } /* cgroup_migrate_execute = -22 */
2851    1)   7.143 us    |    } /* cgroup_migrate = -22 */
2852
2853The above example shows that the function cpu_cgroup_can_attach
2854returned the error code -22 firstly, then we can read the code
2855of this function to get the root cause.
2856
2857When the option funcgraph-retval-hex is not set, the return value can
2858be displayed in a smart way. Specifically, if it is an error code,
2859it will be printed in signed decimal format, otherwise it will
2860printed in hexadecimal format.
2861
2862	- smart: echo nofuncgraph-retval-hex > trace_options
2863	- hexadecimal: echo funcgraph-retval-hex > trace_options
2864
2865  Example with funcgraph-retval-hex::
2866
2867    1)               |      cgroup_migrate() {
2868    1)   0.651 us    |        cgroup_migrate_add_task(); /* = 0xffff93fcfd346c00 */
2869    1)               |        cgroup_migrate_execute() {
2870    1)               |          cpu_cgroup_can_attach() {
2871    1)               |            cgroup_taskset_first() {
2872    1)   0.732 us    |              cgroup_taskset_next(); /* = 0xffff93fc8fb20000 */
2873    1)   1.232 us    |            } /* cgroup_taskset_first = 0xffff93fc8fb20000 */
2874    1)   0.380 us    |            sched_rt_can_attach(); /* = 0x0 */
2875    1)   2.335 us    |          } /* cpu_cgroup_can_attach = 0xffffffea */
2876    1)   4.369 us    |        } /* cgroup_migrate_execute = 0xffffffea */
2877    1)   7.143 us    |      } /* cgroup_migrate = 0xffffffea */
2878
2879At present, there are some limitations when using the funcgraph-retval
2880option, and these limitations will be eliminated in the future:
2881
2882- Even if the function return type is void, a return value will still
2883  be printed, and you can just ignore it.
2884
2885- Even if return values are stored in multiple registers, only the
2886  value contained in the first register will be recorded and printed.
2887  To illustrate, in the x86 architecture, eax and edx are used to store
2888  a 64-bit return value, with the lower 32 bits saved in eax and the
2889  upper 32 bits saved in edx. However, only the value stored in eax
2890  will be recorded and printed.
2891
2892- In certain procedure call standards, such as arm64's AAPCS64, when a
2893  type is smaller than a GPR, it is the responsibility of the consumer
2894  to perform the narrowing, and the upper bits may contain UNKNOWN values.
2895  Therefore, it is advisable to check the code for such cases. For instance,
2896  when using a u8 in a 64-bit GPR, bits [63:8] may contain arbitrary values,
2897  especially when larger types are truncated, whether explicitly or implicitly.
2898  Here are some specific cases to illustrate this point:
2899
2900  **Case One**:
2901
2902  The function narrow_to_u8 is defined as follows::
2903
2904	u8 narrow_to_u8(u64 val)
2905	{
2906		// implicitly truncated
2907		return val;
2908	}
2909
2910  It may be compiled to::
2911
2912	narrow_to_u8:
2913		< ... ftrace instrumentation ... >
2914		RET
2915
2916  If you pass 0x123456789abcdef to this function and want to narrow it,
2917  it may be recorded as 0x123456789abcdef instead of 0xef.
2918
2919  **Case Two**:
2920
2921  The function error_if_not_4g_aligned is defined as follows::
2922
2923	int error_if_not_4g_aligned(u64 val)
2924	{
2925		if (val & GENMASK(31, 0))
2926			return -EINVAL;
2927
2928		return 0;
2929	}
2930
2931  It could be compiled to::
2932
2933	error_if_not_4g_aligned:
2934		CBNZ    w0, .Lnot_aligned
2935		RET			// bits [31:0] are zero, bits
2936					// [63:32] are UNKNOWN
2937	.Lnot_aligned:
2938		MOV    x0, #-EINVAL
2939		RET
2940
2941  When passing 0x2_0000_0000 to it, the return value may be recorded as
2942  0x2_0000_0000 instead of 0.
2943
2944You can put some comments on specific functions by using
2945trace_printk() For example, if you want to put a comment inside
2946the __might_sleep() function, you just have to include
2947<linux/ftrace.h> and call trace_printk() inside __might_sleep()::
2948
2949	trace_printk("I'm a comment!\n")
2950
2951will produce::
2952
2953   1)               |             __might_sleep() {
2954   1)               |                /* I'm a comment! */
2955   1)   1.449 us    |             }
2956
2957
2958You might find other useful features for this tracer in the
2959following "dynamic ftrace" section such as tracing only specific
2960functions or tasks.
2961
2962dynamic ftrace
2963--------------
2964
2965If CONFIG_DYNAMIC_FTRACE is set, the system will run with
2966virtually no overhead when function tracing is disabled. The way
2967this works is the mcount function call (placed at the start of
2968every kernel function, produced by the -pg switch in gcc),
2969starts of pointing to a simple return. (Enabling FTRACE will
2970include the -pg switch in the compiling of the kernel.)
2971
2972At compile time every C file object is run through the
2973recordmcount program (located in the scripts directory). This
2974program will parse the ELF headers in the C object to find all
2975the locations in the .text section that call mcount. Starting
2976with gcc version 4.6, the -mfentry has been added for x86, which
2977calls "__fentry__" instead of "mcount". Which is called before
2978the creation of the stack frame.
2979
2980Note, not all sections are traced. They may be prevented by either
2981a notrace, or blocked another way and all inline functions are not
2982traced. Check the "available_filter_functions" file to see what functions
2983can be traced.
2984
2985A section called "__mcount_loc" is created that holds
2986references to all the mcount/fentry call sites in the .text section.
2987The recordmcount program re-links this section back into the
2988original object. The final linking stage of the kernel will add all these
2989references into a single table.
2990
2991On boot up, before SMP is initialized, the dynamic ftrace code
2992scans this table and updates all the locations into nops. It
2993also records the locations, which are added to the
2994available_filter_functions list.  Modules are processed as they
2995are loaded and before they are executed.  When a module is
2996unloaded, it also removes its functions from the ftrace function
2997list. This is automatic in the module unload code, and the
2998module author does not need to worry about it.
2999
3000When tracing is enabled, the process of modifying the function
3001tracepoints is dependent on architecture. The old method is to use
3002kstop_machine to prevent races with the CPUs executing code being
3003modified (which can cause the CPU to do undesirable things, especially
3004if the modified code crosses cache (or page) boundaries), and the nops are
3005patched back to calls. But this time, they do not call mcount
3006(which is just a function stub). They now call into the ftrace
3007infrastructure.
3008
3009The new method of modifying the function tracepoints is to place
3010a breakpoint at the location to be modified, sync all CPUs, modify
3011the rest of the instruction not covered by the breakpoint. Sync
3012all CPUs again, and then remove the breakpoint with the finished
3013version to the ftrace call site.
3014
3015Some archs do not even need to monkey around with the synchronization,
3016and can just slap the new code on top of the old without any
3017problems with other CPUs executing it at the same time.
3018
3019One special side-effect to the recording of the functions being
3020traced is that we can now selectively choose which functions we
3021wish to trace and which ones we want the mcount calls to remain
3022as nops.
3023
3024Two files are used, one for enabling and one for disabling the
3025tracing of specified functions. They are:
3026
3027  set_ftrace_filter
3028
3029and
3030
3031  set_ftrace_notrace
3032
3033A list of available functions that you can add to these files is
3034listed in:
3035
3036   available_filter_functions
3037
3038::
3039
3040  # cat available_filter_functions
3041  put_prev_task_idle
3042  kmem_cache_create
3043  pick_next_task_rt
3044  cpus_read_lock
3045  pick_next_task_fair
3046  mutex_lock
3047  [...]
3048
3049If I am only interested in sys_nanosleep and hrtimer_interrupt::
3050
3051  # echo sys_nanosleep hrtimer_interrupt > set_ftrace_filter
3052  # echo function > current_tracer
3053  # echo 1 > tracing_on
3054  # usleep 1
3055  # echo 0 > tracing_on
3056  # cat trace
3057  # tracer: function
3058  #
3059  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 5/5   #P:4
3060  #
3061  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
3062  #                             / _----=> need-resched
3063  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
3064  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
3065  #                            ||| /     delay
3066  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
3067  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
3068            usleep-2665  [001] ....  4186.475355: sys_nanosleep <-system_call_fastpath
3069            <idle>-0     [001] d.h1  4186.475409: hrtimer_interrupt <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
3070            usleep-2665  [001] d.h1  4186.475426: hrtimer_interrupt <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
3071            <idle>-0     [003] d.h1  4186.475426: hrtimer_interrupt <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
3072            <idle>-0     [002] d.h1  4186.475427: hrtimer_interrupt <-smp_apic_timer_interrupt
3073
3074To see which functions are being traced, you can cat the file:
3075::
3076
3077  # cat set_ftrace_filter
3078  hrtimer_interrupt
3079  sys_nanosleep
3080
3081
3082Perhaps this is not enough. The filters also allow glob(7) matching.
3083
3084  ``<match>*``
3085	will match functions that begin with <match>
3086  ``*<match>``
3087	will match functions that end with <match>
3088  ``*<match>*``
3089	will match functions that have <match> in it
3090  ``<match1>*<match2>``
3091	will match functions that begin with <match1> and end with <match2>
3092
3093.. note::
3094      It is better to use quotes to enclose the wild cards,
3095      otherwise the shell may expand the parameters into names
3096      of files in the local directory.
3097
3098::
3099
3100  # echo 'hrtimer_*' > set_ftrace_filter
3101
3102Produces::
3103
3104  # tracer: function
3105  #
3106  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 897/897   #P:4
3107  #
3108  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
3109  #                             / _----=> need-resched
3110  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
3111  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
3112  #                            ||| /     delay
3113  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
3114  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
3115            <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547803: hrtimer_cancel <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
3116            <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547804: hrtimer_try_to_cancel <-hrtimer_cancel
3117            <idle>-0     [003] dN.2  4228.547805: hrtimer_force_reprogram <-__remove_hrtimer
3118            <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547805: hrtimer_forward <-tick_nohz_idle_exit
3119            <idle>-0     [003] dN.1  4228.547805: hrtimer_start_range_ns <-hrtimer_start_expires.constprop.11
3120            <idle>-0     [003] d..1  4228.547858: hrtimer_get_next_event <-get_next_timer_interrupt
3121            <idle>-0     [003] d..1  4228.547859: hrtimer_start <-__tick_nohz_idle_enter
3122            <idle>-0     [003] d..2  4228.547860: hrtimer_force_reprogram <-__rem
3123
3124Notice that we lost the sys_nanosleep.
3125::
3126
3127  # cat set_ftrace_filter
3128  hrtimer_run_queues
3129  hrtimer_run_pending
3130  hrtimer_setup
3131  hrtimer_cancel
3132  hrtimer_try_to_cancel
3133  hrtimer_forward
3134  hrtimer_start
3135  hrtimer_reprogram
3136  hrtimer_force_reprogram
3137  hrtimer_get_next_event
3138  hrtimer_interrupt
3139  hrtimer_nanosleep
3140  hrtimer_wakeup
3141  hrtimer_get_remaining
3142  hrtimer_get_res
3143  hrtimer_init_sleeper
3144
3145
3146This is because the '>' and '>>' act just like they do in bash.
3147To rewrite the filters, use '>'
3148To append to the filters, use '>>'
3149
3150To clear out a filter so that all functions will be recorded
3151again::
3152
3153 # echo > set_ftrace_filter
3154 # cat set_ftrace_filter
3155 #
3156
3157Again, now we want to append.
3158
3159::
3160
3161  # echo sys_nanosleep > set_ftrace_filter
3162  # cat set_ftrace_filter
3163  sys_nanosleep
3164  # echo 'hrtimer_*' >> set_ftrace_filter
3165  # cat set_ftrace_filter
3166  hrtimer_run_queues
3167  hrtimer_run_pending
3168  hrtimer_setup
3169  hrtimer_cancel
3170  hrtimer_try_to_cancel
3171  hrtimer_forward
3172  hrtimer_start
3173  hrtimer_reprogram
3174  hrtimer_force_reprogram
3175  hrtimer_get_next_event
3176  hrtimer_interrupt
3177  sys_nanosleep
3178  hrtimer_nanosleep
3179  hrtimer_wakeup
3180  hrtimer_get_remaining
3181  hrtimer_get_res
3182  hrtimer_init_sleeper
3183
3184
3185The set_ftrace_notrace prevents those functions from being
3186traced.
3187::
3188
3189  # echo '*preempt*' '*lock*' > set_ftrace_notrace
3190
3191Produces::
3192
3193  # tracer: function
3194  #
3195  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 39608/39608   #P:4
3196  #
3197  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
3198  #                             / _----=> need-resched
3199  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
3200  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
3201  #                            ||| /     delay
3202  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
3203  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
3204              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324896: file_ra_state_init <-do_dentry_open
3205              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324897: open_check_o_direct <-do_last
3206              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324897: ima_file_check <-do_last
3207              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324898: process_measurement <-ima_file_check
3208              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324898: ima_get_action <-process_measurement
3209              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324898: ima_match_policy <-ima_get_action
3210              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324899: do_truncate <-do_last
3211              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324899: setattr_should_drop_suidgid <-do_truncate
3212              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324899: notify_change <-do_truncate
3213              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324900: current_fs_time <-notify_change
3214              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324900: current_kernel_time <-current_fs_time
3215              bash-1994  [000] ....  4342.324900: timespec_trunc <-current_fs_time
3216
3217We can see that there's no more lock or preempt tracing.
3218
3219Selecting function filters via index
3220------------------------------------
3221
3222Because processing of strings is expensive (the address of the function
3223needs to be looked up before comparing to the string being passed in),
3224an index can be used as well to enable functions. This is useful in the
3225case of setting thousands of specific functions at a time. By passing
3226in a list of numbers, no string processing will occur. Instead, the function
3227at the specific location in the internal array (which corresponds to the
3228functions in the "available_filter_functions" file), is selected.
3229
3230::
3231
3232  # echo 1 > set_ftrace_filter
3233
3234Will select the first function listed in "available_filter_functions"
3235
3236::
3237
3238  # head -1 available_filter_functions
3239  trace_initcall_finish_cb
3240
3241  # cat set_ftrace_filter
3242  trace_initcall_finish_cb
3243
3244  # head -50 available_filter_functions | tail -1
3245  x86_pmu_commit_txn
3246
3247  # echo 1 50 > set_ftrace_filter
3248  # cat set_ftrace_filter
3249  trace_initcall_finish_cb
3250  x86_pmu_commit_txn
3251
3252Dynamic ftrace with the function graph tracer
3253---------------------------------------------
3254
3255Although what has been explained above concerns both the
3256function tracer and the function-graph-tracer, there are some
3257special features only available in the function-graph tracer.
3258
3259If you want to trace only one function and all of its children,
3260you just have to echo its name into set_graph_function::
3261
3262 echo __do_fault > set_graph_function
3263
3264will produce the following "expanded" trace of the __do_fault()
3265function::
3266
3267   0)               |  __do_fault() {
3268   0)               |    filemap_fault() {
3269   0)               |      find_lock_page() {
3270   0)   0.804 us    |        find_get_page();
3271   0)               |        __might_sleep() {
3272   0)   1.329 us    |        }
3273   0)   3.904 us    |      }
3274   0)   4.979 us    |    }
3275   0)   0.653 us    |    _spin_lock();
3276   0)   0.578 us    |    page_add_file_rmap();
3277   0)   0.525 us    |    native_set_pte_at();
3278   0)   0.585 us    |    _spin_unlock();
3279   0)               |    unlock_page() {
3280   0)   0.541 us    |      page_waitqueue();
3281   0)   0.639 us    |      __wake_up_bit();
3282   0)   2.786 us    |    }
3283   0) + 14.237 us   |  }
3284   0)               |  __do_fault() {
3285   0)               |    filemap_fault() {
3286   0)               |      find_lock_page() {
3287   0)   0.698 us    |        find_get_page();
3288   0)               |        __might_sleep() {
3289   0)   1.412 us    |        }
3290   0)   3.950 us    |      }
3291   0)   5.098 us    |    }
3292   0)   0.631 us    |    _spin_lock();
3293   0)   0.571 us    |    page_add_file_rmap();
3294   0)   0.526 us    |    native_set_pte_at();
3295   0)   0.586 us    |    _spin_unlock();
3296   0)               |    unlock_page() {
3297   0)   0.533 us    |      page_waitqueue();
3298   0)   0.638 us    |      __wake_up_bit();
3299   0)   2.793 us    |    }
3300   0) + 14.012 us   |  }
3301
3302You can also expand several functions at once::
3303
3304 echo sys_open > set_graph_function
3305 echo sys_close >> set_graph_function
3306
3307Now if you want to go back to trace all functions you can clear
3308this special filter via::
3309
3310 echo > set_graph_function
3311
3312
3313ftrace_enabled
3314--------------
3315
3316Note, the proc sysctl ftrace_enable is a big on/off switch for the
3317function tracer. By default it is enabled (when function tracing is
3318enabled in the kernel). If it is disabled, all function tracing is
3319disabled. This includes not only the function tracers for ftrace, but
3320also for any other uses (perf, kprobes, stack tracing, profiling, etc). It
3321cannot be disabled if there is a callback with FTRACE_OPS_FL_PERMANENT set
3322registered.
3323
3324Please disable this with care.
3325
3326This can be disable (and enabled) with::
3327
3328  sysctl kernel.ftrace_enabled=0
3329  sysctl kernel.ftrace_enabled=1
3330
3331 or
3332
3333  echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/ftrace_enabled
3334  echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/ftrace_enabled
3335
3336
3337Filter commands
3338---------------
3339
3340A few commands are supported by the set_ftrace_filter interface.
3341Trace commands have the following format::
3342
3343  <function>:<command>:<parameter>
3344
3345The following commands are supported:
3346
3347- mod:
3348  This command enables function filtering per module. The
3349  parameter defines the module. For example, if only the write*
3350  functions in the ext3 module are desired, run:
3351
3352   echo 'write*:mod:ext3' > set_ftrace_filter
3353
3354  This command interacts with the filter in the same way as
3355  filtering based on function names. Thus, adding more functions
3356  in a different module is accomplished by appending (>>) to the
3357  filter file. Remove specific module functions by prepending
3358  '!'::
3359
3360   echo '!writeback*:mod:ext3' >> set_ftrace_filter
3361
3362  Mod command supports module globbing. Disable tracing for all
3363  functions except a specific module::
3364
3365   echo '!*:mod:!ext3' >> set_ftrace_filter
3366
3367  Disable tracing for all modules, but still trace kernel::
3368
3369   echo '!*:mod:*' >> set_ftrace_filter
3370
3371  Enable filter only for kernel::
3372
3373   echo '*write*:mod:!*' >> set_ftrace_filter
3374
3375  Enable filter for module globbing::
3376
3377   echo '*write*:mod:*snd*' >> set_ftrace_filter
3378
3379- traceon/traceoff:
3380  These commands turn tracing on and off when the specified
3381  functions are hit. The parameter determines how many times the
3382  tracing system is turned on and off. If unspecified, there is
3383  no limit. For example, to disable tracing when a schedule bug
3384  is hit the first 5 times, run::
3385
3386   echo '__schedule_bug:traceoff:5' > set_ftrace_filter
3387
3388  To always disable tracing when __schedule_bug is hit::
3389
3390   echo '__schedule_bug:traceoff' > set_ftrace_filter
3391
3392  These commands are cumulative whether or not they are appended
3393  to set_ftrace_filter. To remove a command, prepend it by '!'
3394  and drop the parameter::
3395
3396   echo '!__schedule_bug:traceoff:0' > set_ftrace_filter
3397
3398  The above removes the traceoff command for __schedule_bug
3399  that have a counter. To remove commands without counters::
3400
3401   echo '!__schedule_bug:traceoff' > set_ftrace_filter
3402
3403- snapshot:
3404  Will cause a snapshot to be triggered when the function is hit.
3405  ::
3406
3407   echo 'native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot' > set_ftrace_filter
3408
3409  To only snapshot once:
3410  ::
3411
3412   echo 'native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot:1' > set_ftrace_filter
3413
3414  To remove the above commands::
3415
3416   echo '!native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot' > set_ftrace_filter
3417   echo '!native_flush_tlb_others:snapshot:0' > set_ftrace_filter
3418
3419- enable_event/disable_event:
3420  These commands can enable or disable a trace event. Note, because
3421  function tracing callbacks are very sensitive, when these commands
3422  are registered, the trace point is activated, but disabled in
3423  a "soft" mode. That is, the tracepoint will be called, but
3424  just will not be traced. The event tracepoint stays in this mode
3425  as long as there's a command that triggers it.
3426  ::
3427
3428   echo 'try_to_wake_up:enable_event:sched:sched_switch:2' > \
3429   	 set_ftrace_filter
3430
3431  The format is::
3432
3433    <function>:enable_event:<system>:<event>[:count]
3434    <function>:disable_event:<system>:<event>[:count]
3435
3436  To remove the events commands::
3437
3438   echo '!try_to_wake_up:enable_event:sched:sched_switch:0' > \
3439   	 set_ftrace_filter
3440   echo '!schedule:disable_event:sched:sched_switch' > \
3441   	 set_ftrace_filter
3442
3443- dump:
3444  When the function is hit, it will dump the contents of the ftrace
3445  ring buffer to the console. This is useful if you need to debug
3446  something, and want to dump the trace when a certain function
3447  is hit. Perhaps it's a function that is called before a triple
3448  fault happens and does not allow you to get a regular dump.
3449
3450- cpudump:
3451  When the function is hit, it will dump the contents of the ftrace
3452  ring buffer for the current CPU to the console. Unlike the "dump"
3453  command, it only prints out the contents of the ring buffer for the
3454  CPU that executed the function that triggered the dump.
3455
3456- stacktrace:
3457  When the function is hit, a stack trace is recorded.
3458
3459trace_pipe
3460----------
3461
3462The trace_pipe outputs the same content as the trace file, but
3463the effect on the tracing is different. Every read from
3464trace_pipe is consumed. This means that subsequent reads will be
3465different. The trace is live.
3466::
3467
3468  # echo function > current_tracer
3469  # cat trace_pipe > /tmp/trace.out &
3470  [1] 4153
3471  # echo 1 > tracing_on
3472  # usleep 1
3473  # echo 0 > tracing_on
3474  # cat trace
3475  # tracer: function
3476  #
3477  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 0/0   #P:4
3478  #
3479  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
3480  #                             / _----=> need-resched
3481  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
3482  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
3483  #                            ||| /     delay
3484  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
3485  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
3486
3487  #
3488  # cat /tmp/trace.out
3489             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568961: mutex_unlock <-rb_simple_write
3490             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568963: __mutex_unlock_slowpath <-mutex_unlock
3491             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568963: __fsnotify_parent <-fsnotify_modify
3492             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568964: fsnotify <-fsnotify_modify
3493             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568964: __srcu_read_lock <-fsnotify
3494             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568964: add_preempt_count <-__srcu_read_lock
3495             bash-1994  [000] ...1  5281.568965: sub_preempt_count <-__srcu_read_lock
3496             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568965: __srcu_read_unlock <-fsnotify
3497             bash-1994  [000] ....  5281.568967: sys_dup2 <-system_call_fastpath
3498
3499
3500Note, reading the trace_pipe file will block until more input is
3501added. This is contrary to the trace file. If any process opened
3502the trace file for reading, it will actually disable tracing and
3503prevent new entries from being added. The trace_pipe file does
3504not have this limitation.
3505
3506trace entries
3507-------------
3508
3509Having too much or not enough data can be troublesome in
3510diagnosing an issue in the kernel. The file buffer_size_kb is
3511used to modify the size of the internal trace buffers. The
3512number listed is the number of entries that can be recorded per
3513CPU. To know the full size, multiply the number of possible CPUs
3514with the number of entries.
3515::
3516
3517  # cat buffer_size_kb
3518  1408 (units kilobytes)
3519
3520Or simply read buffer_total_size_kb
3521::
3522
3523  # cat buffer_total_size_kb
3524  5632
3525
3526To modify the buffer, simple echo in a number (in 1024 byte segments).
3527::
3528
3529  # echo 10000 > buffer_size_kb
3530  # cat buffer_size_kb
3531  10000 (units kilobytes)
3532
3533It will try to allocate as much as possible. If you allocate too
3534much, it can cause Out-Of-Memory to trigger.
3535::
3536
3537  # echo 1000000000000 > buffer_size_kb
3538  -bash: echo: write error: Cannot allocate memory
3539  # cat buffer_size_kb
3540  85
3541
3542The per_cpu buffers can be changed individually as well:
3543::
3544
3545  # echo 10000 > per_cpu/cpu0/buffer_size_kb
3546  # echo 100 > per_cpu/cpu1/buffer_size_kb
3547
3548When the per_cpu buffers are not the same, the buffer_size_kb
3549at the top level will just show an X
3550::
3551
3552  # cat buffer_size_kb
3553  X
3554
3555This is where the buffer_total_size_kb is useful:
3556::
3557
3558  # cat buffer_total_size_kb
3559  12916
3560
3561Writing to the top level buffer_size_kb will reset all the buffers
3562to be the same again.
3563
3564Snapshot
3565--------
3566CONFIG_TRACER_SNAPSHOT makes a generic snapshot feature
3567available to all non latency tracers. (Latency tracers which
3568record max latency, such as "irqsoff" or "wakeup", can't use
3569this feature, since those are already using the snapshot
3570mechanism internally.)
3571
3572Snapshot preserves a current trace buffer at a particular point
3573in time without stopping tracing. Ftrace swaps the current
3574buffer with a spare buffer, and tracing continues in the new
3575current (=previous spare) buffer.
3576
3577The following tracefs files in "tracing" are related to this
3578feature:
3579
3580  snapshot:
3581
3582	This is used to take a snapshot and to read the output
3583	of the snapshot. Echo 1 into this file to allocate a
3584	spare buffer and to take a snapshot (swap), then read
3585	the snapshot from this file in the same format as
3586	"trace" (described above in the section "The File
3587	System"). Both reads snapshot and tracing are executable
3588	in parallel. When the spare buffer is allocated, echoing
3589	0 frees it, and echoing else (positive) values clear the
3590	snapshot contents.
3591	More details are shown in the table below.
3592
3593	+--------------+------------+------------+------------+
3594	|status\\input |     0      |     1      |    else    |
3595	+==============+============+============+============+
3596	|not allocated |(do nothing)| alloc+swap |(do nothing)|
3597	+--------------+------------+------------+------------+
3598	|allocated     |    free    |    swap    |   clear    |
3599	+--------------+------------+------------+------------+
3600
3601Here is an example of using the snapshot feature.
3602::
3603
3604  # echo 1 > events/sched/enable
3605  # echo 1 > snapshot
3606  # cat snapshot
3607  # tracer: nop
3608  #
3609  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 71/71   #P:8
3610  #
3611  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
3612  #                             / _----=> need-resched
3613  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
3614  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
3615  #                            ||| /     delay
3616  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
3617  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
3618            <idle>-0     [005] d...  2440.603828: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/5 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120   prev_state=R ==> next_comm=snapshot-test-2 next_pid=2242 next_prio=120
3619             sleep-2242  [005] d...  2440.603846: sched_switch: prev_comm=snapshot-test-2 prev_pid=2242 prev_prio=120   prev_state=R ==> next_comm=kworker/5:1 next_pid=60 next_prio=120
3620  [...]
3621          <idle>-0     [002] d...  2440.707230: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/2 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R ==> next_comm=snapshot-test-2 next_pid=2229 next_prio=120
3622
3623  # cat trace
3624  # tracer: nop
3625  #
3626  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 77/77   #P:8
3627  #
3628  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
3629  #                             / _----=> need-resched
3630  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
3631  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
3632  #                            ||| /     delay
3633  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
3634  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
3635            <idle>-0     [007] d...  2440.707395: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/7 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R ==> next_comm=snapshot-test-2 next_pid=2243 next_prio=120
3636   snapshot-test-2-2229  [002] d...  2440.707438: sched_switch: prev_comm=snapshot-test-2 prev_pid=2229 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=swapper/2 next_pid=0 next_prio=120
3637  [...]
3638
3639
3640If you try to use this snapshot feature when current tracer is
3641one of the latency tracers, you will get the following results.
3642::
3643
3644  # echo wakeup > current_tracer
3645  # echo 1 > snapshot
3646  bash: echo: write error: Device or resource busy
3647  # cat snapshot
3648  cat: snapshot: Device or resource busy
3649
3650
3651Instances
3652---------
3653In the tracefs tracing directory, there is a directory called "instances".
3654This directory can have new directories created inside of it using
3655mkdir, and removing directories with rmdir. The directory created
3656with mkdir in this directory will already contain files and other
3657directories after it is created.
3658::
3659
3660  # mkdir instances/foo
3661  # ls instances/foo
3662  buffer_size_kb  buffer_total_size_kb  events  free_buffer  per_cpu
3663  set_event  snapshot  trace  trace_clock  trace_marker  trace_options
3664  trace_pipe  tracing_on
3665
3666As you can see, the new directory looks similar to the tracing directory
3667itself. In fact, it is very similar, except that the buffer and
3668events are agnostic from the main directory, or from any other
3669instances that are created.
3670
3671The files in the new directory work just like the files with the
3672same name in the tracing directory except the buffer that is used
3673is a separate and new buffer. The files affect that buffer but do not
3674affect the main buffer with the exception of trace_options. Currently,
3675the trace_options affect all instances and the top level buffer
3676the same, but this may change in future releases. That is, options
3677may become specific to the instance they reside in.
3678
3679Notice that none of the function tracer files are there, nor is
3680current_tracer and available_tracers. This is because the buffers
3681can currently only have events enabled for them.
3682::
3683
3684  # mkdir instances/foo
3685  # mkdir instances/bar
3686  # mkdir instances/zoot
3687  # echo 100000 > buffer_size_kb
3688  # echo 1000 > instances/foo/buffer_size_kb
3689  # echo 5000 > instances/bar/per_cpu/cpu1/buffer_size_kb
3690  # echo function > current_trace
3691  # echo 1 > instances/foo/events/sched/sched_wakeup/enable
3692  # echo 1 > instances/foo/events/sched/sched_wakeup_new/enable
3693  # echo 1 > instances/foo/events/sched/sched_switch/enable
3694  # echo 1 > instances/bar/events/irq/enable
3695  # echo 1 > instances/zoot/events/syscalls/enable
3696  # cat trace_pipe
3697  CPU:2 [LOST 11745 EVENTS]
3698              bash-2044  [002] .... 10594.481032: _raw_spin_lock_irqsave <-get_page_from_freelist
3699              bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481032: add_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_lock_irqsave
3700              bash-2044  [002] d..1 10594.481032: __rmqueue <-get_page_from_freelist
3701              bash-2044  [002] d..1 10594.481033: _raw_spin_unlock <-get_page_from_freelist
3702              bash-2044  [002] d..1 10594.481033: sub_preempt_count <-_raw_spin_unlock
3703              bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481033: get_pageblock_flags_group <-get_pageblock_migratetype
3704              bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481034: __mod_zone_page_state <-get_page_from_freelist
3705              bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481034: zone_statistics <-get_page_from_freelist
3706              bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481034: __inc_zone_state <-zone_statistics
3707              bash-2044  [002] d... 10594.481034: __inc_zone_state <-zone_statistics
3708              bash-2044  [002] .... 10594.481035: arch_dup_task_struct <-copy_process
3709  [...]
3710
3711  # cat instances/foo/trace_pipe
3712              bash-1998  [000] d..4   136.676759: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/0:1 pid=59 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=000
3713              bash-1998  [000] dN.4   136.676760: sched_wakeup: comm=bash pid=1998 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=000
3714            <idle>-0     [003] d.h3   136.676906: sched_wakeup: comm=rcu_preempt pid=9 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=003
3715            <idle>-0     [003] d..3   136.676909: sched_switch: prev_comm=swapper/3 prev_pid=0 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R ==> next_comm=rcu_preempt next_pid=9 next_prio=120
3716       rcu_preempt-9     [003] d..3   136.676916: sched_switch: prev_comm=rcu_preempt prev_pid=9 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=swapper/3 next_pid=0 next_prio=120
3717              bash-1998  [000] d..4   136.677014: sched_wakeup: comm=kworker/0:1 pid=59 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=000
3718              bash-1998  [000] dN.4   136.677016: sched_wakeup: comm=bash pid=1998 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=000
3719              bash-1998  [000] d..3   136.677018: sched_switch: prev_comm=bash prev_pid=1998 prev_prio=120 prev_state=R+ ==> next_comm=kworker/0:1 next_pid=59 next_prio=120
3720       kworker/0:1-59    [000] d..4   136.677022: sched_wakeup: comm=sshd pid=1995 prio=120 success=1 target_cpu=001
3721       kworker/0:1-59    [000] d..3   136.677025: sched_switch: prev_comm=kworker/0:1 prev_pid=59 prev_prio=120 prev_state=S ==> next_comm=bash next_pid=1998 next_prio=120
3722  [...]
3723
3724  # cat instances/bar/trace_pipe
3725       migration/1-14    [001] d.h3   138.732674: softirq_raise: vec=3 [action=NET_RX]
3726            <idle>-0     [001] dNh3   138.732725: softirq_raise: vec=3 [action=NET_RX]
3727              bash-1998  [000] d.h1   138.733101: softirq_raise: vec=1 [action=TIMER]
3728              bash-1998  [000] d.h1   138.733102: softirq_raise: vec=9 [action=RCU]
3729              bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733105: softirq_entry: vec=1 [action=TIMER]
3730              bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733106: softirq_exit: vec=1 [action=TIMER]
3731              bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733106: softirq_entry: vec=9 [action=RCU]
3732              bash-1998  [000] ..s2   138.733109: softirq_exit: vec=9 [action=RCU]
3733              sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733278: irq_handler_entry: irq=21 name=uhci_hcd:usb4
3734              sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733280: irq_handler_exit: irq=21 ret=unhandled
3735              sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733281: irq_handler_entry: irq=21 name=eth0
3736              sshd-1995  [001] d.h1   138.733283: irq_handler_exit: irq=21 ret=handled
3737  [...]
3738
3739  # cat instances/zoot/trace
3740  # tracer: nop
3741  #
3742  # entries-in-buffer/entries-written: 18996/18996   #P:4
3743  #
3744  #                              _-----=> irqs-off
3745  #                             / _----=> need-resched
3746  #                            | / _---=> hardirq/softirq
3747  #                            || / _--=> preempt-depth
3748  #                            ||| /     delay
3749  #           TASK-PID   CPU#  ||||    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
3750  #              | |       |   ||||       |         |
3751              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733501: sys_write -> 0x2
3752              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733504: sys_dup2(oldfd: a, newfd: 1)
3753              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733506: sys_dup2 -> 0x1
3754              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733508: sys_fcntl(fd: a, cmd: 1, arg: 0)
3755              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733509: sys_fcntl -> 0x1
3756              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733510: sys_close(fd: a)
3757              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733510: sys_close -> 0x0
3758              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733514: sys_rt_sigprocmask(how: 0, nset: 0, oset: 6e2768, sigsetsize: 8)
3759              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733515: sys_rt_sigprocmask -> 0x0
3760              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733516: sys_rt_sigaction(sig: 2, act: 7fff718846f0, oact: 7fff71884650, sigsetsize: 8)
3761              bash-1998  [000] d...   140.733516: sys_rt_sigaction -> 0x0
3762
3763You can see that the trace of the top most trace buffer shows only
3764the function tracing. The foo instance displays wakeups and task
3765switches.
3766
3767To remove the instances, simply delete their directories:
3768::
3769
3770  # rmdir instances/foo
3771  # rmdir instances/bar
3772  # rmdir instances/zoot
3773
3774Note, if a process has a trace file open in one of the instance
3775directories, the rmdir will fail with EBUSY.
3776
3777
3778Stack trace
3779-----------
3780Since the kernel has a fixed sized stack, it is important not to
3781waste it in functions. A kernel developer must be conscious of
3782what they allocate on the stack. If they add too much, the system
3783can be in danger of a stack overflow, and corruption will occur,
3784usually leading to a system panic.
3785
3786There are some tools that check this, usually with interrupts
3787periodically checking usage. But if you can perform a check
3788at every function call that will become very useful. As ftrace provides
3789a function tracer, it makes it convenient to check the stack size
3790at every function call. This is enabled via the stack tracer.
3791
3792CONFIG_STACK_TRACER enables the ftrace stack tracing functionality.
3793To enable it, write a '1' into /proc/sys/kernel/stack_tracer_enabled.
3794::
3795
3796 # echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/stack_tracer_enabled
3797
3798You can also enable it from the kernel command line to trace
3799the stack size of the kernel during boot up, by adding "stacktrace"
3800to the kernel command line parameter.
3801
3802After running it for a few minutes, the output looks like:
3803::
3804
3805  # cat stack_max_size
3806  2928
3807
3808  # cat stack_trace
3809          Depth    Size   Location    (18 entries)
3810          -----    ----   --------
3811    0)     2928     224   update_sd_lb_stats+0xbc/0x4ac
3812    1)     2704     160   find_busiest_group+0x31/0x1f1
3813    2)     2544     256   load_balance+0xd9/0x662
3814    3)     2288      80   idle_balance+0xbb/0x130
3815    4)     2208     128   __schedule+0x26e/0x5b9
3816    5)     2080      16   schedule+0x64/0x66
3817    6)     2064     128   schedule_timeout+0x34/0xe0
3818    7)     1936     112   wait_for_common+0x97/0xf1
3819    8)     1824      16   wait_for_completion+0x1d/0x1f
3820    9)     1808     128   flush_work+0xfe/0x119
3821   10)     1680      16   tty_flush_to_ldisc+0x1e/0x20
3822   11)     1664      48   input_available_p+0x1d/0x5c
3823   12)     1616      48   n_tty_poll+0x6d/0x134
3824   13)     1568      64   tty_poll+0x64/0x7f
3825   14)     1504     880   do_select+0x31e/0x511
3826   15)      624     400   core_sys_select+0x177/0x216
3827   16)      224      96   sys_select+0x91/0xb9
3828   17)      128     128   system_call_fastpath+0x16/0x1b
3829
3830Note, if -mfentry is being used by gcc, functions get traced before
3831they set up the stack frame. This means that leaf level functions
3832are not tested by the stack tracer when -mfentry is used.
3833
3834Currently, -mfentry is used by gcc 4.6.0 and above on x86 only.
3835
3836More
3837----
3838More details can be found in the source code, in the `kernel/trace/*.c` files.
3839