perf-probe.txt 10.7 KB
Newer Older
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
perf-probe(1)
=============

NAME
----
perf-probe - Define new dynamic tracepoints

SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
11
'perf probe' [options] --add='PROBE' [...]
12
or
13 14 15 16
'perf probe' [options] PROBE
or
'perf probe' [options] --del='[GROUP:]EVENT' [...]
or
17
'perf probe' --list[=[GROUP:]EVENT]
18
or
19
'perf probe' [options] --line='LINE'
20
or
21
'perf probe' [options] --vars='PROBEPOINT'
22 23
or
'perf probe' [options] --funcs
24 25
or
'perf probe' [options] --definition='PROBE' [...]
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36

DESCRIPTION
-----------
This command defines dynamic tracepoint events, by symbol and registers
without debuginfo, or by C expressions (C line numbers, C function names,
and C local variables) with debuginfo.


OPTIONS
-------
-k::
37
--vmlinux=PATH::
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
38
	Specify vmlinux path which has debuginfo (Dwarf binary).
39 40
	Only when using this with --definition, you can give an offline
	vmlinux file.
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
41

42
-m::
43
--module=MODNAME|PATH::
44
	Specify module name in which perf-probe searches probe points
45 46 47
	or lines. If a path of module file is passed, perf-probe
	treat it as an offline module (this means you can add a probe on
        a module which has not been loaded yet).
48

49 50 51 52
-s::
--source=PATH::
	Specify path to kernel source.

M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
53 54 55
-v::
--verbose::
        Be more verbose (show parsed arguments, etc).
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
56 57 58 59 60 61
	Can not use with -q.

-q::
--quiet::
	Be quiet (do not show any messages including errors).
	Can not use with -v.
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
62

63
-a::
64 65 66 67 68
--add=::
	Define a probe event (see PROBE SYNTAX for detail).

-d::
--del=::
69 70
	Delete probe events. This accepts glob wildcards('*', '?') and character
	classes(e.g. [a-z], [!A-Z]).
71 72

-l::
73
--list[=[GROUP:]EVENT]::
74 75 76 77
	List up current probe events. This can also accept filtering patterns of
	event names.
	When this is used with --cache, perf shows all cached probes instead of
	the live probes.
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
78

79 80 81
-L::
--line=::
	Show source code lines which can be probed. This needs an argument
82 83
	which specifies a range of the source code. (see LINE SYNTAX for detail)

84 85 86 87 88
-V::
--vars=::
	Show available local variables at given probe point. The argument
	syntax is same as PROBE SYNTAX, but NO ARGs.

89 90 91 92
--externs::
	(Only for --vars) Show external defined variables in addition to local
	variables.

93 94 95 96
--no-inlines::
	(Only for --add) Search only for non-inlined functions. The functions
	which do not have instances are ignored.

97
-F::
98
--funcs[=FILTER]::
99 100
	Show available functions in given module or kernel. With -x/--exec,
	can also list functions in a user space executable / shared library.
101
	This also can accept a FILTER rule argument.
102

103 104 105 106 107
-D::
--definition=::
	Show trace-event definition converted from given probe-event instead
	of write it into tracing/[k,u]probe_events.

108
--filter=FILTER::
109 110 111 112 113
	(Only for --vars and --funcs) Set filter. FILTER is a combination of glob
	pattern, see FILTER PATTERN for detail.
	Default FILTER is "!__k???tab_* & !__crc_*" for --vars, and "!_*"
	for --funcs.
	If several filters are specified, only the last filter is used.
114

115 116 117
-f::
--force::
	Forcibly add events with existing name.
118

119 120 121 122 123
-n::
--dry-run::
	Dry run. With this option, --add and --del doesn't execute actual
	adding and removal operations.

124
--cache::
125
	(With --add) Cache the probes. Any events which successfully added
126
	are also stored in the cache file.
127
	(With --list) Show cached probes.
128
	(With --del) Remove cached probes.
129

M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
130
--max-probes=NUM::
131 132
	Set the maximum number of probe points for an event. Default is 128.

133 134 135 136 137
-x::
--exec=PATH::
	Specify path to the executable or shared library file for user
	space tracing. Can also be used with --funcs option.

M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
138 139 140 141
--demangle::
	Demangle application symbols. --no-demangle is also available
	for disabling demangling.

142
--demangle-kernel::
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
143 144
	Demangle kernel symbols. --no-demangle-kernel is also available
	for disabling kernel demangling.
145

146 147 148 149
In absence of -m/-x options, perf probe checks if the first argument after
the options is an absolute path name. If its an absolute path, perf probe
uses it as a target module/target user space binary to probe.

M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
150 151 152 153
PROBE SYNTAX
------------
Probe points are defined by following syntax.

154
    1) Define event based on function name
155
     [[GROUP:]EVENT=]FUNC[@SRC][:RLN|+OFFS|%return|;PTN] [ARG ...]
156 157

    2) Define event based on source file with line number
158
     [[GROUP:]EVENT=]SRC:ALN [ARG ...]
159 160

    3) Define event based on source file with lazy pattern
161
     [[GROUP:]EVENT=]SRC;PTN [ARG ...]
162

163
    4) Pre-defined SDT events or cached event with name
164 165 166
     %[sdt_PROVIDER:]SDTEVENT
     or,
     sdt_PROVIDER:SDTEVENT
M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
167

168 169 170
'EVENT' specifies the name of new event, if omitted, it will be set the name of the probed function. You can also specify a group name by 'GROUP', if omitted, set 'probe' is used for kprobe and 'probe_<bin>' is used for uprobe.
Note that using existing group name can conflict with other events. Especially, using the group name reserved for kernel modules can hide embedded events in the
modules.
171 172
'FUNC' specifies a probed function name, and it may have one of the following options; '+OFFS' is the offset from function entry address in bytes, ':RLN' is the relative-line number from function entry line, and '%return' means that it probes function return. And ';PTN' means lazy matching pattern (see LAZY MATCHING). Note that ';PTN' must be the end of the probe point definition.  In addition, '@SRC' specifies a source file which has that function.
It is also possible to specify a probe point by the source line number or lazy matching by using 'SRC:ALN' or 'SRC;PTN' syntax, where 'SRC' is the source file path, ':ALN' is the line number and ';PTN' is the lazy matching pattern.
173
'ARG' specifies the arguments of this probe point, (see PROBE ARGUMENT).
174 175 176 177 178
'SDTEVENT' and 'PROVIDER' is the pre-defined event name which is defined by user SDT (Statically Defined Tracing) or the pre-cached probes with event name.
Note that before using the SDT event, the target binary (on which SDT events are defined) must be scanned by linkperf:perf-buildid-cache[1] to make SDT events as cached events.

For details of the SDT, see below.
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Static-Probe-Points.html
179 180 181 182 183

PROBE ARGUMENT
--------------
Each probe argument follows below syntax.

184
 [NAME=]LOCALVAR|$retval|%REG|@SYMBOL[:TYPE]
185

186
'NAME' specifies the name of this argument (optional). You can use the name of local variable, local data structure member (e.g. var->field, var.field2), local array with fixed index (e.g. array[1], var->array[0], var->pointer[2]), or kprobe-tracer argument format (e.g. $retval, %ax, etc). Note that the name of this argument will be set as the last member name if you specify a local data structure member (e.g. field2 for 'var->field1.field2'.)
187
'$vars' and '$params' special arguments are also available for NAME, '$vars' is expanded to the local variables (including function parameters) which can access at given probe point. '$params' is expanded to only the function parameters.
188
'TYPE' casts the type of this argument (optional). If omitted, perf probe automatically set the type based on debuginfo (*). Currently, basic types (u8/u16/u32/u64/s8/s16/s32/s64), hexadecimal integers (x/x8/x16/x32/x64), signedness casting (u/s), "string" and bitfield are supported. (see TYPES for detail)
189 190
On x86 systems %REG is always the short form of the register: for example %AX. %RAX or %EAX is not valid.

191 192
TYPES
-----
193
Basic types (u8/u16/u32/u64/s8/s16/s32/s64) and hexadecimal integers (x8/x16/x32/x64) are integer types. Prefix 's' and 'u' means those types are signed and unsigned respectively, and 'x' means that is shown in hexadecimal format. Traced arguments are shown in decimal (sNN/uNN) or hex (xNN). You can also use 's' or 'u' to specify only signedness and leave its size auto-detected by perf probe. Moreover, you can use 'x' to explicitly specify to be shown in hexadecimal (the size is also auto-detected).
194 195 196 197 198
String type is a special type, which fetches a "null-terminated" string from kernel space. This means it will fail and store NULL if the string container has been paged out. You can specify 'string' type only for the local variable or structure member which is an array of or a pointer to 'char' or 'unsigned char' type.
Bitfield is another special type, which takes 3 parameters, bit-width, bit-offset, and container-size (usually 32). The syntax is;

 b<bit-width>@<bit-offset>/<container-size>

199 200
LINE SYNTAX
-----------
201
Line range is described by following syntax.
202

203
 "FUNC[@SRC][:RLN[+NUM|-RLN2]]|SRC[:ALN[+NUM|-ALN2]]"
204 205 206 207 208

FUNC specifies the function name of showing lines. 'RLN' is the start line
number from function entry line, and 'RLN2' is the end line number. As same as
probe syntax, 'SRC' means the source file path, 'ALN' is start line number,
and 'ALN2' is end line number in the file. It is also possible to specify how
209 210
many lines to show by using 'NUM'. Moreover, 'FUNC@SRC' combination is good
for searching a specific function when several functions share same name.
211 212
So, "source.c:100-120" shows lines between 100th to l20th in source.c file. And "func:10+20" shows 20 lines from 10th line of func function.

213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221
LAZY MATCHING
-------------
 The lazy line matching is similar to glob matching but ignoring spaces in both of pattern and target. So this accepts wildcards('*', '?') and character classes(e.g. [a-z], [!A-Z]).

e.g.
 'a=*' can matches 'a=b', 'a = b', 'a == b' and so on.

This provides some sort of flexibility and robustness to probe point definitions against minor code changes. For example, actual 10th line of schedule() can be moved easily by modifying schedule(), but the same line matching 'rq=cpu_rq*' may still exist in the function.)

222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229
FILTER PATTERN
--------------
 The filter pattern is a glob matching pattern(s) to filter variables.
 In addition, you can use "!" for specifying filter-out rule. You also can give several rules combined with "&" or "|", and fold those rules as one rule by using "(" ")".

e.g.
 With --filter "foo* | bar*", perf probe -V shows variables which start with "foo" or "bar".
 With --filter "!foo* & *bar", perf probe -V shows variables which don't start with "foo" and end with "bar", like "fizzbar". But "foobar" is filtered out.
230

231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244
EXAMPLES
--------
Display which lines in schedule() can be probed:

 ./perf probe --line schedule

Add a probe on schedule() function 12th line with recording cpu local variable:

 ./perf probe schedule:12 cpu
 or
 ./perf probe --add='schedule:12 cpu'

 this will add one or more probes which has the name start with "schedule".

245 246 247 248 249 250
 Add probes on lines in schedule() function which calls update_rq_clock().

 ./perf probe 'schedule;update_rq_clock*'
 or
 ./perf probe --add='schedule;update_rq_clock*'

251 252 253 254
Delete all probes on schedule().

 ./perf probe --del='schedule*'

255 256
Add probes at zfree() function on /bin/zsh

257
 ./perf probe -x /bin/zsh zfree or ./perf probe /bin/zsh zfree
258 259 260

Add probes at malloc() function on libc

261
 ./perf probe -x /lib/libc.so.6 malloc or ./perf probe /lib/libc.so.6 malloc
262

M
Masami Hiramatsu 已提交
263 264
SEE ALSO
--------
265
linkperf:perf-trace[1], linkperf:perf-record[1], linkperf:perf-buildid-cache[1]