tracing.txt 15.6 KB
Newer Older
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
= Tracing =

== Introduction ==

This document describes the tracing infrastructure in QEMU and how to use it
for debugging, profiling, and observing execution.

== Quickstart ==

1. Build with the 'simple' trace backend:

L
Lluís Vilanova 已提交
12
    ./configure --enable-trace-backends=simple
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
13 14
    make

15
2. Create a file with the events you want to trace:
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
16

17 18
   echo bdrv_aio_readv   > /tmp/events
   echo bdrv_aio_writev >> /tmp/events
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
19

20 21 22 23 24
3. Run the virtual machine to produce a trace file:

    qemu -trace events=/tmp/events ... # your normal QEMU invocation

4. Pretty-print the binary trace file:
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
25

26
    ./scripts/simpletrace.py trace-events-all trace-* # Override * with QEMU <pid>
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
27 28 29

== Trace events ==

30
=== Sub-directory setup ===
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
31

32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67
Each directory in the source tree can declare a set of static trace events
in a local "trace-events" file. All directories which contain "trace-events"
files must be listed in the "trace-events-subdirs" make variable in the top
level Makefile.objs. During build, the "trace-events" file in each listed
subdirectory will be processed by the "tracetool" script to generate code for
the trace events.

The individual "trace-events" files are merged into a "trace-events-all" file,
which is also installed into "/usr/share/qemu" with the name "trace-events".
This merged file is to be used by the "simpletrace.py" script to later analyse
traces in the simpletrace data format.

In the sub-directory the following files will be automatically generated

 - trace.c - the trace event state declarations
 - trace.h - the trace event enums and probe functions
 - trace-dtrace.h - DTrace event probe specification
 - trace-dtrace.dtrace - DTrace event probe helper declaration
 - trace-dtrace.o - binary DTrace provider (generated by dtrace)
 - trace-ust.h - UST event probe helper declarations

Source files in the sub-directory should #include the local 'trace.h' file,
without any sub-directory path prefix. eg io/channel-buffer.c would do

  #include "trace.h"

To access the 'io/trace.h' file. While it is possible to include a trace.h
file from outside a source files' own sub-directory, this is discouraged in
general. It is strongly preferred that all events be declared directly in
the sub-directory that uses them. The only exception is where there are some
shared trace events defined in the top level directory trace-events file.
The top level directory generates trace files with a filename prefix of
"trace-root" instead of just "trace". This is to avoid ambiguity between
a trace.h in the current directory, vs the top level directory.

=== Using trace events ===
68 69

Trace events are invoked directly from source code like this:
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
70 71

    #include "trace.h"  /* needed for trace event prototype */
72
    
73
    void *qemu_vmalloc(size_t size)
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
74 75
    {
        void *ptr;
76 77 78 79
        size_t align = QEMU_VMALLOC_ALIGN;
     
        if (size < align) {
            align = getpagesize();
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
80
        }
81 82
        ptr = qemu_memalign(align, size);
        trace_qemu_vmalloc(size, ptr);
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
83 84 85 86 87
        return ptr;
    }

=== Declaring trace events ===

88
The "tracetool" script produces the trace.h header file which is included by
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
89
every source file that uses trace events.  Since many source files include
90 91
trace.h, it uses a minimum of types and other header files included to keep the
namespace clean and compile times and dependencies down.
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107

Trace events should use types as follows:

 * Use stdint.h types for fixed-size types.  Most offsets and guest memory
   addresses are best represented with uint32_t or uint64_t.  Use fixed-size
   types over primitive types whose size may change depending on the host
   (32-bit versus 64-bit) so trace events don't truncate values or break
   the build.

 * Use void * for pointers to structs or for arrays.  The trace.h header
   cannot include all user-defined struct declarations and it is therefore
   necessary to use void * for pointers to structs.

 * For everything else, use primitive scalar types (char, int, long) with the
   appropriate signedness.

108 109
Format strings should reflect the types defined in the trace event.  Take
special care to use PRId64 and PRIu64 for int64_t and uint64_t types,
110
respectively.  This ensures portability between 32- and 64-bit platforms.
111

112 113 114 115 116 117 118
Each event declaration will start with the event name, then its arguments,
finally a format string for pretty-printing. For example:

    qemu_vmalloc(size_t size, void *ptr) "size %zu ptr %p"
    qemu_vfree(void *ptr) "ptr %p"


S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137
=== Hints for adding new trace events ===

1. Trace state changes in the code.  Interesting points in the code usually
   involve a state change like starting, stopping, allocating, freeing.  State
   changes are good trace events because they can be used to understand the
   execution of the system.

2. Trace guest operations.  Guest I/O accesses like reading device registers
   are good trace events because they can be used to understand guest
   interactions.

3. Use correlator fields so the context of an individual line of trace output
   can be understood.  For example, trace the pointer returned by malloc and
   used as an argument to free.  This way mallocs and frees can be matched up.
   Trace events with no context are not very useful.

4. Name trace events after their function.  If there are multiple trace events
   in one function, append a unique distinguisher at the end of the name.

138 139
== Generic interface and monitor commands ==

140 141
You can programmatically query and control the state of trace events through a
backend-agnostic interface provided by the header "trace/control.h".
142

143 144 145
Note that some of the backends do not provide an implementation for some parts
of this interface, in which case QEMU will just print a warning (please refer to
header "trace/control.h" to see which routines are backend-dependent).
146

147
The state of events can also be queried and modified through monitor commands:
148 149 150 151 152 153

* info trace-events
  View available trace events and their state.  State 1 means enabled, state 0
  means disabled.

* trace-event NAME on|off
154
  Enable/disable a given trace event or a group of events (using wildcards).
155

156 157 158 159
The "-trace events=<file>" command line argument can be used to enable the
events listed in <file> from the very beginning of the program. This file must
contain one event name per line.

160 161 162 163
If a line in the "-trace events=<file>" file begins with a '-', the trace event
will be disabled instead of enabled.  This is useful when a wildcard was used
to enable an entire family of events but one noisy event needs to be disabled.

164 165 166 167 168 169 170
Wildcard matching is supported in both the monitor command "trace-event" and the
events list file. That means you can enable/disable the events having a common
prefix in a batch. For example, virtio-blk trace events could be enabled using
the following monitor command:

    trace-event virtio_blk_* on

S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
171 172
== Trace backends ==

173
The "tracetool" script automates tedious trace event code generation and also
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
174 175
keeps the trace event declarations independent of the trace backend.  The trace
events are not tightly coupled to a specific trace backend, such as LTTng or
176
SystemTap.  Support for trace backends can be added by extending the "tracetool"
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
177 178
script.

179
The trace backends are chosen at configure time:
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
180

181
    ./configure --enable-trace-backends=simple
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
182 183

For a list of supported trace backends, try ./configure --help or see below.
184
If multiple backends are enabled, the trace is sent to them all.
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
185

186 187 188
If no backends are explicitly selected, configure will default to the
"log" backend.

S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
189 190 191 192 193
The following subsections describe the supported trace backends.

=== Nop ===

The "nop" backend generates empty trace event functions so that the compiler
194 195
can optimize out trace events completely.  This imposes no performance
penalty.
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
196

197 198 199
Note that regardless of the selected trace backend, events with the "disable"
property will be generated with the "nop" backend.

200
=== Log ===
201

202
The "log" backend sends trace events directly to standard error.  This
203 204 205 206 207
effectively turns trace events into debug printfs.

This is the simplest backend and can be used together with existing code that
uses DPRINTF().

S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
208 209 210 211 212 213 214
=== Simpletrace ===

The "simple" backend supports common use cases and comes as part of the QEMU
source tree.  It may not be as powerful as platform-specific or third-party
trace backends but it is portable.  This is the recommended trace backend
unless you have specific needs for more advanced backends.

E
Eiichi Tsukata 已提交
215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230
=== Ftrace ===

The "ftrace" backend writes trace data to ftrace marker. This effectively
sends trace events to ftrace ring buffer, and you can compare qemu trace
data and kernel(especially kvm.ko when using KVM) trace data.

if you use KVM, enable kvm events in ftrace:

   # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kvm/enable

After running qemu by root user, you can get the trace:

   # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace

Restriction: "ftrace" backend is restricted to Linux only.

P
Paul Durrant 已提交
231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242
=== Syslog ===

The "syslog" backend sends trace events using the POSIX syslog API. The log
is opened specifying the LOG_DAEMON facility and LOG_PID option (so events
are tagged with the pid of the particular QEMU process that generated
them). All events are logged at LOG_INFO level.

NOTE: syslog may squash duplicate consecutive trace events and apply rate
      limiting.

Restriction: "syslog" backend is restricted to POSIX compliant OS.

S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250
==== Monitor commands ====

* trace-file on|off|flush|set <path>
  Enable/disable/flush the trace file or set the trace file name.

==== Analyzing trace files ====

The "simple" backend produces binary trace files that can be formatted with the
251 252
simpletrace.py script.  The script takes the "trace-events-all" file and the
binary trace:
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
253

254
    ./scripts/simpletrace.py trace-events-all trace-12345
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
255

256
You must ensure that the same "trace-events-all" file was used to build QEMU,
S
Stefan Hajnoczi 已提交
257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264
otherwise trace event declarations may have changed and output will not be
consistent.

=== LTTng Userspace Tracer ===

The "ust" backend uses the LTTng Userspace Tracer library.  There are no
monitor commands built into QEMU, instead UST utilities should be used to list,
enable/disable, and dump traces.
265

266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301
Package lttng-tools is required for userspace tracing. You must ensure that the
current user belongs to the "tracing" group, or manually launch the
lttng-sessiond daemon for the current user prior to running any instance of
QEMU.

While running an instrumented QEMU, LTTng should be able to list all available
events:

    lttng list -u

Create tracing session:

    lttng create mysession

Enable events:

    lttng enable-event qemu:g_malloc -u

Where the events can either be a comma-separated list of events, or "-a" to
enable all tracepoint events. Start and stop tracing as needed:

    lttng start
    lttng stop

View the trace:

    lttng view

Destroy tracing session:

    lttng destroy

Babeltrace can be used at any later time to view the trace:

    babeltrace $HOME/lttng-traces/mysession-<date>-<time>

302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309
=== SystemTap ===

The "dtrace" backend uses DTrace sdt probes but has only been tested with
SystemTap.  When SystemTap support is detected a .stp file with wrapper probes
is generated to make use in scripts more convenient.  This step can also be
performed manually after a build in order to change the binary name in the .stp
probes:

310 311 312 313
    scripts/tracetool.py --backends=dtrace --format=stap \
                         --binary path/to/qemu-binary \
                         --target-type system \
                         --target-name x86_64 \
314
                         <trace-events-all >qemu.stp
315 316 317

== Trace event properties ==

318
Each event in the "trace-events-all" file can be prefixed with a space-separated
319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329
list of zero or more of the following event properties.

=== "disable" ===

If a specific trace event is going to be invoked a huge number of times, this
might have a noticeable performance impact even when the event is
programmatically disabled.

In this case you should declare such event with the "disable" property. This
will effectively disable the event at compile time (by using the "nop" backend),
thus having no performance impact at all on regular builds (i.e., unless you
330
edit the "trace-events-all" file).
331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354

In addition, there might be cases where relatively complex computations must be
performed to generate values that are only used as arguments for a trace
function. In these cases you can use the macro 'TRACE_${EVENT_NAME}_ENABLED' to
guard such computations and avoid its compilation when the event is disabled:

    #include "trace.h"  /* needed for trace event prototype */
    
    void *qemu_vmalloc(size_t size)
    {
        void *ptr;
        size_t align = QEMU_VMALLOC_ALIGN;
    
        if (size < align) {
            align = getpagesize();
        }
        ptr = qemu_memalign(align, size);
        if (TRACE_QEMU_VMALLOC_ENABLED) { /* preprocessor macro */
            void *complex;
            /* some complex computations to produce the 'complex' value */
            trace_qemu_vmalloc(size, ptr, complex);
        }
        return ptr;
    }
355 356 357 358

You can check both if the event has been disabled and is dynamically enabled at
the same time using the 'trace_event_get_state' routine (see header
"trace/control.h" for more information).
L
Lluís Vilanova 已提交
359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398

=== "tcg" ===

Guest code generated by TCG can be traced by defining an event with the "tcg"
event property. Internally, this property generates two events:
"<eventname>_trans" to trace the event at translation time, and
"<eventname>_exec" to trace the event at execution time.

Instead of using these two events, you should instead use the function
"trace_<eventname>_tcg" during translation (TCG code generation). This function
will automatically call "trace_<eventname>_trans", and will generate the
necessary TCG code to call "trace_<eventname>_exec" during guest code execution.

Events with the "tcg" property can be declared in the "trace-events" file with a
mix of native and TCG types, and "trace_<eventname>_tcg" will gracefully forward
them to the "<eventname>_trans" and "<eventname>_exec" events. Since TCG values
are not known at translation time, these are ignored by the "<eventname>_trans"
event. Because of this, the entry in the "trace-events" file needs two printing
formats (separated by a comma):

    tcg foo(uint8_t a1, TCGv_i32 a2) "a1=%d", "a1=%d a2=%d"

For example:

    #include "trace-tcg.h"
    
    void some_disassembly_func (...)
    {
        uint8_t a1 = ...;
        TCGv_i32 a2 = ...;
        trace_foo_tcg(a1, a2);
    }

This will immediately call:

    void trace_foo_trans(uint8_t a1);

and will generate the TCG code to call:

    void trace_foo(uint8_t a1, uint32_t a2);
399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407

=== "vcpu" ===

Identifies events that trace vCPU-specific information. It implicitly adds a
"CPUState*" argument, and extends the tracing print format to show the vCPU
information. If used together with the "tcg" property, it adds a second
"TCGv_env" argument that must point to the per-target global TCG register that
points to the vCPU when guest code is executed (usually the "cpu_env" variable).

408 409 410
The "tcg" and "vcpu" properties are currently only honored in the root
./trace-events file.

411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442
The following example events:

    foo(uint32_t a) "a=%x"
    vcpu bar(uint32_t a) "a=%x"
    tcg vcpu baz(uint32_t a) "a=%x", "a=%x"

Can be used as:

    #include "trace-tcg.h"
    
    CPUArchState *env;
    TCGv_ptr cpu_env;
    
    void some_disassembly_func(...)
    {
        /* trace emitted at this point */
        trace_foo(0xd1);
        /* trace emitted at this point */
        trace_bar(ENV_GET_CPU(env), 0xd2);
        /* trace emitted at this point (env) and when guest code is executed (cpu_env) */
        trace_baz_tcg(ENV_GET_CPU(env), cpu_env, 0xd3);
    }

If the translating vCPU has address 0xc1 and code is later executed by vCPU
0xc2, this would be an example output:

    // at guest code translation
    foo a=0xd1
    bar cpu=0xc1 a=0xd2
    baz_trans cpu=0xc1 a=0xd3
    // at guest code execution
    baz_exec cpu=0xc2 a=0xd3