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1 =======
2 Tracing
3 =======
4
5 Introduction
6 ============
7
8 This document describes the tracing infrastructure in QEMU and how to use it
9 for debugging, profiling, and observing execution.
10
11 Quickstart
12 ==========
13
14 Enable tracing of ``memory_region_ops_read`` and ``memory_region_ops_write``
15 events::
16
17 $ qemu --trace "memory_region_ops_*" ...
18 ...
19 719585@1608130130.441188:memory_region_ops_read cpu 0 mr 0x562fdfbb3820 addr 0x3cc value 0x67 size 1
20 719585@1608130130.441190:memory_region_ops_write cpu 0 mr 0x562fdfbd2f00 addr 0x3d4 value 0x70e size 2
21
22 This output comes from the "log" trace backend that is enabled by default when
23 ``./configure --enable-trace-backends=BACKENDS`` was not explicitly specified.
24
25 Multiple patterns can be specified by repeating the ``--trace`` option::
26
27 $ qemu --trace "kvm_*" --trace "virtio_*" ...
28
29 When patterns are used frequently it is more convenient to store them in a
30 file to avoid long command-line options::
31
32 $ echo "memory_region_ops_*" >/tmp/events
33 $ echo "kvm_*" >>/tmp/events
34 $ qemu --trace events=/tmp/events ...
35
36 Trace events
37 ============
38
39 Sub-directory setup
40 -------------------
41
42 Each directory in the source tree can declare a set of trace events in a local
43 "trace-events" file. All directories which contain "trace-events" files must be
44 listed in the "trace_events_subdirs" variable in the top level meson.build
45 file. During build, the "trace-events" file in each listed subdirectory will be
46 processed by the "tracetool" script to generate code for the trace events.
47
48 The individual "trace-events" files are merged into a "trace-events-all" file,
49 which is also installed into "/usr/share/qemu" with the name "trace-events".
50 This merged file is to be used by the "simpletrace.py" script to later analyse
51 traces in the simpletrace data format.
52
53 The following files are automatically generated in <builddir>/trace/ during the
54 build:
55
56 - trace-<subdir>.c - the trace event state declarations
57 - trace-<subdir>.h - the trace event enums and probe functions
58 - trace-dtrace-<subdir>.h - DTrace event probe specification
59 - trace-dtrace-<subdir>.dtrace - DTrace event probe helper declaration
60 - trace-dtrace-<subdir>.o - binary DTrace provider (generated by dtrace)
61 - trace-ust-<subdir>.h - UST event probe helper declarations
62
63 Here <subdir> is the sub-directory path with '/' replaced by '_'. For example,
64 "accel/kvm" becomes "accel_kvm" and the final filename for "trace-<subdir>.c"
65 becomes "trace-accel_kvm.c".
66
67 Source files in the source tree do not directly include generated files in
68 "<builddir>/trace/". Instead they #include the local "trace.h" file, without
69 any sub-directory path prefix. eg io/channel-buffer.c would do::
70
71 #include "trace.h"
72
73 The "io/trace.h" file must be created manually with an #include of the
74 corresponding "trace/trace-<subdir>.h" file that will be generated in the
75 builddir::
76
77 $ echo '#include "trace/trace-io.h"' >io/trace.h
78
79 While it is possible to include a trace.h file from outside a source file's own
80 sub-directory, this is discouraged in general. It is strongly preferred that
81 all events be declared directly in the sub-directory that uses them. The only
82 exception is where there are some shared trace events defined in the top level
83 directory trace-events file. The top level directory generates trace files
84 with a filename prefix of "trace/trace-root" instead of just "trace". This is
85 to avoid ambiguity between a trace.h in the current directory, vs the top level
86 directory.
87
88 Using trace events
89 ------------------
90
91 Trace events are invoked directly from source code like this::
92
93 #include "trace.h" /* needed for trace event prototype */
94
95 void *qemu_vmalloc(size_t size)
96 {
97 void *ptr;
98 size_t align = QEMU_VMALLOC_ALIGN;
99
100 if (size < align) {
101 align = getpagesize();
102 }
103 ptr = qemu_memalign(align, size);
104 trace_qemu_vmalloc(size, ptr);
105 return ptr;
106 }
107
108 Declaring trace events
109 ----------------------
110
111 The "tracetool" script produces the trace.h header file which is included by
112 every source file that uses trace events. Since many source files include
113 trace.h, it uses a minimum of types and other header files included to keep the
114 namespace clean and compile times and dependencies down.
115
116 Trace events should use types as follows:
117
118 * Use stdint.h types for fixed-size types. Most offsets and guest memory
119 addresses are best represented with uint32_t or uint64_t. Use fixed-size
120 types over primitive types whose size may change depending on the host
121 (32-bit versus 64-bit) so trace events don't truncate values or break
122 the build.
123
124 * Use void * for pointers to structs or for arrays. The trace.h header
125 cannot include all user-defined struct declarations and it is therefore
126 necessary to use void * for pointers to structs.
127
128 * For everything else, use primitive scalar types (char, int, long) with the
129 appropriate signedness.
130
131 * Avoid floating point types (float and double) because SystemTap does not
132 support them. In most cases it is possible to round to an integer type
133 instead. This may require scaling the value first by multiplying it by 1000
134 or the like when digits after the decimal point need to be preserved.
135
136 Format strings should reflect the types defined in the trace event. Take
137 special care to use PRId64 and PRIu64 for int64_t and uint64_t types,
138 respectively. This ensures portability between 32- and 64-bit platforms.
139 Format strings must not end with a newline character. It is the responsibility
140 of backends to adapt line ending for proper logging.
141
142 Each event declaration will start with the event name, then its arguments,
143 finally a format string for pretty-printing. For example::
144
145 qemu_vmalloc(size_t size, void *ptr) "size %zu ptr %p"
146 qemu_vfree(void *ptr) "ptr %p"
147
148
149 Hints for adding new trace events
150 ---------------------------------
151
152 1. Trace state changes in the code. Interesting points in the code usually
153 involve a state change like starting, stopping, allocating, freeing. State
154 changes are good trace events because they can be used to understand the
155 execution of the system.
156
157 2. Trace guest operations. Guest I/O accesses like reading device registers
158 are good trace events because they can be used to understand guest
159 interactions.
160
161 3. Use correlator fields so the context of an individual line of trace output
162 can be understood. For example, trace the pointer returned by malloc and
163 used as an argument to free. This way mallocs and frees can be matched up.
164 Trace events with no context are not very useful.
165
166 4. Name trace events after their function. If there are multiple trace events
167 in one function, append a unique distinguisher at the end of the name.
168
169 Generic interface and monitor commands
170 ======================================
171
172 You can programmatically query and control the state of trace events through a
173 backend-agnostic interface provided by the header "trace/control.h".
174
175 Note that some of the backends do not provide an implementation for some parts
176 of this interface, in which case QEMU will just print a warning (please refer to
177 header "trace/control.h" to see which routines are backend-dependent).
178
179 The state of events can also be queried and modified through monitor commands:
180
181 * ``info trace-events``
182 View available trace events and their state. State 1 means enabled, state 0
183 means disabled.
184
185 * ``trace-event NAME on|off``
186 Enable/disable a given trace event or a group of events (using wildcards).
187
188 The "--trace events=<file>" command line argument can be used to enable the
189 events listed in <file> from the very beginning of the program. This file must
190 contain one event name per line.
191
192 If a line in the "--trace events=<file>" file begins with a '-', the trace event
193 will be disabled instead of enabled. This is useful when a wildcard was used
194 to enable an entire family of events but one noisy event needs to be disabled.
195
196 Wildcard matching is supported in both the monitor command "trace-event" and the
197 events list file. That means you can enable/disable the events having a common
198 prefix in a batch. For example, virtio-blk trace events could be enabled using
199 the following monitor command::
200
201 trace-event virtio_blk_* on
202
203 Trace backends
204 ==============
205
206 The "tracetool" script automates tedious trace event code generation and also
207 keeps the trace event declarations independent of the trace backend. The trace
208 events are not tightly coupled to a specific trace backend, such as LTTng or
209 SystemTap. Support for trace backends can be added by extending the "tracetool"
210 script.
211
212 The trace backends are chosen at configure time::
213
214 ./configure --enable-trace-backends=simple,dtrace
215
216 For a list of supported trace backends, try ./configure --help or see below.
217 If multiple backends are enabled, the trace is sent to them all.
218
219 If no backends are explicitly selected, configure will default to the
220 "log" backend.
221
222 The following subsections describe the supported trace backends.
223
224 Nop
225 ---
226
227 The "nop" backend generates empty trace event functions so that the compiler
228 can optimize out trace events completely. This imposes no performance
229 penalty.
230
231 Note that regardless of the selected trace backend, events with the "disable"
232 property will be generated with the "nop" backend.
233
234 Log
235 ---
236
237 The "log" backend sends trace events directly to standard error. This
238 effectively turns trace events into debug printfs.
239
240 This is the simplest backend and can be used together with existing code that
241 uses DPRINTF().
242
243 The -msg timestamp=on|off command-line option controls whether or not to print
244 the tid/timestamp prefix for each trace event.
245
246 Simpletrace
247 -----------
248
249 The "simple" backend writes binary trace logs to a file from a thread, making
250 it lower overhead than the "log" backend. A Python API is available for writing
251 offline trace file analysis scripts. It may not be as powerful as
252 platform-specific or third-party trace backends but it is portable and has no
253 special library dependencies.
254
255 Monitor commands
256 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
257
258 * ``trace-file on|off|flush|set <path>``
259 Enable/disable/flush the trace file or set the trace file name.
260
261 Analyzing trace files
262 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
263
264 The "simple" backend produces binary trace files that can be formatted with the
265 simpletrace.py script. The script takes the "trace-events-all" file and the
266 binary trace::
267
268 ./scripts/simpletrace.py trace-events-all trace-12345
269
270 You must ensure that the same "trace-events-all" file was used to build QEMU,
271 otherwise trace event declarations may have changed and output will not be
272 consistent.
273
274 Ftrace
275 ------
276
277 The "ftrace" backend writes trace data to ftrace marker. This effectively
278 sends trace events to ftrace ring buffer, and you can compare qemu trace
279 data and kernel(especially kvm.ko when using KVM) trace data.
280
281 if you use KVM, enable kvm events in ftrace::
282
283 # echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kvm/enable
284
285 After running qemu by root user, you can get the trace::
286
287 # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace
288
289 Restriction: "ftrace" backend is restricted to Linux only.
290
291 Syslog
292 ------
293
294 The "syslog" backend sends trace events using the POSIX syslog API. The log
295 is opened specifying the LOG_DAEMON facility and LOG_PID option (so events
296 are tagged with the pid of the particular QEMU process that generated
297 them). All events are logged at LOG_INFO level.
298
299 NOTE: syslog may squash duplicate consecutive trace events and apply rate
300 limiting.
301
302 Restriction: "syslog" backend is restricted to POSIX compliant OS.
303
304 LTTng Userspace Tracer
305 ----------------------
306
307 The "ust" backend uses the LTTng Userspace Tracer library. There are no
308 monitor commands built into QEMU, instead UST utilities should be used to list,
309 enable/disable, and dump traces.
310
311 Package lttng-tools is required for userspace tracing. You must ensure that the
312 current user belongs to the "tracing" group, or manually launch the
313 lttng-sessiond daemon for the current user prior to running any instance of
314 QEMU.
315
316 While running an instrumented QEMU, LTTng should be able to list all available
317 events::
318
319 lttng list -u
320
321 Create tracing session::
322
323 lttng create mysession
324
325 Enable events::
326
327 lttng enable-event qemu:g_malloc -u
328
329 Where the events can either be a comma-separated list of events, or "-a" to
330 enable all tracepoint events. Start and stop tracing as needed::
331
332 lttng start
333 lttng stop
334
335 View the trace::
336
337 lttng view
338
339 Destroy tracing session::
340
341 lttng destroy
342
343 Babeltrace can be used at any later time to view the trace::
344
345 babeltrace $HOME/lttng-traces/mysession-<date>-<time>
346
347 SystemTap
348 ---------
349
350 The "dtrace" backend uses DTrace sdt probes but has only been tested with
351 SystemTap. When SystemTap support is detected a .stp file with wrapper probes
352 is generated to make use in scripts more convenient. This step can also be
353 performed manually after a build in order to change the binary name in the .stp
354 probes::
355
356 scripts/tracetool.py --backends=dtrace --format=stap \
357 --binary path/to/qemu-binary \
358 --target-type system \
359 --target-name x86_64 \
360 --group=all \
361 trace-events-all \
362 qemu.stp
363
364 To facilitate simple usage of systemtap where there merely needs to be printf
365 logging of certain probes, a helper script "qemu-trace-stap" is provided.
366 Consult its manual page for guidance on its usage.
367
368 Trace event properties
369 ======================
370
371 Each event in the "trace-events-all" file can be prefixed with a space-separated
372 list of zero or more of the following event properties.
373
374 "disable"
375 ---------
376
377 If a specific trace event is going to be invoked a huge number of times, this
378 might have a noticeable performance impact even when the event is
379 programmatically disabled.
380
381 In this case you should declare such event with the "disable" property. This
382 will effectively disable the event at compile time (by using the "nop" backend),
383 thus having no performance impact at all on regular builds (i.e., unless you
384 edit the "trace-events-all" file).
385
386 In addition, there might be cases where relatively complex computations must be
387 performed to generate values that are only used as arguments for a trace
388 function. In these cases you can use 'trace_event_get_state_backends()' to
389 guard such computations, so they are skipped if the event has been either
390 compile-time disabled or run-time disabled. If the event is compile-time
391 disabled, this check will have no performance impact.
392
393 ::
394
395 #include "trace.h" /* needed for trace event prototype */
396
397 void *qemu_vmalloc(size_t size)
398 {
399 void *ptr;
400 size_t align = QEMU_VMALLOC_ALIGN;
401
402 if (size < align) {
403 align = getpagesize();
404 }
405 ptr = qemu_memalign(align, size);
406 if (trace_event_get_state_backends(TRACE_QEMU_VMALLOC)) {
407 void *complex;
408 /* some complex computations to produce the 'complex' value */
409 trace_qemu_vmalloc(size, ptr, complex);
410 }
411 return ptr;
412 }
413
414 "tcg"
415 -----
416
417 Guest code generated by TCG can be traced by defining an event with the "tcg"
418 event property. Internally, this property generates two events:
419 "<eventname>_trans" to trace the event at translation time, and
420 "<eventname>_exec" to trace the event at execution time.
421
422 Instead of using these two events, you should instead use the function
423 "trace_<eventname>_tcg" during translation (TCG code generation). This function
424 will automatically call "trace_<eventname>_trans", and will generate the
425 necessary TCG code to call "trace_<eventname>_exec" during guest code execution.
426
427 Events with the "tcg" property can be declared in the "trace-events" file with a
428 mix of native and TCG types, and "trace_<eventname>_tcg" will gracefully forward
429 them to the "<eventname>_trans" and "<eventname>_exec" events. Since TCG values
430 are not known at translation time, these are ignored by the "<eventname>_trans"
431 event. Because of this, the entry in the "trace-events" file needs two printing
432 formats (separated by a comma)::
433
434 tcg foo(uint8_t a1, TCGv_i32 a2) "a1=%d", "a1=%d a2=%d"
435
436 For example::
437
438 #include "trace-tcg.h"
439
440 void some_disassembly_func (...)
441 {
442 uint8_t a1 = ...;
443 TCGv_i32 a2 = ...;
444 trace_foo_tcg(a1, a2);
445 }
446
447 This will immediately call::
448
449 void trace_foo_trans(uint8_t a1);
450
451 and will generate the TCG code to call::
452
453 void trace_foo(uint8_t a1, uint32_t a2);
454
455 "vcpu"
456 ------
457
458 Identifies events that trace vCPU-specific information. It implicitly adds a
459 "CPUState*" argument, and extends the tracing print format to show the vCPU
460 information. If used together with the "tcg" property, it adds a second
461 "TCGv_env" argument that must point to the per-target global TCG register that
462 points to the vCPU when guest code is executed (usually the "cpu_env" variable).
463
464 The "tcg" and "vcpu" properties are currently only honored in the root
465 ./trace-events file.
466
467 The following example events::
468
469 foo(uint32_t a) "a=%x"
470 vcpu bar(uint32_t a) "a=%x"
471 tcg vcpu baz(uint32_t a) "a=%x", "a=%x"
472
473 Can be used as::
474
475 #include "trace-tcg.h"
476
477 CPUArchState *env;
478 TCGv_ptr cpu_env;
479
480 void some_disassembly_func(...)
481 {
482 /* trace emitted at this point */
483 trace_foo(0xd1);
484 /* trace emitted at this point */
485 trace_bar(env_cpu(env), 0xd2);
486 /* trace emitted at this point (env) and when guest code is executed (cpu_env) */
487 trace_baz_tcg(env_cpu(env), cpu_env, 0xd3);
488 }
489
490 If the translating vCPU has address 0xc1 and code is later executed by vCPU
491 0xc2, this would be an example output::
492
493 // at guest code translation
494 foo a=0xd1
495 bar cpu=0xc1 a=0xd2
496 baz_trans cpu=0xc1 a=0xd3
497 // at guest code execution
498 baz_exec cpu=0xc2 a=0xd3