Provided by: uftrace_0.9.3-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       uftrace-replay - Print recorded function trace

SYNOPSIS

       uftrace replay [options]

DESCRIPTION

       This  command  prints trace data recorded using the uftrace-record(1) command.  The traced
       functions are printed like a C program in time order.

REPLAY OPTIONS

       -f FIELD, --output-fields=FIELD
              Customize field in the output.  Possible values are:  duration,  tid,  addr,  time,
              delta,  elapsed,  task  and  module.   Multiple  fields  can be set by using comma.
              Special field of `none' can be used  (solely)  to  hide  all  fields.   Default  is
              `duration,tid'.  See FIELDS.

       --flat Print  flat  format  rather  than C-like format.  This is usually for debugging and
              testing purpose.

       --column-view
              Show each task in separate column.  This makes easy  to  distinguish  functions  in
              different tasks.

       --column-offset=DEPTH
              When  --column-view  option  is  used,  this  option specifies the amount of offset
              between each task.  Default is 8.

       --task-newline
              Interleave a new line when  task  is  changed.   This  makes  easy  to  distinguish
              functions in different tasks.

       --no-comment
              Do not show comments of returned functions.

       --libname
              Show libname name along with function name.

COMMON OPTIONS

       -F FUNC, --filter=FUNC
              Set  filter  to  trace  selected functions only.  This option can be used more than
              once.  See FILTERS.

       -N FUNC, --notrace=FUNC
              Set filter not to trace selected functions  (or  the  functions  called  underneath
              them).  This option can be used more than once.  See FILTERS.

       -C FUNC, --caller-filter=FUNC
              Set  filter  to  trace callers of selected functions only.  This option can be used
              more than once.  See FILTERS.

       -T TRG, --trigger=TRG
              Set trigger on selected functions.  This option can be used more  than  once.   See
              TRIGGERS.

       -D DEPTH, --depth DEPTH
              Set trace limit in nesting level.  See FILTERS.

       -t TIME, --time-filter=TIME
              Do  not  show  functions  which  run  under  the time threshold.  If some functions
              explicitly have the `trace' trigger applied, those are always traced regardless  of
              execution time.  See FILTERS.

       --no-libcall
              Do not show library calls.

       --no-event
              Do not show any events.

       --match=TYPE
              Use  pattern  match  using  TYPE.   Possible  types are regex and glob.  Default is
              regex.

       --disable
              Start replay with tracing disabled.  This is  only  meaningful  when  used  with  a
              trace_on trigger.

COMMON ANALYSIS OPTIONS

       --kernel-full
              Show all kernel functions and events occurred outside of user functions.

       --kernel-only
              Show kernel functions only without user functions.

       --event-full
              Show all (user) events outside of user functions.

       --tid=TID[,TID,...]
              Only  print  functions  called by the given threads.  To see the list of threads in
              the data file, you can use uftrace report --threads or uftrace info.   This  option
              can also be used more than once.

       --demangle=TYPE
              Use  demangled  C++  symbol  names  for  filters, triggers, arguments and/or return
              values.  Possible values are “full”, “simple” and “no”.  Default is “simple”  which
              ignores function arguments and template parameters.

       -r RANGE, --time-range=RANGE
              Only   show   functions   executed  within  the  time  RANGE.   The  RANGE  can  be
              <start>~<stop> (separated by “~”) and one of <start> and  <stop>  can  be  omitted.
              The  <start>  and  <stop>  are  timestamp  or elapsed time if they have <time_unit>
              postfix, for example `100us'.  The timestamp or elapsed time can be shown  with  -f
              time or -f elapsed option respectively.  See FILTERS.

FILTERS

       The  uftrace  tool supports filtering out uninteresting functions.  When uftrace is called
       it receives two types of function filter; an opt-in filter with -F/--filter and an opt-out
       filter  with  -N/--notrace.   These filters can be applied either at record time or replay
       time.

       The first one is an opt-in filter.  By default, it doesn’t show anything.  But when one of
       the  specified functions is met, printing is started.  When the function returns, printing
       is stopped again.

       For example, consider a simple program which calls a(), b() and c() in turn.

              $ cat abc.c
              void c(void) {
                  /* do nothing */
              }

              void b(void) {
                  c();
              }

              void a(void) {
                  b();
              }

              int main(void) {
                  a();
                  return 0;
              }

              $ gcc -pg -o abc abc.c

       Normally uftrace replay will show all the functions from main() to c().

              $ uftrace ./abc
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
               138.494 us [ 1234] | __cxa_atexit();
                          [ 1234] | main() {
                          [ 1234] |   a() {
                          [ 1234] |     b() {
                 3.880 us [ 1234] |       c();
                 5.475 us [ 1234] |     } /* b */
                 6.448 us [ 1234] |   } /* a */
                 8.631 us [ 1234] | } /* main */

       But when the -F b filter option is used, it will not show main() or a() but only  b()  and
       c().  Note that the filter was set on uftrace replay, not at record time.

              $ uftrace record ./abc
              $ uftrace replay -F b
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
                          [ 1234] | b() {
                 3.880 us [ 1234] |   c();
                 5.475 us [ 1234] | } /* b */

       The  second  type  of  filter  is opt-out.  When used, everything is shown by default, but
       printing stops once one of the specified  functions  is  met.   When  the  given  function
       returns, printing is started again.

       In  the  above  example,  you can omit the function b() and all calls it makes with the -N
       option.

              $ uftrace record ./abc
              $ uftrace replay -N b
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
               138.494 us [ 1234] | __cxa_atexit();
                          [ 1234] | main() {
                 6.448 us [ 1234] |   a();
                 8.631 us [ 1234] | } /* main */

       If users only care about specific functions and want to know how they are called, one  can
       use  the  caller filter.  It makes the function as leaf and prints the parent functions to
       the function.

              $ uftrace record -C b ./abc
              $ uftrace replay
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
                          [ 1234] | main() {
                          [ 1234] |   a() {
                 5.475 us [ 1234] |     b();
                 6.448 us [ 1234] |   } /* a */
                 8.631 us [ 1234] | } /* main */

       In the above example, functions not in the calling path were not shown.  Also the function
       `c' - which is a child of the function `b' - is also hidden.

       In addition, you can limit the print nesting level with -D option.

              $ uftrace record ./abc
              $ uftrace replay -D 3
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
               138.494 us [ 1234] | __cxa_atexit();
                          [ 1234] | main() {
                          [ 1234] |   a() {
                 5.475 us [ 1234] |     b();
                 6.448 us [ 1234] |   } /* a */
                 8.631 us [ 1234] | } /* main */

       In  the  above example, uftrace only prints functions up to a depth of 3, so leaf function
       c() was omitted.  Note that the -D option also works with -F.

       Sometimes it’s useful to see long-running functions only.  This is good because there  are
       usually  many  tiny  functions  that  are  not  interesting.   The -t/--time-filter option
       implements the time-based filter that only records functions which  run  longer  than  the
       given  threshold.  In the above example, the user might want to see functions running more
       than 5 microseconds like below:

              $ uftrace record ./abc
              $ uftrace replay -t 5us
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
               138.494 us [ 1234] | __cxa_atexit();
                          [ 1234] | main() {
                          [ 1234] |   a() {
                 5.475 us [ 1234] |     b();
                 6.448 us [ 1234] |   } /* a */
                 8.631 us [ 1234] | } /* main */

       You can also see replay output with different time threshold for the same recorded data.

              $ uftrace replay -t 6us
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
               138.494 us [ 1234] | __cxa_atexit();
                          [ 1234] | main() {
                 6.448 us [ 1234] |   a();
                 8.631 us [ 1234] | } /* main */

       In addition, The -r option can show functions executed within the given time range.   When
       using this option, you can see TIMESTAMP or ELAPSED fields as well as DURATION and TID.

              $ uftrace replay -r 502716.387320101~502716.387322389
              #     TIMESTAMP      DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
              502716.387320101   0.289 us [ 6126] |   fgets();
              502716.387320584            [ 6126] |   get_values_from() {
              502716.387320709   0.245 us [ 6126] |     strdup();
              502716.387321172   0.144 us [ 6126] |     strsep();
              502716.387321542   0.223 us [ 6126] |     atoi();
              502716.387321983   0.239 us [ 6126] |     atoi();
              502716.387322389   1.805 us [ 6126] |   } /* get_values_from */

              $ uftrace replay -r 40us~ | head -10
              #  ELAPSED   DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
                40.141 us            [ 6126] |   get_values_from() {
                40.269 us   0.249 us [ 6126] |     strdup();
                40.756 us   0.149 us [ 6126] |     strsep();
                41.119 us   0.235 us [ 6126] |     atoi();
                41.578 us   0.211 us [ 6126] |     atoi();
                41.957 us   1.816 us [ 6126] |   } /* get_values_from */
                42.124 us   0.220 us [ 6126] |   fgets();
                42.529 us            [ 6126] |   get_values_from() {
                42.645 us   0.236 us [ 6126] |     strdup();

       You can also set triggers on filtered functions.  See TRIGGERS section below for details.

TRIGGERS

       The  uftrace  tool  supports triggering actions on selected function calls with or without
       filters.  Currently supported triggers are depth, backtrace, trace_on and trace_off.   The
       BNF for trigger specifications is like below:

              <trigger>    :=  <symbol> "@" <actions>
              <actions>    :=  <action>  | <action> "," <actions>
              <action>     :=  "depth="<num> | "backtrace" | "trace_on" | "trace_off" |
                               "color="<color> | "time="<time_spec> | "filter" | "notrace"
              <time_spec>  :=  <num> [ <time_unit> ]
              <time_unit>  :=  "ns" | "nsec" | "us" | "usec" | "ms" | "msec" | "s" | "sec" | "m" | "min"

       The  depth  trigger is to change filter depth during execution of the function.  It can be
       used to apply different filter depths for different functions.  And the backtrace  trigger
       is used to print a stack backtrace at replay time.

       The  color trigger is to change the color of the function in replay output.  The supported
       colors are red, green, blue, yellow, magenta, cyan, bold, and gray.

       The following example shows how triggers work.  We set a filter on function b()  with  the
       backtrace action and change the maximum filter depth under b() to 2.

              $ uftrace record ./abc
              $ uftrace replay -T 'b@filter,backtrace,depth=2'
              # DURATION    TID     FUNCTION
                backtrace [ 1234] | /* [ 0] main */
                backtrace [ 1234] | /* [ 1] a */
                          [ 1234] | b {
                 3.880 us [ 1234] |   c();
                 5.475 us [ 1234] | } /* b */

       The  trace_on and trace_off actions (the _ can be omitted as traceon and traceoff) control
       whether uftrace shows functions or not.  The trigger runs at replay time, not run time, so
       it  can  handle  kernel functions as well.  Contrast this with triggers used under uftrace
       record.

       The `time' trigger is to change time filter setting during execution of the function.   It
       can be used to apply different time filter for different functions.

       The `filter' and `notrace' triggers have same effect as -F/–filter and -N/–notrace options
       respectively.

FIELDS

       The uftrace allows for user to customize the replay output with a couple of fields.   Here
       the  field  means  info  on  the  left side of the pipe (|) character.  By default it uses
       duration and tid fields, but you can use other fields in any order like:

              $ uftrace replay -f time,delta,duration,addr
              #     TIMESTAMP      TIMEDELTA  DURATION     ADDRESS     FUNCTION
                  74469.340757350              1.583 us       4004d0 | __monstartup();
                  74469.340762221   4.871 us   0.766 us       4004f0 | __cxa_atexit();
                  74469.340764847   2.626 us                  4006b1 | main() {
                  74469.340765061   0.214 us                  400656 |   a() {
                  74469.340765195   0.134 us                  400669 |     b() {
                  74469.340765344   0.149 us                  40067c |       c() {
                  74469.340765524   0.180 us   0.742 us       4004b0 |         getpid();
                  74469.340766935   1.411 us   1.591 us       40067c |       } /* c */
                  74469.340767195   0.260 us   2.000 us       400669 |     } /* b */
                  74469.340767372   0.177 us   2.311 us       400656 |   } /* a */
                  74469.340767541   0.169 us   2.694 us       4006b1 | } /* main */

       Each field has following meaning:

       • tid: task id (obtained by gettid(2))

       • duration: function execution time

       • time: timestamp at the execution

       • delta: difference between two timestamp in a task

       • elapsed: elapsed time from the first timestamp

       • addr: address of the function

       • task: task name (comm)

       • module: library or executable name of the function

       The default value is `duration,tid'.  If given field name starts with “+”, then  it’ll  be
       appended  to the default fields.  So “-f +time” is as same as “-f duration,tid,time”.  And
       it also accepts a special field name of `none' which disables the field display and  shows
       function output only.

SEE ALSO

       uftrace(1), uftrace-record(1), uftrace-report(1), uftrace-info(1)

AUTHORS

       Namhyung Kim <namhyung@gmail.com>.