Provided by: perf-tools-unstable_1.0.1~20200130+git49b8cdf-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       funcslower  -  trace  kernel  functions slower than a threshold (microseconds). Uses Linux
       ftrace.

SYNOPSIS

       funcslower [-aChHPt] [-p PID] [-L TID] [-d secs] funcstring latency_us

DESCRIPTION

       This uses the Linux ftrace function graph profiler to time  kernel  functions  and  filter
       them  based  on  a latency threshold. Latency outliers can be studied this way, confirming
       their presence, duration, and rate. This tool is a proof of  concept  using  Linux  ftrace
       capabilities on older kernels.

       The  output  format  is  based on the ftrace function graph trace format, described in the
       kernel source under Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt. Use the  -H  option  to  print  column
       headings.  Note that the output may be shuffled when different CPU buffers are read; check
       the CPU column for changes, or include timestamps (-t) and post sort.

       WARNING: This uses dynamic tracing of kernel functions, and could cause kernel  panics  or
       freezes. Test, and know what you are doing, before use.

       Since this uses ftrace, only the root user can use this tool.

REQUIREMENTS

       FTRACE function graph, which you may already have enabled and available on recent kernels.
       And awk.

OPTIONS

       -a     All info. Same as -HPt.

       -C     Function durations measure on-CPU time only (exclude sleep time).

       -d seconds
              Set the duration of tracing, in seconds. Trace output will be buffered and  printed
              at the end. This also reduces overheads by buffering in-kernel, instead of printing
              events as they occur.

              The     ftrace     buffer     has     a      fixed      size      per-CPU      (see
              /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/buffer_size_kb).  If  you  think  events are missing, try
              increasing that size.

       -h     Print usage message.

       -H     Print column headers.

       -p PID Only trace kernel functions when this process ID is on-CPU.

       -L TID Only trace kernel functions when this thread ID is on-CPU.

       -P     Show process names and process IDs with every line of output.

       -t     Show timestamps on every line of output.

       funcstring
              A function name to trace, which may include file glob style wildcards ("*") at  the
              beginning  or  ending  of  a  string only. Eg, "vfs*" means match "vfs" followed by
              anything. Since the output is verbose, you  probably  only  want  to  trace  single
              functions, and not use wildcards.

       latency_us
              Minimum  function duration to trace, in units of microseconds. This is filtered in-
              kernel.

EXAMPLES

       Trace calls to vfs_read(), showing events slower than 10 ms:
              # funcslower vfs_read 10000

       Same as above, but include column headers, event timestamps, and process names:
              # funcslower -HPt vfs_read 10000

       Trace slow vfs_read()s for PID 198 only:
              # funcslower -p 198 vfs_read 10000

FIELDS

       The output format depends on the kernel version, and headings can be printed using -H. The
       format  is  the  same  as the ftrace function trace format, described in the kernel source
       under Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt.

       Typical fields are:

       TIME   (Shown with -t.) Time of event, in seconds.

       CPU    The CPU this event occurred on.

       TASK/PID
              (Shown with -P.) The process name (which could include dashes),  a  dash,  and  the
              process ID.

       DURATION
              Elapsed  time  during  the  function  call,  inclusive  of  children.  This is also
              inclusive of sleep time, unless -C is used.

       FUNCTION CALLS
              Kernel function returns.

OVERHEAD

       OVERHEADS: Timing and filtering is performed in-kernel context,  costing  lower  overheads
       than  post-processing  in  user  space.  If  you  trace frequent events (eg, pick a common
       function and a low threshold), you might want to try the "-d secs" option,  which  buffers
       events in-kernel instead of printing them live.

       It's a good idea to start with a high threshold (eg, "100000" for 100 ms) then to decrease
       it. If you start low instead, you may start printing too many events.

SOURCE

       This is from the perf-tools collection:

              https://github.com/brendangregg/perf-tools

       Also look under the examples directory for a text file containing example  usage,  output,
       and commentary for this tool.

OS

       Linux

STABILITY

       Unstable - in development.

AUTHOR

       Brendan Gregg

SEE ALSO

       funccount(8), functrace(8), funcgraph(8), kprobe(8)