plucky (1) trace-cmd-set.1.gz

Provided by: trace-cmd_3.2-1ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       trace-cmd-set - set a configuration parameter of the Ftrace Linux internal tracer

SYNOPSIS

       trace-cmd set [OPTIONS] [command]

DESCRIPTION

       The trace-cmd(1) set command will set a configuration parameter of the Ftrace Linux kernel tracer. The
       specified command will be run after the ftrace state is set. The configured ftrace state can be restored
       to default using the trace-cmd-reset(1) command.

OPTIONS

       -p tracer
           Specify a tracer. Tracers usually do more than just trace an event. Common tracers are: function,
           function_graph, preemptirqsoff, irqsoff, preemptoff and wakeup. A tracer must be supported by the
           running kernel. To see a list of available tracers, see trace-cmd-list(1).

       -e event
           Specify an event to trace. Various static trace points have been added to the Linux kernel. They are
           grouped by subsystem where you can enable all events of a given subsystem or specify specific events
           to be enabled. The event is of the format "subsystem:event-name". You can also just specify the
           subsystem without the :event-name or the event-name without the "subsystem:". Using "-e sched_switch"
           will enable the "sched_switch" event where as, "-e sched" will enable all events under the "sched"
           subsystem.

               The 'event' can also contain glob expressions. That is, "*stat*" will
               select all events (or subsystems) that have the characters "stat" in their
               names.

               The keyword 'all' can be used to enable all events.

       -T
           Enable a stacktrace on each event. For example:

                         <idle>-0     [003] 58549.289091: sched_switch:         kworker/0:1:0 [120] R ==> trace-cmd:2603 [120]
                         <idle>-0     [003] 58549.289092: kernel_stack:         <stack trace>
               => schedule (ffffffff814b260e)
               => cpu_idle (ffffffff8100a38c)
               => start_secondary (ffffffff814ab828)

       --func-stack
           Enable a stack trace on all functions. Note this is only applicable for the "function" plugin tracer,
           and will only take effect if the -l option is used and succeeds in limiting functions. If the
           function tracer is not filtered, and the stack trace is enabled, you can live lock the machine.

       -f filter
           Specify a filter for the previous event. This must come after a -e. This will filter what events get
           recorded based on the content of the event. Filtering is passed to the kernel directly so what
           filtering is allowed may depend on what version of the kernel you have. Basically, it will let you
           use C notation to check if an event should be processed or not.

               ==, >=, <=, >, <, &, |, && and ||

           The above are usually safe to use to compare fields.

       -R trigger
           Specify a trigger for the previous event. This must come after a -e. This will add a given trigger to
           the given event. To only enable the trigger and not the event itself, then place the event after the
           -v option.

               See Documentation/trace/events.txt in the Linux kernel source for more
               information on triggers.

       -v
           This will negate options specified after it on the command line. It affects:

                -e: Causes all specified events to not be traced. This is useful for
                      selecting a subsystem to be traced but to leave out various events.
                      For example: "-e sched -v -e "*stat*"" will enable all events in
                      the sched subsystem except those that have "stat" in their names.
                -B: Deletes the specified ftrace instance. There must be no
                      configuration options related to this instance in the command line.
                      For example: "-v -B bar -B foo" will delete instance bar and create
                      a new instance foo.
               Note: the -v option was taken from the way grep(1) inverts the following
               matches.

       -P pid
           This will filter only the specified process IDs. Using -P will let you trace only events that are
           caused by the process.

       -c
           Used -P to trace the process' children too (if kernel supports it).

       --user
           Execute the specified command as given user.

       -C clock
           Set the trace clock to "clock".

               Use trace-cmd(1) list -C to see what clocks are available.

       -l function-name
           This will limit the function and function_graph tracers to only trace the given function name. More
           than one -l may be specified on the command line to trace more than one function. The limited use of
           glob expressions are also allowed. These are match* to only filter functions that start with match.
           *match to only filter functions that end with match.  *match\* to only filter on functions that
           contain match.

       -g function-name
           This option is for the function_graph plugin. It will graph the given function. That is, it will only
           trace the function and all functions that it calls. You can have more than one -g on the command
           line.

       -n function-name
           This has the opposite effect of -l. The function given with the -n option will not be traced. This
           takes precedence, that is, if you include the same function for both -n and -l, it will not be
           traced.

       -d
           Some tracer plugins enable the function tracer by default. Like the latency tracers. This option
           prevents the function tracer from being enabled at start up.

       -D
           The option -d will try to use the function-trace option to disable the function tracer (if
           available), otherwise it defaults to the proc file: /proc/sys/kernel/ftrace_enabled, but will not
           touch it if the function-trace option is available. The -D option will disable both the
           ftrace_enabled proc file as well as the function-trace option if it exists.

               Note, this disable function tracing for all users, which includes users
               outside of ftrace tracers (stack_tracer, perf, etc).

       -O option
           Ftrace has various options that can be enabled or disabled. This allows you to set them. Appending
           the text no to an option disables it. For example: "-O nograph-time" will disable the "graph-time"
           Ftrace option.

       -b size
           This sets the ring buffer size to size kilobytes. Because the Ftrace ring buffer is per CPU, this
           size is the size of each per CPU ring buffer inside the kernel. Using "-b 10000" on a machine with 4
           CPUs will make Ftrace have a total buffer size of 40 Megs.

       -B buffer-name
           If the kernel supports multiple buffers, this will add a buffer with the given name. If the buffer
           name already exists, that buffer is just reset.

               After a buffer name is stated, all events added after that will be
               associated with that buffer. If no buffer is specified, or an event
               is specified before a buffer name, it will be associated with the
               main (toplevel) buffer.

               trace-cmd set -e sched -B block -e block -B time -e timer sleep 1

               The above is will enable all sched events in the main buffer. It will
               then create a 'block' buffer instance and enable all block events within
               that buffer. A 'time' buffer instance is created and all timer events
               will be enabled for that event.

       -m size
           The max size in kilobytes that a per cpu buffer should be. Note, due to rounding to page size, the
           number may not be totally correct. Also, this is performed by switching between two buffers that are
           half the given size thus the output may not be of the given size even if much more was written.

               Use this to prevent running out of diskspace for long runs.

       -M cpumask
           Set the cpumask for to trace. It only affects the last buffer instance given. If supplied before any
           buffer instance, then it affects the main buffer. The value supplied must be a hex number.

               trace-cmd set -p function -M c -B events13 -e all -M 5

               If the -M is left out, then the mask stays the same. To enable all
               CPUs, pass in a value of '-1'.

       -i
           By default, if an event is listed that trace-cmd does not find, it will exit with an error. This
           option will just ignore events that are listed on the command line but are not found on the system.

       -q | --quiet
           Suppresses normal output, except for errors.

       --max-graph-depth depth
           Set the maximum depth the function_graph tracer will trace into a function. A value of one will only
           show where userspace enters the kernel but not any functions called in the kernel. The default is
           zero, which means no limit.

       --cmdlines-size size
           Set the number of entries the kernel tracing file "saved_cmdlines" can contain. This file is a
           circular buffer which stores the mapping between cmdlines and PIDs. If full, it leads to unresolved
           cmdlines ("<...>") within the trace. The kernel default value is 128.

       --module module
           Filter a module’s name in function tracing. It is equivalent to adding :mod:module after all other
           functions being filtered. If no other function filter is listed, then all modules functions will be
           filtered in the filter.

               '--module snd'  is equivalent to  '-l :mod:snd'

               '--module snd -l "*jack*"' is equivalent to '-l "*jack*:mod:snd"'

               '--module snd -n "*"' is equivalent to '-n :mod:snd'

       --stderr
           Have output go to stderr instead of stdout, but the output of the command executed will not be
           changed. This is useful if you want to monitor the output of the command being executed, but not see
           the output from trace-cmd.

       --fork
           If a command is listed, then trace-cmd will wait for that command to finish, unless the --fork option
           is specified. Then it will fork the command and return immediately.

       --verbose[=level]
           Set the log level. Supported log levels are "none", "critical", "error", "warning", "info", "debug",
           "all" or their identifiers "0", "1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6". Setting the log level to specific value
           enables all logs from that and all previous levels. The level will default to "info" if one is not
           specified.

               Example: enable all critical, error and warning logs

               trace-cmd set --verbose=warning

EXAMPLES

       Enable all events for tracing:

            # trace-cmd set -e all

       Set the function tracer:

            # trace-cmd set -p function

SEE ALSO

       trace-cmd(1), trace-cmd-report(1), trace-cmd-start(1), trace-cmd-stop(1), trace-cmd-extract(1),
       trace-cmd-reset(1), trace-cmd-split(1), trace-cmd-list(1), trace-cmd-listen(1), trace-cmd-profile(1)

AUTHOR

       Written by Tzvetomir Stoyanov (VMware) <tz.stoyanov@gmail.com[1]>

RESOURCES

       https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/trace-cmd/trace-cmd.git/

COPYING

       Copyright (C) 2010 Red Hat, Inc. Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU Public
       License (GPL).

NOTES

        1. tz.stoyanov@gmail.com
           mailto:tz.stoyanov@gmail.com