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LTTng-modules

by Mathieu Desnoyers

LTTng kernel modules are Linux kernel modules which make LTTng kernel tracing possible. They include essential control modules and many probes which instrument numerous interesting parts of Linux. LTTng-modules builds against a vanilla or distribution kernel, with no need for additional patches.

Other notable features:

  • Produces CTF (Common Trace Format) natively,
  • Tracepoints, function tracer, CPU Performance Monitoring Unit (PMU) counters, kprobes, and kretprobes support,
  • Have the ability to attach context information to events in the trace (e.g., any PMU counter, PID, PPID, TID, command name, etc). All the extra information fields to be collected with events are optional, specified on a per-tracing-session basis (except for timestamp and event ID, which are mandatory).

Building

To build and install LTTng-modules, you will need to have your kernel headers available (or access to your full kernel source tree), and do:

make
sudo make modules_install
sudo depmod -a

The above commands will build LTTng-modules against your current kernel. If you need to build LTTng-modules against a custom kernel, do:

make KERNELDIR=/path/to/custom/kernel
sudo make KERNELDIR=/path/to/custom/kernel modules_install
sudo depmod -a kernel_version

Kernel built-in support

It is also possible to build these modules as part of a kernel image. Simply run the scripts/built-in.sh script with the path to your kernel source directory as an argument. It will symlink the lttng-modules directory in the kernel sources and add an include in the kernel Makefile.

Then configure your kernel as usual and enable the CONFIG_LTTNG option.

Required kernel config options

Make sure your target kernel has the following config options enabled:

  • CONFIG_MODULES: loadable module support (not strictly required when built into the kernel),
  • CONFIG_KALLSYMS: see files in wrapper; this is necessary until the few required missing symbols are exported to GPL modules from mainline,
  • CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS: needed for LTTng 2.x clock source,
  • CONFIG_TRACEPOINTS: kernel tracepoint instrumentation (enabled as a side-effect of any of the perf/ftrace/blktrace instrumentation features).
  • CONFIG_KPROBES (5.7+): use kallsyms for kernel 5.7 and newer.

Supported (optional) kernel config options

The following kernel configuration options will affect the features available from LTTng:

  • CONFIG_HAVE_SYSCALL_TRACEPOINTS: system call tracing:

    lttng enable-event -k --syscall
    lttng enable-event -k -a
    
  • CONFIG_PERF_EVENTS: performance counters:

    lttng add-context -t perf:*
    
  • CONFIG_EVENT_TRACING: needed to allow block layer tracing

  • CONFIG_KPROBES: dynamic probes:

    lttng enable-event -k --probe ...
    
  • CONFIG_KRETPROBES: dynamic function entry/return probes:

    lttng enable-event -k --function ...
    
  • CONFIG_KALLSYMS_ALL: state dump of mapping between block device number and name

LTTng specific kernel config options

The following kernel configuration options are provided by LTTng:

  • CONFIG_LTTNG: Build LTTng (Defaults to 'm').

  • CONFIG_LTTNG_EXPERIMENTAL_BITWISE_ENUM: Enable the experimental bitwise enumerations (Defaults to 'n'). This can be enabled by building with:

     make CONFIG_LTTNG_EXPERIMENTAL_BITWISE_ENUM=y
    
  • CONFIG_LTTNG_CLOCK_PLUGIN_TEST: Build the test clock plugin (Defaults to 'm'). This plugin overrides the trace clock and should always be built as a module for testing.

Customization/Extension

The lttng-modules source includes definitions for the actual callback functions that will be attached to the kernel tracepoints by lttng. The lttng-modules project implements its own macros generating these callbacks: the LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT macro family found in instrumentation/events/lttng-module/. In order to show up in a lttng-modules trace, a kernel tracepoint must be defined within the kernel tree, and also defined within lttng-modules with the LTTNG_TRACEPOINT_EVENT macro family. Customizations or extensions must be done by modifying instances of these macros within the lttng-modules source.

Usage

Use LTTng-tools to control the tracer. The session daemon of LTTng-tools should automatically load the LTTng kernel modules when needed. Use Babeltrace to print traces as a human-readable text log.

Support

Linux kernels >= 3.0 are supported.

Notes

About perf PMU counters support

Each PMU counter has its zero value set when it is attached to a context with add-context. Therefore, it is normal that the same counters attached to both the stream context and event context show different values for a given event; what matters is that they increment at the same rate.

Supported versions

The LTTng project supports the last two released stable versions (e.g. stable-2.13 and stable-2.12).

Fixes are backported from the master branch to the last stable version unless those fixes would break the ABI or API. Those fixes may be backported to the second-last stable version, depending on complexity and ABI/API compatibility.

Security fixes are backported from the master branch to both of the last stable version and the the second-last stable version.

New kernel version enablement commits are integrated into the master branch and backported to the last stable version.

New features are integrated into the master branch and not backported to the last stable branch.

Contacts

You can contact the maintainers on the following mailing list: [email protected].

IRC channel: #lttng on the OFTC network

Bug tracker: LTTng-modules bug tracker

Code review: lttng-modules project on LTTng Review

Continuous integration: LTTng-modules on LTTng's CI

GitHub mirror: lttng/lttng-modules

Patches are principally submitted and reviewed on LTTng Review, but may also be submitted to the mailing list with the subject prefix PATCH lttng-modules or by pull request on the GitHub mirror.

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