Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S965672AbaKNPvY (ORCPT ); Fri, 14 Nov 2014 10:51:24 -0500 Received: from mail.efficios.com ([78.47.125.74]:56497 "EHLO mail.efficios.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S964887AbaKNPvX convert rfc822-to-8bit (ORCPT ); Fri, 14 Nov 2014 10:51:23 -0500 Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2014 15:51:21 +0000 (UTC) From: Mathieu Desnoyers To: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior Cc: Alexandre Montplaisir , Jiri Olsa , linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, Dominique Toupin , Tom Zanussi , Jeremie Galarneau , David Ahern , Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo Message-ID: <1671966299.13578.1415980281866.JavaMail.zimbra@efficios.com> In-Reply-To: <54650583.5000000@linutronix.de> References: <53F38C74.4030300@voxpopuli.im> <20140820092858.GA1203@krava.brq.redhat.com> <53F4F38C.4080407@voxpopuli.im> <5457C259.8030605@linutronix.de> <545829CA.7040900@voxpopuli.im> <20141105125028.GA30087@linutronix.de> <808291558.8227.1415208064002.JavaMail.zimbra@efficios.com> <54650583.5000000@linutronix.de> Subject: Re: [RFC 0/5] perf tools: Add perf data CTF conversion MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT X-Originating-IP: [206.248.138.119] X-Mailer: Zimbra 8.0.7_GA_6021 (ZimbraWebClient - FF33 (Linux)/8.0.7_GA_6021) Thread-Topic: perf tools: Add perf data CTF conversion Thread-Index: ZBnWI3rVvP2kBk9Ndk6Arn4nK/nDWg== Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Sebastian Andrzej Siewior" > To: "Mathieu Desnoyers" > Cc: "Alexandre Montplaisir" , "Jiri Olsa" , linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, > "Dominique Toupin" , "Tom Zanussi" , "Jeremie Galarneau" > , "David Ahern" , "Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo" > Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2014 2:24:51 PM > Subject: Re: [RFC 0/5] perf tools: Add perf data CTF conversion > > On 11/05/2014 06:21 PM, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: > > A very good example is the semantic of the sched_wakeup event. It has > > changed due to scheduler code modification, and is now called from an > > IPI context, which changes its semantic (not called from the same > > PID). Unfortunately, there is little we can do besides checking the > > kernel version to detect the semantic change from the trace viewer > > side, because neither the event nor the field names have changed. > > > > The trace viewer could therefore care about the following information > > to identify the semantic of a trace: > > > > - Tracer name (e.g. lttng or perf), > > - Domain (e.g. kernel or userspace), > > - Tracepoint versioning (e.g. kernel version for Perf). > > this sounds reasonable. That means for "domain" I switch to kernel from > kernel-perf that I am using now. And then I need to add tracer_name. Yes, > > > In summary, for perf it would be really easy: just repeat the > > kernel version in a new attribute attached to each event in the > > metadata. For LTTng we would have the flexibility to have our own > > version numbers in there. This would also cover the case of > > userspace tracing, allowing each application to advertise their > > tracepoint provider semantic changes through versioning. > > So what you are saying is that I need something like: > > event { > name = "sched:sched_process_fork"; > id = 1; > stream_id = 0; > => version = "3.16"; > fields := struct { > integer { … } perf_ip; > integer { … } perf_tid; > … > } align(8); > }; > > where the line marked "=>" is that one I should add. Typically we don't use strings for this. This makes it easier for trace analysis to check on version ranges. We should also define a clear semantic for what constitutes compatible versions. We do have an issue here through. We've had various cases in the past where commits that changed the event layout or semantic were backported to kernel stable versions (e.g. between a x.y.0 and x.y.1 kernel). There is also the question of distribution vendor kernels to consider, where some backport commits without kernel patchlevel increments. The more I look into this problem, the more I start thinking that we might want to add fields to TRACE_EVENT that specify the major/minor version of the event per se. If the content of existing event fields change, we bump the major number. If new fields are added to the event, but the semantic of all existing fields stay the same, we bump the minor number. This would make it really easy for trace viewers to track event semantic changes, without ending up with a mess of incompatible traces generated by kernels with same version but behaving differently due to stable kernels and distribution backports. > > >>> Right now, we only define LTTng event and field names: > >>> http://git.eclipse.org/c/tracecompass/org.eclipse.tracecompass.git/tree/org.eclipse.tracecompass.lttng2.kernel.core/src/org/eclipse/tracecompass/internal/lttng2/kernel/core/LttngStrings.java > >> > >> Okay. So I found this file for linuxtools now let me try tracecompass. > >> The basic renaming should do the job. Then I have to figure out how to > >> compile this thingy… > >> > >> There is this one thing where you go for "tid" while perf says "pid". I > >> guess I could figure that out once I have the rename done. > > > > LTTng uses the semantic presented to user-space to identify threads and > > processes. What you find in /proc is what you find in a LTTng trace. The > > tracepoint semantic used by perf and ftrace uses the kernel-internal > > meaning of pid = thread ID, pgid = process ID, which differs from what is > > visible from user-space. > > > > I guess it's up to you to decide if you want to stick to the > > kernel-internal > > semantic, or switch to the user-visible (/proc) semantic for perf traces. > > I am happy if I can record and pass unchanged perf data :) > > >> We don't have lttng_statedump_process_state, this look lttng specific. I > >> would have to look if there is a replacement event in perf. > > > > Not that I am aware of. Perf tends to add fields to each records to keep > > track of extra state. LTTng can also do that by dynamically attaching > > context information, but it also supports dumping the initial system > > state, thus allowing trace viewers to reconstruct the system state by > > reading the trace, starting with the state dump events at the beginning. > > I see. So if this is really a must-have for trace compass there would > need to be a similar event added once we start perf. But from what I > read in Alexandre's email it is not that tragic. Indeed, trace compass should be able to deal with "missing" info. > > >> For the fields, this is one event with alle the members we have. Please > >> note that lttng saves the members with the _ prefix and I haven't seen > >> that prefix in that .java file. The members of each event: > > > > Yeah, the _ prefix for event names. This is one decision I would like to > > find a way to revert, but we'll have to live with it unfortunately for > > CTF 1.8. The issue it's trying to fix is to allow having fields named > > "event" that don't clash with the "event" reserved keyword. When I added > > the _ prefix, I did it like this in the CTF spec: > > > > "Replacing reserved keywords with underscore-prefixed field names is > > recommended. Fields starting with an underscore should have their leading > > underscore removed by the CTF trace readers." > > > > Unfortunately, this introduces semantic corner-cases for event names that > > would indeed start with an underscore, unless they are prefixed with > > double-underscore in the metadata. > > > > So far, the only fix I see to this situation is to eventually do a > > CTF 1.9, and add the notion of a $ prefix to the grammar (which is not > > part of the symbols accepted for an identifier) to be used as a field > > name prefix that ensures there is no clash with reserved keywords. I'm > > very open to suggestions there through, and I'm really not in a hurry > > to release a new CTF spec version (we should only do so when we have > > a batch of changes that are required, because it will require all trace > > readers to be updated). > > Aha. I haven't seen this underscore prefix in babeltrace examples so I > wasn't aware for this. Thanks for explaining. Now should I add the > prefix to perf by all means or is okay keep it as is? If you can eventually have field names such as "event", "trace", or such names that clash with existing keywords, then you should prefix at least those field names with underscore. In LTTng, we simply prefix every field name with underscore. Thanks, Mathieu > > > Thanks! > > > > Mathieu > > > >>> Cheers, > >>> Alexandre > > Sebastian > -- Mathieu Desnoyers EfficiOS Inc. http://www.efficios.com -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/