LTTNG-EVENT-RULE(7) | LTTng Manual | LTTNG-EVENT-RULE(7) |
NAME¶
lttng-event-rule - Common LTTng event rule specification
SYNOPSIS¶
Specify an event rule to match Linux kernel tracepoint or system call events:
--type=(kernel:tracepoint | kernel:syscall[:entry|:exit|:entry+exit])] [--name=NAME] [--filter=EXPR]
Specify an event rule to match Linux kernel kprobe or user space probe events:
--type=(kernel:kprobe | kernel:uprobe) --location=LOC [--event-name=EVENTNAME]
Specify an event rule to match user space tracepoint events:
--type=user:tracepoint [--name=NAME] [--exclude-name=XNAME]... [--log-level=(LOGLEVEL | LOGLEVEL.. | ..)] [--filter=EXPR]
Specify an event rule to match Java/Python logging events:
--type=(jul | log4j | python):logging [--name=NAME] [--log-level=(LOGLEVEL | LOGLEVEL.. | ..)] [--filter=EXPR]
DESCRIPTION¶
This manual page shows how to specify an LTTng event rule on the command line.
As of LTTng 2.13.11, the command-line options documented here only apply to the event-rule-matches trigger condition specifier (see lttng-add-trigger(1)).
See lttng-concepts(7) to learn more about instrumentation points, events, and event rules.
Note
This manual page only describes the common event rule options. The lttng(1) commands which require an event rule specification may accept or require other options and arguments, depending on the context.
For example, the lttng-add-trigger(1) command also accepts --capture options with the event-rule-matches trigger condition.
Overview of event rule condtions¶
For LTTng to emit an event E, E must satisfy all the conditions of an event rule, that is:
See the “Instrumentation point type condition” section below.
See the “Event name condition” section below.
See the “Instrumentation point log level condition” section below.
See the “Event payload and context filter condition” section below.
The dedicated command-line options of most conditions are optional: if you don’t specify the option, the associated condition is always satisfied.
Instrumentation point type condition¶
An event E satisfies the instrumentation point type condition of an event rule if the instrumentation point from which LTTng creates E is, depending on the argument of the --type option:
kernel:tracepoint
List the available Linux kernel tracepoints with lttng list --kernel. See lttng-list(1) to learn more.
kernel:syscall:entry, kernel:syscall:exit, kernel:syscall:entry+exit
List the available Linux kernel system call instrumentation points with lttng list --kernel --syscall. See lttng-list(1) to learn more.
kernel:kprobe
You must specify the kprobe location with the --location option.
The payload of a Linux kprobe event is empty.
kernel:uprobe
LTTng 2.13.11 supports the ELF and SystemTap User-level Statically Defined Tracing (USDT; a DTrace-style marker) probing methods. LTTng only supports USDT probes which are NOT reference-counted.
You must specify the user space probe location with the --location option.
The payload of a Linux user space probe event is empty.
user:tracepoint
List the available user space tracepoints with lttng list --userspace. See lttng-list(1) to learn more.
jul:logging
List the available java.util.logging loggers with lttng list --jul See lttng-list(1) to learn more.
log4j:logging
List the available Apache log4j loggers with lttng list --log4j See lttng-list(1) to learn more.
python:logging
List the available Python loggers with lttng list --python See lttng-list(1) to learn more.
Event name condition¶
An event E satisfies the event name condition of an event rule ER if the two following statements are true:
kernel:tracepoint, user:tracepoint
Note that the full name of a user space tracepoint is PROVIDER:NAME, where PROVIDER is the tracepoint provider name and NAME is the tracepoint name.
jul:logging, log4j:logging, python:logging
kernel:syscall:entry, kernel:syscall:exit, kernel:syscall:entry+exit
The --exclude-name option is only available with the --type=user:tracepoint option.
This condition is only meaningful for the LTTng tracepoint, logging statement, and Linux system call instrumentation point types: it’s always satisfied for the other types.
In all cases, NAME and XNAME are globbing patterns: the * character means “match anything”. To match a literal * character, use \*.
Important
Make sure to single-quote NAME and XNAME when they contain the * character and when you run an lttng(1) command from a shell.
As of LTTng 2.13.11, not specifying the --name option is equivalent to specifying --name='*´, but this default may change in the future.
Instrumentation point log level condition¶
An event E satisfies the instrumentation point log level condition of an event rule if either:
Defaulting to --log-level=.. when you don’t specify the --log-level option is specific to LTTng 2.13.11 and may change in the future.
With the --log-level=LOGLEVEL.. option
With the --log-level=LOGLEVEL option
As of LTTng 2.13.11, the ..LOGLEVEL and LOGLEVEL..LOGLEVEL formats are NOT supported.
This condition is only meaningful for the LTTng user space tracepoint and logging statement instrumentation point types: it’s always satisfied for other types.
The available values of LOGLEVEL are, depending on the argument of the --type option, from the most to the least severe:
user:tracepoint
jul:logging
log4j:logging
python:logging
Event payload and context filter condition¶
An event E satisfies the event payload and context filter condition of an event rule if the --filter=EXPR option is missing or if EXPR is true.
This condition is only meaningful for the LTTng tracepoint and Linux system call instrumentation point types: it’s always satisfied for other types.
EXPR can contain references to the payload fields of E and to the current context fields.
Important
Make sure to single-quote EXPR when you run an lttng(1) command from a shell, as filter expressions typically include characters having a special meaning for most shells.
The expected syntax of EXPR is similar to the syntax of a C language conditional expression (an expression which an if statement can evaluate), but there are a few differences:
Use the C language dot and square bracket notations to access nested structure and array/sequence fields. You can only use a constant, positive integer number within square brackets. If the index is out of bounds, EXPR is false.
The value of an enumeration field is an integer.
When a field expression doesn’t exist, EXPR is false.
Examples: my_field, target_cpu, seq[7], msg.user[1].data[2][17].
List the available statically-known context field names with the lttng-add-context(1) command.
When a field expression doesn’t exist, EXPR is false.
Examples: $ctx.prio, $ctx.preemptible, $ctx.perf:cpu:stalled-cycles-frontend.
When a field expression doesn’t exist, EXPR is false.
Example: $app.server:cur_user.
When comparing to a string literal, the * character means “match anything”. To match a literal * character, use \*.
Examples: my_field == "user34", my_field == my_other_field, my_field == "192.168.*".
Precedence | Operator | Description | Associativity |
1 | - | Unary minus | Right-to-left |
1 | + | Unary plus | Right-to-left |
1 | ! | Logical NOT | Right-to-left |
1 | ~ | Bitwise NOT | Right-to-left |
2 | << | Bitwise left shift | Left-to-right |
2 | >> | Bitwise right shift | Left-to-right |
3 | & | Bitwise AND | Left-to-right |
4 | ^ | Bitwise XOR | Left-to-right |
5 | | | Bitwise OR | Left-to-right |
6 | < | Less than | Left-to-right |
6 | <= | Less than or equal to | Left-to-right |
6 | > | Greater than | Left-to-right |
6 | >= | Greater than or equal to | Left-to-right |
7 | == | Equal to | Left-to-right |
7 | != | Not equal to | Left-to-right |
8 | && | Logical AND | Left-to-right |
9 | || | Logical OR | Left-to-right |
Parentheses are supported to bypass the default order.
Important
LTTng first casts all integer constants and fields to signed 64-bit integers. The representation of negative integers is two’s complement. This means that, for example, the signed 8-bit integer field 0xff (-1) becomes 0xffffffffffffffff (still -1) once casted.
Before a bitwise operator is applied, LTTng casts all its operands to unsigned 64-bit integers, and then casts the result back to a signed 64-bit integer. For the bitwise NOT operator, it’s the equivalent of this C expression:
(int64_t) ~((uint64_t) val)
For the binary bitwise operators, it’s the equivalent of those C expressions:
(int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs >> (uint64_t) rhs) (int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs << (uint64_t) rhs) (int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs & (uint64_t) rhs) (int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs ^ (uint64_t) rhs) (int64_t) ((uint64_t) lhs | (uint64_t) rhs)
If the right-hand side of a bitwise shift operator (<< and >>) is not in the [0, 63] range, then EXPR is false.
EXPR examples:
msg_id == 23 && size >= 2048
$ctx.procname == "lttng*" && (!flag || poel < 34)
$app.my_provider:my_context == 17.34e9 || some_enum >= 14
$ctx.cpu_id == 2 && filename != "*.log"
eax_reg & 0xff7 == 0x240 && x[4] >> 12 <= 0x1234
Migration from a recording event rule specification¶
Since LTTng 2.13, what this manual page documents is the standard, common way to specify an LTTng event rule.
With the lttng-enable-event(1) command, you also specify an event rule, but with deprecated options and arguments.
The following table shows how to translate from the lttng-enable-event(1) options and arguments to the common event rule specification options:
Recording event rule option(s)/argument(s) | Common event rule option(s) |
--kernel and --tracepoint | --type=kernel:tracepoint |
--kernel and --syscall | --type=kernel:syscall:entry+exit |
--probe=LOC and RECORDNAME (non-option) | --type=kernel:kprobe, --location=LOC, and --event-name=RECORDNAME |
--userspace-probe=LOC and RECORDNAME (non-option) | --type=kernel:uprobe, --location=LOC, and --event-name=RECORDNAME |
--function=LOC and RECORDNAME (non-option) | Not available as of LTTng 2.13.11 |
--userspace and --tracepoint | --type=user:tracepoint |
--jul and --tracepoint | --type=jul:logging |
--log4j and --tracepoint | --type=log4j:logging |
--python and --tracepoint | --type=python:logging |
NAME (non-option) | --name=NAME |
--all | --name='*´ or no --name option |
--exclude=XNAME[,XNAME]... | --exclude-name=XNAME for each XNAME |
--loglevel=LOGLEVEL | --log-level=LOGLEVEL.. |
--loglevel-only=LOGLEVEL | --log-level=LOGLEVEL |
--filter=EXPR | --filter=EXPR |
OPTIONS¶
Instrumentation point type condition¶
See the “Instrumentation point type condition” section above.
-E NAME, --event-name=NAME
Defaulting to LOC is specific to LTTng 2.13.11 and may change in the future.
-L LOC, --location=LOC
With the --type=kernel:kprobe option
LOC is one of:
With the --type=kernel:uprobe option
LOC is one of:
[elf:]PATH:SYMBOL
PATH
One of:
SYMBOL
SYMBOL can be any defined code symbol in the output of the nm(1) command, including with its --dynamic option, which lists dynamic symbols.
As of LTTng 2.13.11, not specifying elf: is equivalent to specifying it, but this default may change in the future.
Examples:
sdt:PATH:PROVIDER:NAME
PATH
This can be:
PROVIDER, NAME
For example, with the following USDT probe:
DTRACE_PROBE2("server", "accept_request",
request_id, ip_addr);
The provider/probe name pair is server:accept_request.
Example: sdt:./build/server:server:accept_request
-t TYPE, --type=TYPE
TYPE is one of:
kernel:tracepoint
As of LTTng 2.13.11, kernel is an alias, but this may change in the future.
user:tracepoint
As of LTTng 2.13.11, user is an alias, but this may change in the future.
kernel:syscall:entry
As of LTTng 2.13.11, syscall:entry is an alias, but this may change in the future.
kernel:syscall:exit
As of LTTng 2.13.11, syscall:exit is an alias, but this may change in the future.
kernel:syscall:entry+exit
As of LTTng 2.13.11, the following are aliases, but this may change in the future:
kernel:kprobe
As of LTTng 2.13.11, kprobe is an alias, but this may change in the future.
You must specify the location of the kprobe to insert with the --location option.
You may specify the name of the emitted events with the --event-name option.
kernel:uprobe
You must specify the location of the user space probe to insert with the --location option.
You may specify the name of the emitted events with the --event-name option.
jul:logging
As of LTTng 2.13.11, jul is an alias, but this may change in the future.
log4j:logging
As of LTTng 2.13.11, log4j is an alias, but this may change in the future.
python:logging
As of LTTng 2.13.11, python is an alias, but this may change in the future.
Event name condition¶
See the “Event name condition” section above.
-n NAME, --name=NAME
kernel:tracepoint, user:tracepoint
jul:logging, log4j:logging, python:logging
kernel:syscall:entry, kernel:syscall:exit, kernel:syscall:entry+exit
This option is NOT available with other instrumentation point types.
As of LTTng 2.13.11, not specifying this option is equivalent to specifying --name='*´ (when it applies), but this default may change in the future.
-x XNAME, --exclude-name=XNAME
Only available with the --type=user:tracepoint option.
NAME and XNAME are globbing patterns: the * character means “match anything”. To match a literal * character, use \*.
Instrumentation point log level condition¶
See the “Instrumentation point log level condition” section above.
-l LOGLEVELSPEC, --log-level=LOGLEVELSPEC
LOGLEVEL..
LOGLEVEL
..
This option is NOT available with the following options:
As of LTTng 2.13.11, not specifying this option is equivalent to specifying --log-level=.. (when it applies), but this default may change in the future.
Event payload and context filter condition¶
See the “Event payload and context filter condition” section above.
-f EXPR, --filter=EXPR
This option is only available with the following options:
RESOURCES¶
COPYRIGHT¶
This program is part of the LTTng-tools project.
LTTng-tools is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 2 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html>. See the LICENSE <https://github.com/lttng/lttng-tools/blob/master/LICENSE> file for details.
THANKS¶
Special thanks to Michel Dagenais and the DORSAL laboratory <http://www.dorsal.polymtl.ca/> at École Polytechnique de Montréal for the LTTng journey.
Also thanks to the Ericsson teams working on tracing which helped us greatly with detailed bug reports and unusual test cases.
SEE ALSO¶
lttng(1), lttng-add-trigger(1), lttng-list(1), lttng-concepts(7)
18 May 2021 | LTTng 2.13.11 |