This patchset adds support for 'inter-event' quantities to the trace event subsystem. The most important example of inter-event quantities are latencies, or the time differences between two events. One of the main motivations for adding this capability is to provide a general-purpose base that existing existing tools such as the -RT latency_hist patchset can be built upon, while at the same time providing a simple way for users to track latencies (or any inter-event quantity) generically between any two events. Previous -RT latency_hist patchsets that take advantage of the trace event subsystem have been submitted, but they essentially hard-code special-case tracepoints and application logic in ways that can't be reused. It seemed to me that rather than providing a one-off patchset devoted specifically to generating the specific histograms in the latency_hist patchset, it should be possible to build the same functionality on top of a generic layer allowing users to do similar things for other non-latency_hist applications. In addition to preliminary patches that add some basic missing functionality such as a common ringbuffer-derived timestamp and dynamically-creatable tracepoints, the overall patchset is divided up into a few different areas that combine to produce the overall goal (The Documentation patch explains all the details): - variables and simple expressions required to calculate a latency In order to calculate a latency or any inter-event value, something from one event needs to be saved and later retrieved, and some operation such as subtraction or addition is performed on it. This means some minimal form of variables and expressions, which the first set of patches implements. Saving and retrieving events to use in a latency calculation is normally done using a hash table, and that's exactly what we have with trace event hist triggers, so that's where variables are instantiated, set, and retrieved. Basically, variables are set on one entry and retrieved and used by a 'matching' event. - 'synthetic' events, combining variables from other events The trace event interface is based on pseudo-files associated with individual events, so it wouldn't really make sense to have quantities derived from multiple events attached to any one of those events. For that reason, the patchset implements a means of combining variables from other events into a separate 'synthetic' event, which can be treated as if it were just like any other trace event in the system. - 'actions' generating synthetic events, among other things Variables and synthetic events provide the data and data structure for new events, but something still needs to actually generate an event using that data. 'Actions' are expanded to provide that capability. Though it hasn't been explicitly called as much before, the default 'action' currently for a hist trigger is to update the matching histogram entry's sum values. This patchset essentially expands that to provide a new 'onmatch.trace(event)' action that can be used to have one event generate another. The mechanism is extensible to other actions, and in fact the patchset also includes another, 'onmax(var).save(field,...)' that can be used to save context whenever a value exceeds the previous maximum (something also needed by latency_hist). I'm submitting the patchset (based on tracing/for-next) as an RFC not only to get comments, but because there are still some problems I haven't fixed yet... Here are some examples that should make things less abstract. ==== Example - wakeup latency ==== This basically implements the -RT latency_hist 'wakeup_latency' histogram using the synthetic events, variables, and actions described. The output below is from a run of cyclictest using the following command: # rt-tests/cyclictest -p 80 -n -s -t 2 What we're measuring the latency of is the time between when a thread (of cyclictest) is awakened and when it's scheduled in. To do that we add triggers to sched_wakeup and sched_switch with the appropriate variables, and on a matching sched_switch event, generate a synthetic 'wakeup_latency' event. Since it's just another trace event like any other, we can also define a histogram on that event, the output of which is what we see displayed when reading the wakeup_latency 'hist' file. First, we create a synthetic event called wakeup_latency, that references 3 variables from other events: # echo 'wakeup_latency lat=sched_switch:wakeup_lat \ pid=sched_switch:woken_pid \ prio=sched_switch:woken_prio' >> \ /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/synthetic_events Next we add a trigger to sched_wakeup, which saves the value of the 'common_timestamp' when that event is hit in a variable, ts0. Note that this happens only when 'comm==cyclictest'. Also, 'common_timestamp' is a new field defined on every event (if needed - if there are no users of timestamps in a trace, timestamps won't be saved and there's no additional overhead from that). # echo 'hist:keys=pid:ts0=common_timestamp.usecs if \ comm=="cyclictest"' >> \ /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_wakeup/trigger Next, we add a trigger to sched_switch. When the pid being switched to matches the pid woken up by a previous sched_wakeup event, this event grabs the ts0 saved on that event, takes the difference between it and the current sched_switch's common_timestamp, and assigns it to a new 'wakeup_lat' variable. It also saves a couple other variables and then invokes the onmatch().trace() action which generates a new wakeup_latency event using those variables. # echo 'hist:keys=woken_pid=next_pid:woken_prio=next_prio:\ wakeup_lat=common_timestamp.usecs-ts0:onmatch().trace(wakeup_latency) \ if next_comm=="cyclictest"' >> \ /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_switch/trigger Finally, all we have left to do is create a standard histogram simply naming the fields of the wakeup_latency synthetic event: # echo 'hist:keys=pid,prio,lat:sort=pid,lat' >> \ /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeup_latency/trigger At any time, we can see the histogram output by simply reading the synthetic/wakeup_latency/hist file: # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeup_latency/hist # event histogram # # trigger info: hist:keys=pid,prio,lat:vals=hitcount:sort=pid,lat:size=2048 [active] # { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 1 } hitcount: 12 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 2 } hitcount: 671 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 3 } hitcount: 588 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 4 } hitcount: 202 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 5 } hitcount: 28 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 6 } hitcount: 13 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 7 } hitcount: 12 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 8 } hitcount: 7 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 9 } hitcount: 12 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 10 } hitcount: 11 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 11 } hitcount: 7 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 12 } hitcount: 6 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 13 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 17 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 18 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 19 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 22 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 23 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 24 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 27 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 34 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 53 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 67 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2519, prio: 120, lat: 69 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 1 } hitcount: 735 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 2 } hitcount: 8978 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 3 } hitcount: 4798 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 4 } hitcount: 716 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 5 } hitcount: 298 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 6 } hitcount: 136 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 7 } hitcount: 93 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 8 } hitcount: 51 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 9 } hitcount: 20 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 10 } hitcount: 18 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 11 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 12 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 13 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 15 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 17 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 18 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 20 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 22 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 25 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2521, prio: 19, lat: 26 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 1 } hitcount: 392 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 2 } hitcount: 5376 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 3 } hitcount: 3982 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 4 } hitcount: 500 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 5 } hitcount: 202 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 6 } hitcount: 67 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 7 } hitcount: 35 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 8 } hitcount: 12 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 9 } hitcount: 9 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 10 } hitcount: 4 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 11 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 12 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 13 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 16 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 18 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 19 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 21 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 22 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 23 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 45 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2522, prio: 19, lat: 82 } hitcount: 1 Totals: Hits: 28037 Entries: 65 Dropped: 0 The above output uses the .usecs modifier to common_timestamp, so the latencies are reported in microseconds. The default, without the modifier, is nanoseconds, but that's too fine-grained to put directly into a histogram - for that however we can use the .log2 modifier on the 'lat' key. Otherwise the rest is the same: # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeup_latency/hist # event histogram # # trigger info: hist:keys=pid,prio,lat.log2:vals=hitcount:sort=pid,lat.log2:size=2048 [active] # { pid: 2585, prio: 120, lat: ~ 2^10 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2585, prio: 120, lat: ~ 2^11 } hitcount: 379 { pid: 2585, prio: 120, lat: ~ 2^12 } hitcount: 1008 { pid: 2585, prio: 120, lat: ~ 2^13 } hitcount: 42 { pid: 2585, prio: 120, lat: ~ 2^14 } hitcount: 18 { pid: 2585, prio: 120, lat: ~ 2^15 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 2585, prio: 120, lat: ~ 2^16 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2586, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^11 } hitcount: 4715 { pid: 2586, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^12 } hitcount: 9161 { pid: 2586, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^13 } hitcount: 632 { pid: 2586, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^14 } hitcount: 47 { pid: 2586, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^15 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 2586, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^17 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 2587, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^11 } hitcount: 3398 { pid: 2587, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^12 } hitcount: 5762 { pid: 2587, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^13 } hitcount: 505 { pid: 2587, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^14 } hitcount: 58 { pid: 2587, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^15 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 2587, prio: 19, lat: ~ 2^17 } hitcount: 1 Totals: Hits: 25738 Entries: 19 Dropped: 0 ==== Example - wakeup latency with onmax() ==== This example is the same as the previous ones, but here we're using the onmax() action to save some context (several fields of the sched_switch event) whenever the latency (wakeup_lat) exceeds the previous maximum. As with the similar functionality of the -RT latency_hist histograms, it's useful to be able to capture information about the previous process, which potentially could have contributed to the maximum latency that was saved. # echo 'hist:keys=woken_pid=next_pid:woken_prio=next_prio: \ wakeup_lat=common_timestamp.usecs-ts0:\ onmax(wakeup_lat).save(next_comm,prev_pid,prev_prio,prev_comm) \ if next_comm=="cyclictest"' >> \ /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_switch/trigger # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_switch/hist # event histogram # { next_pid: 3519 } hitcount: 2453 next_prio: 0 \ common_timestamp-ts0: 12785539665130611 max: 79 next_comm: cyclictest \ prev_pid: 0 prev_prio: 120 prev_comm: swapper/1 { next_pid: 3521 } hitcount: 16425 next_prio: 0 \ common_timestamp-ts0: 12785539665130611 max: 84 next_comm: cyclictest \ prev_pid: 0 prev_prio: 120 prev_comm: swapper/2 { next_pid: 3520 } hitcount: 24593 next_prio: 0 \ common_timestamp-ts0: 12785539665130611 max: 98 next_comm: cyclictest \ prev_pid: 0 prev_prio: 120 prev_comm: swapper/0 Totals: Hits: 217355 Entries: 3 Dropped: 0 And, verifying, we can see that the max latencies captured above match the highest latencies for each thread in the wakeup_latency histogram: # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeup_latency/hist # event histogram # # trigger info: hist:keys=pid,prio,lat:vals=hitcount:sort=pid,lat:size=2048 [active] # { pid: 3519, prio: 120, lat: 0 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3519, prio: 120, lat: 1 } hitcount: 176 { pid: 3519, prio: 120, lat: 2 } hitcount: 1284 { pid: 3519, prio: 120, lat: 3 } hitcount: 709 ... { pid: 3519, prio: 120, lat: 79 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3520, prio: 19, lat: 1 } hitcount: 3372 { pid: 3520, prio: 19, lat: 2 } hitcount: 14777 { pid: 3520, prio: 19, lat: 3 } hitcount: 4678 { pid: 3520, prio: 19, lat: 4 } hitcount: 926 ... { pid: 3520, prio: 19, lat: 98 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3521, prio: 19, lat: 1 } hitcount: 1551 { pid: 3521, prio: 19, lat: 2 } hitcount: 8827 { pid: 3521, prio: 19, lat: 3 } hitcount: 4620 { pid: 3521, prio: 19, lat: 4 } hitcount: 876 { pid: 3521, prio: 19, lat: 84 } hitcount: 1 Totals: Hits: 43471 Entries: 71 Dropped: 0 ==== Example - combined wakeup and switchtime (wakeupswitch) latency ==== Finally, this example is quite a bit more involved, but that's because it implements 3 latencies, one which is a combination of the other two. This also, is something that the -RT latency_hist patchset does and which this patchset adds generic support for. The latency_hist patchset creates a few individual latency histograms but also combines them into larger overall combined histograms. For example, the time between when a thread is awakened and when it actually continues executing in userspace is something covered by a histogram, but it's also broken down into two sub-histograms, one covering the time between sched_wakeup and the time the thread is scheduled in (wakeup_latency as above), and the time between when the thread is scheduled in and the time it actually begins executing again (return from sys_nanosleep), covered by a separate switchtime_latency histogram. The below combines the wakeup_latency histogram from before, adds a new switchtime_latency histogram, and another, wakeupswitch_latency, that's a combination of the other two. There isn't anything really new here, other than that the use of the addition operator to add two latencies to produce the wakeupswitch_latency. # wakeup latency # echo 'wakeup_latency lat=sched_switch:ss_lat pid=sched_switch:ss_pid' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/synthetic_events # echo 'hist:keys=pid:wakeup_ts=common_timestamp.usecs if comm=="cyclictest"' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_wakeup/trigger # echo 'hist:keys=ss_pid=next_pid:ss_lat=common_timestamp.usecs-wakeup_ts:onmatch().trace(wakeup_latency) if next_comm=="cyclictest"' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_switch/trigger # echo 'hist:keys=pid:wakeup_latency=lat:sort=pid' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeup_latency/trigger echo 'hist:keys=pid,lat:sort=pid,lat' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeup_latency/trigger # switchtime latency # echo 'switchtime_latency lat=sys_exit_nanosleep:ns_lat pid=sys_exit_nanosleep:ns_pid' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/synthetic_events # echo 'hist:keys=next_pid:ss_ts=common_timestamp.usecs if next_comm=="cyclictest"' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_switch/trigger # echo 'hist:key=ns_pid=common_pid:ns_lat=common_timestamp.usecs-ss_ts:onmatch().trace(switchtime_latency)' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/syscalls/sys_exit_nanosleep/trigger # echo 'hist:keys=pid:switchtime_latency=lat:sort=pid' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/switchtime_latency/trigger # echo 'hist:keys=pid,lat:sort=pid,lat' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/switchtime_latency/trigger # wakeupswitch latency # echo 'wakeupswitch_latency pid=sys_exit_nanosleep:ns_pid lat=sys_exit_nanosleep:wakeupswitch_lat' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/synthetic_events # echo 'hist:key=common_pid:wakeupswitch_lat=wakeup_latency+switchtime_latency:onmatch().trace(wakeupswitch_latency)' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/syscalls/sys_exit_nanosleep/trigger # echo 'hist:keys=pid,lat:sort=pid,lat' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeupswitch_latency/trigger # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeup_latency/hist # event histogram # # trigger info: hist:keys=pid,lat:vals=hitcount:sort=pid,lat:size=2048 [active] # { pid: 3015, lat: 1 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 2 } hitcount: 167 { pid: 3015, lat: 3 } hitcount: 348 { pid: 3015, lat: 4 } hitcount: 139 { pid: 3015, lat: 5 } hitcount: 14 { pid: 3015, lat: 6 } hitcount: 6 { pid: 3015, lat: 7 } hitcount: 7 { pid: 3015, lat: 8 } hitcount: 8 { pid: 3015, lat: 9 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3015, lat: 10 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 11 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 12 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3015, lat: 13 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3015, lat: 21 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 1 } hitcount: 294 { pid: 3016, lat: 2 } hitcount: 3641 { pid: 3016, lat: 3 } hitcount: 2535 { pid: 3016, lat: 4 } hitcount: 311 { pid: 3016, lat: 5 } hitcount: 109 { pid: 3016, lat: 6 } hitcount: 59 { pid: 3016, lat: 7 } hitcount: 27 { pid: 3016, lat: 8 } hitcount: 13 { pid: 3016, lat: 9 } hitcount: 5 { pid: 3016, lat: 10 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 11 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 12 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 13 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3016, lat: 15 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 17 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3016, lat: 21 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 1 } hitcount: 85 { pid: 3017, lat: 2 } hitcount: 1752 { pid: 3017, lat: 3 } hitcount: 2334 { pid: 3017, lat: 4 } hitcount: 308 { pid: 3017, lat: 5 } hitcount: 96 { pid: 3017, lat: 6 } hitcount: 46 { pid: 3017, lat: 7 } hitcount: 31 { pid: 3017, lat: 8 } hitcount: 12 { pid: 3017, lat: 9 } hitcount: 11 { pid: 3017, lat: 10 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3017, lat: 12 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3017, lat: 16 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 21 } hitcount: 1 Totals: Hits: 12386 Entries: 43 Dropped: 0 # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/switchtime_latency/hist # event histogram # # trigger info: hist:keys=pid,lat:vals=hitcount:sort=pid,lat:size=2048 [active] # { pid: 3015, lat: 1 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 2 } hitcount: 46 { pid: 3015, lat: 3 } hitcount: 284 { pid: 3015, lat: 4 } hitcount: 164 { pid: 3015, lat: 5 } hitcount: 116 { pid: 3015, lat: 6 } hitcount: 61 { pid: 3015, lat: 7 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3015, lat: 8 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 9 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 11 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3015, lat: 12 } hitcount: 4 { pid: 3015, lat: 13 } hitcount: 5 { pid: 3015, lat: 14 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3015, lat: 15 } hitcount: 5 { pid: 3015, lat: 20 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 1 } hitcount: 469 { pid: 3016, lat: 2 } hitcount: 5068 { pid: 3016, lat: 3 } hitcount: 920 { pid: 3016, lat: 4 } hitcount: 257 { pid: 3016, lat: 5 } hitcount: 97 { pid: 3016, lat: 6 } hitcount: 50 { pid: 3016, lat: 7 } hitcount: 32 { pid: 3016, lat: 8 } hitcount: 26 { pid: 3016, lat: 9 } hitcount: 24 { pid: 3016, lat: 10 } hitcount: 21 { pid: 3016, lat: 11 } hitcount: 10 { pid: 3016, lat: 12 } hitcount: 12 { pid: 3016, lat: 13 } hitcount: 6 { pid: 3016, lat: 14 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3016, lat: 15 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 17 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 19 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 21 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3016, lat: 25 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 29 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 61 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 1 } hitcount: 101 { pid: 3017, lat: 2 } hitcount: 3278 { pid: 3017, lat: 3 } hitcount: 877 { pid: 3017, lat: 4 } hitcount: 207 { pid: 3017, lat: 5 } hitcount: 66 { pid: 3017, lat: 6 } hitcount: 52 { pid: 3017, lat: 7 } hitcount: 27 { pid: 3017, lat: 8 } hitcount: 19 { pid: 3017, lat: 9 } hitcount: 20 { pid: 3017, lat: 10 } hitcount: 16 { pid: 3017, lat: 11 } hitcount: 8 { pid: 3017, lat: 12 } hitcount: 4 { pid: 3017, lat: 13 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3017, lat: 14 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3017, lat: 15 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 16 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 24 } hitcount: 1 Totals: Hits: 12386 Entries: 53 Dropped: 0 # cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/synthetic/wakeupswitch_latency/hist # event histogram # # trigger info: hist:keys=pid,lat:vals=hitcount:sort=pid,lat:size=2048 [active] # { pid: 3015, lat: 3 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 4 } hitcount: 21 { pid: 3015, lat: 5 } hitcount: 77 { pid: 3015, lat: 6 } hitcount: 174 { pid: 3015, lat: 7 } hitcount: 180 { pid: 3015, lat: 8 } hitcount: 123 { pid: 3015, lat: 9 } hitcount: 65 { pid: 3015, lat: 10 } hitcount: 13 { pid: 3015, lat: 11 } hitcount: 9 { pid: 3015, lat: 12 } hitcount: 5 { pid: 3015, lat: 13 } hitcount: 5 { pid: 3015, lat: 14 } hitcount: 5 { pid: 3015, lat: 15 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3015, lat: 16 } hitcount: 4 { pid: 3015, lat: 17 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3015, lat: 18 } hitcount: 7 { pid: 3015, lat: 19 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3015, lat: 24 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3015, lat: 25 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 2 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3016, lat: 3 } hitcount: 472 { pid: 3016, lat: 4 } hitcount: 3149 { pid: 3016, lat: 5 } hitcount: 2148 { pid: 3016, lat: 6 } hitcount: 516 { pid: 3016, lat: 7 } hitcount: 250 { pid: 3016, lat: 8 } hitcount: 174 { pid: 3016, lat: 9 } hitcount: 90 { pid: 3016, lat: 10 } hitcount: 58 { pid: 3016, lat: 11 } hitcount: 40 { pid: 3016, lat: 12 } hitcount: 31 { pid: 3016, lat: 13 } hitcount: 16 { pid: 3016, lat: 14 } hitcount: 12 { pid: 3016, lat: 15 } hitcount: 9 { pid: 3016, lat: 16 } hitcount: 10 { pid: 3016, lat: 17 } hitcount: 6 { pid: 3016, lat: 18 } hitcount: 7 { pid: 3016, lat: 19 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3016, lat: 20 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3016, lat: 21 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 23 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3016, lat: 28 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3016, lat: 34 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3016, lat: 63 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 2 } hitcount: 2 { pid: 3017, lat: 3 } hitcount: 89 { pid: 3017, lat: 4 } hitcount: 1417 { pid: 3017, lat: 5 } hitcount: 2026 { pid: 3017, lat: 6 } hitcount: 549 { pid: 3017, lat: 7 } hitcount: 169 { pid: 3017, lat: 8 } hitcount: 148 { pid: 3017, lat: 9 } hitcount: 104 { pid: 3017, lat: 10 } hitcount: 63 { pid: 3017, lat: 11 } hitcount: 36 { pid: 3017, lat: 12 } hitcount: 34 { pid: 3017, lat: 13 } hitcount: 19 { pid: 3017, lat: 14 } hitcount: 9 { pid: 3017, lat: 15 } hitcount: 6 { pid: 3017, lat: 16 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3017, lat: 17 } hitcount: 3 { pid: 3017, lat: 19 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 23 } hitcount: 1 { pid: 3017, lat: 26 } hitcount: 2 Totals: Hits: 12383 Entries: 62 Dropped: 0 The following changes since commit e704eff3ff5138a462443dcd64d071165df18782: ftrace: Have set_graph_function handle multiple functions in one write (2017-02-03 10:59:52 -0500) are available in the git repository at: git://git.yoctoproject.org/linux-yocto-contrib.git tzanussi/inter-event-v0 http://git.yoctoproject.org/cgit/cgit.cgi/linux-yocto-contrib/log/?h=tzanussi/inter-event-v0 Tom Zanussi (21): tracing: Add hist_field_name() accessor tracing: Reimplement log2 ring-buffer: Add TIME_EXTEND_ABS ring buffer type tracing: Give event triggers access to ring_buffer_event tracing: Add ring buffer event param to hist field functions tracing: Increase tracing map KEYS_MAX size tracing: Break out hist trigger assignment parsing tracing: Make traceprobe parsing code reusable tracing: Add hist trigger timestamp support tracing: Add per-element variable support to tracing_map tracing: Add variable support to hist triggers tracing: Account for variables in named trigger compatibility tracing: Add simple expression support to hist triggers tracing: Add variable reference handling to hist triggers tracing: Add usecs modifier for hist trigger timestamps tracing: Add support for dynamic tracepoints tracing: Add hist trigger action hook tracing: Add support for 'synthetic' events tracing: Add 'onmatch' hist trigger action support tracing: Add 'onmax' hist trigger action support tracing: Add inter-event hist trigger Documentation Documentation/trace/events.txt | 330 +++++ include/linux/ring_buffer.h | 12 +- include/linux/trace_events.h | 14 +- include/linux/tracepoint.h | 11 +- kernel/trace/ring_buffer.c | 109 +- kernel/trace/trace.c | 108 +- kernel/trace/trace.h | 20 +- kernel/trace/trace_events.c | 4 +- kernel/trace/trace_events_hist.c | 2687 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- kernel/trace/trace_events_trigger.c | 47 +- kernel/trace/trace_kprobe.c | 18 +- kernel/trace/trace_probe.c | 75 - kernel/trace/trace_probe.h | 7 - kernel/trace/trace_uprobe.c | 2 +- kernel/trace/tracing_map.c | 113 ++ kernel/trace/tracing_map.h | 13 +- kernel/tracepoint.c | 42 +- 17 files changed, 3244 insertions(+), 368 deletions(-) -- 1.9.3 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-rt-users" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html