diff options
author | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2012-10-01 10:28:49 -0700 |
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committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2012-10-01 10:28:49 -0700 |
commit | 7e92daaefa68e5ef1e1732e45231e73adbb724e7 (patch) | |
tree | 8e7f8ac9d82654df4c65939c6682f95510e22977 /tools/perf/scripts/python | |
parent | 7a68294278ae714ce2632a54f0f46916dca64f56 (diff) | |
parent | 1d787d37c8ff6612b8151c6dff15bfa7347bcbdf (diff) |
Merge branch 'perf-core-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip
Pull perf update from Ingo Molnar:
"Lots of changes in this cycle as well, with hundreds of commits from
over 30 contributors. Most of the activity was on the tooling side.
Higher level changes:
- New 'perf kvm' analysis tool, from Xiao Guangrong.
- New 'perf trace' system-wide tracing tool
- uprobes fixes + cleanups from Oleg Nesterov.
- Lots of patches to make perf build on Android out of box, from
Irina Tirdea
- Extend ftrace function tracing utility to be more dynamic for its
users. It allows for data passing to the callback functions, as
well as reading regs as if a breakpoint were to trigger at function
entry.
The main goal of this patch series was to allow kprobes to use
ftrace as an optimized probe point when a probe is placed on an
ftrace nop. With lots of help from Masami Hiramatsu, and going
through lots of iterations, we finally came up with a good
solution.
- Add cpumask for uncore pmu, use it in 'stat', from Yan, Zheng.
- Various tracing updates from Steve Rostedt
- Clean up and improve 'perf sched' performance by elliminating lots
of needless calls to libtraceevent.
- Event group parsing support, from Jiri Olsa
- UI/gtk refactorings and improvements from Namhyung Kim
- Add support for non-tracepoint events in perf script python, from
Feng Tang
- Add --symbols to 'script', similar to the one in 'report', from
Feng Tang.
Infrastructure enhancements and fixes:
- Convert the trace builtins to use the growing evsel/evlist
tracepoint infrastructure, removing several open coded constructs
like switch like series of strcmp to dispatch events, etc.
Basically what had already been showcased in 'perf sched'.
- Add evsel constructor for tracepoints, that uses libtraceevent just
to parse the /format events file, use it in a new 'perf test' to
make sure the libtraceevent format parsing regressions can be more
readily caught.
- Some strange errors were happening in some builds, but not on the
next, reported by several people, problem was some parser related
files, generated during the build, didn't had proper make deps, fix
from Eric Sandeen.
- Introduce struct and cache information about the environment where
a perf.data file was captured, from Namhyung Kim.
- Fix handling of unresolved samples when --symbols is used in
'report', from Feng Tang.
- Add union member access support to 'probe', from Hyeoncheol Lee.
- Fixups to die() removal, from Namhyung Kim.
- Render fixes for the TUI, from Namhyung Kim.
- Don't enable annotation in non symbolic view, from Namhyung Kim.
- Fix pipe mode in 'report', from Namhyung Kim.
- Move related stats code from stat to util/, will be used by the
'stat' kvm tool, from Xiao Guangrong.
- Remove die()/exit() calls from several tools.
- Resolve vdso callchains, from Jiri Olsa
- Don't pass const char pointers to basename, so that we can
unconditionally use libgen.h and thus avoid ifdef BIONIC lines,
from David Ahern
- Refactor hist formatting so that it can be reused with the GTK
browser, From Namhyung Kim
- Fix build for another rbtree.c change, from Adrian Hunter.
- Make 'perf diff' command work with evsel hists, from Jiri Olsa.
- Use the only field_sep var that is set up: symbol_conf.field_sep,
fix from Jiri Olsa.
- .gitignore compiled python binaries, from Namhyung Kim.
- Get rid of die() in more libtraceevent places, from Namhyung Kim.
- Rename libtraceevent 'private' struct member to 'priv' so that it
works in C++, from Steven Rostedt
- Remove lots of exit()/die() calls from tools so that the main perf
exit routine can take place, from David Ahern
- Fix x86 build on x86-64, from David Ahern.
- {int,str,rb}list fixes from Suzuki K Poulose
- perf.data header fixes from Namhyung Kim
- Allow user to indicate objdump path, needed in cross environments,
from Maciek Borzecki
- Fix hardware cache event name generation, fix from Jiri Olsa
- Add round trip test for sw, hw and cache event names, catching the
problem Jiri fixed, after Jiri's patch, the test passes
successfully.
- Clean target should do clean for lib/traceevent too, fix from David
Ahern
- Check the right variable for allocation failure, fix from Namhyung
Kim
- Set up evsel->tp_format regardless of evsel->name being set
already, fix from Namhyung Kim
- Oprofile fixes from Robert Richter.
- Remove perf_event_attr needless version inflation, from Jiri Olsa
- Introduce libtraceevent strerror like error reporting facility,
from Namhyung Kim
- Add pmu mappings to perf.data header and use event names from cmd
line, from Robert Richter
- Fix include order for bison/flex-generated C files, from Ben
Hutchings
- Build fixes and documentation corrections from David Ahern
- Assorted cleanups from Robert Richter
- Let O= makes handle relative paths, from Steven Rostedt
- perf script python fixes, from Feng Tang.
- Initial bash completion support, from Frederic Weisbecker
- Allow building without libelf, from Namhyung Kim.
- Support DWARF CFI based unwind to have callchains when %bp based
unwinding is not possible, from Jiri Olsa.
- Symbol resolution fixes, while fixing support PPC64 files with an
.opt ELF section was the end goal, several fixes for code that
handles all architectures and cleanups are included, from Cody
Schafer.
- Assorted fixes for Documentation and build in 32 bit, from Robert
Richter
- Cache the libtraceevent event_format associated to each evsel
early, so that we avoid relookups, i.e. calling pevent_find_event
repeatedly when processing tracepoint events.
[ This is to reduce the surface contact with libtraceevents and
make clear what is that the perf tools needs from that lib: so
far parsing the common and per event fields. ]
- Don't stop the build if the audit libraries are not installed, fix
from Namhyung Kim.
- Fix bfd.h/libbfd detection with recent binutils, from Markus
Trippelsdorf.
- Improve warning message when libunwind devel packages not present,
from Jiri Olsa"
* 'perf-core-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (282 commits)
perf trace: Add aliases for some syscalls
perf probe: Print an enum type variable in "enum variable-name" format when showing accessible variables
perf tools: Check libaudit availability for perf-trace builtin
perf hists: Add missing period_* fields when collapsing a hist entry
perf trace: New tool
perf evsel: Export the event_format constructor
perf evsel: Introduce rawptr() method
perf tools: Use perf_evsel__newtp in the event parser
perf evsel: The tracepoint constructor should store sys:name
perf evlist: Introduce set_filter() method
perf evlist: Renane set_filters method to apply_filters
perf test: Add test to check we correctly parse and match syscall open parms
perf evsel: Handle endianity in intval method
perf evsel: Know if byte swap is needed
perf tools: Allow handling a NULL cpu_map as meaning "all cpus"
perf evsel: Improve tracepoint constructor setup
tools lib traceevent: Fix error path on pevent_parse_event
perf test: Fix build failure
trace: Move trace event enable from fs_initcall to core_initcall
tracing: Add an option for disabling markers
...
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/perf/scripts/python')
4 files changed, 294 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tools/perf/scripts/python/Perf-Trace-Util/lib/Perf/Trace/EventClass.py b/tools/perf/scripts/python/Perf-Trace-Util/lib/Perf/Trace/EventClass.py new file mode 100755 index 00000000000..9e0985794e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/perf/scripts/python/Perf-Trace-Util/lib/Perf/Trace/EventClass.py @@ -0,0 +1,94 @@ +# EventClass.py +# +# This is a library defining some events types classes, which could +# be used by other scripts to analyzing the perf samples. +# +# Currently there are just a few classes defined for examples, +# PerfEvent is the base class for all perf event sample, PebsEvent +# is a HW base Intel x86 PEBS event, and user could add more SW/HW +# event classes based on requirements. + +import struct + +# Event types, user could add more here +EVTYPE_GENERIC = 0 +EVTYPE_PEBS = 1 # Basic PEBS event +EVTYPE_PEBS_LL = 2 # PEBS event with load latency info +EVTYPE_IBS = 3 + +# +# Currently we don't have good way to tell the event type, but by +# the size of raw buffer, raw PEBS event with load latency data's +# size is 176 bytes, while the pure PEBS event's size is 144 bytes. +# +def create_event(name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf): + if (len(raw_buf) == 144): + event = PebsEvent(name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf) + elif (len(raw_buf) == 176): + event = PebsNHM(name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf) + else: + event = PerfEvent(name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf) + + return event + +class PerfEvent(object): + event_num = 0 + def __init__(self, name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf, ev_type=EVTYPE_GENERIC): + self.name = name + self.comm = comm + self.dso = dso + self.symbol = symbol + self.raw_buf = raw_buf + self.ev_type = ev_type + PerfEvent.event_num += 1 + + def show(self): + print "PMU event: name=%12s, symbol=%24s, comm=%8s, dso=%12s" % (self.name, self.symbol, self.comm, self.dso) + +# +# Basic Intel PEBS (Precise Event-based Sampling) event, whose raw buffer +# contains the context info when that event happened: the EFLAGS and +# linear IP info, as well as all the registers. +# +class PebsEvent(PerfEvent): + pebs_num = 0 + def __init__(self, name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf, ev_type=EVTYPE_PEBS): + tmp_buf=raw_buf[0:80] + flags, ip, ax, bx, cx, dx, si, di, bp, sp = struct.unpack('QQQQQQQQQQ', tmp_buf) + self.flags = flags + self.ip = ip + self.ax = ax + self.bx = bx + self.cx = cx + self.dx = dx + self.si = si + self.di = di + self.bp = bp + self.sp = sp + + PerfEvent.__init__(self, name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf, ev_type) + PebsEvent.pebs_num += 1 + del tmp_buf + +# +# Intel Nehalem and Westmere support PEBS plus Load Latency info which lie +# in the four 64 bit words write after the PEBS data: +# Status: records the IA32_PERF_GLOBAL_STATUS register value +# DLA: Data Linear Address (EIP) +# DSE: Data Source Encoding, where the latency happens, hit or miss +# in L1/L2/L3 or IO operations +# LAT: the actual latency in cycles +# +class PebsNHM(PebsEvent): + pebs_nhm_num = 0 + def __init__(self, name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf, ev_type=EVTYPE_PEBS_LL): + tmp_buf=raw_buf[144:176] + status, dla, dse, lat = struct.unpack('QQQQ', tmp_buf) + self.status = status + self.dla = dla + self.dse = dse + self.lat = lat + + PebsEvent.__init__(self, name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf, ev_type) + PebsNHM.pebs_nhm_num += 1 + del tmp_buf diff --git a/tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/event_analyzing_sample-record b/tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/event_analyzing_sample-record new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..5ce652dabd0 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/event_analyzing_sample-record @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +#!/bin/bash + +# +# event_analyzing_sample.py can cover all type of perf samples including +# the tracepoints, so no special record requirements, just record what +# you want to analyze. +# +perf record $@ diff --git a/tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/event_analyzing_sample-report b/tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/event_analyzing_sample-report new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..0941fc94e15 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/perf/scripts/python/bin/event_analyzing_sample-report @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +#!/bin/bash +# description: analyze all perf samples +perf script $@ -s "$PERF_EXEC_PATH"/scripts/python/event_analyzing_sample.py diff --git a/tools/perf/scripts/python/event_analyzing_sample.py b/tools/perf/scripts/python/event_analyzing_sample.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..163c39fa12d --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/perf/scripts/python/event_analyzing_sample.py @@ -0,0 +1,189 @@ +# event_analyzing_sample.py: general event handler in python +# +# Current perf report is already very powerful with the annotation integrated, +# and this script is not trying to be as powerful as perf report, but +# providing end user/developer a flexible way to analyze the events other +# than trace points. +# +# The 2 database related functions in this script just show how to gather +# the basic information, and users can modify and write their own functions +# according to their specific requirement. +# +# The first function "show_general_events" just does a basic grouping for all +# generic events with the help of sqlite, and the 2nd one "show_pebs_ll" is +# for a x86 HW PMU event: PEBS with load latency data. +# + +import os +import sys +import math +import struct +import sqlite3 + +sys.path.append(os.environ['PERF_EXEC_PATH'] + \ + '/scripts/python/Perf-Trace-Util/lib/Perf/Trace') + +from perf_trace_context import * +from EventClass import * + +# +# If the perf.data has a big number of samples, then the insert operation +# will be very time consuming (about 10+ minutes for 10000 samples) if the +# .db database is on disk. Move the .db file to RAM based FS to speedup +# the handling, which will cut the time down to several seconds. +# +con = sqlite3.connect("/dev/shm/perf.db") +con.isolation_level = None + +def trace_begin(): + print "In trace_begin:\n" + + # + # Will create several tables at the start, pebs_ll is for PEBS data with + # load latency info, while gen_events is for general event. + # + con.execute(""" + create table if not exists gen_events ( + name text, + symbol text, + comm text, + dso text + );""") + con.execute(""" + create table if not exists pebs_ll ( + name text, + symbol text, + comm text, + dso text, + flags integer, + ip integer, + status integer, + dse integer, + dla integer, + lat integer + );""") + +# +# Create and insert event object to a database so that user could +# do more analysis with simple database commands. +# +def process_event(param_dict): + event_attr = param_dict["attr"] + sample = param_dict["sample"] + raw_buf = param_dict["raw_buf"] + comm = param_dict["comm"] + name = param_dict["ev_name"] + + # Symbol and dso info are not always resolved + if (param_dict.has_key("dso")): + dso = param_dict["dso"] + else: + dso = "Unknown_dso" + + if (param_dict.has_key("symbol")): + symbol = param_dict["symbol"] + else: + symbol = "Unknown_symbol" + + # Create the event object and insert it to the right table in database + event = create_event(name, comm, dso, symbol, raw_buf) + insert_db(event) + +def insert_db(event): + if event.ev_type == EVTYPE_GENERIC: + con.execute("insert into gen_events values(?, ?, ?, ?)", + (event.name, event.symbol, event.comm, event.dso)) + elif event.ev_type == EVTYPE_PEBS_LL: + event.ip &= 0x7fffffffffffffff + event.dla &= 0x7fffffffffffffff + con.execute("insert into pebs_ll values (?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?)", + (event.name, event.symbol, event.comm, event.dso, event.flags, + event.ip, event.status, event.dse, event.dla, event.lat)) + +def trace_end(): + print "In trace_end:\n" + # We show the basic info for the 2 type of event classes + show_general_events() + show_pebs_ll() + con.close() + +# +# As the event number may be very big, so we can't use linear way +# to show the histogram in real number, but use a log2 algorithm. +# + +def num2sym(num): + # Each number will have at least one '#' + snum = '#' * (int)(math.log(num, 2) + 1) + return snum + +def show_general_events(): + + # Check the total record number in the table + count = con.execute("select count(*) from gen_events") + for t in count: + print "There is %d records in gen_events table" % t[0] + if t[0] == 0: + return + + print "Statistics about the general events grouped by thread/symbol/dso: \n" + + # Group by thread + commq = con.execute("select comm, count(comm) from gen_events group by comm order by -count(comm)") + print "\n%16s %8s %16s\n%s" % ("comm", "number", "histogram", "="*42) + for row in commq: + print "%16s %8d %s" % (row[0], row[1], num2sym(row[1])) + + # Group by symbol + print "\n%32s %8s %16s\n%s" % ("symbol", "number", "histogram", "="*58) + symbolq = con.execute("select symbol, count(symbol) from gen_events group by symbol order by -count(symbol)") + for row in symbolq: + print "%32s %8d %s" % (row[0], row[1], num2sym(row[1])) + + # Group by dso + print "\n%40s %8s %16s\n%s" % ("dso", "number", "histogram", "="*74) + dsoq = con.execute("select dso, count(dso) from gen_events group by dso order by -count(dso)") + for row in dsoq: + print "%40s %8d %s" % (row[0], row[1], num2sym(row[1])) + +# +# This function just shows the basic info, and we could do more with the +# data in the tables, like checking the function parameters when some +# big latency events happen. +# +def show_pebs_ll(): + + count = con.execute("select count(*) from pebs_ll") + for t in count: + print "There is %d records in pebs_ll table" % t[0] + if t[0] == 0: + return + + print "Statistics about the PEBS Load Latency events grouped by thread/symbol/dse/latency: \n" + + # Group by thread + commq = con.execute("select comm, count(comm) from pebs_ll group by comm order by -count(comm)") + print "\n%16s %8s %16s\n%s" % ("comm", "number", "histogram", "="*42) + for row in commq: + print "%16s %8d %s" % (row[0], row[1], num2sym(row[1])) + + # Group by symbol + print "\n%32s %8s %16s\n%s" % ("symbol", "number", "histogram", "="*58) + symbolq = con.execute("select symbol, count(symbol) from pebs_ll group by symbol order by -count(symbol)") + for row in symbolq: + print "%32s %8d %s" % (row[0], row[1], num2sym(row[1])) + + # Group by dse + dseq = con.execute("select dse, count(dse) from pebs_ll group by dse order by -count(dse)") + print "\n%32s %8s %16s\n%s" % ("dse", "number", "histogram", "="*58) + for row in dseq: + print "%32s %8d %s" % (row[0], row[1], num2sym(row[1])) + + # Group by latency + latq = con.execute("select lat, count(lat) from pebs_ll group by lat order by lat") + print "\n%32s %8s %16s\n%s" % ("latency", "number", "histogram", "="*58) + for row in latq: + print "%32s %8d %s" % (row[0], row[1], num2sym(row[1])) + +def trace_unhandled(event_name, context, event_fields_dict): + print ' '.join(['%s=%s'%(k,str(v))for k,v in sorted(event_fields_dict.items())]) |