table of contents
| KTR(4) | Device Drivers Manual | KTR(4) |
NAME¶
ktr — kernel
tracing facility
SYNOPSIS¶
options KTR
options ALQ
options KTR_ALQ
options KTR_COMPILE=(KTR_LOCK|KTR_INTR|KTR_PROC)
options KTR_CPUMASK=0x3
options KTR_ENTRIES=8192
options KTR_MASK=(KTR_INTR|KTR_PROC)
options KTR_VERBOSE
DESCRIPTION¶
The ktr facility allows kernel events to
be logged while the kernel executes so that they can be examined later when
debugging. The only mandatory option to enable ktr
is “options KTR”.
The KTR_ENTRIES option sets the size of
the buffer of events. The size of the buffer in the currently running kernel
can be found via the sysctl debug.ktr.entries. By
default the buffer contains 1024 entries.
Event Masking¶
Event levels can be enabled or disabled to trim excessive and
overly verbose logging. First, a mask of events is specified at compile time
via the KTR_COMPILE option to limit which events are
actually compiled into the kernel. The default value for this option is for
all events to be enabled.
Secondly, the actual events logged while the kernel runs can be
further masked via the run time event mask. The
KTR_MASK option sets the default value of the run
time event mask. The runtime event mask can also be set by the
loader(8) via the debug.ktr.mask
environment variable. It can also be examined and set after booting via the
debug.ktr.mask sysctl. By default the run time mask is
set to block any tracing. The definitions of the event mask bits can be
found in <sys/ktr.h>.
Furthermore, there is a CPU event mask whose default value can be
changed via the KTR_CPUMASK option. When two or more
parameters to KTR_CPUMASK, are used, it is important
they are not separated by whitespace. A CPU must have the bit corresponding
to its logical id set in this bitmask for events that occur on it to be
logged. This mask can be set by the loader(8) via the
debug.ktr.cpumask environment variable. It can also be
examined and set after booting via the
debug.ktr.cpumask sysctl. By default, only CPUs
specified in KTR_CPUMASK will log events. See
sys/conf/NOTES for more information.
Verbose Mode¶
By default, events are only logged to the internal buffer for
examination later, but if the verbose flag is set then they are dumped to
the kernel console as well. This flag can also be set from the loader via
the debug.ktr.verbose environment variable, or it can
be examined and set after booting via the
debug.ktr.verbose sysctl. If the flag is set to zero,
which is the default, then verbose output is disabled. If the flag is set to
one, then the contents of the log message and the CPU number are printed to
the kernel console. If the flag is greater than one, then the filename and
line number of the event are output to the console in addition to the log
message and the CPU number. The KTR_VERBOSE option
sets the flag to one.
Examining the Events¶
The KTR buffer can be examined from within
ddb(4) via the show ktr
[/vV] command. This command displays the contents of
the trace buffer one page at a time. At the
“--more--” prompt, the Enter key
displays one more entry and prompts again. The spacebar displays another
page of entries. Any other key quits. By default the timestamp, filename,
and line number are not displayed with each log entry. If the
/v modifier is specified, then they are displayed in
addition to the normal output. If the /V modifier is
specified, then just the timestamp is displayed in addition to the normal
output. Note that the events are displayed in reverse chronological order.
That is, the most recent events are displayed first.
Logging ktr to Disk¶
The KTR_ALQ option can be used to log
ktr entries to disk for post analysis using the
ktrdump(8) utility. This option depends on the
ALQ option. Due to the potentially high volume of
trace messages the trace mask should be selected carefully. This feature is
configured through a group of sysctls.
- debug.ktr.alq_file
- displays or sets the file that
ktrwill log to. By default its value is /tmp/ktr.out. If the file name is changed whilektris enabled it will not take effect until the next invocation. - debug.ktr.alq_enable
- enables logging of
ktrentries to disk if it is set to one. Setting this to 0 will terminate logging to disk and revert to logging to the normal ktr ring buffer. Data is not sent to the ring buffer while logging to disk. - debug.ktr.alq_max
- is the maximum number of entries that will be recorded to disk, or 0 for infinite. This is helpful for limiting the number of particularly high frequency entries that are recorded.
- debug.ktr.alq_depth
- determines the number of entries in the write buffer. This is the buffer
that holds entries before they are written to disk and defaults to the
value of the
KTR_ENTRIESoption. - debug.ktr.alq_failed
- records the number of times we failed to write an entry due to overflowing
the write buffer. This may happen if the frequency of the logged
ktrmessages outpaces the depth of the queue. - debug.ktr.alq_cnt
- records the number of entries that have currently been written to disk.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The KTR kernel tracing facility first appeared in BSD/OS 3.0 and was imported into FreeBSD 5.0.
| October 20, 2012 | Debian |