xref: /OK3568_Linux_fs/kernel/Documentation/trace/kprobetrace.rst (revision 4882a59341e53eb6f0b4789bf948001014eff981)
1*4882a593Smuzhiyun==========================
2*4882a593SmuzhiyunKprobe-based Event Tracing
3*4882a593Smuzhiyun==========================
4*4882a593Smuzhiyun
5*4882a593Smuzhiyun:Author: Masami Hiramatsu
6*4882a593Smuzhiyun
7*4882a593SmuzhiyunOverview
8*4882a593Smuzhiyun--------
9*4882a593SmuzhiyunThese events are similar to tracepoint based events. Instead of Tracepoint,
10*4882a593Smuzhiyunthis is based on kprobes (kprobe and kretprobe). So it can probe wherever
11*4882a593Smuzhiyunkprobes can probe (this means, all functions except those with
12*4882a593Smuzhiyun__kprobes/nokprobe_inline annotation and those marked NOKPROBE_SYMBOL).
13*4882a593SmuzhiyunUnlike the Tracepoint based event, this can be added and removed
14*4882a593Smuzhiyundynamically, on the fly.
15*4882a593Smuzhiyun
16*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo enable this feature, build your kernel with CONFIG_KPROBE_EVENTS=y.
17*4882a593Smuzhiyun
18*4882a593SmuzhiyunSimilar to the events tracer, this doesn't need to be activated via
19*4882a593Smuzhiyuncurrent_tracer. Instead of that, add probe points via
20*4882a593Smuzhiyun/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_events, and enable it via
21*4882a593Smuzhiyun/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kprobes/<EVENT>/enable.
22*4882a593Smuzhiyun
23*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can also use /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/dynamic_events instead of
24*4882a593Smuzhiyunkprobe_events. That interface will provide unified access to other
25*4882a593Smuzhiyundynamic events too.
26*4882a593Smuzhiyun
27*4882a593SmuzhiyunSynopsis of kprobe_events
28*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------------------
29*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
30*4882a593Smuzhiyun
31*4882a593Smuzhiyun  p[:[GRP/]EVENT] [MOD:]SYM[+offs]|MEMADDR [FETCHARGS]	: Set a probe
32*4882a593Smuzhiyun  r[MAXACTIVE][:[GRP/]EVENT] [MOD:]SYM[+0] [FETCHARGS]	: Set a return probe
33*4882a593Smuzhiyun  p:[GRP/]EVENT] [MOD:]SYM[+0]%return [FETCHARGS]	: Set a return probe
34*4882a593Smuzhiyun  -:[GRP/]EVENT						: Clear a probe
35*4882a593Smuzhiyun
36*4882a593Smuzhiyun GRP		: Group name. If omitted, use "kprobes" for it.
37*4882a593Smuzhiyun EVENT		: Event name. If omitted, the event name is generated
38*4882a593Smuzhiyun		  based on SYM+offs or MEMADDR.
39*4882a593Smuzhiyun MOD		: Module name which has given SYM.
40*4882a593Smuzhiyun SYM[+offs]	: Symbol+offset where the probe is inserted.
41*4882a593Smuzhiyun SYM%return	: Return address of the symbol
42*4882a593Smuzhiyun MEMADDR	: Address where the probe is inserted.
43*4882a593Smuzhiyun MAXACTIVE	: Maximum number of instances of the specified function that
44*4882a593Smuzhiyun		  can be probed simultaneously, or 0 for the default value
45*4882a593Smuzhiyun		  as defined in Documentation/trace/kprobes.rst section 1.3.1.
46*4882a593Smuzhiyun
47*4882a593Smuzhiyun FETCHARGS	: Arguments. Each probe can have up to 128 args.
48*4882a593Smuzhiyun  %REG		: Fetch register REG
49*4882a593Smuzhiyun  @ADDR		: Fetch memory at ADDR (ADDR should be in kernel)
50*4882a593Smuzhiyun  @SYM[+|-offs]	: Fetch memory at SYM +|- offs (SYM should be a data symbol)
51*4882a593Smuzhiyun  $stackN	: Fetch Nth entry of stack (N >= 0)
52*4882a593Smuzhiyun  $stack	: Fetch stack address.
53*4882a593Smuzhiyun  $argN		: Fetch the Nth function argument. (N >= 1) (\*1)
54*4882a593Smuzhiyun  $retval	: Fetch return value.(\*2)
55*4882a593Smuzhiyun  $comm		: Fetch current task comm.
56*4882a593Smuzhiyun  +|-[u]OFFS(FETCHARG) : Fetch memory at FETCHARG +|- OFFS address.(\*3)(\*4)
57*4882a593Smuzhiyun  \IMM		: Store an immediate value to the argument.
58*4882a593Smuzhiyun  NAME=FETCHARG : Set NAME as the argument name of FETCHARG.
59*4882a593Smuzhiyun  FETCHARG:TYPE : Set TYPE as the type of FETCHARG. Currently, basic types
60*4882a593Smuzhiyun		  (u8/u16/u32/u64/s8/s16/s32/s64), hexadecimal types
61*4882a593Smuzhiyun		  (x8/x16/x32/x64), "string", "ustring" and bitfield
62*4882a593Smuzhiyun		  are supported.
63*4882a593Smuzhiyun
64*4882a593Smuzhiyun  (\*1) only for the probe on function entry (offs == 0).
65*4882a593Smuzhiyun  (\*2) only for return probe.
66*4882a593Smuzhiyun  (\*3) this is useful for fetching a field of data structures.
67*4882a593Smuzhiyun  (\*4) "u" means user-space dereference. See :ref:`user_mem_access`.
68*4882a593Smuzhiyun
69*4882a593SmuzhiyunTypes
70*4882a593Smuzhiyun-----
71*4882a593SmuzhiyunSeveral types are supported for fetch-args. Kprobe tracer will access memory
72*4882a593Smuzhiyunby given type. Prefix 's' and 'u' means those types are signed and unsigned
73*4882a593Smuzhiyunrespectively. 'x' prefix implies it is unsigned. Traced arguments are shown
74*4882a593Smuzhiyunin decimal ('s' and 'u') or hexadecimal ('x'). Without type casting, 'x32'
75*4882a593Smuzhiyunor 'x64' is used depends on the architecture (e.g. x86-32 uses x32, and
76*4882a593Smuzhiyunx86-64 uses x64).
77*4882a593SmuzhiyunThese value types can be an array. To record array data, you can add '[N]'
78*4882a593Smuzhiyun(where N is a fixed number, less than 64) to the base type.
79*4882a593SmuzhiyunE.g. 'x16[4]' means an array of x16 (2bytes hex) with 4 elements.
80*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote that the array can be applied to memory type fetchargs, you can not
81*4882a593Smuzhiyunapply it to registers/stack-entries etc. (for example, '$stack1:x8[8]' is
82*4882a593Smuzhiyunwrong, but '+8($stack):x8[8]' is OK.)
83*4882a593SmuzhiyunString type is a special type, which fetches a "null-terminated" string from
84*4882a593Smuzhiyunkernel space. This means it will fail and store NULL if the string container
85*4882a593Smuzhiyunhas been paged out. "ustring" type is an alternative of string for user-space.
86*4882a593SmuzhiyunSee :ref:`user_mem_access` for more info..
87*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe string array type is a bit different from other types. For other base
88*4882a593Smuzhiyuntypes, <base-type>[1] is equal to <base-type> (e.g. +0(%di):x32[1] is same
89*4882a593Smuzhiyunas +0(%di):x32.) But string[1] is not equal to string. The string type itself
90*4882a593Smuzhiyunrepresents "char array", but string array type represents "char * array".
91*4882a593SmuzhiyunSo, for example, +0(%di):string[1] is equal to +0(+0(%di)):string.
92*4882a593SmuzhiyunBitfield is another special type, which takes 3 parameters, bit-width, bit-
93*4882a593Smuzhiyunoffset, and container-size (usually 32). The syntax is::
94*4882a593Smuzhiyun
95*4882a593Smuzhiyun b<bit-width>@<bit-offset>/<container-size>
96*4882a593Smuzhiyun
97*4882a593SmuzhiyunSymbol type('symbol') is an alias of u32 or u64 type (depends on BITS_PER_LONG)
98*4882a593Smuzhiyunwhich shows given pointer in "symbol+offset" style.
99*4882a593SmuzhiyunFor $comm, the default type is "string"; any other type is invalid.
100*4882a593Smuzhiyun
101*4882a593Smuzhiyun.. _user_mem_access:
102*4882a593Smuzhiyun
103*4882a593SmuzhiyunUser Memory Access
104*4882a593Smuzhiyun------------------
105*4882a593SmuzhiyunKprobe events supports user-space memory access. For that purpose, you can use
106*4882a593Smuzhiyuneither user-space dereference syntax or 'ustring' type.
107*4882a593Smuzhiyun
108*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe user-space dereference syntax allows you to access a field of a data
109*4882a593Smuzhiyunstructure in user-space. This is done by adding the "u" prefix to the
110*4882a593Smuzhiyundereference syntax. For example, +u4(%si) means it will read memory from the
111*4882a593Smuzhiyunaddress in the register %si offset by 4, and the memory is expected to be in
112*4882a593Smuzhiyunuser-space. You can use this for strings too, e.g. +u0(%si):string will read
113*4882a593Smuzhiyuna string from the address in the register %si that is expected to be in user-
114*4882a593Smuzhiyunspace. 'ustring' is a shortcut way of performing the same task. That is,
115*4882a593Smuzhiyun+0(%si):ustring is equivalent to +u0(%si):string.
116*4882a593Smuzhiyun
117*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote that kprobe-event provides the user-memory access syntax but it doesn't
118*4882a593Smuzhiyunuse it transparently. This means if you use normal dereference or string type
119*4882a593Smuzhiyunfor user memory, it might fail, and may always fail on some archs. The user
120*4882a593Smuzhiyunhas to carefully check if the target data is in kernel or user space.
121*4882a593Smuzhiyun
122*4882a593SmuzhiyunPer-Probe Event Filtering
123*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------------------
124*4882a593SmuzhiyunPer-probe event filtering feature allows you to set different filter on each
125*4882a593Smuzhiyunprobe and gives you what arguments will be shown in trace buffer. If an event
126*4882a593Smuzhiyunname is specified right after 'p:' or 'r:' in kprobe_events, it adds an event
127*4882a593Smuzhiyununder tracing/events/kprobes/<EVENT>, at the directory you can see 'id',
128*4882a593Smuzhiyun'enable', 'format', 'filter' and 'trigger'.
129*4882a593Smuzhiyun
130*4882a593Smuzhiyunenable:
131*4882a593Smuzhiyun  You can enable/disable the probe by writing 1 or 0 on it.
132*4882a593Smuzhiyun
133*4882a593Smuzhiyunformat:
134*4882a593Smuzhiyun  This shows the format of this probe event.
135*4882a593Smuzhiyun
136*4882a593Smuzhiyunfilter:
137*4882a593Smuzhiyun  You can write filtering rules of this event.
138*4882a593Smuzhiyun
139*4882a593Smuzhiyunid:
140*4882a593Smuzhiyun  This shows the id of this probe event.
141*4882a593Smuzhiyun
142*4882a593Smuzhiyuntrigger:
143*4882a593Smuzhiyun  This allows to install trigger commands which are executed when the event is
144*4882a593Smuzhiyun  hit (for details, see Documentation/trace/events.rst, section 6).
145*4882a593Smuzhiyun
146*4882a593SmuzhiyunEvent Profiling
147*4882a593Smuzhiyun---------------
148*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can check the total number of probe hits and probe miss-hits via
149*4882a593Smuzhiyun/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_profile.
150*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe first column is event name, the second is the number of probe hits,
151*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe third is the number of probe miss-hits.
152*4882a593Smuzhiyun
153*4882a593SmuzhiyunKernel Boot Parameter
154*4882a593Smuzhiyun---------------------
155*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can add and enable new kprobe events when booting up the kernel by
156*4882a593Smuzhiyun"kprobe_event=" parameter. The parameter accepts a semicolon-delimited
157*4882a593Smuzhiyunkprobe events, which format is similar to the kprobe_events.
158*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe difference is that the probe definition parameters are comma-delimited
159*4882a593Smuzhiyuninstead of space. For example, adding myprobe event on do_sys_open like below
160*4882a593Smuzhiyun
161*4882a593Smuzhiyun  p:myprobe do_sys_open dfd=%ax filename=%dx flags=%cx mode=+4($stack)
162*4882a593Smuzhiyun
163*4882a593Smuzhiyunshould be below for kernel boot parameter (just replace spaces with comma)
164*4882a593Smuzhiyun
165*4882a593Smuzhiyun  p:myprobe,do_sys_open,dfd=%ax,filename=%dx,flags=%cx,mode=+4($stack)
166*4882a593Smuzhiyun
167*4882a593Smuzhiyun
168*4882a593SmuzhiyunUsage examples
169*4882a593Smuzhiyun--------------
170*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo add a probe as a new event, write a new definition to kprobe_events
171*4882a593Smuzhiyunas below::
172*4882a593Smuzhiyun
173*4882a593Smuzhiyun  echo 'p:myprobe do_sys_open dfd=%ax filename=%dx flags=%cx mode=+4($stack)' > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_events
174*4882a593Smuzhiyun
175*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis sets a kprobe on the top of do_sys_open() function with recording
176*4882a593Smuzhiyun1st to 4th arguments as "myprobe" event. Note, which register/stack entry is
177*4882a593Smuzhiyunassigned to each function argument depends on arch-specific ABI. If you unsure
178*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe ABI, please try to use probe subcommand of perf-tools (you can find it
179*4882a593Smuzhiyununder tools/perf/).
180*4882a593SmuzhiyunAs this example shows, users can choose more familiar names for each arguments.
181*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
182*4882a593Smuzhiyun
183*4882a593Smuzhiyun  echo 'r:myretprobe do_sys_open $retval' >> /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_events
184*4882a593Smuzhiyun
185*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis sets a kretprobe on the return point of do_sys_open() function with
186*4882a593Smuzhiyunrecording return value as "myretprobe" event.
187*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can see the format of these events via
188*4882a593Smuzhiyun/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kprobes/<EVENT>/format.
189*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
190*4882a593Smuzhiyun
191*4882a593Smuzhiyun  cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kprobes/myprobe/format
192*4882a593Smuzhiyun  name: myprobe
193*4882a593Smuzhiyun  ID: 780
194*4882a593Smuzhiyun  format:
195*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned short common_type;       offset:0;       size:2; signed:0;
196*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned char common_flags;       offset:2;       size:1; signed:0;
197*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned char common_preempt_count;       offset:3; size:1;signed:0;
198*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:int common_pid;   offset:4;       size:4; signed:1;
199*4882a593Smuzhiyun
200*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned long __probe_ip; offset:12;      size:4; signed:0;
201*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:int __probe_nargs;        offset:16;      size:4; signed:1;
202*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned long dfd;        offset:20;      size:4; signed:0;
203*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned long filename;   offset:24;      size:4; signed:0;
204*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned long flags;      offset:28;      size:4; signed:0;
205*4882a593Smuzhiyun          field:unsigned long mode;       offset:32;      size:4; signed:0;
206*4882a593Smuzhiyun
207*4882a593Smuzhiyun
208*4882a593Smuzhiyun  print fmt: "(%lx) dfd=%lx filename=%lx flags=%lx mode=%lx", REC->__probe_ip,
209*4882a593Smuzhiyun  REC->dfd, REC->filename, REC->flags, REC->mode
210*4882a593Smuzhiyun
211*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can see that the event has 4 arguments as in the expressions you specified.
212*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
213*4882a593Smuzhiyun
214*4882a593Smuzhiyun  echo > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/kprobe_events
215*4882a593Smuzhiyun
216*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis clears all probe points.
217*4882a593Smuzhiyun
218*4882a593SmuzhiyunOr,
219*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
220*4882a593Smuzhiyun
221*4882a593Smuzhiyun  echo -:myprobe >> kprobe_events
222*4882a593Smuzhiyun
223*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis clears probe points selectively.
224*4882a593Smuzhiyun
225*4882a593SmuzhiyunRight after definition, each event is disabled by default. For tracing these
226*4882a593Smuzhiyunevents, you need to enable it.
227*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
228*4882a593Smuzhiyun
229*4882a593Smuzhiyun  echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kprobes/myprobe/enable
230*4882a593Smuzhiyun  echo 1 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kprobes/myretprobe/enable
231*4882a593Smuzhiyun
232*4882a593SmuzhiyunUse the following command to start tracing in an interval.
233*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
234*4882a593Smuzhiyun
235*4882a593Smuzhiyun    # echo 1 > tracing_on
236*4882a593Smuzhiyun    Open something...
237*4882a593Smuzhiyun    # echo 0 > tracing_on
238*4882a593Smuzhiyun
239*4882a593SmuzhiyunAnd you can see the traced information via /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace.
240*4882a593Smuzhiyun::
241*4882a593Smuzhiyun
242*4882a593Smuzhiyun  cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace
243*4882a593Smuzhiyun  # tracer: nop
244*4882a593Smuzhiyun  #
245*4882a593Smuzhiyun  #           TASK-PID    CPU#    TIMESTAMP  FUNCTION
246*4882a593Smuzhiyun  #              | |       |          |         |
247*4882a593Smuzhiyun             <...>-1447  [001] 1038282.286875: myprobe: (do_sys_open+0x0/0xd6) dfd=3 filename=7fffd1ec4440 flags=8000 mode=0
248*4882a593Smuzhiyun             <...>-1447  [001] 1038282.286878: myretprobe: (sys_openat+0xc/0xe <- do_sys_open) $retval=fffffffffffffffe
249*4882a593Smuzhiyun             <...>-1447  [001] 1038282.286885: myprobe: (do_sys_open+0x0/0xd6) dfd=ffffff9c filename=40413c flags=8000 mode=1b6
250*4882a593Smuzhiyun             <...>-1447  [001] 1038282.286915: myretprobe: (sys_open+0x1b/0x1d <- do_sys_open) $retval=3
251*4882a593Smuzhiyun             <...>-1447  [001] 1038282.286969: myprobe: (do_sys_open+0x0/0xd6) dfd=ffffff9c filename=4041c6 flags=98800 mode=10
252*4882a593Smuzhiyun             <...>-1447  [001] 1038282.286976: myretprobe: (sys_open+0x1b/0x1d <- do_sys_open) $retval=3
253*4882a593Smuzhiyun
254*4882a593Smuzhiyun
255*4882a593SmuzhiyunEach line shows when the kernel hits an event, and <- SYMBOL means kernel
256*4882a593Smuzhiyunreturns from SYMBOL(e.g. "sys_open+0x1b/0x1d <- do_sys_open" means kernel
257*4882a593Smuzhiyunreturns from do_sys_open to sys_open+0x1b).
258