1perf-record(1) 2============== 3 4NAME 5---- 6perf-record - Run a command and record its profile into perf.data 7 8SYNOPSIS 9-------- 10[verse] 11'perf record' [-e <EVENT> | --event=EVENT] [-a] <command> 12'perf record' [-e <EVENT> | --event=EVENT] [-a] -- <command> [<options>] 13 14DESCRIPTION 15----------- 16This command runs a command and gathers a performance counter profile 17from it, into perf.data - without displaying anything. 18 19This file can then be inspected later on, using 'perf report'. 20 21 22OPTIONS 23------- 24<command>...:: 25 Any command you can specify in a shell. 26 27-e:: 28--event=:: 29 Select the PMU event. Selection can be: 30 31 - a symbolic event name (use 'perf list' to list all events) 32 33 - a raw PMU event (eventsel+umask) in the form of rNNN where NNN is a 34 hexadecimal event descriptor. 35 36 - a symbolically formed PMU event like 'pmu/param1=0x3,param2/' where 37 'param1', 'param2', etc are defined as formats for the PMU in 38 /sys/bus/event_source/devices/<pmu>/format/*. 39 40 - a symbolically formed event like 'pmu/config=M,config1=N,config3=K/' 41 42 where M, N, K are numbers (in decimal, hex, octal format). Acceptable 43 values for each of 'config', 'config1' and 'config2' are defined by 44 corresponding entries in /sys/bus/event_source/devices/<pmu>/format/* 45 param1 and param2 are defined as formats for the PMU in: 46 /sys/bus/event_source/devices/<pmu>/format/* 47 48 There are also some parameters which are not defined in .../<pmu>/format/*. 49 These params can be used to overload default config values per event. 50 Here are some common parameters: 51 - 'period': Set event sampling period 52 - 'freq': Set event sampling frequency 53 - 'time': Disable/enable time stamping. Acceptable values are 1 for 54 enabling time stamping. 0 for disabling time stamping. 55 The default is 1. 56 - 'call-graph': Disable/enable callgraph. Acceptable str are "fp" for 57 FP mode, "dwarf" for DWARF mode, "lbr" for LBR mode and 58 "no" for disable callgraph. 59 - 'stack-size': user stack size for dwarf mode 60 - 'name' : User defined event name. Single quotes (') may be used to 61 escape symbols in the name from parsing by shell and tool 62 like this: name=\'CPU_CLK_UNHALTED.THREAD:cmask=0x1\'. 63 - 'aux-output': Generate AUX records instead of events. This requires 64 that an AUX area event is also provided. 65 - 'aux-sample-size': Set sample size for AUX area sampling. If the 66 '--aux-sample' option has been used, set aux-sample-size=0 to disable 67 AUX area sampling for the event. 68 69 See the linkperf:perf-list[1] man page for more parameters. 70 71 Note: If user explicitly sets options which conflict with the params, 72 the value set by the parameters will be overridden. 73 74 Also not defined in .../<pmu>/format/* are PMU driver specific 75 configuration parameters. Any configuration parameter preceded by 76 the letter '@' is not interpreted in user space and sent down directly 77 to the PMU driver. For example: 78 79 perf record -e some_event/@cfg1,@cfg2=config/ ... 80 81 will see 'cfg1' and 'cfg2=config' pushed to the PMU driver associated 82 with the event for further processing. There is no restriction on 83 what the configuration parameters are, as long as their semantic is 84 understood and supported by the PMU driver. 85 86 - a hardware breakpoint event in the form of '\mem:addr[/len][:access]' 87 where addr is the address in memory you want to break in. 88 Access is the memory access type (read, write, execute) it can 89 be passed as follows: '\mem:addr[:[r][w][x]]'. len is the range, 90 number of bytes from specified addr, which the breakpoint will cover. 91 If you want to profile read-write accesses in 0x1000, just set 92 'mem:0x1000:rw'. 93 If you want to profile write accesses in [0x1000~1008), just set 94 'mem:0x1000/8:w'. 95 96 - a BPF source file (ending in .c) or a precompiled object file (ending 97 in .o) selects one or more BPF events. 98 The BPF program can attach to various perf events based on the ELF section 99 names. 100 101 When processing a '.c' file, perf searches an installed LLVM to compile it 102 into an object file first. Optional clang options can be passed via the 103 '--clang-opt' command line option, e.g.: 104 105 perf record --clang-opt "-DLINUX_VERSION_CODE=0x50000" \ 106 -e tests/bpf-script-example.c 107 108 Note: '--clang-opt' must be placed before '--event/-e'. 109 110 - a group of events surrounded by a pair of brace ("{event1,event2,...}"). 111 Each event is separated by commas and the group should be quoted to 112 prevent the shell interpretation. You also need to use --group on 113 "perf report" to view group events together. 114 115--filter=<filter>:: 116 Event filter. This option should follow an event selector (-e) which 117 selects either tracepoint event(s) or a hardware trace PMU 118 (e.g. Intel PT or CoreSight). 119 120 - tracepoint filters 121 122 In the case of tracepoints, multiple '--filter' options are combined 123 using '&&'. 124 125 - address filters 126 127 A hardware trace PMU advertises its ability to accept a number of 128 address filters by specifying a non-zero value in 129 /sys/bus/event_source/devices/<pmu>/nr_addr_filters. 130 131 Address filters have the format: 132 133 filter|start|stop|tracestop <start> [/ <size>] [@<file name>] 134 135 Where: 136 - 'filter': defines a region that will be traced. 137 - 'start': defines an address at which tracing will begin. 138 - 'stop': defines an address at which tracing will stop. 139 - 'tracestop': defines a region in which tracing will stop. 140 141 <file name> is the name of the object file, <start> is the offset to the 142 code to trace in that file, and <size> is the size of the region to 143 trace. 'start' and 'stop' filters need not specify a <size>. 144 145 If no object file is specified then the kernel is assumed, in which case 146 the start address must be a current kernel memory address. 147 148 <start> can also be specified by providing the name of a symbol. If the 149 symbol name is not unique, it can be disambiguated by inserting #n where 150 'n' selects the n'th symbol in address order. Alternately #0, #g or #G 151 select only a global symbol. <size> can also be specified by providing 152 the name of a symbol, in which case the size is calculated to the end 153 of that symbol. For 'filter' and 'tracestop' filters, if <size> is 154 omitted and <start> is a symbol, then the size is calculated to the end 155 of that symbol. 156 157 If <size> is omitted and <start> is '*', then the start and size will 158 be calculated from the first and last symbols, i.e. to trace the whole 159 file. 160 161 If symbol names (or '*') are provided, they must be surrounded by white 162 space. 163 164 The filter passed to the kernel is not necessarily the same as entered. 165 To see the filter that is passed, use the -v option. 166 167 The kernel may not be able to configure a trace region if it is not 168 within a single mapping. MMAP events (or /proc/<pid>/maps) can be 169 examined to determine if that is a possibility. 170 171 Multiple filters can be separated with space or comma. 172 173--exclude-perf:: 174 Don't record events issued by perf itself. This option should follow 175 an event selector (-e) which selects tracepoint event(s). It adds a 176 filter expression 'common_pid != $PERFPID' to filters. If other 177 '--filter' exists, the new filter expression will be combined with 178 them by '&&'. 179 180-a:: 181--all-cpus:: 182 System-wide collection from all CPUs (default if no target is specified). 183 184-p:: 185--pid=:: 186 Record events on existing process ID (comma separated list). 187 188-t:: 189--tid=:: 190 Record events on existing thread ID (comma separated list). 191 This option also disables inheritance by default. Enable it by adding 192 --inherit. 193 194-u:: 195--uid=:: 196 Record events in threads owned by uid. Name or number. 197 198-r:: 199--realtime=:: 200 Collect data with this RT SCHED_FIFO priority. 201 202--no-buffering:: 203 Collect data without buffering. 204 205-c:: 206--count=:: 207 Event period to sample. 208 209-o:: 210--output=:: 211 Output file name. 212 213-i:: 214--no-inherit:: 215 Child tasks do not inherit counters. 216 217-F:: 218--freq=:: 219 Profile at this frequency. Use 'max' to use the currently maximum 220 allowed frequency, i.e. the value in the kernel.perf_event_max_sample_rate 221 sysctl. Will throttle down to the currently maximum allowed frequency. 222 See --strict-freq. 223 224--strict-freq:: 225 Fail if the specified frequency can't be used. 226 227-m:: 228--mmap-pages=:: 229 Number of mmap data pages (must be a power of two) or size 230 specification with appended unit character - B/K/M/G. The 231 size is rounded up to have nearest pages power of two value. 232 Also, by adding a comma, the number of mmap pages for AUX 233 area tracing can be specified. 234 235--group:: 236 Put all events in a single event group. This precedes the --event 237 option and remains only for backward compatibility. See --event. 238 239-g:: 240 Enables call-graph (stack chain/backtrace) recording. 241 242--call-graph:: 243 Setup and enable call-graph (stack chain/backtrace) recording, 244 implies -g. Default is "fp". 245 246 Allows specifying "fp" (frame pointer) or "dwarf" 247 (DWARF's CFI - Call Frame Information) or "lbr" 248 (Hardware Last Branch Record facility) as the method to collect 249 the information used to show the call graphs. 250 251 In some systems, where binaries are build with gcc 252 --fomit-frame-pointer, using the "fp" method will produce bogus 253 call graphs, using "dwarf", if available (perf tools linked to 254 the libunwind or libdw library) should be used instead. 255 Using the "lbr" method doesn't require any compiler options. It 256 will produce call graphs from the hardware LBR registers. The 257 main limitation is that it is only available on new Intel 258 platforms, such as Haswell. It can only get user call chain. It 259 doesn't work with branch stack sampling at the same time. 260 261 When "dwarf" recording is used, perf also records (user) stack dump 262 when sampled. Default size of the stack dump is 8192 (bytes). 263 User can change the size by passing the size after comma like 264 "--call-graph dwarf,4096". 265 266-q:: 267--quiet:: 268 Don't print any message, useful for scripting. 269 270-v:: 271--verbose:: 272 Be more verbose (show counter open errors, etc). 273 274-s:: 275--stat:: 276 Record per-thread event counts. Use it with 'perf report -T' to see 277 the values. 278 279-d:: 280--data:: 281 Record the sample virtual addresses. 282 283--phys-data:: 284 Record the sample physical addresses. 285 286-T:: 287--timestamp:: 288 Record the sample timestamps. Use it with 'perf report -D' to see the 289 timestamps, for instance. 290 291-P:: 292--period:: 293 Record the sample period. 294 295--sample-cpu:: 296 Record the sample cpu. 297 298-n:: 299--no-samples:: 300 Don't sample. 301 302-R:: 303--raw-samples:: 304Collect raw sample records from all opened counters (default for tracepoint counters). 305 306-C:: 307--cpu:: 308Collect samples only on the list of CPUs provided. Multiple CPUs can be provided as a 309comma-separated list with no space: 0,1. Ranges of CPUs are specified with -: 0-2. 310In per-thread mode with inheritance mode on (default), samples are captured only when 311the thread executes on the designated CPUs. Default is to monitor all CPUs. 312 313-B:: 314--no-buildid:: 315Do not save the build ids of binaries in the perf.data files. This skips 316post processing after recording, which sometimes makes the final step in 317the recording process to take a long time, as it needs to process all 318events looking for mmap records. The downside is that it can misresolve 319symbols if the workload binaries used when recording get locally rebuilt 320or upgraded, because the only key available in this case is the 321pathname. You can also set the "record.build-id" config variable to 322'skip to have this behaviour permanently. 323 324-N:: 325--no-buildid-cache:: 326Do not update the buildid cache. This saves some overhead in situations 327where the information in the perf.data file (which includes buildids) 328is sufficient. You can also set the "record.build-id" config variable to 329'no-cache' to have the same effect. 330 331-G name,...:: 332--cgroup name,...:: 333monitor only in the container (cgroup) called "name". This option is available only 334in per-cpu mode. The cgroup filesystem must be mounted. All threads belonging to 335container "name" are monitored when they run on the monitored CPUs. Multiple cgroups 336can be provided. Each cgroup is applied to the corresponding event, i.e., first cgroup 337to first event, second cgroup to second event and so on. It is possible to provide 338an empty cgroup (monitor all the time) using, e.g., -G foo,,bar. Cgroups must have 339corresponding events, i.e., they always refer to events defined earlier on the command 340line. If the user wants to track multiple events for a specific cgroup, the user can 341use '-e e1 -e e2 -G foo,foo' or just use '-e e1 -e e2 -G foo'. 342 343If wanting to monitor, say, 'cycles' for a cgroup and also for system wide, this 344command line can be used: 'perf stat -e cycles -G cgroup_name -a -e cycles'. 345 346-b:: 347--branch-any:: 348Enable taken branch stack sampling. Any type of taken branch may be sampled. 349This is a shortcut for --branch-filter any. See --branch-filter for more infos. 350 351-j:: 352--branch-filter:: 353Enable taken branch stack sampling. Each sample captures a series of consecutive 354taken branches. The number of branches captured with each sample depends on the 355underlying hardware, the type of branches of interest, and the executed code. 356It is possible to select the types of branches captured by enabling filters. The 357following filters are defined: 358 359 - any: any type of branches 360 - any_call: any function call or system call 361 - any_ret: any function return or system call return 362 - ind_call: any indirect branch 363 - call: direct calls, including far (to/from kernel) calls 364 - u: only when the branch target is at the user level 365 - k: only when the branch target is in the kernel 366 - hv: only when the target is at the hypervisor level 367 - in_tx: only when the target is in a hardware transaction 368 - no_tx: only when the target is not in a hardware transaction 369 - abort_tx: only when the target is a hardware transaction abort 370 - cond: conditional branches 371 - save_type: save branch type during sampling in case binary is not available later 372 373+ 374The option requires at least one branch type among any, any_call, any_ret, ind_call, cond. 375The privilege levels may be omitted, in which case, the privilege levels of the associated 376event are applied to the branch filter. Both kernel (k) and hypervisor (hv) privilege 377levels are subject to permissions. When sampling on multiple events, branch stack sampling 378is enabled for all the sampling events. The sampled branch type is the same for all events. 379The various filters must be specified as a comma separated list: --branch-filter any_ret,u,k 380Note that this feature may not be available on all processors. 381 382--weight:: 383Enable weightened sampling. An additional weight is recorded per sample and can be 384displayed with the weight and local_weight sort keys. This currently works for TSX 385abort events and some memory events in precise mode on modern Intel CPUs. 386 387--namespaces:: 388Record events of type PERF_RECORD_NAMESPACES. 389 390--transaction:: 391Record transaction flags for transaction related events. 392 393--per-thread:: 394Use per-thread mmaps. By default per-cpu mmaps are created. This option 395overrides that and uses per-thread mmaps. A side-effect of that is that 396inheritance is automatically disabled. --per-thread is ignored with a warning 397if combined with -a or -C options. 398 399-D:: 400--delay=:: 401After starting the program, wait msecs before measuring. This is useful to 402filter out the startup phase of the program, which is often very different. 403 404-I:: 405--intr-regs:: 406Capture machine state (registers) at interrupt, i.e., on counter overflows for 407each sample. List of captured registers depends on the architecture. This option 408is off by default. It is possible to select the registers to sample using their 409symbolic names, e.g. on x86, ax, si. To list the available registers use 410--intr-regs=\?. To name registers, pass a comma separated list such as 411--intr-regs=ax,bx. The list of register is architecture dependent. 412 413--user-regs:: 414Similar to -I, but capture user registers at sample time. To list the available 415user registers use --user-regs=\?. 416 417--running-time:: 418Record running and enabled time for read events (:S) 419 420-k:: 421--clockid:: 422Sets the clock id to use for the various time fields in the perf_event_type 423records. See clock_gettime(). In particular CLOCK_MONOTONIC and 424CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW are supported, some events might also allow 425CLOCK_BOOTTIME, CLOCK_REALTIME and CLOCK_TAI. 426 427-S:: 428--snapshot:: 429Select AUX area tracing Snapshot Mode. This option is valid only with an 430AUX area tracing event. Optionally, certain snapshot capturing parameters 431can be specified in a string that follows this option: 432 'e': take one last snapshot on exit; guarantees that there is at least one 433 snapshot in the output file; 434 <size>: if the PMU supports this, specify the desired snapshot size. 435 436In Snapshot Mode trace data is captured only when signal SIGUSR2 is received 437and on exit if the above 'e' option is given. 438 439--aux-sample[=OPTIONS]:: 440Select AUX area sampling. At least one of the events selected by the -e option 441must be an AUX area event. Samples on other events will be created containing 442data from the AUX area. Optionally sample size may be specified, otherwise it 443defaults to 4KiB. 444 445--proc-map-timeout:: 446When processing pre-existing threads /proc/XXX/mmap, it may take a long time, 447because the file may be huge. A time out is needed in such cases. 448This option sets the time out limit. The default value is 500 ms. 449 450--switch-events:: 451Record context switch events i.e. events of type PERF_RECORD_SWITCH or 452PERF_RECORD_SWITCH_CPU_WIDE. 453 454--clang-path=PATH:: 455Path to clang binary to use for compiling BPF scriptlets. 456(enabled when BPF support is on) 457 458--clang-opt=OPTIONS:: 459Options passed to clang when compiling BPF scriptlets. 460(enabled when BPF support is on) 461 462--vmlinux=PATH:: 463Specify vmlinux path which has debuginfo. 464(enabled when BPF prologue is on) 465 466--buildid-all:: 467Record build-id of all DSOs regardless whether it's actually hit or not. 468 469--aio[=n]:: 470Use <n> control blocks in asynchronous (Posix AIO) trace writing mode (default: 1, max: 4). 471Asynchronous mode is supported only when linking Perf tool with libc library 472providing implementation for Posix AIO API. 473 474--affinity=mode:: 475Set affinity mask of trace reading thread according to the policy defined by 'mode' value: 476 node - thread affinity mask is set to NUMA node cpu mask of the processed mmap buffer 477 cpu - thread affinity mask is set to cpu of the processed mmap buffer 478 479--mmap-flush=number:: 480 481Specify minimal number of bytes that is extracted from mmap data pages and 482processed for output. One can specify the number using B/K/M/G suffixes. 483 484The maximal allowed value is a quarter of the size of mmaped data pages. 485 486The default option value is 1 byte which means that every time that the output 487writing thread finds some new data in the mmaped buffer the data is extracted, 488possibly compressed (-z) and written to the output, perf.data or pipe. 489 490Larger data chunks are compressed more effectively in comparison to smaller 491chunks so extraction of larger chunks from the mmap data pages is preferable 492from the perspective of output size reduction. 493 494Also at some cases executing less output write syscalls with bigger data size 495can take less time than executing more output write syscalls with smaller data 496size thus lowering runtime profiling overhead. 497 498-z:: 499--compression-level[=n]:: 500Produce compressed trace using specified level n (default: 1 - fastest compression, 50122 - smallest trace) 502 503--all-kernel:: 504Configure all used events to run in kernel space. 505 506--all-user:: 507Configure all used events to run in user space. 508 509--kernel-callchains:: 510Collect callchains only from kernel space. I.e. this option sets 511perf_event_attr.exclude_callchain_user to 1. 512 513--user-callchains:: 514Collect callchains only from user space. I.e. this option sets 515perf_event_attr.exclude_callchain_kernel to 1. 516 517Don't use both --kernel-callchains and --user-callchains at the same time or no 518callchains will be collected. 519 520--timestamp-filename 521Append timestamp to output file name. 522 523--timestamp-boundary:: 524Record timestamp boundary (time of first/last samples). 525 526--switch-output[=mode]:: 527Generate multiple perf.data files, timestamp prefixed, switching to a new one 528based on 'mode' value: 529 "signal" - when receiving a SIGUSR2 (default value) or 530 <size> - when reaching the size threshold, size is expected to 531 be a number with appended unit character - B/K/M/G 532 <time> - when reaching the time threshold, size is expected to 533 be a number with appended unit character - s/m/h/d 534 535 Note: the precision of the size threshold hugely depends 536 on your configuration - the number and size of your ring 537 buffers (-m). It is generally more precise for higher sizes 538 (like >5M), for lower values expect different sizes. 539 540A possible use case is to, given an external event, slice the perf.data file 541that gets then processed, possibly via a perf script, to decide if that 542particular perf.data snapshot should be kept or not. 543 544Implies --timestamp-filename, --no-buildid and --no-buildid-cache. 545The reason for the latter two is to reduce the data file switching 546overhead. You can still switch them on with: 547 548 --switch-output --no-no-buildid --no-no-buildid-cache 549 550--switch-max-files=N:: 551 552When rotating perf.data with --switch-output, only keep N files. 553 554--dry-run:: 555Parse options then exit. --dry-run can be used to detect errors in cmdline 556options. 557 558'perf record --dry-run -e' can act as a BPF script compiler if llvm.dump-obj 559in config file is set to true. 560 561--tail-synthesize:: 562Instead of collecting non-sample events (for example, fork, comm, mmap) at 563the beginning of record, collect them during finalizing an output file. 564The collected non-sample events reflects the status of the system when 565record is finished. 566 567--overwrite:: 568Makes all events use an overwritable ring buffer. An overwritable ring 569buffer works like a flight recorder: when it gets full, the kernel will 570overwrite the oldest records, that thus will never make it to the 571perf.data file. 572 573When '--overwrite' and '--switch-output' are used perf records and drops 574events until it receives a signal, meaning that something unusual was 575detected that warrants taking a snapshot of the most current events, 576those fitting in the ring buffer at that moment. 577 578'overwrite' attribute can also be set or canceled for an event using 579config terms. For example: 'cycles/overwrite/' and 'instructions/no-overwrite/'. 580 581Implies --tail-synthesize. 582 583--kcore:: 584Make a copy of /proc/kcore and place it into a directory with the perf data file. 585 586--max-size=<size>:: 587Limit the sample data max size, <size> is expected to be a number with 588appended unit character - B/K/M/G 589 590SEE ALSO 591-------- 592linkperf:perf-stat[1], linkperf:perf-list[1] 593