1perf.data format 2 3Uptodate as of v4.7 4 5This document describes the on-disk perf.data format, generated by perf record 6or perf inject and consumed by the other perf tools. 7 8On a high level perf.data contains the events generated by the PMUs, plus metadata. 9 10All fields are in native-endian of the machine that generated the perf.data. 11 12When perf is writing to a pipe it uses a special version of the file 13format that does not rely on seeking to adjust data offsets. This 14format is described in "Pipe-mode data" section. The pipe data version can be 15augmented with additional events using perf inject. 16 17The file starts with a perf_header: 18 19struct perf_header { 20 char magic[8]; /* PERFILE2 */ 21 uint64_t size; /* size of the header */ 22 uint64_t attr_size; /* size of an attribute in attrs */ 23 struct perf_file_section attrs; 24 struct perf_file_section data; 25 struct perf_file_section event_types; 26 uint64_t flags; 27 uint64_t flags1[3]; 28}; 29 30The magic number identifies the perf file and the version. Current perf versions 31use PERFILE2. Old perf versions generated a version 1 format (PERFFILE). Version 1 32is not described here. The magic number also identifies the endian. When the 33magic value is 64bit byte swapped compared the file is in non-native 34endian. 35 36A perf_file_section contains a pointer to another section of the perf file. 37The header contains three such pointers: for attributes, data and event types. 38 39struct perf_file_section { 40 uint64_t offset; /* offset from start of file */ 41 uint64_t size; /* size of the section */ 42}; 43 44Flags section: 45 46For each of the optional features a perf_file_section it placed after the data 47section if the feature bit is set in the perf_header flags bitset. The 48respective perf_file_section points to the data of the additional header and 49defines its size. 50 51Some headers consist of strings, which are defined like this: 52 53struct perf_header_string { 54 uint32_t len; 55 char string[len]; /* zero terminated */ 56}; 57 58Some headers consist of a sequence of strings, which start with a 59 60struct perf_header_string_list { 61 uint32_t nr; 62 struct perf_header_string strings[nr]; /* variable length records */ 63}; 64 65The bits are the flags bits in a 256 bit bitmap starting with 66flags. These define the valid bits: 67 68 HEADER_RESERVED = 0, /* always cleared */ 69 HEADER_FIRST_FEATURE = 1, 70 HEADER_TRACING_DATA = 1, 71 72Describe me. 73 74 HEADER_BUILD_ID = 2, 75 76The header consists of an sequence of build_id_event. The size of each record 77is defined by header.size (see perf_event.h). Each event defines a ELF build id 78for a executable file name for a pid. An ELF build id is a unique identifier 79assigned by the linker to an executable. 80 81struct build_id_event { 82 struct perf_event_header header; 83 pid_t pid; 84 uint8_t build_id[24]; 85 char filename[header.size - offsetof(struct build_id_event, filename)]; 86}; 87 88 HEADER_HOSTNAME = 3, 89 90A perf_header_string with the hostname where the data was collected 91(uname -n) 92 93 HEADER_OSRELEASE = 4, 94 95A perf_header_string with the os release where the data was collected 96(uname -r) 97 98 HEADER_VERSION = 5, 99 100A perf_header_string with the perf user tool version where the 101data was collected. This is the same as the version of the source tree 102the perf tool was built from. 103 104 HEADER_ARCH = 6, 105 106A perf_header_string with the CPU architecture (uname -m) 107 108 HEADER_NRCPUS = 7, 109 110A structure defining the number of CPUs. 111 112struct nr_cpus { 113 uint32_t nr_cpus_available; /* CPUs not yet onlined */ 114 uint32_t nr_cpus_online; 115}; 116 117 HEADER_CPUDESC = 8, 118 119A perf_header_string with description of the CPU. On x86 this is the model name 120in /proc/cpuinfo 121 122 HEADER_CPUID = 9, 123 124A perf_header_string with the exact CPU type. On x86 this is 125vendor,family,model,stepping. For example: GenuineIntel,6,69,1 126 127 HEADER_TOTAL_MEM = 10, 128 129An uint64_t with the total memory in bytes. 130 131 HEADER_CMDLINE = 11, 132 133A perf_header_string_list with the perf arg-vector used to collect the data. 134 135 HEADER_EVENT_DESC = 12, 136 137Another description of the perf_event_attrs, more detailed than header.attrs 138including IDs and names. See perf_event.h or the man page for a description 139of a struct perf_event_attr. 140 141struct { 142 uint32_t nr; /* number of events */ 143 uint32_t attr_size; /* size of each perf_event_attr */ 144 struct { 145 struct perf_event_attr attr; /* size of attr_size */ 146 uint32_t nr_ids; 147 struct perf_header_string event_string; 148 uint64_t ids[nr_ids]; 149 } events[nr]; /* Variable length records */ 150}; 151 152 HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY = 13, 153 154struct { 155 /* 156 * First revision of HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY 157 * 158 * See 'struct perf_header_string_list' definition earlier 159 * in this file. 160 */ 161 162 struct perf_header_string_list cores; /* Variable length */ 163 struct perf_header_string_list threads; /* Variable length */ 164 165 /* 166 * Second revision of HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY, older tools 167 * will not consider what comes next 168 */ 169 170 struct { 171 uint32_t core_id; 172 uint32_t socket_id; 173 } cpus[nr]; /* Variable length records */ 174 /* 'nr' comes from previously processed HEADER_NRCPUS's nr_cpu_avail */ 175 176 /* 177 * Third revision of HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY, older tools 178 * will not consider what comes next 179 */ 180 181 struct perf_header_string_list dies; /* Variable length */ 182 uint32_t die_id[nr_cpus_avail]; /* from previously processed HEADER_NR_CPUS, VLA */ 183}; 184 185Example: 186 sibling sockets : 0-8 187 sibling dies : 0-3 188 sibling dies : 4-7 189 sibling threads : 0-1 190 sibling threads : 2-3 191 sibling threads : 4-5 192 sibling threads : 6-7 193 194 HEADER_NUMA_TOPOLOGY = 14, 195 196 A list of NUMA node descriptions 197 198struct { 199 uint32_t nr; 200 struct { 201 uint32_t nodenr; 202 uint64_t mem_total; 203 uint64_t mem_free; 204 struct perf_header_string cpus; 205 } nodes[nr]; /* Variable length records */ 206}; 207 208 HEADER_BRANCH_STACK = 15, 209 210Not implemented in perf. 211 212 HEADER_PMU_MAPPINGS = 16, 213 214 A list of PMU structures, defining the different PMUs supported by perf. 215 216struct { 217 uint32_t nr; 218 struct pmu { 219 uint32_t pmu_type; 220 struct perf_header_string pmu_name; 221 } [nr]; /* Variable length records */ 222}; 223 224 HEADER_GROUP_DESC = 17, 225 226 Description of counter groups ({...} in perf syntax) 227 228struct { 229 uint32_t nr; 230 struct { 231 struct perf_header_string string; 232 uint32_t leader_idx; 233 uint32_t nr_members; 234 } [nr]; /* Variable length records */ 235}; 236 237 HEADER_AUXTRACE = 18, 238 239Define additional auxtrace areas in the perf.data. auxtrace is used to store 240undecoded hardware tracing information, such as Intel Processor Trace data. 241 242/** 243 * struct auxtrace_index_entry - indexes a AUX area tracing event within a 244 * perf.data file. 245 * @file_offset: offset within the perf.data file 246 * @sz: size of the event 247 */ 248struct auxtrace_index_entry { 249 u64 file_offset; 250 u64 sz; 251}; 252 253#define PERF_AUXTRACE_INDEX_ENTRY_COUNT 256 254 255/** 256 * struct auxtrace_index - index of AUX area tracing events within a perf.data 257 * file. 258 * @list: linking a number of arrays of entries 259 * @nr: number of entries 260 * @entries: array of entries 261 */ 262struct auxtrace_index { 263 struct list_head list; 264 size_t nr; 265 struct auxtrace_index_entry entries[PERF_AUXTRACE_INDEX_ENTRY_COUNT]; 266}; 267 268 HEADER_STAT = 19, 269 270This is merely a flag signifying that the data section contains data 271recorded from perf stat record. 272 273 HEADER_CACHE = 20, 274 275Description of the cache hierarchy. Based on the Linux sysfs format 276in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cache/ 277 278 u32 version Currently always 1 279 u32 number_of_cache_levels 280 281struct { 282 u32 level; 283 u32 line_size; 284 u32 sets; 285 u32 ways; 286 struct perf_header_string type; 287 struct perf_header_string size; 288 struct perf_header_string map; 289}[number_of_cache_levels]; 290 291 HEADER_SAMPLE_TIME = 21, 292 293Two uint64_t for the time of first sample and the time of last sample. 294 295 HEADER_SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY = 22, 296 297Physical memory map and its node assignments. 298 299The format of data in MEM_TOPOLOGY is as follows: 300 301 0 - version | for future changes 302 8 - block_size_bytes | /sys/devices/system/memory/block_size_bytes 303 16 - count | number of nodes 304 305For each node we store map of physical indexes: 306 307 32 - node id | node index 308 40 - size | size of bitmap 309 48 - bitmap | bitmap of memory indexes that belongs to node 310 | /sys/devices/system/node/node<NODE>/memory<INDEX> 311 312The MEM_TOPOLOGY can be displayed with following command: 313 314$ perf report --header-only -I 315... 316# memory nodes (nr 1, block size 0x8000000): 317# 0 [7G]: 0-23,32-69 318 319 HEADER_CLOCKID = 23, 320 321One uint64_t for the clockid frequency, specified, for instance, via 'perf 322record -k' (see clock_gettime()), to enable timestamps derived metrics 323conversion into wall clock time on the reporting stage. 324 325 HEADER_DIR_FORMAT = 24, 326 327The data files layout is described by HEADER_DIR_FORMAT feature. Currently it 328holds only version number (1): 329 330 uint64_t version; 331 332The current version holds only version value (1) means that data files: 333 334- Follow the 'data.*' name format. 335 336- Contain raw events data in standard perf format as read from kernel (and need 337 to be sorted) 338 339Future versions are expected to describe different data files layout according 340to special needs. 341 342 HEADER_BPF_PROG_INFO = 25, 343 344struct bpf_prog_info_linear, which contains detailed information about 345a BPF program, including type, id, tag, jited/xlated instructions, etc. 346 347 HEADER_BPF_BTF = 26, 348 349Contains BPF Type Format (BTF). For more information about BTF, please 350refer to Documentation/bpf/btf.rst. 351 352struct { 353 u32 id; 354 u32 data_size; 355 char data[]; 356}; 357 358 HEADER_COMPRESSED = 27, 359 360struct { 361 u32 version; 362 u32 type; 363 u32 level; 364 u32 ratio; 365 u32 mmap_len; 366}; 367 368Indicates that trace contains records of PERF_RECORD_COMPRESSED type 369that have perf_events records in compressed form. 370 371 other bits are reserved and should ignored for now 372 HEADER_FEAT_BITS = 256, 373 374Attributes 375 376This is an array of perf_event_attrs, each attr_size bytes long, which defines 377each event collected. See perf_event.h or the man page for a detailed 378description. 379 380Data 381 382This section is the bulk of the file. It consist of a stream of perf_events 383describing events. This matches the format generated by the kernel. 384See perf_event.h or the manpage for a detailed description. 385 386Some notes on parsing: 387 388Ordering 389 390The events are not necessarily in time stamp order, as they can be 391collected in parallel on different CPUs. If the events should be 392processed in time order they need to be sorted first. It is possible 393to only do a partial sort using the FINISHED_ROUND event header (see 394below). perf record guarantees that there is no reordering over a 395FINISHED_ROUND. 396 397ID vs IDENTIFIER 398 399When the event stream contains multiple events each event is identified 400by an ID. This can be either through the PERF_SAMPLE_ID or the 401PERF_SAMPLE_IDENTIFIER header. The PERF_SAMPLE_IDENTIFIER header is 402at a fixed offset from the event header, which allows reliable 403parsing of the header. Relying on ID may be ambiguous. 404IDENTIFIER is only supported by newer Linux kernels. 405 406Perf record specific events: 407 408In addition to the kernel generated event types perf record adds its 409own event types (in addition it also synthesizes some kernel events, 410for example MMAP events) 411 412 PERF_RECORD_USER_TYPE_START = 64, 413 PERF_RECORD_HEADER_ATTR = 64, 414 415struct attr_event { 416 struct perf_event_header header; 417 struct perf_event_attr attr; 418 uint64_t id[]; 419}; 420 421 PERF_RECORD_HEADER_EVENT_TYPE = 65, /* deprecated */ 422 423#define MAX_EVENT_NAME 64 424 425struct perf_trace_event_type { 426 uint64_t event_id; 427 char name[MAX_EVENT_NAME]; 428}; 429 430struct event_type_event { 431 struct perf_event_header header; 432 struct perf_trace_event_type event_type; 433}; 434 435 436 PERF_RECORD_HEADER_TRACING_DATA = 66, 437 438Describe me 439 440struct tracing_data_event { 441 struct perf_event_header header; 442 uint32_t size; 443}; 444 445 PERF_RECORD_HEADER_BUILD_ID = 67, 446 447Define a ELF build ID for a referenced executable. 448 449 struct build_id_event; /* See above */ 450 451 PERF_RECORD_FINISHED_ROUND = 68, 452 453No event reordering over this header. No payload. 454 455 PERF_RECORD_ID_INDEX = 69, 456 457Map event ids to CPUs and TIDs. 458 459struct id_index_entry { 460 uint64_t id; 461 uint64_t idx; 462 uint64_t cpu; 463 uint64_t tid; 464}; 465 466struct id_index_event { 467 struct perf_event_header header; 468 uint64_t nr; 469 struct id_index_entry entries[nr]; 470}; 471 472 PERF_RECORD_AUXTRACE_INFO = 70, 473 474Auxtrace type specific information. Describe me 475 476struct auxtrace_info_event { 477 struct perf_event_header header; 478 uint32_t type; 479 uint32_t reserved__; /* For alignment */ 480 uint64_t priv[]; 481}; 482 483 PERF_RECORD_AUXTRACE = 71, 484 485Defines auxtrace data. Followed by the actual data. The contents of 486the auxtrace data is dependent on the event and the CPU. For example 487for Intel Processor Trace it contains Processor Trace data generated 488by the CPU. 489 490struct auxtrace_event { 491 struct perf_event_header header; 492 uint64_t size; 493 uint64_t offset; 494 uint64_t reference; 495 uint32_t idx; 496 uint32_t tid; 497 uint32_t cpu; 498 uint32_t reserved__; /* For alignment */ 499}; 500 501struct aux_event { 502 struct perf_event_header header; 503 uint64_t aux_offset; 504 uint64_t aux_size; 505 uint64_t flags; 506}; 507 508 PERF_RECORD_AUXTRACE_ERROR = 72, 509 510Describes an error in hardware tracing 511 512enum auxtrace_error_type { 513 PERF_AUXTRACE_ERROR_ITRACE = 1, 514 PERF_AUXTRACE_ERROR_MAX 515}; 516 517#define MAX_AUXTRACE_ERROR_MSG 64 518 519struct auxtrace_error_event { 520 struct perf_event_header header; 521 uint32_t type; 522 uint32_t code; 523 uint32_t cpu; 524 uint32_t pid; 525 uint32_t tid; 526 uint32_t reserved__; /* For alignment */ 527 uint64_t ip; 528 char msg[MAX_AUXTRACE_ERROR_MSG]; 529}; 530 531 PERF_RECORD_HEADER_FEATURE = 80, 532 533Describes a header feature. These are records used in pipe-mode that 534contain information that otherwise would be in perf.data file's header. 535 536 PERF_RECORD_COMPRESSED = 81, 537 538struct compressed_event { 539 struct perf_event_header header; 540 char data[]; 541}; 542 543The header is followed by compressed data frame that can be decompressed 544into array of perf trace records. The size of the entire compressed event 545record including the header is limited by the max value of header.size. 546 547Event types 548 549Define the event attributes with their IDs. 550 551An array bound by the perf_file_section size. 552 553 struct { 554 struct perf_event_attr attr; /* Size defined by header.attr_size */ 555 struct perf_file_section ids; 556 } 557 558ids points to a array of uint64_t defining the ids for event attr attr. 559 560Pipe-mode data 561 562Pipe-mode avoid seeks in the file by removing the perf_file_section and flags 563from the struct perf_header. The trimmed header is: 564 565struct perf_pipe_file_header { 566 u64 magic; 567 u64 size; 568}; 569 570The information about attrs, data, and event_types is instead in the 571synthesized events PERF_RECORD_ATTR, PERF_RECORD_HEADER_TRACING_DATA, 572PERF_RECORD_HEADER_EVENT_TYPE, and PERF_RECORD_HEADER_FEATURE 573that are generated by perf record in pipe-mode. 574 575 576References: 577 578include/uapi/linux/perf_event.h 579 580This is the canonical description of the kernel generated perf_events 581and the perf_event_attrs. 582 583perf_events manpage 584 585A manpage describing perf_event and perf_event_attr is here: 586http://web.eece.maine.edu/~vweaver/projects/perf_events/programming.html 587This tends to be slightly behind the kernel include, but has better 588descriptions. An (typically older) version of the man page may be 589included with the standard Linux man pages, available with "man 590perf_events" 591 592pmu-tools 593 594https://github.com/andikleen/pmu-tools/tree/master/parser 595 596A definition of the perf.data format in python "construct" format is available 597in pmu-tools parser. This allows to read perf.data from python and dump it. 598 599quipper 600 601The quipper C++ parser is available at 602http://github.com/google/perf_data_converter/tree/master/src/quipper 603 604