xref: /openbmc/linux/tools/power/pm-graph/README (revision 3e30a927)
1                     p m - g r a p h
2
3   pm-graph: suspend/resume/boot timing analysis tools
4    Version: 5.5
5     Author: Todd Brandt <todd.e.brandt@intel.com>
6  Home Page: https://01.org/pm-graph
7
8 Report bugs/issues at bugzilla.kernel.org Tools/pm-graph
9	- https://bugzilla.kernel.org/buglist.cgi?component=pm-graph&product=Tools
10
11 Full documentation available online & in man pages
12	- Getting Started:
13	  https://01.org/pm-graph/documentation/getting-started
14
15	- Config File Format:
16	  https://01.org/pm-graph/documentation/3-config-file-format
17
18	- upstream version in git:
19	  https://github.com/intel/pm-graph/
20
21 Requirements:
22	- runs with python2 or python3, choice is made by /usr/bin/python link
23	- python2 now requires python-configparser be installed
24
25 Table of Contents
26	- Overview
27	- Setup
28	- Usage
29		- Basic Usage
30		- Dev Mode Usage
31		- Proc Mode Usage
32	- Configuration Files
33		- Usage Examples
34		- Config File Options
35	- Custom Timeline Entries
36		- Adding/Editing Timeline Functions
37		- Adding/Editing Dev Timeline Source Functions
38		- Verifying your Custom Functions
39	- Testing on consumer linux Operating Systems
40		- Android
41
42------------------------------------------------------------------
43|                          OVERVIEW                              |
44------------------------------------------------------------------
45
46 This tool suite is designed to assist kernel and OS developers in optimizing
47 their linux stack's suspend/resume & boot time. Using a kernel image built
48 with a few extra options enabled, the tools will execute a suspend or boot,
49 and will capture dmesg and ftrace data. This data is transformed into a set of
50 timelines and a callgraph to give a quick and detailed view of which devices
51 and kernel processes are taking the most time in suspend/resume & boot.
52
53------------------------------------------------------------------
54|                            SETUP                               |
55------------------------------------------------------------------
56
57    These packages are required to execute the scripts
58       - python
59       - python-requests
60
61       Ubuntu:
62          sudo apt-get install python python-requests
63
64       Fedora:
65          sudo dnf install python python-requests
66
67    The tools can most easily be installed via git clone and make install
68
69    $> git clone http://github.com/intel/pm-graph.git
70    $> cd pm-graph
71    $> sudo make install
72    $> man sleepgraph ; man bootgraph
73
74    Setup involves some minor kernel configuration
75
76    The following kernel build options are required for all kernels:
77        CONFIG_DEVMEM=y
78        CONFIG_PM_DEBUG=y
79        CONFIG_PM_SLEEP_DEBUG=y
80        CONFIG_FTRACE=y
81        CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER=y
82        CONFIG_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER=y
83        CONFIG_KPROBES=y
84        CONFIG_KPROBES_ON_FTRACE=y
85
86	In kernel 3.15.0, two patches were upstreamed which enable the
87        v3.0 behavior. These patches allow the tool to read all the
88        data from trace events instead of from dmesg. You can enable
89        this behavior on earlier kernels with these patches:
90
91        (kernel/pre-3.15/enable_trace_events_suspend_resume.patch)
92        (kernel/pre-3.15/enable_trace_events_device_pm_callback.patch)
93
94	If you're using a kernel older than 3.15.0, the following
95        additional kernel parameters are required:
96        (e.g. in file /etc/default/grub)
97        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="... initcall_debug log_buf_len=32M ..."
98
99	If you're using a kernel older than 3.11-rc2, the following simple
100		patch must be applied to enable ftrace data:
101        in file: kernel/power/suspend.c
102        in function: int suspend_devices_and_enter(suspend_state_t state)
103        remove call to "ftrace_stop();"
104        remove call to "ftrace_start();"
105
106        There is a patch which does this for kernel v3.8.0:
107        (kernel/pre-3.11-rc2/enable_ftrace_in_suspendresume.patch)
108
109
110
111------------------------------------------------------------------
112|                            USAGE                               |
113------------------------------------------------------------------
114
115Basic Usage
116___________
117
118 1) First configure a kernel using the instructions from the previous sections.
119    Then build, install, and boot with it.
120 2) Open up a terminal window and execute the mode list command:
121
122	%> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -modes
123		['freeze', 'mem', 'disk']
124
125 Execute a test using one of the available power modes, e.g. mem (S3):
126
127	%> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -m mem -rtcwake 15
128
129		or with a config file
130
131	%> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -config config/suspend.cfg
132
133 When the system comes back you'll see the script finishing up and
134 creating the output files in the test subdir. It generates output
135 files in subdirectory: suspend-mmddyy-HHMMSS. The ftrace file can
136 be used to regenerate the html timeline with different options
137
138     HTML output:                    <hostname>_<mode>.html
139     raw dmesg output:               <hostname>_<mode>_dmesg.txt
140     raw ftrace output:              <hostname>_<mode>_ftrace.txt
141
142 View the html in firefox or chrome.
143
144
145Dev Mode Usage
146______________
147
148 Developer mode adds information on low level source calls to the timeline.
149 The tool sets kprobes on all delay and mutex calls to see which devices
150 are waiting for something and when. It also sets a suite of kprobes on
151 subsystem dependent calls to better fill out the timeline.
152
153 The tool will also expose kernel threads that don't normally show up in the
154 timeline. This is useful in discovering dependent threads to get a better
155 idea of what each device is waiting for. For instance, the scsi_eh thread,
156 a.k.a. scsi resume error handler, is what each SATA disk device waits for
157 before it can continue resume.
158
159 The timeline will be much larger if run with dev mode, so it can be useful
160 to set the -mindev option to clip out any device blocks that are too small
161 to see easily. The following command will give a nice dev mode run:
162
163 %> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -m mem -rtcwake 15 -mindev 1 -dev
164
165	or with a config file
166
167 %> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -config config/suspend-dev.cfg
168
169
170Proc Mode Usage
171_______________
172
173 Proc mode adds user process info to the timeline. This is done in a manner
174 similar to the bootchart utility, which graphs init processes and their
175 execution as the system boots. This tool option does the same thing but for
176 the period before and after suspend/resume.
177
178 In order to see any process info, there needs to be some delay before or
179 after resume since processes are frozen in suspend_prepare and thawed in
180 resume_complete. The predelay and postdelay args allow you to do this. It
181 can also be useful to run in x2 mode with an x2 delay, this way you can
182 see process activity before and after resume, and in between two
183 successive suspend/resumes.
184
185 The command can be run like this:
186
187 %> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -m mem -rtcwake 15 -x2 -x2delay 1000 -predelay 1000 -postdelay 1000 -proc
188
189	or with a config file
190
191 %> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -config config/suspend-proc.cfg
192
193
194------------------------------------------------------------------
195|                    CONFIGURATION FILES                         |
196------------------------------------------------------------------
197
198 Since 4.0 we've moved to using config files in lieu of command line options.
199 The config folder contains a collection of typical use cases.
200 There are corresponding configs for other power modes:
201
202	Simple suspend/resume with basic timeline (mem/freeze/standby)
203		config/suspend.cfg
204		config/freeze.cfg
205		config/standby.cfg
206
207	Dev mode suspend/resume with dev timeline (mem/freeze/standby)
208		config/suspend-dev.cfg
209		config/freeze-dev.cfg
210		config/standby-dev.cfg
211
212	Simple suspend/resume with timeline and callgraph (mem/freeze/standby)
213		config/suspend-callgraph.cfg
214		config/freeze-callgraph.cfg
215		config/standby-callgraph.cfg
216
217	Sample proc mode x2 run using mem suspend
218		config/suspend-x2-proc.cfg
219
220	Sample for editing timeline funcs (moves internal functions into config)
221		config/custom-timeline-functions.cfg
222
223	Sample debug config for serio subsystem
224		config/debug-serio-suspend.cfg
225
226
227Usage Examples
228______________
229
230 Run a simple mem suspend:
231 %> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -config config/suspend.cfg
232
233 Run a mem suspend with callgraph data:
234 %> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -config config/suspend-callgraph.cfg
235
236 Run a mem suspend with dev mode detail:
237 %> sudo ./sleepgraph.py -config config/suspend-dev.cfg
238
239
240Config File Options
241___________________
242
243 [Settings]
244
245 # Verbosity: print verbose messages (def: false)
246 verbose: false
247
248 # Suspend Mode: e.g. standby, mem, freeze, disk (def: mem)
249 mode: mem
250
251 # Output Directory Format: {hostname}, {date}, {time} give current values
252 output-dir: suspend-{hostname}-{date}-{time}
253
254 # Automatic Wakeup: use rtcwake to wakeup after X seconds (def: infinity)
255 rtcwake: 15
256
257 # Add Logs: add the dmesg and ftrace log to the html output (def: false)
258 addlogs: false
259
260 # Sus/Res Gap: insert a gap between sus & res in the timeline (def: false)
261 srgap: false
262
263 # Custom Command: Command to execute in lieu of suspend (def: "")
264 command: echo mem > /sys/power/state
265
266 # Proc mode: graph user processes and cpu usage in the timeline (def: false)
267 proc: false
268
269 # Dev mode: graph source functions in the timeline (def: false)
270 dev: false
271
272 # Suspend/Resume x2: run 2 suspend/resumes back to back (def: false)
273 x2: false
274
275 # x2 Suspend Delay: time delay between the two test runs in ms (def: 0 ms)
276 x2delay: 0
277
278 # Pre Suspend Delay: nclude an N ms delay before (1st) suspend (def: 0 ms)
279 predelay: 0
280
281 # Post Resume Delay: include an N ms delay after (last) resume (def: 0 ms)
282 postdelay: 0
283
284 # Min Device Length: graph only dev callbacks longer than min (def: 0.001 ms)
285 mindev: 0.001
286
287 # Callgraph: gather ftrace callgraph data on all timeline events (def: false)
288 callgraph: false
289
290 # Expand Callgraph: pre-expand the callgraph treeviews in html (def: false)
291 expandcg: false
292
293 # Min Callgraph Length: show callgraphs only if longer than min (def: 1 ms)
294 mincg: 1
295
296 # Timestamp Precision: number of sig digits in timestamps (0:S, [3:ms], 6:us)
297 timeprec: 3
298
299 # Device Filter: show only devs whose name/driver includes one of these strings
300 devicefilter: _cpu_up,_cpu_down,i915,usb
301
302 # Override default timeline entries:
303 # Do not use the internal default functions for timeline entries (def: false)
304 # Set this to true if you intend to only use the ones defined in the config
305 override-timeline-functions: true
306
307 # Override default dev timeline entries:
308 # Do not use the internal default functions for dev timeline entries (def: false)
309 # Set this to true if you intend to only use the ones defined in the config
310 override-dev-timeline-functions: true
311
312 # Call Loop Max Gap (dev mode only)
313 # merge loops of the same call if each is less than maxgap apart (def: 100us)
314 callloop-maxgap: 0.0001
315
316 # Call Loop Max Length (dev mode only)
317 # merge loops of the same call if each is less than maxlen in length (def: 5ms)
318 callloop-maxlen: 0.005
319
320------------------------------------------------------------------
321|                   CUSTOM TIMELINE ENTRIES                      |
322------------------------------------------------------------------
323
324Adding or Editing Timeline Functions
325____________________________________
326
327 The tool uses an array of function names to fill out empty spaces in the
328 timeline where device callbacks don't appear. For instance, in suspend_prepare
329 the tool adds the sys_sync and freeze_processes calls as virtual device blocks
330 in the timeline to show you where the time is going. These calls should fill
331 the timeline with contiguous data so that most kernel execution is covered.
332
333 It is possible to add new function calls to the timeline by adding them to
334 the config. It's also possible to copy the internal timeline functions into
335 the config so that you can override and edit them. Place them in the
336 timeline_functions_ARCH section with the name of your architecture appended.
337 i.e. for x86_64: [timeline_functions_x86_64]
338
339 Use the override-timeline-functions option if you only want to use your
340 custom calls, or leave it false to append them to the internal ones.
341
342 This section includes a list of functions (set using kprobes) which use both
343 symbol data and function arg data. The args are pulled directly from the
344 stack using this architecture's registers and stack formatting. Each entry
345 can include up to four pieces of info: The function name, a format string,
346 an argument list, and a color. But only a function name is required.
347
348 For a full example config, see config/custom-timeline-functions.cfg. It pulls
349 all the internal timeline functions into the config and allows you to edit
350 them.
351
352  Entry format:
353
354    function: format{fn_arg1}_{fn_arg2} fn_arg1 fn_arg2 ... [color=purple]
355
356  Required Arguments:
357
358    function: The symbol name for the function you want probed, this is the
359              minimum required for an entry, it will show up as the function
360              name with no arguments.
361
362        example: _cpu_up:
363
364  Optional Arguments:
365
366    format: The format to display the data on the timeline in. Use braces to
367            enclose the arg names.
368
369        example: CPU_ON[{cpu}]
370
371    color: The color of the entry block in the timeline. The default color is
372           transparent, so the entry shares the phase color. The color is an
373           html color string, either a word, or an RGB.
374
375        example: [color=#CC00CC]
376
377    arglist: A list of arguments from registers/stack addresses. See URL:
378             https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/trace/kprobetrace.txt
379
380        example: cpu=%di:s32
381
382 Here is a full example entry. It displays cpu resume calls in the timeline
383 in orange. They will appear as CPU_ON[0], CPU_ON[1], etc.
384
385  [timeline_functions_x86_64]
386  _cpu_up: CPU_ON[{cpu}] cpu=%di:s32 [color=orange]
387
388
389Adding or Editing Dev Mode Timeline Source Functions
390____________________________________________________
391
392 In dev mode, the tool uses an array of function names to monitor source
393 execution within the timeline entries.
394
395 The function calls are displayed inside the main device/call blocks in the
396 timeline. However, if a function call is not within a main timeline event,
397 it will spawn an entirely new event named after the caller's kernel thread.
398 These asynchronous kernel threads will populate in a separate section
399 beneath the main device/call section.
400
401 The tool has a set of hard coded calls which focus on the most common use
402 cases: msleep, udelay, schedule_timeout, mutex_lock_slowpath, etc. These are
403 the functions that add a hardcoded time delay to the suspend/resume path.
404 The tool also includes some common functions native to important
405 subsystems: ata, i915, and ACPI, etc.
406
407 It is possible to add new function calls to the dev timeline by adding them
408 to the config. It's also possible to copy the internal dev timeline
409 functions into the config so that you can override and edit them. Place them
410 in the dev_timeline_functions_ARCH section with the name of your architecture
411 appended. i.e. for x86_64: [dev_timeline_functions_x86_64]
412
413 Use the override-dev-timeline-functions option if you only want to use your
414 custom calls, or leave it false to append them to the internal ones.
415
416 The format is the same as the timeline_functions_x86_64 section. It's a
417 list of functions (set using kprobes) which use both symbol data and function
418 arg data. The args are pulled directly from the stack using this
419 architecture's registers and stack formatting. Each entry can include up
420 to four pieces of info: The function name, a format string, an argument list,
421 and a color. But only the function name is required.
422
423 For a full example config, see config/custom-timeline-functions.cfg. It pulls
424 all the internal dev timeline functions into the config and allows you to edit
425 them.
426
427 Here is a full example entry. It displays the ATA port reset calls as
428 ataN_port_reset in the timeline. This is where most of the SATA disk resume
429 time goes, so it can be helpful to see the low level call.
430
431  [dev_timeline_functions_x86_64]
432  ata_eh_recover: ata{port}_port_reset port=+36(%di):s32 [color=#CC00CC]
433
434
435Verifying your custom functions
436_______________________________
437
438 Once you have a set of functions (kprobes) defined, it can be useful to
439 perform a quick check to see if you formatted them correctly and if the system
440 actually supports them. To do this, run the tool with your config file
441 and the -status option. The tool will go through all the kprobes (both
442 custom and internal if you haven't overridden them) and actually attempts
443 to set them in ftrace. It will then print out success or fail for you.
444
445 Note that kprobes which don't actually exist in the kernel won't stop the
446 tool, they just wont show up.
447
448 For example:
449
450 sudo ./sleepgraph.py -config config/custom-timeline-functions.cfg -status
451 Checking this system (myhostname)...
452    have root access: YES
453    is sysfs mounted: YES
454    is "mem" a valid power mode: YES
455    is ftrace supported: YES
456    are kprobes supported: YES
457    timeline data source: FTRACE (all trace events found)
458    is rtcwake supported: YES
459    verifying timeline kprobes work:
460         _cpu_down: YES
461         _cpu_up: YES
462         acpi_pm_finish: YES
463         acpi_pm_prepare: YES
464         freeze_kernel_threads: YES
465         freeze_processes: YES
466         sys_sync: YES
467         thaw_processes: YES
468    verifying dev kprobes work:
469         __const_udelay: YES
470         __mutex_lock_slowpath: YES
471         acpi_os_stall: YES
472         acpi_ps_parse_aml: YES
473         intel_opregion_init: NO
474         intel_opregion_register: NO
475         intel_opregion_setup: NO
476         msleep: YES
477         schedule_timeout: YES
478         schedule_timeout_uninterruptible: YES
479         usleep_range: YES
480
481
482------------------------------------------------------------------
483|           TESTING ON CONSUMER LINUX OPERATING SYSTEMS          |
484------------------------------------------------------------------
485
486Android
487_______
488
489 The easiest way to execute on an android device is to run the android.sh
490 script on the device, then pull the ftrace log back to the host and run
491 sleepgraph.py on it.
492
493 Here are the steps:
494
495 [download and install the tool on the device]
496
497	host%> wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intel/pm-graph/master/tools/android.sh
498	host%> adb connect 192.168.1.6
499	host%> adb root
500	# push the script to a writeable location
501	host%> adb push android.sh /sdcard/
502
503 [check whether the tool will run on your device]
504
505	host%> adb shell
506	dev%> cd /sdcard
507	dev%> sh android.sh status
508		host    : asus_t100
509		kernel  : 3.14.0-i386-dirty
510		modes   : freeze mem
511		rtcwake : supported
512		ftrace  : supported
513		trace events {
514		    suspend_resume: found
515		    device_pm_callback_end: found
516		    device_pm_callback_start: found
517		}
518	# the above is what you see on a system that's properly patched
519
520 [execute the suspend]
521
522	# NOTE: The suspend will only work if the screen isn't timed out,
523	# so you have to press some keys first to wake it up b4 suspend)
524	dev%> sh android.sh suspend mem
525	------------------------------------
526	Suspend/Resume timing test initiated
527	------------------------------------
528	hostname   : asus_t100
529	kernel     : 3.14.0-i386-dirty
530	mode       : mem
531	ftrace out : /mnt/shell/emulated/0/ftrace.txt
532	dmesg out  : /mnt/shell/emulated/0/dmesg.txt
533	log file   : /mnt/shell/emulated/0/log.txt
534	------------------------------------
535	INITIALIZING FTRACE........DONE
536	STARTING FTRACE
537	SUSPEND START @ 21:24:02 (rtcwake in 10 seconds)
538	<adb connection will now terminate>
539
540 [retrieve the data from the device]
541
542	# I find that you have to actually kill the adb process and
543	# reconnect sometimes in order for the connection to work post-suspend
544	host%> adb connect 192.168.1.6
545	# (required) get the ftrace data, this is the most important piece
546	host%> adb pull /sdcard/ftrace.txt
547	# (optional) get the dmesg data, this is for debugging
548	host%> adb pull /sdcard/dmesg.txt
549	# (optional) get the log, which just lists some test times for comparison
550	host%> adb pull /sdcard/log.txt
551
552 [create an output html file using sleepgraph.py]
553
554	host%> sleepgraph.py -ftrace ftrace.txt
555
556 You should now have an output.html with the android data, enjoy!
557