XRay Instrumentation¶
Version: | 1 as of 2016-11-08 |
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Introduction¶
XRay is a function call tracing system which combines compiler-inserted instrumentation points and a runtime library that can dynamically enable and disable the instrumentation.
More high level information about XRay can be found in the XRay whitepaper.
This document describes how to use XRay as implemented in LLVM.
XRay in LLVM¶
XRay consists of three main parts:
Compiler-inserted instrumentation points.
A runtime library for enabling/disabling tracing at runtime.
A suite of tools for analysing the traces.
NOTE: As of July 25, 2018 , XRay is only available for the following architectures running Linux: x86_64, arm7 (no thumb), aarch64, powerpc64le, mips, mipsel, mips64, mips64el, NetBSD: x86_64, FreeBSD: x86_64 and OpenBSD: x86_64.
The compiler-inserted instrumentation points come in the form of nop-sleds in
the final generated binary, and an ELF section named xray_instr_map
which
contains entries pointing to these instrumentation points. The runtime library
relies on being able to access the entries of the xray_instr_map
, and
overwrite the instrumentation points at runtime.
Using XRay¶
You can use XRay in a couple of ways:
- Instrumenting your C/C++/Objective-C/Objective-C++ application.
- Generating LLVM IR with the correct function attributes.
The rest of this section covers these main ways and later on how to customise what XRay does in an XRay-instrumented binary.
Instrumenting your C/C++/Objective-C Application¶
The easiest way of getting XRay instrumentation for your application is by
enabling the -fxray-instrument
flag in your clang invocation.
For example:
clang -fxray-instrument ...
By default, functions that have at least 200 instructions will get XRay
instrumentation points. You can tweak that number through the
-fxray-instruction-threshold=
flag:
clang -fxray-instrument -fxray-instruction-threshold=1 ...
You can also specifically instrument functions in your binary to either always or never be instrumented using source-level attributes. You can do it using the GCC-style attributes or C++11-style attributes.
[[clang::xray_always_instrument]] void always_instrumented();
[[clang::xray_never_instrument]] void never_instrumented();
void alt_always_instrumented() __attribute__((xray_always_instrument));
void alt_never_instrumented() __attribute__((xray_never_instrument));
When linking a binary, you can either manually link in the XRay Runtime
Library or use clang
to link it in automatically with the
-fxray-instrument
flag. Alternatively, you can statically link-in the XRay
runtime library from compiler-rt – those archive files will take the name of
libclang_rt.xray-{arch} where {arch} is the mnemonic supported by clang
(x86_64, arm7, etc.).
LLVM Function Attribute¶
If you’re using LLVM IR directly, you can add the function-instrument
string attribute to your functions, to get the similar effect that the
C/C++/Objective-C source-level attributes would get:
define i32 @always_instrument() uwtable "function-instrument"="xray-always" {
; ...
}
define i32 @never_instrument() uwtable "function-instrument"="xray-never" {
; ...
}
You can also set the xray-instruction-threshold
attribute and provide a
numeric string value for how many instructions should be in the function before
it gets instrumented.
define i32 @maybe_instrument() uwtable "xray-instruction-threshold"="2" {
; ...
}
Special Case File¶
Attributes can be imbued through the use of special case files instead of adding them to the original source files. You can use this to mark certain functions and classes to be never, always, or instrumented with first-argument logging from a file. The file’s format is described below:
# Comments are supported
[always]
fun:always_instrument
fun:log_arg1=arg1 # Log the first argument for the function
[never]
fun:never_instrument
These files can be provided through the -fxray-attr-list=
flag to clang.
You may have multiple files loaded through multiple instances of the flag.
XRay Runtime Library¶
The XRay Runtime Library is part of the compiler-rt project, which implements
the runtime components that perform the patching and unpatching of inserted
instrumentation points. When you use clang
to link your binaries and the
-fxray-instrument
flag, it will automatically link in the XRay runtime.
The default implementation of the XRay runtime will enable XRay instrumentation
before main
starts, which works for applications that have a short
lifetime. This implementation also records all function entry and exit events
which may result in a lot of records in the resulting trace.
Also by default the filename of the XRay trace is xray-log.XXXXXX
where the
XXXXXX
part is randomly generated.
These options can be controlled through the XRAY_OPTIONS
environment
variable, where we list down the options and their defaults below.
Option | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
patch_premain | bool |
false |
Whether to patch instrumentation points before main. |
xray_mode | const char* |
"" |
Default mode to
install and initialize
before main . |
xray_logfile_base | const char* |
xray-log. |
Filename base for the XRay logfile. |
verbosity | int |
0 |
Runtime verbosity level. |
If you choose to not use the default logging implementation that comes with the
XRay runtime and/or control when/how the XRay instrumentation runs, you may use
the XRay APIs directly for doing so. To do this, you’ll need to include the
xray_log_interface.h
from the compiler-rt xray
directory. The important API
functions we list below:
__xray_log_register_mode(...)
: Register a logging implementation against a string Mode identifier. The implementation is an instance ofXRayLogImpl
defined inxray/xray_log_interface.h
.__xray_log_select_mode(...)
: Select the mode to install, associated with a string Mode identifier. Only implementations registered with__xray_log_register_mode(...)
can be chosen with this function.__xray_log_init_mode(...)
: This function allows for initializing and re-initializing an installed logging implementation. Seexray/xray_log_interface.h
for details, part of the XRay compiler-rt installation.
Once a logging implementation has been initialized, it can be “stopped” by
finalizing the implementation through the __xray_log_finalize()
function.
The finalization routine is the opposite of the initialization. When finalized,
an implementation’s data can be cleared out through the
__xray_log_flushLog()
function. For implementations that support in-memory
processing, these should register an iterator function to provide access to the
data via the __xray_log_set_buffer_iterator(...)
which allows code calling
the __xray_log_process_buffers(...)
function to deal with the data in
memory.
All of this is better explained in the xray/xray_log_interface.h
header.
Basic Mode¶
XRay supports a basic logging mode which will trace the application’s
execution, and periodically append to a single log. This mode can be
installed/enabled by setting xray_mode=xray-basic
in the XRAY_OPTIONS
environment variable. Combined with patch_premain=true
this can allow for
tracing applications from start to end.
Like all the other modes installed through __xray_log_select_mode(...)
, the
implementation can be configured through the __xray_log_init_mode(...)
function, providing the mode string and the flag options. Basic-mode specific
defaults can be provided in the XRAY_BASIC_OPTIONS
environment variable.
Flight Data Recorder Mode¶
XRay supports a logging mode which allows the application to only capture a
fixed amount of memory’s worth of events. Flight Data Recorder (FDR) mode works
very much like a plane’s “black box” which keeps recording data to memory in a
fixed-size circular queue of buffers, and have the data available
programmatically until the buffers are finalized and flushed. To use FDR mode
on your application, you may set the xray_mode
variable to xray-fdr
in
the XRAY_OPTIONS
environment variable. Additional options to the FDR mode
implementation can be provided in the XRAY_FDR_OPTIONS
environment
variable. Programmatic configuration can be done by calling
__xray_log_init_mode("xray-fdr", <configuration string>)
once it has been
selected/installed.
When the buffers are flushed to disk, the result is a binary trace format described by XRay FDR format
When FDR mode is on, it will keep writing and recycling memory buffers until the logging implementation is finalized – at which point it can be flushed and re-initialised later. To do this programmatically, we follow the workflow provided below:
// Patch the sleds, if we haven't yet.
auto patch_status = __xray_patch();
// Maybe handle the patch_status errors.
// When we want to flush the log, we need to finalize it first, to give
// threads a chance to return buffers to the queue.
auto finalize_status = __xray_log_finalize();
if (finalize_status != XRAY_LOG_FINALIZED) {
// maybe retry, or bail out.
}
// At this point, we are sure that the log is finalized, so we may try
// flushing the log.
auto flush_status = __xray_log_flushLog();
if (flush_status != XRAY_LOG_FLUSHED) {
// maybe retry, or bail out.
}
The default settings for the FDR mode implementation will create logs named similarly to the basic log implementation, but will have a different log format. All the trace analysis tools (and the trace reading library) will support all versions of the FDR mode format as we add more functionality and record types in the future.
NOTE: We do not promise perpetual support for when we update the log versions we support going forward. Deprecation of the formats will be announced and discussed on the developers mailing list.
Trace Analysis Tools¶
We currently have the beginnings of a trace analysis tool in LLVM, which can be
found in the tools/llvm-xray
directory. The llvm-xray
tool currently
supports the following subcommands:
extract
: Extract the instrumentation map from a binary, and return it as YAML.account
: Performs basic function call accounting statistics with various options for sorting, and output formats (supports CSV, YAML, and console-friendly TEXT).convert
: Converts an XRay log file from one format to another. We can convert from binary XRay traces (both basic and FDR mode) to YAML, flame-graph friendly text formats, as well as Chrome Trace Viewer (catapult) <https://github.com/catapult-project/catapult> formats.graph
: Generates a DOT graph of the function call relationships between functions found in an XRay trace.stack
: Reconstructs function call stacks from a timeline of function calls in an XRay trace.
These subcommands use various library components found as part of the XRay libraries, distributed with the LLVM distribution. These are:
llvm/XRay/Trace.h
: A trace reading library for conveniently loading an XRay trace of supported forms, into a convenient in-memory representation. All the analysis tools that deal with traces use this implementation.llvm/XRay/Graph.h
: A semi-generic graph type used by the graph subcommand to conveniently represent a function call graph with statistics associated with edges and vertices.llvm/XRay/InstrumentationMap.h
: A convenient tool for analyzing the instrumentation map in XRay-instrumented object files and binaries. Theextract
andstack
subcommands uses this particular library.
Future Work¶
There are a number of ongoing efforts for expanding the toolset building around the XRay instrumentation system.
Trace Analysis Tools¶
- Work is in progress to integrate with or develop tools to visualize findings
from an XRay trace. Particularly, the
stack
tool is being expanded to output formats that allow graphing and exploring the duration of time in each call stack. - With a large instrumented binary, the size of generated XRay traces can quickly become unwieldy. We are working on integrating pruning techniques and heuristics for the analysis tools to sift through the traces and surface only relevant information.
More Platforms¶
We’re looking forward to contributions to port XRay to more architectures and operating systems.