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LTTNG-UST(3)			 LTTng Manual			  LTTNG-UST(3)

NAME
       lttng-ust - LTTng user space tracing

SYNOPSIS
       #include	<lttng/tracepoint.h>

       #define LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(args...)
       #define LTTNG_UST_TP_ENUM_VALUES(values...)
       #define LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS(fields...)
       #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM(prov_name, enum_name, mappings)
       #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT(prov_name, t_name, args, fields)
       #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(cls_prov_name, cls_name,
						args, fields)
       #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(cls_prov_name, cls_name,
						   inst_prov_name, t_name, args)
       #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(prov_name,	t_name,	level)
       #define lttng_ust_do_tracepoint(prov_name, t_name, ...)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_hex(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_nowrite_hex(int_type, field_name, expr,
						 count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_network(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_network_nowrite(int_type, field_name,
						     expr, count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_network_hex(int_type, field_name, expr,
						 count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_network_nowrite_hex(int_type, field_name,
							 expr, count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_text(char,	field_name, expr, count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_array_text_nowrite(char,	field_name, expr,
						  count)
       #define lttng_ust_field_enum(prov_name, enum_name, int_type, field_name,
				    expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_enum_nowrite(prov_name, enum_name, int_type,
					    field_name,	expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_enum_value(label, value)
       #define lttng_ust_field_enum_range(label, start,	end)
       #define lttng_ust_field_float(float_type, field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_float_nowrite(float_type, field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_integer(int_type, field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_integer_hex(int_type, field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_integer_network(int_type, field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_integer_network_hex(int_type, field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_integer_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence(int_type, field_name, expr,
					len_type, len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr,
						len_type, len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_hex(int_type, field_name, expr,
					    len_type, len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_nowrite_hex(int_type, field_name, expr,
						    len_type, len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_network(int_type, field_name, expr,
						len_type, len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_network_nowrite(int_type, field_name,
							expr, len_type,
							len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_network_hex(int_type, field_name, expr,
						    len_type, len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_network_nowrite_hex(int_type,
							    field_name,
							    expr, len_type,
							    len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_text(char, field_name, expr, len_type,
					     len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_sequence_text_nowrite(char, field_name, expr,
						     len_type, len_expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_string(field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_field_string_nowrite(field_name, expr)
       #define lttng_ust_tracepoint(prov_name, t_name, ...)
       #define lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled(prov_name, t_name)

       Link with, following this manual	page:

          -llttng-ust

          If you define _LGPL_SOURCE before including <lttng/tracepoint.h>
	   (directly or	indirectly): -llttng-ust-common

DESCRIPTION
       The Linux Trace Toolkit:	next generation	<http://lttng.org/> is an open
       source software package used for	correlated tracing of the Linux
       kernel, user applications, and user libraries.

       LTTng-UST is the	user space tracing component of	the LTTng project. It
       is a port to user space of the low-overhead tracing capabilities	of the
       LTTng Linux kernel tracer. The liblttng-ust library is used to trace
       user applications and libraries.

	   Note

	   This	man page is about the liblttng-ust library. The	LTTng-UST
	   project also	provides Java and Python packages to trace
	   applications	written	in those languages. How	to instrument and
	   trace Java and Python applications is documented in the online
	   LTTng documentation <http://lttng.org/docs/>.

       There are three ways to use liblttng-ust:

          Using the lttng_ust_tracef(3) API, which is similar to printf(3).

          Using the lttng_ust_tracelog(3) API,	which is lttng_ust_tracef(3)
	   with	a log level parameter.

          Defining your own tracepoints. See the Creating a tracepoint
	   provider section below.

   Compatibility with previous APIs
       Since LTTng-UST 2.13, the LTTNG_UST_COMPAT_API_VERSION definition
       controls	which LTTng-UST	APIs are available (compiled):

       Undefined
	   All APIs are	available.

       N (0 or positive	integer)
	   API version N, and all the following	existing APIs, are available.
	   Previous APIs are not available (not	compiled).

       The following table shows the mapping from LTTng-UST versions (up to
       LTTng-UST 2.13.9) to available API versions:
       +-------------------+------------------------+
       | LTTng-UST version | Available API versions |
       +-------------------+------------------------+
       |		   |			    |
       | 2.0 to	2.12	   | 0			    |
       +-------------------+------------------------+
       |		   |			    |
       | 2.13		   | 0 and 1		    |
       +-------------------+------------------------+

       This manual page	only documents version 1 of the	API.

       If you wish to have access to version 0 of the API (for example,	the
       tracepoint(), ctf_integer(), and	TRACEPOINT_EVENT() macros), then
       either don't define LTTNG_UST_COMPAT_API_VERSION, or define it to 0
       before including	any LTTng-UST header.

   Creating a tracepoint provider
       Creating	a tracepoint provider is the first step	of using liblttng-ust.
       The next	steps are:

          Instrumenting your application with lttng_ust_tracepoint() calls

          Building your application with LTTng-UST support, either statically
	   or dynamically.

       A tracepoint provider is	a compiled object containing the event probes
       corresponding to	your custom tracepoint definitions. A tracepoint
       provider	contains the code to get the size of an	event and to serialize
       it, amongst other things.

       To create a tracepoint provider,	start with the following tracepoint
       provider	header template:

	   #undef LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER
	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER my_provider

	   #undef LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE
	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE	"./tp.h"

	   #if !defined(_TP_H) || \
	       defined(LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
	   #define _TP_H

	   #include <lttng/tracepoint.h>

	   /*
	    * LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT(), LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(),
	    * LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(),
	    * LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(), and `LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM()`
	    * are used here.
	    */

	   #endif /* _TP_H */

	   #include <lttng/tracepoint-event.h>

       In this template, the tracepoint	provider is named my_provider
       (LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER definition). The file needs to bear the
       name of the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_INCLUDE	definition (tp.h in this
       case). Between #include <lttng/tracepoint.h> and	#endif go the
       invocations of the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT(),
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(),
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(), LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(),
       and LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM() macros.

	   Note

	   You can avoid writing the prologue and epilogue boilerplate in the
	   template file above by using	the lttng-gen-tp(1) tool shipped with
	   LTTng-UST.

       The tracepoint provider header file needs to be included	in a source
       file which looks	like this:

	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES

	   #include "tp.h"

       Together, those two files (let's	call them tp.h and tp.c) form the
       tracepoint provider sources, ready to be	compiled.

       You can create multiple tracepoint providers to be used in a single
       application, but	each one must have its own header file.

       The LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()	usage section below shows how to use
       the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()	macro to define	the actual tracepoints
       in the tracepoint provider header file.

       See the EXAMPLE section below for a complete example.

   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()	usage
       The LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()	macro is used in a template provider
       header file (see	the Creating a tracepoint provider section above) to
       define LTTng-UST	tracepoints.

       The LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT()	usage template is as follows:

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
	       /* Tracepoint provider name */
	       my_provider,

	       /* Tracepoint/event name	*/
	       my_tracepoint,

	       /* List of tracepoint arguments (input) */
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   ...
	       ),

	       /* List of fields of eventual event (output) */
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS(
		   ...
	       )
	   )

       The LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS() macro contains the input	arguments of the
       tracepoint. Those arguments can be used in the argument expressions of
       the output fields defined in LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS().

       The format of the LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS() parameters	is: C type, then
       argument	name; repeat as	needed,	up to ten times. For example:

	   LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
	       int, my_int,
	       const char *, my_string,
	       FILE *, my_file,
	       double, my_float,
	       struct my_data *, my_data
	   )

       The LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS() macro contains	the output fields of the
       tracepoint, that	is, the	actual data that can be	recorded in the
       payload of an event emitted by this tracepoint.

       The LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS() macro contains	a list of lttng_ust_field_*()
       macros NOT separated by commas. The available macros are	documented in
       the Available lttng_ust_field_*() field type macros section below.

   Available field macros
       This section documents the available lttng_ust_field_*()	macros that
       can be inserted in the LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS() macro of the
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT() macro.

       Standard	integer, displayed in base 10:

	   lttng_ust_field_integer(int_type, field_name, expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_integer_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr)

       Standard	integer, displayed in base 16:

	   lttng_ust_field_integer_hex(int_type, field_name, expr)

       Integer in network byte order (big endian), displayed in	base 10:

	   lttng_ust_field_integer_network(int_type, field_name, expr)

       Integer in network byte order, displayed	in base	16:

	   lttng_ust_field_integer_network_hex(int_type, field_name, expr)

       Floating	point number:

	   lttng_ust_field_float(float_type, field_name, expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_float_nowrite(float_type, field_name, expr)

       Null-terminated string:

	   lttng_ust_field_string(field_name, expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_string_nowrite(field_name, expr)

       Statically-sized	array of integers (_hex	versions displayed in
       hexadecimal, _network versions in network byte order):

	   lttng_ust_field_array(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_hex(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_nowrite_hex(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_network(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_network_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr,
						 count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_network_hex(int_type, field_name, expr, count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_network_nowrite_hex(int_type, field_name,
						     expr, count)

       Statically-sized	array, printed as text;	no need	to be null-terminated:

	   lttng_ust_field_array_text(char, field_name,	expr, count)
	   lttng_ust_field_array_text_nowrite(char, field_name,	expr, count)

       Dynamically-sized array of integers (_hex versions displayed in
       hexadecimal, _network versions in network byte order):

	   lttng_ust_field_sequence(int_type, field_name, expr,	len_type,
				    len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr,
					    len_type, len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_hex(int_type, field_name, expr, len_type,
					len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_nowrite_hex(int_type, field_name, expr,
						len_type, len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_network(int_type, field_name, expr,
					    len_type, len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_network_nowrite(int_type, field_name, expr,
						    len_type, len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_network_hex(int_type, field_name, expr,
						len_type, len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_network_nowrite_hex(int_type, field_name,
							expr, len_type,
							len_expr)

       Dynamically-sized array,	displayed as text; no need to be
       null-terminated:

	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_text(char, field_name, expr, len_type,
					 len_expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_sequence_text_nowrite(char, field_name, expr,
						 len_type, len_expr)

       Enumeration. The	enumeration field must be defined before using this
       macro with the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM() macro. See the
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM() usage section for more information.

	   lttng_ust_field_enum(prov_name, enum_name, int_type,	field_name,
				expr)
	   lttng_ust_field_enum_nowrite(prov_name, enum_name, int_type,
					field_name, expr)

       The parameters are:

       count
	   Number of elements in array/sequence. This must be known at compile
	   time.

       enum_name
	   Name	of an enumeration field	previously defined with	the
	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM() macro. See the
	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM() usage section for more information.

       expr
	   C expression	resulting in the field's value.	This expression	can
	   use one or more arguments passed to the tracepoint. The arguments
	   of a	given tracepoint are defined in	the LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS()	macro
	   (see	the Creating a tracepoint provider section above).

       field_name
	   Event field name (C identifier syntax, NOT a	literal	string).

       float_type
	   Float C type	(float or double). The size of this type determines
	   the size of the floating point number field.

       int_type
	   Integer C type. The size of this type determines the	size of	the
	   integer/enumeration field.

       len_expr
	   C expression	resulting in the sequence's length. This expression
	   can use one or more arguments passed	to the tracepoint.

       len_type
	   Unsigned integer C type of sequence's length.

       prov_name
	   Tracepoint provider name. This must be the same as the tracepoint
	   provider name used in a previous field definition.

       The _nowrite versions omit themselves from the recorded trace, but are
       otherwise identical. Their primary purpose is to	make some of the event
       context available to the	event filters without having to	commit the
       data to sub-buffers. See	lttng-enable-event(1) to learn more about
       dynamic event filtering.

       See the EXAMPLE section below for a complete example.

   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM() usage
       An enumeration field is a list of mappings between an integers, or a
       range of	integers, and strings (sometimes called	labels or
       enumerators). Enumeration fields	can be used to have a more compact
       trace when the possible values for a field are limited.

       An enumeration field is defined with the	LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM()
       macro:

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM(
	       /* Tracepoint provider name */
	       my_provider,

	       /* Enumeration name (unique in the whole	tracepoint provider) */
	       my_enum,

	       /* Enumeration mappings */
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ENUM_VALUES(
		   ...
	       )
	   )

       LTTNG_UST_TP_ENUM_VALUES() contains a list of enumeration mappings, NOT
       separated by commas. Two	macros can be used in the
       LTTNG_UST_TP_ENUM_VALUES(): lttng_ust_field_enum_value()	and
       lttng_ust_field_enum_range().

       lttng_ust_field_enum_value() is a single	value mapping:

	   lttng_ust_field_enum_value(label, value)

       This macro maps the given label string to the value value.

       lttng_ust_field_enum_range() is a range mapping:

	   lttng_ust_field_enum_range(label, start, end)

       This macro maps the given label string to the range of integers from
       start to	end, inclusively. Range	mappings may overlap, but the
       behaviour is implementation-defined: each trace reader handles
       overlapping ranges as it	wishes.

       See the EXAMPLE section below for a complete example.

   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS() usage
       A tracepoint class is a class of	tracepoints sharing the	same field
       types and names.	A tracepoint instance is one instance of such a
       declared	tracepoint class, with its own event name.

       LTTng-UST creates one event serialization function per tracepoint
       class. Using LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT() creates one tracepoint	class
       per tracepoint definition, whereas using
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS() and
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE() creates one tracepoint class, and
       one or more tracepoint instances	of this	class. In other	words, many
       tracepoints can reuse the same serialization code. Reusing the same
       code, when possible, can	reduce cache pollution,	thus improve
       performance.

       The LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS() macro accepts the	same
       parameters as the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT() macro, except that
       instead of an event name, its second parameter is the tracepoint	class
       name:

	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER my_provider

	   /* ... */

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(
	       /* Tracepoint class provider name */
	       my_provider,

	       /* Tracepoint class name	*/
	       my_tracepoint_class,

	       /* List of tracepoint arguments (input) */
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   ...
	       ),

	       /* List of fields of eventual event (output) */
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS(
		   ...
	       )
	   )

       Once the	tracepoint class is defined, you can create as many tracepoint
       instances as needed:

	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER natality

	   /* ... */

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
	       /* Name of the tracepoint class provider	*/
	       my_provider,

	       /* Tracepoint class name	*/
	       my_tracepoint_class,

	       /* Name of the local (instance) tracepoint provider */
	       natality,

	       /* Tracepoint/event name	*/
	       my_tracepoint,

	       /* List of tracepoint arguments (input) */
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   ...
	       )
	   )

       As you can see, the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE() does not
       contain the LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS() macro,	because	they are defined at
       the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS() level.

       Note that the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE() macro requires two
       provider	names:

          The name of the tracepoint class provider (my_provider in the
	   example above).

	   This	is the same as the first argument of the
	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS() expansion	to refer to.

          The name of the local, or instance, provider	(natality in the
	   example above).

	   This	is the provider	name which becomes the prefix part of the name
	   of the events which such a tracepoint creates.

       The two provider	names may be different if the tracepoint class and the
       tracepoint instance macros are in two different translation units.

       See the EXAMPLE section below for a complete example.

   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL() usage
       Optionally, a log level can be assigned to a defined tracepoint.
       Assigning different levels of severity to tracepoints can be useful:
       when controlling	tracing	sessions, you can choose to only enable	events
       falling into a specific log level range using the --loglevel and
       --loglevel-only options of the lttng-enable-event(1) command.

       Log levels are assigned to tracepoints that are already defined using
       the LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL() macro. The latter must be used
       after having used LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT() or
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE() for a given tracepoint. The
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL() macro is	used as	follows:

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(
	       /* Tracepoint provider name */
	       my_provider,

	       /* Tracepoint/event name	*/
	       my_tracepoint,

	       /* Log level */
	       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_INFO
	   )

       The available log level definitions are:

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_EMERG
	   System is unusable.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_ALERT
	   Action must be taken	immediately.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_CRIT
	   Critical conditions.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_ERR
	   Error conditions.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_WARNING
	   Warning conditions.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_NOTICE
	   Normal, but significant, condition.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_INFO
	   Informational message.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG_SYSTEM
	   Debug information with system-level scope (set of programs).

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG_PROGRAM
	   Debug information with program-level	scope (set of processes).

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG_PROCESS
	   Debug information with process-level	scope (set of modules).

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG_MODULE
	   Debug information with module (executable/library) scope (set of
	   units).

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG_UNIT
	   Debug information with compilation unit scope (set of functions).

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG_FUNCTION
	   Debug information with function-level scope.

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG_LINE
	   Debug information with line-level scope (default log	level).

       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_DEBUG
	   Debug-level message.

       See the EXAMPLE section below for a complete example.

   Instrumenting your application
       Once the	tracepoint provider is created (see the	Creating a tracepoint
       provider	section	above),	you can	instrument your	application with the
       defined tracepoints thanks to the lttng_ust_tracepoint()	macro:

	   #define lttng_ust_tracepoint(prov_name, t_name, ...)

       With:

       prov_name
	   Tracepoint provider name.

       t_name
	   Tracepoint/event name.

       ...
	   Tracepoint arguments, if any.

       Make sure to include the	tracepoint provider header file	anywhere you
       use lttng_ust_tracepoint() for this provider.

	   Note

	   Even	though LTTng-UST supports lttng_ust_tracepoint() call site
	   duplicates having the same provider and tracepoint names, it	is
	   recommended to use a	provider/tracepoint name pair only once	within
	   the application source code to help map events back to their	call
	   sites when analyzing	the trace.

       Sometimes, arguments to the tracepoint are expensive to compute (take
       call stack, for example). To avoid the computation when the tracepoint
       is disabled, you	can use	the lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled() and
       lttng_ust_do_tracepoint() macros:

	   #define lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled(prov_name, t_name)
	   #define lttng_ust_do_tracepoint(prov_name, t_name, ...)

       lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled() returns a	non-zero value if the
       tracepoint named	t_name from the	provider named prov_name is enabled at
       run time.

       lttng_ust_do_tracepoint() is like lttng_ust_tracepoint(), except	that
       it doesn't check	if the tracepoint is enabled. Using
       lttng_ust_tracepoint() with lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled() is dangerous
       since lttng_ust_tracepoint() also contains the
       lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled() check, thus a race condition is possible
       in this situation:

	   if (lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled(my_provider, my_tracepoint)) {
	       stuff = prepare_stuff();
	   }

	   lttng_ust_tracepoint(my_provider, my_tracepoint, stuff);

       If the tracepoint is enabled after the condition, then stuff is not
       prepared: the emitted event will	either contain wrong data, or the
       whole application could crash (segmentation fault, for example).

	   Note

	   Neither lttng_ust_tracepoint_enabled() nor
	   lttng_ust_do_tracepoint() have a STAP_PROBEV() call,	so if you need
	   it, you should emit this call yourself.

   Statically linking the tracepoint provider
       With the	static linking method, compiled	tracepoint providers are
       copied into the target application.

       Define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_DEFINE definition below the
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES definition in	the tracepoint
       provider	source:

	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES
	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_DEFINE

	   #include "tp.h"

       Create the tracepoint provider object file:

	   $ cc	-c -I. tp.c

	   Note

	   Although an application instrumented	with LTTng-UST tracepoints can
	   be compiled with a C++ compiler, tracepoint probes should be
	   compiled with a C compiler.

       At this point, you can archive this tracepoint provider object file,
       possibly	with other object files	of your	application or with other
       tracepoint provider object files, as a static library:

	   $ ar	rc tp.a	tp.o

       Using a static library does have	the advantage of centralising the
       tracepoint providers objects so they can	be shared between multiple
       applications. This way, when the	tracepoint provider is modified, the
       source code changes don't have to be patched into each application's
       source code tree. The applications need to be relinked after each
       change, but need	not to be otherwise recompiled (unless the tracepoint
       provider's API changes).

       Then, link your application with	this object file (or with the static
       library containing it) and with liblttng-ust and	libdl (libc on a BSD
       system):

	   $ cc	-o app tp.o app.o -llttng-ust

   Dynamically loading the tracepoint provider
       The second approach to package the tracepoint provider is to use	the
       dynamic loader: the library and its member functions are	explicitly
       sought, loaded at run time.

       In this scenario, the tracepoint	provider is compiled as	a shared
       object.

       The process to create the tracepoint provider shared object is pretty
       much the	same as	the static linking method, except that:

          Since the tracepoint	provider is not	part of	the application,
	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_DEFINE must be defined,	for each tracepoint
	   provider, in	exactly	one source file	of the application

          LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE must be defined next to
	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_DEFINE

       Regarding LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_DEFINE and
       LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE, the recommended practice is
       to use a	separate C source file in your application to define them,
       then include the	tracepoint provider header files afterwards. For
       example,	as tp-define.c:

	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_DEFINE
	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROBE_DYNAMIC_LINKAGE

	   #include "tp.h"

       The tracepoint provider object file used	to create the shared library
       is built	like it	is using the static linking method, but	with the -fpic
       option:

	   $ cc	-c -fpic -I. tp.c

       It is then linked as a shared library like this:

	   $ cc	-shared	-Wl,--no-as-needed -o tp.so tp.o -llttng-ust

       This tracepoint provider	shared object isn't linked with	the user
       application: it must be loaded manually.	This is	why the	application is
       built with no mention of	this tracepoint	provider, but still needs
       libdl:

	   $ cc	-o app app.o tp-define.o

       There are two ways to dynamically load the tracepoint provider shared
       object:

          Load	it manually from the application using dlopen(3)

          Make	the dynamic loader load	it with	the LD_PRELOAD environment
	   variable (see ld.so(8))

       If the application does not dynamically load the	tracepoint provider
       shared object using one of the methods above, tracing is	disabled for
       this application, and the events	are not	listed in the output of	lttng-
       list(1).

       Note that it is not safe	to use dlclose(3) on a tracepoint provider
       shared object that is being actively used for tracing, due to a lack of
       reference counting from LTTng-UST to the	shared object.

       For example, statically linking a tracepoint provider to	a shared
       object which is to be dynamically loaded	by an application (a plugin,
       for example) is not safe: the shared object, which contains the
       tracepoint provider, could be dynamically closed	(dlclose(3)) at	any
       time by the application.

       To instrument a shared object, either:

          Statically link the tracepoint provider to the application, or

          Build the tracepoint	provider as a shared object (following the
	   procedure shown in this section), and preload it when tracing is
	   needed using	the LD_PRELOAD environment variable.

   Using LTTng-UST with	daemons
       Some extra care is needed when using liblttng-ust with daemon
       applications that call fork(2), clone(2), or BSD's rfork(2) without a
       following exec(3) family	system call. The library liblttng-ust-fork.so
       needs to	be preloaded before starting the application with the
       LD_PRELOAD environment variable (see ld.so(8)).

       To use liblttng-ust with	a daemon application which closes file
       descriptors that	were not opened	by it, preload the liblttng-ust-fd.so
       library before you start	the application. Typical use cases include
       daemons closing all file	descriptors after fork(2), and buggy
       applications doing "double-closes".

   Context information
       Context information can be prepended by the LTTng-UST tracer before
       each event, or before specific events.

       Context fields can be added to specific channels	using lttng-add-
       context(1).

       The following context fields are	supported by LTTng-UST:

       General context fields

	   cpu_id
	       CPU ID.

		   Note
		   This	context	field is always	enabled, and it	cannot be
		   added with lttng-add-context(1). Its	main purpose is	to be
		   used	for dynamic event filtering. See lttng-enable-event(1)
		   for more information	about event filtering.

	   ip
	       Instruction pointer: enables recording the exact	address	from
	       which an	event was emitted. This	context	field can be used to
	       reverse-lookup the source location that caused the event	to be
	       emitted.

	   pthread_id
	       POSIX thread identifier.

	       Can be used on architectures where pthread_t maps nicely	to an
	       unsigned	long type.

       Process context fields

	   procname
	       Thread name, as set by exec(3) or prctl(2). It is recommended
	       that programs set their thread name with	prctl(2) before
	       hitting the first tracepoint for	that thread.

	   vpid
	       Virtual process ID: process ID as seen from the point of	view
	       of the current process ID namespace (see	pid_namespaces(7)).

	   vtid
	       Virtual thread ID: thread ID as seen from the point of view of
	       the current process ID namespace	(see pid_namespaces(7)).

       perf context fields

	   perf:thread:COUNTER
	       perf counter named COUNTER. Use lttng add-context --list	to
	       list the	available perf counters.

	       Only available on IA-32 and x86-64 architectures.

	   perf:thread:raw:rN:NAME
	       perf counter with raw ID	N and custom name NAME.	See lttng-add-
	       context(1) for more details.

       Namespace context fields	(see namespaces(7))

	   cgroup_ns
	       Inode number of the current control group namespace (see
	       cgroup_namespaces(7)) in	the proc file system.

	   ipc_ns
	       Inode number of the current IPC namespace (see
	       ipc_namespaces(7)) in the proc file system.

	   mnt_ns
	       Inode number of the current mount point namespace (see
	       mount_namespaces(7)) in the proc	file system.

	   net_ns
	       Inode number of the current network namespace (see
	       network_namespaces(7)) in the proc file system.

	   pid_ns
	       Inode number of the current process ID namespace	(see
	       pid_namespaces(7)) in the proc file system.

	   time_ns
	       Inode number of the current clock namespace (see
	       time_namespaces(7)) in the proc file system.

	   user_ns
	       Inode number of the current user	namespace (see
	       user_namespaces(7)) in the proc file system.

	   uts_ns
	       Inode number of the current UTS namespace (see
	       uts_namespaces(7)) in the proc file system.

       Credential context fields (see credentials(7))

	   vuid
	       Virtual real user ID: real user ID as seen from the point of
	       view of the current user	namespace (see user_namespaces(7)).

	   vgid
	       Virtual real group ID: real group ID as seen from the point of
	       view of the current user	namespace (see user_namespaces(7)).

	   veuid
	       Virtual effective user ID: effective user ID as seen from the
	       point of	view of	the current user namespace (see
	       user_namespaces(7)).

	   vegid
	       Virtual effective group ID: effective group ID as seen from the
	       point of	view of	the current user namespace (see
	       user_namespaces(7)).

	   vsuid
	       Virtual saved set-user ID: saved	set-user ID as seen from the
	       point of	view of	the current user namespace (see
	       user_namespaces(7)).

	   vsgid
	       Virtual saved set-group ID: saved set-group ID as seen from the
	       point of	view of	the current user namespace (see
	       user_namespaces(7)).

   LTTng-UST state dump
       If an application that uses liblttng-ust	becomes	part of	a tracing
       session,	information about its currently	loaded shared objects, their
       build IDs, and their debug link information are emitted as events by
       the tracer.

       The following LTTng-UST state dump events exist and must	be enabled to
       record application state	dumps. Note that, during the state dump	phase,
       LTTng-UST can also emit shared library load/unload events (see Shared
       library load/unload tracking below).

       lttng_ust_statedump:start
	   Emitted when	the state dump begins.

	   This	event has no fields.

       lttng_ust_statedump:end
	   Emitted when	the state dump ends. Once this event is	emitted, it is
	   guaranteed that, for	a given	process, the state dump	is complete.

	   This	event has no fields.

       lttng_ust_statedump:bin_info
	   Emitted when	information about a currently loaded executable	or
	   shared object is found.

	   Fields:
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+
	   | Field name	    | Description		     |
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+
	   | baddr	    | Base address of loaded	     |
	   |		    | executable.		     |
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+
	   | memsz	    | Size of loaded executable	     |
	   |		    | in memory.		     |
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+
	   | path	    | Path to loaded executable	     |
	   |		    | file.			     |
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+
	   | is_pic	    | Whether or not the	     |
	   |		    | executable is		     |
	   |		    | position-independent code.     |
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+
	   | has_build_id   | Whether or not the	     |
	   |		    | executable has a build ID.     |
	   |		    | If this field is 1, you	     |
	   |		    | can expect that an	     |
	   |		    | lttng_ust_statedump:build_id   |
	   |		    | event record follows this	     |
	   |		    | one (not necessarily	     |
	   |		    | immediately after).	     |
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+
	   | has_debug_link | Whether or not the	     |
	   |		    | executable has debug link	     |
	   |		    | information. If this field     |
	   |		    | is 1, you	can expect that	an   |
	   |		    | lttng_ust_statedump:debug_link |
	   |		    | event record follows this	     |
	   |		    | one (not necessarily	     |
	   |		    | immediately after).	     |
	   +----------------+--------------------------------+

       lttng_ust_statedump:build_id
	   Emitted when	a build	ID is found in a currently loaded shared
	   library. See	Debugging Information in Separate Files
	   <https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-
	   Files.html> for more	information about build	IDs.

	   Fields:
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | Field name	| Description		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | baddr	| Base address of loaded |
	   |		| library.		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | build_id	| Build	ID.		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+

       lttng_ust_statedump:debug_link
	   Emitted when	debug link information is found	in a currently loaded
	   shared library. See Debugging Information in	Separate Files
	   <https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-
	   Files.html> for more	information about debug	links.

	   Fields:
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | Field name	| Description		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | baddr	| Base address of loaded |
	   |		| library.		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | crc	| Debug	link file's CRC. |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | filename	| Debug	link file name.	 |
	   +------------+------------------------+

       lttng_ust_statedump:procname
	   The process procname	at process start.

	   Fields:
	   +------------+-------------------+
	   | Field name	| Description	    |
	   +------------+-------------------+
	   | procname	| The process name. |
	   +------------+-------------------+

   Shared library load/unload tracking
       The LTTng-UST state dump	and the	LTTng-UST helper library to instrument
       the dynamic linker (see liblttng-ust-dl(3)) can emit shared library
       load/unload tracking events.

       The following shared library load/unload	tracking events	exist and must
       be enabled to track the loading and unloading of	shared libraries:

       lttng_ust_lib:load
	   Emitted when	a shared library (shared object) is loaded.

	   Fields:
	   +----------------+----------------------------+
	   | Field name	    | Description		 |
	   +----------------+----------------------------+
	   | baddr	    | Base address of loaded	 |
	   |		    | library.			 |
	   +----------------+----------------------------+
	   | memsz	    | Size of loaded library in	 |
	   |		    | memory.			 |
	   +----------------+----------------------------+
	   | path	    | Path to loaded library	 |
	   |		    | file.			 |
	   +----------------+----------------------------+
	   | has_build_id   | Whether or not the library |
	   |		    | has a build ID. If this	 |
	   |		    | field is 1, you can expect |
	   |		    | that an			 |
	   |		    | lttng_ust_lib:build_id	 |
	   |		    | event record follows this	 |
	   |		    | one (not necessarily	 |
	   |		    | immediately after).	 |
	   +----------------+----------------------------+
	   | has_debug_link | Whether or not the library |
	   |		    | has debug	link		 |
	   |		    | information. If this field |
	   |		    | is 1, you	can expect that	 |
	   |		    | an			 |
	   |		    | lttng_ust_lib:debug_link	 |
	   |		    | event record follows this	 |
	   |		    | one (not necessarily	 |
	   |		    | immediately after).	 |
	   +----------------+----------------------------+

       lttng_ust_lib:unload
	   Emitted when	a shared library (shared object) is unloaded.

	   Fields:
	   +------------+--------------------------+
	   | Field name	| Description		   |
	   +------------+--------------------------+
	   | baddr	| Base address of unloaded |
	   |		| library.		   |
	   +------------+--------------------------+

       lttng_ust_lib:build_id
	   Emitted when	a build	ID is found in a loaded	shared library (shared
	   object). See	Debugging Information in Separate Files
	   <https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-
	   Files.html> for more	information about build	IDs.

	   Fields:
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | Field name	| Description		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | baddr	| Base address of loaded |
	   |		| library.		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | build_id	| Build	ID.		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+

       lttng_ust_lib:debug_link
	   Emitted when	debug link information is found	in a loaded shared
	   library (shared object). See	Debugging Information in Separate
	   Files <https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Separate-Debug-
	   Files.html> for more	information about debug	links.

	   Fields:
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | Field name	| Description		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | baddr	| Base address of loaded |
	   |		| library.		 |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | crc	| Debug	link file's CRC. |
	   +------------+------------------------+
	   | filename	| Debug	link file name.	 |
	   +------------+------------------------+

   Detect if LTTng-UST is loaded
       To detect if liblttng-ust is loaded from	an application:

	1. Define the lttng_ust_loaded weak symbol globally:

	       int lttng_ust_loaded __attribute__((weak));

	   This	weak symbol is set by the constructor of liblttng-ust.

	2. Test	lttng_ust_loaded where needed:

	       /* ... */

	       if (lttng_ust_loaded) {
		   /* LTTng-UST	is loaded */
	       } else {
		   /* LTTng-UST	is NOT loaded */
	       }

	       /* ... */

EXAMPLE
	   Note

	   A few examples are available	in the doc/examples
	   <https://github.com/lttng/lttng-ust/tree/stable-2.13/doc/examples>
	   directory of	LTTng-UST's source tree.

       This example shows all the features documented in the previous
       sections. The static linking method is chosen here to link the
       application with	the tracepoint provider.

       You can compile the source files	and link them together statically like
       this:

	   $ cc	-c -I. tp.c
	   $ cc	-c app.c
	   $ cc	-o app tp.o app.o -llttng-ust

       Using the lttng(1) tool,	create an LTTng	tracing	session, enable	all
       the events of this tracepoint provider, and start tracing:

	   $ lttng create my-session
	   $ lttng enable-event	--userspace 'my_provider:*'
	   $ lttng start

       You may also enable specific events:

	   $ lttng enable-event	--userspace my_provider:big_event
	   $ lttng enable-event	--userspace my_provider:event_instance2

       Run the application:

	   $ ./app some	arguments

       Stop the	current	tracing	session	and inspect the	recorded events:

	   $ lttng stop
	   $ lttng view

   Tracepoint provider header file
       tp.h:

	   #undef LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER
	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_PROVIDER my_provider

	   #undef LTTNG_USTTRACEPOINT_INCLUDE
	   #define LTTNG_USTTRACEPOINT_INCLUDE "./tp.h"

	   #if !defined(_TP_H) || \
	       defined(LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
	   #define _TP_H

	   #include <lttng/tracepoint.h>
	   #include <stdio.h>

	   #include "app.h"

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
	       my_provider,
	       simple_event,
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   int,	my_integer_arg,
		   const char *, my_string_arg
	       ),
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS(
		   lttng_ust_field_string(argc,	my_string_arg)
		   lttng_ust_field_integer(int,	argv, my_integer_arg)
	       )
	   )

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_ENUM(
	       my_provider,
	       my_enum,
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ENUM_VALUES(
		   lttng_ust_field_enum_value("ZERO", 0)
		   lttng_ust_field_enum_value("ONE", 1)
		   lttng_ust_field_enum_value("TWO", 2)
		   lttng_ust_field_enum_range("A RANGE", 52, 125)
		   lttng_ust_field_enum_value("ONE THOUSAND", 1000)
	       )
	   )

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT(
	       my_provider,
	       big_event,
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   int,	my_integer_arg,
		   const char *, my_string_arg,
		   FILE	*, stream,
		   double, flt_arg,
		   int *, array_arg
	       ),
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS(
		   lttng_ust_field_integer(int,	int_field1, my_integer_arg * 2)
		   lttng_ust_field_integer_hex(long int, stream_pos,
					       ftell(stream))
		   lttng_ust_field_float(double, float_field, flt_arg)
		   lttng_ust_field_string(string_field,	my_string_arg)
		   lttng_ust_field_array(int, array_field, array_arg, 7)
		   lttng_ust_field_array_text(char, array_text_field,
					      array_arg, 5)
		   lttng_ust_field_sequence(int, seq_field, array_arg, unsigned	int,
					    my_integer_arg / 10)
		   lttng_ust_field_sequence_text(char, seq_text_field,
						 array_arg, unsigned int,
						 my_integer_arg	/ 5)
		   lttng_ust_field_enum(my_provider, my_enum, int,
					enum_field, array_arg[1])
	       )
	   )

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(my_provider, big_event,
					 LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_WARNING)

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_CLASS(
	       my_provider,
	       my_tracepoint_class,
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   int,	my_integer_arg,
		   struct app_struct *,	app_struct_arg
	       ),
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_FIELDS(
		   lttng_ust_field_integer(int,	a, my_integer_arg)
		   lttng_ust_field_integer(unsigned long, b, app_struct_arg->b)
		   lttng_ust_field_string(c, app_struct_arg->c)
	       )
	   )

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
	       my_provider,
	       my_tracepoint_class,
	       my_provider,
	       event_instance1,
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   int,	my_integer_arg,
		   struct app_struct *,	app_struct_arg
	       )
	   )

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
	       my_provider,
	       my_tracepoint_class,
	       my_provider,
	       event_instance2,
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   int,	my_integer_arg,
		   struct app_struct *,	app_struct_arg
	       )
	   )

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL(my_provider, event_instance2,
					 LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_LOGLEVEL_INFO)

	   LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_EVENT_INSTANCE(
	       my_provider,
	       my_tracepoint_class,
	       my_provider,
	       event_instance3,
	       LTTNG_UST_TP_ARGS(
		   int,	my_integer_arg,
		   struct app_struct *,	app_struct_arg
	       )
	   )

	   #endif /* _TP_H */

	   #include <lttng/tracepoint-event.h>

   Tracepoint provider source file
       tp.c:

	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_CREATE_PROBES
	   #define LTTNG_UST_TRACEPOINT_DEFINE

	   #include "tp.h"

   Application header file
       app.h:

	   #ifndef _APP_H
	   #define _APP_H

	   struct app_struct {
	       unsigned	long b;
	       const char *c;
	       double d;
	   };

	   #endif /* _APP_H */

   Application source file
       app.c:

	   #include <stdlib.h>
	   #include <stdio.h>

	   #include "tp.h"
	   #include "app.h"

	   static int array_of_ints[] =	{
	       100, -35, 1, 23,	14, -6,	28, 1001, -3000,
	   };

	   int main(int	argc, char* argv[])
	   {
	       FILE *stream;
	       struct app_struct app_struct;

	       lttng_ust_tracepoint(my_provider, simple_event, argc, argv[0]);
	       stream =	fopen("/tmp/app.txt", "w");

	       if (!stream) {
		   fprintf(stderr,
			   "Error: Cannot open /tmp/app.txt for	writing\n");
		   return EXIT_FAILURE;
	       }

	       if (fprintf(stream, "0123456789") != 10)	{
		   fclose(stream);
		   fprintf(stderr, "Error: Cannot write	to /tmp/app.txt\n");
		   return EXIT_FAILURE;
	       }

	       lttng_ust_tracepoint(my_provider, big_event, 35,
				    "hello tracepoint",	stream,	-3.14,
				    array_of_ints);
	       fclose(stream);
	       app_struct.b = argc;
	       app_struct.c = "[the string]";
	       lttng_ust_tracepoint(my_provider, event_instance1, 23,
				    &app_struct);
	       app_struct.b = argc * 5;
	       app_struct.c = "[other string]";
	       lttng_ust_tracepoint(my_provider, event_instance2, 17,
				    &app_struct);
	       app_struct.b = 23;
	       app_struct.c = "nothing";
	       lttng_ust_tracepoint(my_provider, event_instance3, -52,
				    &app_struct);
	       return EXIT_SUCCESS;
	   }

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       LTTNG_HOME
	   Alternative user's home directory. This variable is useful when the
	   user	running	the instrumented application has a non-writable	home
	   directory.

	   Unix	sockets	used for the communication between liblttng-ust	and
	   the LTTng session and consumer daemons (part	of the LTTng-tools
	   project) are	located	in a specific directory	under $LTTNG_HOME (or
	   $HOME if $LTTNG_HOME	is not set).

       LTTNG_UST_ALLOW_BLOCKING
	   If set, allow the application to retry event	tracing	when there's
	   no space left for the event record in the sub-buffer, therefore
	   effectively blocking	the application	until space is made available
	   or the configured timeout is	reached.

	   To allow an application to block during tracing, you	also need to
	   specify a blocking timeout when you create a	channel	with the
	   --blocking-timeout option of	the lttng-enable-channel(1) command.

	   This	option can be useful in	workloads generating very large	trace
	   data	throughput, where blocking the application is an acceptable
	   trade-off to	prevent	discarding event records.

	       Warning
	       Setting this environment	variable may significantly affect
	       application timings.

       LTTNG_UST_ABORT_ON_CRITICAL
	   If set, abort the instrumented application on a critical error
	   message.

       LTTNG_UST_CLOCK_PLUGIN
	   Path	to the shared object which acts	as the clock override plugin.
	   An example of such a	plugin can be found in the LTTng-UST
	   documentation under examples/clock-override
	   <https://github.com/lttng/lttng-
	   ust/tree/stable-2.13/doc/examples/clock-override>.

       LTTNG_UST_DEBUG
	   If set, enable liblttng-ust's debug and error output.

       LTTNG_UST_GETCPU_PLUGIN
	   Path	to the shared object which acts	as the getcpu()	override
	   plugin. An example of such a	plugin can be found in the LTTng-UST
	   documentation under examples/getcpu-override
	   <https://github.com/lttng/lttng-
	   ust/tree/stable-2.13/doc/examples/getcpu-override>.

       LTTNG_UST_REGISTER_TIMEOUT
	   Waiting time	for the	registration done session daemon command
	   before proceeding to	execute	the main program (milliseconds).

	   The value 0 means do	not wait. The value -1 means wait forever.
	   Setting this	environment variable to	0 is recommended for
	   applications	with time constraints on the process startup time.

	   Default: 3000.

       LTTNG_UST_WITHOUT_BADDR_STATEDUMP
	   If set, prevents liblttng-ust from performing a base	address	state
	   dump	(see the LTTng-UST state dump section above).

       LTTNG_UST_WITHOUT_PROCNAME_STATEDUMP
	   If set, prevents liblttng-ust from performing a procname state dump
	   (see	the LTTng-UST state dump section above).

BUGS
       If you encounter	any issue or usability problem,	please report it on
       the LTTng bug tracker <https://bugs.lttng.org/projects/lttng-ust>.

RESOURCES
          LTTng project website <http://lttng.org>

          LTTng documentation <http://lttng.org/docs>

          Git repositories <http://git.lttng.org>

          GitHub organization <http://github.com/lttng>

          Continuous integration <http://ci.lttng.org/>

          Mailing list	<http://lists.lttng.org> for support and development:
	   lttng-dev@lists.lttng.org

          IRC channel <irc://irc.oftc.net/lttng>: #lttng on irc.oftc.net

COPYRIGHTS
       This library is part of the LTTng-UST project.

       This library is distributed under the GNU Lesser	General	Public
       License,	version	2.1 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-
       licenses/lgpl-2.1.en.html>. See the COPYING
       <https://github.com/lttng/lttng-ust/blob/v2.13/COPYING> file for	more
       details.

THANKS
       Thanks to Ericsson for funding this work, providing real-life use
       cases, and testing.

       Special thanks to Michel	Dagenais and the DORSAL	laboratory
       <http://www.dorsal.polymtl.ca/> at Ecole	Polytechnique de Montreal for
       the LTTng journey.

AUTHORS
       LTTng-UST was originally	written	by Mathieu Desnoyers, with additional
       contributions from various other	people.	It is currently	maintained by
       Mathieu Desnoyers <mailto:mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>.

SEE ALSO
       lttng_ust_tracef(3), lttng_ust_tracelog(3), lttng-gen-tp(1), lttng-ust-
       dl(3), lttng-ust-cyg-profile(3),	lttng(1), lttng-enable-event(1),
       lttng-list(1), lttng-add-context(1), babeltrace(1), dlopen(3), ld.so(8)

LTTng 2.13.9			  11/02/2025			  LTTNG-UST(3)

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