| page.title=Traceview: A Graphical Log Viewer |
| @jd:body |
| |
| <p>Traceview is a graphical viewer for execution logs |
| saved by your application. The sections below describe how to use the program. </p> |
| |
| <h2>Contents</h2> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a href="#creatingtracefiles">Creating Trace Files</a></dt> |
| <dt><a href="#copyingfiles">Copying Trace Files to a Host Machine</a></dt> |
| <dt><a href="#runningtraceview">Viewing Trace Files in Traceview</a></dt> |
| <dd><a href="#timelinepanel">Timeline Panel</a></dd> |
| <dd><a href="#profilepanel">Profile Panel</a></dd> |
| <dt><a href="#format">Traceview File Format</a></dd> |
| <dd><a href="#datafileformat">Data File Format</a><dd> |
| <dd><a href="#keyfileformat">Key File Format</a></dd> |
| <dt><a href="#knownissues">Traceview Known Issues</a></dd> |
| <dt><a href="#dmtracedump">Using dmtracedump</a></dt> |
| </dl> |
| |
| <a name="creatingtracefiles"></a> |
| |
| <h2>Creating Trace Files</h2> |
| |
| <p>To use Traceview, you need to generate log files containing the trace information you want to analyze. To do that, you include the {@link android.os.Debug} |
| class in your code and call its methods to start and stop logging of trace information |
| to disk. When your application quits, you can then use Traceview to examine the log files |
| for useful run-time information such |
| as method calls and run times. </p> |
| <p>To create the trace files, include the {@link android.os.Debug} class and call one |
| of the {@link android.os.Debug#startMethodTracing() startMethodTracing()} methods. |
| In the call, you specify a base name for the trace files that the system generates. |
| To stop tracing, call {@link android.os.Debug#stopMethodTracing() stopMethodTracing()}. |
| These methods start and stop method tracing across the entire virtual machine. For |
| example, you could call startMethodTracing() in your activity's onCreate() |
| method, and call stopMethodTracing() in that activity's onDestroy() method.</p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| // start tracing to "/sdcard/calc.trace" |
| Debug.startMethodTracing("calc"); |
| // ... |
| // stop tracing |
| Debug.stopMethodTracing(); |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p>When your application calls startMethodTracing(), the system creates a |
| file called <code><trace-base-name>.trace</code>. This contains the |
| binary method trace data and a mapping table with thread and method names.</p> |
| |
| <p>The system then begins buffering the generated trace data, until your application calls |
| stopMethodTracing(), at which time it writes the buffered data to the |
| output file. |
| If the system reaches the maximum buffer size before stopMethodTracing() |
| is called, the system stops tracing and sends a notification |
| to the console. </p> |
| |
| <p>Interpreted code will run more slowly when profiling is enabled. Don't |
| try to generate absolute timings from the profiler results (i.e. "function |
| X takes 2.5 seconds to run"). The times are only |
| useful in relation to other profile output, so you can see if changes |
| have made the code faster or slower. </p> |
| |
| <p>When using the Android emulator, you must create an SD card image upon which |
| the trace files will be written. For example, from the <code>/tools</code> directory, you |
| can create an SD card image and mount it when launching the emulator like so:</p> |
| <pre> |
| <b>$</b> mksdcard 1024M ./imgcd |
| <b>$</b> emulator -sdcard ./img |
| </pre> |
| <p>For more information, read about the |
| <a href="{@docRoot}reference/othertools.html#mksdcard">mksdcard tool</a>.</p> |
| |
| <p>The format of the trace files is described <a href="#format">later |
| in this document</a>. </p> |
| |
| <a name="copyingfiles"></a> |
| |
| <h2>Copying Trace Files to a Host Machine</h2> |
| <p>After your application has run and the system has created your trace files <code><trace-base-name>.trace</code> |
| on a device or emulator, you must copy those files to your development computer. You can use <code>adb pull</code> to copy |
| the files. Here's an example that shows how to copy an example file, |
| calc.trace, from the default location on the emulator to the /tmp directory on |
| the emulator host machine:</p> |
| <pre>adb pull /sdcard/calc.trace /tmp</pre> |
| |
| |
| <a name="runningtraceview"></a> |
| |
| <h2>Viewing Trace Files in Traceview</h2> |
| <p>To run traceview and view the trace files, enter <code>traceview <trace-base-name></code>. |
| For example, to run Traceview on the example files copied in the previous section, |
| you would use: </p> |
| <pre>traceview /tmp/calc</pre> |
| |
| <p>Traceview loads the log files and displays their data in a window that has two panels:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>A <a href="#timelinepanel">timeline panel</a> -- describes when each thread |
| and method started and stopped</li> |
| <li>A <a href="#timelinepanel">profile panel</a> -- provides a summary of what happened inside a method</li> |
| </ul> |
| <p>The sections below provide addition information about the traceview output panes. </p> |
| |
| <a name="timelinepanel"></a> |
| |
| <h3>Timeline Panel </h3> |
| <p>The image below shows a close up of the timeline panel. Each thread’s |
| execution is shown in its own row, with time increasing to the right. Each method |
| is shown in another color (colors are reused in a round-robin fashion starting |
| with the methods that have the most inclusive time). The thin lines underneath |
| the first row show the extent (entry to exit) of all the calls to the selected |
| method. The method in this case is LoadListener.nativeFinished() and it was |
| selected in the profile view. </p> |
| <p><img src="../images/traceview_timeline.png" alt="Traceview timeline panel" width="893" height="284"></p> |
| <a name="profilepanel"></a> |
| <h3>Profile Panel</h3> |
| <p>The image below shows the profile pane. The profile pane shows a |
| summary of all the time spent in a method. The table shows |
| both the inclusive and exclusive times (as well as the percentage of the total |
| time). Exclusive time is the time spent in the method. Inclusive time is the |
| time spent in the method plus the time spent in any called functions. We refer |
| to calling methods as "parents" and called methods as "children." |
| When a method is selected (by clicking on it), it expands to show the parents |
| and children. Parents are shown with a purple background and children |
| with a yellow background. The last column in the table shows the number of calls |
| to this method plus the number of recursive calls. The last column shows the |
| number of calls out of the total number of calls made to that method. In this |
| view, we can see that there were 14 calls to LoadListener.nativeFinished(); looking |
| at the timeline panel shows that one of those calls took an unusually |
| long time.</p> |
| <p><img src="../images/traceview_profile.png" alt="Traceview profile panel." width="892" height="630"></p> |
| |
| <a name="format"></a> |
| <h2>Traceview File Format</h2> |
| <p>Tracing creates two distinct pieces of output: a <em>data</em> file, |
| which holds the trace data, and a <em>key</em> file, which |
| provides a mapping from binary identifiers to thread and method names. |
| The files are concatenated when tracing completes, into a |
| single <em>.trace</em> file. </p> |
| |
| <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The previous version of Traceview did not concatenate |
| these files for you. If you have old key and data files that you'd still like to trace, you |
| can concatenate them yourself with <code>cat mytrace.key mytrace.data > mytrace.trace</code>.</p> |
| |
| <a name="datafileformat"></a> |
| |
| <h3>Data File Format</h3> |
| <p>The data file is binary, structured as |
| follows (all values are stored in little-endian order):</p> |
| <pre>* File format: |
| * header |
| * record 0 |
| * record 1 |
| * ... |
| * |
| * Header format: |
| * u4 magic 0x574f4c53 ('SLOW') |
| * u2 version |
| * u2 offset to data |
| * u8 start date/time in usec |
| * |
| * Record format: |
| * u1 thread ID |
| * u4 method ID | method action |
| * u4 time delta since start, in usec |
| </pre> |
| <p>The application is expected to parse all of the header fields, then seek |
| to "offset to data" from the start of the file. From there it just |
| reads |
| 9-byte records until EOF is reached.</p> |
| <p><em>u8 start date/time in usec</em> is the output from gettimeofday(). |
| It's mainly there so that you can tell if the output was generated yesterday |
| or three months ago.</p> |
| <p><em>method action</em> sits in the two least-significant bits of the |
| <em>method</em> word. The currently defined meanings are: </p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>0 - method entry </li> |
| <li>1 - method exit </li> |
| <li>2 - method "exited" when unrolled by exception handling </li> |
| <li>3 - (reserved)</li> |
| </ul> |
| <p>An unsigned 32-bit integer can hold about 70 minutes of time in microseconds. |
| </p> |
| |
| <a name="keyfileformat"></a> |
| |
| <h3>Key File Format</h3> |
| <p>The key file is a plain text file divided into three sections. Each |
| section starts with a keyword that begins with '*'. If you see a '*' at the start |
| of a line, you have found the start of a new section.</p> |
| <p>An example file might look like this:</p> |
| <pre>*version |
| 1 |
| clock=global |
| *threads |
| 1 main |
| 6 JDWP Handler |
| 5 Async GC |
| 4 Reference Handler |
| 3 Finalizer |
| 2 Signal Handler |
| *methods |
| 0x080f23f8 java/io/PrintStream write ([BII)V |
| 0x080f25d4 java/io/PrintStream print (Ljava/lang/String;)V |
| 0x080f27f4 java/io/PrintStream println (Ljava/lang/String;)V |
| 0x080da620 java/lang/RuntimeException <init> ()V |
| [...] |
| 0x080f630c android/os/Debug startMethodTracing ()V |
| 0x080f6350 android/os/Debug startMethodTracing (Ljava/lang/String;Ljava/lang/String;I)V |
| *end</pre> |
| <dl> |
| <dt><em>version section</em></dt> |
| <dd>The first line is the file version number, currently |
| 1. |
| The second line, <code>clock=global</code>, indicates that we use a common |
| clock across all threads. A future version may use per-thread CPU time counters |
| that are independent for every thread.</dd> |
| <dt><em>threads section</em></dt> |
| <dd>One line per thread. Each line consists of two parts: the thread ID, followed |
| by a tab, followed by the thread name. There are few restrictions on what |
| a valid thread name is, so include everything to the end of the line.</dd> |
| <dt><em>methods section </em></dt> |
| <dd>One line per method entry or exit. A line consists of four pieces, |
| separated by tab marks: <em>method-ID</em> [TAB] <em>class-name</em> [TAB] |
| <em>method-name</em> [TAB] |
| <em>signature</em> . Only |
| the methods that were actually entered or exited are included in the list. |
| Note that all three identifiers are required to uniquely identify a |
| method.</dd> |
| </dl> |
| <p>Neither the threads nor methods sections are sorted.</p> |
| |
| <a name="knownissues"></a> |
| <h2>Traceview Known Issues</h2> |
| <dl> |
| <dt>Threads</dt> |
| <dd>Traceview logging does not handle threads well, resulting in these two problems: |
| <ol> |
| <li> If a thread exits during profiling, the thread name is not emitted; </li> |
| <li>The VM reuses thread IDs. If a thread stops and another starts, they |
| may get the same ID. </li> |
| </ol> |
| </dd> |
| |
| <a name="dmtracedump"></a> |
| |
| <h2>Using dmtracedump</h2> |
| |
| <p>The Android SDK includes dmtracedump, a tool that gives you an alternate way |
| of generating graphical call-stack diagrams from trace log files. The tool |
| uses the Graphviz Dot utility to create the graphical output, so you need to |
| install Graphviz before running dmtracedump.</p> |
| |
| <p>The dmtracedump tool generates the call stack data as a tree diagram, with each call |
| represented as a node. It shows call flow (from parent node to child nodes) using |
| arrows. The diagram below shows an example of dmtracedump output.</p> |
| |
| <img src="{@docRoot}images/tracedump.png" width="485" height="401" style="margin-top:1em;"/> |
| |
| <p style="margin-top:1em;">For each node, dmtracedump shows <code><ref> <em>callname</em> (<inc-ms>, |
| <exc-ms>,<numcalls>)</code>, where</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li><code><ref></code> -- Call reference number, as used in trace logs</li> |
| <li><code><inc-ms></code> -- Inclusive elapsed time (milliseconds spent in method, including all child methods)</li> |
| <li><code><exc-ms></code> -- Exclusive elapsed time (milliseconds spent in method, not including any child methods)</li> |
| <li><code><numcalls></code> -- Number of calls</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>The usage for dmtracedump is: </p> |
| |
| <pre>dmtracedump [-ho] [-s sortable] [-d trace-base-name] [-g outfile] <trace-base-name></pre> |
| |
| <p>The tool then loads trace log data from <trace-base-name>.data and <trace-base-name>.key. |
| The table below lists the options for dmtracedump.</p> |
| |
| <table> |
| <tr> |
| <th>Option</td> |
| <th>Description</th> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td><code>-d <trace-base-name> </code></td> |
| <td>Diff with this trace name</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td><code>-g <outfile> </code></td> |
| <td>Generate output to <outfile></td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td><code>-h </code></td> |
| <td>Turn on HTML output</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td><code>-o </code></td> |
| <td>Dump the trace file instead of profiling</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td><code>-d <trace-base-name> </code></td> |
| <td>URL base to the location of the sortable javascript file</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td><code>-t <percent> </code></td> |
| <td>Minimum threshold for including child nodes in the graph (child's inclusive |
| time as a percentage of parent inclusive time). If this option is not used, |
| the default threshold is 20%. </td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| </table> |