1TRACE-CMD-DUMP(1)                                            TRACE-CMD-DUMP(1)
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3
4

NAME

6       trace-cmd-dump - show a meta data from a trace file, created by
7       trace-cmd record
8

SYNOPSIS

10       trace-cmd dump [OPTIONS] [input-file]
11

DESCRIPTION

13       The trace-cmd(1) dump command will display the meta data from a trace
14       file created by trace-cmd record.
15

OPTIONS

17       -i input-file
18           By default, trace-cmd dump will read the file trace.dat. But the -i
19           option open up the given input-file instead. Note, the input file
20           may also be specified as the last item on the command line.
21
22       -v, --validate
23           Check if the input file is a valid trace file, created by
24           trace-cmd.
25
26       --summary
27           Print a meta data summary - initial format and a short description
28           of each file section. This is the default action, if no arguments
29           are specified.
30
31       --head-page
32           Print the header page information, stored in the file.
33
34       --head-event
35           Print the event header information, stored in the file.
36
37       --ftrace-events
38           Print formats of ftrace specific events.
39
40       --systems
41           Print information of event systems, stored in the file - name and
42           number of events for each system.
43
44       --events
45           Print formats of all events, stored in the file.
46
47       --kallsyms
48           Print information of the mapping of function addresses to the
49           function names.
50
51       --printk
52           Print trace_printk() format strings, stored in the file.
53
54       --cmd-lines
55           Print mapping a PID to a process name.
56
57       --options
58           Print all options, stored in the file.
59
60       --flyrecord
61           Print the offset and the size of tracing data per each CPU.
62
63       --all
64           Print all meta data from the file.
65
66       --help
67           Print usage information.
68

EXAMPLES

70       # trace-cmd dump --summary -i trace.dat
71
72           Tracing meta data in file trace.dat:
73                  [Initial format]
74                          6       [Version]
75                          0       [Little endian]
76                          8       [Bytes in a long]
77                          4096    [Page size, bytes]
78                  [Header info, 205 bytes]
79                  [Header event, 205 bytes]
80                  [Ftrace format, 15 events]
81                  [Events format, 2 systems]
82                  [Kallsyms, 7144493 bytes]
83                  [Trace printk, 2131 bytes]
84                  [Saved command lines, 117 bytes]
85                  8 [CPUs with tracing data]
86                  [12 options]
87                  [Flyrecord tracing data]
88
89           # trace-cmd dump --flyrecord -i trace.dat
90                   [Flyrecord tracing data]
91                            7176192 0      [offset, size of cpu 0]
92                            7176192 0      [offset, size of cpu 1]
93                            7176192 0      [offset, size of cpu 2]
94                            7176192 4096   [offset, size of cpu 3]
95                            7180288 4096   [offset, size of cpu 4]
96                            7184384 0      [offset, size of cpu 5]
97                            7184384 0      [offset, size of cpu 6]
98                            7184384 0      [offset, size of cpu 7]
99
100       # trace-cmd dump --summary --systems -i trace.dat
101
102           Tracing meta data in file trace.dat:
103                  [Initial format]
104                          6       [Version]
105                          0       [Little endian]
106                          8       [Bytes in a long]
107                          4096    [Page size, bytes]
108                  [Header info, 205 bytes]
109                  [Header event, 205 bytes]
110                  [Ftrace format, 15 events]
111                  [Events format, 3 systems]
112                          sched 23 [system, events]
113                          irq 5 [system, events]
114                          kvm 70 [system, events]
115                  [Kallsyms, 7144493 bytes]
116                  [Trace printk, 2131 bytes]
117                  [Saved command lines, 157 bytes]
118                  8 [CPUs with tracing data]
119                  [11 options]
120                  [Flyrecord tracing data]
121
122           # trace-cmd dump --summary --systems -i trace.dat
123           File trace.dat is a valid trace-cmd file
124

SEE ALSO

126       trace-cmd(1), trace-cmd.dat(1)
127

AUTHOR

129       Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org[1]>, author of trace-cmd. Tzvetomir
130       Stoyanov <tz.stoyanov@gmail.com[2]>, author of this man page.
131

RESOURCES

133       git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rostedt/trace-cmd.git
134

COPYING

136       Copyright (C) 2010 Red Hat, Inc. Free use of this software is granted
137       under the terms of the GNU Public License (GPL).
138

NOTES

140        1. rostedt@goodmis.org
141           mailto:rostedt@goodmis.org
142
143        2. tz.stoyanov@gmail.com
144           mailto:tz.stoyanov@gmail.com
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148                                  12/02/2020                 TRACE-CMD-DUMP(1)
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