Dates and Events: |
OSADL Articles:
2023-11-12 12:00
Open Source License Obligations Checklists even better nowImport the checklists to other tools, create context diffs and merged lists
2022-07-11 12:00
Call for participation in phase #4 of Open Source OPC UA open62541 support projectLetter of Intent fulfills wish list from recent survey
2022-01-13 12:00
Phase #3 of OSADL project on OPC UA PubSub over TSN successfully completedAnother important milestone on the way to interoperable Open Source real-time Ethernet has been reached
2021-02-09 12:00
Open Source OPC UA PubSub over TSN project phase #3 launchedLetter of Intent with call for participation is now available |
Real Time Linux Workshops
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Eleventh Real-Time Linux Workshop on September 28 to 30, in Dresden, Germany
Announcement - Hotels - Agenda - Paper Abstracts - Presentations - Registration - Abstract Submission - Xenomai User Meeting - Sponsors
Papers
Finding origins of latencies using Ftrace
Steven Rostedt, Red Hat, Inc
One of the difficult tasks analyzing Real-Time systems is finding a source/cause of an unexpected latency. Is the latency caused by the application or the kernel? Is it a wake up scheduling latency or a latency caused by interrupts being disabled, or is it a latency caused by preemption being disabled, or a combination of disabled interrupts and preemption.
Ftrace has its origins from the -rt patch latency tracer, and still carries the capabilities to track down latencies. It can catch the maximum wake up latency for the highest priority task. This wake up latency can also be tuned to only trace Real-Time processes. There is a latency tracer to find the latency of how long interrupts and/or preemption are disabled. The max is captured and you can even see the functions that were called in the mean time. Ftrace also has a rich array of tracing features that can help determine if latencies are caused by the kernel, or simply are a bi-product of an application.
This paper will describe in detail how to use the latency tracers of ftrace, specifically to find the origins of latencies seen by Real-Time tasks.