16 KiB
Tracing
This subsystem will provide a mechanism to get structured tracing info from GStreamer applications. This can be used for post-run analysis as well as for live introspection.
Use cases
-
I’d like to get statistics from a running application.
-
I’d like to to understand which parts of my pipeline use how many resources.
-
I’d like to know which parts of the pipeline use how much memory.
-
I’d like to know about ref-counts of parts in the pipeline to find ref-count issues.
Non use-cases
- Some element in the pipeline does not play along the rules, find out which one. This could be done with generic tests.
Design
The system brings the following new items: core hooks: probes in the core api, that will expose internal state when tracing is in use tracers: plugin features that can process data from the hooks and emit a log tracing front-ends: applications that consume logs from tracers
Like the logging, the tracer hooks can be compiled out and if not use a local condition to check if active.
Certain GStreamer core function (such as gst_pad_push()
or
gst_element_add_pad()
) will call into the tracer subsystem to dispatch
into active tracing modules. Developers will be able to select a list of
plugins by setting an environment variable, such as
GST_TRACERS="meminfo;dbus"
. One can also pass parameters to plugins:
GST_TRACERS="log(events,buffers);stats(all)"
. When then plugins are
loaded, we’ll add them to certain hooks according to which they are
interested in.
Right now tracing info is logged as GstStructures
to the TRACE level.
Idea: Another env var GST_TRACE_CHANNEL
could be used to send the
tracing to a file or a socket. See
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733188 for discussion on
these environment variables.
Hook api
We’ll wrap interesting api calls with two macros, e.g. gst_pad_push()
:
GstFlowReturn gst_pad_push (GstPad * pad, GstBuffer * buffer) {
GstFlowReturn res;
g_return_val_if_fail (GST_IS_PAD (pad), GST_FLOW_ERROR);
g_return_val_if_fail (GST_PAD_IS_SRC (pad), GST_FLOW_ERROR);
g_return_val_if_fail (GST_IS_BUFFER (buffer), GST_FLOW_ERROR);
GST_TRACER_PAD_PUSH_PRE (pad, buffer);
res = gst_pad_push_data (pad,
GST_PAD_PROBE_TYPE_BUFFER | GST_PAD_PROBE_TYPE_PUSH, buffer);
GST_TRACER_PAD_PUSH_POST (pad, res);
return res;
}
TODO(ensonic): gcc has some magic for wrapping functions - http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Constructing-Calls.html - http://www.clifford.at/cfun/gccfeat/#gccfeat05.c
TODO(ensonic): we should eval if we can use something like jump_label in the kernel - http://lwn.net/Articles/412072/ + http://lwn.net/Articles/435215/ - http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/kernel/jump_label.c - http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/include/linux/jump_label.h - http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/arch/x86/kernel/jump_label.c TODO(ensonic): liblttng-ust provides such a mechanism for user-space - but this is mostly about logging traces - it is linux specific :/
In addition to api hooks we should also provide timer hooks. Interval
timers are useful to get e.g. resource usage snapshots. Also absolute
timers might make sense. All this could be implemented with a clock
thread. We can use another env-var GST_TRACE_TIMERS="100ms,75ms"
to
configure timers and then pass them to the tracers like,
GST_TRACERS="rusage(timer=100ms);meminfo(timer=75ms)"
. Maybe we can
create them ad-hoc and avoid the GST_TRACE_TIMERS
var.
Hooks (* already implemented)
* gst_bin_add
* gst_bin_remove
* gst_element_add_pad
* gst_element_post_message
* gst_element_query
* gst_element_remove_pad
* gst_element_factory_make
* gst_pad_link
* gst_pad_pull_range
* gst_pad_push
* gst_pad_push_list
* gst_pad_push_event
* gst_pad_unlink
Tracer api
Tracers are plugin features. They have a simple api:
class init Here the tracers describe the data the will emit.
instance init Tracers attach handlers to one or more hooks using
gst_tracing_register_hook()
. In case the are configurable, they can
read the options from the params property. This is the extra detail
from the environment var.
hook functions Hooks marshal the parameters given to a trace hook into varargs and also add some extra into such as a timestamp. Hooks will be called from misc threads. The trace plugins should only consume (=read) the provided data. Expensive computation should be avoided to not affect the execution too much. Most trace plugins will log data to a trace channel.
instance destruction Tracers can output results and release data. This
would ideally be done at the end of the applications, but gst_deinit()
is not mandatory. gst_tracelib
was using a gcc_destructor
. Ideally
tracer modules log data as they have them and leave aggregation to a
tool that processes the log.
tracer event classes
Most tracers will log some kind of events : a data transfer, an event, a message, a query or a measurement. Every tracer should describe the data format. This way tools that process tracer logs can show the data in a meaningful way without having to know about the tracer plugin.
Tracers can use gst_tracer_record_new
in their tracer_class_init()
to describe their format:
fmt = gst_tracer_record_new ("thread-rusage.class",
// value in the log record (order does not matter)
// *thread-id* is a *key* to related the record to something as indicated
// by *scope* substructure
"thread-id", GST_TYPE_STRUCTURE, gst_structure_new ("scope",
"type", G_TYPE_GTYPE, G_TYPE_GUINT64,
"related-to", GST_TYPE_TRACER_VALUE_SCOPE, GST_TRACER_VALUE_SCOPE_THREAD,
NULL),
// next value in the record
// *average-cpuload* is a measurement as indicated by the *value*
// substructure
"average-cpuload", GST_TYPE_STRUCTURE, gst_structure_new ("value",
// value type
"type", G_TYPE_GTYPE, G_TYPE_UINT,
// human readable description, that can be used as a graph label
"description", G_TYPE_STRING, "average cpu usage per thread",
// flags that help to use the right graph type
// flags { aggregated, windowed, cumulative, … }
"flags", GST_TYPE_TRACER_VALUE_FLAGS, GST_TRACER_VALUE_FLAGS_AGGREGATED,
// value range
"min", G_TYPE_UINT, 0,
"max", G_TYPE_UINT, 100,
NULL),
…
NULL);
Later tracers can use the GstTracerRecord
instance to log values efficiently:
gst_tracer_record_log (fmt, (guint64) (guintptr) thread_id, avg_cpuload);
Below a few more example for parts of tracer classes:
An optional value. Since the PTS can be GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and that is (-1), we don't want to log this.
"buffer-pts", GST_TYPE_STRUCTURE, gst_structure_new ("value",
"type", G_TYPE_GTYPE, G_TYPE_UINT64,
"description", G_TYPE_STRING, "presentation timestamp of the buffer in ns",
"flags", GST_TYPE_TRACER_VALUE_FLAGS, GST_TRACER_VALUE_FLAGS_OPTIONAL,
"min", G_TYPE_UINT64, G_GUINT64_CONSTANT (0),
"max", G_TYPE_UINT64, G_MAXUINT64,
NULL),
In the tracer code an optional value is logged using a boolean + the value, where the boolean indicated the presence:
GstClockTime pts = GST_BUFFER_PTS (buf);
gst_tracer_record_log (fmt, ..., GST_CLOCK_TIME_IS_VALID (pts), pts, ...);
A few ideas that are not yet in the above spec:
-
it would be nice to describe the unit of values
- putting it into the description is not flexible though, e.g. time would be a guint64 but a ui would reformat it to e.g. hⓂ️s.ms
- other units are e.g.: percent, per-mille, or kbit/s
-
we’d like to have some metadata on scopes
- e.g. we’d like to log the thread-names, so that a UI can show that instead of thread-ids
- ordering: e.g. in the latency tracer we'd like to order by 'sink' and then by 'src'
-
unique instance ids
- the stats tracer logs new-element and new-pad messages
- they add a unique ix to each instance as the memory ptr or the object name can be reused for new instances, the data is attached to the objects as qdata
- the latency tracer would like to also reference this metadata (right now, it relies on unique element names)
- the relationship between a scope 'element-ix' ('related-to'=_ELEMENT) and an earlier message 'new-element' that has scope 'ix' ('related-to'=_ELEMENT) and value 'name' is not obvious
Right now we log the classes as structures, this is important so that the log
is self contained. It would be nice to add them to the registry, so that
gst-inspect can show them. We could also consider to add each value as a
READONLY gobject property. The property has name/description. We could use
qdata for scope and flags (or have some new property flags). We would also
need a new "notify" signal, so that value-change notifications would include a
time-stamp. This way the tracers would not needs to be aware of the
logging. The core tracer would register the notify handlers and emit the
log. Or we just add a gst_tracer_class_install_event()
and that
mimics the g_object_class_install_property()
.
Frontends can:
- do an events over time histogram
- plot curves of values over time or deltas
- show gauges
- collect statistics (min, max, avg, …)
latency
- register to buffer and event flow
- send custom event on buffer flow at source elements
- catch events on event transfer at sink elements
meminfo (not yet implemented)
- register to an interval-timer hook.
- call
mallinfo()
and log memory usage rusage - register to an interval-timer hook.
- call
getrusage()
and log resource usage
dbus (not yet implemented)
- provide a dbus iface to announce applications that are traced
- tracing UIs can use the dbus iface to find the channels where logging and tracing is getting logged to
- one would start the tracing UI first and when the application is started with tracing activated, the dbus plugin will announce the new application, upon which the tracing UI can start reading from the log channels, this avoid missing some data
topology (not yet implemented)
- register to pipeline topology hooks
- tracing UIs can show a live pipeline graph
stats
- register to buffer, event, message and query flow
- tracing apps can do e.g. statistics
refcounts (not yet implemented)
- log ref-counts of objects
- just logging them outside of glib/gobject would still make it hard to detect issues though
opengl (not yet implemented)
- upload/download times
- there is not hardware agnostic way to get e.g. memory usage info (gl extensions)
memory (not yet implemented)
- trace live instance (and pointer to the memory)
- use an atexit handler to dump leaked instance https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756760#c6
leaks
-
track creation/destruction of
GstObject
andGstMiniObject
-
log those which are still alive when app is exiting and raise an error if any
-
The tracer takes several parameters in a
GstStructure
like syntax (without the structure name):- check-refs (boolean): Whether to also track object ref and unref operations
example:
GST_TRACERS=leaks(check-refs=true)
COMMAND - stack-traces-flags: Flags to use when generating stack trace (does not generate stack trace
if not set), valid values are “full” to retrieve as much information as possible in the
backtrace, or “none” for a simple backtrace (usually does not contain line number or source files).
This may significantly increase memory consumption. (You can also set the
GST_LEAKS_TRACER_STACK_TRACE
environment variable for that). - filters: (string): A comma separated list of object types to trace (make sure to enclose in quotation marks)
- check-refs (boolean): Whether to also track object ref and unref operations
example:
Run the leaks tracer on all GstProxyPad
objects logging the references with a full backtraces
GST_TRACERS=leaks(stack-traces-flags=full,filters=”GstProxyPad”,check-refs=true) COMMAND
Run the leaks tracer on all (mini)objects logging the references with less complete backtraces
GST_TRACERS=leaks(stack-traces-flags=fast,check-refs=true) COMMAND
-
If the
GST_LEAKS_TRACER_SIG
env variable is defined the tracer will handle the following UNIX signals: -
SIGUSR1: log alive objects
-
SIGUSR2: create a checkpoint and print a list of objects created and destroyed since the previous checkpoint.
gst-debug-viewer
gst-debug-viewer could be given the trace log in addition to the debug log (or a combined log). Alternatively it would show a dialog that shows all local apps (if the dbus plugin is loaded) and read the log streams from the sockets/files that are configured for the app.
gst-tracer
Counterpart of gst-tracelib-ui.
gst-stats
A terminal app that shows summary/running stats like the summary gst-tracelib shows at the end of a run. Currently only shows an aggregated status.
live-graphers
Maybe we can even feed the log into existing live graphers, with a little driver * https://github.com/dkogan/feedgnuplot
-
should tracers log into the debug.log or into a separate log?
-
separate log
-
use a binary format?
-
worse performance (we’re writing two logs at the same time)
-
need to be careful when people to
GST_DEBUG_CHANNEL=stderr
andGST_TRACE_CHANNEL=stderr
(use a shared channel, but what about the formats?) -
debug log
-
the tracer subsystem would need to log the
GST_TRACE
at a level that is active -
should the tracer call
gst_debug_category_set_threshold()
to ensure things work, even though the levels don’t make a lot of sense here -
make logging a tracer (a hook in
gst_debug_log_valist()
, movegst_debug_log_default()
to the tracer module) -
log all debug log to the tracer log, some of the current logging statements can be replaced by generic logging as shown in the log-tracer
-
add tools/gst-debug to extract a human readable debug log from the trace log
-
we could maintain a list of log functions, where
gst_tracer_log_trace()
is the default one. This way e.g.gst-validate
could consume the traces directly. -
when hooking into a timer, should we just have some predefined intervals?
-
can we add a tracer module that registers the timer hook? then we could do
GST_TRACER="timer(10ms);rusage"
right now the tracer hooks are defined as an enum though. -
when connecting to a running app, we can’t easily get the current state if logging is using a socket, as past events are not explicitly stored, we could determine the current topology and emit events with
GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE
as ts to indicate that the events are synthetic. -
we need stable ids for scopes (threads, elements, pads)
-
the address can be reused
-
we can use
gst_util_seqnum_next()
-
something like
gst_object_get_path_string()
won’t work as objects are initially without parent -
right now the tracing-hooks are enabled/disabled from configure with
--{enable,disable}-gst-tracer-hooks
The tracer code and the plugins are still built though. We should add a--{enable,disable}-gst-tracer
to disabled the whole system, allthough this is a bit confusing with the--{enable,disable}-trace
option we have already.
Try it
Traces for buffer flow, events and messages in TRACE level:
GST_DEBUG="GST_TRACER:7,GST_BUFFER*:7,GST_EVENT:7,GST_MESSAGE:7"
GST_TRACERS=log gst-launch-1.0 fakesrc num-buffers=10 ! fakesink -
Print some pipeline stats on exit:
GST_DEBUG="GST_TRACER:7" GST_TRACERS="stats;rusage"
GST_DEBUG_FILE=trace.log gst-launch-1.0 fakesrc num-buffers=10
sizetype=fixed ! queue ! fakesink && gst-stats-1.0 trace.log
get ts, average-cpuload, current-cpuload, time and plot
GST_DEBUG="GST_TRACER:7" GST_TRACERS="stats;rusage"
GST_DEBUG_FILE=trace.log /usr/bin/gst-play-1.0 $HOME/Videos/movie.mp4 &&
./scripts/gst-plot-traces.sh --format=png | gnuplot eog trace.log.*.png
print processing latencies
GST_DEBUG="GST_TRACER:7" GST_TRACERS=latency gst-launch-1.0 \
audiotestsrc num-buffers=10 ! audioconvert ! volume volume=0.7 ! \
autoaudiosink
Raise a warning if a leak is detected
GST_TRACERS="leaks" gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc num-buffers=10 !
fakesink
check if any GstEvent or GstMessage is leaked and raise a warning
GST_DEBUG="GST_TRACER:7" GST_TRACERS="leaks(GstEvent,GstMessage)"
gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc num-buffers=10 ! fakesink
Performance
run ./tests/benchmarks/tracing.sh <tracer(s)> <media>
egrep -c "(proc|thread)-rusage" trace.log 658618 grep -c
"gst_tracer_log_trace" trace.log 823351
- we can optimize most of it by using quarks in structures or eventually avoid structures totally