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authorTom Zanussi <zanussi@kernel.org>2020-05-18 13:29:24 -0500
committerJonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>2020-05-25 18:59:59 -0600
commitb8170fad6e5fe8a695fbba9305a1e5ede278a2db (patch)
treed06fd66ace69dfac31f83b0418f393390f1b9c39 /Documentation/trace
parentdd9a41bc61cc62d38306465ed62373b98df0049e (diff)
tracing: Fix events.rst section numbering
The in-kernel trace event API should have its own section, and the duplicate section numbers need fixing as well. Reported-by: Li Xinhai <lixinhai.lxh@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tom Zanussi <zanussi@kernel.org> Acked-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/90ea854dfb728390b50ddf8a8675238973ee014a.camel@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/trace')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/trace/events.rst28
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/trace/events.rst b/Documentation/trace/events.rst
index 4a2ebe0bd19b..f792b1959a33 100644
--- a/Documentation/trace/events.rst
+++ b/Documentation/trace/events.rst
@@ -527,8 +527,8 @@ The following commands are supported:
See Documentation/trace/histogram.rst for details and examples.
-6.3 In-kernel trace event API
------------------------------
+7. In-kernel trace event API
+============================
In most cases, the command-line interface to trace events is more than
sufficient. Sometimes, however, applications might find the need for
@@ -560,8 +560,8 @@ following:
- tracing synthetic events from in-kernel code
- the low-level "dynevent_cmd" API
-6.3.1 Dyamically creating synthetic event definitions
------------------------------------------------------
+7.1 Dyamically creating synthetic event definitions
+---------------------------------------------------
There are a couple ways to create a new synthetic event from a kernel
module or other kernel code.
@@ -666,8 +666,8 @@ registered by calling the synth_event_gen_cmd_end() function::
At this point, the event object is ready to be used for tracing new
events.
-6.3.3 Tracing synthetic events from in-kernel code
---------------------------------------------------
+7.2 Tracing synthetic events from in-kernel code
+------------------------------------------------
To trace a synthetic event, there are several options. The first
option is to trace the event in one call, using synth_event_trace()
@@ -678,8 +678,8 @@ synth_event_trace_start() and synth_event_trace_end() along with
synth_event_add_next_val() or synth_event_add_val() to add the values
piecewise.
-6.3.3.1 Tracing a synthetic event all at once
----------------------------------------------
+7.2.1 Tracing a synthetic event all at once
+-------------------------------------------
To trace a synthetic event all at once, the synth_event_trace() or
synth_event_trace_array() functions can be used.
@@ -780,8 +780,8 @@ remove the event::
ret = synth_event_delete("schedtest");
-6.3.3.1 Tracing a synthetic event piecewise
--------------------------------------------
+7.2.2 Tracing a synthetic event piecewise
+-----------------------------------------
To trace a synthetic using the piecewise method described above, the
synth_event_trace_start() function is used to 'open' the synthetic
@@ -864,8 +864,8 @@ Note that synth_event_trace_end() must be called at the end regardless
of whether any of the add calls failed (say due to a bad field name
being passed in).
-6.3.4 Dyamically creating kprobe and kretprobe event definitions
-----------------------------------------------------------------
+7.3 Dyamically creating kprobe and kretprobe event definitions
+--------------------------------------------------------------
To create a kprobe or kretprobe trace event from kernel code, the
kprobe_event_gen_cmd_start() or kretprobe_event_gen_cmd_start()
@@ -941,8 +941,8 @@ used to give the kprobe event file back and delete the event::
ret = kprobe_event_delete("gen_kprobe_test");
-6.3.4 The "dynevent_cmd" low-level API
---------------------------------------
+7.4 The "dynevent_cmd" low-level API
+------------------------------------
Both the in-kernel synthetic event and kprobe interfaces are built on
top of a lower-level "dynevent_cmd" interface. This interface is