* cmake-format + miscellaneous tweaks * Formatted cmake in examples and tests * Updated linux-ci.yml artifacts naming * Updated clang-format * Fixed submodule branches
hosttrace: application tracing with static/dynamic binary instrumentation
Dependencies
Installing DynInst
The easiest way to install Dyninst is via spack
git clone https://github.com/spack/spack.git
source ./spack/share/spack/setup-env.sh
spack compiler find
spack external find
spack install dyninst
spack load -r dyninst
Installing Julia
Julia is available via Linux package managers or may be available via a module. Debian-based distributions such as Ubuntu can run (as a super-user):
apt-get install julia
Once Julia is installed, install the necessary packages (this operation only needs to be performed once):
julia -e 'using Pkg; for name in ["JSON", "DataFrames", "Dates", "CSV", "Chain", "PrettyTables"]; Pkg.add(name); end'
Installing hosttrace
HOSTTRACE_ROOT=${HOME}/sw/hosttrace
git clone https://github.com/AARInternal/hosttrace-dyninst.git
cmake -B build-hosttrace -DHOSTTRACE_USE_MPI=ON -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=${HOSTTRACE_ROOT} hosttrace-dyninst
cmake --build build-hosttrace --target all --parallel 8
cmake --build build-hosttrace --target install
export PATH=${HOSTTRACE_ROOT}/bin:${PATH}
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${HOSTTRACE_ROOT}/lib64:${HOSTTRACE_ROOT}/lib:${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}
Using Hosttrace Executable
hosttrace --help
hosttrace <hosttrace-options> -- <exe-or-library> <exe-options>
Hosttrace Library Environment Settings
| Environment Variable | Default Value | Description |
|---|---|---|
HOSTTRACE_DEBUG |
false |
Enable debugging statements |
HOSTTRACE_USE_PERFETTO |
true |
Collect profiling data via perfetto |
HOSTTRACE_USE_TIMEMORY |
false |
Collection profiling data via timemory |
HOSTTRACE_SAMPLE_RATE |
1 |
Invoke perfetto and/or timemory once every N function calls |
HOSTTRACE_USE_MPI |
true |
Label perfetto output files via rank instead of PID |
HOSTTRACE_OUTPUT_FILE |
perfetto-trace.%rank%.proto |
Output file for perfetto (may use %pid) |
HOSTTRACE_BACKEND |
"inprocess" |
Configure perfetto to use either "inprocess" data management, "system", or "all" |
HOSTTRACE_COMPONENTS |
"wall_clock" |
Timemory components to activate when enabled |
HOSTTRACE_SHMEM_SIZE_HINT |
40960 |
Hint for perfetto shared memory buffer |
HOSTTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE_KB |
1024000 |
Maximum amount of memory perfetto will use to collect data in-process |
TIMEMORY_TIME_OUTPUT |
true |
Create unique output subdirectory with date and launch time |
Example Hosttrace Instrumentation
Binary Rewrite
Rewrite the text section of an executable or library with instrumentation:
hosttrace -o app.inst -- /path/to/app
In binary rewrite mode, if you also want instrumentation in the linked libraries, you must also rewrite those libraries.
Example of rewriting the functions starting with "hip" with instrumentation in the amdhip64 library:
mkdir -p ./lib
hosttrace -R '^hip' -o ./lib/libamdhip64.so.4 -- /opt/rocm/lib/libamdhip64.so.4
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${PWD}/lib:${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}
NOTE: Verify via
lddthat your executable will load the instrumented library -- if you built your executable with an RPATH to the original library's directory, then prefixingLD_LIBRARY_PATHwill have no effect.
Once you have rewritten your executable and/or libraries with instrumentation, you can just run the (instrumented) executable or exectuable which loads the instrumented libraries normally, e.g.:
./app.inst
If you want to re-define certain settings to new default in a binary rewrite, use the --env option. This hosttrace option
will set the environment variable to the given value but will not override it. E.g. the default value of HOSTTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE_KB
is 1024000 KB (1 GiB):
# buffer size defaults to 1024000
hosttrace -o app.inst -- /path/to/app
./app.inst
Passing --env HOSTTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE_KB=5120000 will change the default value in app.inst to 5120000 KiB (5 GiB):
# defaults to 5 GiB buffer size
hosttrace -o app.inst --env HOSTTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE_KB=5120000 -- /path/to/app
./app.inst
# override default 5 GiB buffer size to 200 MB
export HOSTTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE_KB=200000
./app.inst
Runtime Instrumentation
Runtime instrumentation will not only instrument the text section of the executable but also the text sections of the
linked libraries. Thus, it may be useful to exclude those libraries via the -ME (module exclude) regex option.
hosttrace -- /path/to/app
hosttrace -ME '^(libhsa-runtime64|libz\\.so)' -- /path/to/app
hosttrace -E 'rocr::atomic|rocr::core|rocr::HSA' -- /path/to/app
Miscellaneous Features and Caveats
- You may need to increase the default perfetto buffer size (1 GiB) to capture all the information
- E.g.
export HOSTTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE_KB=10240000increases the buffer size to 10 GiB
- E.g.
- The hosttrace library has various setting which can be configured via environment variables, you can
configure these settings to custom defaults with the hosttrace command-line tool via the
--envoption- E.g. to default to a buffer size of 5 GB, use
--env HOSTTRACE_BUFFER_SIZE_KB=5120000 - This is particularly useful in binary rewrite mode
- E.g. to default to a buffer size of 5 GB, use
- Perfetto tooling is enabled by default
- Timemory tooling is disabled by default
- Enabling/disabling one of the aformentioned tools but not specifying enabling/disable the other will assume the inverse of the other's enabled state, e.g.
HOSTTRACE_USE_PERFETTO=OFFyields the same resultHOSTTRACE_USE_TIMEMORY=ONHOSTTRACE_USE_PERFETTO=ONyields the same result asHOSTTRACE_USE_TIMEMORY=OFF- In order to enable both timemory and perfetto, set both
HOSTTRACE_USE_TIMEMORY=ONandHOSTTRACE_USE_PERFETTO=ON - Setting
HOSTTRACE_USE_TIMEMORY=OFFandHOSTTRACE_USE_PERFETTO=OFFwill disable all instrumentation
- Use
timemory-avail -Sto view the various settings for timemory - Set
HOSTTRACE_COMPONENTS="<comma-delimited-list-of-component-name>"to control which components timemory collects- The list of components and their descriptions can be viewed via
timemory-avail -Cd - The list of components and their string identifiers can be view via
timemory-avail -Cbs
- The list of components and their descriptions can be viewed via
- You can filter any
timemory-availresults via-r <regex> -hl
Hosttrace Output
hosttrace will create an output directory named hosttrace-<EXE_NAME>-output, e.g. if your executable
is named app.inst, the output directory will be hosttrace-app.inst-output. Depending on whether
TIMEMORY_TIME_OUTPUT=ON (the default when perfetto is enabled), there will be a subdirectory with the date and time,
e.g. 2021-09-02_01.03_PM. Within this directory, all perfetto files will be named perfetto-trace.<PID>.proto or
when HOSTTRACE_USE_MPI=ON, perfetto-trace.<RANK>.proto (assuming hosttrace was built with MPI support).
You can explicitly control the output path and naming scheme of the files via the HOSTTRACE_OUTPUT_FILE environment
variable. The special character sequences %pid% and %rank% will be replaced with the PID or MPI rank, respectively.
Merging the traces from rocprof and hosttrace
NOTE: Using
rocprofexternally is deprecated. The current version has built-in support for recording the GPU activity and HIP API calls. If you want to use an external rocprof, either configure CMake with-DHOSTTRACE_USE_ROCTRACER=OFFor explicitly setTIMEMORY_ROCTRACER_ENABLED=OFFin the environment.
Use the hosttrace-merge.jl Julia script to merge rocprof and perfetto traces.
export TIMEMORY_ROCTRACER_ENABLED=OFF
rocprof --hip-trace --roctx-trace --stats ./app.inst
hosttrace-merge.jl results.json hosttrace-app.inst-output/2021-09-02_01.03_PM/*.proto
Use Perfetto tracing with System Backend
In a separate window run:
pkill traced
traced --background
perfetto --out ./htrace.out --txt -c ${HOSTTRACE_ROOT}/share/roctrace.cfg
then in the window running the application, configure the hosttrace instrumentation to use the system backend:
export HOSTTRACE_BACKEND_SYSTEM=1
for the merge use the htrace.out:
hosttrace-merge.jl results.json htrace.out