Path: blob/master/tools/perf/Documentation/jitdump-specification.txt
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JITDUMP specification version 21Last Revised: 09/15/20162Author: Stephane Eranian <[email protected]>34--------------------------------------------------------5| Revision | Date | Description |6--------------------------------------------------------7| 1 | 09/07/2016 | Initial revision |8--------------------------------------------------------9| 2 | 09/15/2016 | Add JIT_CODE_UNWINDING_INFO |10--------------------------------------------------------111213I/ Introduction141516This document describes the jitdump file format. The file is generated by Just-In-time compiler runtimes to save meta-data information about the generated code, such as address, size, and name of generated functions, the native code generated, the source line information. The data may then be used by performance tools, such as Linux perf to generate function and assembly level profiles.1718The format is not specific to any particular programming language. It can be extended as need be.1920The format of the file is binary. It is self-describing in terms of endianness and is portable across multiple processor architectures.212223II/ Overview of the format242526The format requires only sequential accesses, i.e., append only mode. The file starts with a fixed size file header describing the version of the specification, the endianness.2728The header is followed by a series of records, each starting with a fixed size header describing the type of record and its size. It is, itself, followed by the payload for the record. Records can have a variable size even for a given type.2930Each entry in the file is timestamped. All timestamps must use the same clock source. The CLOCK_MONOTONIC clock source is recommended.313233III/ Jitdump file header format3435Each jitdump file starts with a fixed size header containing the following fields in order:363738* uint32_t magic : a magic number tagging the file type. The value is 4-byte long and represents the string "JiTD" in ASCII form. It written is as 0x4A695444. The reader will detect an endian mismatch when it reads 0x4454694a.39* uint32_t version : a 4-byte value representing the format version. It is currently set to 140* uint32_t total_size: size in bytes of file header41* uint32_t elf_mach : ELF architecture encoding (ELF e_machine value as specified in /usr/include/elf.h)42* uint32_t pad1 : padding. Reserved for future use43* uint32_t pid : JIT runtime process identification (OS specific)44* uint64_t timestamp : timestamp of when the file was created45* uint64_t flags : a bitmask of flags4647The flags currently defined are as follows:48* bit 0: JITDUMP_FLAGS_ARCH_TIMESTAMP : set if the jitdump file is using an architecture-specific timestamp clock source. For instance, on x86, one could use TSC directly4950IV/ Record header5152The file header is immediately followed by records. Each record starts with a fixed size header describing the record that follows.5354The record header is specified in order as follows:55* uint32_t id : a value identifying the record type (see below)56* uint32_t total_size: the size in bytes of the record including the header.57* uint64_t timestamp : a timestamp of when the record was created.5859The following record types are defined:60* Value 0 : JIT_CODE_LOAD : record describing a jitted function61* Value 1 : JIT_CODE_MOVE : record describing an already jitted function which is moved62* Value 2 : JIT_CODE_DEBUG_INFO: record describing the debug information for a jitted function63* Value 3 : JIT_CODE_CLOSE : record marking the end of the jit runtime (optional)64* Value 4 : JIT_CODE_UNWINDING_INFO: record describing a function unwinding information6566The payload of the record must immediately follow the record header without padding.6768V/ JIT_CODE_LOAD record697071The record has the following fields following the fixed-size record header in order:72* uint32_t pid: OS process id of the runtime generating the jitted code73* uint32_t tid: OS thread identification of the runtime thread generating the jitted code74* uint64_t vma: virtual address of jitted code start75* uint64_t code_addr: code start address for the jitted code. By default vma = code_addr76* uint64_t code_size: size in bytes of the generated jitted code77* uint64_t code_index: unique identifier for the jitted code (see below)78* char[n]: function name in ASCII including the null termination79* native code: raw byte encoding of the jitted code8081The record header total_size field is inclusive of all components:82* record header83* fixed-sized fields84* function name string, including termination85* native code length86* record specific variable data (e.g., array of data entries)8788The code_index is used to uniquely identify each jitted function. The index can be a monotonically increasing 64-bit value. Each time a function is jitted it gets a new number. This value is used in case the code for a function is moved and avoids having to issue another JIT_CODE_LOAD record.8990The format supports empty functions with no native code.919293VI/ JIT_CODE_MOVE record9495The record type is optional.9697The record has the following fields following the fixed-size record header in order:98* uint32_t pid : OS process id of the runtime generating the jitted code99* uint32_t tid : OS thread identification of the runtime thread generating the jitted code100* uint64_t vma : new virtual address of jitted code start101* uint64_t old_code_addr: previous code address for the same function102* uint64_t new_code_addr: alternate new code started address for the jitted code. By default it should be equal to the vma address.103* uint64_t code_size : size in bytes of the jitted code104* uint64_t code_index : index referring to the JIT_CODE_LOAD code_index record of when the function was initially jitted105106107The MOVE record can be used in case an already jitted function is simply moved by the runtime inside the code cache.108109The JIT_CODE_MOVE record cannot come before the JIT_CODE_LOAD record for the same function name. The function cannot have changed name, otherwise a new JIT_CODE_LOAD record must be emitted.110111The code size of the function cannot change.112113114VII/ JIT_DEBUG_INFO record115116The record type is optional.117118The record contains source lines debug information, i.e., a way to map a code address back to a source line. This information may be used by the performance tool.119120The record has the following fields following the fixed-size record header in order:121* uint64_t code_addr: address of function for which the debug information is generated122* uint64_t nr_entry : number of debug entries for the function123* debug_entry[n]: array of nr_entry debug entries for the function124125The debug_entry describes the source line information. It is defined as follows in order:126* uint64_t code_addr: address of function for which the debug information is generated127* uint32_t line : source file line number (starting at 1)128* uint32_t discrim : column discriminator, 0 is default129* char name[n] : source file name in ASCII, including null termination130131The debug_entry entries are saved in sequence but given that they have variable sizes due to the file name string, they cannot be indexed directly.132They need to be walked sequentially. The next debug_entry is found at sizeof(debug_entry) + strlen(name) + 1.133134IMPORTANT:135The JIT_CODE_DEBUG for a given function must always be generated BEFORE the JIT_CODE_LOAD for the function. This facilitates greatly the parser for the jitdump file.136137138VIII/ JIT_CODE_CLOSE record139140141The record type is optional.142143The record is used as a marker for the end of the jitted runtime. It can be replaced by the end of the file.144145The JIT_CODE_CLOSE record does not have any specific fields, the record header contains all the information needed.146147148IX/ JIT_CODE_UNWINDING_INFO149150151The record type is optional.152153The record is used to describe the unwinding information for a jitted function.154155The record has the following fields following the fixed-size record header in order:156157uint64_t unwind_data_size : the size in bytes of the unwinding data table at the end of the record158uint64_t eh_frame_hdr_size : the size in bytes of the DWARF EH Frame Header at the start of the unwinding data table at the end of the record159uint64_t mapped_size : the size of the unwinding data mapped in memory160const char unwinding_data[n]: an array of unwinding data, consisting of the EH Frame Header, followed by the actual EH Frame161162163The EH Frame header follows the Linux Standard Base (LSB) specification as described in the document at https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/LSB_1.3.0/gLSB/gLSB/ehframehdr.html164165166The EH Frame follows the LSB specification as described in the document at https://refspecs.linuxbase.org/LSB_3.0.0/LSB-PDA/LSB-PDA/ehframechpt.html167168169NOTE: The mapped_size is generally either the same as unwind_data_size (if the unwinding data was mapped in memory by the running process) or zero (if the unwinding data is not mapped by the process). If the unwinding data was not mapped, then only the EH Frame Header will be read, which can be used to specify FP based unwinding for a function which does not have unwinding information.170171172