lttng-health-check(3) — Linux manual page

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | LIMITATIONS | AUTHORS | COLOPHON

LTTNG_HEALTH_CHECK(3)    LTTng Developer Manual    LTTNG_HEALTH_CHECK(3)

NAME         top

       DEPRECATED

       lttng_health_check - Monitor health of the session daemon

SYNOPSIS         top

       #include <lttng/lttng.h>

       int lttng_health_check(enum lttng_health_component c);

       Link with -llttng-ctl.

DESCRIPTION         top

       The lttng_health_check() is used to check the session daemon
       health for either a specific component c or for all of them. Each
       component represent a subsystem of the session daemon.  Those
       components are set with health counters that are atomically
       incremented once reached. An even value indicates progress in the
       execution of the component. An odd value means that the code has
       entered a blocking state which is not a poll(7) wait period.

       A bad health is defined by a fatal error code path reached or any
       IPC used in the session daemon that was blocked for more than 20
       seconds (default timeout).  The condition for this bad health to
       be detected is that one or many of the counters are odd.

       The health check mechanism of the session daemon can only be
       reached through the health socket which is a different one from
       the command and the application socket. An isolated thread serves
       this socket and only computes the health counters across the code
       when asked by the lttng control library (using this call). This
       subsystem is highly unlikely to fail due to its simplicity.

       The c argument can be one of the following values:

       LTTNG_HEALTH_CMD
              Command subsystem which handles user commands coming from
              the liblttng-ctl or the lttng(1) command line interface.

       LTTNG_HEALTH_APP_MANAGE
              The session daemon manages application socket in order to
              route client command and check if they get closed which
              indicates the application shutdown.

       LTTNG_HEALTH_APP_REG
              The application registration mechanism is an important and
              vital part of for user space tracing. Upon startup,
              applications instrumented with lttng-ust(3) try to
              register to the session daemon through this subsystem.

       LTTNG_HEALTH_KERNEL
              Monitor the Kernel tracer streams and main channel of
              communication (/proc/lttng). If this component
              malfunction, the Kernel tracer is not usable anymore by
              lttng-tools.

       LTTNG_HEALTH_CONSUMER
              The session daemon can spawn up to three consumer daemon
              for kernel, user space 32 and 64 bit. This subsystem
              monitors the consumer daemon(s). A bad health state means
              that the consumer(s) are not usable anymore hence likely
              making tracing not usable.

       LTTNG_HEALTH_ALL
              Check all components. If only one of them is in a bad
              state, a health check error is returned.

RETURN VALUE         top

       Return 0 if the health is OK, or 1 is it's in a bad state. A
       return code of -1 indicates that the control library was not able
       to connect to the session daemon health socket.

LIMITATIONS         top

       For the LTTNG_HEALTH_CONSUMER, you can not know which consumer
       daemon has failed but only that either the consumer subsystem has
       failed or that a lttng-consumerd died.

AUTHORS         top

       lttng-health-check was originally written by David Goulet and is
       currently maintained by Jérémie Galarneau
       <[email protected]>.

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the LTTng-Tools (    LTTng tools) project.
       Information about the project can be found at 
       ⟨http://lttng.org/⟩.  It is not known how to report bugs for this
       man page; if you know, please send a mail to [email protected].
       This page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
       ⟨git://git.lttng.org/lttng-tools.git⟩ on 2019-11-19.  (At that
       time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
       repository was 2019-11-14.)  If you discover any rendering
       problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
       is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
       corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
       (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
       [email protected]

LTTng                          2012-09-19          LTTNG_HEALTH_CHECK(3)