Tom,

Can you review this patch.

Jon,

After Tom gives his review, can you take this in your tree?

Thanks!

Reviewed-by: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rost...@goodmis.org>

-- Steve


On Tue,  7 May 2019 17:49:46 +0300
Tzvetomir Stoyanov <tstoya...@vmware.com> wrote:

> The current trace documentation, the section describing histogram's "onmatch"
> is not straightforward enough about how this action is applied. It is not
> clear what criteria are used to "match" both events. A short note is added,
> describing what exactly is compared in order to match the events.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Tzvetomir Stoyanov <tstoya...@vmware.com>
> ---
>  Documentation/trace/histogram.txt | 12 ++++++++----
>  1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/trace/histogram.txt 
> b/Documentation/trace/histogram.txt
> index 7ffea6aa22e3..d97f0530a731 100644
> --- a/Documentation/trace/histogram.txt
> +++ b/Documentation/trace/histogram.txt
> @@ -1863,7 +1863,10 @@ hist trigger specification.
>  
>      The 'matching.event' specification is simply the fully qualified
>      event name of the event that matches the target event for the
> -    onmatch() functionality, in the form 'system.event_name'.
> +    onmatch() functionality, in the form 'system.event_name'. Histogram
> +    keys of both events are compared to find if events match. In the case
> +    multiple histogram keys are used, both events must have the same
> +    number of keys, and the keys must match in the same order.
>  
>      Finally, the number and type of variables/fields in the 'param
>      list' must match the number and types of the fields in the
> @@ -1920,9 +1923,10 @@ hist trigger specification.
>           /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/sched/sched_waking/trigger
>  
>      Then, when the corresponding thread is actually scheduled onto the
> -    CPU by a sched_switch event, calculate the latency and use that
> -    along with another variable and an event field to generate a
> -    wakeup_latency synthetic event:
> +    CPU by a sched_switch event (where the sched_waking key  "saved_pid"
> +    matches the sched_switch key "next_pid"), calculate the latency and
> +    use that along with another variable and an event field to generate
> +    a wakeup_latency synthetic event:
>  
>      # echo 'hist:keys=next_pid:wakeup_lat=common_timestamp.usecs-$ts0:\
>              onmatch(sched.sched_waking).wakeup_latency($wakeup_lat,\

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