Re: Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-26 Thread Karim Yaghmour
Hellor George, As others have suggested, you can do what you are asking for using LTT (http://www.opersys.com/LTT). Specifically, you may want to use the event allocation capabilities. This will enable you to add your own events and view these as part of the trace. By the way, there are

Re: Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-26 Thread Karim Yaghmour
Hellor George, As others have suggested, you can do what you are asking for using LTT (http://www.opersys.com/LTT). Specifically, you may want to use the event allocation capabilities. This will enable you to add your own events and view these as part of the trace. By the way, there are

Re: Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-25 Thread Jeremy Jackson
I think all of this has been done... you should check out the Linux Trace Toolkit. george anzinger wrote: > This is an attempt to look in the wheel locker. > > I need a simple event sub system for use in the kernel. I envision at > least two types of events: the history event and the timing

Re: Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-25 Thread Jeremy Jackson
I think all of this has been done... you should check out the Linux Trace Toolkit. george anzinger wrote: This is an attempt to look in the wheel locker. I need a simple event sub system for use in the kernel. I envision at least two types of events: the history event and the timing event.

Re: Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-24 Thread Andrew Morton
george anzinger wrote: > > This is an attempt to look in the wheel locker. > > I need a simple event sub system for use in the kernel. I envision at > least two types of events: the history event and the timing event. > > The timing event would keep track of start/stop times by class. If,

Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-24 Thread george anzinger
This is an attempt to look in the wheel locker. I need a simple event sub system for use in the kernel. I envision at least two types of events: the history event and the timing event. The timing event would keep track of start/stop times by class. If, for example, I wanted to know how much

Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-24 Thread george anzinger
This is an attempt to look in the wheel locker. I need a simple event sub system for use in the kernel. I envision at least two types of events: the history event and the timing event. The timing event would keep track of start/stop times by class. If, for example, I wanted to know how much

Re: Event tools, do they exist

2001-04-24 Thread Andrew Morton
george anzinger wrote: This is an attempt to look in the wheel locker. I need a simple event sub system for use in the kernel. I envision at least two types of events: the history event and the timing event. The timing event would keep track of start/stop times by class. If, for