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+perf.data format
+
+Uptodate as of v4.7
+
+This document describes the on-disk perf.data format, generated by perf record
+or perf inject and consumed by the other perf tools.
+
+On a high level perf.data contains the events generated by the PMUs, plus metadata.
+
+All fields are in native-endian of the machine that generated the perf.data.
+
+When perf is writing to a pipe it uses a special version of the file
+format that does not rely on seeking to adjust data offsets. This
+format is described in "Pipe-mode data" section. The pipe data version can be
+augmented with additional events using perf inject.
+
+The file starts with a perf_header:
+
+struct perf_header {
+ char magic[8]; /* PERFILE2 */
+ uint64_t size; /* size of the header */
+ uint64_t attr_size; /* size of an attribute in attrs */
+ struct perf_file_section attrs;
+ struct perf_file_section data;
+ struct perf_file_section event_types;
+ uint64_t flags;
+ uint64_t flags1[3];
+};
+
+The magic number identifies the perf file and the version. Current perf versions
+use PERFILE2. Old perf versions generated a version 1 format (PERFFILE). Version 1
+is not described here. The magic number also identifies the endian. When the
+magic value is 64bit byte swapped compared the file is in non-native
+endian.
+
+A perf_file_section contains a pointer to another section of the perf file.
+The header contains three such pointers: for attributes, data and event types.
+
+struct perf_file_section {
+ uint64_t offset; /* offset from start of file */
+ uint64_t size; /* size of the section */
+};
+
+Flags section:
+
+For each of the optional features a perf_file_section it placed after the data
+section if the feature bit is set in the perf_header flags bitset. The
+respective perf_file_section points to the data of the additional header and
+defines its size.
+
+Some headers consist of strings, which are defined like this:
+
+struct perf_header_string {
+ uint32_t len;
+ char string[len]; /* zero terminated */
+};
+
+Some headers consist of a sequence of strings, which start with a
+
+struct perf_header_string_list {
+ uint32_t nr;
+ struct perf_header_string strings[nr]; /* variable length records */
+};
+
+The bits are the flags bits in a 256 bit bitmap starting with
+flags. These define the valid bits:
+
+ HEADER_RESERVED = 0, /* always cleared */
+ HEADER_FIRST_FEATURE = 1,
+ HEADER_TRACING_DATA = 1,
+
+Describe me.
+
+ HEADER_BUILD_ID = 2,
+
+The header consists of an sequence of build_id_event. The size of each record
+is defined by header.size (see perf_event.h). Each event defines a ELF build id
+for a executable file name for a pid. An ELF build id is a unique identifier
+assigned by the linker to an executable.
+
+struct build_id_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ pid_t pid;
+ uint8_t build_id[24];
+ char filename[header.size - offsetof(struct build_id_event, filename)];
+};
+
+ HEADER_HOSTNAME = 3,
+
+A perf_header_string with the hostname where the data was collected
+(uname -n)
+
+ HEADER_OSRELEASE = 4,
+
+A perf_header_string with the os release where the data was collected
+(uname -r)
+
+ HEADER_VERSION = 5,
+
+A perf_header_string with the perf user tool version where the
+data was collected. This is the same as the version of the source tree
+the perf tool was built from.
+
+ HEADER_ARCH = 6,
+
+A perf_header_string with the CPU architecture (uname -m)
+
+ HEADER_NRCPUS = 7,
+
+A structure defining the number of CPUs.
+
+struct nr_cpus {
+ uint32_t nr_cpus_available; /* CPUs not yet onlined */
+ uint32_t nr_cpus_online;
+};
+
+ HEADER_CPUDESC = 8,
+
+A perf_header_string with description of the CPU. On x86 this is the model name
+in /proc/cpuinfo
+
+ HEADER_CPUID = 9,
+
+A perf_header_string with the exact CPU type. On x86 this is
+vendor,family,model,stepping. For example: GenuineIntel,6,69,1
+
+ HEADER_TOTAL_MEM = 10,
+
+An uint64_t with the total memory in kilobytes.
+
+ HEADER_CMDLINE = 11,
+
+A perf_header_string_list with the perf arg-vector used to collect the data.
+
+ HEADER_EVENT_DESC = 12,
+
+Another description of the perf_event_attrs, more detailed than header.attrs
+including IDs and names. See perf_event.h or the man page for a description
+of a struct perf_event_attr.
+
+struct {
+ uint32_t nr; /* number of events */
+ uint32_t attr_size; /* size of each perf_event_attr */
+ struct {
+ struct perf_event_attr attr; /* size of attr_size */
+ uint32_t nr_ids;
+ struct perf_header_string event_string;
+ uint64_t ids[nr_ids];
+ } events[nr]; /* Variable length records */
+};
+
+ HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY = 13,
+
+struct {
+ /*
+ * First revision of HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY
+ *
+ * See 'struct perf_header_string_list' definition earlier
+ * in this file.
+ */
+
+ struct perf_header_string_list cores; /* Variable length */
+ struct perf_header_string_list threads; /* Variable length */
+
+ /*
+ * Second revision of HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY, older tools
+ * will not consider what comes next
+ */
+
+ struct {
+ uint32_t core_id;
+ uint32_t socket_id;
+ } cpus[nr]; /* Variable length records */
+ /* 'nr' comes from previously processed HEADER_NRCPUS's nr_cpu_avail */
+
+ /*
+ * Third revision of HEADER_CPU_TOPOLOGY, older tools
+ * will not consider what comes next
+ */
+
+ struct perf_header_string_list dies; /* Variable length */
+ uint32_t die_id[nr_cpus_avail]; /* from previously processed HEADER_NR_CPUS, VLA */
+};
+
+Example:
+ sibling sockets : 0-8
+ sibling dies : 0-3
+ sibling dies : 4-7
+ sibling threads : 0-1
+ sibling threads : 2-3
+ sibling threads : 4-5
+ sibling threads : 6-7
+
+ HEADER_NUMA_TOPOLOGY = 14,
+
+ A list of NUMA node descriptions
+
+struct {
+ uint32_t nr;
+ struct {
+ uint32_t nodenr;
+ uint64_t mem_total;
+ uint64_t mem_free;
+ struct perf_header_string cpus;
+ } nodes[nr]; /* Variable length records */
+};
+
+ HEADER_BRANCH_STACK = 15,
+
+Not implemented in perf.
+
+ HEADER_PMU_MAPPINGS = 16,
+
+ A list of PMU structures, defining the different PMUs supported by perf.
+
+struct {
+ uint32_t nr;
+ struct pmu {
+ uint32_t pmu_type;
+ struct perf_header_string pmu_name;
+ } [nr]; /* Variable length records */
+};
+
+ HEADER_GROUP_DESC = 17,
+
+ Description of counter groups ({...} in perf syntax)
+
+struct {
+ uint32_t nr;
+ struct {
+ struct perf_header_string string;
+ uint32_t leader_idx;
+ uint32_t nr_members;
+ } [nr]; /* Variable length records */
+};
+
+ HEADER_AUXTRACE = 18,
+
+Define additional auxtrace areas in the perf.data. auxtrace is used to store
+undecoded hardware tracing information, such as Intel Processor Trace data.
+
+/**
+ * struct auxtrace_index_entry - indexes a AUX area tracing event within a
+ * perf.data file.
+ * @file_offset: offset within the perf.data file
+ * @sz: size of the event
+ */
+struct auxtrace_index_entry {
+ u64 file_offset;
+ u64 sz;
+};
+
+#define PERF_AUXTRACE_INDEX_ENTRY_COUNT 256
+
+/**
+ * struct auxtrace_index - index of AUX area tracing events within a perf.data
+ * file.
+ * @list: linking a number of arrays of entries
+ * @nr: number of entries
+ * @entries: array of entries
+ */
+struct auxtrace_index {
+ struct list_head list;
+ size_t nr;
+ struct auxtrace_index_entry entries[PERF_AUXTRACE_INDEX_ENTRY_COUNT];
+};
+
+ HEADER_STAT = 19,
+
+This is merely a flag signifying that the data section contains data
+recorded from perf stat record.
+
+ HEADER_CACHE = 20,
+
+Description of the cache hierarchy. Based on the Linux sysfs format
+in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cache/
+
+ u32 version Currently always 1
+ u32 number_of_cache_levels
+
+struct {
+ u32 level;
+ u32 line_size;
+ u32 sets;
+ u32 ways;
+ struct perf_header_string type;
+ struct perf_header_string size;
+ struct perf_header_string map;
+}[number_of_cache_levels];
+
+ HEADER_SAMPLE_TIME = 21,
+
+Two uint64_t for the time of first sample and the time of last sample.
+
+ HEADER_SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY = 22,
+
+Physical memory map and its node assignments.
+
+The format of data in MEM_TOPOLOGY is as follows:
+
+ u64 version; // Currently 1
+ u64 block_size_bytes; // /sys/devices/system/memory/block_size_bytes
+ u64 count; // number of nodes
+
+struct memory_node {
+ u64 node_id; // node index
+ u64 size; // size of bitmap
+ struct bitmap {
+ /* size of bitmap again */
+ u64 bitmapsize;
+ /* bitmap of memory indexes that belongs to node */
+ /* /sys/devices/system/node/node<NODE>/memory<INDEX> */
+ u64 entries[(bitmapsize/64)+1];
+ }
+}[count];
+
+The MEM_TOPOLOGY can be displayed with following command:
+
+$ perf report --header-only -I
+...
+# memory nodes (nr 1, block size 0x8000000):
+# 0 [7G]: 0-23,32-69
+
+ HEADER_CLOCKID = 23,
+
+One uint64_t for the clockid frequency, specified, for instance, via 'perf
+record -k' (see clock_gettime()), to enable timestamps derived metrics
+conversion into wall clock time on the reporting stage.
+
+ HEADER_DIR_FORMAT = 24,
+
+The data files layout is described by HEADER_DIR_FORMAT feature. Currently it
+holds only version number (1):
+
+ uint64_t version;
+
+The current version holds only version value (1) means that data files:
+
+- Follow the 'data.*' name format.
+
+- Contain raw events data in standard perf format as read from kernel (and need
+ to be sorted)
+
+Future versions are expected to describe different data files layout according
+to special needs.
+
+ HEADER_BPF_PROG_INFO = 25,
+
+struct bpf_prog_info_linear, which contains detailed information about
+a BPF program, including type, id, tag, jited/xlated instructions, etc.
+
+ HEADER_BPF_BTF = 26,
+
+Contains BPF Type Format (BTF). For more information about BTF, please
+refer to Documentation/bpf/btf.rst.
+
+struct {
+ u32 id;
+ u32 data_size;
+ char data[];
+};
+
+ HEADER_COMPRESSED = 27,
+
+struct {
+ u32 version;
+ u32 type;
+ u32 level;
+ u32 ratio;
+ u32 mmap_len;
+};
+
+Indicates that trace contains records of PERF_RECORD_COMPRESSED type
+that have perf_events records in compressed form.
+
+ HEADER_CPU_PMU_CAPS = 28,
+
+ A list of cpu PMU capabilities. The format of data is as below.
+
+struct {
+ u32 nr_cpu_pmu_caps;
+ {
+ char name[];
+ char value[];
+ } [nr_cpu_pmu_caps]
+};
+
+
+Example:
+ cpu pmu capabilities: branches=32, max_precise=3, pmu_name=icelake
+
+ HEADER_CLOCK_DATA = 29,
+
+ Contains clock id and its reference time together with wall clock
+ time taken at the 'same time', both values are in nanoseconds.
+ The format of data is as below.
+
+struct {
+ u32 version; /* version = 1 */
+ u32 clockid;
+ u64 wall_clock_ns;
+ u64 clockid_time_ns;
+};
+
+ other bits are reserved and should ignored for now
+ HEADER_FEAT_BITS = 256,
+
+Attributes
+
+This is an array of perf_event_attrs, each attr_size bytes long, which defines
+each event collected. See perf_event.h or the man page for a detailed
+description.
+
+Data
+
+This section is the bulk of the file. It consist of a stream of perf_events
+describing events. This matches the format generated by the kernel.
+See perf_event.h or the manpage for a detailed description.
+
+Some notes on parsing:
+
+Ordering
+
+The events are not necessarily in time stamp order, as they can be
+collected in parallel on different CPUs. If the events should be
+processed in time order they need to be sorted first. It is possible
+to only do a partial sort using the FINISHED_ROUND event header (see
+below). perf record guarantees that there is no reordering over a
+FINISHED_ROUND.
+
+ID vs IDENTIFIER
+
+When the event stream contains multiple events each event is identified
+by an ID. This can be either through the PERF_SAMPLE_ID or the
+PERF_SAMPLE_IDENTIFIER header. The PERF_SAMPLE_IDENTIFIER header is
+at a fixed offset from the event header, which allows reliable
+parsing of the header. Relying on ID may be ambiguous.
+IDENTIFIER is only supported by newer Linux kernels.
+
+Perf record specific events:
+
+In addition to the kernel generated event types perf record adds its
+own event types (in addition it also synthesizes some kernel events,
+for example MMAP events)
+
+ PERF_RECORD_USER_TYPE_START = 64,
+ PERF_RECORD_HEADER_ATTR = 64,
+
+struct attr_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ struct perf_event_attr attr;
+ uint64_t id[];
+};
+
+ PERF_RECORD_HEADER_EVENT_TYPE = 65, /* deprecated */
+
+#define MAX_EVENT_NAME 64
+
+struct perf_trace_event_type {
+ uint64_t event_id;
+ char name[MAX_EVENT_NAME];
+};
+
+struct event_type_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ struct perf_trace_event_type event_type;
+};
+
+
+ PERF_RECORD_HEADER_TRACING_DATA = 66,
+
+Describe me
+
+struct tracing_data_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ uint32_t size;
+};
+
+ PERF_RECORD_HEADER_BUILD_ID = 67,
+
+Define a ELF build ID for a referenced executable.
+
+ struct build_id_event; /* See above */
+
+ PERF_RECORD_FINISHED_ROUND = 68,
+
+No event reordering over this header. No payload.
+
+ PERF_RECORD_ID_INDEX = 69,
+
+Map event ids to CPUs and TIDs.
+
+struct id_index_entry {
+ uint64_t id;
+ uint64_t idx;
+ uint64_t cpu;
+ uint64_t tid;
+};
+
+struct id_index_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ uint64_t nr;
+ struct id_index_entry entries[nr];
+};
+
+ PERF_RECORD_AUXTRACE_INFO = 70,
+
+Auxtrace type specific information. Describe me
+
+struct auxtrace_info_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ uint32_t type;
+ uint32_t reserved__; /* For alignment */
+ uint64_t priv[];
+};
+
+ PERF_RECORD_AUXTRACE = 71,
+
+Defines auxtrace data. Followed by the actual data. The contents of
+the auxtrace data is dependent on the event and the CPU. For example
+for Intel Processor Trace it contains Processor Trace data generated
+by the CPU.
+
+struct auxtrace_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ uint64_t size;
+ uint64_t offset;
+ uint64_t reference;
+ uint32_t idx;
+ uint32_t tid;
+ uint32_t cpu;
+ uint32_t reserved__; /* For alignment */
+};
+
+struct aux_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ uint64_t aux_offset;
+ uint64_t aux_size;
+ uint64_t flags;
+};
+
+ PERF_RECORD_AUXTRACE_ERROR = 72,
+
+Describes an error in hardware tracing
+
+enum auxtrace_error_type {
+ PERF_AUXTRACE_ERROR_ITRACE = 1,
+ PERF_AUXTRACE_ERROR_MAX
+};
+
+#define MAX_AUXTRACE_ERROR_MSG 64
+
+struct auxtrace_error_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ uint32_t type;
+ uint32_t code;
+ uint32_t cpu;
+ uint32_t pid;
+ uint32_t tid;
+ uint32_t reserved__; /* For alignment */
+ uint64_t ip;
+ char msg[MAX_AUXTRACE_ERROR_MSG];
+};
+
+ PERF_RECORD_HEADER_FEATURE = 80,
+
+Describes a header feature. These are records used in pipe-mode that
+contain information that otherwise would be in perf.data file's header.
+
+ PERF_RECORD_COMPRESSED = 81,
+
+struct compressed_event {
+ struct perf_event_header header;
+ char data[];
+};
+
+The header is followed by compressed data frame that can be decompressed
+into array of perf trace records. The size of the entire compressed event
+record including the header is limited by the max value of header.size.
+
+Event types
+
+Define the event attributes with their IDs.
+
+An array bound by the perf_file_section size.
+
+ struct {
+ struct perf_event_attr attr; /* Size defined by header.attr_size */
+ struct perf_file_section ids;
+ }
+
+ids points to a array of uint64_t defining the ids for event attr attr.
+
+Pipe-mode data
+
+Pipe-mode avoid seeks in the file by removing the perf_file_section and flags
+from the struct perf_header. The trimmed header is:
+
+struct perf_pipe_file_header {
+ u64 magic;
+ u64 size;
+};
+
+The information about attrs, data, and event_types is instead in the
+synthesized events PERF_RECORD_ATTR, PERF_RECORD_HEADER_TRACING_DATA,
+PERF_RECORD_HEADER_EVENT_TYPE, and PERF_RECORD_HEADER_FEATURE
+that are generated by perf record in pipe-mode.
+
+
+References:
+
+include/uapi/linux/perf_event.h
+
+This is the canonical description of the kernel generated perf_events
+and the perf_event_attrs.
+
+perf_events manpage
+
+A manpage describing perf_event and perf_event_attr is here:
+http://web.eece.maine.edu/~vweaver/projects/perf_events/programming.html
+This tends to be slightly behind the kernel include, but has better
+descriptions. An (typically older) version of the man page may be
+included with the standard Linux man pages, available with "man
+perf_events"
+
+pmu-tools
+
+https://github.com/andikleen/pmu-tools/tree/master/parser
+
+A definition of the perf.data format in python "construct" format is available
+in pmu-tools parser. This allows to read perf.data from python and dump it.
+
+quipper
+
+The quipper C++ parser is available at
+http://github.com/google/perf_data_converter/tree/master/src/quipper
+