Perfetto allows you to collect system-wide performance traces from Android devices from a variety of data sources (kernel scheduler via ftrace, userspace instrumentation via atrace and all other data sources listed in this site).
Perfetto is based on platform services that are available since Android 9 (P) but are enabled by default only since Android 11 (R). On Android 9 (P) and 10 (Q) you need to do the following to ensure that the tracing services are enabled before getting started:
# Needed only on Android 9 (P) and 10 (Q) on non-Pixel phones. adb shell setprop persist.traced.enable 1
If you are running a version of Android older than P, you can still capture a trace with Perfetto using the record_android_trace
script. See instructions below in the Recording a trace through the cmdline section.
Command line tools (usage examples below in this page):
tools/record_android_trace
helper script./system/bin/perfetto
command on device [reference].UI tools:
Navigate to ui.perfetto.dev and select Record new trace from the left menu. From this page, select and turn on the data sources you want to include in the trace. More detail about the different data sources can be found in the Data sources section of the docs.
If you are unsure, start by turning on Scheduling details under the CPU tab.
Ensure your device is connected and select Add ADB device. Once your device has successfully paired (you may need to allow USB debugging on the device), select the Start Recording button.
Allow time for the trace to be collected (10s by default) and then you should see the trace appear.
Your trace may look different depending on which data sources you enabled.
Prerequisites
For the cmdline based workflow you will need the adb
(Android Debug Bridge) executable to be in your PATH. ADB binaries for Linux, Mac or Windows can be downloaded from https://developer.android.com/studio/releases/platform-tools .
Using the helper script
We suggest using the tools/record_android_trace
script to record traces from the command line. It is the equivalent of running adb shell perfetto
but it helps with getting the paths right, auto-pulling the trace once done and opening it on the browser. Furthermore, on older versions of Android it takes care of sideloading the tracebox
binary to make up for the lack of tracing system services.
If you are already familiar with systrace
or atrace
, both cmdline tools support a systrace-equivalent syntax:
On Linux and Mac:
curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/google/perfetto/main/tools/record_android_trace chmod u+x record_android_trace # See ./record_android_trace --help for more ./record_android_trace -o trace_file.perfetto-trace -t 30s -b 64mb \ sched freq idle am wm gfx view binder_driver hal dalvik camera input res memory
On Windows:
curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/google/perfetto/main/tools/record_android_trace python3 record_android_trace -o trace_file.perfetto-trace -t 30s -b 64mb \ sched freq idle am wm gfx view binder_driver hal dalvik camera input res memory
Using the on-device /system/bin/perfetto command
Or, if you want to use directly the on-device binary do instead:
adb shell perfetto -o /data/misc/perfetto-traces/trace_file.perfetto-trace -t 20s \ sched freq idle am wm gfx view binder_driver hal dalvik camera input res memory
Caveats when using directly the adb shell perfetto
workflow:
adb shell perfetto
but only when using an interactive PTY-based session via adb shell
.cat config | adb shell perfetto -c -
(-: stdin) because of over-restrictive SELinux rules. Since Android 12 /data/misc/perfetto-configs
can be used for storing configs./data/misc/perfetto-traces
. Use adb shell cat /data/misc/perfetto-traces/trace > trace
to work around.PID=$(perfetto --background)
and then kill $PID
to stop.The short syntax allows to enable only a subset of the data sources; for full control of the trace config, pass the full trace config in input.
See the Trace configuration page and the examples in each data source doc page for detailed instructions about how to configure all the various knobs of Perfetto.
If you are running on a Mac or Linux host, or are using a bash-based terminal on Windows, you can use the following:
WARNING: The below command does not work on Android P because the --txt
option was introduced in Q. The binary protobuf format should be used instead; the details of this can be found on the Trace configuration page.
cat<<EOF>config.pbtx duration_ms: 10000 buffers: { size_kb: 8960 fill_policy: DISCARD } buffers: { size_kb: 1280 fill_policy: DISCARD } data_sources: { config { name: "linux.ftrace" ftrace_config { ftrace_events: "sched/sched_switch" ftrace_events: "power/suspend_resume" ftrace_events: "sched/sched_process_exit" ftrace_events: "sched/sched_process_free" ftrace_events: "task/task_newtask" ftrace_events: "task/task_rename" ftrace_events: "ftrace/print" atrace_categories: "gfx" atrace_categories: "view" atrace_categories: "webview" atrace_categories: "camera" atrace_categories: "dalvik" atrace_categories: "power" } } } data_sources: { config { name: "linux.process_stats" target_buffer: 1 process_stats_config { scan_all_processes_on_start: true } } } EOF ./record_android_trace -c config.pbtx -o trace_file.perfetto-trace
Or alternatively, when using directly the on-device command:
cat config.pbtx | adb shell perfetto -c - --txt -o /data/misc/perfetto-traces/trace.perfetto-trace
Alternatively, first push the trace config file and then invoke perfetto:
adb push config.pbtx /data/local/tmp/config.pbtx adb shell 'cat /data/local/tmp/config.pbtx | perfetto --txt -c - -o /data/misc/perfetto-traces/trace.perfetto-trace'
NOTE: because of strict SELinux rules, on non-rooted builds of Android, passing directly the file path as -c /data/local/tmp/config
will fail, hence the -c -
+ stdin piping above. From Android 12 (S), /data/misc/perfetto-configs/
can be used instead.
Pull the file using adb pull /data/misc/perfetto-traces/trace ~/trace.perfetto-trace
and open it in the Perfetto UI.
NOTE: On devices before Android 10, adb cannot directly pull /data/misc/perfetto-traces
. Use adb shell cat /data/misc/perfetto-traces/trace > trace.perfetto-trace
to work around.
The full reference for the perfetto
cmdline interface can be found here.