tree: f0ad01e04eab1bea96677b2a59f94c614337ba2c [path history] [tgz]
  1. BUILD.gn
  2. CMakeLists.txt
  3. example.cc
  4. example.png
  5. example_console.cc
  6. example_custom_data_source.cc
  7. example_startup_trace.cc
  8. example_system_wide.cc
  9. example_system_wide.png
  10. README.md
  11. system_wide_trace_cfg.pbtxt
  12. trace_categories.cc
  13. trace_categories.h
examples/sdk/README.md

Perfetto SDK example project

This directory contains an example project using the Perfetto SDK. It demonstrates how to instrument your application with track events to give more context in developing, debugging and performance analysis.

Dependencies:

Building

First, check out the latest Perfetto release:

git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/perfetto -b v44.0

Then, build using CMake:

cd perfetto/examples/sdk
cmake -B build
cmake --build build

Note: If amalgamated source files are not present, generate them using cd perfetto ; tools/gen_amalgamated --output sdk/perfetto. Learn more at the release section.

Track event example

The basic example shows how to instrument an app with track events. Run it with:

build/example

The program will create a trace file in example.perfetto-trace, which can be directly opened in the Perfetto UI. The result should look like this:

Example trace loaded in the Perfetto UI

System-wide example

While the above example only records events from the program itself, with Perfetto it's also possible to combine app trace events with system-wide profiling data (e.g., ftrace on Linux). The repository has a second example which demonstrates this on Android.

Requirements:

Tip: It's also possible to sideload Perfetto on pre-Pie Android devices. See the build instructions.

To build:

export NDK=/path/to/ndk
cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=$NDK/build/cmake/android.toolchain.cmake \
      -DANDROID_ABI=arm64-v8a \
      -DANDROID_PLATFORM=android-21 \
      -DANDROID_LD=lld \
      -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
      -B build_android
cmake --build build_android

Next, plug in an Android device into a USB port, download the example and run it while simultaneously recording a trace using the perfetto command line tool:

adb push build_android/example_system_wide ../system_wide_trace_cfg.pbtxt \
         /data/local/tmp/
adb shell "\
    cd /data/local/tmp; \
    rm -f /data/misc/perfetto-traces/example_system_wide.perfetto-trace; \
    cat system_wide_trace_cfg.pbtxt | \
        perfetto --config - --txt --background \
                 -o
                 /data/misc/perfetto-traces/example_system_wide.perfetto-trace; \
    ./example_system_wide"

Finally, retrieve the resulting trace:

adb pull /data/misc/perfetto-traces/example_system_wide.perfetto-trace

When opened in the Perfetto UI, the trace now shows additional contextual information such as CPU frequencies and kernel scheduler information.

Example system wide-trace loaded in the Perfetto UI

Tip: You can generate a new trace config with additional data sources using the Perfetto UI and replace system_wide_trace_cfg.pbtxt with the generated config.

Custom data source example

The final example shows how to use an application defined data source to emit custom, strongly typed data into a trace. Run it with:

build/example_custom_data_source

The program generates a trace file in example_custom_data_source.perfetto-trace, which we can examine using Perfetto's traceconv tool to show the trace packet written by the custom data source:

traceconv text example_custom_data_source.perfetto-trace
...
packet {
  trusted_uid: 0
  timestamp: 42
  trusted_packet_sequence_id: 2
  previous_packet_dropped: true
  for_testing {
    str: "Hello world!"
  }
}
...