// Copyright (c) 2014 Marshall A. Greenblatt. Portions copyright (c) 2012 // Google Inc. All rights reserved. // // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are // met: // // * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright // notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. // * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above // copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer // in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the // distribution. // * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the name Chromium Embedded // Framework nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse // or promote products derived from this software without specific prior // written permission. // // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY // THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. /// /// \file /// Trace events are for tracking application performance and resource usage. /// Macros are provided to track: /// Begin and end of function calls /// Counters /// /// Events are issued against categories. Whereas LOG's categories are /// statically defined, TRACE categories are created implicitly with a string. /// For example:
///   TRACE_EVENT_INSTANT0("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "SomeImportantEvent")
/// 
/// /// Events can be INSTANT, or can be pairs of BEGIN and END in the same scope: ///
///   TRACE_EVENT_BEGIN0("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "SomethingCostly")
///   doSomethingCostly()
///   TRACE_EVENT_END0("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "SomethingCostly")
/// 
/// Note: Our tools can't always determine the correct BEGIN/END pairs unless /// these are used in the same scope. Use ASYNC_BEGIN/ASYNC_END macros if you /// need them to be in separate scopes. /// /// A common use case is to trace entire function scopes. This issues a trace /// BEGIN and END automatically: ///
///   void doSomethingCostly() {
///     TRACE_EVENT0("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "doSomethingCostly");
///     ...
///   }
/// 
/// /// Additional parameters can be associated with an event: ///
///   void doSomethingCostly2(int howMuch) {
///     TRACE_EVENT1("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "doSomethingCostly",
///         "howMuch", howMuch);
///     ...
///   }
/// 
/// /// The trace system will automatically add to this information the current /// process id, thread id, and a timestamp in microseconds. /// /// To trace an asynchronous procedure such as an IPC send/receive, use /// ASYNC_BEGIN and ASYNC_END: ///
///   [single threaded sender code]
///     static int send_count = 0;
///     ++send_count;
///     TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_BEGIN0("ipc", "message", send_count);
///     Send(new MyMessage(send_count));
///   [receive code]
///     void OnMyMessage(send_count) {
///       TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_END0("ipc", "message", send_count);
///     }
/// 
/// The third parameter is a unique ID to match ASYNC_BEGIN/ASYNC_END pairs. /// ASYNC_BEGIN and ASYNC_END can occur on any thread of any traced process. /// Pointers can be used for the ID parameter, and they will be mangled /// internally so that the same pointer on two different processes will not /// match. For example: ///
///   class MyTracedClass {
///    public:
///     MyTracedClass() {
///       TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_BEGIN0("category", "MyTracedClass", this);
///     }
///     ~MyTracedClass() {
///       TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_END0("category", "MyTracedClass", this);
///     }
///   }
/// 
/// /// The trace event also supports counters, which is a way to track a quantity /// as it varies over time. Counters are created with the following macro: ///
///   TRACE_COUNTER1("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "myCounter", g_myCounterValue);
/// 
/// /// Counters are process-specific. The macro itself can be issued from any /// thread, however. /// /// Sometimes, you want to track two counters at once. You can do this with two /// counter macros: ///
///   TRACE_COUNTER1("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "myCounter0", g_myCounterValue[0]);
///   TRACE_COUNTER1("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "myCounter1", g_myCounterValue[1]);
/// 
/// Or you can do it with a combined macro: ///
///   TRACE_COUNTER2("MY_SUBSYSTEM", "myCounter",
///       "bytesPinned", g_myCounterValue[0],
///       "bytesAllocated", g_myCounterValue[1]);
/// 
/// This indicates to the tracing UI that these counters should be displayed /// in a single graph, as a summed area chart. /// /// Since counters are in a global namespace, you may want to disembiguate with /// a unique ID, by using the TRACE_COUNTER_ID* variations. /// /// By default, trace collection is compiled in, but turned off at runtime. /// Collecting trace data is the responsibility of the embedding application. In /// CEF's case, calling BeginTracing will turn on tracing on all active /// processes. /// /// /// Memory scoping note: /// Tracing copies the pointers, not the string content, of the strings passed /// in for category, name, and arg_names. Thus, the following code will cause /// problems: ///
///     char* str = strdup("impprtantName");
///     TRACE_EVENT_INSTANT0("SUBSYSTEM", str);  // BAD!
///     free(str);                   // Trace system now has dangling pointer
/// 
/// /// /// Thread Safety: /// All macros are thread safe and can be used from any process. /// #ifndef CEF_INCLUDE_BASE_CEF_TRACE_EVENT_H_ #define CEF_INCLUDE_BASE_CEF_TRACE_EVENT_H_ #pragma once #if defined(USING_CHROMIUM_INCLUDES) /// When building CEF include the Chromium header directly. #include "base/trace_event/trace_event.h" #else // !USING_CHROMIUM_INCLUDES // The following is substantially similar to the Chromium implementation. // If the Chromium implementation diverges the below implementation should be // updated to match. #include "include/internal/cef_trace_event_internal.h" /// /// Records a pair of begin and end events called "name" for the current /// scope, with 0, 1 or 2 associated arguments. If the category is not /// enabled, then this does nothing. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// #define TRACE_EVENT0(category, name) \ cef_trace_event_begin(category, name, NULL, 0, NULL, 0); \ CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_END_ON_SCOPE_CLOSE(category, name) #define TRACE_EVENT1(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_begin(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, NULL, 0); \ CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_END_ON_SCOPE_CLOSE(category, name) #define TRACE_EVENT2(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, arg2_val) \ cef_trace_event_begin(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, \ arg2_val); \ CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_END_ON_SCOPE_CLOSE(category, name) // Implementation detail: trace event macros create temporary variable names. // These macros give each temporary variable a unique name based on the line // number to prevent name collisions. #define CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_EVENT_UID3(a, b) cef_trace_event_unique_##a##b #define CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_EVENT_UID2(a, b) CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_EVENT_UID3(a, b) #define CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_EVENT_UID(name_prefix) \ CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_EVENT_UID2(name_prefix, __LINE__) // Implementation detail: internal macro to end end event when the scope ends. #define CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_END_ON_SCOPE_CLOSE(category, name) \ cef_trace_event::CefTraceEndOnScopeClose CEF_INTERNAL_TRACE_EVENT_UID( \ profileScope)(category, name) /// /// Records a single event called "name" immediately, with 0, 1 or 2 /// associated arguments. If the category is not enabled, then this /// does nothing. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// #define TRACE_EVENT_INSTANT0(category, name) \ cef_trace_event_instant(category, name, NULL, 0, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_INSTANT1(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_instant(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_INSTANT2(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, \ arg2_val) \ cef_trace_event_instant(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, \ arg2_val) /// /// Records a single BEGIN event called "name" immediately, with 0, 1 or 2 /// associated arguments. If the category is not enabled, then this /// does nothing. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// #define TRACE_EVENT_BEGIN0(category, name) \ cef_trace_event_begin(category, name, NULL, 0, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_BEGIN1(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_begin(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_BEGIN2(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, \ arg2_val) \ cef_trace_event_begin(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, \ arg2_val) /// /// Records a single END event for "name" immediately. If the category /// is not enabled, then this does nothing. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// #define TRACE_EVENT_END0(category, name) \ cef_trace_event_end(category, name, NULL, 0, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_END1(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_end(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_END2(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, \ arg2_val) \ cef_trace_event_end(category, name, arg1_name, arg1_val, arg2_name, arg2_val) /// /// Records the value of a counter called "name" immediately. Value /// must be representable as a 32 bit integer. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// #define TRACE_COUNTER1(category, name, value) \ cef_trace_counter(category, name, NULL, value, NULL, 0) /// /// Records the values of a multi-parted counter called "name" immediately. /// The UI will treat value1 and value2 as parts of a whole, displaying their /// values as a stacked-bar chart. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// #define TRACE_COUNTER2(category, name, value1_name, value1_val, value2_name, \ value2_val) \ cef_trace_counter(category, name, value1_name, value1_val, value2_name, \ value2_val) /// /// Records the value of a counter called "name" immediately. Value /// must be representable as a 32 bit integer. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// - |id| is used to disambiguate counters with the same name. It must either /// be a pointer or an integer value up to 64 bits. If it's a pointer, the /// bits will be xored with a hash of the process ID so that the same pointer /// on two different processes will not collide. /// #define TRACE_COUNTER_ID1(category, name, id, value) \ cef_trace_counter_id(category, name, id, NULL, value, NULL, 0) /// /// Records the values of a multi-parted counter called "name" immediately. /// The UI will treat value1 and value2 as parts of a whole, displaying their /// values as a stacked-bar chart. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// - |id| is used to disambiguate counters with the same name. It must either /// be a pointer or an integer value up to 64 bits. If it's a pointer, the /// bits will be xored with a hash of the process ID so that the same pointer /// on two different processes will not collide. /// #define TRACE_COUNTER_ID2(category, name, id, value1_name, value1_val, \ value2_name, value2_val) \ cef_trace_counter_id(category, name, id, value1_name, value1_val, \ value2_name, value2_val) /// /// Records a single ASYNC_BEGIN event called "name" immediately, with 0, 1 or 2 /// associated arguments. If the category is not enabled, then this /// does nothing. /// - category and name strings must have application lifetime (statics or /// literals). They may not include " chars. /// - |id| is used to match the ASYNC_BEGIN event with the ASYNC_END event. /// ASYNC events are considered to match if their category, name and id values /// all match. |id| must either be a pointer or an integer value up to 64 /// bits. If it's a pointer, the bits will be xored with a hash of the process /// ID sothat the same pointer on two different processes will not collide. /// An asynchronous operation can consist of multiple phases. The first phase is /// defined by the ASYNC_BEGIN calls. Additional phases can be defined using the /// ASYNC_STEP_BEGIN macros. When the operation completes, call ASYNC_END. /// An async operation can span threads and processes, but all events in that /// operation must use the same |name| and |id|. Each event can have its own /// args. /// #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_BEGIN0(category, name, id) \ cef_trace_event_async_begin(category, name, id, NULL, 0, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_BEGIN1(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_async_begin(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_BEGIN2(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val, \ arg2_name, arg2_val) \ cef_trace_event_async_begin(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val, \ arg2_name, arg2_val) /// /// Records a single ASYNC_STEP_INTO event for |step| immediately. If the /// category is not enabled, then this does nothing. The |name| and |id| must /// match the ASYNC_BEGIN event above. The |step| param identifies this step /// within the async event. This should be called at the beginning of the next /// phase of an asynchronous operation. The ASYNC_BEGIN event must not have any /// ASYNC_STEP_PAST events. /// #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_STEP_INTO0(category, name, id, step) \ cef_trace_event_async_step_into(category, name, id, step, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_STEP_INTO1(category, name, id, step, arg1_name, \ arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_async_step_into(category, name, id, step, arg1_name, arg1_val) /// /// Records a single ASYNC_STEP_PAST event for |step| immediately. If the /// category is not enabled, then this does nothing. The |name| and |id| must /// match the ASYNC_BEGIN event above. The |step| param identifies this step /// within the async event. This should be called at the beginning of the next /// phase of an asynchronous operation. The ASYNC_BEGIN event must not have any /// ASYNC_STEP_INTO events. /// #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_STEP_PAST0(category, name, id, step) \ cef_trace_event_async_step_past(category, name, id, step, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_STEP_PAST1(category, name, id, step, arg1_name, \ arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_async_step_past(category, name, id, step, arg1_name, arg1_val) /// /// Records a single ASYNC_END event for "name" immediately. If the category /// is not enabled, then this does nothing. /// #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_END0(category, name, id) \ cef_trace_event_async_end(category, name, id, NULL, 0, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_END1(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val) \ cef_trace_event_async_end(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val, NULL, 0) #define TRACE_EVENT_ASYNC_END2(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val, \ arg2_name, arg2_val) \ cef_trace_event_async_end(category, name, id, arg1_name, arg1_val, \ arg2_name, arg2_val) namespace cef_trace_event { /// /// Used by TRACE_EVENTx macro. Do not use directly. /// class CefTraceEndOnScopeClose { public: CefTraceEndOnScopeClose(const char* category, const char* name) : category_(category), name_(name) {} ~CefTraceEndOnScopeClose() { cef_trace_event_end(category_, name_, NULL, 0, NULL, 0); } private: const char* category_; const char* name_; }; } // namespace cef_trace_event #endif // !USING_CHROMIUM_INCLUDES #endif // CEF_INCLUDE_BASE_CEF_TRACE_EVENT_H_