diff options
author | HÃ¥kan Mattsson <[email protected]> | 2010-02-03 08:59:06 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Erlang/OTP <[email protected]> | 2010-02-03 08:59:06 +0000 |
commit | 43f3482adf5eee657e5ba922733dfff6600c4e14 (patch) | |
tree | 7ea7b32a171de1a7690102c403a8a946e8a382a8 /lib/et/doc/src/et_examples.xml | |
parent | 768da5a5f6312496b9b8a09cca5ea1d6b89a2c1c (diff) | |
download | otp-43f3482adf5eee657e5ba922733dfff6600c4e14.tar.gz otp-43f3482adf5eee657e5ba922733dfff6600c4e14.tar.bz2 otp-43f3482adf5eee657e5ba922733dfff6600c4e14.zip |
OTP-8058 The GUI parts are rewritten to use wxWidgets. Thanks Olle
Mattsson!
For the time being it is still possible to use the old GS based
version of the tool, but it is deprecated. The wxWidgets based
version is started by default.
A new tutorial has been added to the documentation. It is based
on Jayson Vantuyl's article
http://souja.net/2009/04/making-sense-of-erlangs-event-tracer.htm
l.
The functions et:trace_me/4 and et:trace_me/5 has been introduced
in order to replace the deprecated functions et:report_event/4
and et:report_event/5. Hopefully the new names makes it a little
more obvious what the intended usage of the functions are.
A print function has been added to the GUI, in order to enable
printing of sequence charts.
More functionality for hiding unwanted events has been added to
the GUI.
The max_events, hide_unknown and display_mode configuration
parameters to et_viewer is not used any more. Now the event cache
in the Viewer only contains those events that actually are
displayed in the GUI.
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/et/doc/src/et_examples.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/et/doc/src/et_examples.xml | 311 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 311 deletions
diff --git a/lib/et/doc/src/et_examples.xml b/lib/et/doc/src/et_examples.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 7627b191a1..0000000000 --- a/lib/et/doc/src/et_examples.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,311 +0,0 @@ -<?xml version="1.0" encoding="latin1" ?> -<!DOCTYPE chapter SYSTEM "chapter.dtd"> - -<chapter> - <header> - <copyright> - <year>2002</year><year>2009</year> - <holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder> - </copyright> - <legalnotice> - The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License, - Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in - compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the - Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be - retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/. - - Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" - basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See - the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations - under the License. - - </legalnotice> - - <title>Examples</title> - <prepared>Håkan Mattsson</prepared> - <responsible>Håkan Mattsson</responsible> - <docno></docno> - <approved>Håkan Mattsson</approved> - <checked></checked> - <date></date> - <rev>%VSN%</rev> - <file>et_examples.xml</file> - </header> - - <section> - <title>A simulated Mnesia transaction</title> - <p>The Erlang code for running the simulated Mnesia transaction example - in the previous chapter is included in the <c>et/examples/et_demo.erl</c> file: - </p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%sim_trans" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%mgr_actors" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p>If you invoke the <c>et_demo:sim_trans()</c> function a viewer - window will pop up and the sequence trace will be almost the same as - if the following Mnesia transaction would have been run:</p> - <p></p> - <code type="none"> - mnesia:transaction(fun() -> mnesia:write({my_tab, key, val}) end). - </code> - <p>And the viewer window will look like:</p> - <p></p> - <code type="none"><![CDATA[ - $ erl -pa ../examples - Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 2002.10.08 [source] - - Eshell V2002.10.08 (abort with ^G) - 1> et_demo:sim_trans(). - {ok,{table_handle,<0.30.0>,11,trace_ts,#Fun<et_collector.0.83904657>}} - 2> - ]]></code> - <p></p> - <image file="sim_trans.gif"> - <icaption>A simulated Mnesia transaction which writes one record</icaption> - </image> - </section> - - <section> - <title>Some convenient functions used in the Mnesia transaction example</title> - <p>The <c>module_as_actor</c> filter converts the event-records so - the module names becomes actors and the invoked functions becomes - labels. If the information about who the caller was it will be - displayed as an arrow directed from the caller to the callee. The - <c>[{message, {caller}}, {return_trace}]</c> options to <c>dbg:tpl/2</c> - function will imply the necessary information in the Erlang traces. - Here follows the <c>module_as_actor</c> filter:</p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%module_as_actor" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p>The <c>plain_process_info</c> filter does not alter the event-records. - It merely ensures that the event not related to processes are skipped:</p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%plain_process_info" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p>The <c>plain_process_info_nolink</c> filter does not alter the - event-records. It do makes use of the <c>plain_process_info</c> , but - do also ensure that the process info related to linking and unlinking - is skipped:</p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%plain_process_info_nolink" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p>In order to simplify the startup of an <c>et_viewer</c> process - with the filters mentioned above, plus some others (that also are - found in <c>et/examples/et_demo.erl</c> src/et_collector.erl the - <c>et_demo:start/0,1</c> functions can be used:</p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%start" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p>A simple one-liner starts the tool:</p> - <code type="none"> - erl -pa ../examples -s et_demo - </code> - <p>The filters are included by the following parameters:</p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%filters" type="erl"></codeinclude> - </section> - - <section> - <title>Erlang trace of a Mnesia transaction</title> - <p>The following piece of code <c>et_demo:trace_mnesia/0</c> - activates call tracing of both local and external function calls for - all modules in the Mnesia application. The call traces are configured - cover all processes (both existing and those that are spawned in the - future) and include timestamps for trace data. It do also activate - tracing of process related events for Mnesia's static processes plus - the calling process (that is your shell). Please, observe that the - <c>whereis/1</c> call in the following code requires that both the - traced Mnesia application and the <c>et_viewer</c>is running on the - same node:</p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%trace_mnesia" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p>The <c>et_demo:live_trans/0</c> function starts the a global - controller, starts a viewer, starts Mnesia, creates a local table, - activates tracing (as described above) and registers the shell - process is as 'my_shell' for clarity. Finally the a simple Mnesia - transaction that writes a single record is run:</p> - <p></p> - <codeinclude file="../../examples/et_demo.erl" tag="%live_trans" type="erl"></codeinclude> - <p>Now we run the <c>et_demo:live_trans/0</c> function:</p> - <p></p> - <code type="none"> - erl -pa ../examples -s et_demo live_trans - Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 2002.10.08 [source] - - Eshell V2002.10.08 (abort with ^G) - 1> - </code> - <p>Please, explore the different filters in order to see how the traced - transaction can be seen from different point of views:</p> - <p></p> - <image file="live_trans.gif"> - <icaption>A real Mnesia transaction which writes one record</icaption> - </image> - </section> - - <section> - <title>Erlang trace of Megaco startup</title> - <p>The Event Tracer (ET) tool was initially written in order to - demonstrate how messages where sent over the Megaco protocol. This - were back in the old days before the standard bodies of IETF and ITU - had approved Megaco (also called H.248) as an international - standard.</p> - <p>In the Megaco application of Erlang/OTP, the code is carefully - instrumented with calls to <c>et:report_event/5</c>. For call a detail - level is set in order to dynamically control the trace level in a - simple manner.</p> - <p>The <c>megaco_filter</c> module implements a customized filter - for Megaco messages. It does also make use of <c>trace_global</c> - combined with usage of the <c>trace_pattern</c>:</p> - <p></p> - <code type="none"> - -module(megaco_filter). - -export([start/0]). - - start() -> - Options = - [{event_order, event_ts}, - {scale, 3}, - {max_actors, infinity}, - {trace_pattern, {megaco, max}}, - {trace_global, true}, - {dict_insert, {filter, megaco_filter}, fun filter/1}, - {active_filter, megaco_filter}, - {title, "Megaco tracer - Erlang/OTP"}], - et_viewer:start(Options). - </code> - <p>First we start an Erlang node with the a global collector and - its viewer. The <c>et_viewer: search for: [] ++ ["gateway_tt"]</c> - printout is caused by a click on the "gateway_tt" actor name in the - viewer. It means that only events with that actor will be displayed - in the viewer.</p> - <p></p> - <code type="none"> - erl -sname observer -s megaco_filter - Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 2002.10.08 [source] - - Eshell V2002.10.08 (abort with ^G) - (observer@amrod)1> et_viewer: search for: [] ++ ["gateway_tt"] - </code> - <p>Secondly we start another Erlang node which we connect the - observer node, before we start the application that we want to - trace. In this case we start a Media Gateway Controller that listens - for both TCP and UDP on the text and binary ports for Megaco:</p> - <p></p> - <code type="none"> - erl -sname mgc -pa ../../megaco/examples/simple - Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 2002.10.08 [source] - - Eshell V2002.10.08 (abort with ^G) - (mgc@amrod)1> net:ping(observer@amrod). - pong - (mgc@amrod)2> megaco:start(). - ok - (mgc@amrod)3> megaco_simple_mgc:start(). - {ok,[{ok,2944, - {megaco_receive_handle,{deviceName,"controller"}, - megaco_pretty_text_encoder, - [], - megaco_tcp}}, - {ok,2944, - {megaco_receive_handle,{deviceName,"controller"}, - megaco_pretty_text_encoder, - [], - megaco_udp}}, - {ok,2945, - {megaco_receive_handle,{deviceName,"controller"}, - megaco_binary_encoder, - [], - megaco_tcp}}, - {ok,2945, - {megaco_receive_handle,{deviceName,"controller"}, - megaco_binary_encoder, - [], - megaco_udp}}]} - (mgc@amrod)4> - </code> - <p>And finally we start an Erlang node for the Media Gateways and - connect to the observer node. Each Media Gateway connects to the - controller and sends an initial Service Change message. The controller - accepts the gateways and sends a reply to each one using the same - transport mechanism and message encoding according to the preference - of each gateway. That is all combinations of TCP/IP transport, UDP/IP - transport, text encoding and ASN.1 BER encoding:</p> - <p></p> - <code type="none"> - erl -sname mg -pa ../../megaco/examples/simple - Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 2002.10.08 [source] - - Eshell V2002.10.08 (abort with ^G) - (mg@amrod)1> net:ping(observer@amrod). - pong - (mg@amrod)2> megaco_simple_mg:start(). - [{{deviceName,"gateway_tt"},{error,{start_user,megaco_not_started}}}, - {{deviceName,"gateway_tb"},{error,{start_user,megaco_not_started}}}, - {{deviceName,"gateway_ut"},{error,{start_user,megaco_not_started}}}, - {{deviceName,"gateway_ub"},{error,{start_user,megaco_not_started}}}] - (mg@amrod)3> megaco:start(). - ok - (mg@amrod)4> megaco_simple_mg:start(). - [{{deviceName,"gateway_tt"}, - {1, - {ok,[{'ActionReply',0, - asn1_NOVALUE, - asn1_NOVALUE, - [{serviceChangeReply, - {'ServiceChangeReply', - [{megaco_term_id,false,["root"]}], - {serviceChangeResParms, - {'ServiceChangeResParm', - {deviceName|...}, - asn1_NOVALUE|...}}}}]}]}}}, - {{deviceName,"gateway_tb"}, - {1, - {ok,[{'ActionReply',0, - asn1_NOVALUE, - asn1_NOVALUE, - [{serviceChangeReply, - {'ServiceChangeReply', - [{megaco_term_id,false,["root"]}], - {serviceChangeResParms, - {'ServiceChangeResParm', - {...}|...}}}}]}]}}}, - {{deviceName,"gateway_ut"}, - {1, - {ok,[{'ActionReply',0, - asn1_NOVALUE, - asn1_NOVALUE, - [{serviceChangeReply, - {'ServiceChangeReply', - [{megaco_term_id,false,["root"]}], - {serviceChangeResParms, - {'ServiceChangeResParm',{...}|...}}}}]}]}}}, - {{deviceName,"gateway_ub"}, - {1, - {ok,[{'ActionReply',0, - asn1_NOVALUE, - asn1_NOVALUE, - [{serviceChangeReply, - {'ServiceChangeReply', - [{megaco_term_id,false,["root"]}], - {serviceChangeResParms, - {'ServiceChangeResParm'|...}}}}]}]}}}] - (mg@amrod)5> - </code> - <p>The Megaco adopted viewer looks like this, when we have clicked - on the "gateway_tt" actor name in order to only display the events - regarding that actor:</p> - <p></p> - <image file="megaco_tracer.gif"> - <icaption>The viewer adopted for Megaco</icaption> - </image> - <p>A pretty printed Megaco message looks like this:</p> - <p></p> - <image file="megaco_filter.gif"> - <icaption>A textual Megaco message</icaption> - </image> - <p>And the corresponding internal form for the same Megaco message - looks like this:</p> - <p></p> - <image file="megaco_collector.gif"> - <icaption>The internal form of a Megaco message</icaption> - </image> - </section> -</chapter> - |