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Tutorial
Håkan Mattsson
Håkan Mattsson
Håkan Mattsson
%VSN%
et_tutorial.xml
Visualizing Message Sequence Charts
The easiest way of using ET, is to just use it as a
graphical tool for displaying message sequence charts. In order to
do that you need to first start a Viewer (which by default
starts a Collector):
Then you send events to the Collector
with the function et_collector:report_event/6 like this:
The Viewer will automatically pull events from the
Collector and display them on the screen.
The number (in this case 85) is an integer from 1 to 100 that
specifies the "detail level" of the message. The higher the
number, the more important it is. This provides a crude form of
priority filtering.
The from, to, and message parameters are
exactly what they sound like. from and to are
visualized in the Viewer as "lifelines", with the message
passing from one to the other. If from and to are
the same value, then it is displayed next to the lifeline as an
"action". The extra_stuff value is simply data that you can
attach that will be displayed when someone actually clicks on the
action or message in the Viewer window.
The module et/examples/et_display_demo.erl illustrates
how it can be used:
When you run the et_display_demo:test(). function in the
example above, the Viewer window will look like this:
Screenshot of the Viewer window
Four Modules
The event tracer framework is made up of four modules:
et
et_collector
et_viewer
et_selector
In addition, you'll probably want to familiarize yourself with
the dbg module and possibly seq_trace module as
well.
The Event Tracer Interface
The et module is not like other modules. It contains a
function called et:trace_me/5. Which is a function that
does not do any useful stuff at all. Its sole purpose is to be a
function that is easy to trace. A call to it may be something
like:
The parameters to et:trace_me/5 are the same as to
et_collector:report_event/6
in the previous chapter. The big difference between the two is in
the semantics of the two functions. The second actually reports an
Event to the Collector while the first does nothing,
it just returns the atom hopefully_traced. In order to make
the parameters to et:trace_me/5 turn up in the
Collector, tracing of that function must be activated and
the Collector must be registered as a Tracer of the
Raw Trace Data.
Erlang tracing is a seething pile of pain that involves
reasonably complex knowledge of clever ports, tracing return
formats, and specialized tracing MatchSpecs (which are
really their own special kind of hell). The tracing mechanism is
very powerful indeed, but it can be hard to grasp.
Luckily there is a simplified way to start tracing of
et:trace_me/5 function calls. The idea is that you should
instrument your code with calls to et:trace_me/5 in
strategic places where you have interesting information available
in your program. Then you just start the Collector with
global tracing enabled:
This will start a Collector, a Viewer and also
start the tracing of et:trace_me/5 function calls. The
Raw Trace Data is collected by the Collector and a
view of it is displayed on the screen by the Viewer. You
can define your own "views" of the data by implementing your own
Filter functions and register them in the
Viewer.
The Collector and Viewer
These two pieces work in concert. Basically, the
Collector receives Raw Trace Data and processes it
into Events in a et specific format (defined in
et/include/et.hrl). The Viewer interrogates the
Collector and displays an interactive representation of the
data.
You might wonder why these aren't just one module. The
Collector is a generic full-fledged framework that allows
processes to "subscribe" to the Events that it
collects. One Collector can serve several
Viewers. The typical case is that you have one
Viewer that visualizes Events in one flavor and
another Viewer that visualizes them in another flavor. If
you for example are tracing a text based protocol like HTML
(or Megaco/H.248) it would be useful to be able to display
the Events as plain text as well as the internal
representation of the message. The architecture does also allow
you to implement your own Viewer program as long as it
complies to the protocol between the Collector/Viewer
protocol. Currently two kinds of Viewers exists. That is
the old GS based one and the new based on
wxWidgets. But if you feel for it you may implement your
own Viewer, which for example could display the
Events as ASCII art or whatever you feel useful.
The Viewer will by default create a Collector for
you. With a few options and some configuration settings you can
start collecting Events.
The Collector API does also allow you to save the
collected Events to file and later load them in a later
session.
The Selector
This is perhaps the most central module in the entirety of the
et suite. The Collector needs "filters" to convert
the Raw Trace Data into "events" that it can display. The
et_selector module provides the default Filter and
some API calls to manage the Trace Pattern. The
Selector provides various functions that achieve the
following:
Convert Raw Trace Data into an appropriate
Event
Magically notice traces of the et:trace_me/5
function and make appropriate Events
Carefully prevent translating the Raw Trace Data
twice
Manage a Trace Pattern
The Trace Pattern is basically a tuple of a
module and a detail level (either an integer or the
atom max for full detail). In most cases the Trace Pattern
{et,max} does suffice. But if you do not want any runtime
dependency of et you can implement your own
trace_me/5 function in some module and refer to that module
in the Trace Pattern.
The specified module flows from your instantiation of the
Viewer, to the Collector that it automatically
creates, gets stashed in as the Trace Pattern, and
eventually goes down into the bowels of the Selector.
The module that you specify gets passed down (eventually) into
Selector's default Filter. The format of the
et:trace_me/5 function call is hardcoded in that
Filter.
How To Put It Together
The Collector automatically registers itself to listen
for trace Events, so all you have to do is enable them.
For those people who want to do general tracing, consult the
dbg module on how to trace whatever you're interested in
and let it work its magic. If you just want et:trace_me/5
to work, do the following:
Create a Collector
Create a Viewer (this can do step #1 for you)
Turn on and pare down debugging
The module et/examples/et_trace_demo.erl achieves this.
Running through the above, the most important points are:
Turn on global tracing
Set a Trace Pattern
Tell dbg to trace function Calls
Tell it specifically to trace the et:trace_me/5 function
When you run the et_trace_demo:test() function above, the
Viewer window will look like this screenshot:
Screenshot of the Viewer window