The tep_print_event() function parses the event information of the given
record and writes it into the trace sequence s, according to the format
string fmt. The desired information is specified after the format string.
The fmt is printf-like format string, following arguments are supported:
TEP_PRINT_PID, "%d" - PID of the event.
TEP_PRINT_CPU, "%d" - Event CPU.
TEP_PRINT_COMM, "%s" - Event command string.
TEP_PRINT_NAME, "%s" - Event name.
TEP_PRINT_LATENCY, "%s" - Latency of the event. It prints 4 or more
fields - interrupt state, scheduling state,
current context, and preemption count.
Field 1 is the interrupt enabled state:
d : Interrupts are disabled
. : Interrupts are enabled
X : The architecture does not support this
information
Field 2 is the "need resched" state.
N : The task is set to call the scheduler when
possible, as another higher priority task
may need to be scheduled in.
. : The task is not set to call the scheduler.
Field 3 is the context state.
. : Normal context
s : Soft interrupt context
h : Hard interrupt context
H : Hard interrupt context which triggered
during soft interrupt context.
z : NMI context
Z : NMI context which triggered during hard
interrupt context
Field 4 is the preemption count.
. : The preempt count is zero.
On preemptible kernels (where the task can be scheduled
out in arbitrary locations while in kernel context), the
preempt count, when non zero, will prevent the kernel
from scheduling out the current task. The preempt count
number is displayed when it is not zero.
Depending on the kernel, it may show other fields
(lock depth, or migration disabled, which are unique to
specialized kernels).
TEP_PRINT_TIME, %d - event time stamp. A divisor and precision can be
specified as part of this format string:
"%precision.divisord". Example:
"%3.1000d" - divide the time by 1000 and print the first
3 digits before the dot. Thus, the time stamp
"123456000" will be printed as "123.456"
TEP_PRINT_INFO, "%s" - event information.
TEP_PRINT_INFO_RAW, "%s" - event information, in raw format.