[Lldb-commits] [lldb] [lldb][telemetry] Implement LLDB Telemetry (part 1) (PR #119716)

Pavel Labath via lldb-commits lldb-commits at lists.llvm.org
Fri Feb 7 02:07:17 PST 2025


================
@@ -0,0 +1,93 @@
+//===-- Telemetry.h ----------------------------------------------*- C++
+//-*-===//
+//
+// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
+// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
+// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
+//
+//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
+
+#ifndef LLDB_CORE_TELEMETRY_H
+#define LLDB_CORE_TELEMETRY_H
+
+#include "lldb/Core/StructuredDataImpl.h"
+#include "lldb/Interpreter/CommandReturnObject.h"
+#include "lldb/Utility/StructuredData.h"
+#include "lldb/lldb-forward.h"
+#include "llvm/ADT/StringExtras.h"
+#include "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h"
+#include "llvm/Support/JSON.h"
+#include "llvm/Telemetry/Telemetry.h"
+#include <chrono>
+#include <ctime>
+#include <memory>
+#include <optional>
+#include <string>
+#include <unordered_map>
+
+namespace lldb_private {
+
+struct LldbEntryKind : public ::llvm::telemetry::EntryKind {
+  static const llvm::telemetry::KindType BaseInfo = 0b11000;
+};
+
+/// Defines a convenient type for timestamp of various events.
+/// This is used by the EventStats below.
+using SteadyTimePoint = std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::steady_clock,
+                                                std::chrono::nanoseconds>;
+
+/// Various time (and possibly memory) statistics of an event.
+struct EventStats {
+  // REQUIRED: Start time of an event
+  SteadyTimePoint start;
+  // OPTIONAL: End time of an event - may be empty if not meaningful.
+  std::optional<SteadyTimePoint> end;
+  // TBD: could add some memory stats here too?
+
+  EventStats() = default;
+  EventStats(SteadyTimePoint start) : start(start) {}
+  EventStats(SteadyTimePoint start, SteadyTimePoint end)
+      : start(start), end(end) {}
+};
+
+/// Describes the exit signal of an event.
----------------
labath wrote:

I'm going to go with Jonas here. "Signal" is a very confusing word here, because a process can die from a (unix) signal (but lldb doesn't do a very good job of differentiating the "death by signal N" and "exit with status N"

https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/119716


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