Hello all, I hope you are doing well. I have a quick question about LTTng tracking when using kernel probes. I mainly use LTTng to trace file system functions in the Linux kernel, and for that I use the LTTng kernel probe feature, which works very well. However, when I tried filtering logs for a specific group ID, I noticed that filters are not supported for kernel probes. Then I attempted to use the tracking feature to trace only a specific GID, but this also did not work. From what I see in my logs, it appears that for kernel probes all events are captured and recorded, regardless of the tracking options. I wanted to know if this is a known limitation, and whether there is any in-progress work or reason why this is not currently supported. For reference, here is my code. I am using LTTng 2.13.11 with kernel 6.8.0-101-generic: ``` #!/bin/sh SESSION_NAME="lttng-gid-test" OUTPUT_DIR="/tmp/lttng/${SESSION_NAME}" GROUP_ID=1002 # create the lttng session lttng create "$SESSION_NAME" -o "$OUTPUT_DIR" # create the lttng ring buffer channel lttng enable-channel --session="$SESSION_NAME" --kernel channel0 \ --subbuf-size=16M \ --num-subbuf=2 # add pid, tid, proc, and gid for tracing collection lttng add-context --session="$SESSION_NAME" --channel=channel0 --kernel --type pid lttng add-context --session="$SESSION_NAME" --channel=channel0 --kernel --type gid # enable the target probe lttng enable-event --session="$SESSION_NAME" --channel=channel0 --kernel --probe=ext4_get_inode_loc ext4_get_inode_loc # disable all tracks # NOTE: untracking doesn't make a difference # lttng untrack --session="$SESSION_NAME" --kernel --all --gid # lttng untrack --session="$SESSION_NAME" --kernel --all --pid # lttng untrack --session="$SESSION_NAME" --kernel --all --vpid # lttng untrack --session="$SESSION_NAME" --kernel --all --uid # lttng untrack --session="$SESSION_NAME" --kernel --all --vuid # lttng untrack --session="$SESSION_NAME" --kernel --all --vgid # only enable gid 1002 track lttng track --kernel --gid=1002 # start lttng lttng start $SESSION_NAME ``` Thank you for your time and guidance. Best regards, Amir -- *Amirhossein Najafizadeh* *PhD Student, Computer Science Department, Stony Brook University, N.Y.File systems and Storage Lab (FSL)* najafizadeh21@gmail.com https://amirhnajafiz.github.io/