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WPA Providers

Providers are Event Tracing for Windows components that expose events to WPA. Providers are grouped in multiple ways in order to allow maximum flexibility.

NT Kernel Logger

WPA exposes a number of providers that are specific to the kernel. These kernel providers have been built to expose the useful events captured from the kernel mode only. Because these events are generated in kernel mode special syntax and naming is associated with these providers.

  • "NT Kernel Logger" is the logger name where kernel events are stored.

  • There can be one and only one NT Kernel Logger per tracing activity.

  • Events to be captured by the kernel logger can be identified in one of three ways:

    1. Kernel Flags - This is the most granular way of listing events to be captured. Each kernel flag identifies a specific type of event. Kernel flags are separated by a "+" sign. For example,

      Xperf -on FILE_IO+CSWITCH+PROFILE
      

      Turns the kernel logger "on" and collects FILE_IO, CSWITCH and PROFILE events.

      To obtain a list of kernel flags use the syntax:

      Xperf  -providers kf
      

      Note

      Kernel flags are not case sensitive.

    2. Kernel Groups - Are sets of kernel flags that are logically grouped together. For example,

      Xperf  -on DiagEasy
      

      Turns the kernel logger "on" using the kernel group DiagEasy. DiagEasy contains the following kernel flags:

      Kernel Flag Description
      PROC_THREAD
      Process and Thread create/delete
      LOADER
      Kernel and user mode Image Load/Unload events
      DISK_IO
      Disk I/O
      HARD_FAULTS
      Hard Page Faults
      DPC
      Deferred Procedure Calls
      INTERRUPT
      Interrupt Events
      CSWITCH
      Context Switch
      PERF_COUNTER
      Process Performance Counters

      To obtain a list of kernel flags use the syntax:

      Xperf -providers kg
      

      Note

      Kernel groups are not case sensitive.

    3. Trace Profiles - A trace profile is a collection of various settings of a specific type of trace. You can gather and control these settings with a single command per operation. For more information on trace profiles please see the Trace Profiles section of this document.

  • When using kernel flags or groups the xperf option to start tracing is "on" rather than start.

Command-line Usage

To get help for the providers, type the following in the command line:

xperf -help providers 

You can query which providers are available by using query options in the following form:

xperf -providers [Installed|I] [Registered|R] [KernelFlags|KF] [KernelGroups|KG] [Kernel|K] 

The following table shows where each option is located.

Option Description
I or Installed
Include installed/known providers
R or Registered
Include registered providers
KF or KernelFlags
Include kernel flags
KG or KernelGroups
Include kernel groups
K or Kernel
Include kernel flags and groups; shortcut for "KF KG"

If you do not specify an option, all providers are included in the output. The set of registered providers is obtained by enumerating all providers that are registered through ETW for enable/disable operations that are managed by the controller. The set of installed providers is the set of providers that are installed on the test system, which includes hundreds of providers that are included with Windows Vista and later versions of Windows. You can find this list by running the following command:

logman.exe query providers 

The kernel provider exposes a large amount of information. The kernel provider can be controlled by using flags and/or groups. A kernel provider flag enables/disables the logging of a kernel event type, such as "context switch." If you use the CSWITCH flag during tracing, events will be logged for all context switches that occur on the test system. A kernel provider group is a set of flags that are organized by component or area of interest. For example, the group network consists of flags to provide information that is necessary to do network related analysis. You can enable multiple groups and flags for the same trace. Conventionally, kernel flag names are printed in all capital letters (for example, CSWITCH, PROFILE, DISK_IO) and kernel group names are printed in initial capital (for example, Base, Latency, Network). The Xperf command line is not case sensitive, though, so any capitalization of the kernel flags and groups will be accepted (for example, Base, BASE, base, CSWITCH, cswitch, CSwitch).