logd can record and replay log messages for offline analysis.
Recording Messages
logd has a RecordingLogBuffer buffer that records messages to /data/misc/logd/recorded-messages.
It stores messages in memory until that file is accessible, in order to capture all messages since
the beginning of boot. It is only meant for logging developers to use and must be manually enabled
in by adding RecordingLogBuffer.cpp to Android.bp and setting
log_buffer = new SimpleLogBuffer(&reader_list, &log_tags, &log_statistics); in main.cpp.
Recording messages may delay the Log() function from completing and it is highly recommended to make
the logd socket in liblog blocking, by removing SOCK_NONBLOCK from the socket() call in
liblog/logd_writer.cpp.
Replaying Messages
Recorded messages can be replayed offline with the replay_messages tool. It runs on host and
device and supports the following options:
interesting - this prints 'interesting' statistics for each of the log buffer types (simple,
chatty, serialized). The statistics are:
Log Entry Count
Size (the uncompressed size of the log messages in bytes)
Overhead (the total cost of the log messages in memory in bytes)
Range (the range of time that the logs cover in seconds)
memory_usage BUFFER_TYPE - this prints the memory usage (sum of private dirty pages of the
replay_messages process). Note that the input file is mmap()'ed as RO/Shared so it does not
appear in these dirty pages, and a baseline is taken before allocating the log buffers, so only
their contributions are measured. The tool outputs the memory usage every 100,000 messages.
latency BUFFER_TYPE - this prints statistics of the latency of the Log() function for the given
buffer type. It specifically prints the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd quartiles; the 95th, 99th, and 99.99th
percentiles; and the maximum latency.
print_logs BUFFER_TYPE [buffers] [print_point] - this prints the logs as processed by the given
buffer_type from the buffers specified by buffers starting after the number of logs specified by
print_point have been logged. This acts as if a user called logcat immediately after the
specified logs have been logged, which is particularly useful since it will show the chatty
pruning messages at that point. It additionally prints the statistics from logcat -S after the
logs.
buffers is a comma separated list of the numeric buffer id values from <android/log.h>. For
example, 0,1,3 represents the main, radio, and system buffers. It can can also be all.
print_point is an positive integer. If it is unspecified, logs are printed after the entire
input file is consumed.
nothing BUFFER_TYPE - this does nothing other than read the input file and call Log() for the
given buffer type. This is used for profiling CPU usage of strictly the log buffer.