From: eLinux.org
Bootchart is a tool for performance analysis and visualization of the Linux boot process. Resource utilization and process information are collected during the user-space portion of the boot process and are later rendered in a PNG, SVG or EPS encoded chart. For embedded systems several developers have tried to use bootchart to analyze boot time, but problems arose. There have been several efforts to modify bootchart to make it more useful for embedded development.
bootchart-lite-en.pdf Presentation by Shuuji Miyake of Fujitsu Software Technologies Limited, about bootchart deficiencies in the embedded space and ideas for fixing them.
# Non-members may check out a read-only working copy anonymously over HTTP.
svn checkout http://bootchart-lite.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ bootchart-lite-read-only
Like Bootchart Lite, an implementation of the ideas from "embootchart".
Busybox has a C implementation of bootchartd. It compiles to less than 40k (static uclibc i386 build). It will be available in the busybox-1.17.0 release. Please send bug reports, improvements to busybox mailing list.
Usage: bootchartd start [PROG ARGS]|stop|init
Options:
start: start background logging; with PROG, run PROG, then kill logging with USR1
stop: send USR1 to all bootchartd processes
init: start background logging; stop when getty/xdm is seen (for init scripts)
Under PID 1: start background logging, then execute $bootchart_init, /init, /sbin/init
This makes it possible to start bootchartd even before init by booting kernel with:
init=/sbin/bootchartd bootchart_init=/path/to/regular/init
Note that if you're using an initramfs, you'll need
rdinit=/sbin/bootchartd
instead of
init=/sbin/bootchartd
Note also that bootchartd tries to create a gzipped tarball, so you either need a full tar with gz support, or you need to enable FEATURE_SEAMLESS_GZ in busybox. If 'tar -z' is not working, bootchartd will not produce output.
To use this, capture the bootchart information using bootchartd, then transfer the information to your host machine, and use bootchart to produce a graphic chart of the boot sequence.
The host 'bootchart' provided by Ubuntu-based hosts uses pybootchartgui to generate a graph from the collected data. However, that version of pybootchartgui does not work well with the data generated by busybox bootchartd. A newer project bootchart2 has improved pybootchartgui and included it in their sources, and this works fine with busybox bootchartd data.
After downloading bootchart2 and running 'make', you can generate a graph (bootchart.png) with:
/path/to/bootchart2/pybootchartgui.py bootlog.tgz
An example graph, generated in a different way, is shown below:
A related project is a set of System Tap scripts to provide information about boot time. See Bootprobe
Bootchart has been forked and updated and can be found on github https://github.com/mmeeks/bootchart (Main changes: no java, better visualization)
Another fork (the same?) can be found here: Updated Bootchart