**-a**, **--auto** *us* Set the automatic trace mode. This mode sets some commonly used options while debugging the system. It is equivalent to use **-T** *us* **-s** *us* **-t**. By default, *timerlat* tracer uses FIFO:95 for *timerlat* threads, thus equilavent to **-P** *f:95*. **-p**, **--period** *us* Set the *timerlat* tracer period in microseconds. **-i**, **--irq** *us* Stop trace if the *IRQ* latency is higher than the argument in us. **-T**, **--thread** *us* Stop trace if the *Thread* latency is higher than the argument in us. **-s**, **--stack** *us* Save the stack trace at the *IRQ* if a *Thread* latency is higher than the argument in us. **--dma-latency** *us* Set the /dev/cpu_dma_latency to *us*, aiming to bound exit from idle latencies. *cyclictest* sets this value to *0* by default, use **--dma-latency** *0* to have similar results. **-u**, **--user-threads** Set timerlat to run without a workload, and then dispatches user-space workloads to wait on the timerlat_fd. Once the workload is awakes, it goes to sleep again adding so the measurement for the kernel-to-user and user-to-kernel to the tracer output. **-U**, **--user-load** Set timerlat to run without workload, waiting for the user to dispatch a per-cpu task that waits for a new period on the tracing/osnoise/per_cpu/cpu$ID/timerlat_fd. See linux/tools/rtla/sample/timerlat_load.py for an example of user-load code.