dtrace 语法

Usage: dtrace [-aACeFHlqSvVwZ] [-arch i386|x86_64] [-b bufsz] [-c cmd] [-D name[=def]]

     [-I path] [-L path] [-o output] [-p pid] [-s script] [-U name]
     [-x opt[=val]]
 
     [-P provider [[ predicate ] action ]]
     [-m [ provider: ] module [[ predicate ] action ]]
     [-f [[ provider: ] module: ] func [[ predicate ] action ]]
     [-n [[[ provider: ] module: ] func: ] name [[ predicate ] action ]]
     [-i probe-id [[ predicate ] action ]] [ args ... ]
 
     predicate -> '/' D-expression '/'
        action -> '{' D-statements '}'
 
     -arch Generate programs and Mach-O files for the specified architecture
 
     -a  claim anonymous tracing state
     -A  generate plist(5) entries for anonymous tracing
     -b  set trace buffer size
     -c  run specified command and exit upon its completion
     -C  run cpp(1) preprocessor on script files
     -D  define symbol when invoking preprocessor
     -e  exit after compiling request but prior to enabling probes
     -f  enable or list probes matching the specified function name
     -F  coalesce trace output by function
     -h  generate a header file with definitions for static probes
     -H  print included files when invoking preprocessor
     -i  enable or list probes matching the specified probe id
     -I  add include directory to preprocessor search path
     -l  list probes matching specified criteria
     -L  add library directory to library search path
     -m  enable or list probes matching the specified module name
     -n  enable or list probes matching the specified probe name
     -o  set output file
     -p  grab specified process-ID and cache its symbol tables
     -P  enable or list probes matching the specified provider name
     -q  set quiet mode (only output explicitly traced data)
     -s  enable or list probes according to the specified D script
     -S  print D compiler intermediate code
     -U  undefine symbol when invoking preprocessor
     -v  set verbose mode (report stability attributes, arguments)
     -V  report DTrace API version
     -w  permit destructive actions
     -x  enable or modify compiler and tracing options
     -Z  permit probe descriptions that match zero probes
 
 
 
 
probe names are specified using the following:
provider:module:function:name
 
The provider and name fields are terms to describe the probe, whereas the mod- ule and function fields explain the probe’s software location

provider: Providers are libraries of probes that instrument a specific area of the system (for example, sched) or a mode of tracing (for example, fbt). New providers are written over time and added to newer releases (for example, ip, tcp, perl, python, mysql, and so on).

module: This is the kernel module where the probe is located. For user-land probes, it reflects the shared object library that contains the probe.

function: This is the software function that contains this probe.

name: This is a meaningful name to describe the probe. For example, names such as entry and return are probes that fire at the entry and return of the corresponding function.

http://crypt.codemancers.com/assets/images/ruby-probes.png
 


 
 

例子 dtrace -n 'syscall::read:entry /execname != "dtrace"/ { @reads[execname, fds[arg0].fi_pathname] = count(); }'

 
//之间的是filter,过滤不需要的
 
 
 
 
sudo dtrace -l -P ruby86604
 

   ID   PROVIDER            MODULE                          FUNCTION NAME

35731  ruby86604              Ruby                          rb_call0 function-entry
35732  ruby86604              Ruby                          rb_call0 function-return
35733  ruby86604              Ruby                   garbage_collect gc-begin
35734  ruby86604              Ruby                   garbage_collect gc-end
35735  ruby86604              Ruby                           rb_eval line
35736  ruby86604              Ruby                      rb_obj_alloc object-create-done
35737  ruby86604              Ruby                      rb_obj_alloc object-create-start
35738  ruby86604              Ruby                   garbage_collect object-free
35739  ruby86604              Ruby                        rb_longjmp raise
35740  ruby86604              Ruby                           rb_eval rescue
35741  ruby86604              Ruby                 ruby_dtrace_probe ruby-probe
 
 
ruby86604中,数字表示的是进程号, provider都是ruby
 
-P enable or list probes matching the specified provider name
 
 
 
 

There are essentially three components to a DTrace invocation:

The probes

An optional predicate

An optional probe clause, containing the actions to take when the probe fires
 
 
dtrace -n 'probe /predicate/ { actions }'
 
 
Aggregation variables are prefixed with @ and are populated using aggregating functions
 
 
 
 
1、 rvm use 2.0.0 ; irb
 
2、 sudo dtrace -l | grep ruby  | grep  pid( irb的进程号)
 
 
 
 
d语言提供的内建变量
 
 
 
 
 
 actions
trace()    takes a single argument and prints it:
printf() 
tracemem()
copyin()
stringof()
copyinstr()
strlen() and strjoin()
stack(), ustack(), and jstack()
sizeof()
exit()
Speculations
 
 
 
 
内建的 macro
 

Variable

Name                Type                      Description

 
$target            pid_t                  Process ID specified using -p PID or -c command
 
$1..$N           Integer or string     Command-line arguments to dtrace(1M)
 
 
$$1..$$N        String (forced)        Command-line arguments to dtrace(1M)
 
 
外部变量
 
External variables are defined by the operating system (external to DTrace) and accessed by prefixing the kernel variable name with a backquote. The kernel inte- ger variable k could be printed using this:
 
printf("k: %d ", `k);
 
 

Aggregations

Aggregations are a special variable type used to summarize data. They are pre- fixed with an at (@) sign and are populated by aggregating functions. The action
 
@a = count();
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
DTrace operates in the kernel address space. To access data from the user-land address space associated with a process, copyin() can be used.
 

trace()

The trace() action takes a single argument and prints it:
 
sudo dtrace -n 'syscall::fork*: { trace(pid); }'
sudo dtrace -n 'syscall::exec*: { trace(execname); }'
 
sudo dtrace -n python*:::function-entry 
 
sudo dtrace -n syscall::*read*:entry
 
sudo dtrace -n 'syscall::read:entry, sys call::write:entry' /fds[arg0].fi_fs == "sockfs"/ { @[execname, pid] = count();}'
 
 
 
sudo dtrace -n 'ruby57003::rb_str_resurrect:string-create { printf("%s", probefunc); trace(arg4); }' 
 
 
sudo dtrace -ln 'ruby$target::str_new:string-create {}' -p 81737 
 

DTrace runs in kernel-land.

 

You can examine user-land (process) memory using copyinstr() (and copyin()).
 
If you forget this, you’ll see “invalid address” (if you’re lucky).
 
copyin” is a term from kernel code to refer to copying in data from user-land to the kernel) 
 
DTrace allows you to access command-line arguments within the script. $1 is the first argument after all of arguments that dtrace will consume, $2 is the next one, and so on. Hard-coding a pid is unpleasant to do, so you will typically use $1 to pass a particular process ID on the command-line.
 
sudo dtrace -q -s malloc-pid.d 1313
 
 
例子:
 
  • pid provider
sudo dtrace -n 'pid52043::malloc:entry  { printf ("Safari asking for %d bytes", arg0);  } ‘
sudo dtrace -l -n 'pid$1::malloc:entry' 8880 
 
  • which applications are making the most system calls?
sudo dtrace -n ’syscall:::entry{@num[execname] = count();}’
  • which system calls is the Ruby making?
sudo dtrace -n ’syscall:::entry /execname==“ruby”{@num[probefunc] = count();}/‘
  • what functions is the ruby calling?
dtrace -n ‘pid*:::entry /execname == “ruby”/ {@num[probefunc] = count();}’
  • How much memory is Ruby allocating?
 
dtrace -n ‘pid*::malloc*:entry /execname == “ruby”/ {@num[probefunc] = sum(arg0);'
 
 
 
变量范围:
 
self  thread-local
this  clause-local
 
 
cases :
 
sudo dtrace -x ustackframes=100 -n 'profile-997 /execname == "mysqld"/ { @[ustack()] = count(); }tick-60s {exit(0);} 
 
sudo dtrace -n 'ruby*:::method-entry /pid == 96725  && copyinstr(arg1) == "save" /{printf("%s in %s at %d",copyinstr(arg1), copyinstr(arg2),arg3 )}'
 
 sudo dtrace -n 'ruby*:::method-entry /pid == 96725 /{@count[copyinstr(arg1)] = count() }’ #分析一次操作中, 方法被调用了多少次 
 
sudo dtrace -n 'ruby*:::method-entry /pid == 6438/ {@ss[copyinstr(arg0), copyinstr(arg1)] = count();}'
 
 
sudo dtrace -n 'ruby*:::method-entry /copyinstr(arg1) == "empty?" / {  printf("%s in %s at %d",copyinstr(arg1), copyinstr(arg2),arg3 ) }' -c 'rake assets:precompile RAILS_ENV=development'
 
 
匹配方法的名称(与上例相同)
sudo dtrace -n  'ruby51374:::method-entry /pid==51374 && copyinstr(arg1) == "initialize"/ {printf("%s, %s",copyinstr(arg0),  copyinstr(arg1))}
 
 
查看哪些命令是用dtrace写的:
 
man -k dtrace
 
 
 当日志很大的时候, 通过过滤日志缩小考察范围:
 
cat update_course.log  | ack "(codes|course_core|plato_core|course_api|course|update|save|callback)"  > filter.log
 
 
sudo dtrace -s "./ruby_flow_info.d" -p 63369 > ~/Desktop/xxx.log
原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/zengkefu/p/6616943.html