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KTRACE(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual KTRACE(1)
NAME
ktrace - enable kernel process tracing
SYNOPSIS
ktrace [-aCcdi] [-f trfile] [-g pgrp | -p pid] [-t trstr]
ktrace [-adi] [-f trfile] [-t trstr] command
DESCRIPTION
The ktrace utility enables kernel trace logging for the specified
processes. Kernel trace data is logged to the file ktrace.out. The
kernel operations that are traced include system calls (see intro(2)),
file system path lookups (namei(9)), signal processing (sigaction(2)),
and I/O.
Once tracing is enabled on a process, trace data will be logged until
either the process exits or the trace point is cleared. A traced process
can generate enormous amounts of log data quickly; It is strongly
suggested that users memorize how to disable tracing before attempting to
trace a process. The following command is sufficient to disable tracing
on all user-owned processes, and, if executed by root, all processes:
$ ktrace -C
The trace file is not human readable; use kdump(1) to decode it.
The utility may be used only with a kernel that has been built with the
"KTRACE" option in the kernel configuration file.
The options are:
-a Append to the trace file instead of recreating it.
-C Disable tracing on all user-owned processes, and, if executed by
root, all processes in the system.
-c Clear the specified trace points associated with the given file
or processes.
-d Descendants; perform the operation for all current children of
the designated processes. See also the -i option.
-f trfile
Log trace records to trfile instead of ktrace.out.
-g pgid
Enable (disable) tracing on all processes in the process group
(only one -g flag is permitted).
-i Inherit; pass the trace flags to all future children of the
designated processes. See also the -d option.
-p pid Enable (disable) tracing on the indicated process id (only one -p
flag is permitted).
-t trstr
Specify the list of trace points to enable or disable, one per
letter. If an explicit list is not specified, the default set of
n trace namei(9) translations
p trace capability check failures
s trace signal processing
t trace various structures
u userland traces generated by utrace(2)
w context switches
y trace sysctl(3) requests
+ trace the default set of trace points - c, i, n, s, t, u, y
command
Execute command with the specified trace flags.
The -p, -g, and command options are mutually exclusive.
CAPABILITY VIOLATION TRACING
When the p trace point is specified, ktrace will record capsicum(4)
capability mode violations made by the traced process. Violations will
be logged regardless of whether the process has actually entered
capability mode.
For developers that are interested in Capsicumizing their programs, the
c, n, p trace points can help quickly identify any system calls and path
lookups that are triggering violations.
EXAMPLES
Run "make", then trace it and any child processes:
$ ktrace -i make
Trace all kernel operations of process id 34:
$ ktrace -p 34
Trace all kernel operations of processes in process group 15 and pass the
trace flags to all current and future children:
$ ktrace -idg 15
Disable all tracing of process 65:
$ ktrace -cp 65
Disable tracing signals on process 70 and all current children:
$ ktrace -t s -cdp 70
Enable tracing of I/O on process 67:
$ ktrace -ti -p 67
Disable all tracing to the file "tracedata":
$ ktrace -c -f tracedata
Disable tracing of all user-owned processes:
$ ktrace -C
SEE ALSO
dtrace(1), kdump(1), truss(1), intro(2), ktrace(2), sigaction(2),
utrace(2), capsicum(4), namei(9)
HISTORY
The ktrace command appeared in 4.4BSD.
BUGS
Only works if trfile is a regular file.