Dmitry V. Levin
2f6510c8a6
When two ore more -y options are given, print local and remote ip:port pairs associated with socket descriptors. This implementation uses NETLINK_INET_DIAG for sockaddr lookup; it's based on the patch prepared by Zubin Mithra as a part of his GSoC 2014 strace project. * Makefile.am (strace_SOURCES): Add socketutils.c (EXTRA_DIST): Add linux/inet_diag.h and linux/sock_diag.h. * defs.h (print_sockaddr_by_inode): New prototype. * linux/inet_diag.h: New file. * linux/sock_diag.h: Likewise. * socketutils.c: Likewise. * strace.1: Document -yy option. * strace.c (usage): Likewise. * util.c (printfd): Use print_sockaddr_by_inode.
717 lines
21 KiB
Groff
717 lines
21 KiB
Groff
.\" Copyright (c) 1991, 1992 Paul Kranenburg <pk@cs.few.eur.nl>
|
|
.\" Copyright (c) 1993 Branko Lankester <branko@hacktic.nl>
|
|
.\" Copyright (c) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 Rick Sladkey <jrs@world.std.com>
|
|
.\" All rights reserved.
|
|
.\"
|
|
.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
|
|
.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
|
|
.\" are met:
|
|
.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
|
|
.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
|
|
.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
|
|
.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
|
|
.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
|
|
.\" 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
|
|
.\" derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
|
|
.\"
|
|
.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
|
|
.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
|
|
.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
|
|
.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
|
|
.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
|
|
.\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
|
|
.\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
|
|
.\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
|
|
.\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
|
|
.\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
|
|
.de CW
|
|
.sp
|
|
.nf
|
|
.ft CW
|
|
..
|
|
.de CE
|
|
.ft R
|
|
.fi
|
|
.sp
|
|
..
|
|
.\" Macro IX is not defined in the groff macros
|
|
.if \n(.g \{\
|
|
. de IX
|
|
..
|
|
.\}
|
|
.TH STRACE 1 "2010-03-30"
|
|
.SH NAME
|
|
strace \- trace system calls and signals
|
|
.SH SYNOPSIS
|
|
.B strace
|
|
[\fB-CdffhikqrtttTvVxxy\fR]
|
|
[\fB-I\fIn\fR]
|
|
[\fB-b\fIexecve\fR]
|
|
[\fB-e\fIexpr\fR]...
|
|
[\fB-a\fIcolumn\fR]
|
|
[\fB-o\fIfile\fR]
|
|
[\fB-s\fIstrsize\fR]
|
|
[\fB-P\fIpath\fR]... \fB-p\fIpid\fR... /
|
|
[\fB-D\fR]
|
|
[\fB-E\fIvar\fR[=\fIval\fR]]... [\fB-u\fIusername\fR]
|
|
\fIcommand\fR [\fIargs\fR]
|
|
.sp
|
|
.B strace
|
|
\fB-c\fR[\fBdf\fR]
|
|
[\fB-I\fIn\fR]
|
|
[\fB-b\fIexecve\fR]
|
|
[\fB-e\fIexpr\fR]...
|
|
[\fB-O\fIoverhead\fR]
|
|
[\fB-S\fIsortby\fR] \fB-p\fIpid\fR... /
|
|
[\fB-D\fR]
|
|
[\fB-E\fIvar\fR[=\fIval\fR]]... [\fB-u\fIusername\fR]
|
|
\fIcommand\fR [\fIargs\fR]
|
|
.SH DESCRIPTION
|
|
.IX "strace command" "" "\fLstrace\fR command"
|
|
.LP
|
|
In the simplest case
|
|
.B strace
|
|
runs the specified
|
|
.I command
|
|
until it exits.
|
|
It intercepts and records the system calls which are called
|
|
by a process and the signals which are received by a process.
|
|
The name of each system call, its arguments and its return value
|
|
are printed on standard error or to the file specified with the
|
|
.B \-o
|
|
option.
|
|
.LP
|
|
.B strace
|
|
is a useful diagnostic, instructional, and debugging tool.
|
|
System administrators, diagnosticians and trouble-shooters will find
|
|
it invaluable for solving problems with
|
|
programs for which the source is not readily available since
|
|
they do not need to be recompiled in order to trace them.
|
|
Students, hackers and the overly-curious will find that
|
|
a great deal can be learned about a system and its system calls by
|
|
tracing even ordinary programs. And programmers will find that
|
|
since system calls and signals are events that happen at the user/kernel
|
|
interface, a close examination of this boundary is very
|
|
useful for bug isolation, sanity checking and
|
|
attempting to capture race conditions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Each line in the trace contains the system call name, followed
|
|
by its arguments in parentheses and its return value.
|
|
An example from stracing the command "cat /dev/null" is:
|
|
.CW
|
|
open("/dev/null", O_RDONLY) = 3
|
|
.CE
|
|
Errors (typically a return value of \-1) have the errno symbol
|
|
and error string appended.
|
|
.CW
|
|
open("/foo/bar", O_RDONLY) = \-1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
|
|
.CE
|
|
Signals are printed as signal symbol and decoded siginfo structure.
|
|
An excerpt from stracing and interrupting the command "sleep 666" is:
|
|
.CW
|
|
sigsuspend([] <unfinished ...>
|
|
--- SIGINT {si_signo=SIGINT, si_code=SI_USER, si_pid=...} ---
|
|
+++ killed by SIGINT +++
|
|
.CE
|
|
If a system call is being executed and meanwhile another one is being called
|
|
from a different thread/process then
|
|
.B strace
|
|
will try to preserve the order of those events and mark the ongoing call as
|
|
being
|
|
.IR unfinished .
|
|
When the call returns it will be marked as
|
|
.IR resumed .
|
|
.CW
|
|
[pid 28772] select(4, [3], NULL, NULL, NULL <unfinished ...>
|
|
[pid 28779] clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME, {1130322148, 939977000}) = 0
|
|
[pid 28772] <... select resumed> ) = 1 (in [3])
|
|
.CE
|
|
Interruption of a (restartable) system call by a signal delivery is processed
|
|
differently as kernel terminates the system call and also arranges its
|
|
immediate reexecution after the signal handler completes.
|
|
.CW
|
|
read(0, 0x7ffff72cf5cf, 1) = ? ERESTARTSYS (To be restarted)
|
|
--- SIGALRM ... ---
|
|
rt_sigreturn(0xe) = 0
|
|
read(0, "", 1) = 0
|
|
.CE
|
|
Arguments are printed in symbolic form with a passion.
|
|
This example shows the shell performing ">>xyzzy" output redirection:
|
|
.CW
|
|
open("xyzzy", O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, 0666) = 3
|
|
.CE
|
|
Here the third argument of open is decoded by breaking down the
|
|
flag argument into its three bitwise-OR constituents and printing the
|
|
mode value in octal by tradition. Where traditional or native
|
|
usage differs from ANSI or POSIX, the latter forms are preferred.
|
|
In some cases,
|
|
.B strace
|
|
output has proven to be more readable than the source.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Structure pointers are dereferenced and the members are displayed
|
|
as appropriate. In all cases arguments are formatted in the most C-like
|
|
fashion possible.
|
|
For example, the essence of the command "ls \-l /dev/null" is captured as:
|
|
.CW
|
|
lstat("/dev/null", {st_mode=S_IFCHR|0666, st_rdev=makedev(1, 3), ...}) = 0
|
|
.CE
|
|
Notice how the 'struct stat' argument is dereferenced and how each member is
|
|
displayed symbolically. In particular, observe how the st_mode member
|
|
is carefully decoded into a bitwise-OR of symbolic and numeric values.
|
|
Also notice in this example that the first argument to lstat is an input
|
|
to the system call and the second argument is an output. Since output
|
|
arguments are not modified if the system call fails, arguments may not
|
|
always be dereferenced. For example, retrying the "ls \-l" example
|
|
with a non-existent file produces the following line:
|
|
.CW
|
|
lstat("/foo/bar", 0xb004) = \-1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
|
|
.CE
|
|
In this case the porch light is on but nobody is home.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Character pointers are dereferenced and printed as C strings.
|
|
Non-printing characters in strings are normally represented by
|
|
ordinary C escape codes.
|
|
Only the first
|
|
.I strsize
|
|
(32 by default) bytes of strings are printed;
|
|
longer strings have an ellipsis appended following the closing quote.
|
|
Here is a line from "ls \-l" where the
|
|
.B getpwuid
|
|
library routine is reading the password file:
|
|
.CW
|
|
read(3, "root::0:0:System Administrator:/"..., 1024) = 422
|
|
.CE
|
|
While structures are annotated using curly braces, simple pointers
|
|
and arrays are printed using square brackets with commas separating
|
|
elements. Here is an example from the command "id" on a system with
|
|
supplementary group ids:
|
|
.CW
|
|
getgroups(32, [100, 0]) = 2
|
|
.CE
|
|
On the other hand, bit-sets are also shown using square brackets
|
|
but set elements are separated only by a space. Here is the shell
|
|
preparing to execute an external command:
|
|
.CW
|
|
sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, [CHLD TTOU], []) = 0
|
|
.CE
|
|
Here the second argument is a bit-set of two signals, SIGCHLD and SIGTTOU.
|
|
In some cases the bit-set is so full that printing out the unset
|
|
elements is more valuable. In that case, the bit-set is prefixed by
|
|
a tilde like this:
|
|
.CW
|
|
sigprocmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, ~[], NULL) = 0
|
|
.CE
|
|
Here the second argument represents the full set of all signals.
|
|
.SH OPTIONS
|
|
.TP 12
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-c
|
|
Count time, calls, and errors for each system call and report a summary on
|
|
program exit. On Linux, this attempts to show system time (CPU time spent
|
|
running in the kernel) independent of wall clock time. If
|
|
.B \-c
|
|
is used with
|
|
.B \-f
|
|
or
|
|
.B \-F
|
|
(below), only aggregate totals for all traced processes are kept.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-C
|
|
Like
|
|
.B \-c
|
|
but also print regular output while processes are running.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-D
|
|
Run tracer process as a detached grandchild, not as parent of the
|
|
tracee. This reduces the visible effect of
|
|
.B strace
|
|
by keeping the tracee a direct child of the calling process.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-d
|
|
Show some debugging output of
|
|
.B strace
|
|
itself on the standard error.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-f
|
|
Trace child processes as they are created by currently traced
|
|
processes as a result of the
|
|
.BR fork (2),
|
|
.BR vfork (2)
|
|
and
|
|
.BR clone (2)
|
|
system calls. Note that
|
|
.B \-p
|
|
.I PID
|
|
.B \-f
|
|
will attach all threads of process PID if it is multi-threaded,
|
|
not only thread with thread_id = PID.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-ff
|
|
If the
|
|
.B \-o
|
|
.I filename
|
|
option is in effect, each processes trace is written to
|
|
.I filename.pid
|
|
where pid is the numeric process id of each process.
|
|
This is incompatible with
|
|
.BR \-c ,
|
|
since no per-process counts are kept.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-F
|
|
This option is now obsolete and it has the same functionality as
|
|
.BR \-f .
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-h
|
|
Print the help summary.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-i
|
|
Print the instruction pointer at the time of the system call.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-k
|
|
Print the execution stack trace of the traced processes after each system call (experimental).
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-q
|
|
Suppress messages about attaching, detaching etc. This happens
|
|
automatically when output is redirected to a file and the command
|
|
is run directly instead of attaching.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-qq
|
|
If given twice, suppress messages about process exit status.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-r
|
|
Print a relative timestamp upon entry to each system call. This
|
|
records the time difference between the beginning of successive
|
|
system calls.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-t
|
|
Prefix each line of the trace with the time of day.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-tt
|
|
If given twice, the time printed will include the microseconds.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-ttt
|
|
If given thrice, the time printed will include the microseconds
|
|
and the leading portion will be printed as the number
|
|
of seconds since the epoch.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-T
|
|
Show the time spent in system calls. This records the time
|
|
difference between the beginning and the end of each system call.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-w
|
|
Summarise the time difference between the beginning and end of
|
|
each system call. The default is to summarise the system time.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-v
|
|
Print unabbreviated versions of environment, stat, termios, etc.
|
|
calls. These structures are very common in calls and so the default
|
|
behavior displays a reasonable subset of structure members. Use
|
|
this option to get all of the gory details.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-V
|
|
Print the version number of
|
|
.BR strace .
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-x
|
|
Print all non-ASCII strings in hexadecimal string format.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-xx
|
|
Print all strings in hexadecimal string format.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-y
|
|
Print paths associated with file descriptor arguments.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-yy
|
|
Print ip:port pairs associated with socket file descriptors.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-a " column
|
|
Align return values in a specific column (default column 40).
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-b " syscall
|
|
If specified syscall is reached, detach from traced process.
|
|
Currently, only
|
|
.I execve
|
|
syscall is supported. This option is useful if you want to trace
|
|
multi-threaded process and therefore require -f, but don't want
|
|
to trace its (potentially very complex) children.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-e " expr
|
|
A qualifying expression which modifies which events to trace
|
|
or how to trace them. The format of the expression is:
|
|
.RS 15
|
|
.IP
|
|
[\,\fIqualifier\/\fB=\fR][\fB!\fR]\,\fIvalue1\/\fR[\fB,\,\fIvalue2\/\fR]...
|
|
.RE
|
|
.IP
|
|
where
|
|
.I qualifier
|
|
is one of
|
|
.BR trace ,
|
|
.BR abbrev ,
|
|
.BR verbose ,
|
|
.BR raw ,
|
|
.BR signal ,
|
|
.BR read ,
|
|
or
|
|
.B write
|
|
and
|
|
.I value
|
|
is a qualifier-dependent symbol or number. The default
|
|
qualifier is
|
|
.BR trace .
|
|
Using an exclamation mark negates the set of values. For example,
|
|
.BR \-e "\ " open
|
|
means literally
|
|
.BR \-e "\ " trace = open
|
|
which in turn means trace only the
|
|
.B open
|
|
system call. By contrast,
|
|
.BR \-e "\ " trace "=!" open
|
|
means to trace every system call except
|
|
.BR open .
|
|
In addition, the special values
|
|
.B all
|
|
and
|
|
.B none
|
|
have the obvious meanings.
|
|
.IP
|
|
Note that some shells use the exclamation point for history
|
|
expansion even inside quoted arguments. If so, you must escape
|
|
the exclamation point with a backslash.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-e\ trace\fR=\,\fIset\fR
|
|
Trace only the specified set of system calls. The
|
|
.B \-c
|
|
option is useful for determining which system calls might be useful
|
|
to trace. For example,
|
|
.BR trace = open,close,read,write
|
|
means to only
|
|
trace those four system calls. Be careful when making inferences
|
|
about the user/kernel boundary if only a subset of system calls
|
|
are being monitored. The default is
|
|
.BR trace = all .
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = file
|
|
Trace all system calls which take a file name as an argument. You
|
|
can think of this as an abbreviation for
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = open , stat , chmod , unlink ,...
|
|
which is useful to seeing what files the process is referencing.
|
|
Furthermore, using the abbreviation will ensure that you don't
|
|
accidentally forget to include a call like
|
|
.B lstat
|
|
in the list. Betchya woulda forgot that one.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = process
|
|
Trace all system calls which involve process management. This
|
|
is useful for watching the fork, wait, and exec steps of a process.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = network
|
|
Trace all the network related system calls.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = signal
|
|
Trace all signal related system calls.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = ipc
|
|
Trace all IPC related system calls.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = desc
|
|
Trace all file descriptor related system calls.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BR "\-e\ trace" = memory
|
|
Trace all memory mapping related system calls.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-e\ abbrev\fR=\,\fIset\fR
|
|
Abbreviate the output from printing each member of large structures.
|
|
The default is
|
|
.BR abbrev = all .
|
|
The
|
|
.B \-v
|
|
option has the effect of
|
|
.BR abbrev = none .
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-e\ verbose\fR=\,\fIset\fR
|
|
Dereference structures for the specified set of system calls. The
|
|
default is
|
|
.BR verbose = all .
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-e\ raw\fR=\,\fIset\fR
|
|
Print raw, undecoded arguments for the specified set of system calls.
|
|
This option has the effect of causing all arguments to be printed
|
|
in hexadecimal. This is mostly useful if you don't trust the
|
|
decoding or you need to know the actual numeric value of an
|
|
argument.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-e\ signal\fR=\,\fIset\fR
|
|
Trace only the specified subset of signals. The default is
|
|
.BR signal = all .
|
|
For example,
|
|
.B signal "=!" SIGIO
|
|
(or
|
|
.BR signal "=!" io )
|
|
causes SIGIO signals not to be traced.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-e\ read\fR=\,\fIset\fR
|
|
Perform a full hexadecimal and ASCII dump of all the data read from
|
|
file descriptors listed in the specified set. For example, to see
|
|
all input activity on file descriptors
|
|
.I 3
|
|
and
|
|
.I 5
|
|
use
|
|
\fB\-e\ read\fR=\,\fI3\fR,\fI5\fR.
|
|
Note that this is independent from the normal tracing of the
|
|
.BR read (2)
|
|
system call which is controlled by the option
|
|
.BR -e "\ " trace = read .
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-e\ write\fR=\,\fIset\fR
|
|
Perform a full hexadecimal and ASCII dump of all the data written to
|
|
file descriptors listed in the specified set. For example, to see
|
|
all output activity on file descriptors
|
|
.I 3
|
|
and
|
|
.I 5
|
|
use
|
|
\fB\-e\ write\fR=\,\fI3\fR,\,\fI5\fR.
|
|
Note that this is independent from the normal tracing of the
|
|
.BR write (2)
|
|
system call which is controlled by the option
|
|
.BR -e "\ " trace = write .
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-I " interruptible
|
|
When strace can be interrupted by signals (such as pressing ^C).
|
|
1: no signals are blocked; 2: fatal signals are blocked while decoding syscall
|
|
(default); 3: fatal signals are always blocked (default if '-o FILE PROG');
|
|
4: fatal signals and SIGTSTP (^Z) are always blocked (useful to make
|
|
strace -o FILE PROG not stop on ^Z).
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-o " filename
|
|
Write the trace output to the file
|
|
.I filename
|
|
rather than to stderr.
|
|
Use
|
|
.I filename.pid
|
|
if
|
|
.B \-ff
|
|
is used.
|
|
If the argument begins with '|' or with '!' then the rest of the
|
|
argument is treated as a command and all output is piped to it.
|
|
This is convenient for piping the debugging output to a program
|
|
without affecting the redirections of executed programs.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-O " overhead
|
|
Set the overhead for tracing system calls to
|
|
.I overhead
|
|
microseconds.
|
|
This is useful for overriding the default heuristic for guessing
|
|
how much time is spent in mere measuring when timing system calls using
|
|
the
|
|
.B \-c
|
|
option. The accuracy of the heuristic can be gauged by timing a given
|
|
program run without tracing (using
|
|
.BR time (1))
|
|
and comparing the accumulated
|
|
system call time to the total produced using
|
|
.BR \-c .
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-p " pid
|
|
Attach to the process with the process
|
|
.SM ID
|
|
.I pid
|
|
and begin tracing.
|
|
The trace may be terminated
|
|
at any time by a keyboard interrupt signal (\c
|
|
.SM CTRL\s0-C).
|
|
.B strace
|
|
will respond by detaching itself from the traced process(es)
|
|
leaving it (them) to continue running.
|
|
Multiple
|
|
.B \-p
|
|
options can be used to attach to many processes.
|
|
-p "`pidof PROG`" syntax is supported.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-P " path
|
|
Trace only system calls accessing
|
|
.I path.
|
|
Multiple
|
|
.B \-P
|
|
options can be used to specify several paths.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-s " strsize
|
|
Specify the maximum string size to print (the default is 32). Note
|
|
that filenames are not considered strings and are always printed in
|
|
full.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-S " sortby
|
|
Sort the output of the histogram printed by the
|
|
.B \-c
|
|
option by the specified criterion. Legal values are
|
|
.BR time ,
|
|
.BR calls ,
|
|
.BR name ,
|
|
and
|
|
.B nothing
|
|
(default is
|
|
.BR time ).
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-u " username
|
|
Run command with the user \s-1ID\s0, group \s-2ID\s0, and
|
|
supplementary groups of
|
|
.IR username .
|
|
This option is only useful when running as root and enables the
|
|
correct execution of setuid and/or setgid binaries.
|
|
Unless this option is used setuid and setgid programs are executed
|
|
without effective privileges.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fB\-E\ \fIvar\fR=\,\fIval\fR
|
|
Run command with
|
|
.IR var = val
|
|
in its list of environment variables.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.BI "\-E " var
|
|
Remove
|
|
.IR var
|
|
from the inherited list of environment variables before passing it on to
|
|
the command.
|
|
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
|
|
When
|
|
.I command
|
|
exits,
|
|
.B strace
|
|
exits with the same exit status.
|
|
If
|
|
.I command
|
|
is terminated by a signal,
|
|
.B strace
|
|
terminates itself with the same signal, so that
|
|
.B strace
|
|
can be used as a wrapper process transparent to the invoking parent process.
|
|
Note that parent-child relationship (signal stop notifications,
|
|
getppid() value, etc) between traced process and its parent are not preserved
|
|
unless
|
|
.B \-D
|
|
is used.
|
|
.LP
|
|
When using
|
|
.BR \-p ,
|
|
the exit status of
|
|
.B strace
|
|
is zero unless there was an unexpected error in doing the tracing.
|
|
.SH "SETUID INSTALLATION"
|
|
If
|
|
.B strace
|
|
is installed setuid to root then the invoking user will be able to
|
|
attach to and trace processes owned by any user.
|
|
In addition setuid and setgid programs will be executed and traced
|
|
with the correct effective privileges.
|
|
Since only users trusted with full root privileges should be allowed
|
|
to do these things,
|
|
it only makes sense to install
|
|
.B strace
|
|
as setuid to root when the users who can execute it are restricted
|
|
to those users who have this trust.
|
|
For example, it makes sense to install a special version of
|
|
.B strace
|
|
with mode 'rwsr-xr--', user
|
|
.B root
|
|
and group
|
|
.BR trace ,
|
|
where members of the
|
|
.B trace
|
|
group are trusted users.
|
|
If you do use this feature, please remember to install
|
|
a non-setuid version of
|
|
.B strace
|
|
for ordinary lusers to use.
|
|
.SH "SEE ALSO"
|
|
.BR ltrace (1),
|
|
.BR time (1),
|
|
.BR ptrace (2),
|
|
.BR proc (5)
|
|
.SH NOTES
|
|
It is a pity that so much tracing clutter is produced by systems
|
|
employing shared libraries.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is instructive to think about system call inputs and outputs
|
|
as data-flow across the user/kernel boundary. Because user-space
|
|
and kernel-space are separate and address-protected, it is
|
|
sometimes possible to make deductive inferences about process
|
|
behavior using inputs and outputs as propositions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In some cases, a system call will differ from the documented behavior
|
|
or have a different name. For example, on System V-derived systems
|
|
the true
|
|
.BR time (2)
|
|
system call does not take an argument and the
|
|
.B stat
|
|
function is called
|
|
.B xstat
|
|
and takes an extra leading argument. These
|
|
discrepancies are normal but idiosyncratic characteristics of the
|
|
system call interface and are accounted for by C library wrapper
|
|
functions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
On some platforms a process that is attached to with the
|
|
.B \-p
|
|
option may observe a spurious EINTR return from the current
|
|
system call that is not restartable. (Ideally, all system calls
|
|
should be restarted on strace attach, making the attach invisible
|
|
to the traced process, but a few system calls aren't.
|
|
Arguably, every instance of such behavior is a kernel bug.)
|
|
This may have an unpredictable effect on the process
|
|
if the process takes no action to restart the system call.
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
Programs that use the
|
|
.I setuid
|
|
bit do not have
|
|
effective user
|
|
.SM ID
|
|
privileges while being traced.
|
|
.LP
|
|
A traced process runs slowly.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Traced processes which are descended from
|
|
.I command
|
|
may be left running after an interrupt signal (\c
|
|
.SM CTRL\s0-C).
|
|
.LP
|
|
The
|
|
.B \-i
|
|
option is weakly supported.
|
|
.SH HISTORY
|
|
The original
|
|
.B strace
|
|
was written by Paul Kranenburg
|
|
for SunOS and was inspired by its trace utility.
|
|
The SunOS version of
|
|
.B strace
|
|
was ported to Linux and enhanced
|
|
by Branko Lankester, who also wrote the Linux kernel support.
|
|
Even though Paul released
|
|
.B strace
|
|
2.5 in 1992,
|
|
Branko's work was based on Paul's
|
|
.B strace
|
|
1.5 release from 1991.
|
|
In 1993, Rick Sladkey merged
|
|
.B strace
|
|
2.5 for SunOS and the second release of
|
|
.B strace
|
|
for Linux, added many of the features of
|
|
.BR truss (1)
|
|
from SVR4, and produced an
|
|
.B strace
|
|
that worked on both platforms. In 1994 Rick ported
|
|
.B strace
|
|
to SVR4 and Solaris and wrote the
|
|
automatic configuration support. In 1995 he ported
|
|
.B strace
|
|
to Irix
|
|
and tired of writing about himself in the third person.
|
|
.SH PROBLEMS
|
|
Problems with
|
|
.B strace
|
|
should be reported to the
|
|
.B strace
|
|
mailing list at <strace\-devel@lists.sourceforge.net>.
|