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PERLDTRACE(1) |
Perl Programmers Reference Guide |
PERLDTRACE(1) |
perldtrace - Perl's support for DTrace
# dtrace -Zn 'perl::sub-entry, perl::sub-return { trace(copyinstr(arg0)) }'
dtrace: description 'perl::sub-entry, perl::sub-return ' matched 10 probes
# perl -E 'sub outer { inner(@_) } sub inner { say shift } outer("hello")'
hello
(dtrace output)
CPU ID FUNCTION:NAME
0 75915 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry BEGIN
0 75915 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry import
0 75922 Perl_pp_leavesub:sub-return import
0 75922 Perl_pp_leavesub:sub-return BEGIN
0 75915 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry outer
0 75915 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry inner
0 75922 Perl_pp_leavesub:sub-return inner
0 75922 Perl_pp_leavesub:sub-return outer
DTrace is a framework for comprehensive system- and application-level tracing.
Perl is a DTrace provider, meaning it exposes several probes for
instrumentation. You can use these in conjunction with kernel-level probes, as
well as probes from other providers such as MySQL, in order to diagnose
software defects, or even just your application's bottlenecks.
Perl must be compiled with the
"-Dusedtrace" option in order to make use
of the provided probes. While DTrace aims to have no overhead when its
instrumentation is not active, Perl's support itself cannot uphold that
guarantee, so it is built without DTrace probes under most systems. One
notable exception is that Mac OS X ships a /usr/bin/perl with DTrace
support enabled.
- 5.10.1
- Perl's initial DTrace support was added, providing
"sub-entry" and
"sub-return" probes.
- 5.14.0
- The "sub-entry" and
"sub-return" probes gain a fourth
argument: the package name of the function.
- 5.16.0
- The "phase-change" probe was added.
- 5.18.0
- The "op-entry",
"loading-file", and
"loaded-file" probes were added.
- sub-entry(SUBNAME, FILE, LINE, PACKAGE)
- Traces the entry of any subroutine. Note that all of the variables refer
to the subroutine that is being invoked; there is currently no way to get
ahold of any information about the subroutine's caller from a
DTrace action.
:*perl*::sub-entry {
printf("%s::%s entered at %s line %d\n",
copyinstr(arg3), copyinstr(arg0), copyinstr(arg1), arg2);
}
- sub-return(SUBNAME, FILE, LINE, PACKAGE)
- Traces the exit of any subroutine. Note that all of the variables refer to
the subroutine that is returning; there is currently no way to get ahold
of any information about the subroutine's caller from a DTrace
action.
:*perl*::sub-return {
printf("%s::%s returned at %s line %d\n",
copyinstr(arg3), copyinstr(arg0), copyinstr(arg1), arg2);
}
- phase-change(NEWPHASE, OLDPHASE)
- Traces changes to Perl's interpreter state. You can internalize this as
tracing changes to Perl's
"${^GLOBAL_PHASE}" variable, especially
since the values for "NEWPHASE" and
"OLDPHASE" are the strings that
"${^GLOBAL_PHASE}" reports.
:*perl*::phase-change {
printf("Phase changed from %s to %s\n",
copyinstr(arg1), copyinstr(arg0));
}
- op-entry(OPNAME)
- Traces the execution of each opcode in the Perl runloop. This probe is
fired before the opcode is executed. When the Perl debugger is enabled,
the DTrace probe is fired after the debugger hooks (but still
before the opcode itself is executed).
:*perl*::op-entry {
printf("About to execute opcode %s\n", copyinstr(arg0));
}
- loading-file(FILENAME)
- Fires when Perl is about to load an individual file, whether from
"use",
"require", or
"do". This probe fires before the file
is read from disk. The filename argument is converted to local filesystem
paths instead of providing
"Module::Name"-style names.
:*perl*:loading-file {
printf("About to load %s\n", copyinstr(arg0));
}
- loaded-file(FILENAME)
- Fires when Perl has successfully loaded an individual file, whether from
"use",
"require", or
"do". This probe fires after the file is
read from disk and its contents evaluated. The filename argument is
converted to local filesystem paths instead of providing
"Module::Name"-style names.
:*perl*:loaded-file {
printf("Successfully loaded %s\n", copyinstr(arg0));
}
- Most frequently called functions
-
# dtrace -qZn 'sub-entry { @[strjoin(strjoin(copyinstr(arg3),"::"),copyinstr(arg0))] = count() } END {trunc(@, 10)}'
Class::MOP::Attribute::slots 400
Try::Tiny::catch 411
Try::Tiny::try 411
Class::MOP::Instance::inline_slot_access 451
Class::MOP::Class::Immutable::Trait:::around 472
Class::MOP::Mixin::AttributeCore::has_initializer 496
Class::MOP::Method::Wrapped::__ANON__ 544
Class::MOP::Package::_package_stash 737
Class::MOP::Class::initialize 1128
Class::MOP::get_metaclass_by_name 1204
- Trace function calls
-
# dtrace -qFZn 'sub-entry, sub-return { trace(copyinstr(arg0)) }'
0 -> Perl_pp_entersub BEGIN
0 <- Perl_pp_leavesub BEGIN
0 -> Perl_pp_entersub BEGIN
0 -> Perl_pp_entersub import
0 <- Perl_pp_leavesub import
0 <- Perl_pp_leavesub BEGIN
0 -> Perl_pp_entersub BEGIN
0 -> Perl_pp_entersub dress
0 <- Perl_pp_leavesub dress
0 -> Perl_pp_entersub dirty
0 <- Perl_pp_leavesub dirty
0 -> Perl_pp_entersub whiten
0 <- Perl_pp_leavesub whiten
0 <- Perl_dounwind BEGIN
- Function calls during interpreter cleanup
-
# dtrace -Zn 'phase-change /copyinstr(arg0) == "END"/ { self->ending = 1 } sub-entry /self->ending/ { trace(copyinstr(arg0)) }'
CPU ID FUNCTION:NAME
1 77214 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry END
1 77214 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry END
1 77214 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry cleanup
1 77214 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry _force_writable
1 77214 Perl_pp_entersub:sub-entry _force_writable
- System calls at compile time
-
# dtrace -qZn 'phase-change /copyinstr(arg0) == "START"/ { self->interesting = 1 } phase-change /copyinstr(arg0) == "RUN"/ { self->interesting = 0 } syscall::: /self->interesting/ { @[probefunc] = count() } END { trunc(@, 3) }'
lseek 310
read 374
stat64 1056
- Perl functions that execute the most opcodes
-
# dtrace -qZn 'sub-entry { self->fqn = strjoin(copyinstr(arg3), strjoin("::", copyinstr(arg0))) } op-entry /self->fqn != ""/ { @[self->fqn] = count() } END { trunc(@, 3) }'
warnings::unimport 4589
Exporter::Heavy::_rebuild_cache 5039
Exporter::import 14578
- DTrace Dynamic Tracing Guide
- <http://dtrace.org/guide/preface.html>
- DTrace: Dynamic Tracing in Oracle Solaris, Mac OS X and FreeBSD
- <https://www.amazon.com/DTrace-Dynamic-Tracing-Solaris-FreeBSD/dp/0132091518/>
- Devel::DTrace::Provider
- This CPAN module lets you create application-level DTrace probes written
in Perl.
Shawn M Moore "sartak@gmail.com"
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