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Oracle Solaris 11.1 Dynamic Tracing Guide     Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library
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Document Information

Preface

1.  About DTrace

2.  D Programming Language

D Program Structure

Probe Clauses and Declarations

Probe Descriptions

Predicates

Actions

Order of Execution

Use of the C Preprocessor

Compilation and Instrumentation

Variables and Arithmetic Expressions

Predicates

Output Formatting

Arrays

External Symbols and Types

Types, Operators, and Expressions

Identifier Names and Keywords

Data Types and Sizes

Constants

Arithmetic Operators

Relational Operators

Logical Operators

Bitwise Operators

Assignment Operators

Increment and Decrement Operators

Conditional Expressions

Type Conversions

Precedence

Variables

Scalar Variables

Associative Arrays

Thread-Local Variables

Clause-Local Variables

Built-in Variables

External Variables

Pointers and Arrays

Pointers and Addresses

Pointer Safety

Array Declarations and Storage

Pointer and Array Relationship

Pointer Arithmetic

Generic Pointers

Multi-Dimensional Arrays

Pointers to DTrace Objects

Pointers and Address Spaces

Strings

String Representation

String Constants

String Assignment

String Conversion

String Comparison

Structs and Unions

Structs

Pointers to Structs

Unions

Member Sizes and Offsets

Bit-Fields

Type and Constant Definitions

typedef

Enumerations

Inlines

Type Namespaces

3.  Aggregations

4.  Actions and Subroutines

5.  Buffers and Buffering

6.  Output Formatting

7.  Speculative Tracing

8.  dtrace(1M) Utility

9.  Scripting

10.  Options and Tunables

11.  Providers

12.  User Process Tracing

13.  Statically Defined Tracing for User Applications

14.  Security

15.  Anonymous Tracing

16.  Postmortem Tracing

17.  Performance Considerations

18.  Stability

19.  Translators

20.  Versioning

Index

Arrays

D permits you to define variables that are integers, as well as other types to represent strings and composite types called structs and unions. If you are familiar with C programming, you'll be happy to know you can use any type in D that you can in C. If you're not a C expert, don't worry: the different kinds of data types are all described in Types, Operators, and Expressions. D also supports a special kind of variable called an associative array. An associative array is similar to a normal array in that it associates a set of keys with a set of values, but in an associative array the keys are not limited to integers of a fixed range.

D associative arrays can be indexed by a list of one or more values of any type. Together the individual key values form a tuple that is used to index into the array and access or modify the value corresponding to that key. Every tuple used with a given associative array must conform to the same type signature; that is, each tuple key must be of the same length and have the same key types in the same order. The value associated with each element of a given associative array is also of a single fixed type for the entire array. For example, the following D statement defines a new associative array a of value type int with the tuple signature string, int and stores the integer value 456 in the array:

a["hello", 123] = 456;

Once an array is defined, its elements can be accessed like any other D variable. For example, the following D statement modifies the array element previously stored in a by incrementing the value from 456 to 457:

a["hello", 123]++;

The values of any array elements you have not yet assigned are set to zero. Now let's use an associative array in a D program. Type the following program and save it in a file named rwtime.d:

Example 2-2 rwtime.d: Time read(2) and write(2) Calls

syscall::read:entry,
syscall::write:entry
/pid == $1/
{
ts[probefunc] = timestamp;
}

syscall::read:return,
syscall::write:return
/pid == $1 && ts[probefunc] != 0/
{
printf("%d nsecs", timestamp - ts[probefunc]);
}

As with trussrw.d, specify the ID of shell process when you execute rwtime.d. If you type a few shell commands, you'll see the amount time elapsed during each system call. Type in the following command and then press return a few times in your other shell:

# dtrace -s rwtime.d `pgrep -n bash`
dtrace: script 'rwtime.d' matched 4 probes
CPU     ID                    FUNCTION:NAME
  0     33                    read:return 22644 nsecs
  0     33                    read:return 3382 nsecs
  0     35                    write:return 25952 nsecs
  0     33                    read:return 916875239 nsecs
  0     35                    write:return 27320 nsecs
  0     33                    read:return 9022 nsecs
  0     33                    read:return 3776 nsecs
  0     35                    write:return 17164 nsecs
...
^C
#

To trace the elapsed time for each system call, you must instrument both the entry to and return from read(2) and write(2) and sample the time at each point. Then, on return from a given system call, you must compute the difference between our first and second timestamp. You could use separate variables for each system call, but this would make the program annoying to extend to additional system calls. Instead, it's easier to use an associative array indexed by the probe function name. Here is the first probe clause:

syscall::read:entry,
syscall::write:entry
/pid == $1/
{
        ts[probefunc] = timestamp;
}

This clause defines an array named ts and assigns the appropriate member the value of the DTrace variable timestamp. This variable returns the value of an always-incrementing nanosecond counter, similar to the Oracle Solaris library routine gethrtime(3C). Once the entry timestamp is saved, the corresponding return probe samples timestamp again and reports the difference between the current time and the saved value:

syscall::read:return,
syscall::write:return
/pid == $1 && ts[probefunc] != 0/
{
        printf("%d nsecs", timestamp - ts[probefunc]);
}

The predicate on the return probe requires that DTrace is tracing the appropriate process and that the corresponding entry probe has already fired and assigned tsprobefunc a non-zero value. This trick eliminates invalid output when DTrace first starts. If your shell is already waiting in a read(2) system call for input when you execute dtrace, the read:return probe will fire without a preceding read:entry for this first read(2) and tsprobefunc will evaluate to zero because it has not yet been assigned.