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Oracle Solaris 11.1 Dynamic Tracing Guide Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
DTrace predicates are used to filter unwanted data from the experiment by tracing data only if a specified condition is found to be true. When enabling many probes, you generally use predicates of a form that identifies a specific thread or threads of interest, such as /self->traceme/ or /pid == 12345/. Although many of these predicates evaluate to a false value for most threads in most probes, the evaluation itself can become costly when done for many thousands of probes. To reduce this cost, DTrace caches the evaluation of a predicate if it includes only thread-local variables (for example, /self->traceme/) or immutable variables (for example, /pid == 12345/). The cost of evaluating a cached predicate is much smaller than the cost of evaluating a non-cached predicate, especially if the predicate involves thread-local variables, string comparisons, or other relatively costly operations. While predicate caching is transparent to the user, it does imply some guidelines for constructing optimal predicates, as shown in the following table:
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The following example is not recommended:
syscall::read:entry { follow[pid, tid] = 1; } fbt::: /follow[pid, tid]/ {} syscall::read:return /follow[pid, tid]/ { follow[pid, tid] = 0; }
The following example using thread-local variables is preferable:
syscall::read:entry { self->follow = 1; } fbt::: /self->follow/ {} syscall::read:return /self->follow/ { self->follow = 0; }
A predicate must consist exclusively of cacheable expressions in order to be cacheable. The following predicates are all cacheable:
/execname == "myprogram"/ /execname == $$1/ /pid == 12345/ /pid == $1/ /self->traceme == 1/
The following examples, which use global variables, are not cacheable:
/execname == one_to_watch/ /traceme[execname]/ /pid == pid_i_care_about/ /self->traceme == my_global/