staprun (8) - Linux Manuals
staprun: systemtap runtime
NAME
staprun - systemtap runtimeSYNOPSIS
staprun
[
OPTIONS
]
MODULE
[
MODULE-OPTIONS
]
DESCRIPTION
The staprun program is the back-end of the Systemtap tool. It expects a kernel module produced by the front-end stap tool.
Splitting the systemtap tool into a front-end and a back-end allows a user to compile a systemtap script on a development machine that has the kernel development tools (needed to compile the script) and then transfer the resulting kernel module to a production machine that doesn't have any development tools installed.
Please refer to stappaths (7) for the version number, or run rpm -q systemtap (fedora/red hat) apt-get -v systemtap (ubuntu)
OPTIONS
The staprun program supports the following options. Any other option prints a list of supported options.- -v
- Verbose mode. The level of verbosity is also set in the SYSTEMTAP_VERBOSE environment variable.
- -V
- Print version number and exit.
- -w
- Suppress warnings from the script.
- -u
- Load the uprobes.ko module.
- -c CMD
- Command CMD will be run and the staprun program will exit when CMD does. The '_stp_target' variable will contain the pid for CMD.
- -x PID
- The '_stp_target' variable will be set to PID.
- -o FILE
- Send output to FILE. If the module uses bulk mode, the output will be in percpu files FILE_x(FILE_cpux in background and bulk mode) where 'x' is the cpu number. This supports strftime(3) formats for FILE.
- -b BUFFER_SIZE
- The systemtap module will specify a buffer size. Setting one here will override that value. The value should be an integer between 1 and 4095 which be assumed to be the buffer size in MB. That value will be per-cpu if bulk mode is used.
- -L
- Load module and start probes, then detach from the module leaving the probes running. The module can be attached to later by using the -A option.
- -A
- Attach to loaded systemtap module.
- -C WHEN
- Control coloring of error messages. WHEN must be either "never", "always", or "auto" (i.e. enable only if at a terminal). If the option is missing, then "auto" is assumed. Colors can be modified using the SYSTEMTAP_COLORS environment variable. See the stap(1) manual page for more information on syntax and behaviour.
- -d
- Delete a module. Only detached or unused modules the user has permission to access will be deleted. Use "*" (quoted) to delete all unused modules.
- -D
- Run staprun in background as a daemon and show it's pid.
- -R
- Rename the module to a unique name before inserting it.
- -r N:URI
- Pass the given number and URI data to the tapset functions remote_id() and remote_uri().
- -S size[,N]
- Sets the maximum size of output file and the maximum number of output files. If the size of output file will exceed size , systemtap switches output file to the next file. And if the number of output files exceed N , systemtap removes the oldest output file. You can omit the second argument.
- -T timeout
- Sets maximum time reader thread will wait before dumping trace buffer. Value is in ms, default is 200ms. Setting this to a high value decreases number of stapio wake-ups, allowing deeper sleep for embedded platforms. But it impacts interactivity on terminal as traces are dumped less often in case of low throughput. There is no interactivity or performance impact for high throughput as trace is dumped when buffer is full, before this timeout expires.
- var1=val
-
Sets the value of global variable var1 to val. Global variables contained
within a module are treated as module options and can be set from the
staprun command line.
ARGUMENTS
MODULE is either a module path or a module name. If it is a module name, the module will be looked for in the following directory (where 'VERSION' is the output of "uname -r"):- /lib/modules/VERSION/systemtap
Any additional arguments on the command line are passed to the module. One use of these additional module arguments is to set the value of global variables declared within the module.
$ stap -p4 -m mod1 -e
Running this with an additional module argument:
$ staprun mod1.ko var1="HelloWorld"
Spaces and exclamation marks currently cannot be passed into global variables
this way.
Here is a very basic example of how to use
staprun.
First, use
stap
to compile a script. The
stap
program will report the pathname to the resulting module.
$ stap -p4 -e 'probe begin { printf("Hello World!\n"); exit() }'
Run
staprun
with the pathname to the module as an argument.
$ staprun /home/user/.systemtap/cache/85/stap_8553d83f78c_265.ko
To reattach to a kernel module, the
staprun
-A
option would be used.
$ staprun -o foo ...
outputs trace logs to
foo
and if it receives
SIGUSR2
signal, it switches output to
foo.1
file. And receiving
SIGUSR2
again, it switches to
foo.2
file.
To increase system security, users of systemtap must be root, or in the
staprun
group in order to execute this setuid
staprun
program.
A user may select a particular privilege level with the stap
--privilege=
option, which
staprun
will later enforce.
Part of the privilege enforcement mechanism may require using a
stap-server and administrative trust in its cryptographic signer; see the
stap-server(8)
manual page for a for more information.
On a kernel with FIPS mode enabled, staprun normally refuses to attempt to
load systemtap-generated kernel modules. This is because on some kernels,
this results in a panic. If your kernel includes corrections such as
linux commit #002c77a48b47, then you can force staprun to attempt module
loads anyway, by setting the
STAP_FIPS_OVERRIDE
environment variable to any value.
HelloWorld
EXAMPLES
See the
stapex(3stap)
manual page for a collection of sample scripts.
/home/user/.systemtap/cache/85/stap_8553d83f78c_265.ko
Hello World!
MODULE DETACHING AND ATTACHING
After the
staprun
program installs a Systemtap kernel module, users can detach from the
kernel module and reattach to it later. The
-L
option loads the module and automatically detaches. Users can also
detach from the kernel module interactively by sending the SIGQUIT
signal from the keyboard (typically by typing Ctrl-\).
FILE SWITCHING BY SIGNAL
After
staprun
launched the
stapio
program, users can command it to switch output file to next file when it
outputs to file(s) (running staprun with
-o
option) by sending a
SIGUSR2
signal to the
stapio
process. When it receives SIGUSR2, it will switch output file to
new file with suffix
.N
where N is the sequential number.
For example,
SAFETY AND SECURITY
Systemtap, in the default kernel-module runtime mode, is an
administrative tool. It exposes kernel internal data structures and
potentially private user information. See the
stap(1)
manual page for additional information on safety and security.
FILES
BUGS
Use the Bugzilla link of the project web page or our mailing list.
http://sourceware.org/systemtap/, <systemtap [at] sourceware.org>.