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Demonstrations of stacksnoop, the Linux eBPF/bcc version.
This program traces the given kernel function and prints the kernel stack trace
for every call. This tool is useful for studying low frequency kernel functions,
to see how they were invoked. For example, tracing the submit_bio() call:
# ./stacksnoop submit_bio
TIME(s) SYSCALL
3592.838736000 submit_bio
submit_bio
submit_bh
jbd2_journal_commit_transaction
kjournald2
kthread
ret_from_fork
This shows that submit_bio() was called by submit_bh(), which was called
by jbd2_journal_commit_transaction(), and so on.
For high frequency functions, see stackcount, which summarizes in-kernel for
efficiency. If you don't know if your function is low or high frequency, try
funccount.
The -v option includes more fields, including the on-CPU process (COMM and PID):
# ./stacksnoop -v submit_bio
TIME(s) COMM PID CPU SYSCALL
3734.855027000 jbd2/dm-0-8 313 0 submit_bio
submit_bio
submit_bh
jbd2_journal_commit_transaction
kjournald2
kthread
ret_from_fork
This identifies the application issuing the sync syscall: the jbd2 process
(COMM column).
Here's another example, showing the path to second_overflow() and on-CPU
process:
# ./stacksnoop -v second_overflow
TIME(s) COMM PID CPU SYSCALL
3837.526433000 <idle> 0 1 second_overflow
second_overflow
tick_do_update_jiffies64
tick_irq_enter
irq_enter
smp_apic_timer_interrupt
apic_timer_interrupt
default_idle
arch_cpu_idle
default_idle_call
cpu_startup_entry
start_secondary
3838.526953000 <idle> 0 1 second_overflow
second_overflow
tick_do_update_jiffies64
tick_irq_enter
irq_enter
smp_apic_timer_interrupt
apic_timer_interrupt
default_idle
arch_cpu_idle
default_idle_call
cpu_startup_entry
start_secondary
This fires every second (see TIME(s)), and is from tick_do_update_jiffies64().
USAGE message:
# ./stacksnoop -h
usage: stacksnoop [-h] [-p PID] [-s] [-v] function
Trace and print kernel stack traces for a kernel function
positional arguments:
function kernel function name
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-p PID, --pid PID trace this PID only
-s, --offset show address offsets
-v, --verbose print more fields
examples:
./stacksnoop ext4_sync_fs # print kernel stack traces for ext4_sync_fs
./stacksnoop -s ext4_sync_fs # ... also show symbol offsets
./stacksnoop -v ext4_sync_fs # ... show extra columns
./stacksnoop -p 185 ext4_sync_fs # ... only when PID 185 is on-CPU