stackshot(1) BSD General Commands Manual stackshot(1)NAME
stackshot — capture user and kernel space stack traces, using a kernel
stack trace facility
SYNOPSIS
stackshot [-D] [-i] [-f path] [-n number] [-p pid] [-B size]
DESCRIPTION
The stackshot daemon is a diagnostic facility used to capture stack
traces for each thread on the system, including both user space and ker‐
nel stacks. The resulting view of the system is internally consistent.
This facility, especially when coupled with sysdiagnose(1) (described
below) can be used to obtain an overview of the state of the system under
abnormal conditions, such as hangs and UI unresponsiveness, with a few
keystrokes.
The stack snapshot is triggered upon pressing a special key chord. Two
key chords are available: Control-Option-Command-Shift-Period triggers
stackshot as well as sysdiagnose(1) in the default configuration. An
alternate keychord, Control-Option-Command-Shift-Comma invokes stackshot
and its stack symbolication facility alone.
The daemon also triggers a stack snapshot upon reception of the SIGINFO
signal.
Stack pages that are paged out are not captured--this caveat does not
apply to kernel space stacks, which are wired.
The following options are available:
-D Turn on debugging.
-i Do an immediate snapshot, and exit. Useful when invoked from the
command line.
-f path Output the log information to the specified path. This
supercedes any preference configuration (see below).
-n number
Limit the number of snapshots taken; the default is 1.
-p pid Log the stack information for the specified process-ID only.
-B size Specify the size of the trace buffer; the default is 52 kilo‐
bytes.
-t Attempt to invoke sysdiagnose(1) This will also cause the stack‐
shot logfile to be symbolicated, with the symbolicated tracefile
appended to /Library/Logs/stackshot-syms.log.
-u Attempt symbolication. Currently, this starts up a separate sym‐
bolicator thread, and signals that thread to begin symbolication
using atos(1) when a snapshot is triggered. The current imple‐
mentation may take several seconds to perform the address-symbol
translations, depending on the state of the system. The symboli‐
cated trace file is appended to:
/Library/Logs/stackshot-syms.log.
SYMBOLICATION
Symbolication (as with the -t or -u options, or the symstacks.rb script
described below) is performed against the currently executing process
images, which may have been either fully or partially stripped of debug‐
ging symbols. Additionally, kernel stacks are symbolicated against
/mach_kernel, which typically has all local and debugging symbols
stripped (as with "strip -S -x"). In either case, symbol matching may not
always be accurate. If in doubt, you may run the unstripped executable
images, or symbolicate the trace file directly against the unstripped
images using an alternate mechanism, such as gdb. The symstacks.rb script
(see below) can take a "-k" argument, which specifies the location of an
alternate kernel image to symbolicate with--this can be an unstripped
kernel image. When filing bug reports, it is best to include both the
trace file ("stackshot.log") and the symbolicated trace ("stackshot-
syms.log").
NOTES
The stackshot daemon is intended to be run by the launchd(8) super-dae‐
mon. The system may not be configured with stackshot enabled by default.
launchctl(1) can be used to enable and disable this daemon. stackshot
reads configuration information from
~root/Library/Preferences/com.apple.stackshot.plist. It examines the
following keys
Trace File Specifies the file to use. The default is
/Library/Logs/stackshot.log.
Trace Server A dictionary containing ``Host'' (as a string) and ``Port''
(as an integer) keys, for a server. If both a file and
server are specified, stackshot will attempt to use both.
The server is expected to do nothing other than accept a
connection, accept a stream of data, and write it to a file
of its choosing.
Buffer Size Specifies the size of the trace buffer.
FILES
/usr/libexec/stackshot The stackshot binary.
~root/Library/Preferences/com.apple.stackshot.plist
Preference file used for configuration informa‐
tion.
/System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.stackshot.plist
Configuration file used by launchd(8).
/usr/sbin/symstacks.rb ruby(1) script to process the output of stackshot
and turn symbol addresses into symbol names. It
reads a stackshot trace file from standard input
or a file specified with "-f" , and writes the
symbolicated version to standard output, or to a
file specified with "-w". See caveats above
regarding accuracy of symbolication against
stripped images. The "-k" argument to the script
can specify the location of a kernel image, which
will be used for symbolication. The "-s" argument
forces the script to symbolicate kernel stacks
alone, which can be useful in conjunction with
the "-k" argument to symbolicate kernel stacks on
systems which differ from the one which generated
the trace file. Note that symbolication is per‐
formed against currently running process images,
so the script must be executed on the same (or
identical) system for accuracy, and any processes
of interest must be currently executing.
SEE ALSOlaunchd(8)BUGS
Certain types of deadlocks (especially driver/kernel level deadlocks) may
prevent triggering stackshot when the hot-key combination is pressed.
Depending upon the type of deadlock, there may be issues accessing the
filesystem and/or network, preventing publication of the data once the
traces are gathered.
The daemon makes a minimal effort to ensure that the log file has space
allocated, and does no processing afterwards. The aforementioned ruby(1)
script can be used to translate addresses to symbols. It is up to the
user to examine the file (and perhaps send it off to someone for debug‐
ging) afterwards.
The symbolication is not perfect, and may benefit from human scrutiny or
post-processing.
Darwin June 8, 2024 Darwin