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STRACE(1)							     STRACE(1)

NAME
       strace - trace system calls and signals

SYNOPSIS
       strace  [  -CdffhiqrtttTvxx ] [ -acolumn ] [ -eexpr ] ...  [ -ofile ] [
       -ppid ] ...  [ -sstrsize ] [ -uusername ] [ -Evar=val ] ...  [ -Evar  ]
       ...  [ command [ arg ...	 ] ]

       strace  -c  [ -eexpr ] ...  [ -Ooverhead ] [ -Ssortby ] [ command [ arg
       ...  ] ]

DESCRIPTION
       In the simplest case strace runs the specified command until it	exits.
       It  intercepts  and  records  the  system  calls	 which are called by a
       process and the signals which are received by a process.	 The  name  of
       each  system  call,  its	 arguments and its return value are printed on
       standard error or to the file specified with the -o option.

       strace is a useful diagnostic, instructional, and debugging tool.  Sys‐
       tem  administrators,  diagnosticians  and trouble-shooters will find it
       invaluable for solving problems with programs for which the  source  is
       not  readily available since they do not need to be recompiled in order
       to trace them.  Students, hackers and the overly-curious will find that
       a  great	 deal  can  be	learned about a system and its system calls by
       tracing even ordinary programs.	And programmers will find  that	 since
       system  calls  and  signals  are	 events that happen at the user/kernel
       interface, a close examination of this boundary is very useful for  bug
       isolation, sanity checking and attempting to capture race conditions.

       Each  line  in the trace contains the system call name, followed by its
       arguments in parentheses and its return value.  An example from	strac‐
       ing the command ``cat /dev/null'' is:

       open("/dev/null", O_RDONLY) = 3

       Errors (typically a return value of -1) have the errno symbol and error
       string appended.

       open("/foo/bar", O_RDONLY) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)

       Signals are printed as a signal symbol and a signal string.  An excerpt
       from stracing and interrupting the command ``sleep 666'' is:

       sigsuspend([] <unfinished ...>
       --- SIGINT (Interrupt) ---
       +++ killed by SIGINT +++

       If  a  system call is being executed and meanwhile another one is being
       called from a different thread/process then strace will try to preserve
       the  order  of  those  events and mark the ongoing call as being unfin‐
       ished.  When the call returns it will be marked as resumed.

       [pid 28772] select(4, [3], NULL, NULL, NULL <unfinished ...>
       [pid 28779] clock_gettime(CLOCK_REALTIME, {1130322148, 939977000}) = 0
       [pid 28772] <... select resumed> )      = 1 (in [3])

       Interruption of a (restartable) system call by  a  signal  delivery  is
       processed  differently  as  kernel  terminates the system call and also
       arranges its immediate reexecution after the signal handler completes.

       read(0, 0x7ffff72cf5cf, 1)	       = ? ERESTARTSYS (To be restarted)
       --- SIGALRM (Alarm clock) @ 0 (0) ---
       rt_sigreturn(0xe)		       = 0
       read(0, ""..., 1)		       = 0

       Arguments are printed in symbolic form with a  passion.	 This  example
       shows the shell performing ``>>xyzzy'' output redirection:

       open("xyzzy", O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, 0666) = 3

       Here  the  three	 argument form of open is decoded by breaking down the
       flag argument into its three bitwise-OR constituents and	 printing  the
       mode  value  in	octal by tradition.  Where traditional or native usage
       differs from ANSI or POSIX, the latter forms are	 preferred.   In  some
       cases, strace output has proven to be more readable than the source.

       Structure  pointers  are	 dereferenced and the members are displayed as
       appropriate.  In all cases arguments are formatted in the  most	C-like
       fashion	possible.   For	 example,  the	essence of the command ``ls -l
       /dev/null'' is captured as:

       lstat("/dev/null", {st_mode=S_IFCHR|0666, st_rdev=makedev(1, 3), ...}) = 0

       Notice how the `struct stat' argument is dereferenced and how each mem‐
       ber  is displayed symbolically.	In particular, observe how the st_mode
       member is carefully decoded into a bitwise-OR of symbolic  and  numeric
       values.	 Also  notice in this example that the first argument to lstat
       is an input to the system call and the second argument  is  an  output.
       Since output arguments are not modified if the system call fails, argu‐
       ments may not always be dereferenced.  For example, retrying  the  ``ls
       -l'' example with a non-existent file produces the following line:

       lstat("/foo/bar", 0xb004) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)

       In this case the porch light is on but nobody is home.

       Character  pointers  are	 dereferenced  and printed as C strings.  Non-
       printing characters in strings are normally represented by  ordinary  C
       escape  codes.  Only the first strsize (32 by default) bytes of strings
       are printed; longer strings have an  ellipsis  appended	following  the
       closing	quote.	 Here  is  a  line  from  ``ls -l'' where the getpwuid
       library routine is reading the password file:

       read(3, "root::0:0:System Administrator:/"..., 1024) = 422

       While structures are annotated using curly braces, simple pointers  and
       arrays  are  printed  using square brackets with commas separating ele‐
       ments.  Here is an example from the command ``id''  on  a  system  with
       supplementary group ids:

       getgroups(32, [100, 0]) = 2

       On  the	other  hand, bit-sets are also shown using square brackets but
       set elements are separated only by a space.  Here is the shell  prepar‐
       ing to execute an external command:

       sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, [CHLD TTOU], []) = 0

       Here the second argument is a bit-set of two signals, SIGCHLD and SIGT‐
       TOU.  In some cases the bit-set is so full that printing out the	 unset
       elements	 is more valuable.  In that case, the bit-set is prefixed by a
       tilde like this:

       sigprocmask(SIG_UNBLOCK, ~[], NULL) = 0

       Here the second argument represents the full set of all signals.

OPTIONS
       -c	   Count time, calls, and errors for each  system  call
		   and	report	a  summary  on program exit.  On Linux,
		   this attempts to show system time  (CPU  time  spent
		   running  in	the  kernel)  independent of wall clock
		   time.  If -c is used with -f	 or  -F	 (below),  only
		   aggregate totals for all traced processes are kept.

       -C	   Like	 -c  but  also	print regular output while pro‐
		   cesses are running.

       -d	   Show some debugging output of strace itself	on  the
		   standard error.

       -f	   Trace  child	 processes  as they are created by cur‐
		   rently traced processes as a result of  the	fork(2)
		   system call.

		   On  non-Linux  platforms the new process is attached
		   to as soon as its pid is known (through  the	 return
		   value  of fork(2) in the parent process). This means
		   that such children may run uncontrolled for a  while
		   (especially	in  the	 case of a vfork(2)), until the
		   parent is scheduled again to complete its (v)fork(2)
		   call.   On  Linux the child is traced from its first
		   instruction with no delay.  If  the	parent	process
		   decides  to	wait(2)	 for  a child that is currently
		   being traced, it is suspended until	an  appropriate
		   child  process  either terminates or incurs a signal
		   that would cause it to terminate (as determined from
		   the child's current signal disposition).

		   On  SunOS  4.x the tracing of vforks is accomplished
		   with some dynamic linking trickery.

       -ff	   If the -o filename option is in  effect,  each  pro‐
		   cesses trace is written to filename.pid where pid is
		   the numeric process id of  each  process.   This  is
		   incompatible	 with  -c,  since no per-process counts
		   are kept.

       -F	   This option is now obsolete	and  it	 has  the  same
		   functionality as -f.

       -h	   Print the help summary.

       -i	   Print  the  instruction  pointer  at the time of the
		   system call.

       -q	   Suppress messages about  attaching,	detaching  etc.
		   This happens automatically when output is redirected
		   to a file and the command is run directly instead of
		   attaching.

       -r	   Print a relative timestamp upon entry to each system
		   call.  This records the time difference between  the
		   beginning of successive system calls.

       -t	   Prefix each line of the trace with the time of day.

       -tt	   If  given  twice,  the time printed will include the
		   microseconds.

       -ttt	   If given thrice, the time printed will  include  the
		   microseconds and the leading portion will be printed
		   as the number of seconds since the epoch.

       -T	   Show the time spent in system  calls.  This	records
		   the	time  difference  between the beginning and the
		   end of each system call.

       -v	   Print unabbreviated versions of  environment,  stat,
		   termios,  etc.   calls.   These  structures are very
		   common in calls and so the default behavior displays
		   a  reasonable subset of structure members.  Use this
		   option to get all of the gory details.

       -V	   Print the version number of strace.

       -x	   Print all non-ASCII strings	in  hexadecimal	 string
		   format.

       -xx	   Print all strings in hexadecimal string format.

       -a column   Align  return  values  in a specific column (default
		   column 40).

       -e expr	   A qualifying expression which modifies which	 events
		   to  trace  or  how to trace them.  The format of the
		   expression is:

			     [qualifier=][!]value1[,value2]...

		   where qualifier is one of  trace,  abbrev,  verbose,
		   raw,	 signal,  read,	 or write and value is a quali‐
		   fier-dependent symbol or number.  The default quali‐
		   fier	 is  trace.   Using an exclamation mark negates
		   the set of values.  For example, -e open means  lit‐
		   erally  -e trace=open which in turn means trace only
		   the open system call.  By  contrast,	 -e trace=!open
		   means  to  trace  every system call except open.  In
		   addition, the special values all and none  have  the
		   obvious meanings.

		   Note	 that some shells use the exclamation point for
		   history expansion even inside quoted arguments.   If
		   so,	you  must  escape  the exclamation point with a
		   backslash.

       -e trace=set
		   Trace only the specified set of system  calls.   The
		   -c  option  is  useful  for determining which system
		   calls  might	 be  useful  to	 trace.	  For  example,
		   trace=open,close,read,write	 means	to  only  trace
		   those four system calls.   Be  careful  when	 making
		   inferences  about the user/kernel boundary if only a
		   subset of system calls  are	being  monitored.   The
		   default is trace=all.

       -e trace=file
		   Trace  all system calls which take a file name as an
		   argument.  You can think of this as an  abbreviation
		   for	-e trace=open,stat,chmod,unlink,...   which  is
		   useful to seeing what files the process is referenc‐
		   ing.	   Furthermore,	 using	the  abbreviation  will
		   ensure that you don't accidentally forget to include
		   a  call like lstat in the list.  Betchya woulda for‐
		   got that one.

       -e trace=process
		   Trace all system calls which involve process manage‐
		   ment.   This	 is useful for watching the fork, wait,
		   and exec steps of a process.

       -e trace=network
		   Trace all the network related system calls.

       -e trace=signal
		   Trace all signal related system calls.

       -e trace=ipc
		   Trace all IPC related system calls.

       -e trace=desc
		   Trace all file descriptor related system calls.

       -e abbrev=set
		   Abbreviate the output from printing each  member  of
		   large  structures.	The default is abbrev=all.  The
		   -v option has the effect of abbrev=none.

       -e verbose=set
		   Dereference structures for the specified set of sys‐
		   tem calls.  The default is verbose=all.

       -e raw=set  Print raw, undecoded arguments for the specified set
		   of system calls.  This  option  has	the  effect  of
		   causing  all arguments to be printed in hexadecimal.
		   This is mostly useful if you don't trust the	 decod‐
		   ing	or you need to know the actual numeric value of
		   an argument.

       -e signal=set
		   Trace only the specified  subset  of	 signals.   The
		   default is signal=all.  For example, signal =! SIGIO
		   (or signal=!io)  causes  SIGIO  signals  not	 to  be
		   traced.

       -e read=set Perform a full hexadecimal and ASCII dump of all the
		   data read from file descriptors listed in the speci‐
		   fied set.  For example, to see all input activity on
		   file descriptors 3 and 5 use -e read=3,5.  Note that
		   this	 is  independent from the normal tracing of the
		   read(2) system  call	 which	is  controlled	by  the
		   option -e trace=read.

       -e write=set
		   Perform a full hexadecimal and ASCII dump of all the
		   data written to file descriptors listed in the spec‐
		   ified  set.	For example, to see all output activity
		   on file descriptors 3 and 5 use -e write=3,5.   Note
		   that	 this is independent from the normal tracing of
		   the write(2) system call which is controlled by  the
		   option -e trace=write.

       -o filename Write  the  trace output to the file filename rather
		   than to stderr.  Use filename.pid if	 -ff  is  used.
		   If the argument begins with `|' or with `!' then the
		   rest of the argument is treated as a command and all
		   output  is piped to it.  This is convenient for pip‐
		   ing	the  debugging	output	to  a  program	without
		   affecting the redirections of executed programs.

       -O overhead Set	the  overhead for tracing system calls to over‐
		   head microseconds.  This is	useful	for  overriding
		   the	default heuristic for guessing how much time is
		   spent in mere measuring  when  timing  system  calls
		   using  the -c option.  The accuracy of the heuristic
		   can be gauged by timing a given program run	without
		   tracing  (using  time(1))  and comparing the accumu‐
		   lated system call time to the total	produced  using
		   -c.

       -p pid	   Attach  to  the  process with the process ID pid and
		   begin tracing.  The trace may be terminated	at  any
		   time	  by  a	 keyboard  interrupt  signal  (CTRL-C).
		   strace will respond by  detaching  itself  from  the
		   traced  process(es)	leaving	 it  (them) to continue
		   running.  Multiple -p options can be used to	 attach
		   to  up to 32 processes in addition to command (which
		   is optional if at least one -p option is given).

       -s strsize  Specify  the	 maximum  string  size	to  print  (the
		   default is 32).  Note that filenames are not consid‐
		   ered strings and are always printed in full.

       -S sortby   Sort the output of the histogram printed by	the  -c
		   option by the specified criterion.  Legal values are
		   time, calls, name, and nothing (default is time).

       -u username Run command with the user ID, group ID, and	supple‐
		   mentary  groups  of	username.   This option is only
		   useful when running as root and enables the	correct
		   execution  of setuid and/or setgid binaries.	 Unless
		   this option is used setuid and setgid  programs  are
		   executed without effective privileges.

       -E var=val  Run	command with var=val in its list of environment
		   variables.

       -E var	   Remove var from the inherited  list	of  environment
		   variables before passing it on to the command.

DIAGNOSTICS
       When  command exits, strace exits with the same exit status.  If
       command is terminated by a signal, strace terminates itself with
       the same signal, so that strace can be used as a wrapper process
       transparent to the invoking parent process.

       When using -p, the exit status of strace is  zero  unless  there
       was an unexpected error in doing the tracing.

SETUID INSTALLATION
       If  strace  is  installed  setuid to root then the invoking user
       will be able to attach to and trace processes owned by any user.
       In  addition  setuid  and  setgid  programs will be executed and
       traced with the correct effective privileges.  Since only  users
       trusted	with full root privileges should be allowed to do these
       things, it only makes sense to install strace as setuid to  root
       when  the users who can execute it are restricted to those users
       who have this trust.  For example, it makes sense to  install  a
       special	version	 of strace with mode `rwsr-xr--', user root and
       group trace, where members of the trace group are trusted users.
       If  you	do  use this feature, please remember to install a non-
       setuid version of strace for ordinary lusers to use.

SEE ALSO
       ltrace(1), time(1), ptrace(2), proc(5)

NOTES
       It is a pity that so much tracing clutter is produced by systems
       employing shared libraries.

       It  is instructive to think about system call inputs and outputs
       as data-flow across the	user/kernel  boundary.	 Because  user-
       space and kernel-space are separate and address-protected, it is
       sometimes possible to make deductive  inferences	 about	process
       behavior using inputs and outputs as propositions.

       In  some	 cases,	 a  system call will differ from the documented
       behavior or have a different name.  For example,	 on  System  V-
       derived	systems	 the  true time(2) system call does not take an
       argument and the stat function is  called  xstat	 and  takes  an
       extra  leading  argument.   These  discrepancies	 are normal but
       idiosyncratic characteristics of the system call	 interface  and
       are accounted for by C library wrapper functions.

       On some platforms a process that has a system call trace applied
       to it with the -p option will receive a	SIGSTOP.   This	 signal
       may  interrupt  a system call that is not restartable.  This may
       have an unpredictable effect on the process if the process takes
       no action to restart the system call.

BUGS
       Programs	 that  use the setuid bit do not have effective user ID
       privileges while being traced.

       A traced process ignores SIGSTOP except on SVR4 platforms.

       A traced process which tries to block SIGTRAP  will  be	sent  a
       SIGSTOP in an attempt to force continuation of tracing.

       A traced process runs slowly.

       Traced  processes  which	 are descended from command may be left
       running after an interrupt signal (CTRL-C).

       On Linux, exciting as it would be, tracing the init  process  is
       forbidden.

       The -i option is weakly supported.

HISTORY
       strace  The  original  strace was written by Paul Kranenburg for
       SunOS and was inspired by its trace utility.  The SunOS	version
       of  strace was ported to Linux and enhanced by Branko Lankester,
       who also wrote the  Linux  kernel  support.   Even  though  Paul
       released	 strace	 2.5 in 1992, Branko's work was based on Paul's
       strace 1.5 release from 1991.   In  1993,  Rick	Sladkey	 merged
       strace 2.5 for SunOS and the second release of strace for Linux,
       added many of the features of truss(1) from SVR4,  and  produced
       an  strace  that	 worked on both platforms.  In 1994 Rick ported
       strace to SVR4 and Solaris and wrote the automatic configuration
       support.	  In 1995 he ported strace to Irix and tired of writing
       about himself in the third person.

BUGS
       The SIGTRAP signal is used internally by the kernel  implementa‐
       tion  of	 system call tracing.  When a traced process receives a
       SIGTRAP signal not associated  with  tracing,  strace  will  not
       report  that signal correctly.  This signal is not normally used
       by programs, but could be via a hard-coded break instruction  or
       via kill(2).

PROBLEMS
       Problems	 with  strace  should  be  reported  via the Debian Bug
       Tracking	 System,   or	to   the   strace   mailing   list   at
       <strace-devel@lists.sourceforge.net>.

				  2010-03-30			     STRACE(1)
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