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19.\" Copyright (c) 2006, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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21.\" $FreeBSD$
22.\"
23.Dd September 8, 2023
24.Dt DTRACE 1
25.Os
26.Sh NAME
27.Nm dtrace
28.Nd dynamic tracing compiler and tracing utility
29.Sh SYNOPSIS
30.Nm
31.Op Fl 32 | Fl 64
32.Op Fl aACdeFGhHlOqSvVwZ
33.Op Fl -libxo
34.Op Fl b Ar bufsz
35.Op Fl c Ar cmd
36.Op Fl D Ar name Op Ns = Ns value
37.Op Fl I Ar path
38.Op Fl L Ar path
39.Op Fl o Ar output
40.Op Fl s Ar script
41.Op Fl U Ar name
42.Op Fl x Ar arg Op Ns = Ns value
43.Op Fl X Cm a | c | s | t
44.Op Fl p Ar pid
45.Op Fl P Ar provider Oo Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action Oc
46.Op Fl m Oo Ar provider : Oc Ar module Oo Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action Oc
47.Op Fl f Oo Oo Ar provider : Oc Ar module : Oc Ar function Oo Oo Ar predicate \
48    Oc Ar action Oc
49.Op Fl n Oo Oo Oo Ar provider : Oc Ar module : Oc Ar function : Oc Ar name \
50    Oo Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action Oc
51.Op Fl i Ar probe-id Oo Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action Oc
52.Sh DESCRIPTION
53DTrace is a comprehensive dynamic tracing framework ported from Solaris.
54DTrace provides a powerful infrastructure that permits administrators,
55developers, and service personnel to concisely answer arbitrary questions about
56the behavior of the operating system and user programs.
57.Pp
58The
59.Nm
60command provides a generic interface to the essential services provided by the
61DTrace facility, including:
62.Bl -bullet -offset indent
63.It
64Options that list the set of probes and providers currently published by DTrace
65.It
66Options that enable probes directly using any of the probe description
67specifiers (provider, module, function, name)
68.It
69Options that run the D compiler and compile one or more D program files or
70programs written directly on the command line
71.It
72Options that generate anonymous tracing programs
73.It
74Options that generate program stability reports
75.It
76Options that modify DTrace tracing and buffering behavior and enable
77additional D compiler features
78.El
79.Pp
80You can use
81.Nm
82to create D scripts by using it in a shebang declaration to create an
83interpreter file.
84You can also use
85.Nm
86to attempt to compile D programs and determine their properties without
87actually enabling traces using the
88.Fl e
89option.
90.Sh OPTIONS
91The arguments accepted by the
92.Fl P ,
93.Fl m ,
94.Fl f ,
95.Fl n ,
96and
97.Fl i
98options can include an optional D language
99.Ar predicate
100enclosed in slashes and an optional D language
101.Ar action
102statement list enclosed in braces.
103D program code specified on the command line must be appropriately quoted to
104avoid interpretation of meta-characters by the shell.
105.Pp
106The following options are supported:
107.Bl -tag -width indent
108.It Fl 32 | Fl 64
109The D compiler produces programs using the native data model of the operating
110system kernel.
111If the
112.Fl 32
113option is specified,
114.Nm
115forces the D compiler to compile a D program using the 32-bit data model.
116If the
117.Fl 64
118option is specified,
119.Nm
120forces the D compiler to compile a D program using the 64-bit data model.
121These options are typically not required as
122.Nm
123selects the native data model as the default.
124The data model affects the sizes of integer types and other language properties.
125D programs compiled for either data model can be executed on both 32-bit and
12664-bit kernels.
127The
128.Fl 32
129and
130.Fl 64
131options also determine the
132.Xr elf 5
133file format (ELF32 or ELF64) produced by the
134.Fl G
135option.
136.It Fl a
137Claim anonymous tracing state and display the traced data.
138You can combine the
139.Fl a
140option with the
141.Fl e
142option to force
143.Nm
144to exit immediately after consuming the anonymous tracing state rather than
145continuing to wait for new data.
146.It Fl A
147Generate directives for anonymous tracing and write them to
148.Pa /boot/dtrace.dof .
149This option constructs a set of dtrace configuration file directives to enable
150the specified probes for anonymous tracing and then exits.
151By default,
152.Nm
153attempts to store the directives to the file
154.Pa /boot/dtrace.dof .
155This behavior can be modified using the
156.Fl o
157option to specify an alternate output file.
158.It Fl b Ar bufsz
159Set the principal trace buffer size to
160.Ar bufsz .
161The trace buffer size can include any of the size suffixes k, m, g, or t.
162If the buffer space cannot be allocated,
163.Nm dtrace
164attempts to reduce the buffer size or exit depending on the setting of the
165bufresize property.
166.It Fl c Ar cmd
167Run the specified command
168.Ar cmd
169and exit upon its completion.
170If more than one
171.Fl c
172option is present on the command line,
173.Nm dtrace
174exits when all commands have exited, reporting the exit status for each child
175process as it terminates.
176The process ID of the first command is made available to any D programs
177specified on the command line or using the
178.Fl s
179option through the
180.Li $target
181macro variable.
182.It Fl C
183Run the C preprocessor
184.Xr cpp 1
185over D programs before compiling them.
186You can pass options to the C preprocessor using the
187.Fl D ,
188.Fl U ,
189.Fl I ,
190and
191.Fl H
192options.
193You can select the degree of C standard conformance if you use the
194.Fl X
195option.
196For a description of the set of tokens defined by the D compiler when invoking
197the C preprocessor, see
198.Fl X .
199.It Fl d
200Dump the D script to standard output, after syntactic transformations have been
201applied.
202For example, if-statements in D are implemented using such transformations: a
203conditional clause in a probe body is replaced at compile-time by a separate
204probe predicated on the original condition.
205.It Fl D Ar name Op Ns = Ns value
206Define
207.Ar name
208when invoking
209.Xr cpp 1
210(enabled using the
211.Fl C
212option).
213If you specify an additional
214.Ar value ,
215the name is assigned the corresponding value.
216This option passes the
217.Fl D
218option to each
219.Xr cpp 1
220invocation.
221.It Fl e
222Exit after compiling any requests and consuming anonymous tracing state
223.Fl ( a
224option) but prior to enabling any probes.
225You can combine this option with the
226.Fl a
227option to print anonymous tracing data and exit.
228You can also combine this option with D compiler options.
229This combination verifies that the programs compile without actually executing
230them and enabling the corresponding instrumentation.
231.It Fl f Oo Oo Ar provider : Oc Ar module : Oc Ar function Oo Oo Ar predicate \
232    Oc Ar action Oc
233Specify function name to trace or list
234.Fl ( l
235option).
236The corresponding argument can include any of the probe description forms
237.Ar provider:module:function ,
238.Ar module:function ,
239or
240.Ar function .
241Unspecified probe description fields are left blank and match any probes
242regardless of the values in those fields.
243If no qualifiers other than
244.Ar function
245are specified in the description, all probes with the corresponding
246.Ar function
247are matched.
248The
249.Fl f
250argument can be suffixed with an optional D probe clause.
251You can specify more than one
252.Fl f
253option on the command line at a time.
254.It Fl F
255Coalesce trace output by identifying function entry and return.
256Function entry probe reports are indented and their output is prefixed with
257.Ql -> .
258Function return probe reports are unindented and their output is prefixed with
259.Ql <- .
260System call entry probe reports are indented and their output is prefixed with
261.Ql => .
262System call return probe reports are unindented and their output is prefixed
263with
264.Ql <= .
265.It Fl G
266Generate an ELF file containing an embedded DTrace program.
267The DTrace probes specified in the program are saved inside of a relocatable ELF
268object which can be linked into another program.
269If the
270.Fl o
271option is present, the ELF file is saved using the pathname specified as the
272argument for this operand.
273If the
274.Fl o
275option is not present and the DTrace program is contained with a file whose name
276is
277.Ar filename.d ,
278then the ELF file is saved using the name
279.Ar filename.o .
280Otherwise the ELF file is saved using the name d.out.
281.It Fl h
282Generate a header file containing macros that correspond to probes in the
283specified provider definitions.
284This option should be used to generate a header file that is included by other
285source files for later use with the
286.Fl G
287option.
288If the
289.Fl o
290option is present, the header file is saved using the pathname specified as the
291argument for that option.
292If the
293.Fl o
294option is not present and the DTrace program is contained within a file whose
295name is
296.Ar filename.d ,
297then the header file is saved using the name
298.Ar filename.h .
299.It Fl H
300Print the pathnames of included files when invoking
301.Xr cpp 1
302(enabled using the
303.Fl C
304option).
305This option passes the
306.Fl H
307option to each
308.Xr cpp 1
309invocation, causing it to display the list of pathnames, one for each line, to
310standard error.
311.It Fl i Ar probe-id Op Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action
312Specify probe identifier
313.Ar ( probe-id )
314to trace or list
315.Ar ( l
316option).
317You can specify probe IDs using decimal integers as shown by `dtrace -l`.
318The
319.Fl i
320argument can be suffixed with an optional D probe clause.
321You can specify more than one
322.Fl i
323option at a time.
324.It Fl I Ar path
325Add the specified directory
326.Ar path
327to the search path for #include files when invoking
328.Xr cpp 1
329(enabled using the
330.Fl C
331option).
332This option passes the
333.Fl I
334option to each
335.Xr cpp 1
336invocation.
337The specified
338.Ar path
339is inserted into the search path ahead of the default directory list.
340.It Fl l
341List probes instead of enabling them.
342If the
343.Fl l
344option is specified,
345.Nm
346produces a report of the probes matching the descriptions given using the
347.Fl P , m , f , n , i ,
348and
349.Fl s
350options.
351If none of these options are specified, this option lists all probes.
352.It Fl L Ar path
353Add the specified directory
354.Ar path
355to the search path for DTrace libraries.
356DTrace libraries are used to contain common definitions that can be used when
357writing D programs.
358The specified
359.Ar path
360is added after the default library search path.
361.It Fl -libxo
362Generate output via
363.Xr libxo 3 .
364This option is the same as specifying
365.Sy oformat .
366.It Fl m Oo Ar provider : Oc Ar module Oo Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action Oc
367Specify module name to trace or list
368.Fl ( l
369option).
370The corresponding argument can include any of the probe description forms
371.Ar provider:module
372or
373.Ar module .
374Unspecified probe description fields are left blank and match any probes
375regardless of the values in those fields.
376If no qualifiers other than
377.Ar module
378are specified in the description, all probes with a corresponding
379.Ar module
380are matched.
381The
382.Fl m
383argument can be suffixed with an optional D probe clause.
384More than one
385.Fl m
386option can be specified on the command line at a time.
387.It Fl n Oo Oo Oo Ar provider : Oc Ar module : Oc Ar function : Oc Ar name \
388    Oo Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action Oc
389Specify probe name to trace or list
390.Fl ( l
391option).
392The corresponding argument can include any of the probe description forms
393.Ar provider:module:function:name , module:function:name , function:name ,
394or
395.Ar name .
396Unspecified probe description fields are left blank and match any probes
397regardless of the values in those fields.
398If no qualifiers other than
399.Ar name
400are specified in the description, all probes with a corresponding
401.Ar name
402are matched.
403The
404.Fl n
405argument can be suffixed with an optional D probe clause.
406More than one
407.Fl n
408option can be specified on the command line at a time.
409.It Fl O
410This option causes
411.Nm
412to print all the aggregations upon exiting if
413.Sy oformat
414or
415.Fl -libxo
416are specified.
417.It Fl o Ar output
418Specify the
419.Ar output
420file for the
421.Fl A , G ,
422and
423.Fl l
424options, or for the traced data itself.
425If the
426.Fl A
427option is present and
428.Fl o
429is not present, the default output file is
430.Pa /boot/dtrace.dof .
431If the
432.Fl G
433option is present and the
434.Fl s
435option's argument is of the form
436.Ar filename.d
437and
438.Fl o
439is not present, the default output file is
440.Ar filename.o .
441Otherwise the default output file is
442.Ar d.out .
443.It Fl p Ar pid
444Grab the specified process-ID
445.Ar pid ,
446cache its symbol tables, and exit upon its completion.
447If more than one
448.Fl p
449option is present on the command line,
450.Nm
451exits when all commands have exited, reporting the exit status for each process
452as it terminates.
453The first process-ID is made available to any D programs specified on the
454command line or using the
455.Fl s
456option through the
457.Li $target
458macro variable.
459.It Fl P Ar provider Oo Oo Ar predicate Oc Ar action Oc
460Specify provider name to trace or list
461.Fl ( l
462option).
463The remaining probe description fields module, function, and name are left
464blank and match any probes regardless of the values in those fields.
465The
466.Fl P
467argument can be suffixed with an optional D probe clause.
468You can specify more than one
469.Fl P
470option on the command line at a time.
471.It Fl q
472Set quiet mode.
473.Nm
474suppresses messages such as the number of probes matched by the specified
475options and D programs and does not print column headers, the CPU ID, the probe
476ID, or insert newlines into the output.
477Only data traced and formatted by D program statements such as
478.Ql dtrace()
479and
480.Ql printf()
481is displayed to standard output.
482.It Fl s Ar script
483Compile the specified D program source file.
484If the
485.Fl e
486option is present, the program is compiled but instrumentation is not enabled.
487If the
488.Fl l
489option is present, the program is compiled and the set of probes matched by it
490is listed, but instrumentation is not enabled.
491If none of
492.Fl e , l , G ,
493or
494.Fl A
495are present, the instrumentation specified by the D program is enabled and
496tracing begins.
497.It Fl S
498Show D compiler intermediate code.
499The D compiler produces a report of the intermediate code generated for each D
500program to standard error.
501.It Fl U Ar name
502Undefine the specified
503.Ar name
504when invoking
505.Xr cpp 1
506(enabled using the
507.Fl C
508option).
509This option passes the
510.Fl U
511option to each
512.Xr cpp 1
513invocation.
514.It Fl v
515Set verbose mode.
516If the
517.Fl v
518option is specified,
519.Nm
520produces a program stability report showing the minimum interface stability and
521dependency level for the specified D programs.
522.It Fl V
523Report the highest D programming interface version supported by
524.Nm .
525The version information is printed to standard output and the
526.Nm
527command exits.
528.It Fl w
529Permit destructive actions in D programs specified using the
530.Fl s , P , m , f , n ,
531or
532.Fl i
533options.
534If the
535.Fl w
536option is not specified,
537.Nm
538does not permit the compilation or enabling of a D program that contains
539destructive actions.
540.It Fl x Ar arg Op Ns = Ns value
541Enable or modify a DTrace runtime option or D compiler option.
542Boolean options are enabled by specifying their name.
543Options with values are set by separating the option name and value with an
544equals sign (=).
545.Pp
546A
547.Ar size
548argument may be suffixed with one of
549.Cm K ,
550.Cm M ,
551.Cm G
552or
553.Cm T
554(either upper or lower case) to indicate a multiple of
555Kilobytes, Megabytes, Gigabytes or Terabytes
556respectively.
557.Pp
558A
559.Ar time
560argument may be suffixed with one of
561.Cm ns ,
562.Cm nsec ,
563.Cm us ,
564.Cm usec ,
565.Cm ms ,
566.Cm msec ,
567.Cm s  ,
568.Cm sec ,
569.Cm m ,
570.Cm min ,
571.Cm h ,
572.Cm hour ,
573.Cm d  ,
574.Cm day ,
575.Cm hz .
576If no suffix is specified
577.Cm hz
578will be used as the unit.
579.Bl -tag -width indent
580.It Sy aggrate Ns = Ns Ar time
581Rate of aggregation reading.
582.It Sy aggsize Ns = Ns Ar size
583Size of the aggregation buffer.
584.It Sy bufpolicy Ns = Ns Cm fill Ns | Ns Cm switch Ns | Ns Cm ring
585Specifies the buffer policy for the principal buffer.
586.It Sy bufresize Ns = Ns Cm auto Ns | Ns Cm manual
587Buffer resizing policy.
588.It Sy bufsize Ns = Ns Ar size
589Size of the per-CPU principal buffer.
590Same as the
591.Fl b
592flag.
593.It Sy cleanrate Ns = Ns Ar time
594Cleaning rate.
595Must be specified in number-per-second with the
596.Dq Li hz
597suffix.
598.It Sy cpu Ns = Ns Ar scalar
599Specifies the CPU on which to enable tracing.
600.It Sy cpp
601Run a C preprocessor over input files.
602Same as the
603.Fl C
604flag.
605.It Sy cpppath Ns = Ns Ar path
606Use the specified path for the C preprocessor rather than
607searching for
608.Dq cpp
609in
610.Ev PATH .
611.It Sy defaultargs
612Allow references to unspecified macro arguments.
613.It Sy destructive
614Allow destructive actions.
615Same as the
616.Fl w
617flag.
618.It Sy dynvarsize Ns = Ns Ar size
619Size of the dynamic variable space.
620.It Sy flowindent
621Turn on flow indentation.
622Same as the
623.Fl F
624flag.
625.It Sy grabanon
626Claim anonymous state.
627Same as the
628.Fl a
629flag.
630.It Sy jstackframes Ns = Ns Ar scalar
631Number of default stack frames for
632.Fn jstack .
633.It Sy jstackstrsize Ns = Ns Ar scalar
634Default string space size for
635.Fn jstack .
636.It Sy ldpath Ns = Ns Ar path
637When
638.Fl G
639is specified, use the specified path for a static linker
640rather than searching for
641.Dq "ld"
642in
643.Ev PATH .
644.It Sy libdir Ns = Ns Ar path
645Add a directory to the system library path.
646.It Sy nspec Ns = Ns Ar scalar
647Number of speculations.
648.It Sy nolibs
649Do not load D system libraries.
650.It Sy quiet
651Set quiet mode.
652Same as the
653.Fl q
654flag.
655.It Sy specsize Ns = Ns Ar size
656Size of the speculation buffer.
657.It Sy strsize Ns = Ns Ar size
658Maximum size of strings.
659.It Sy stackframes Ns = Ns Ar scalar
660Maximum number of kernelspace stack frames to unwind when executing the
661.Fn stack
662action.
663.It Sy stackindent Ns = Ns Ar scalar
664Number of whitespace characters to use when indenting
665.Fn stack
666and
667.Fn ustack
668output.
669.It Sy oformat Ns = Ns Ar format
670Specify the format to use for output.
671Setting
672.Sy oformat
673to
674.Ql text
675makes
676.Nm
677use regular human-readable output which is its default behavior.
678The options passed to
679.Sy oformat
680are directly forwarded to
681.Xr libxo 3 .
682Some of the supported formatters include
683.Ql json ,
684.Ql xml
685and
686.Ql html .
687Note that this option will cause
688.Nm
689to not produce any output unless printing functions are explicitly called,
690or the
691.Fl O
692flag is specified.
693For more information see
694.Sx STRUCTURED OUTPUT .
695.It Sy statusrate Ns = Ns Ar time
696Rate of status checking.
697.It Sy switchrate Ns = Ns Ar time
698Rate of buffer switching.
699.It Sy syslibdir Ns = Ns Ar path
700Path to system libraries.
701Defaults to
702.Pa /usr/lib/dtrace .
703.It Sy ustackframes Ns = Ns Ar scalar
704Maximum number of userspace stack frames to unwind when executing the
705.Fn ustack
706action.
707.El
708.It Fl X Cm a | c | s | t
709Specify the degree of conformance to the ISO C standard that should be selected
710when invoking
711.Xr cpp 1
712(enabled using the
713.Fl C
714option).
715The
716.Fl X
717option argument affects the value and presence of the __STDC__ macro depending
718upon the value of the argument letter.
719.sp
720The
721.Fl X
722option supports the following arguments:
723.Bl -tag -width indent
724.It a
725Default.
726ISO C plus K&R compatibility extensions, with semantic changes required by ISO
727C.
728This is the default mode if
729.Fl X
730is not specified.
731The predefined macro __STDC__ has a value of 0 when
732.Xr cpp 1
733is invoked in conjunction with the
734.Fl Xa
735option.
736.It c
737Conformance.
738Strictly conformant ISO C, without K&R C compatibility extensions.
739The predefined macro __STDC__ has a value of 1 when
740.Xr cpp 1
741is invoked in conjunction with the
742.Fl \&Xc
743option.
744.It s
745K&R C only.
746The macro __STDC__ is not defined when
747.Xr cpp 1
748is invoked in conjunction with the
749.Fl Xs
750option.
751.It t
752Transition.
753ISO C plus K&R C compatibility extensions, without semantic changes required by
754ISO C.
755The predefined macro __STDC__ has a value of 0 when
756.Xr cpp 1
757is invoked in conjunction with the
758.Fl Xt
759option.
760.El
761.Pp
762As the
763.Fl X
764option only affects how the D compiler invokes the C preprocessor, the
765.Fl Xa
766and
767.Fl Xt
768options are equivalent from the perspective of D and both are provided only to
769ease re-use of settings from a C build environment.
770.Pp
771Regardless of the
772.Fl X
773mode, the following additional C preprocessor definitions are always specified
774and valid in all modes:
775.Bl -bullet -offset indent
776.It
777__sun
778.It
779__unix
780.It
781__SVR4
782.It
783__sparc (on SPARC systems only)
784.It
785__sparcv9 (on SPARC systems only when 64-bit programs are compiled)
786.It
787__i386 (on x86 systems only when 32-bit programs are compiled)
788.It
789__amd64 (on x86 systems only when 64-bit programs are compiled)
790.It
791__`uname -s`_`uname -r` (for example,
792.Ql FreeBSD_9.2-RELEASE .
793.It
794__SUNW_D=1
795.It
796.No __SUNW_D_VERSION=0x Ns Ar MMmmmuuu
797.Pp
798Where
799.Ar MM
800is the major release value in hexadecimal,
801.Ar mmm
802is the minor release value in hexadecimal, and
803.Ar uuu
804is the micro release value in hexadecimal.
805.El
806.It Fl Z
807Permit probe descriptions that match zero probes.
808If the
809.Fl Z
810option is not specified,
811.Nm
812reports an error and exits if any probe descriptions specified in D program
813files
814.Fl ( s
815option) or on the command line
816.Fl ( P , m , f , n ,
817or
818.Fl i
819options) contain descriptions that do not match any known probes.
820.El
821.Sh STRUCTURED OUTPUT
822.Nm
823supports structured output using
824.Xr libxo 3 .
825The output will always have a top-level object called
826.Dq dtrace ,
827followed by a list of objects
828.Dq probes .
829Each of the probe objects will to have a timestamp which is generated at
830output time rather than probe firing time, an identifier for the CPU on
831which the probe was executed, and the probe's full specification:
832.Bd -literal
833{
834  "dtrace": {
835    "probes": [
836      {
837        "timestamp": ...,
838        "cpu": ...,
839        "id": ...,
840        "provider": ...,
841        "module": ...,
842        "function": ...,
843        "name": ...,
844        "output": [
845           ... (script-specific output)
846        ]
847      }
848    ]
849  }
850}
851
852<?xml version="1.0"?>
853<dtrace>
854  <probes>
855    <timestamp>...</timestamp>
856    <cpu>...</cpu>
857    <id>...</id>
858    <provider>...</provider>
859    <module>...</module>
860    <function>...</function>
861    <name>...</name>
862    <output>
863      ... (script-specific output)
864    </output>
865  </probes>
866</dtrace>
867.Ed
868.Pp
869It is also possible for XML output to take the following form if some
870of the fields are empty (in this example, module and function values
871are absent):
872.Bd -literal
873<?xml version="1.0"?>
874<dtrace>
875  <probes>
876    ...
877    <module/>
878    <function/>
879    ...
880    <output>
881      ... (script-specific output)
882    </output>
883  </probes>
884</dtrace>
885.Ed
886.Pp
887Similarly,
888.Sy oformat
889can be used to generate HTML:
890.Bd -literal
891<div class="line">
892<div class="data" data-tag="timestamp">...</div>
893<div class="text"></div>
894<div class="data" data-tag="cpu">...</div>
895<div class="text"></div>
896<div class="data" data-tag="id">...</div>
897<div class="text"></div>
898<div class="data" data-tag="provider">...</div>
899<div class="text"></div>
900<div class="data" data-tag="module">...</div>
901<div class="text"></div>
902<div class="data" data-tag="function">...</div>
903<div class="text"></div>
904<div class="data" data-tag="name">...</div>
905<div class="data" data-tag="... (script-specific output)">...</div>
906</div>
907.Ed
908.Pp
909Unlike JSON and XML, the
910.Dq output
911array is not present.
912Instead, data is simply formatted into a div of class
913.Dq data
914and a data-tag is associated with each of the keys.
915.Pp
916The
917.Dq output
918array's contents depend on the probes' actions and is explained below.
919The examples here are presented in JSON form as opposed to XML or HTML,
920however the conversion explained above applies for all output formats.
921.Pp
922Any scalar output, such as output produced by the
923.Fn trace
924action is of form:
925.Bd -literal
926{
927  "value": ...
928}
929.Ed
930.Pp
931The
932.Fn printf
933action begins with an object containing the formatted output of the
934.Fn printf
935action.
936Subsequent objects contains the value of each of the arguments to
937.Fn printf
938in its raw form as if the
939.Fn trace
940action was used instead.
941A
942.Fn printf
943statement which contains no arguments other than the message will only have
944one object following the message object and its value will always be 0.
945This is an artefact of the implementation and can safely be ignored.
946.Bd -literal
947# dtrace --libxo json,pretty -n 'BEGIN { printf("... %Y, ..", walltimestamp); }'
948
949{
950  "message": "... 2023 Sep  7 16:49:02, .."
951},
952{
953  "value": 1694105342633402400
954},
955{
956  ...
957}
958.Ed
959.Pp
960Scalar aggregations are aggregations which produce a single value for a given
961key.
962These aggregations include
963.Fn count ,
964.Fn min ,
965.Fn max ,
966.Fn stddev
967and
968.Fn sum .
969Each one of them is represented by the key containing their name.
970For example, the output of a
971.Fn stddev
972aggregation will contain a key
973.Dq stddev
974inside an
975.Dq aggregation-data
976object:
977.Bd -literal
978{
979  "aggregation-data": [
980    {
981      "keys": [
982        ...
983      ],
984      "stddev": ...
985    }
986  ],
987  "aggregation-name": ...
988}
989.Ed
990.Pp
991The
992.Dq keys
993field remains consistent across all aggregations, however
994.Fn quantize ,
995.Fn lquantize
996and
997.Fn llquantize
998need to be treated differently.
999.Sy oformat
1000will create a new array of objects called
1001.Dq buckets .
1002Each of the objects contains a
1003.Dq value
1004and a
1005.Dq count
1006field which are
1007the left-hand side and the right-hand side of human-readable
1008.Nm
1009output respectively.
1010The full object has the following format:
1011.Bd -literal
1012{
1013  "aggregation-data": [
1014    ...
1015    {
1016      "keys": [
1017        ...
1018      ],
1019      "buckets": [
1020        {
1021          "value": 32,
1022          "count": 0
1023        },
1024        {
1025          "value": 64,
1026          "count": 17
1027        },
1028        ...
1029      ],
1030    },
1031    ...
1032  ]
1033  "aggregation-name": ...
1034}
1035.Ed
1036.Pp
1037Similar to scalar aggregations, named scalar actions such as
1038.Fn mod ,
1039.Fn umod ,
1040.Fn usym ,
1041.Fn tracemem
1042and
1043.Fn printm
1044will output an object with the key being equal to the
1045name of the action.
1046For example,
1047.Fn printm
1048output would produce the following object:
1049.Bd -literal
1050{
1051  "printm": "0x4054171100"
1052}
1053.Ed
1054.Pp
1055.Fn sym
1056is slightly different.
1057While it will create a
1058.Dq sym
1059field which contains its value, in some cases it will also create additional
1060fields
1061.Dq object ,
1062.Dq name
1063and
1064.Dq offset :
1065.Bd -literal
1066# dtrace -x oformat=json,pretty -On 'BEGIN { sym((uintptr_t)&`prison0); }'
1067
1068{
1069  "sym": "kernel`prison0",
1070  "object": "kernel",
1071  "name": "prison0"
1072}
1073
1074# dtrace --libxo json,pretty -On 'BEGIN { sym((uintptr_t)curthread); }'
1075
1076{
1077  "sym": "0xfffffe00c18d2000",
1078  "offset": "0xfffffe00c18d2000"
1079}
1080.Ed
1081.Pp
1082.Fn stack
1083and
1084.Fn ustack
1085actions unroll each of the stack frames into its own object in an array.
1086The only real difference between them is that the
1087.Fn stack
1088action will produce a list called
1089.Dq stack-frames
1090while
1091.Fn ustack
1092will produce one called
1093.Dq ustack-frames .
1094The following is an example of their
1095.Sy oformat
1096output:
1097.Bd -literal
1098{
1099  "stack-frames": [
1100    {
1101      "symbol": "dtrace.ko`dtrace_dof_create+0x35",
1102      "module": "dtrace.ko",
1103      "name": "dtrace_dof_create",
1104      "offset": "0x35"
1105    },
1106    {
1107      "symbol": "dtrace.ko`dtrace_ioctl+0x81c",
1108      "module": "dtrace.ko",
1109      "name": "dtrace_ioctl",
1110      "offset": "0x81c"
1111    },
1112    ...
1113  ]
1114}
1115
1116{
1117  "ustack-frames": [
1118    {
1119      "symbol": "libc.so.7`ioctl+0xa",
1120      "module": "libc.so.7",
1121      "name": "ioctl",
1122      "offset": "0xa"
1123    },
1124    {
1125      "symbol": "libdtrace.so.2`dtrace_go+0xf3",
1126      "module": "libdtrace.so.2",
1127      "name": "dtrace_go",
1128      "offset": "0xf3"
1129    },
1130    ...
1131  ]
1132}
1133.Ed
1134.Pp
1135The
1136.Fn print
1137action produces a
1138.Dq type
1139list in the following form:
1140.Bd -literal
1141{
1142  "type": [
1143    {
1144      "object-name": "kernel",
1145      "name": "struct thread",
1146      "ctfid": 2372
1147    },
1148    {
1149      "member-name": "td_lock",
1150      "name": "struct mtx *volatile",
1151      "ctfid": 2035,
1152      "value": "0xffffffff82158440"
1153    },
1154    ...
1155}
1156.Ed
1157.Pp
1158If the type is invalid, a
1159.Dq warning
1160object will be produced containing the diagnostic message as well as two
1161possible optional fields:
1162.Dq type-identifier
1163which contains the CTF identifier of the type and
1164.Dq size containing the size of an integer, enum or float.
1165The fields generated will depend on the kind of error that was encountered
1166while processing the trace data.
1167.Pp
1168Finally,
1169.Sy oformat
1170provides a special pseudo-probe to represent drops.
1171As
1172.Nm
1173polls for various kinds of drops
1174.Sy oformat
1175will produce output similar to the following in order to represent drops:
1176.Bd -literal
1177{
1178  "cpu": -1,
1179  "id": -1,
1180  "provider": "dtrace",
1181  "module": "INTERNAL",
1182  "function": "INTERNAL",
1183  "name": "DROP",
1184  "timestamp": ...,
1185  "count": ...,
1186  "total": ...,
1187  "kind": 2,
1188  "msg": "... dynamic variable drops\n"
1189}
1190.Ed
1191.Sh OPERANDS
1192You can specify zero or more additional arguments on the
1193.Nm
1194command line to define a set of macro variables and so forth).
1195The additional arguments can be used in D programs specified using the
1196.Fl s
1197option or on the command line.
1198.Sh FILES
1199.Bl -tag -width /boot/dtrace.dof -compact
1200.It Pa /boot/dtrace.dof
1201File for anonymous tracing directives.
1202.El
1203.Sh EXIT STATUS
1204The following exit statuses are returned:
1205.Bl -tag -width indent
1206.It 0
1207Successful completion.
1208.Pp
1209For D program requests, an exit status of 0 indicates that programs were
1210successfully compiled, probes were successfully enabled, or anonymous state
1211was successfully retrieved.
1212.Nm
1213returns 0 even if the specified tracing requests encountered errors or drops.
1214.It 1
1215An error occurred.
1216.Pp
1217For D program requests, an exit status of 1 indicates that program compilation
1218failed or that the specified request could not be satisfied.
1219.It 2
1220Invalid command line options or arguments were specified.
1221.El
1222.Sh SEE ALSO
1223.Xr cpp 1 ,
1224.Xr elf 5 ,
1225.Xr SDT 9
1226.Rs
1227.%T Solaris Dynamic Tracing Guide
1228.Re
1229.Sh HISTORY
1230The
1231.Nm
1232utility first appeared in
1233.Fx 7.1 .
1234