table of contents
STAPEX(3stap) | STAPEX(3stap) |
NAME¶
stapex - systemtap examples
LANGUAGE BASICS¶
These examples give a feel for basic systemtap syntax and control structures.
global odds, evens probe begin {
# "no" and "ne" are local integers
for (i=0; i<10; i++) {
if (i % 2) odds [no++] = i
else evens [ne++] = i
}
delete odds[2]
delete evens[3]
exit () } probe end {
foreach (x+ in odds) {
printf ("odds[%d] = %d\n", x, odds[x])
}
foreach (x in evens-) {
printf ("evens[%d] = %d\n", x, evens[x])
} }
This prints:
odds[1] = 1 odds[3] = 5 odds[4] = 7 odds[5] = 9 evens[5] = 8 evens[4] = 6 evens[2] = 2 evens[1] = 0
Note that all variables types are inferred, and that all locals and globals are automatically initialized.
This script prints the primes between 0 and 49.
function isprime (x) {
if (x < 2) return 0
for (i=2; i<x; i++) {
if (x % i == 0) return 0
if (i * i > x) break
}
return 1 } probe begin {
for (i=0; i<50; i++)
if (isprime (i)) printf("%d\n", i)
exit() }
This script demonstrates recursive functions.
function fibonacci(i) {
if (i < 1) error ("bad number")
if (i == 1) return 1
if (i == 2) return 2
return fibonacci (i-1) + fibonacci (i-2) } probe begin {
printf ("11th fibonacci number: %d\n", fibonacci (11))
exit () }
Any larger number may exceed the MAXACTION or MAXNESTING limits, and result in an error.
PROBING¶
To trace entry and exit from a function, use a pair of probes:
probe kernel.function("sys_mkdir") { println ("enter") } probe kernel.function("sys_mkdir").return { println ("exit") }
To list the probeable functions in the kernel, use the listings mode.
% stap -l 'kernel.function("*")'
To list the probeable functions and local variables in the kernel, use another listings mode.
% stap -L 'kernel.function("*")'
MORE EXAMPLES¶
The directory to find more examples can be found in the stappaths (7) manual page, and online at http://sourceware.org/systemtap/examples/
SEE ALSO¶
stap(1) stapprobes(3stap) stappaths(7)