killsnoop.bt - Man Page

Trace signals issued by the kill() syscall. Uses bpftrace/eBPF.

Synopsis

killsnoop.bt

Description

killsnoop traces the kill() syscall, to show signals sent via this method. This may be useful to troubleshoot failing applications, where an unknown mechanism is sending signals.

This works by tracing the kill() syscall tracepoints.

Since this uses BPF, only the root user can use this tool.

Requirements

CONFIG_BPF and bpftrace.

Examples

Trace all kill() syscalls:

# killsnoop.bt

Fields

TIME

Time of the kill call.

PID

Source process ID

COMM

Source process name

SIG

Signal number. See signal(7).

TPID

Target process ID

RES

Result. 0 == success, a negative value (of the error code) for failure.

Overhead

This traces the kernel kill function and prints output for each event. As the rate of this is generally expected to be low (< 100/s), the overhead is also expected to be negligible. If you have an application that is calling a very high rate of kill()s for some reason, then test and understand overhead before use.

Source

This is from bpftrace.

https://github.com/bpftrace/bpftrace

Also look in the bpftrace distribution for a companion _examples.txt file containing example usage, output, and commentary for this tool.

This is a bpftrace version of the bcc tool of the same name. The bcc tool may provide more options and customizations.

https://github.com/iovisor/bcc

OS

Linux

Stability

Unstable - in development.

Author

Brendan Gregg

See Also

opensnoop.bt(8)

Info

2018-09-07 USER COMMANDS