Provided by: systemtap-doc_4.7-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       stapprobes - systemtap probe points

DESCRIPTION

       The  following  sections  enumerate the variety of probe points supported by the systemtap
       translator, and some of the additional aliases defined by standard tapset  scripts.   Many
       are individually documented in the 3stap manual section, with the probe:: prefix.

SYNTAX

              probe PROBEPOINT [, PROBEPOINT] { [STMT ...] }

       A  probe  declaration  may list multiple comma-separated probe points in order to attach a
       handler to all of the named events.  Normally, the handler statements are run whenever any
       of  events  occur.  Depending on the type of probe point, the handler statements may refer
       to context variables (denoted with a dollar-sign prefix like $foo) to read or write state.
       This may include function parameters for function probes, or local variables for statement
       probes.

       The syntax of a single probe point is a general dotted-symbol  sequence.   This  allows  a
       breakdown  of the event namespace into parts, somewhat like the Domain Name System does on
       the Internet.  Each component identifier  may  be  parametrized  by  a  string  or  number
       literal,  with a syntax like a function call.  A component may include a "*" character, to
       expand to a set of matching probe points.  It may also  include  "**"  to  match  multiple
       sequential components at once.  Probe aliases likewise expand to other probe points.

       Probe  aliases  can  be  given  on their own, or with a suffix. The suffix attaches to the
       underlying probe point that the alias is expanded to. For example,

              syscall.read.return.maxactive(10)

       expands to

              kernel.function("sys_read").return.maxactive(10)

       with the component maxactive(10) being recognized as a suffix.

       Normally, each and every probe point resulting from wildcard- and alias-expansion must  be
       resolved  to  some  low-level  system  instrumentation  facility  (e.g., a kprobe address,
       marker, or a timer configuration), otherwise the elaboration phase will fail.

       However, a probe point may be followed  by  a  "?"  character,  to  indicate  that  it  is
       optional,  and  that  no  error should result if it fails to resolve.  Optionalness passes
       down through all levels of alias/wildcard expansion.  Alternately, a probe  point  may  be
       followed  by a "!" character, to indicate that it is both optional and sufficient.  (Think
       vaguely of the Prolog cut operator.) If it does resolve, then no further probe  points  in
       the same comma-separated list will be resolved.  Therefore, the "!"  sufficiency mark only
       makes sense in a list of probe point alternatives.

       Additionally, a probe point may be followed by  a  "if  (expr)"  statement,  in  order  to
       enable/disable the probe point on-the-fly. With the "if" statement, if the "expr" is false
       when the probe point is hit, the whole probe body including alias's body is  skipped.  The
       condition  is  stacked  up  through  all  levels of alias/wildcard expansion. So the final
       condition becomes the logical-and of  conditions  of  all  expanded  alias/wildcard.   The
       expressions are necessarily restricted to global variables.

       These are all syntactically valid probe points.  (They are generally semantically invalid,
       depending on the contents of  the  tapsets,  and  the  versions  of  kernel/user  software
       installed.)

              kernel.function("foo").return
              process("/bin/vi").statement(0x2222)
              end
              syscall.*
              syscall.*.return.maxactive(10)
              syscall.{open,close}
              sys**open
              kernel.function("no_such_function") ?
              module("awol").function("no_such_function") !
              signal.*? if (switch)
              kprobe.function("foo")

       Probes  may  be broadly classified into "synchronous" and "asynchronous".  A "synchronous"
       event is deemed to occur when  any  processor  executes  an  instruction  matched  by  the
       specification.  This gives these probes a reference point (instruction address) from which
       more contextual  data  may  be  available.   Other  families  of  probe  points  refer  to
       "asynchronous"  events  such  as  timers/counters  rolling  over,  where there is no fixed
       reference point that is related.   Each  probe  point  specification  may  match  multiple
       locations  (for  example,  using  wildcards  or aliases), and all them are then probed.  A
       probe declaration may also contain several comma-separated specifications,  all  of  which
       are probed.

       Brace  expansion is a mechanism which allows a list of probe points to be generated. It is
       very similar to shell expansion. A component may be surrounded by a pair of  curly  braces
       to  indicate  that  the  comma-separated  sequence  of one or more subcomponents will each
       constitute a new probe point. The braces  may  be  arbitrarily  nested.  The  ordering  of
       expanded results is based on product order.

       The  question mark (?), exclamation mark (!) indicators and probe point conditions may not
       be placed in any expansions that are before the last component.

       The following is an example of brace expansion.

              syscall.{write,read}
              # Expands to
              syscall.write, syscall.read

              {kernel,module("nfs")}.function("nfs*")!
              # Expands to
              kernel.function("nfs*")!, module("nfs").function("nfs*")!

DWARF DEBUGINFO

       Resolving some probe points requires DWARF debuginfo or "debug symbols" for  the  specific
       program  being  instrumented.   For some others, DWARF is automatically synthesized on the
       fly from source code header files.  For  others,  it  is  not  needed  at  all.   Since  a
       systemtap  script  may  use any mixture of probe points together, the union of their DWARF
       requirements has to be met on the computer where  script  compilation  occurs.   (See  the
       --use-server  option  and  the  stap-server(8)  man  page for information about the remote
       compilation facility, which allows these requirements to be met on a different machine.)

       The following point lists many of the available probe point  families,  to  classify  them
       with  respect  to  their  need for DWARF debuginfo for the specific program for that probe
       point.

       DWARF                          NON-DWARF                    SYMBOL-TABLE

       kernel.function, .statement    kernel.mark                  kernel.function*
       module.function, .statement    process.mark, process.plt    module.function*

       process.function, .statement   begin, end, error, never     process.function*
       process.mark*                  timer
       .function.callee               perf
       python2, python3               procfs
                                      kernel.statement.absolute
       AUTO-GENERATED-DWARF           kernel.data
                                      kprobe.function
       kernel.trace                   process.statement.absolute
                                      process.begin, .end
                                      netfilter
                                      java

       The probe types marked with * asterisks mark  fallbacks,  where  systemtap  can  sometimes
       infer  subset  or  substitute  information.   In  general,  the  more symbolic / debugging
       information available, the higher quality probing will be available.

ON-THE-FLY ARMING

       The following types of probe points may be armed/disarmed  on-the-fly  to  save  overheads
       during uninteresting times.  Arming conditions may also be added to other types of probes,
       but will be treated as a wrapping conditional and won't benefit from overhead savings.

       DISARMABLE                                exceptions
       kernel.function, kernel.statement
       module.function, module.statement
       process.*.function, process.*.statement
       process.*.plt, process.*.mark
       timer.                                    timer.profile
       java

PROBE POINT FAMILIES

   BEGIN/END/ERROR
       The probe points begin and end are defined by the translator  to  refer  to  the  time  of
       session  startup  and  shutdown.   All  "begin"  probe handlers are run, in some sequence,
       during the startup of the session.  All global variables will have been initialized  prior
       to  this point.  All "end" probes are run, in some sequence, during the normal shutdown of
       a session, such as in the aftermath of an exit () function call, or an  interruption  from
       the  user.   In  the case of an error-triggered shutdown, "end" probes are not run.  There
       are no target variables available in either context.

       If the order of execution among "begin" or "end" probes is significant, then  an  optional
       sequence number may be provided:

              begin(N)
              end(N)

       The number N may be positive or negative.  The probe handlers are run in increasing order,
       and the order between handlers with the same sequence number is unspecified.  When "begin"
       or "end" are given without a sequence, they are effectively sequence zero.

       The error probe point is similar to the end probe, except that each such probe handler run
       when the session ends after errors  have  occurred.   In  such  cases,  "end"  probes  are
       skipped,  but  each  "error"  probe is still attempted.  This kind of probe can be used to
       clean up or emit a "final gasp".  It  may  also  be  numerically  parametrized  to  set  a
       sequence.

   NEVER
       The  probe  point never is specially defined by the translator to mean "never".  Its probe
       handler is never run, though its statements are analyzed for symbol / type correctness  as
       usual.  This probe point may be useful in conjunction with optional probes.

   SYSCALL and ND_SYSCALL
       The  syscall.* and nd_syscall.*  aliases define several hundred probes, too many to detail
       here.  They are of the general form:

              syscall.NAME
              nd_syscall.NAME
              syscall.NAME.return
              nd_syscall.NAME.return

       Generally, a pair of probes are defined for each normal  system  call  as  listed  in  the
       syscalls(2)  manual page, one for entry and one for return.  Those system calls that never
       return do not have a corresponding .return probe.  The nd_* family of probes are about the
       same,  except  it  uses  non-DWARF based searching mechanisms, which may result in a lower
       quality of symbolic context data (parameters), and may miss some system  calls.   You  may
       want to try them first, in case kernel debugging information is not immediately available.

       Each probe alias provides a variety of variables. Looking at the tapset source code is the
       most reliable way.  Generally, each variable listed in the standard manual  page  is  made
       available  as  a script-level variable, so syscall.open exposes filename, flags, and mode.
       In addition, a standard suite of variables is available at most aliases:

       argstr A pretty-printed form of the entire argument list, without parentheses.

       name   The name of the system call.

       retval For return probes, the raw numeric system-call result.

       retstr For return probes, a pretty-printed string form of the system-call result.

       As usual for probe aliases, these variables are all initialized once from  the  underlying
       $context  variables,  so  that  later  changes to $context variables are not automatically
       reflected.  Not all probe aliases obey all of these general guidelines.  Please report any
       bothersome  ones  you encounter as a bug.  Note that on some kernel/userspace architecture
       combinations (e.g., 32-bit userspace on 64-bit kernel), the underlying $context  variables
       may  need  explicit  sign  extension / masking.  When this is an issue, consider using the
       tapset-provided variables instead of raw $context variables.

       If debuginfo availability is a problem, you may try  using  the  non-DWARF  syscall  probe
       aliases  instead.   Use  the  nd_syscall.   prefix  instead  of syscall.  The same context
       variables are available, as far as possible.

       nd_syscall probes on kernels that use syscall  wrappers  to  pass  arguments  via  pt_regs
       (currently  4.17+  on  x86_64  and 4.19+ on aarch64) support syscall argument writing when
       guru mode is enabled. If a probe syscall parameter is modified  in  the  probe  body  then
       immediately  before  the  probe  exits  the  parameter's  current value will be written to
       pt_regs.  This  overwrites  the  previous  value.   nd_syscall  probes  also  include  two
       parameters for each of the syscall's string parameters.  One holds a quoted version of the
       string passed to the syscall. The other holds an unquoted version of the  string  intended
       to  be  used  when  modifying  the  parameter.   If the probe modifies the unquoted string
       variable then as the probe is about to exit the contents of this variable will be  written
       to  the user space buffer passed to the syscall. It is the user's responsibility to ensure
       that this buffer is large enough to hold the modified string and that it is located  in  a
       writable memory segment.

   TIMERS
       There  are  two main types of timer probes: "jiffies" timer probes and time interval timer
       probes.

       Intervals defined by the standard kernel "jiffies" timer may  be  used  to  trigger  probe
       handlers asynchronously.  Two probe point variants are supported by the translator:

              timer.jiffies(N)
              timer.jiffies(N).randomize(M)

       The probe handler is run every N jiffies (a kernel-defined unit of time, typically between
       1 and 60 ms).  If the "randomize" component is given, a linearly distributed random  value
       in  the  range [-M..+M] is added to N every time the handler is run.  N is restricted to a
       reasonable range (1 to around a million), and M is restricted to be smaller than N.  There
       are  no target variables provided in either context.  It is possible for such probes to be
       run concurrently on a multi-processor computer.

       Alternatively, intervals may be specified in units of time.  There  are  two  probe  point
       variants similar to the jiffies timer:

              timer.ms(N)
              timer.ms(N).randomize(M)

       Here,  N  and  M are specified in milliseconds, but the full options for units are seconds
       (s/sec), milliseconds (ms/msec), microseconds (us/usec), nanoseconds (ns/nsec), and  hertz
       (hz).  Randomization is not supported for hertz timers.

       The  actual  resolution  of the timers depends on the target kernel.  For kernels prior to
       2.6.17, timers are limited to jiffies resolution, so  intervals  are  rounded  up  to  the
       nearest  jiffies  interval.   After  2.6.17,  the implementation uses hrtimers for tighter
       precision, though the actual resolution will be arch-dependent.  In either  case,  if  the
       "randomize" component is given, then the random value will be added to the interval before
       any rounding occurs.

       Profiling timers are also available to provide probes that execute on all CPUs at the rate
       of  the  system  tick (CONFIG_HZ) or at a given frequency (hz). On some kernels, this is a
       one-concurrent-user-only or disabled facility, resulting in error -16 (EBUSY) during probe
       registration.

              timer.profile.tick
              timer.profile.freq.hz(N)

       Full  context  information  of  the  interrupted  process  is available, making this probe
       suitable for a time-based sampling profiler.

       It is recommended to use the tapset probe timer.profile  rather  than  timer.profile.tick.
       This   probe   point   behaves  identically  to  timer.profile.tick  when  the  underlying
       functionality is available, and falls back  to  using  perf.sw.cpu_clock  on  some  recent
       kernels which lack the corresponding profile timer facility.

       Profiling timers with specified frequencies are only accurate up to around 100 hz. You may
       need to provide a larger value to achieve the desired rate.

       Note that if a timer probe is set to fire at a very high rate and if  the  probe  body  is
       complex,  succeeding  timer  probes  can  get  skipped, since the time for them to run has
       already passed. Normally systemtap reports missed probes, but it  will  not  report  these
       skipped probes.

   DWARF
       This   family  of  probe  points  uses  symbolic  debugging  information  for  the  target
       kernel/module/program, as  may  be  found  in  unstripped  executables,  or  the  separate
       debuginfo  packages.   They allow placement of probes logically into the execution path of
       the target program, by specifying a set of points in the source or object  code.   When  a
       matching statement executes on any processor, the probe handler is run in that context.

       Probe  points  in  the DWARF family can be identified by the target kernel module (or user
       process), source file, line number, function name, or some combination of these.

       Here is a list of DWARF probe points currently supported:

              kernel.function(PATTERN)
              kernel.function(PATTERN).call
              kernel.function(PATTERN).callee(PATTERN)
              kernel.function(PATTERN).callee(PATTERN).return
              kernel.function(PATTERN).callee(PATTERN).call
              kernel.function(PATTERN).callees(DEPTH)
              kernel.function(PATTERN).return
              kernel.function(PATTERN).inline
              kernel.function(PATTERN).label(LPATTERN)
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN)
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).call
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).callee(PATTERN)
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).callee(PATTERN).return
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).callee(PATTERN).call
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).callees(DEPTH)
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).return
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).inline
              module(MPATTERN).function(PATTERN).label(LPATTERN)
              kernel.statement(PATTERN)
              kernel.statement(PATTERN).nearest
              kernel.statement(ADDRESS).absolute
              module(MPATTERN).statement(PATTERN)
              process("PATH").function("NAME")
              process("PATH").statement("*@FILE.c:123")
              process("PATH").library("PATH").function("NAME")
              process("PATH").library("PATH").statement("*@FILE.c:123")
              process("PATH").library("PATH").statement("*@FILE.c:123").nearest
              process("PATH").function("*").return
              process("PATH").function("myfun").label("foo")
              process("PATH").function("foo").callee("bar")
              process("PATH").function("foo").callee("bar").return
              process("PATH").function("foo").callee("bar").call
              process("PATH").function("foo").callees(DEPTH)
              process(PID).function("NAME")
              process(PID).function("myfun").label("foo")
              process(PID).plt("NAME")
              process(PID).plt("NAME").return
              process(PID).statement("*@FILE.c:123")
              process(PID).statement("*@FILE.c:123").nearest
              process(PID).statement(ADDRESS).absolute

       (See the USER-SPACE section below for more information on the process probes.)

       The  list  above  includes  multiple  variants  and  modifiers  which  provide  additional
       functionality or filters. They are:

              .function
                     Places  a probe near the beginning of the named function, so that parameters
                     are available as context variables.

              .return
                     Places a probe at the moment after the return from the  named  function,  so
                     the return value is available as the "$return" context variable.

              .inline
                     Filters  the  results  to  include only instances of inlined functions. Note
                     that inlined functions do not have an identifiable return point, so  .return
                     is not supported on .inline probes.

              .call  Filters  the results to include only non-inlined functions (the opposite set
                     of .inline)

              .exported
                     Filters the results to include only exported functions.

              .statement
                     Places a probe at the exact spot, exposing those local  variables  that  are
                     visible there.

              .statement.nearest
                     Places  a  probe  at  the nearest available line number for each line number
                     given in the statement.

              .callee
                     Places a probe on the callee function given in the .callee  modifier,  where
                     the  callee  must  be  a  function  called  by  the target function given in
                     .function. The advantage of doing this  over  directly  probing  the  callee
                     function is that this probe point is run only when the callee is called from
                     the target function (add the -DSTAP_CALLEE_MATCHALL  directive  to  override
                     this when calling stap(1)).

                     Note that only callees that can be statically determined are available.  For
                     example, calls through function pointers are not  available.   Additionally,
                     calls  to  functions  located  in  other  objects  (e.g.  libraries) are not
                     available (instead use another probe point). This feature will only work for
                     code compiled with GCC 4.7+.

              .callees
                     Shortcut  for  .callee("*"),  which  places  a  probe  on all callees of the
                     function.

              .callees(DEPTH)
                     Recursively places probes on callees. For example,  .callees(2)  will  probe
                     both  callees  of  the target function, as well as callees of those callees.
                     And .callees(3) goes one level deeper, etc...  A callee probe at depth N  is
                     only  triggered  when  the  N callers in the callstack match those that were
                     statically determined during analysis (this also  may  be  overridden  using
                     -DSTAP_CALLEE_MATCHALL).

       In  the  above  list  of  probe  points, MPATTERN stands for a string literal that aims to
       identify the loaded kernel module of  interest.  For  in-tree  kernel  modules,  the  name
       suffices  (e.g.  "btrfs").  The  name may also include the "*", "[]", and "?" wildcards to
       match multiple in-tree modules. Out-of-tree modules are also supported by  specifying  the
       full path to the ko file. Wildcards are not supported. The file must follow the convention
       of being named <module_name>.ko (characters ',' and '-' are replaced by '_').

       LPATTERN stands for a source program label.  It  may  also  contain  "*",  "[]",  and  "?"
       wildcards.  PATTERN  stands  for  a  string  literal  that aims to identify a point in the
       program.  It is made up of three parts:

       •   The first part is the name of a function, as would appear in the nm program's  output.
           This part may use the "*" and "?" wildcarding operators to match multiple names.

       •   The  second part is optional and begins with the "@" character.  It is followed by the
           path to the source file containing the function, which may include a wildcard pattern,
           such  as  mm/slab*.   If it does not match as is, an implicit "*/" is optionally added
           before the pattern, so that a script need only name  the  last  few  components  of  a
           possibly long source directory path.

       •   Finally,  the  third  part is optional if the file name part was given, and identifies
           the line number in the source file preceded by a ":" or a "+".   The  line  number  is
           assumed  to  be  an  absolute  line  number  if  preceded by a ":", or relative to the
           declaration line of the function if preceded by a "+".  All the lines in the  function
           can  be  matched  with ":*".  A range of lines x through y can be matched with ":x-y".
           Ranges and specific lines can be mixed using commas, e.g. ":x,y-z".

       As an alternative, PATTERN may be a numeric constant,  indicating  an  address.   Such  an
       address  may  be  found from symbol tables of the appropriate kernel / module object file.
       It is verified against known statement code boundaries, and will be relocated for  use  at
       run time.

       In  guru  mode only, absolute kernel-space addresses may be specified with the ".absolute"
       suffix.   Such  an  address  is  considered  already  relocated,  as  if  it   came   from
       /proc/kallsyms, so it cannot be checked against statement/instruction boundaries.

   CONTEXT VARIABLES
       Many  of  the source-level context variables, such as function parameters, locals, globals
       visible in the compilation unit, may be visible to probe  handlers.   They  may  refer  to
       these  variables  by  prefixing  their  name  with "$" within the scripts.  In addition, a
       special syntax allows limited traversal of structures, pointers, and arrays.  More  syntax
       allows  pretty-printing  of  individual  variables or their groups.  See also @cast.  Note
       that variables may be inaccessible due to them  being  paged  out,  or  for  a  few  other
       reasons.  See also man error::fault(7stap).

       Functions called from DWARF class probe points and from process.mark probes may also refer
       to context variables.

       $var   refers to an in-scope variable or thread local storage variable "var".  If it's  an
              integer-like  type,  it  will  be  cast  to  a 64-bit int for systemtap script use.
              String-like pointers (char *) may be copied to systemtap string  values  using  the
              kernel_string or user_string functions.

       @var("varname")
              an alternative syntax for $varname

       @var("varname","module")
              The  global  variable or global thread local storage variable in scope of the given
              module already loaded into the current probed process.  Useful to get  an  exported
              variable  in  a  shared  library  loaded into the process being probed, or a global
              variable in a process while a shared library probe is being  executed.   For  user-
              space modules only.  For example: @var("_r_debug","/lib/ld-linux.so.2")

       @var("varname@src/file.c")
              refers  to the global (either file local or external) variable varname defined when
              the file src/file.c was compiled. The CU in which the variable is resolved  is  the
              first  CU in the module of the probe point which matches the given file name at the
              end and has the shortest file name path (e.g. given @var("foo@bar/baz.c")  and  CUs
              with  file name paths src/sub/module/bar/baz.c and src/bar/baz.c the second CU will
              be chosen to resolve the (file) global variable foo

       @var("varname@src/file.c","module")
              The global variable in scope of the given CU, defined in the given module, even  if
              the variable is static (so the name is not unique without the CU name).

       $var->field traversal via a structure's or a pointer's field.  This
              generalized  indirection operator may be repeated to follow more levels.  Note that
              the .  operator is not used for plain structure members, only -> for both purposes.
              (This  is  because  "."  is  reserved for string concatenation.) Also note that for
              direct dereferencing of $var pointer {kernel,user}_{char,int,...}($var)  should  be
              used. (Refer to stapfuncs(5) for more details.)

       $return
              is  available  in  return probes only for functions that are declared with a return
              value, which can be determined using @defined($return).

       $var[N]
              indexes into an array.  The index given with a literal number or even an  arbitrary
              numeric expression.

       A number of operators exist for such basic context variable expressions:

       $$vars expands to a character string that is equivalent to

              sprintf("parm1=%x ... parmN=%x var1=%x ... varN=%x",
                      parm1, ..., parmN, var1, ..., varN)

              for  each  variable  in scope at the probe point.  Some values may be printed as =?
              if their run-time location cannot be found.

       $$locals
              expands to a subset of $$vars for only local variables.

       $$parms
              expands to a subset of $$vars for only function parameters.

       $$return
              is available in return probes only.  It expands to a string that is  equivalent  to
              sprintf("return=%x", $return) if the probed function has a return value, or else an
              empty string.

       & $EXPR
              expands to the  address  of  the  given  context  variable  expression,  if  it  is
              addressable.

       @defined($EXPR)
              expands  to 1 or 0 iff the given context variable expression is resolvable, for use
              in conditionals such as

              @defined($foo->bar) ? $foo->bar : 0

       @probewrite($VAR)
              see the PROBES section of stap(1).

       $EXPR$ expands to a string with all of $EXPR's members, equivalent to

              sprintf("{.a=%i, .b=%u, .c={...}, .d=[...]}",
                       $EXPR->a, $EXPR->b)

       $EXPR$$
              expands to a string with all of $var's members and submembers, equivalent to

              sprintf("{.a=%i, .b=%u, .c={.x=%p, .y=%c}, .d=[%i, ...]}",
                      $EXPR->a, $EXPR->b, $EXPR->c->x, $EXPR->c->y, $EXPR->d[0])

       @errno expands to the last value the C library global variable errno was set to.

   MORE ON RETURN PROBES
       For the  kernel  ".return"  probes,  only  a  certain  fixed  number  of  returns  may  be
       outstanding.   The  default  is a relatively small number, on the order of a few times the
       number of physical CPUs.  If many different threads concurrently call  the  same  blocking
       function,  such  as  futex(2)  or  read(2),  this  limit  could  be  exceeded, and skipped
       "kretprobes" would be reported by "stap -t".  To work around this, specify a

              probe FOO.return.maxactive(NNN)

       suffix, with a large enough NNN  to  cover  all  expected  concurrently  blocked  threads.
       Alternately, use the

              stap -DKRETACTIVE=NNNN

       stap command line macro setting to override the default for all ".return" probes.

       For  ".return"  probes, context variables other than the "$return" may be accessible, as a
       convenience for a script programmer wishing to access function parameters.   These  values
       are  snapshots  taken at the time of function entry.  (Local variables within the function
       are not generally accessible, since those variables did not exist in allocated/initialized
       form  at  the  snapshot  moment.)   These  entry-snapshot variables should be accessed via
       @entry($var).

       In addition, arbitrary entry-time expressions can also be saved for ".return" probes using
       the @entry(expr) operator.  For example, one can compute the elapsed time of a function:

              probe kernel.function("do_filp_open").return {
                  println( get_timeofday_us() - @entry(get_timeofday_us()) )
              }

       The  following  table  summarizes  how  values  related  to  a  function parameter context
       variable, a pointer named addr, may be accessed from a .return probe.

       at-entry value   past-exit value

       $addr            not available
       $addr->x->y      @cast(@entry($addr),"struct zz")->x->y
       $addr[0]         {kernel,user}_{char,int,...}(& $addr[0])

   DWARFLESS
       In absence of debugging information, entry & exit points of kernel & module functions  can
       be  probed  using  the "kprobe" family of probes.  However, these do not permit looking up
       the arguments / local variables of the function.  Following constructs are supported :

              kprobe.function(FUNCTION)
              kprobe.function(FUNCTION).call
              kprobe.function(FUNCTION).return
              kprobe.module(NAME).function(FUNCTION)
              kprobe.module(NAME).function(FUNCTION).call
              kprobe.module(NAME).function(FUNCTION).return
              kprobe.statement(ADDRESS).absolute

       Probes of type function are recommended for  kernel  functions,  whereas  probes  of  type
       module  are  recommended  for  probing  functions  of  the  specified module.  In case the
       absolute address of a kernel  or  module  function  is  known,  statement  probes  can  be
       utilized.

       Note  that  FUNCTION and MODULE names must not contain wildcards, or the probe will not be
       registered.  Also, statement probes must be run under guru-mode only.

   USER-SPACE
       Support for user-space probing is available for  kernels  that  are  configured  with  the
       utrace  extensions,  or  have  the  uprobes  facility in linux 3.5.  (Various kernel build
       configuration options need to be enabled; systemtap will advise if these are missing.)

       There are several forms.  First, a non-symbolic probe point:

              process(PID).statement(ADDRESS).absolute

       is analogous to kernel.statement(ADDRESS).absolute  in  that  both  use  raw  (unverified)
       virtual  addresses  and  provide  no $variables.  The target PID parameter must identify a
       running process, and ADDRESS should identify a valid instruction address.  All threads  of
       that process will be probed.

       Second, non-symbolic user-kernel interface events handled by utrace may be probed:

              process(PID).begin
              process("FULLPATH").begin
              process.begin
              process(PID).thread.begin
              process("FULLPATH").thread.begin
              process.thread.begin
              process(PID).end
              process("FULLPATH").end
              process.end
              process(PID).thread.end
              process("FULLPATH").thread.end
              process.thread.end
              process(PID).syscall
              process("FULLPATH").syscall
              process.syscall
              process(PID).syscall.return
              process("FULLPATH").syscall.return
              process.syscall.return
              process(PID).insn
              process("FULLPATH").insn
              process(PID).insn.block
              process("FULLPATH").insn.block

       A  process.begin  probe  gets  called  when  new process described by PID or FULLPATH gets
       created.  In addition, it is called once from the context of each preexisting process,  at
       systemtap script startup.  This is useful to track live processes.  A process.thread.begin
       probe gets called when a new  thread  described  by  PID  or  FULLPATH  gets  created.   A
       process.end  probe  gets  called  when  process  described  by  PID  or  FULLPATH dies.  A
       process.thread.end probe gets called when a thread described by PID or FULLPATH  dies.   A
       process.syscall  probe  gets  called  when  a  thread described by PID or FULLPATH makes a
       system call.  The system call number is available in the $syscall  context  variable,  and
       the  first  6  arguments  of the system call are available in the $argN (ex. $arg1, $arg2,
       ...) context variable.  A process.syscall.return probe gets called when a thread described
       by PID or FULLPATH returns from a system call.  The system call number is available in the
       $syscall context variable, and the return value of the system call  is  available  in  the
       $return  context  variable.   A  process.insn  probe  gets called for every single-stepped
       instruction of the process described by PID or FULLPATH.  A process.insn.block probe  gets
       called for every block-stepped instruction of the process described by PID or FULLPATH.

       If  a  process  probe  is  specified  without  a PID or FULLPATH, all user threads will be
       probed.  However, if systemtap was invoked with the -c or -x options, then process  probes
       are  restricted to the process hierarchy associated with the target process.  If a process
       probe is unspecified (i.e. without a PID or FULLPATH), but with the -c option, the PATH of
       the  -c cmd will be heuristically filled into the process PATH. In that case, only command
       parameters are allowed in the -c command (i.e. no  command  substitution  allowed  and  no
       occurrences of any of these characters: '|&;<>(){}').

       Third,  symbolic static instrumentation compiled into programs and shared libraries may be
       probed:

              process("PATH").mark("LABEL")
              process("PATH").provider("PROVIDER").mark("LABEL")
              process(PID).mark("LABEL")
              process(PID).provider("PROVIDER").mark("LABEL")

       A .mark probe gets called via a static probe  which  is  defined  in  the  application  by
       STAP_PROBE1(PROVIDER,LABEL,arg1),  which are macros defined in sys/sdt.h.  The PROVIDER is
       an arbitrary application identifier, LABEL is the marker site identifier, and arg1 is  the
       integer-typed  argument.   STAP_PROBE1  is used for probes with 1 argument, STAP_PROBE2 is
       used for probes with 2 arguments, and so on.  The arguments of the probe are available  in
       the  context variables $arg1, $arg2, ...  An alternative to using the STAP_PROBE macros is
       to use the dtrace script to create custom macros.  Additionally, the variables $$name  and
       $$provider  are  available  as  parts  of the probe point name.  The sys/sdt.h macro names
       DTRACE_PROBE* are available as aliases for STAP_PROBE*.

       Finally, full symbolic source-level probes in user-space programs and shared libraries are
       supported.   These  are exactly analogous to the symbolic DWARF-based kernel/module probes
       described  above.   They  expose  the  same  sorts  of  context  $variables  for  function
       parameters, local variables, and so on.

              process("PATH").function("NAME")
              process("PATH").statement("*@FILE.c:123")
              process("PATH").plt("NAME")
              process("PATH").library("PATH").plt("NAME")
              process("PATH").library("PATH").function("NAME")
              process("PATH").library("PATH").statement("*@FILE.c:123")
              process("PATH").function("*").return
              process("PATH").function("myfun").label("foo")
              process("PATH").function("foo").callee("bar")
              process("PATH").plt("NAME").return
              process(PID).function("NAME")
              process(PID).statement("*@FILE.c:123")
              process(PID).plt("NAME")

       Note  that  for  all process probes, PATH names refer to executables that are searched the
       same way shells do: relative to the working directory if they  contain  a  "/"  character,
       otherwise in $PATH.  If PATH names refer to scripts, the actual interpreters (specified in
       the script in the first line after the #! characters) are probed.

       Tapset process probes placed in the special directory $prefix/share/systemtap/tapset/PATH/
       with  relative  paths  will have their process parameter prefixed with the location of the
       tapset. For example,

              process("foo").function("NAME")

       expands to

              process("/usr/bin/foo").function("NAME")

       when placed in $prefix/share/systemtap/tapset/PATH/usr/bin/

       If PATH is a process component parameter referring to shared libraries then all  processes
       that  map  it  at  runtime  would be selected for probing.  If PATH is a library component
       parameter referring to  shared  libraries  then  the  process  specified  by  the  process
       component  would  be  selected.   Note  that  the PATH pattern in a library component will
       always apply to libraries statically determined to be in use by the process. However,  you
       may  also  specify  the full path to any library file even if not statically needed by the
       process.

       A .plt probe will probe functions in the program linkage table corresponding to  the  rest
       of  the probe point.  .plt can be specified as a shorthand for .plt("*").  The symbol name
       is available as a $$name context variable; function arguments  are  not  available,  since
       PLTs  are  processed  without debuginfo.  A .plt.return probe places a probe at the moment
       after the return from the named function.

       If the PATH string contains wildcards as in the MPATTERN case, then standard  globbing  is
       performed to find all matching paths.  In this case, the $PATH environment variable is not
       used.

       If systemtap was invoked with the -c or -x options, then process probes are restricted  to
       the process hierarchy associated with the target process.

   JAVA
       Support  for  probing  Java methods is available using Byteman as a backend. Byteman is an
       instrumentation tool from the JBoss project which systemtap can use to monitor invocations
       for a specific method or line in a Java program.

       Systemtap does so by generating a Byteman script listing the probes to instrument and then
       invoking the Byteman bminstall utility.

       This Java instrumentation support is currently a prototype feature with major limitations.
       Moreover,  Java  probing  currently  does  not work across users; the stap script must run
       (with appropriate permissions) under the same user that the  Java  process  being  probed.
       (Thus a stap script under root currently cannot probe Java methods in a non-root-user Java
       process.)

       The first probe type refers to Java processes by the name of the Java process:

              java("PNAME").class("CLASSNAME").method("PATTERN")
              java("PNAME").class("CLASSNAME").method("PATTERN").return

       The PNAME argument must be a pre-existing jvm pid, and be identifiable via a jps listing.

       The PATTERN parameter specifies the signature of the Java method to probe.  The  signature
       must consist of the exact name of the method, followed by a bracketed list of the types of
       the arguments, for instance "myMethod(int,double,Foo)". Wildcards are not supported.

       The probe can be set to trigger at a specific line within the method by appending  a  line
       number with colon, just as in other types of probes: "myMethod(int,double,Foo):245".

       The  CLASSNAME  parameter  identifies the Java class the method belongs to, either with or
       without the package qualification. By default, the probe only triggers on  descendants  of
       the  class  that  do  not  override  the method definition of the original class. However,
       CLASSNAME can take an optional caret prefix, as in ^org.my.MyClass, which  specifies  that
       the  probe  should  also  trigger on all descendants of MyClass that override the original
       method. For instance, every method with signature foo(int) in program org.my.MyApp can  be
       probed at once using

              java("org.my.MyApp").class("^java.lang.Object").method("foo(int)")

       The second probe type works analogously, but refers to Java processes by PID:

              java(PID).class("CLASSNAME").method("PATTERN")
              java(PID).class("CLASSNAME").method("PATTERN").return

       (PIDs for an already running process can be obtained using the jps(1) utility.)

       Context  variables  defined within java probes include $arg1 through $arg10 (for up to the
       first 10 arguments of a method), represented as character-pointers for the toString() form
       of  each actual argument.  The arg1 through arg10 script variables provide access to these
       as ordinary strings, fetched via user_string_warn().

       Prior to systemtap version 3.1, $arg1 through $arg10  could  contain  either  integers  or
       character  pointers, depending on the types of the objects being passed to each particular
       java method.  This previous behaviour may be invoked with the stap --compatible=3.0 flag.

   PROCFS
       These probe points allow procfs "files" in /proc/systemtap/MODNAME to be created, read and
       written  using  a  permission  that  may be modified using the proper umask value. Default
       permissions are 0400 for read probes, and 0200 for write probes. If both a read and  write
       probe  are  being used on the same file, a default permission of 0600 will be used.  Using
       procfs.umask(0040).read would result in a 0404 permission set for the file.   (MODNAME  is
       the  name  of  the  systemtap module). The proc filesystem is a pseudo-filesystem which is
       used as an interface to kernel data structures. There are  several  probe  point  variants
       supported by the translator:

              procfs("PATH").read
              procfs("PATH").umask(UMASK).read
              procfs("PATH").read.maxsize(MAXSIZE)
              procfs("PATH").umask(UMASK).maxsize(MAXSIZE)
              procfs("PATH").write
              procfs("PATH").umask(UMASK).write
              procfs.read
              procfs.umask(UMASK).read
              procfs.read.maxsize(MAXSIZE)
              procfs.umask(UMASK).read.maxsize(MAXSIZE)
              procfs.write
              procfs.umask(UMASK).write

       Note  that there are a few differences when procfs probes are used in the stapbpf runtime.
       FIFO special files are used instead of proc filesystem files.  These files are created  in
       /var/tmp/systemtap-USER/MODNAME.   (USER  is  the  name of the user).  Additionally, users
       cannot create both read and write probes on the same file.

       PATH  is  the  file  name  (relative  to  /proc/systemtap/MODNAME  or  /var/tmp/systemtap-
       USER/MODNAME) to be created.  If no PATH is specified (as in the last two variants above),
       PATH defaults to "command". The file name "__stdin" is used internally  by  systemtap  for
       input  probes  and  should  not  be  used as a PATH for procfs probes; see the input probe
       section below.

       When a user reads /proc/systemtap/MODNAME/PATH  (normal  runtime)  or  /var/tmp/systemtap-
       USER/MODNAME  (stapbpf  runtime),  the  corresponding procfs read probe is triggered.  The
       string data to be read should be assigned to a variable named $value, like this:

              procfs("PATH").read { $value = "100\n" }

       When   a   user   writes   into   /proc/systemtap/MODNAME/PATH   (normal    runtime)    or
       /var/tmp/systemtap-USER/MODNAME (stapbpf runtime), the corresponding procfs write probe is
       triggered.  The data the user wrote is available in the string variable named $value, like
       this:

              procfs("PATH").write { printf("user wrote: %s", $value) }

       MAXSIZE  is  the  size of the procfs read buffer.  Specifying MAXSIZE allows larger procfs
       output.  If no MAXSIZE is specified, the procfs read buffer defaults to STP_PROCFS_BUFSIZE
       (which  defaults  to MAXSTRINGLEN, the maximum length of a string).  If setting the procfs
       read buffers for more than one  file  is  needed,  it  may  be  easiest  to  override  the
       STP_PROCFS_BUFSIZE definition.  Here's an example of using MAXSIZE:

              procfs.read.maxsize(1024) {
                  $value = "long string..."
                  $value .= "another long string..."
                  $value .= "another long string..."
                  $value .= "another long string..."
              }

   INPUT
       These  probe  points  make  input  from stdin available to the script during runtime.  The
       translator currently supports two variants of this family:

              input.char
              input.line

       input.char is triggered each time a character is read from stdin. The current character is
       available  in  the  string  variable  named char.  There is no newline buffering; the next
       character is read from stdin as soon as it becomes available.

       input.line causes all characters read from stdin to be buffered until a newline  is  read,
       at  which point the probe will be triggered. The current line of characters (including the
       newline) is made available in a string variable  named  line.   Note  that  no  more  than
       MAXSTRINGLEN  characters  will be buffered. Any additional characters will not be included
       in line.

       Input probes are aliases for procfs("__stdin").write.  Systemtap reconfigures stdin if the
       presence  of  this  procfs  probe is detected, therefore "__stdin" should not be used as a
       path argument for procfs probes.  Additionally, input probes will not work with the -F and
       --remote options.

   NETFILTER HOOKS
       These  probe  points allow observation of network packets using the netfilter mechanism. A
       netfilter probe in systemtap corresponds to a netfilter  hook  function  in  the  original
       netfilter  probes  API.  It  is  probably more convenient to use tapset::netfilter(3stap),
       which wraps the  primitive  netfilter  hooks  and  does  the  work  of  extracting  useful
       information from the context variables.

       There are several probe point variants supported by the translator:

              netfilter.hook("HOOKNAME").pf("PROTOCOL_F")
              netfilter.pf("PROTOCOL_F").hook("HOOKNAME")
              netfilter.hook("HOOKNAME").pf("PROTOCOL_F").priority("PRIORITY")
              netfilter.pf("PROTOCOL_F").hook("HOOKNAME").priority("PRIORITY")

       PROTOCOL_F  is  the  protocol  family  to  listen  for,  currently  one  of  NFPROTO_IPV4,
       NFPROTO_IPV6, NFPROTO_ARP, or NFPROTO_BRIDGE.

       HOOKNAME is the point, or 'hook', in the protocol stack at which to intercept the  packet.
       The  available  hook names for each protocol family are taken from the kernel header files
       <linux/netfilter_ipv4.h>,    <linux/netfilter_ipv6.h>,     <linux/netfilter_arp.h>     and
       <linux/netfilter_bridge.h>.  For  instance,  allowable  hook  names  for  NFPROTO_IPV4 are
       NF_INET_PRE_ROUTING,    NF_INET_LOCAL_IN,    NF_INET_FORWARD,    NF_INET_LOCAL_OUT,    and
       NF_INET_POST_ROUTING.

       PRIORITY  is  an  integer  priority  giving  the  order in which the probe point should be
       triggered relative to any other netfilter hook functions which trigger on the same packet.
       Hook  functions  execute  on each packet in order from smallest priority number to largest
       priority number. If no PRIORITY is specified (as in the first  two  probe  point  variants
       above), PRIORITY defaults to "0".

       There  are  a number of predefined priority names of the form NF_IP_PRI_* and NF_IP6_PRI_*
       which  are   defined   in   the   kernel   header   files   <linux/netfilter_ipv4.h>   and
       <linux/netfilter_ipv6.h>  respectively.  The  script  is permitted to use these instead of
       specifying an integer priority. (The  probe  points  for  NFPROTO_ARP  and  NFPROTO_BRIDGE
       currently  do not expose any named hook priorities to the script writer.)  Thus, allowable
       ways to specify the priority include:

              priority("255")
              priority("NF_IP_PRI_SELINUX_LAST")

       A script using guru mode is permitted to specify any identifier or number as the parameter
       for  hook, pf, and priority. This feature should be used with caution, as the parameter is
       inserted verbatim into the C code generated by systemtap.

       The netfilter probe points define the following context variables:

       $hooknum
              The hook number.

       $skb   The address of the sk_buff struct representing the packet. See <linux/skbuff.h> for
              details   on   how   to   use   this   struct,  or  alternatively  use  the  tapset
              tapset::netfilter(3stap) for easy access to key information.

       $in    The address of the net_device struct representing the network device on  which  the
              packet  was  received  (if  any). May be 0 if the device is unknown or undefined at
              that stage in the protocol stack.

       $out   The address of the net_device struct representing the network device on  which  the
              packet  will  be  sent  (if any). May be 0 if the device is unknown or undefined at
              that stage in the protocol stack.

       $verdict
              (Guru  mode   only.)   Assigning   one   of   the   verdict   values   defined   in
              <linux/netfilter.h>  to  this  variable  alters  the further progress of the packet
              through the protocol stack. For instance, the following guru mode script forces all
              ipv6 network packets to be dropped:

              probe netfilter.pf("NFPROTO_IPV6").hook("NF_IP6_PRE_ROUTING") {
                $verdict = 0 /* nf_drop */
              }

              For  convenience,  unlike  the  primitive  probe  points discussed here, the probes
              defined in tapset::netfilter(3stap) export  the  lowercase  names  of  the  verdict
              constants (e.g. NF_DROP becomes nf_drop) as local variables.

   KERNEL TRACEPOINTS
       This  family  of  probe  points  hooks  up to static probing tracepoints inserted into the
       kernel or modules.  As with markers, these tracepoints are special macro calls inserted by
       kernel  developers  to make probing faster and more reliable than with DWARF-based probes,
       and DWARF debugging information is not required to probe tracepoints.  Tracepoints have an
       extra advantage of more strongly-typed parameters than markers.

       Tracepoint  probes look like: kernel.trace("name").  The tracepoint name string, which may
       contain the usual wildcard characters, is matched against the names defined by the  kernel
       developers  in  the tracepoint header files. To restrict the search to specific subsystems
       (e.g. sched, ext3, etc...), the following syntax can be used: kernel.trace("system:name").
       The tracepoint system string may also contain the usual wildcard characters.

       The  handler  associated  with  a  tracepoint-based probe may read the optional parameters
       specified at the macro call site.  These are named according to  the  declaration  by  the
       tracepoint  author.   For example, the tracepoint probe kernel.trace("sched:sched_switch")
       provides the parameters $prev and $next.  If the parameter is a  complex  type,  as  in  a
       struct  pointer,  then  a  script  can access fields with the same syntax as DWARF $target
       variables.  Also, tracepoint parameters cannot be modified, but in guru-mode a script  may
       modify fields of parameters.

       The subsystem and name of the tracepoint are available in $$system and $$name and a string
       of name=value pairs for all parameters  of  the  tracepoint  is  available  in  $$vars  or
       $$parms.

   KERNEL MARKERS (OBSOLETE)
       This  family of probe points hooks up to an older style of static probing markers inserted
       into older kernels or modules.  These markers are special STAP_MARK macro  calls  inserted
       by  kernel  developers  to  make  probing  faster  and more reliable than with DWARF-based
       probes.  Further, DWARF debugging information is not required to probe markers.

       Marker  probe  points  begin  with  kernel.   The  next  part  names  the  marker  itself:
       mark("name").  The marker name string, which may contain the usual wildcard characters, is
       matched against the names given to the marker macros when the  kernel  and/or  module  was
       compiled.     Optionally,  you can specify format("format").  Specifying the marker format
       string allows differentiation between two markers with the same name but different  marker
       format strings.

       The  handler  associated  with  a  marker-based  probe  may  read  the optional parameters
       specified at the macro call site.  These are named $arg1 through $argNN, where NN  is  the
       number  of parameters supplied by the macro.  Number and string parameters are passed in a
       type-safe manner.

       The marker format string associated with a marker is available in $format.  And  also  the
       marker name string is available in $name.

   HARDWARE BREAKPOINTS
       This family of probes is used to set hardware watchpoints for a given
        (global) kernel symbol. The probes take three components as inputs :

       1. The virtual address / name of the kernel symbol to be traced is supplied as argument to
       this class of probes. ( Probes for only data  segment  variables  are  supported.  Probing
       local variables of a function cannot be done.)

       2. Nature of access to be probed : a.  .write probe gets triggered when a write happens at
       the specified address/symbol name.  b.  rw probe is triggered when either a read or  write
       happens.

       3.   .length  (optional)  Users  have  the option of specifying the address interval to be
       probed using "length" constructs. The  user-specified  length  gets  approximated  to  the
       closest possible address length that the architecture can support. If the specified length
       exceeds the limits imposed  by  architecture,  an  error  message  is  flagged  and  probe
       registration  fails.   Wherever  'length'  is  not  specified,  the  translator requests a
       hardware breakpoint probe of length 1. It should be noted that the "length"  construct  is
       not valid with symbol names.

       Following constructs are supported :

              probe kernel.data(ADDRESS).write
              probe kernel.data(ADDRESS).rw
              probe kernel.data(ADDRESS).length(LEN).write
              probe kernel.data(ADDRESS).length(LEN).rw
              probe kernel.data("SYMBOL_NAME").write
              probe kernel.data("SYMBOL_NAME").rw

       This  set  of  probes  make use of the debug registers of the processor, which is a scarce
       resource. (4 on x86 , 1 on powerpc ) The script translation flags  a  warning  if  a  user
       requests  more  hardware  breakpoint  probes  than  the  limits  set  by architecture. For
       example,a pass-2 warning is flashed when an input script requests  5  hardware  breakpoint
       probes on an x86 system while x86 architecture supports a maximum of 4 breakpoints.  Users
       are cautioned to set probes judiciously.

   PERF
       This family of probe points interfaces to  the  kernel  "perf  event"  infrastructure  for
       controlling  hardware performance counters.  The events being attached to are described by
       the "type", "config" fields of the  perf_event_attr  structure,  and  are  sampled  at  an
       interval governed by the "sample_period" and "sample_freq" fields.

       These fields are made available to systemtap scripts using the following syntax:

              probe perf.type(NN).config(MM).sample(XX)
              probe perf.type(NN).config(MM).hz(XX)
              probe perf.type(NN).config(MM)
              probe perf.type(NN).config(MM).process("PROC")
              probe perf.type(NN).config(MM).counter("COUNTER")
              probe perf.type(NN).config(MM).process("PROC").counter("NAME")

       The systemtap probe handler is called once per XX increments of the underlying performance
       counter when using the .sample field or at a frequency in hertz when using the .hz  field.
       When not specified, the default behavior is to sample at a count of 1000000.  The range of
       valid  type/config  is  described  by  the  perf_event_open(2)  system  call,  and/or  the
       linux/perf_event.h  file.   Invalid  combinations  or exhausted hardware counter resources
       result in errors during systemtap script startup.  Systemtap  does  not  sanity-check  the
       values:  it  merely  passes them through to the kernel for error- and safety-checking.  By
       default the perf event probe is systemwide unless .process is specified, which  will  bind
       the probe to a specific task.  If the name is omitted then it is inferred from the stap -c
       argument.   A perf event can be read on demand using .counter.  The body of the perf probe
       handler  will  not be invoked for a .counter probe; instead, the counter is read in a user
       space probe via:

          process("PROC").statement("func@file") {stat <<< @perf("NAME")}

   PYTHON
       Support for probing python 2 and python 3 function is available with the help of an  extra
       python  support  module. Note that the debuginfo for the version of python being probed is
       required. To run a python script with the extra python support module you'd  add  the  '-m
       HelperSDT' option to your python command, like this:

              stap foo.stp -c "python -m HelperSDT foo.py"

       Python probes look like the following:

              python2.module("MPATTERN").function("PATTERN")
              python2.module("MPATTERN").function("PATTERN").call
              python2.module("MPATTERN").function("PATTERN").return
              python3.module("MPATTERN").function("PATTERN")
              python3.module("MPATTERN").function("PATTERN").call
              python3.module("MPATTERN").function("PATTERN").return

       The  list  above  includes  multiple  variants  and  modifiers  which  provide  additional
       functionality or filters. They are:

              .function
                     Places a probe at the beginning of the named  function  by  default,  unless
                     modified by PATTERN. Parameters are available as context variables.

              .call  Places  a  probe  at  the  beginning  of  the named function. Parameters are
                     available as context variables.

              .return
                     Places a probe at the moment before the  return  from  the  named  function.
                     Parameters  and  local/global  python  variables  are  available  as context
                     variables.

       PATTERN stands for a string literal that aims to identify a point in the  python  program.
       It is made up of three parts:

       •   The  first  part  is  the  name  of  a  function  (e.g.  "foo")  or class method (e.g.
           "bar.baz"). This part may use the "*" and "?" wildcarding operators to match  multiple
           names.

       •   The  second part is optional and begins with the "@" character.  It is followed by the
           path to the source file containing the function, which may include a wildcard pattern.
           The python path is searched for a matching filename.

       •   Finally,  the  third  part is optional if the file name part was given, and identifies
           the line number in the source file preceded by a ":" or a "+".   The  line  number  is
           assumed  to  be  an  absolute  line  number  if  preceded by a ":", or relative to the
           declaration line of the function if preceded by a "+".  All the lines in the  function
           can  be  matched  with ":*".  A range of lines x through y can be matched with ":x-y".
           Ranges and specific lines can be mixed using commas, e.g. ":x,y-z".

       In the above list of probe points, MPATTERN stands for a python module or script name that
       names  the  python  module  of  interest.  This  part  may use the "*" and "?" wildcarding
       operators to match multiple names. The python path is searched for a matching filename.

EXAMPLES

       Here are some example probe points, defining the associated events.

       begin, end, end
              refers to the startup and normal shutdown  of  the  session.   In  this  case,  the
              handler would run once during startup and twice during shutdown.

       timer.jiffies(1000).randomize(200)
              refers to a periodic interrupt, every 1000 +/- 200 jiffies.

       kernel.function("*init*"), kernel.function("*exit*")
              refers to all kernel functions with "init" or "exit" in the name.

       kernel.function("*@kernel/time.c:240")
              refers  to any functions within the "kernel/time.c" file that span line 240.   Note
              that this is  not  a  probe  at  the  statement  at  that  line  number.   Use  the
              kernel.statement probe instead.

       kernel.trace("sched_*")
              refers to all scheduler-related (really, prefixed) tracepoints in the kernel.

       kernel.mark("getuid")
              refers to an obsolete STAP_MARK(getuid, ...) macro call in the kernel.

       module("usb*").function("*sync*").return
              refers to the moment of return from all functions with "sync" in the name in any of
              the USB drivers.

       kernel.statement(0xc0044852)
              refers to the first byte of the statement whose compiled instructions  include  the
              given address in the kernel.

       kernel.statement("*@kernel/time.c:296")
              refers to the statement of line 296 within "kernel/time.c".

       kernel.statement("bio_init@fs/bio.c+3")
              refers to the statement at line bio_init+3 within "fs/bio.c".

       kernel.data("pid_max").write
              refers to a hardware breakpoint of type "write" set on pid_max

       syscall.*.return
              refers to the group of probe aliases with any name in the third position

SEE ALSO

       stap(1),
       probe::*(3stap),
       tapset::*(3stap)

                                                                                STAPPROBES(3stap)