NAME

Devel::DTrace::Provider - Create DTrace providers for Perl programs.

SYNOPSIS

# Create a provider in OO style:

use Devel::DTrace::Provider;
  
my $provider = Devel::DTrace::Provider->new('provider1', 'perl');
$provider->probe('probe1', 'string');
my $probes = $provider->enable;

$probes->{probe1}->fire('foo');

# or, with the Builder module, declaratively:

use Devel::DTrace::Provider::Builder;

provider 'provider1' => as {
  probe 'probe1', 'string';
};

probe1 { shift->fire('foo') } if probe1_is_enabled;

DESCRIPTION

This module lets you create DTrace providers for your Perl programs, from Perl - no further native code is required.

If you want to create providers to form part of a larger application, in a more declarative style, see Devel::DTrace::Provider::Builder -- this module provides the raw API, and is more suitable for small scripts.

When you create a provider and call its enable method, the following happens:

Native functions are created for each probe, containing the DTrace tracepoints to be enabled later by the kernel. DOF (DTrace Object Format) is then generated representing the provider and the tracepoints generated, and is inserted into the kernel via the DTrace helper device. Perl functions are created for each probe, so they can be fired from Perl code.

Your program does not need to run as root to create providers.

Providers created by this module should survive fork(), and become visible from both parent and child processes separately. Redefining a provider should be possible within the same process. These two features permit providers to be created by mod_perl applications.

This module may be installed on systems which do not support DTrace: in this case, no native code is built, and providers created by the Builder module will be stubbed out such that there is zero runtime overhead. This can be useful for applications which should run on multiple platforms while still having the probe code embedded.

Using Perl providers

Listing probes available

To list the probes created by your providers, invoke dtrace(1):

$ sudo /usr/sbin/dtrace -l -n 'myprovider*:::'

where "myprovider" is the name of your provider. To restrict this to a specific process by PID, replace the * by the pid:

$ sudo /usr/sbin/dtrace -l -n 'myprovider1234:::'
Observing probe activity

To just see the probes firing, use a command like:

$ sudo /usr/sbin/dtrace -n 'myprovider*:::'

If your script is not already running when you run dtrace(1), use the -Z flag, which indicates that dtrace(1) should wait for the probes to be created, rather than exiting with an error:

$ sudo /usr/sbin/dtrace -Z -n 'myprovider*:::'
Collecting probe arguments

To collect arguments from a specific probe, you can use the trace() action:

$ sudo /usr/sbin/dtrace -n 'myprovider*:::myprobe{ trace(arg0); }'

for an integer argument, and:

$ sudo /usr/sbin/dtrace -n 'myprovider*:::myprobe{ trace(copyinstr(arg0)); }'

for a string argument.

There are numerous other actions and predicates - see the DTrace guide for full details:

http://docs.sun.com/app/docs/doc/817-6223

CAVEATS

Platform support

This release supports DTrace on both Solaris and Mac OS X Leopard, but only on i386, 32 bit.

Support for Solaris on SPARC, OS X on PowerPC and 64 bit processes will follow.

Testing

The tests in the distribution do not actually verify the probes are created or fired, because DTrace requires additional privileges. It's also complex to start an external dtrace(1) to perform the testing.

However, they do verify that it's possible to run the provider creation code. I plan to add optional tests which do full testing if run with additional privileges.

METHODS

new($provider_name, $module_name)

Create a provider. Takes the name of the provider, and the name of the module it should appear to be in to DTrace (in native code this would be the library, kernel module, executable etc).

Returns an empty provider object.

probe($probe_name, @argument_types...)

Adds a probe to the provider, named $probe_name. Arguments are set up with the types specified. Supported types are 'string' (char *) and 'integer' (int). A maximum of eight arguments is supported.

enable()

Actually adds the provider to the running system. Croaks if there was an error inserting the provider into the kernel, or if memory could not be allocated for the tracepoint functions.

Returns a hash of probe "stubs", Devel::DTrace::Probe objects.

DEVELOPMENT

The source to Devel::DTrace::Provider is in github:

http://github.com/chrisa/perl-dtrace/tree/master/Devel-DTrace-Provider

AUTHOR

Chris Andrews <chris@nodnol.org>

LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2008, Chris Andrews <chris@nodnol.org>. All rights reserved.

This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.