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Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 13.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 14.\" without specific prior written permission. 15.\" 16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 17.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 18.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 19.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 20.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 21.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 22.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 23.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 24.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 25.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 26.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 27.\" 28.\" @(#)kdump.1 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/6/93 29.\" $FreeBSD$ 30.\" 31.Dd July 16, 2022 32.Dt KDUMP 1 33.Os 34.Sh NAME 35.Nm kdump 36.Nd display kernel trace data 37.Sh SYNOPSIS 38.Nm 39.Op Fl dEnlHRSsTA 40.Op Fl f Ar trfile 41.Op Fl m Ar maxdata 42.Op Fl p Ar pid 43.Op Fl t Ar trstr 44.Sh DESCRIPTION 45The 46.Nm 47command displays the kernel trace files produced with 48.Xr ktrace 1 49in human readable format. 50By default, the file 51.Pa ktrace.out 52in the current directory is displayed. 53.Pp 54The options are as follows: 55.Bl -tag -width Fl 56.It Fl A 57Display the ABI of the traced process. 58.It Fl c 59Display the CPU number with each trace entry. 60.It Fl d 61Display all numbers in decimal. 62.It Fl E 63Display elapsed timestamps (time since beginning of trace). 64.It Fl f Ar trfile 65Display the specified file instead of 66.Pa ktrace.out . 67.It Fl H 68List the thread ID (tid) of the thread with each trace record, if available. 69If no thread ID is available, 0 will be printed. 70.It Fl l 71Loop reading the trace file, once the end-of-file is reached, waiting for 72more data. 73.It Fl m Ar maxdata 74Display at most 75.Ar maxdata 76bytes when decoding 77.Tn I/O . 78.It Fl n 79Suppress ad hoc translations. 80Normally 81.Nm 82tries to decode many system calls into a more human readable format. 83For example, 84.Xr ioctl 2 85values are replaced with the macro name and 86.Va errno 87values are replaced with the 88.Xr strerror 3 89string. 90Suppressing this feature yields a more consistent output format and is 91easily amenable to further processing. 92.It Fl p Ar pid 93Display only trace events that correspond to the process or thread 94.Ar pid . 95This may be useful when there are multiple processes or threads recorded in the 96same trace file. 97.It Fl R 98Display relative timestamps (time since previous entry). 99.It Fl r 100When decoding STRU records, display structure members such as UIDs, 101GIDs, dates etc. symbolically instead of numerically. 102.It Fl S 103Display system call numbers. 104.It Fl s 105Suppress display of I/O data. 106.It Fl T 107Display absolute timestamps for each entry (seconds since epoch). 108.It Fl t Ar trstr 109See the 110.Fl t 111option of 112.Xr ktrace 1 . 113.El 114.Pp 115The output format of 116.Nm 117is line oriented with several fields. 118The example below shows a section of a kdump generated by the following 119commands: 120.Bd -literal -offset indent 121?> ktrace echo "ktrace" 122 123?> kdump 124 125 85045 echo CALL writev(0x1,0x804b030,0x2) 126 85045 echo GIO fd 1 wrote 7 bytes 127 "ktrace 128 " 129 85045 echo RET writev 7 130.Ed 131.Pp 132The first field is the PID of the process being traced. 133The second field is the name of the program being traced. 134The third field is the operation that the kernel performed 135on behalf of the process. 136If thread IDs are being printed, then an additional thread ID column will be 137added to the output between the PID field and program name field. 138.Pp 139In the first line above, the kernel executes the 140.Xr writev 2 141system call on behalf of the process so this is a 142.Li CALL 143operation. 144The fourth field shows the system call that was executed, 145including its arguments. 146The 147.Xr writev 2 148system call takes a file descriptor, in this case 1, or standard 149output, then a pointer to the iovector to write, and the number of 150iovectors that are to be written. 151In the second line we see the operation was 152.Li GIO , 153for general I/O, and that file descriptor 1 had 154seven bytes written to it. 155This is followed by the seven bytes that were written, the string 156.Qq Li ktrace 157with a carriage return and line feed. 158The last line is the 159.Li RET 160operation, showing a return from the kernel, what system call we are 161returning from, and the return value that the process received. 162Seven bytes were written by the 163.Xr writev 2 164system call, so 7 is the return value. 165.Pp 166The possible operations are: 167.Bl -column -offset indent ".Li CALL" ".No data from user process" 168.It Sy Name Ta Sy Operation Ta Sy Fourth field 169.It Li CALL Ta enter syscall Ta syscall name and arguments 170.It Li RET Ta return from syscall Ta syscall name and return value 171.It Li NAMI Ta file name lookup Ta path to file 172.It Li GIO Ta general I/O Ta fd, read/write, number of bytes 173.It Li PSIG Ta signal Ta signal name, handler, mask, code 174.It Li CSW Ta context switch Ta stop/resume user/kernel wmesg 175.It Li USER Ta data from user process Ta the data 176.It Li STRU Ta various syscalls Ta structure 177.It Li SCTL Ta Xr sysctl 3 requests Ta MIB name 178.It Li PFLT Ta enter page fault Ta fault address and type 179.It Li PRET Ta return from page fault Ta fault result 180.El 181.Sh SEE ALSO 182.Xr ktrace 1 183.Sh HISTORY 184The 185.Nm 186command appeared in 187.Bx 4.4 . 188