exitsnoop-bpfcc(8)
Trace all process termination (exit, fatal signal). Uses Linux eBPF/bcc.
Description
exitsnoop
NAME
exitsnoop - Trace all process termination (exit, fatal signal). Uses Linux eBPF/bcc.
SYNOPSIS
exitsnoop [-h] [-t] [--utc] [-x] [-p PID] [--label LABEL] [--per-thread]
DESCRIPTION
exitsnoop traces process termination, showing the command name and reason for termination, either an exit or a fatal signal.
It catches processes of all users, processes in containers, as well as processes that become zombie.
This works by tracing the kernel sched_process_exit() function using dynamic tracing, and will need updating to match any changes to this function.
Since this uses BPF, only the root user can use this tool.
REQUIREMENTS
CONFIG_BPF and bcc.
OPTIONS
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-h |
Print usage message. |
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-t |
Include a timestamp column. |
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--utc |
Include a timestamp column, use UTC timezone. |
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-x |
Exclude successful exits, exit( 0 ) |
-p PID
Trace this process ID only (filtered in-kernel).
--label LABEL
Label each line with LABEL (default ’exit’) in first column (2nd if timestamp is present).
--per-thread
Trace per thread termination
EXAMPLES
Trace all process termination
# exitsnoop
Trace all process termination, and include timestamps:
# exitsnoop -t
Exclude successful exits, only
include non-zero exit codes and fatal
signals:
# exitsnoop -x
Trace PID 181 only:
# exitsnoop -p 181
Label each output line with ’EXIT’:
# exitsnoop --label EXIT
Trace per thread termination
# exitsnoop --per-thread
FIELDS
TIME-TZ
Time of process termination HH:MM:SS.sss with milliseconds, where TZ is the local time zone, ’UTC’ with --utc option.
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LABEL |
The optional label if --label option is used. This is useful with the -t option for timestamps when the output of several tracing tools is sorted into one combined output. | ||
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PCOMM |
Process/command name. | ||
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PID |
Process ID | ||
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PPID |
The process ID of the process that will be notified of PID termination. | ||
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TID |
Thread ID. |
EXIT_CODE
The exit code for exit() or the signal number for a fatal signal.
OVERHEAD
This traces the kernel sched_process_exit() function and prints output for each event. As the rate of this is generally expected to be low (< 1000/s), the overhead is also expected to be negligible. If you have an application that has a high rate of process termination, then test and understand overhead before use.
SOURCE
This is from bcc.
https://github.com/iovisor/bcc
Also look in the bcc distribution for a companion _examples.txt file containing example usage, output, and commentary for this tool.
OS
Linux
STABILITY
Unstable - in development.
AUTHOR
Arturo Martin-de-Nicolas
SEE ALSO
execsnoop(8)
See Also
- execsnoop(8)