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Generic Kernel Debugging Support (genunix)
Kernel Memory Allocator
This section discusses the dcmds and walkers used to debug problems
identified by the Solaris kernel memory allocator and to examine memory and
memory usage. The dcmds and walkers described here are discussed in more detail
in Chapter 9, Debugging With the Kernel Memory Allocator.
dcmds
-
thread ::allocdby
-
Given the address of a kernel thread, print a list of memory
allocations it has performed in reverse chronological order.
-
bufctl ::bufctl [-a address] [-c caller] [-e earliest] [-l latest] [-t thread]
-
Print a summary of the bufctl information for the specified bufctl address.
If one or more options are present, the bufctl information is printed only
if it matches the criteria defined by the option arguments; in this way, the
dcmd can be used as a filter for input from a pipeline. The -a option
indicates that the bufctl's corresponding buffer address must equal the specified
address. The -c option indicates that a program counter value
from the specified caller must be present in the bufctl's saved stack
trace. The -e option indicates that the bufctl's timestamp
must be greater than or equal to the specified earliest timestamp. The -l option indicates that the bufctl's timestamp must be less than or
equal to the specified latest timestamp. The -t option indicates
that the bufctl's thread pointer must be equal to the specified thread address.
- [ address ] ::findleaks [-v]
-
The ::findleaks dcmd provides powerful
and efficient detection of memory leaks in kernel crash dumps where the full
set of kmem debug features has been enabled. The first execution of ::findleaks processes the dump for memory leaks (this can take a few minutes),
then coalesces the leaks by the allocation stack trace. The findleaks report
shows a bufctl address and the topmost stack frame for each memory leak that
was identified.
If the -v option is specified, the dcmd prints more
verbose messages as it executes. If an explicit address is specified prior
to the dcmd, the report is filtered and only leaks whose allocation stack
traces contain the specified function address are displayed.
-
thread ::freedby
-
Given the address of a kernel thread, print a list of memory
frees it has performed, in reverse chronological order.
-
value ::kgrep
-
Search the kernel address space for pointer-aligned addresses
that contain the specified pointer-sized value. The list of addresses that
contain matching values is then printed. Unlike MDB's built-in search operators, ::kgrep searches every segment of the kernel's address space and
searches across discontiguous segment boundaries. On large kernels, ::kgrep can take a considerable amount of time to execute.
-
::kmalog [ slab | fail ]
-
Display events in a kernel memory
allocator transaction log. Events are displayed in time-reverse order, with
the most recent event displayed first. For each event, ::kmalog displays
the time relative to the most recent event in T-minus notation (for example,
T-0.000151879), the bufctl, the buffer address, the kmem cache name, and
the stack trace at the time of the event. Without arguments, ::kmalog displays
the kmem transaction log, which is present only if KMF_AUDIT is
set in kmem_flags. ::kmalog fail displays
the allocation failure log, which is always present; this can be useful in
debugging drivers that don't cope with allocation failure correctly. ::kmalog slab displays the slab create log, which is
always present. ::kmalog slab can be
useful when searching for memory leaks.
-
::kmastat
-
Display the list of kernel memory allocator caches and virtual
memory arenas, along with corresponding statistics.
-
::kmausers [-ef] [cache ...]
-
Print information about the medium and large users of the
kernel memory allocator that have current memory allocations. The
output consists of one entry for each unique stack trace specifying the total
amount of memory and number of allocations that was made with that stack
trace. This dcmd requires that the KMF_AUDIT flag is set
in kmem_flags.
If one or more cache names (for example, kmem_alloc_256)
are specified, the scan of memory usage is restricted to those caches. By
default all caches are included. If the -e option is used,
the small users of the allocator are included. The small users are allocations
that total less than 1024 bytes of memory or for which there are less than
10 allocations with the same stack trace. If the -f option
is used, the stack traces are printed for each individual allocation.
- [ address ] ::kmem_cache
-
Format and display the kmem_cache structure
stored at the specified address, or the complete set of active kmem_cache structures.
-
::kmem_log
-
Display the complete set of kmem transaction logs, sorted
in reverse chronological order. This dcmd uses a more concise tabular output
format than ::kmalog.
- [ address ] ::kmem_verify
-
Verify the integrity of the kmem_cache structure
stored at the specified address, or the complete set of active kmem_cache structures. If an explicit cache address is specified, the dcmd
displays more verbose information regarding errors; otherwise, a summary
report is displayed. The ::kmem_verify dcmd is discussed
in more detail in Kernel Memory Caches.
- [ address ] ::vmem
-
Format and display the vmem structure
stored at the specified address, or the complete set of active vmem structures.
This structure is defined in <sys/vmem_impl.h>.
-
address ::vmem_seg
-
Format and display the vmem_seg structure
stored at the specified address. This structure is defined in <sys/vmem_impl.h>.
-
address ::whatis [-abv]
-
Report information about the specified
address. In particular, ::whatis will attempt to determine
if the address is a pointer to a kmem-managed buffer or another type of special
memory region, such as a thread stack, and report its findings. If the -a option is present, the dcmd reports all matches instead of just
the first match to its queries. If the -b option is present,
the dcmd also attempts to determine if the address is referred to by a known
kmem bufctl. If the -v option is
present, the dcmd reports its progress as it searches various kernel data
structures.
Walkers
- allocdby
-
Given the address of a kthread_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of bufctl structures
corresponding to memory allocations performed by this kernel thread.
- bufctl
-
Given the address of a kmem_cache_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of allocated bufctls
associated with this cache.
- freectl
-
Given the address of a kmem_cache_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of free bufctls
associated with this cache.
- freedby
-
Given the address of a kthread_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of bufctl structures
corresponding to memory deallocations performed by this kernel thread.
- freemem
-
Given the address of a kmem_cache_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of free buffers associated with
this cache.
- kmem
-
Given the address of a kmem_cache_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of allocated buffers associated
with this cache.
- kmem_cache
-
Iterate over the active set of kmem_cache_t structures.
This structure is defined in <sys/kmem_impl.h>.
- kmem_cpu_cache
-
Given the address of a kmem_cache_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the per-CPU kmem_cpu_cache_t structures
associated with this cache. This structure is defined in <sys/kmem_impl.h>.
- kmem_slab
-
Given the address of a kmem_cache_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of associated kmem_slab_t structures.
This structure is defined in <sys/kmem_impl.h>.
- kmem_log
-
Iterate over the set of bufctls stored
in the kmem allocator transaction log.
- leak
-
Given the address of a bufctl structure,
iterate over the set of bufctl structures corresponding
to leaked memory buffers with similar allocation stack traces. The ::findleaks dcmd must be applied to locate memory leaks before the leak walker
can be used
- leakbuf
-
Given the address of a bufctl structure,
iterate over the set of buffer addresses corresponding to leaked
memory buffers with similar allocation stack traces. The ::findleaks dcmd
must be applied to locate memory leaks before the leakbuf walker can be used.
File Systems
The MDB file systems debugging support includes a built-in facility
to convert vnode pointers to the corresponding file system path name. This
conversion is performed using the Directory Name Lookup Cache (DNLC); because
the cache does not hold all active vnodes, some vnodes might not be able to
be converted to path names and “??” is displayed
instead of a name.
dcmds
-
::fsinfo
-
Display a table of mounted file systems, including the vfs_t address, ops vector, and mount point of each
file system.
-
::lminfo
-
Display a table of vnodes with active network locks registered
with the lock manager. The pathname corresponding to each vnode is
shown.
-
address ::vnode2path [-v]
-
Display the pathname corresponding to the given vnode address.
If the -v option is specified, the dcmd prints a more verbose
display, including the vnode pointer of each intermediate path component.
Walkers
- buf
-
Iterate over the set of active block I/O transfer structures
(buf_t structures). The buf structure
is defined in <sys/buf.h> and
is described in more detail in buf(9S).
Virtual Memory
This section describes the debugging support for the kernel virtual
memory subsystem.
dcmds
-
address ::addr2smap [offset]
-
Print the smap structure address
that corresponds to the given address in the kernel's segmap address space
segment.
-
as ::as2proc
-
Display the proc_t address for the
process corresponding to the as_t address as.
- [ address ] ::memlist [-aiv]
-
Display the specified memlist structure
or one of the well-known memlist structures. If
no memlist address and options are present or if
the -i option is present, the memlist representing
physically installed memory is displayed. If the -a option
is present, the memlist representing available physical
memory is displayed. If the -v option is present, the memlist
representing available virtual memory is displayed.
-
::memstat
-
Display a system-wide memory usage summary. The amount and
percentage of system memory consumed by different classes of pages (kernel,
anonymous memory, executables and libraries, page cache, and free lists) are
displayed, along with the total amount of system memory.
- [ address ] ::page
-
Display the properties of the specified page_t.
If no page_t address is specified, the dcmd displays the
properties of all system pages.
-
seg ::seg
-
Format and display the specified address space segment (seg_t address).
- [ address ] ::swapinfo
-
Display information on all active swapinfo structures
or about the specified struct swapinfo. The vnode,
filename, and statistics for each structure are displayed.
-
vnode ::vnode2smap [offset]
-
Print the smap structure address
that corresponds to the given vnode_t address and
offset.
Walkers
- anon
-
Given the address of an anon_map structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of related anon structures. The
anon map implementation is defined in <vm/anon.h>.
- memlist
-
Iterate over the spans of the specified memlist structure.
This walker can be used in conjunction with the ::memlist dcmd
to display each span.
- page
-
Iterate over all system page structures.
If an explicit address is specified for the walk, this is taken to be the
address of a vnode and the walker iterates over only those pages associated
with the vnode.
- seg
-
Given the address of an as_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of address space segments (seg structures) associated with the specified address space.
The seg structure is defined in <vm/seg.h>.
- swapinfo
-
Iterate over the list of active swapinfo structures.
This walker may be used in conjunction with the ::swapinfo dcmd.
CPUs and the Dispatcher
This section describes the facilities for examining the state of the
cpu structures and the kernel dispatcher.
dcmds
-
::callout
-
Display the callout table. The function, argument, and expiration
time for each callout is displayed.
-
::class
-
Display the scheduling class table.
- [ cpuid ] ::cpuinfo [-v]
-
Display a table of the threads currently executing on each
CPU. If an optional CPU ID number or CPU structure address is specified prior
to the dcmd name, only the information for the specified CPU is displayed.
If the -v option is present, ::cpuinfo also
displays the runnable threads waiting to execute on each CPU as well as the
active interrupt threads.
Walkers
- cpu
-
Iterate over the set of kernel CPU structures. The cpu_t structure is defined in <sys/cpuvar.h>.
Device Drivers and DDI Framework
This section describes dcmds and walkers that are useful for kernel
developers as well as third-party device driver developers.
dcmds
-
address ::binding_hash_entry
-
Given the address of a kernel name-to-major number binding
hash table entry (struct bind), display the node
binding name, major number, and pointer to the next element.
-
::devbindings device-name
-
Display the list of all instances of the named driver. The
output consists of an entry for each instance, beginning with the pointer
to the struct dev_info (viewable with $<devinfo or ::devinfo), the driver name, the instance
number, and the driver and system properties associated with that instance.
-
address ::devinfo [ -q ]
-
Print the system and driver properties associated with a devinfo
node. If the -q option is specified, only a quick summary
of the device node is shown.
-
address ::devinfo2driver
-
Print the name of the driver (if any) associated with the devinfo node.
- [ address ] ::devnames [ -v ]
-
Display the kernel's devnames table along
with the dn_head pointer, which points at the driver instance
list. If the -v flag is specified, additional information
stored at each entry in the devnames table is displayed.
- [ devinfo ] ::prtconf [ -cpv ]
-
Display the kernel device tree starting at the device node
specified by devinfo. If devinfo is
not provided, the root of the device tree is assumed by default. If the -c option is specified, only children of the given device node are
displayed. If the -p option is specified, only ancestors
of the given device node are displayed. If -v is specified,
the properties associated with each node are displayed.
- [ major-num ] ::major2name [ major-num ]
-
Display the driver name corresponding to the specified major
number. The major number can be specified as an expression preceding the dcmd
or as a command-line argument.
- [ address ] ::modctl2devinfo
-
Print all of the device nodes that correspond to the specified modctl address.
-
::name2major driver-name
-
Given a device driver name, display its major number.
- [ address ] ::softstate [ instance-number ]
-
Given a softstate state pointer (see ddi_soft_state_init(9F)) and a device
instance number, display the soft state for that instance.
Walkers
- binding_hash
-
Given the address of an array of kernel binding hash table
entries (struct bind **), walk all entries in the
hash table and return the address of each struct bind.
- devinfo
-
First, iterate over the parents of the given devinfo and return
them in order of seniority from most to least senior. Second, return the
given devinfo itself. Third, iterate over the children of the given devinfo
in order of seniority from most to least senior. The dev_info struct
is defined in <sys/ddi_impldefs.h>.
- devinfo_children
-
First, return the given devinfo, then iterate over the children
of the given devinfo in order of seniority from most to least senior. The dev_info struct is defined in <sys/ddi_impldefs.h>.
- devinfo_parents
-
Iterate over the parents of the given devinfo in order of
seniority from most to least senior, and then return the given devinfo. The dev_info struct is defined in <sys/ddi_impldefs.h>.
- devi_next
-
Iterate over the siblings of the given devinfo. The dev_info struct is defined in <sys/ddi_impldefs.h>.
- devnames
-
Iterate over the entries in the devnames array. This structure
is defined in <sys/autoconf.h>.
- softstate
-
Given a softstate pointer (see ddi_soft_state_init(9F))
display all non-NULL pointers to driver state structures.
- softstate_all
-
Given a softstate pointer (see ddi_soft_state_init(9F))
display all pointers to driver state structures. Note that the pointers for
unused instances will be NULL.
STREAMS
This section describes dcmds and walkers that are useful for kernel
developers as well as developers of third-party STREAMS modules and drivers.
dcmds
-
address ::mblk2dblk
-
Given the address of an mblk_t, print
the address of the corresponding dblk_t.
- [address] ::mblk_verify
-
Verify the integrity of one or more message blocks. If an
explicit message block address is specified, the integrity of this message
block is checked. If no address is specified, the integrity of all active
message blocks are checked. This dcmd produces output for any invalid
message block state that is detected.
-
address ::queue [-v] [-f flag] [-F flag] [-s syncq]
-
Filter and display the specified queue_t data
structure. With no options, various properties of the queue_t are
shown. If the -v option is present, the queue flags are decoded
in greater detail. If the -f, -F, or -m options
are present, the queue is displayed only if it matches the criteria defined
by the arguments to these options; in this way, the dcmd can be used as a
filter for input from a pipeline. The -f option indicates
that the specified flag (one of the Q flag names from <sys/stream.h>) must be present in the queue
flags. The -F option indicates that the specified flag must
be absent from the queue flags. The -m option indicates that
the module name associated with the queue must match the specified modname.
The -s option indicates that the syncq_t associated
with the queue must match the specified syncq_t address.
-
address ::q2syncq
-
Given the address of a queue_t, print
the address of the corresponding syncq_t data structure.
-
address ::q2otherq
-
Given the address of a queue_t, print
the address of the peer read or write queue structure.
-
address ::q2rdq
-
Given the address of a queue_t, print
the address of the corresponding read queue.
-
address ::q2wrq
-
Given the address of a queue_t, print
the address of the corresponding write queue.
- [ address ] ::stream
-
Display a visual picture of a kernel STREAM data structure,
given the address of the stdata_t structure representing
the STREAM head. The read and write queue pointers, byte count, and flags
for each module are shown, and in some cases additional information for the
specific queue is shown in the margin.
-
address ::syncq [-v] [-f flag] [-F flag] [-t type] [-T type]
-
Filter and display the specified syncq_t data
structure. With no options, various properties of the syncq_t are
shown. If the -v option is present, the syncq flags are decoded
in greater detail. If the -f, -F, -t,
or -T options are present, the syncq is displayed only if
it matches the criteria defined by the arguments to these options; in this
way, the dcmd can be used as a filter for input from a pipeline. The -f option
indicates that the specified flag (one of the SQ_ flag
names from <sys/strsubr.h>) must be present in the syncq flags. The -F option
indicates that the specified flag must be absent from the syncq flags. The -t option indicates that the specified type (one of the SQ_CI or SQ_CO type names from <sys/strsubr.h>) must be present in the syncq type bits. The -T option
indicates that the specified type must be absent from the syncq type bits.
-
address ::syncq2q
-
Given the address of a syncq_t, print
the address of the corresponding queue_t data structure.
Walkers
- b_cont
-
Given the address of an mblk_t, iterate
over the set of associated message structures by following the b_cont pointer. The b_cont pointer is used to
link a given message block to the next associated message block that is the
continuation of the same message. The message block is described in more detail
in msgb(9S)
- b_next
-
Given the address of an mblk_t, iterate
over the set of associated message structures by following the b_next pointer. The b_next pointer is used to
link a given message block to the next associated message block on a given
queue. The message block is described in more detail in msgb(9S).
- qlink
-
Given the address of a queue_t structure,
walk the list of related queues using the q_link pointer.
This structure is defined in <sys/stream.h>.
- qnext
-
Given the address of a queue_t structure,
walk the list of related queues using the q_next pointer.
This structure is defined in <sys/stream.h>.
- readq
-
Given the address of an stdata_t structure,
walk the list of read-side queue structures.
- writeq
-
Given the address of an stdata_t structure,
walk the list of write-side queue structures.
Networking
The following dcmds and walkers are provided to help debug the core
kernel networking stack protocols.
dcmds
-
address ::mi [-p] [-d | -m]
-
Given the address of a kernel MI_O, filter and display the
MI_O or its payload. If the -p option is specified, then the
address of the corresponding payload of the MI_O is displayed, otherwise the
MI_O itself is displayed. Specifying filter -d or -m enables
the dcmd to filter device or module MI_O objects respectively.
-
::netstat [-av] [-f inet | inet6 | unix] [-P tcp | udp]
-
Show network statistics and active connections. If the -a option is present, the state of all sockets is displayed. If the -v option is present, more verbose output is displayed. If the -f option is present, only connections associated with the specified
address family are displayed. If the -P option is present,
only connections associated with the specified protocols are displayed.
- [ address ] ::sonode [-f inet | inet6 | unix | id] [-t stream | dgram | raw | id] [-p id]
-
Filters and displays sonode objects. If no address is given,
then the list of AF_UNIX sockets is displayed, otherwise only the specified
sonode is displayed. If the -f option is present, then only
sockets of the given family will be output. If the -t option
is present, then only sonodes of the given type will be output. If the -p option
is present, then only sockets of the given protocol will be displayed.
- [ address ] ::tcpb [-av] [-P v4 | v6]
-
Filters and displays tcpb objects. If no address is specified,
all connections are walked, otherwise only the specified tcpb is filtered/displayed.
Specifying -a filters for only active connections and -P can
be used to filter for TCP IPv4 or IPv6 connections. The tcpb dcmd
is intelligent about filtering TCP connections, and if a IPv6 TCP connection
is in a state that would still facilitate a IPv4 connection, the -P filter
considers the connection as both IPv4 and IPv6 in much the same way that ::netstat does. If the dcmd is not being used as a filter and the -v option is specified, then the output of the dcmd will be verbose.
Walkers
- ar
-
Given the address of an ar, this walker walks all ar objects
from the given ar to the final ar. If no address is specified, all ar objects
are walked.
- icmp
-
Given the address of an icmp, this walker walks all icmp objects
from the given icmp to the final icmp. If no address is specified, all icmp
objects are walked.
- ill
-
Given the address of an interface link layer structure (ill),
this walker walks all ill objects from the given ill to the final. If no address
is specified, all ill objects are walked.
- ipc
-
Given the address of an ipc, this walker walks all ipc objects
from the given ipc to the final ipc. If no address is specified, all ipc objects
are walked.
- mi
-
Given the address of a MI_O, walk all the MI_O's in this MI.
- sonode
-
Given the address of a AF_UNIX sonode, walk the associated
list of AF_UNIX sonodes beginning with the given sonode. If no address is
specified, this walker walks the list of all AF_UNIX sockets.
- tcpb
-
Given the address of a tcpb, this walker walks all TCP connections
from the given tcpb to the final TCP connection. If no address is specified,
all tcpb objects are walked.
- udp
-
Given the address of a udp, this walker walks all udp objects
from the given udp to the final udp. If no address is specified, all udp objects
are walked.
Files, Processes, and Threads
This section describes dcmds and walkers used to format and examine
various fundamental file, process, and thread structures in the Solaris kernel.
dcmds
-
process ::fd fd-num
-
Print the file_t address corresponding
to the file descriptor fd-num associated with the
specified process. The process is specified using the virtual address of
its proc_t structure.
-
thread ::findstack [ command ]
-
Print the stack trace associated with the given kernel thread,
identified by the virtual address of its kthread_t structure.
The dcmd employs several different algorithms to locate the appropriate stack
backtrace. If an optional command string is specified, the dot variable is
reset to the frame pointer address of the topmost stack frame, and the specified
command is evaluated as if it had been typed at the command line. The default
command string is “<.$C0”; that is, print
a stack trace including frame pointers but no arguments.
-
::pgrep [-x] [-n|-o] regexp
-
Display process information for processes whose name matches
the regexp regular expression pattern. The ::pgrep dcmd is similar
to the pgrep(1) command.
The ::pgrep dcmd is used to pattern match against all processes. When the -n option
is used, display only the newest
process that matches the pattern. When the -o option
is used, display only the oldest
process that matches the pattern. When the -x option is used,
display only those processes whose names are exactly the same as the search
pattern.
In kmdb(1), the regexp used
with ::pgrep must be a plain alpha-numeric text string.
-
pid ::pid2proc
-
Print the proc_t address corresponding
to the specified PID. Recall that MDB's default base is hexadecimal, so decimal
PIDs obtained using pgrep(1) or ps(1) should be prefixed with 0t.
-
process ::pmap [-q]
-
Print the memory map of the process indicated by the given
process address. The dcmd displays output using a format similar to pmap(1). If the -q option
is present, the dcmd displays an abbreviated form of its output that requires
less processing time.
- [ address ] ::ps [-fltTP]
-
Print a summary of the information related
to the specified process, or all active system processes, similar to ps(1). If the -f option
is specified, the full command name and initial arguments are printed. If
the -l option is specified, the LWPs associated with each
process are printed. If the -t option is specified, the kernel
threads associated with each process LWP are printed. If the -T option
is specified, the task ID associated with each process is displayed. If the -P option is specified, the project ID associated with each
process is displayed.
-
::ptree
-
Print a process tree, with child processes indented from their
respective parent processes. The dcmd displays output using a format similar
to ptree(1).
-
address ::task
-
Print a list of the active kernel task structures and their
associated ID numbers and attributes. The process task ID is described in
more detail in settaskid(2).
- [ address ] ::thread [-bdfimps]
-
Display properties of the specified kernel kthread_t structure.
If no kthread_t address is specified, the properties
of all kernel threads are displayed. The dcmd options are used to control
which output columns are shown. If no options are present, the -i option
is enabled by default. If the -b option is present, information
relating to the thread's turnstile and blocking synchronization object is
shown. If the -d option is present, the thread's dispatcher
priority, binding, and last dispatch time is shown. If the -f option
is present, threads whose state is TS_FREE are elided from the output. If
the -i option is present (the default), thread state, flags,
priority, and interrupt information is shown. If the -m option
is present, all of the other output options are merged together on to a single
output line. If the -p option is present, the thread's process,
LWP, and credential pointers are displayed. If the -s option
is present, the thread's signal queue and masks of pending and held signals
are shown.
-
vnode ::whereopen
-
Given a vnode_t address, print the proc_t addresses of all processes that have this vnode currently
open in their file table.
Walkers
- file
-
Given the address of a proc_t structure
as a starting point, iterate over the set of open files (file_t structures)
associated with the specified process. The file_t structure
is defined in <sys/file.h>.
- proc
-
Iterate over the active process (proc_t)
structures. This structure is defined in <sys/proc.h>.
- task
-
Given a task pointer, iterate over the list of proc_t structures for processes that are members of the given task.
- thread
-
Iterate over a set of kernel thread (kthread_t)
structures. If the global walk is invoked, all kernel threads are returned
by the walker. If a local walk is invoked using a proc_t address
as the starting point, the set of threads associated with the specified process
is returned. The kthread_t structure is defined in <sys/thread.h>.
Synchronization Primitives
This section describes dcmds and walkers used to examine particular
kernel synchronization primitives. The semantics of each primitive are discussed
in the corresponding (9f) section of the manual pages.
dcmds
-
rwlock ::rwlock
-
Given the address of a readers-writers lock (see rwlock(9F)), display the current state
of the lock and the list of waiting threads.
-
address ::sobj2ts
-
Convert the address of a synchronization object to the address
of the corresponding turnstile and print the turnstile address.
- [ address ] ::turnstile
-
Display the properties of the specified turnstile_t.
If no turnstile_t address is specified, the dcmd
displays the properties of all turnstiles.
- [ address ] ::wchaninfo [-v]
-
Given the address of a condition variable (see condvar(9F)) or semaphore (see semaphore(9F)), display
the current number of waiters on this object. If no explicit address is specified,
display all such objects that have waiting threads. If the -v option
is specified, display the list of threads that are blocked on each object.
Walkers
- blocked
-
Given the address of a synchronization object (such as a mutex(9F) or rwlock(9F)), iterate over the list of
blocked kernel threads.
- wchan
-
Given the address of a condition variable (see condvar(9F)) or semaphore (see semaphore(9F)), iterate
over the list of blocked kernel threads.
Cyclics
The cyclic subsystem is a low-level kernel subsystem that provides high
resolution, per-CPU interval timer facilities to other kernel services and
programming interfaces.
dcmds
-
::cycinfo [-vV]
-
Display the cyclic subsystem per-CPU state for each CPU. If
the -v option is present, a more verbose display is shown.
If the -V option is present, an even more verbose display
than -v is shown.
-
address ::cyclic
-
Format and display the cyclic_t at the
specified address.
-
::cyccover
-
Display cyclic subsystem code coverage information. This
information is available only in a DEBUG kernel.
-
::cyctrace
-
Display cyclic subsystem trace information. This information
is available only in a DEBUG kernel.
Walkers
- cyccpu
-
Iterate over the per-CPU cyc_cpu_t structures.
This structure is defined in <sys/cyclic_impl.h>.
- cyctrace
-
Iterate over the cyclic trace buffer structures. This information
is only available in a DEBUG kernel.
Task Queues
The task queue subsystem provides general-purpose asynchronous task
scheduling for a variety of clients in the kernel.
dcmds
-
address ::taskq_entry
-
Print the contents of the specified struct taskq_entry.
Walkers
- taskq_entry
-
Given the addresss of a taskq structure,
iterate over the list of taskq_entry structures.
Error Queues
The error queue subsystem provides general-purpose asynchronous error
event processing for platform-specific error handling code.
dcmds
- [ address ] ::errorq
-
Display a summary of information relating to the specified
error queue. If no address is given, display information relating to all system
error queues. The address, name, queue length, and data element size for
each queue are displayed, along with various queue statistics.
Walkers
- errorq
-
Walk the list of system error queues and return the address
of each individual error queue.
- errorq_data
-
Given the address of an error queue, return the address of
each pending error event data buffer.
Configuration
This section describes dcmds that can be used to examine system configuration
data.
dcmds
-
::system
-
Display the contents of the system(4) configuration
file at the time the kernel parsed the file during system initialization.
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