#!/usr/bin/python # # urandomread-explicit Example of instrumenting a kernel tracepoint. # For Linux, uses BCC, BPF. Embedded C. # # This is an older example of instrumenting a tracepoint, which defines # the argument struct and makes an explicit call to attach_tracepoint(). # See urandomread for a newer version that uses TRACEPOINT_PROBE(). # # REQUIRES: Linux 4.7+ (BPF_PROG_TYPE_TRACEPOINT support). # # Test by running this, then in another shell, run: # dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/null bs=1k count=5 # # Copyright 2016 Netflix, Inc. # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License") from __future__ import print_function from bcc import BPF from bcc.utils import printb # define BPF program bpf_text = """ #include struct urandom_read_args { // from /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/random/urandom_read/format u64 __unused__; u32 got_bits; u32 pool_left; u32 input_left; }; int printarg(struct urandom_read_args *args) { bpf_trace_printk("%d\\n", args->got_bits); return 0; } """ # load BPF program b = BPF(text=bpf_text) b.attach_tracepoint(tp="random:urandom_read", fn_name="printarg") # header print("%-18s %-16s %-6s %s" % ("TIME(s)", "COMM", "PID", "GOTBITS")) # format output while 1: try: (task, pid, cpu, flags, ts, msg) = b.trace_fields() except ValueError: continue except KeyboardInterrupt: exit() printb(b"%-18.9f %-16s %-6d %s" % (ts, task, pid, msg))