ref: c7d9da8f5a41b833946027c802e0e8d7dd014b22
dir: /sys/man/1/ratrace/
.TH RATRACE 1 .SH NAME ratrace \- trace process system calls .SH SYNOPSIS .B ratrace [ .I pid ] | [ .I -c command ] .SH DESCRIPTION .I Ratrace shows the system calls executed by a process, either the one with .I pid or a fresh invocation of .IR command . .PP Trace output is determined by the kernel, not .IR ratrace . Certain fixed rules apply. The first four fields of the output are pid, text name, system call name, and the PC of the user program. Data is always printed as .IB pointer /\c "\fIstring\fP", where the .I string is the first 32 bytes of the data, with .L \&. replacing non-printing ASCII characters (printing characters are those between ASCII space (SP) and delete (DEL), exclusive). Return values follow an .LR = , and include the integer return value, the .I errstr (with "" if there is no .IR errstr ), and the start and stop times for the system call in nanoseconds. The times are exclusive of the overhead for tracing. .SH FILES .BI /proc/ pid /syscall .br .BI /proc/ pid /ctl .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/cmd/ratrace.c .SH "SEE ALSO" .IR acid (1), .IR db (1), .IR proc (3) .SH BUGS The printing of the data is too limited in length; printing .L \&. instead of something more sensible is limiting.