2 DTrace and Erlang/OTP
2.1
History
The first implementation of DTrace probes for the Erlang virtual machine was presented at the 2008 Erlang User Conference. That work, based on the Erlang/OTP R12 release, was discontinued due to what appears to be miscommunication with the original developers.
Several users have created Erlang port drivers, linked-in drivers, or NIFs that allow Erlang code to try to activate a probe, e.g. foo_module:dtrace_probe("message goes here!").
2.2
Goals
- Annotate as much of the Erlang VM as is practical.
- The initial goal is to trace file I/O operations.
- Support all platforms that implement DTrace: OS X, Solaris, and (I hope) FreeBSD and NetBSD.
- To the extent that it's practical, support SystemTap on Linux via DTrace provider compatibility.
- Allow Erlang code to supply annotations.
2.3
Supported platforms
- OS X 10.6.x / Snow Leopard, OS X 10.7.x / Lion and probably newer versions.
- Solaris 10. I have done limited testing on Solaris 11 and OpenIndiana release 151a, and both appear to work.
- FreeBSD 9.0 and 10.0.
- Linux via SystemTap compatibility. Please see $ERL_TOP/HOWTO/SYSTEMTAP.md for more details.
Just add the --with-dynamic-trace=dtrace option to your command when you run the configure script. If you are using systemtap, the configure option is --with-dynamic-trace=systemtap
2.4
Status
As of R15B01, the dynamic trace code is included in the OTP source distribution, although it's considered experimental. The main development of the dtrace code still happens outside of Ericsson, but there is no need to fetch a patched version of the OTP source to get the basic functionality.
2.5
DTrace probe specifications
Probe specifications can be found in erts/emulator/beam/erlang_dtrace.d, and a few example scripts can be found under lib/runtime_tools/examples/.