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Solaris Dynamic Tracing Guide
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Introduction

2.  Types, Operators, and Expressions

3.  Variables

4.  D Program Structure

5.  Pointers and Arrays

6.  Strings

7.  Structs and Unions

8.  Type and Constant Definitions

9.  Aggregations

10.  Actions and Subroutines

11.  Buffers and Buffering

Principal Buffers

Principal Buffer Policies

switch Policy

fill Policy

fill Policy and END Probes

ring Policy

Other Buffers

Buffer Sizes

Buffer Resizing Policy

12.  Output Formatting

13.  Speculative Tracing

14.  dtrace(1M) Utility

15.  Scripting

16.  Options and Tunables

17.  dtrace Provider

18.  lockstat Provider

19.  profile Provider

20.  fbt Provider

21.  syscall Provider

22.  sdt Provider

23.  sysinfo Provider

24.  vminfo Provider

25.  proc Provider

26.  sched Provider

27.  io Provider

28.  mib Provider

29.  fpuinfo Provider

30.  pid Provider

31.  plockstat Provider

32.  fasttrap Provider

33.  User Process Tracing

34.  Statically Defined Tracing for User Applications

35.  Security

36.  Anonymous Tracing

37.  Postmortem Tracing

38.  Performance Considerations

39.  Stability

40.  Translators

41.  Versioning

Glossary

Index

Buffer Sizes

The size of each buffer can be tuned on a per-consumer basis. Separate options are provided to tune each buffer size, as shown in the following table:

Buffer
Size Option
Principal
bufsize
Speculative
specsize
Aggregation
aggsize

Each of these options is set with a value that denotes the size. As with any size option, the value may have an optional size suffix. See Chapter 16, Options and Tunables for more details. For example, to set the buffer size to one megabyte on the command line to dtrace, you can use -x to set the option:

# dtrace -P syscall -x bufsize=1m

Alternatively, you can use the -b option to dtrace:

# dtrace -P syscall -b 1m

Finally, you could can set bufsize using #pragma D option:

#pragma D option bufsize=1m

The buffer size you select denotes the size of the buffer on each CPU. Moreover, for the switch buffer policy, bufsize denotes the size of each buffer on each CPU. The buffer size defaults to four megabytes.