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create
| Probe that fires when a process is created using fork(2), forkall(2), fork1(2), or vfork(2).
The psinfo_t corresponding to the new child process is
pointed to by args[0]. You can distinguish vfork from
the other fork variants by checking for PR_VFORKP in the pr_flag member of the forking thread's lwpsinfo_t.
You can distinguish fork1 from forkall by
examining the pr_nlwp members of both the parent process's psinfo_t (curpsinfo) and the child process's psinfo_t (args[0]). Because the create probe
only fires after the process has been successfully created, and because LWP
creation is part of creating a process, lwp-create will
fire for any LWPs created at process creation time before the create probe
fires for the new process.
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exec
| Probe that fires whenever a process loads a new process image with a
variant of the exec(2) system call: exec(2), execle(2), execlp(2), execv(2), execve(2), execvp(2). The exec probe
fires before the process image is loaded. Process variables like execname and curpsinfo therefore contain the process
state before the image is loaded. Some time after the exec probe
fires, either the exec-failure probe or the exec-success
probe will subsequently fire in the same thread. The path of the new process
image is pointed to by args[0].
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exec-failure
| Probe that fires when an exec(2) variant has
failed. The exec-failure probe fires only after the exec
probe has fired in the same thread. The errno(3C) value
is provided in args[0].
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exec-success
| Probe that fires when an exec(2) variant has
succeeded. Like the exec-failure probe, the exec-success probe fires only
after the exec probe has fired in the same thread. By the time the exec-success
probe fires, process variables like execname and curpsinfo contain the process state after the new process image has been
loaded.
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exit
| Probe that fires when the current process is exiting. The reason for
exit, which is expressed as one of the SIGCHLD siginfo.h(3HEAD) codes, is contained in args[0].
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fault
| Probe that fires when a thread experiences a machine fault. The fault
code (as defined in proc(4)) is in args[0].
The siginfo structure corresponding to the fault is pointed
to by args[1]. Only those faults that induce a signal can
trigger the fault probe.
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lwp-create
| Probe that fires when an LWP is created, typically as a result of thr_create(3C). The lwpsinfo_t corresponding
to the new thread is pointed to by args[0]. The psinfo_t of the process containing the thread is pointed to by args[1].
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lwp-exit
| Probe that fires when an LWP is exiting, due either to a signal or to
an explicit call to thr_exit(3C).
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lwp-start
| Probe that fires within the context of a newly created LWP. The lwp-start probe will fire before any user-level instructions are executed.
If the LWP is the first LWP in the process, the start probe
will fire, followed by lwp-start.
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signal-clear
| Probes that fires when a pending signal is cleared because the target
thread was waiting for the signal in sigwait(2), sigwaitinfo(3RT), or sigtimedwait(3RT).
Under these conditions, the pending signal is cleared and the signal number
is returned to the caller. The signal number is in args[0]. signal-clear fires in the context of the formerly waiting thread.
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signal-discard
| Probe that fires when a signal is sent to a single-threaded process,
and the signal is both unblocked and ignored by the process. Under these conditions,
the signal is discarded on generation. The lwpsinfo_t and psinfo_t of the target process and thread are in args[0] and args[1], respectively. The signal number is in args[2].
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signal-handle
| Probe that fires immediately before a thread handles a signal. The signal-handle probe fires in the context of the thread that will
handle the signal. The signal number is in args[0]. A pointer
to the siginfo_t structure that corresponds to the signal
is in args[1]. The address of the signal handler in the
process is in args[2].
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signal-send
| Probe that fires when a signal is sent to a thread or process. The signal-send probe fires in the context of the sending process and
thread. The lwpsinfo_t and psinfo_t of
the receiving process and thread are in args[0] and args[1], respectively. The signal number is in args[2].
signal-send is always followed by signal-handle or signal-clear in the receiving process and thread.
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start
| Probe that fires in the context of a newly created process. The start probe will fire before any user-level instructions are executed
in the process.
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