Oracle® Solaris 11.2 Dynamic Tracing Guide

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Updated: July 2014
 
 

Using a Speculation

To use a speculation, an identifier returned from speculation must be passed to the speculate function in a clause before any data-recording actions. All subsequent data-recording actions in a clause containing a speculate will be speculatively traced. The D compiler will generate a compile-time error if a call to speculate follows data recording actions in a D probe clause. Therefore, clauses may contain speculative tracing or non-speculative tracing requests, but not both.

Aggregating actions, destructive actions, and the exit action may never be speculative. Any attempt to take one of these actions in a clause containing a speculate results in a compile-time error. A speculate may not follow a speculate: only one speculation is permitted per clause. A clause that contains only a speculate will speculatively trace the default action, which is defined to trace only the enabled probe ID. See Chapter 4, Actions and Subroutines for a description of the default action.

Typically, you assign the result of speculation to a thread-local variable and then use that variable as a subsequent predicate to other probes as well as an argument to speculate. For example:

syscall::openat:entry
{
        self->spec = speculation();
}

syscall:::
/self->spec/
{
        speculate(self->spec);
        printf("this is speculative");
}