Oops I chose "belongs on uservoice.com" by accident - meant to pick serverfault.com – John RaschJun 18 at 3:03
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I monitor system calls all the time while diagnosing problems in my programs. I see no reason to relegate this question to Server Fault. It's a question about debugging techniques. – Rob KennedyJun 18 at 3:15
In the simplest case strace runs the specified command until it exits. It intercepts and records the system calls which are called by a process and the signals which are received by a process. The name of each system call, its arguments and its return value are printed on standard error or to the file specified with the -o option.
Each line in the trace contains the system call name, followed by its arguments in parentheses and its return value.
Somehow I remember strace being relatively Linux-biased, though it appears to work on other platforms now. SunOS has a similar (and older) truss utility, inherited by Solaris; I believe that truss also runs on BSDs, which have their own ktrace utility. I've never used them, but I hear that Irix and Tru64 have par and trace respectively, all serving the same purpose. – ephemientJun 18 at 3:19
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For the most part, the programs all do the same thing. They have different output format, but mostly the same information. On HP-UX, the command is called tusc. – Rob KennedyJun 18 at 3:21
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