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I wanted to trace the system calls made by the find command to debug some performance issues however I could not figure out how to do this on Mac OS X Yosemite. How can I trace system calls for an arbitrary program similarly to what strace does on FreeBSD? I am especially interested in tracing file-system related calls.


Suggested accepted answer doesn't work for me. This is what I tried:

cd ~
cp /usr/bin/find find
codesign --remove-signature ./find
sudo dtruss ./find …

error:

codesign --remove-signature ./find
sudo dtruss ./find 
dtrace: system integrity protection is on, some features will not be available

dtrace: failed to execute ./find: Could not create symbolicator for task
5
  • 2
    A quick search for strace osx gave me this four year old blog post. It should be easy to find other alternatives using the same search. Jun 25, 2015 at 8:54
  • @JoachimPileborg Nice point. I went another way, starting with apropos trace and searching from that. I overlooked dtruss and dtrace because all outcomes I have found were about a trace utility for the D language. Jun 25, 2015 at 9:16
  • 2
    Just a note, FreeBSD ships with truss(1), not strace. Dec 11, 2020 at 14:18
  • did you try the strace provided by brew? e.g. formulae.brew.sh/formula/strace Jun 13, 2022 at 17:35
  • 2
    @CharlieParker it only supports Linux, not macOS (some people use brew on Linux).
    – talz
    Sep 5, 2022 at 12:42

3 Answers 3

111
+50

Under current versions of macOS, executables under paths covered by SIP (like /usr/bin) cannot be traced.

You can bypass this by making a copy of the executable in your home directory and tracing the copy:

cp /usr/bin/find find
codesign --remove-signature ./find
sudo dtruss ./find …

You needed to remove the code signature from the new find executable, otherwise SIP still notices that a system file is being accessed (credit: @Anmol Singh Jaggi).

7
  • In my case after copying of the executable the bug that I wanted to debug stopped happening ..(
    – Nakilon
    Oct 20, 2017 at 8:14
  • 2
    Probably my bug is really SIP-related so that's a success too.
    – Nakilon
    Oct 21, 2017 at 3:13
  • 25
    Not working on macOS 10.15.4. Had to execute codesign --remove-signature ./find first. Jun 10, 2020 at 11:28
  • 3
    MacOs does not executes the program after its signature is removed. I get error something like this cannot open this program, source is untrusted Jun 17, 2022 at 15:07
  • 2
    does work for me, I get this error: ``` dtrace: failed to execute ./find: Could not create symbolicator for task ``` Feb 23, 2023 at 19:46
85

You can use dtruss like in

sudo dtruss find ~/repo -depth 2 -type d -name '.git'

The manual page of that utility will help you to tailor the use of the tool to your needs.

8
10

You might have better luck with ktrace. For example (on Sonoma 14.0):

sudo ktrace trace -S -f C3 -c find .

-f = filter description, C3 = class 3 = DBG_FSYSTEM, -S = print arguments as strings where possible.

On Yosemite it would have been something like sudo ktrace -t cin -c find .

More ktrace filter examples in https://stackoverflow.com/a/76987655.

1
  • This is working also in Ventura. The accepted answer it won't work anymore because of the system integrity protection.
    – Gongora
    Jan 26 at 19:25

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