trpt(1M) MISC. REFERENCE MANUAL PAGES trpt(1M)
NAME
trpt - transliterate protocol trace
SYNOPSIS
trpt [ -afjst ] [ -p hex-address ] [ system [ core ] ]
DESCRIPTION
trpt interrogates the buffer of TCP trace records created
when a socket is marked for "debugging" [see
getsockopt(3N)], and prints a readable description of these
records. When no options are supplied, trpt prints all the
trace records found in the system grouped according to TCP
connection protocol control block (PCB). The following
options may be used to alter this behavior.
OPTIONS
-a In addition to the normal output, print the values of
the source and destination addresses for each packet
recorded.
-f Follow the trace as it occurs, waiting a short time for
additional records each time the end of the log is
reached.
-j Just give a list of the protocol control block
addresses for which there are trace records.
-s In addition to the normal output, print a detailed
description of the packet sequencing information.
-t In addition to the normal output, print the values for
all timers at each point in the trace.
-p hex-address
Show only trace records associated with the protocol
control block, the address of which follows.
The recommended use of trpt is as follows. Isolate the
problem and enable debugging on the socket(s) involved in
the connection. Find the address of the protocol control
blocks associated with the sockets using the -A option to
netstat(1M). Then run trpt with the -p option, supplying
the associated protocol control block addresses. The -f
option can be used to follow the trace log once the trace is
located. If there are many sockets using the debugging
option, the -j option may be useful in checking to see if
any trace records are present for the socket in question.
If debugging is being performed on a system or core file
other than the default, the last two arguments may be used
to supplant the defaults.
Last change: TCP/IP 1
trpt(1M) MISC. REFERENCE MANUAL PAGES trpt(1M)
FILES
/stand/unix
/dev/kmem
SEE ALSO
netstat(1M), getsockopt(3N).
DIAGNOSTICS
no namelist
When the system image does not contain the proper sym-
bols to find the trace buffer; others which should be
self explanatory.
NOTES
Should also print the data for each input or output, but
this is not saved in the trace record.
The output format is inscrutable and should be described
here.
Last change: TCP/IP 2