#!/usr/bin/python # # strlen_count Trace strlen() and print a frequency count of strings. # For Linux, uses BCC, eBPF. Embedded C. # # Written as a basic example of BCC and uprobes. # # Also see strlensnoop. # # Copyright 2016 Netflix, Inc. # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License") from __future__ import print_function from bcc import BPF from bcc.utils import printb from time import sleep # load BPF program b = BPF(text=""" #include struct key_t { char c[80]; }; BPF_HASH(counts, struct key_t); int count(struct pt_regs *ctx) { if (!PT_REGS_PARM1(ctx)) return 0; struct key_t key = {}; u64 zero = 0, *val; bpf_probe_read_user(&key.c, sizeof(key.c), (void *)PT_REGS_PARM1(ctx)); // could also use `counts.increment(key)` val = counts.lookup_or_try_init(&key, &zero); if (val) { (*val)++; } return 0; }; """) b.attach_uprobe(name="c", sym="strlen", fn_name="count") # header print("Tracing strlen()... Hit Ctrl-C to end.") # sleep until Ctrl-C try: sleep(99999999) except KeyboardInterrupt: pass # print output print("%10s %s" % ("COUNT", "STRING")) counts = b.get_table("counts") for k, v in sorted(counts.items(), key=lambda counts: counts[1].value): printb(b"%10d \"%s\"" % (v.value, k.c))