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authorFabricio Voznika <fvoznika@google.com>2019-04-04 22:31:51 -0700
committerFabricio Voznika <fvoznika@gmail.com>2019-04-04 22:54:46 -0700
commitcd5ded7e062f8c9f2b8771039f461ff60218ec72 (patch)
tree3755c5d58be85f310f7d789e347abe37f792e31d
parente9504bfdf21809ff41a066fbbdccb33e43023bd4 (diff)
Update debugging.md
-rw-r--r--content/docs/user_guide/debugging.md32
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/content/docs/user_guide/debugging.md b/content/docs/user_guide/debugging.md
index 47ddb8127..f8a5999fd 100644
--- a/content/docs/user_guide/debugging.md
+++ b/content/docs/user_guide/debugging.md
@@ -32,14 +32,12 @@ Run your container again, and inspect the files under `/tmp/runsc`. The log file
with name `boot` will contain the strace logs from your application, which can
be useful for identifying missing or broken system calls in gVisor.
-## Stack Trace
+## Stack traces
-`runsc debug --stacks` command allows stack traces to be collected while the
-sandbox is running which can be useful to troubleshoot issues or just to learn
-more about gVisor. It connects to the sandbox process, collects a stack dump,
-and writes it to the console.
-
-Here is an example:
+The command `runsc debug --stacks` collects stack traces while the sandbox is
+running which can be useful to troubleshoot issues or just to learn more about
+gVisor. It connects to the sandbox process, collects a stack dump, and writes
+it to the console. For example:
```bash
docker run --runtime=runsc --rm -d alpine sh -c "while true; do echo running; sleep .1; done"
@@ -52,10 +50,9 @@ sudo runsc --root /var/run/docker/runtime-runsc/moby debug --stacks 63254c6ab3a6
> `/var/run/docker/runtime-[runtime-name]/moby`. If in doubt, `--root` is logged to
> `runsc` logs.
-
## Profiling
-`runsc` integrates with Go profilling tools and gives you easy commands to profile
+`runsc` integrates with Go profiling tools and gives you easy commands to profile
CPU and heap usage. First you need to enable `--profile` in the command line options
before starting the container:
@@ -72,18 +69,18 @@ before starting the container:
}
```
-> Note: Enabling profiler loosens the seccomp protection added to the sandbox,
+> Note: Enabling profiling loosens the seccomp protection added to the sandbox,
> and should not be run in production under normal circumstances.
Then restart docker to refresh the runtime options. While the container is running,
execute `runsc debug` to collect profile information and save to a file. Here are
the options available:
- * **--profile-heap:** It generates heap profile to the speficied file.
- * **--profile-cpu:** It enables CPU profiler, waits for `--profile-delay` seconds
+ * **--profile-heap:** Generates heap profile to the speficied file.
+ * **--profile-cpu:** Enables CPU profiler, waits for `--profile-delay` seconds
and generates CPU profile to the speficied file.
-Here is an example::
+For example:
```bash
docker run --runtime=runsc-prof --rm -d alpine sleep 1000
@@ -93,12 +90,13 @@ sudo runsc --root /var/run/docker/runtime-runsc-prof/moby debug --profile-heap=/
sudo runsc --root /var/run/docker/runtime-runsc-prof/moby debug --profile-cpu=/tmp/cpu.prof --profile-delay=30 63254c6ab3a6989623fa1fb53616951eed31ac605a2637bb9ddba5d8d404b35b
```
-The resulting files can be opened using `go tool pprof` or [pprof]
-(https://github.com/google/pprof/blob/master/doc/README.md). The examples below
-create image file (`.svg`) with the heap profile and writes the top functions
-using CPU to the console:
+The resulting files can be opened using `go tool pprof` or [pprof]. The examples
+below create image file (`.svg`) with the heap profile and writes the top
+functions using CPU to the console:
```bash
go tool pprof -svg /usr/local/bin/runsc /tmp/heap.prof
go tool pprof -top /usr/local/bin/runsc /tmp/cpu.prof
```
+
+[pprof]: https://github.com/google/pprof/blob/master/doc/README.md