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gcmonitor (1)
  • >> gcmonitor (1) ( Solaris man: Команды и прикладные программы пользовательского уровня )
  • 
    NAME
         gcmonitor - web interface to Sun WorkShop Memory Monitor
    
    SYNOPSIS
         gcmonitor [ -h ] [ -p port ] [ -v ] [ -m report-dir ] [ -r ]
    
    DESCRIPTION
         gcmonitor, the GC Monitor,  is  the  web  interface  to  Sun
         WorkShop  Memory  Monitor. The GC monitor is actually a spe-
         cialized web server.  It interacts via  monitor  files  with
         programs  linked  with  the  Sun  WorkShop  Memory Monitor's
         debugging libraries and serves a number of  informative  web
         pages  making  up  an interactive debugging interface.  With
         the interface, you can:
    
         o  debug a program's memory management  from  within  a  web
            browser;
    
         o  debug programs remotely;
    
         o  sort, filter, and summarize leak information;
    
         o  sort, filter, and summarize allocation and  heap  statis-
            tics, to see where and how a program is using memory;
    
         o  view the Sun WorkShop Memory Monitor log file;
    
         o  view the Sun WorkShop Memory Monitor documentation.
    
    OPTIONS
         -h   Prints help on how to use the gcmonitor command.
    
         -p port
              Sets the TCP/IP  port  through  which  the  GC  Monitor
              serves its interface.  The default port is 2660.
    
         -v   Puts the GC Monitor into verbose  mode,  which  outputs
              information  for  use by technical support on the stan-
              dard error stream.
    
         -m report-dir
              Sets the debugging report directory, in  which  the  GC
              Monitor  looks  for  monitor files, to report-dir.  The
              default directory is /tmp.
    
         -r   Puts the GC Monitor in "read only" mode.  Monitor files
              will not be deleted.
    
    TROUBLESHOOTING
      Problem
         My browser  shows  a  GC  Monitor  error:   File  not  found
         ."/htdocs/index.html".
    
      Solution
         Have you moved the file gcmonitor from the gcmonitor  direc-
         tory  in  the  Sun WorkShop Memory Monitor distribution? The
         monitor depends on a relative path to numerous  HTML  pages,
         including   the   on-line  manual,  and  it  cannot  operate
         correctly unless that path is maintained. Put the executable
         back  in  its default directory, and see if the problem goes
         away. (See also BUGS.)
    
      Problem
         No web page is found at http://127.0.0.1:2660.
    
      Solution
         Check to see if you are pointing your  browser  at  a  proxy
         server (to get around a firewall, for instance). Turning off
         the proxy server setting on your browser should  make  local
         browsing  of  the  loopback  address work properly.  In most
         browsers you can disable  the  proxy  server  for  just  the
         address  127.0.0.1, localhost, or even localhost:2660.  Here
         are instructions for some specific browsers.   If  yours  is
         not  listed,  refer to the documentation that came with your
         browser.
    
         Netscape 3:
    
         1.   Go to the "Option" menu  and  select  "Network  Prefer-
              ences".
    
         2.   Choose the "Proxies" tab and  view  the  "Manual  Proxy
              Configuration".
    
         3.   In the "No proxies for" box, add localhost:2660
    
         4.   Click OK to exit.
    
         Netscape 4 ("Communicator"):
    
         1.   In the "Edit" menu, choose "Preferences".
    
         2.   Double click "Advanced" in the category tree and select
              "Proxies".
    
         3.   View the "Manual Proxy Configuration" selection.
    
         4.   In the "Exceptions" box, add: localhost:49213
    
      Problem
         Port 2660 is unreachable when I debug remotely.
    
      Solution
         Check that the GC Monitor is running on the  remote  machine
         (the  one  running  the  program to be debugged, not the one
         with the browser) and connect to http://remote-address:2660/
         and not 127.0.0.1.
    
         Your firewall may be configured to refuse the incoming  con-
         nection.  Some administrators may set up firewalls in such a
         way as to preclude remote debugging through our  web  inter-
         face.  Consult someone who is familiar with your local secu-
         rity setup.
    
         If a firewall precludes remote debugging then  you  can  use
         ftp  or  e-mail to transfer a compressed copy of the monitor
         file to the local machine and view it by  running  gcmonitor
         locally.   This will only allow you to do post-mortem debug-
         ging.
    
      Problem
         I want the GC Monitor to use a port other than 2660.
    
      Solution
         You can specify a new port number when you launch  gcmonitor
         by  using  the argument -p port.  If you want the GC Monitor
         to use port 12345, for example, the correct syntax would  be
         gcmonitor -p 12345.
    
      Problem
         The web page  complains  that  my  browser  doesn't  support
         frames and/or Javascript.
    
      Solution
         You may not have enabled Javascript on your browser.  The GC
         Monitor requires both frames and Javascript in order to pro-
         duce its debug monitor pages, and it should complain  infor-
         matively if it does not find them.
    
      Problem
         The web page says "Bad GCMonitor File" across the top.
    
      Solution
         o  You may not have run  any  programs  with  the  debugging
            library linked to them.
    
         o  You may not have set the debugging  report  directory  to
            the  same directory where your programs are writing moni-
            tor files.  You can change the directory where your  pro-
            grams  are writing monitor files by using the environment
            variable GC_MONDIR.
    
         o  You may have cleaned the monitor file you are  hoping  to
            look at out of your report directory.
    
         Click on the "Select Program" tab of the web interface,  and
         confirm  that  the  directory  is  set  to  the location (by
         default, /tmp) where the monitor files you are interested in
         viewing are being or have been written.
    
         Then check that directory (using ls *.mon  for  example)  to
         confirm that there really are monitor files in there.
    
         (Note that you can still use the on-line manual through  the
         web  interface, even if there are no monitor files currently
         available to examine.)
    
      Problem
         Too many old copies of my application  are  visible  in  the
         "Select Program" tab.
    
      Solution
         Are you clearing out the debugging  report  directory  often
         enough?   In  order to allow you to compare the debug output
         from multiple runs of the same  program,  a  unique  monitor
         file  is  written  every time you run an executable with the
         debugging library linked in.  These monitor files  are  per-
         manent  records of your program's memory allocation behavior
         during that particular run, and they can be kept long  after
         the  program  has  exited.  Since  they  are quite large (at
         present, 8 MB each), disk space constraints may  compel  you
         to prune these files from time to time; it may make sense to
         coordinate this housekeeping with the regular scheduling  of
         your  tape backups, if any. Only those files that correspond
         to currently  running  instances  of  your  program  can  be
         interacted  with  in  real  time through the "User Settings"
         tab, of course: there is no way to change the  operation  of
         Sun  WorkShop Memory Monitor retroactively on a defunct pro-
         cess!
    
      Problem
         The web page keeps asking me to accept cookies.
    
      Solution
         You probably have your browser set to warn you  whenever  it
         is given a cookie. A cookie is a persistent bit of data that
         a web server gives your browser, and expects  back  whenever
         the  browser  connects to it again. This provides a powerful
         mechanism for personalizing your browsing  experience  on  a
         given  site,  as the server otherwise has no way to know who
         you are or what options you have previously set. Some people
         are concerned about privacy issues when they browse the web,
         and have configured their browser to provide feedback  when-
         ever a cookie is offered. GC Monitor offers cookies when you
         change which program's debug log you are examining, when you
         modify  user  variables,  and in response to some other user
         actions. It may make sense  to  temporarily  disable  cookie
         warnings  for  the  duration  of a debug session, since only
         your local GC Monitor (and not Sun  Microsystems  or  anyone
         else  on  the  Internet)  sees  the cookies you return to it
         while debugging.
    
      Problem
         I can't find a known leak under  the  "Allocation  Profiler"
         tab.
    
      Solution
         Have you sorted the allocation sites by  leaked  memory?  If
         you  are  only displaying the top few allocation sites, your
         leak may not be among them in the ordering you have chosen.
    
    ENVIRONMENT
         GC_MONDIR
              GC_MONDIR  tells  the  program  linked  with  the   Sun
              WorkShop Memory Monitor's debugging library (libgc_dbg)
              the directory where the monitor files  are  stored.  By
              default, monitor files are stored in /tmp.
    
    FILES
         /tmp The default debugging report directory, to which  moni-
              tor files are written.  See the -m option.
    
    BUGS
         The GC Monitor must be started in the gcmonitor directory in
         the  Sun  WorkShop  Memory  Monitor  distribution because it
         depends on relative paths to numerous files,  including  the
         on-line  manual,  and  cannot  operate correctly unless this
         path is maintained.
    
    SEE ALSO
         gcInitialize(3), gcFixPrematureFrees(3),  gcStopFixingPrema-
         tureFrees(3).
    
         Sun WorkShop Memory Monitor User's Manual
    
    
    
    


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