STAP-SERVER(8)STAP-SERVER(8)NAME
stap-server - systemtap compile server management
SYNOPSIS
[ service ] stap-server { start | stop | restart | condrestart |
try-restart | force-reload | status } [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
A systemtap compile server listens for connections from stap clients on
a secure SSL network port and accepts requests to run the stap front
end. Each server advertises its presence and configuration on the local
network using mDNS (avahi) allowing for automatic detection by clients.
The stap-server script aims to provide:
· management of systemtap compile servers as a service.
· convenient control over configured servers and individual (ad-hoc)
servers.
ARGUMENTS
One of the actions below must be specified:
start Start servers. The specified servers are started. If no server
is specified, the configured servers are started. If no servers
are configured, a server for the kernel release and architecture
of the host is started. If a specified server is already
started, this action will be ignored for that server. If a
server fails to start, this action fails.
stop Stop server(s). The specified servers are stopped. If no server
is specified, all currently running servers are stopped. If a
specified server is not running, this action will be successful
for that server. If a server fails to stop, this action fails.
restart
Stop and restart servers. The specified servers are stopped and
restarted. If no server is specified, all currently running
servers are stopped and restarted. If no servers are running,
this action behaves like start.
condrestart
Stop and restart servers. The specified servers are stopped and
restarted. If a specified server is not running, it is not
started. If no server is specified, all currently running
servers are stopped and restarted. If no servers are running,
none will be started.
try-restart
This action is identical to condrestart.
force-reload
Stop all running servers, reload config files and restart the
service as if start was specified.
status Print information about running servers. Information about the
specified server(s) will be printed. If no server is specified,
information about all running servers will be printed.
OPTIONS
The following options are used to provide additional configuration and
to specify servers to be managed:
-c configfile
This option specifies a global configuration file in addition to
the default global configuration file described below. This file
will be processed after the default global configuration file.
If the -c option is specified more than once, the last configu‐
ration file specified will be used.
-a architecture
This option specifies the target architecture of the server and
is analogous to the -a option of stap. See the stap(1) manual
page for more details. The default architecture is the archi‐
tecture of the host.
-r kernel-release
This option specifies the target kernel release of the server
and is analogous to the -r option of stap. See the stap(1) man‐
ual page for more details. The default release is that of the
currently running kernel.
-I path
This option specifies an additional path to be searched by the
server(s) for tapsets and is analogous to the -I option of stap.
See the stap(1) manual page for more details.
-R path
This option specifies the location of the systemtap runtime to
be used by the server(s) and is analogous to the -R option of
stap. See the stap(1) manual page for more details.
-B options
This option specifies options to be passed to make when building
systemtap modules and is analogous to the -B option of stap.
See the stap(1) manual page for more details.
-i This option is a shortcut which specifies one server for each
kernel release installed in /lib/modules/. Previous -I, -R, -B
and -u options will be applied to each server, however previous
-a options will be ignored and the default architecture will be
used.
-n nickname
This option allows the specification of a server configuration
by nickname. When -n is specified, a currently running server
with the given nickname will be searched for. If no currently
running server with the given nickname is found, a server con‐
figuration with the given nickname will be searched for in the
configuration files for default servers, or the path configured
in the global configuration file or the configuration file spec‐
ified by the -c option. If a server configuration for the given
nickname is found, the -a, -r, -I, -R, -B and -u options for
that server will be used as if they were specified on the com‐
mand line. If no configuration with the given nickname is found,
and the action is start (or an action behaving like start (see
ARGUMENTS), the server will be started with the given nickname.
If no configuration with the given nickname is found, and the
action is not start (or an action behaving like start), it is an
error. If a nickname is not specified for a server which is
being started, its nickname will be its process id.
-p pid This option allows the specification of a server configuration
by process id. When -p is specified, a currently running server
with the given process id will be searched for. If no such
server is found, it is an error. If a server with the given
procss id is found, the -a, -r, -I, -R, -B and -u options for
that server will be used as if they were specified on the com‐
mand line.
-u user-name
Each systemtap compile server is normally run by the user name
stap-server (for the initscript) or as the user invoking
stap-server, unless otherwise configured (see FILES). This
option specifies the user name used to run the server(s). The
user name specified must be a member of the group stap-server.
CONFIGURATION
Configuration files allow us to:
· specify global configuration of logging, server configuration
files, status files and other global parameters.
· specify which servers are to be started by default.
Global Configuration
The Global Configuration file contains variable assignments used to
configure the overall operation of the service. Each line beginning
with a '#' character is ignored. All other lines must be of the form
VARIABLE=VALUE. This is not a shell script. The entire contents of the
line after the = will be assigned as-is to the variable.
The following variables may be assigned:
CONFIG_PATH
Specifies the absolute path of the directory containing the
default server configurations.
STAT_PATH
Specifies the absolute path of the running server status direc‐
tory.
LOG_FILE
Specifies the absolute path of the log file.
STAP_USER
Specifies the userid which will be used to run the server(s)
(default: for the initscript stap-server, otherwise the user
running stap-server).
Individual Server Configuration
Each server configuration file configures a server to be started when
no server is specified for the start action, or an action behaving like
the start action (see ARGUMENTS). Each configuration file contains
variable assignments used to configure an individual server.
Each line beginning with a '#' character is ignored. All other lines
must be of the form VARIABLE=VALUE. This is not a shell script. The
entire contents of the line after the = will be assigned as-is to the
variable.
Each configuration file must have a filename suffix of .conf. The
default location of these files can be overridden in the global config‐
uration file using the -c option (see OPTIONS).
The following variables may be assigned:
ARCH Specifies the target architecture for this server and corre‐
sponds to the -a option (see OPTIONS). If ARCH is not set, the
architecture of the host will be used.
RELEASE
Specifies the kernel release for this server and corresponds to
the -r option (see OPTIONS). If RELEASE is not set, the release
of the kernel running on the host will be used.
BUILD Specifies options to be passed to the make process used by sys‐
temtap to build kernel modules. This an array variable with
each element corresponding to a -B option (see OPTIONS). Using
the form BUILD=STRING clears the array and sets the first ele‐
ment to STRING. Using the form BUILD+=STRING adds STRING as an
additional element to the array.
INCLUDE
Specifies a list of directories to be searched by the server for
tapsets. This an array variable with each element corresponding
to an -I option (see OPTIONS). Using the form INCLUDE=PATH
clears the array and sets the first element to PATH. Using the
form INCLUDE+=PATH adds PATH as an additional element to the
array.
RUNTIME
Specifies the directory which contains the systemtap runtime
code to be used by this server and corresponds to the -R option
(see OPTIONS).
USER Specifies the user name to be used to run this server and corre‐
sponds to the -u option (see OPTIONS).
NICKNAME
Specifies the nickname to be used to refer to this server and
corresponds to the -n option (see OPTIONS).
SERVER AUTHENTICAION
The security of the SSL network connection between the client and
server depends on the proper management of server certificates.
The trustworthiness of a given systemtap compile server can not be
determined automatically without a trusted certificate authority issu‐
ing systemtap compile server certificates. This is not practical in
everyday use and so, clients must authenticate servers against their
own database of trusted server certificates. In this context, estab‐
lishing a given server as trusted by a given client means adding that
server's certificate to the client's database of trusted servers.
For the stap-server initscript, on the local host, this is handled
automatically. When the systemtap-server package is installed, the
server's certificate for the default user (stap-server) is automati‐
cally generated and installed. This means that servers started by the
stap-server initscript, with the default user, are automatically
trusted by clients on the local host, both as an SSL peer and as a sys‐
temtap module signer. Furthermore, when stap is invoked by an unprivi‐
leged user (not root, not a member of the group stapdev, but a member
of the group stapusr), the options --use-server and --unprivileged are
automatically added to the specified options. This means that unprivi‐
leged users on the local host can use a server on the local host in
unprivileged mode with no further setup or options required.
In order to use a server running on another host, that server's cer‐
tificate must be installed on the client's host. See the
--trust-servers option in the stap(1) manual page for more details and
README.unprivileged in the systemtap sources for more details..
EXAMPLES
See the stapex(3stap) manual page for a collection of sample systemtap
scripts.
To start the configured servers, or the default server, if none are
configured:
$ [ service ] stap-server start
To start a server for each kernel installed in /lib/modules:
$ [ service ] stap-server start -i
To obtain information about the running server(s):
$ [ service ] stap-server status
To start a server like another one, except targeting a different archi‐
tecture, by referencing the first server's nickname:
$ [ service ] stap-server start -n NICKNAME -a ARCH
To stop one of the servers by referencing its process id (obtained by
running stap-server status):
$ [ service ] stap-server stop -p PID
To run a script using a compile server:
$ stap SCRIPT --use-server
To run a script as an unprivileged user using a compile server:
$ stap SCRIPT
To stop all running servers:
$ [ service ] stap-server stop
SAFETY AND SECURITY
Systemtap is an administrative tool. It exposes kernel internal data
structures and potentially private user information. See the stap(1)
manual page for additional information on safety and security.
As a network server, stap-server should be activated with care in order
to limit the potential effects of bugs or mischevious users. Consider
the following prophylactic measures.
1 Run stap-server as an unprivileged user, never as root.
When invoked as a service (i.e. service stap-server ...), each
server is run, by default, as the user stap-server. When
invoked directly (i.e. stap-server ...), each server is run, by
default, as the invoking user. In each case, another user may be
selected by using the -u option on invocation, by specifying
STAP_USER=username in the global configuration file or by speci‐
fying USER=username in an individual server configuration file.
The invoking user must have authority to run processes as
another user. See CONFIGURATION.
The selected user must have write access to the server log file.
The location of the server log file may be changed by setting
LOG_FILE=path in the global configuration file. See CONFIGURA‐
TION.
The selected user must have read/write access to the directory
containing the server status files. The location of the server
status files may be changed by setting STAT_PATH=path in the
global configuration file. See CONFIGURATION.
The selected user must have read/write access to the uprobes.ko
build directory and its files.
Neither form of stap-server will run if the selected user is
root.
2 Run stap-server with resource limits that impose maximum cpu
time, file size, memory consumption, in order to bound the
effects of processing excessively large or bogus inputs.
When the user running the servers is stap-server, each server is
run with limits equivalent to
ulimit -f 50000 -s 1000 -t 60 -u 20 -v 500000
otherwise, no limits are imposed.
3 Run stap-server with a TMPDIR environment variable that points
to a separate and/or quota-enforced directory, in order to pre‐
vent filling up of important filesystems.
The default TMPDIR is /tmp/.
4 Activate network firewalls to limit stap client connections to
relatively trustworthy networks.
For automatic selection of servers by clients, avahi must be
installed on both the server and client hosts and mDNS messages
must be allowed through the firewall.
The systemtap compile server and its related utilities use the Secure
Socket Layer (SSL) as implemented by Network Security Services (NSS)
for network security. NSS is also used for the generation and manage‐
ment of certificates. The related certificate databases must be pro‐
tected in order to maintain the security of the system. Use of the
utilities provided will help to ensure that the proper protection is
maintained. The systemtap client will check for proper access permis‐
sions before making use of any certificate database.
FILES
Important files and their corresponding paths can be located in the
stappaths (7) manual page.
SEE ALSOstap(1), staprun(8), stapprobes(3stap), stapfuncs(3stap), stappaths(7),
stapex(3stap), avahi, ulimit(1), NSS
BUGS
Use the Bugzilla link of the project web page or our mailing list.
http://sources.redhat.com/systemtap/, <systemtap@sources.redhat.com>.
STAP-SERVER(8)