tracexec

A small utility for tracing execve{,at} and pre-exec behavior.

tracexec helps you to figure out what and how programs get executed when you execute a command.

It's useful for debugging build systems, understanding what shell scripts actually do, figuring out what programs does a proprietary software run, etc.

Showcases

TUI mode with pseudo terminal

In TUI mode with a pseudo terminal, you can view the details of exec events and interact with the processes within the pseudo terminal at ease.

Tracing setuid binaries

With root privileges, you can also trace setuid binaries and see how they work. But do note that this is not compatible with seccomp-bpf optimization so it is much less performant.

sudo tracexec --user $(whoami) tui -t -- sudo ls

Nested setuid binary tracing is also possible: A real world use case is to trace extra-x86_64-build (Arch Linux's build tool that requires sudo):

In this real world example, we can easily see that _FORTIFY_SOURCE is redefined from 2 to 3 , which lead to a compiler error.

Log mode

In log mode, by default, tracexec will print filename, argv and the diff of the environment variables and file descriptors.

example: tracexec log -- bash (In an interactive bash shell)

Reconstruct the command line with --show-cmdline

$ tracexec log --show-cmdline -- < command > # example: $ tracexec log --show-cmdline -- firefox

Try to reproduce stdio in the reconstructed command line

--stdio-in-cmdline and --fd-in-cmdline can be used to reproduce(hopefully) the stdio used by a process.

But do note that the result might be inaccurate when pipes, sockets, etc are involved.

tracexec log --show-cmdline --stdio-in-cmdline -- bash

Show the interpreter indicated by shebang with --show-interpreter

And show the cwd with --show-cwd .

$ tracexec log --show-interpreter --show-cwd -- < command > # example: Running Arch Linux makepkg $ tracexec log --show-interpreter --show-cwd -- makepkg -f

Installation

From source

Via cargo:

cargo install tracexec --bin tracexec

You can also install tracexec from AUR.

Binary

You can download the binary from the release page

You can also install tracexec-bin from AUR.

Usage

General CLI help:

A small utility for tracing execve{,at} and pre-exec behavior Usage: tracexec [OPTIONS] < COMMAND > Commands: log Run tracexec in logging mode tui Run tracexec in TUI mode, stdin/out/err are redirected to /dev/null by default help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s) Options: --color < COLOR > Control whether colored output is enabled. This flag has no effect on TUI mode. [default: auto] [possible values: auto, always, never] -C, --cwd < CWD > Change current directory to this path before doing anything -u, --user < USER > Run as user. This option is only available when running tracexec as root -h, --help Print help -V, --version Print version

TUI Mode:

Run tracexec in TUI mode, stdin/out/err are redirected to /dev/null by default Usage: tracexec tui [OPTIONS] -- < CMD > ... Arguments: < CMD > ... command to be executed Options: --seccomp-bpf < SECCOMP_BPF > seccomp-bpf filtering option [default: auto] [possible values: auto, on, off] --successful-only Only show successful calls --fd-in-cmdline [Experimental] Try to reproduce file descriptors in commandline. This might result in an unexecutable cmdline if pipes, sockets, etc. are involved. --stdio-in-cmdline [Experimental] Try to reproduce stdio in commandline. This might result in an unexecutable cmdline if pipes, sockets, etc. are involved. --show-all-events Set the default filter to show all events. This option can be used in combination with --filter-exclude to exclude some unwanted events. --filter < FILTER > Set the default filter for events. [default: warning,error,exec,tracee-exit] --filter-include < FILTER_INCLUDE > Aside from the default filter, also include the events specified here. [default: < empty > ] --filter-exclude < FILTER_EXCLUDE > Exclude the events specified here from the default filter. [default: < empty > ] -t, --tty Allocate a pseudo terminal and show it alongside the TUI -f, --follow Keep the event list scrolled to the bottom --terminate-on-exit Instead of waiting for the root child to exit, terminate when the TUI exits --kill-on-exit Instead of waiting for the root child to exit, kill when the TUI exits -A, --active-pane < ACTIVE_PANE > Set the default active pane to use when TUI launches [default: terminal] [possible values: terminal, events] -L, --layout < LAYOUT > Set the layout of the TUI when it launches [default: horizontal] [possible values: horizontal, vertical] -F, --frame-rate < FRAME_RATE > Set the frame rate of the TUI [default: 60.0] -h, --help Print help

Log Mode:

Run tracexec in logging mode Usage: tracexec log [OPTIONS] -- < CMD > ... Arguments: < CMD > ... command to be executed Options: --show-cmdline Print commandline that (hopefully) reproduces what was executed. Note: file descriptors are not handled for now. --show-interpreter Try to show script interpreter indicated by shebang --more-colors More colors --less-colors Less colors --diff-fd Diff file descriptors with the original std{in/out/err} --no-diff-fd Do not diff file descriptors --show-fd Show file descriptors --no-show-fd Do not show file descriptors --diff-env Diff environment variables with the original environment --no-diff-env Do not diff environment variables --show-env Show environment variables --no-show-env Do not show environment variables --show-comm Show comm --no-show-comm Do not show comm --show-argv Show argv --no-show-argv Do not show argv --show-filename Show filename --no-show-filename Do not show filename --show-cwd Show cwd --no-show-cwd Do not show cwd --decode-errno Decode errno values --no-decode-errno --seccomp-bpf < SECCOMP_BPF > seccomp-bpf filtering option [default: auto] [possible values: auto, on, off] --successful-only Only show successful calls --fd-in-cmdline [Experimental] Try to reproduce file descriptors in commandline. This might result in an unexecutable cmdline if pipes, sockets, etc. are involved. --stdio-in-cmdline [Experimental] Try to reproduce stdio in commandline. This might result in an unexecutable cmdline if pipes, sockets, etc. are involved. --show-all-events Set the default filter to show all events. This option can be used in combination with --filter-exclude to exclude some unwanted events. --filter < FILTER > Set the default filter for events. [default: warning,error,exec,tracee-exit] --filter-include < FILTER_INCLUDE > Aside from the default filter, also include the events specified here. [default: < empty > ] --filter-exclude < FILTER_EXCLUDE > Exclude the events specified here from the default filter. [default: < empty > ] -o, --output < OUTPUT > Output, stderr by default. A single hyphen ' - ' represents stdout. -h, --help Print help

The recommended way to use tracexec is to create an alias with your favorite options in your bashrc:

alias tracex= ' tracexec log --show-cmdline --show-interpreter --show-children --show-filename -- ' alias txtui= ' tracexec tui -t -- ' # Now you can use tracex < command > txtui < command >

Known issues

Non UTF-8 strings are converted to UTF-8 in a lossy way, which means that the output may be inaccurate.

The output is not stable yet, which means that the output may change in the future.

Test coverage is not good enough.

The pseudo terminal can't pass through certain key combinations and terminal features.

Origin

This project was born out of the need to trace the execution of programs.

Initially I simply use strace -Y -f -qqq -s99999 -e trace=execve,execveat <command> .

But the output is still too verbose so that's why I created this project.

Credits

This project takes inspiration from strace and lurk.