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Trace / Trace Method Invoke Chains With Cost Filter

Trace Method Invoke Chains With Cost Filter

Trace command syntax to Trace method invoke chains with cost filter. Copyable examples, output expectations, and common mistakes.

$
Terminal
trace <class-pattern> <method-pattern> '#cost > <10>'

Command Result

What happens when it runs

Shell behavior

Primary Effect

Writes to file. The command sends content into the output file instead of printing the final result to the terminal.

Terminal Expectation

A successful run is usually quiet. Verify the destination file after execution rather than expecting visible stdout.

Troubleshooting

Common pitfalls

One of the input files does not exist

Solution: Check each input path before running the command.

The destination file or directory is not writable

Solution: Verify write permissions on the target path and parent directory.

Shell redirection points to the wrong file

Solution: Double-check the output path before executing, especially when overwriting with >.

Command Breakdown

What each part is doing

trace
Base Command
The executable that performs this operation. Here it runs Trace before the shell applies any redirect operators.
<class-pattern>
class pattern
The value supplied for class pattern.
<method-pattern>
method pattern
The value supplied for method pattern.
>
Output Redirection
Writes the command output to the output file, replacing any existing content.
<10>
Destination Path
The file that receives the final written output.

How To Run

Execution path

  1. Step 1

    Run the command: trace 'com.example.MyClass' 'processData' '#cost > 10'

  2. Step 2

    Verify output for methods exceeding the specified cost threshold in the results.

Alternative Approaches

Comparable commands in other tools

Alternative observability tools for the same job.