This tutorial describes how to collect an execution trace for a service.
This tutorial covers the following:
Related tutorials:
Execution tracing in a child process.
Execution tracing in a service child process.
Execution tracing in an IIS ISAPI DLL.
Execution tracing for a child process from the command line.
This tutorial applies to all native services and to mixed-mode services that start the service that uses the native Win32 services API.
If your service is written entirely in .Net or .Net Core, or your service is mixed-mode with the startup code written in .Net or .Net core you can skip the part of this tutorial relating to the NT Service API and go straight to the collecting an execution trace from a service section.
Bug Validator ships with an example service in the examples\service folder in the Bug Validator installation directory.
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The example service has already been modified to use the NT Service API. In this tutorial, we’ll describe the modifications you would make to the service to make it work correctly with Bug Validator.
The NT Service API is a simple API that allows you to load the Bug Validator profiling DLL and start the process of collecting an execution trace.
The API also includes some debugging functions to help provide debugging information via log files (the only way to get data out of a service without a connection to the Bug Validator user interface).
The purpose of serviceCallback() is to regularly tell the service control manager that the service is alive. This prevents the service from being killed for being unresponsive if the instrumentation of your service takes too long (where too long is defined by the service control manager).
void serviceCallback(void *userParam) { // just tell the Service Control Manager that we are still busy // in this example userParam is not used static DWORD dwCheckPoint = 1; ssStatus.dwServiceType = SERVICE_WIN32_OWN_PROCESS; ssStatus.dwServiceSpecificExitCode = 0; ssStatus.dwControlsAccepted = 0; ssStatus.dwCurrentState = dwCurrentState; ssStatus.dwWin32ExitCode = dwWin32ExitCode; ssStatus.dwWaitHint = dwWaitHint; ssStatus.dwCheckPoint = dwCheckPoint++; // Report the status of the service to the service control manager. return SetServiceStatus(sshStatusHandle, &ssStatus); }
svlBVStub_setLogFileName(SZLOGFILENAME); svlBVStub_deleteLogFile();
#ifdef IS6432 // x86 with x64 GUI errCode = svlBVStub_LoadBugValidator6432(); #else //#ifdef IS6432 // x86 with x86 GUI // x64 with x64 GUI errCode = svlBVStub_LoadBugValidator(); #endif //#ifdef IS6432 if (errCode != SVL_OK) { DWORD lastError; lastError = GetLastError(); svlBVStub_writeToLogFileW(_T("Bug Validator load failed. \r\n")); svlBVStub_writeToLogFileLastError(lastError); svlBVStub_writeToLogFile(errCode); svlBVStub_dumpPathToLogFile(); } else { svlBVStub_writeToLogFileW(_T("Bug Validator load success. \r\n")); }
errCode = svlBVStub_SetServiceCallback(serviceCallback, // the callback NULL); // some user data if (errCode != SVL_OK) { svlBVStub_writeToLogFileW(_T("Setting service callback failed. \r\n")); svlBVStub_writeToLogFile(errCode); }
errCode = svlBVStub_StartBugValidator(); if (errCode != SVL_OK) { DWORD lastError; lastError = GetLastError(); svlBVStub_writeToLogFileW(_T("Starting Bug Validator failed. \r\n")); svlBVStub_writeToLogFileLastError(lastError); svlBVStub_writeToLogFile(errCode); } else { svlBVStub_writeToLogFileW(_T("Finished loading Bug Validator\r\n")); }
Now that the NT Service API has been implemented in your service, we can start collecting an execution trace from the service.
Select the service executable you are going to monitor. For this example the application is examples\service\Release\serviceBV.exe.
To finish collecting an execution trace, you need to stop your service.
Bug Validator will collect an execution trace through the service shutdown procedure and then present you with the complete execution trace.
There are a few things to check.
svlBVStub_setLogFileName(SZLOGFILENAME);
You have learned how to add the NT Service API to a native service, how to use Bug Validator to collect an execution trace for a service, and what to look at to diagnose errors if things don’t work first time.