How can I show the threads (stacktraces) in a hanging application that run with MONO?
I know that I can do it in .NET with the Managed Stack Explorer (MSE). Because the application hang only with MONO that I need to do it with MONO.
Or there are any other ideas how I can find the place of hanging?
Assuming you're on Linux/Unix, not Windows, send a SIGQUIT signal to your program. This can be done with
where $PID is the pid of your program. Mono will then dump stack traces of all threads to stdout. Note that although the process stays running after this, you should not expect it to remain usable/stable.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SIGQUIT for some background.
Note: The thread dump will not print out in the terminal window where you ran the
kill
command. It will appear in the stderr of the mono process.It is also possible to quickly grab a managed stack trace using GDB. Execute
gdb
; use sudo if you're not root or debugging a process owned by your user.Execute this script which I got from the debugging Mono page on mono-project.org:
If you like you can drop these commands in your
~/.gdbinit
so you don't have to copy and paste all the time.Now attach to your PID:
Note that the whole process is now paused so if you're doing this in production it is advisable to script this so it's as fast as possible.
To get your stack trace, execute
mono_stack
as defined above. Note that you won't see the output in gdb but in stdout. If you run your process with upstart you can just edit the upstart job to useconsole log
to log it to/var/log/upstart
.You may be interested in another thread than your main thread however. To do so, execute
info threads
to get your thread list andthread 2
to switch to thread #2. For more information on thread debugging, see debugging programs with multiple threads in the GDB docs.Once you're done, execute
quit
, and your program will continue working.