fdleakfinder

helps you figure out why your unix process uses too many file descriptors


License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install fdleakfinder==0.0.3

Documentation

fd-leak-finder

fd-leak-finder helps you figure out why your unix process is using up too many fds.

To use it, generate strace output with a command something like this:

strace -q -a1 -s0 -ff -e trace=desc -tttT -ostrace.file $EXECUTABLE

Then pipe the resulting "strace.file.$PID" into fd-leak-finder's stdin.

CAVEATS

It turns out that strace's representation of this stuff is much more complicated than I thought, and I don't understand why some of fd-leak-finder's computations turn out the way they do. You can see "xxx weird" sorts of messages in fd-leak-finder. Hopefully it will be useful to you anyway! If you figure out how to improve it please let me know.

I guess parsing strace's human-oriented output is a bad way to do this. I'm not sure what a good way to do it is, on Linux. On Solaris or OSX I suppose a good way to do it would be to use dtrace.

LICENCE

You may use this package under the Simple Permissive Licence, version 1 or, at your option, any later version. See the file COPYING.SPL.txt for the terms of the Simple Permissive Licence, version 1.