]> STAT: the Stack Trace Analysis Tool STAT STAT: the Stack Trace Analysis Tool STAT 2018-02-02 Written by Gregory L. Lee Dorian C.Arnold Dong H.Ahn Bronis R.de Supinski Nicklas B.Jensen SvenKarlsson Matthew P.LeGendre Barton P.Miller Niklas Q.Nielsen MartinSchulz Disclaimer
Auspice&stat_auspice
License&stat_license
Introduction &stat_introduction Overview &stat_overview Changelog &stat_changelog Installing STAT
Dependent Packages&stat_dependencies
Installation&stat_installation
Using the stat-cl Command
Description&stat_description
stat-cl Options&stat_options
STAT Usage Example&stat_example
Using the stat-view GUI
Description&statview_description
The stat-view Node Menu&statview_node_menu
The stat-view Toolbar&statview_toolbar
Using the stat-gui GUI
Description&statgui_description
stat-gui Options&statgui_options
The stat-gui GUI Toolbar&statgui_toolbar
Sample Options&statgui_sample_options
Process Table&statgui_proc_tab
Equivalence Classes and Subset Debugging&statgui_eq_class
Availability&stat_llnl_availability]]>
Setting STAT Preferences and Options
Preference Files&stat_preference_files
Loading and Saving Preferences&stat_preferences
Environment Variables&stat_environment_variables
Prescription-Based Debugging With Prototype DySectAPI
Overview&dysectapi_overview
Installation&dysectapi_installation
Usage&dysectapi_usage
Tips and Tricks Using STAT
Running STAT at scale&stat_at_scale
Using STAT with IO Watchdog and SLURM&io_watchdog
Running STAT in a Batch Script&stat_batch_script
Using the stat-bench Emulator
Description&statbench_description
stat-bench Options&statbench_options
stat-bench Usage Example&statbench_example
Using the stat-script Python Interface
Description&stat_script_description
Troubleshooting Guide
Troubleshooting&stat_troubleshoot
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