Bryan Cantrill
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bryan M. Cantrill is an engineer at Sun Microsystems. Cantrill graduated from Brown University, B.Sc. in computer science. He was born in Colorado where he attained the rank of Eagle Scout.
In 2005 Bryan Cantrill was named one of the 35 Top Young Innovators by Technology Review, MIT's magazine. Cantrill was included in the TR35 list for his development of DTrace, a function of the OS Solaris 10 that provides a non-invasive means for real-time tracing and diagnosis of software.
[edit] Articles
- Bryan Cantrill (February 2006). "Hidden in Plain Sight". ACM Queue 4 (1): 26–36. doi: . ISSN 1542-7730.
- Bryan M. Cantrill, Michael W. Shapiro and Adam H. Leventhal (June 2004). "Dynamic Instrumentation of Production Systems". Proceedings of the 2004 USENIX Annual Technical Conference. Retrieved on 2006-09-08.
- Bryan M. Cantrill, Thomas W. Doeppner (1997). "ThreadMon: A Tool for Monitoring Multithreaded Program Performance". 30th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS) Volume 1: Software Technology and Architecture. Retrieved on 2007-08-18.
[edit] External links
- Bryan Cantrill's blog at Sun Microsystems
- Dtrace Review (Google Tech Talk August 15, 2007)
- "Have you ever kissed a girl?" Bryan Cantrill's famous response to Linux Kernel hacker David Miller.