While the DTrace in FreeBSD is similar to that found in Solaris™, differences do exist. The primary difference is that in FreeBSD, DTrace is implemented as a set of kernel modules and DTrace can not be used until the modules are loaded. To load all of the necessary modules:
#kldload dtraceall
Beginning with FreeBSD 10.0-RELEASE, the modules are
      automatically loaded when dtrace is
      run.
FreeBSD uses the DDB_CTF kernel option to
      enable support for loading CTF data from
      kernel modules and the kernel itself.  CTF is
      the Solaris™ Compact C Type Format which encapsulates a reduced
      form of debugging information similar to
      DWARF and the venerable stabs.
      CTF data is added to binaries by the
      ctfconvert and ctfmerge
      build tools.  The ctfconvert utility parses
      DWARF ELF debug sections
      created by the compiler and ctfmerge merges
      CTF ELF sections from
      objects into either executables or shared libraries.
Some different providers exist for FreeBSD than for Solaris™.
      Most notable is the dtmalloc provider, which
      allows tracing malloc() by type in the FreeBSD
      kernel.  Some of the providers found in Solaris™, such as
      cpc and mib, are not
      present in FreeBSD.  These may appear in future versions of FreeBSD.
      Moreover, some of the providers available in both operating
      systems are not compatible, in the sense that their probes have
      different argument types.  Thus, D scripts
      written on Solaris™ may or may not work unmodified on FreeBSD, and
      vice versa.
Due to security differences, only root may use DTrace on FreeBSD.
      Solaris™ has a few low level security checks which do not yet
      exist in FreeBSD.  As such, the
      /dev/dtrace/dtrace is strictly limited to
      root.
DTrace falls under the Common Development and Distribution
      License (CDDL) license.  To view this license
      on FreeBSD, see
      /usr/src/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE
      or view it online at http://opensource.org/licenses/CDDL-1.0.
      While a FreeBSD kernel with DTrace support is
      BSD licensed, the CDDL is
      used when the modules are distributed in binary form or the
      binaries are loaded.
All FreeBSD documents are available for download at https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/doc/
Questions that are not answered by the
    documentation may be
    sent to <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org>.
    Send questions about this document to <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org>.