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163ecdff06
Enable delay accounting by default so that feature gets coverage testing without requiring special measures. Earlier, it was off by default and had to be enabled via a boot time param. This patch reverses the default behaviour to improve coverage testing. It can be removed late in the kernel development cycle if its believed users shouldn't have to incur any cost if they don't want delay accounting. Or it can be retained forever if the utility of the stats is deemed common enough to warrant keeping the feature on. Signed-off-by: Shailabh Nagar <nagar@watson.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
113 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
113 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
Delay accounting
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----------------
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Tasks encounter delays in execution when they wait
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for some kernel resource to become available e.g. a
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runnable task may wait for a free CPU to run on.
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The per-task delay accounting functionality measures
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the delays experienced by a task while
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a) waiting for a CPU (while being runnable)
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b) completion of synchronous block I/O initiated by the task
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c) swapping in pages
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and makes these statistics available to userspace through
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the taskstats interface.
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Such delays provide feedback for setting a task's cpu priority,
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io priority and rss limit values appropriately. Long delays for
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important tasks could be a trigger for raising its corresponding priority.
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The functionality, through its use of the taskstats interface, also provides
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delay statistics aggregated for all tasks (or threads) belonging to a
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thread group (corresponding to a traditional Unix process). This is a commonly
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needed aggregation that is more efficiently done by the kernel.
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Userspace utilities, particularly resource management applications, can also
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aggregate delay statistics into arbitrary groups. To enable this, delay
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statistics of a task are available both during its lifetime as well as on its
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exit, ensuring continuous and complete monitoring can be done.
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Interface
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---------
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Delay accounting uses the taskstats interface which is described
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in detail in a separate document in this directory. Taskstats returns a
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generic data structure to userspace corresponding to per-pid and per-tgid
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statistics. The delay accounting functionality populates specific fields of
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this structure. See
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include/linux/taskstats.h
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for a description of the fields pertaining to delay accounting.
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It will generally be in the form of counters returning the cumulative
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delay seen for cpu, sync block I/O, swapin etc.
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Taking the difference of two successive readings of a given
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counter (say cpu_delay_total) for a task will give the delay
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experienced by the task waiting for the corresponding resource
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in that interval.
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When a task exits, records containing the per-task statistics
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are sent to userspace without requiring a command. If it is the last exiting
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task of a thread group, the per-tgid statistics are also sent. More details
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are given in the taskstats interface description.
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The getdelays.c userspace utility in this directory allows simple commands to
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be run and the corresponding delay statistics to be displayed. It also serves
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as an example of using the taskstats interface.
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Usage
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-----
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Compile the kernel with
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CONFIG_TASK_DELAY_ACCT=y
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CONFIG_TASKSTATS=y
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Delay accounting is enabled by default at boot up.
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To disable, add
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nodelayacct
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to the kernel boot options. The rest of the instructions
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below assume this has not been done.
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After the system has booted up, use a utility
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similar to getdelays.c to access the delays
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seen by a given task or a task group (tgid).
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The utility also allows a given command to be
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executed and the corresponding delays to be
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seen.
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General format of the getdelays command
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getdelays [-t tgid] [-p pid] [-c cmd...]
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Get delays, since system boot, for pid 10
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# ./getdelays -p 10
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(output similar to next case)
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Get sum of delays, since system boot, for all pids with tgid 5
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# ./getdelays -t 5
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CPU count real total virtual total delay total
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7876 92005750 100000000 24001500
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IO count delay total
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0 0
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MEM count delay total
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0 0
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Get delays seen in executing a given simple command
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# ./getdelays -c ls /
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bin data1 data3 data5 dev home media opt root srv sys usr
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boot data2 data4 data6 etc lib mnt proc sbin subdomain tmp var
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CPU count real total virtual total delay total
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6 4000250 4000000 0
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IO count delay total
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0 0
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MEM count delay total
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0 0
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