1 ================ 2 Delay accounting 3 ================ 4 5 Tasks encounter delays in execution when they 6 for some kernel resource to become available e 7 runnable task may wait for a free CPU to run o 8 9 The per-task delay accounting functionality me 10 the delays experienced by a task while 11 12 a) waiting for a CPU (while being runnable) 13 b) completion of synchronous block I/O initiat 14 c) swapping in pages 15 d) memory reclaim 16 e) thrashing 17 f) direct compact 18 g) write-protect copy 19 h) IRQ/SOFTIRQ 20 21 and makes these statistics available to usersp 22 the taskstats interface. 23 24 Such delays provide feedback for setting a tas 25 io priority and rss limit values appropriately 26 important tasks could be a trigger for raising 27 28 The functionality, through its use of the task 29 delay statistics aggregated for all tasks (or 30 thread group (corresponding to a traditional U 31 needed aggregation that is more efficiently do 32 33 Userspace utilities, particularly resource man 34 aggregate delay statistics into arbitrary grou 35 statistics of a task are available both during 36 exit, ensuring continuous and complete monitor 37 38 39 Interface 40 --------- 41 42 Delay accounting uses the taskstats interface 43 in detail in a separate document in this direc 44 generic data structure to userspace correspond 45 statistics. The delay accounting functionality 46 this structure. See 47 48 include/uapi/linux/taskstats.h 49 50 for a description of the fields pertaining to 51 It will generally be in the form of counters r 52 delay seen for cpu, sync block I/O, swapin, me 53 cache, direct compact, write-protect copy, IRQ 54 55 Taking the difference of two successive readin 56 counter (say cpu_delay_total) for a task will 57 experienced by the task waiting for the corres 58 in that interval. 59 60 When a task exits, records containing the per- 61 are sent to userspace without requiring a comm 62 task of a thread group, the per-tgid statistic 63 are given in the taskstats interface descripti 64 65 The getdelays.c userspace utility in tools/acc 66 commands to be run and the corresponding delay 67 also serves as an example of using the tasksta 68 69 Usage 70 ----- 71 72 Compile the kernel with:: 73 74 CONFIG_TASK_DELAY_ACCT=y 75 CONFIG_TASKSTATS=y 76 77 Delay accounting is disabled by default at boo 78 To enable, add:: 79 80 delayacct 81 82 to the kernel boot options. The rest of the in 83 been done. Alternatively, use sysctl kernel.ta 84 at runtime. Note however that only tasks start 85 delayacct information. 86 87 After the system has booted up, use a utility 88 similar to getdelays.c to access the delays 89 seen by a given task or a task group (tgid). 90 The utility also allows a given command to be 91 executed and the corresponding delays to be 92 seen. 93 94 General format of the getdelays command:: 95 96 getdelays [-dilv] [-t tgid] [-p pid] 97 98 Get delays, since system boot, for pid 10:: 99 100 # ./getdelays -d -p 10 101 (output similar to next case) 102 103 Get sum of delays, since system boot, for all 104 105 # ./getdelays -d -t 5 106 print delayacct stats ON 107 TGID 5 108 109 110 CPU count real total 111 8 7000000 112 IO count delay total 113 0 0 0 114 SWAP count delay total 115 0 0 116 RECLAIM count delay total 117 0 0 0 118 THRASHING count delay total 119 0 0 120 COMPACT count delay total 121 0 0 122 WPCOPY count delay total 123 0 0 124 IRQ count delay total 125 0 0 126 127 Get IO accounting for pid 1, it works only wit 128 129 # ./getdelays -i -p 1 130 printing IO accounting 131 linuxrc: read=65536, write=0, cancelle 132 133 The above command can be used with -v to get m
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