sched-stats.txt 7.4 KB

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  1. Version 14 of schedstats includes support for sched_domains, which hit the
  2. mainline kernel in 2.6.20 although it is identical to the stats from version
  3. 12 which was in the kernel from 2.6.13-2.6.19 (version 13 never saw a kernel
  4. release). Some counters make more sense to be per-runqueue; other to be
  5. per-domain. Note that domains (and their associated information) will only
  6. be pertinent and available on machines utilizing CONFIG_SMP.
  7. In version 14 of schedstat, there is at least one level of domain
  8. statistics for each cpu listed, and there may well be more than one
  9. domain. Domains have no particular names in this implementation, but
  10. the highest numbered one typically arbitrates balancing across all the
  11. cpus on the machine, while domain0 is the most tightly focused domain,
  12. sometimes balancing only between pairs of cpus. At this time, there
  13. are no architectures which need more than three domain levels. The first
  14. field in the domain stats is a bit map indicating which cpus are affected
  15. by that domain.
  16. These fields are counters, and only increment. Programs which make use
  17. of these will need to start with a baseline observation and then calculate
  18. the change in the counters at each subsequent observation. A perl script
  19. which does this for many of the fields is available at
  20. http://eaglet.rain.com/rick/linux/schedstat/
  21. Note that any such script will necessarily be version-specific, as the main
  22. reason to change versions is changes in the output format. For those wishing
  23. to write their own scripts, the fields are described here.
  24. CPU statistics
  25. --------------
  26. cpu<N> 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
  27. NOTE: In the sched_yield() statistics, the active queue is considered empty
  28. if it has only one process in it, since obviously the process calling
  29. sched_yield() is that process.
  30. First four fields are sched_yield() statistics:
  31. 1) # of times both the active and the expired queue were empty
  32. 2) # of times just the active queue was empty
  33. 3) # of times just the expired queue was empty
  34. 4) # of times sched_yield() was called
  35. Next three are schedule() statistics:
  36. 5) # of times we switched to the expired queue and reused it
  37. 6) # of times schedule() was called
  38. 7) # of times schedule() left the processor idle
  39. Next two are try_to_wake_up() statistics:
  40. 8) # of times try_to_wake_up() was called
  41. 9) # of times try_to_wake_up() was called to wake up the local cpu
  42. Next three are statistics describing scheduling latency:
  43. 10) sum of all time spent running by tasks on this processor (in jiffies)
  44. 11) sum of all time spent waiting to run by tasks on this processor (in
  45. jiffies)
  46. 12) # of timeslices run on this cpu
  47. Domain statistics
  48. -----------------
  49. One of these is produced per domain for each cpu described. (Note that if
  50. CONFIG_SMP is not defined, *no* domains are utilized and these lines
  51. will not appear in the output.)
  52. domain<N> <cpumask> 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36
  53. The first field is a bit mask indicating what cpus this domain operates over.
  54. The next 24 are a variety of load_balance() statistics in grouped into types
  55. of idleness (idle, busy, and newly idle):
  56. 1) # of times in this domain load_balance() was called when the
  57. cpu was idle
  58. 2) # of times in this domain load_balance() checked but found
  59. the load did not require balancing when the cpu was idle
  60. 3) # of times in this domain load_balance() tried to move one or
  61. more tasks and failed, when the cpu was idle
  62. 4) sum of imbalances discovered (if any) with each call to
  63. load_balance() in this domain when the cpu was idle
  64. 5) # of times in this domain pull_task() was called when the cpu
  65. was idle
  66. 6) # of times in this domain pull_task() was called even though
  67. the target task was cache-hot when idle
  68. 7) # of times in this domain load_balance() was called but did
  69. not find a busier queue while the cpu was idle
  70. 8) # of times in this domain a busier queue was found while the
  71. cpu was idle but no busier group was found
  72. 9) # of times in this domain load_balance() was called when the
  73. cpu was busy
  74. 10) # of times in this domain load_balance() checked but found the
  75. load did not require balancing when busy
  76. 11) # of times in this domain load_balance() tried to move one or
  77. more tasks and failed, when the cpu was busy
  78. 12) sum of imbalances discovered (if any) with each call to
  79. load_balance() in this domain when the cpu was busy
  80. 13) # of times in this domain pull_task() was called when busy
  81. 14) # of times in this domain pull_task() was called even though the
  82. target task was cache-hot when busy
  83. 15) # of times in this domain load_balance() was called but did not
  84. find a busier queue while the cpu was busy
  85. 16) # of times in this domain a busier queue was found while the cpu
  86. was busy but no busier group was found
  87. 17) # of times in this domain load_balance() was called when the
  88. cpu was just becoming idle
  89. 18) # of times in this domain load_balance() checked but found the
  90. load did not require balancing when the cpu was just becoming idle
  91. 19) # of times in this domain load_balance() tried to move one or more
  92. tasks and failed, when the cpu was just becoming idle
  93. 20) sum of imbalances discovered (if any) with each call to
  94. load_balance() in this domain when the cpu was just becoming idle
  95. 21) # of times in this domain pull_task() was called when newly idle
  96. 22) # of times in this domain pull_task() was called even though the
  97. target task was cache-hot when just becoming idle
  98. 23) # of times in this domain load_balance() was called but did not
  99. find a busier queue while the cpu was just becoming idle
  100. 24) # of times in this domain a busier queue was found while the cpu
  101. was just becoming idle but no busier group was found
  102. Next three are active_load_balance() statistics:
  103. 25) # of times active_load_balance() was called
  104. 26) # of times active_load_balance() tried to move a task and failed
  105. 27) # of times active_load_balance() successfully moved a task
  106. Next three are sched_balance_exec() statistics:
  107. 28) sbe_cnt is not used
  108. 29) sbe_balanced is not used
  109. 30) sbe_pushed is not used
  110. Next three are sched_balance_fork() statistics:
  111. 31) sbf_cnt is not used
  112. 32) sbf_balanced is not used
  113. 33) sbf_pushed is not used
  114. Next three are try_to_wake_up() statistics:
  115. 34) # of times in this domain try_to_wake_up() awoke a task that
  116. last ran on a different cpu in this domain
  117. 35) # of times in this domain try_to_wake_up() moved a task to the
  118. waking cpu because it was cache-cold on its own cpu anyway
  119. 36) # of times in this domain try_to_wake_up() started passive balancing
  120. /proc/<pid>/schedstat
  121. ----------------
  122. schedstats also adds a new /proc/<pid>/schedstat file to include some of
  123. the same information on a per-process level. There are three fields in
  124. this file correlating for that process to:
  125. 1) time spent on the cpu
  126. 2) time spent waiting on a runqueue
  127. 3) # of timeslices run on this cpu
  128. A program could be easily written to make use of these extra fields to
  129. report on how well a particular process or set of processes is faring
  130. under the scheduler's policies. A simple version of such a program is
  131. available at
  132. http://eaglet.rain.com/rick/linux/schedstat/v12/latency.c