biolatency 8 "2015-08-20" "USER COMMANDS"
NAME
biolatency - Summarize block device I/O latency as a histogram.
SYNOPSIS
biolatency [-h] [-T] [-Q] [-m] [-D] [interval [count]] DESCRIPTION
biolatency traces block device I/O (disk I/O), and records the distribution
of I/O latency (time). This is printed as a histogram either on Ctrl-C, or
after a given interval in seconds.
The latency of the disk I/O is measured from the issue to the device to its
completion. A -Q option can be used to include time queued in the kernel.
This tool uses in-kernel eBPF maps for storing timestamps and the histogram,
for efficiency.
This works by tracing various kernel blk_*() functions using dynamic tracing,
and will need updating to match any changes to these functions.
Since this uses BPF, only the root user can use this tool.
REQUIREMENTS
CONFIG_BPF and bcc.
OPTIONS
-h
Print usage message.
-T
Include timestamps on output.
-m
Output histogram in milliseconds.
-D
Print a histogram per disk device.
interval
Output interval, in seconds.
count
Number of outputs.
EXAMPLES
Summarize block device I/O latency as a histogram:
#
biolatency
Print 1 second summaries, 10 times:
#
biolatency 1 10
Print 1 second summaries, using milliseconds as units for the histogram, and
include timestamps on output:
#
biolatency -mT 1
Include OS queued time in I/O time:
#
biolatency -Q
Show a latency histogram for each disk device separately:
#
biolatency -D
FIELDS
usecs
Microsecond range
msecs
Millisecond range
count
How many I/O fell into this range
distribution
An ASCII bar chart to visualize the distribution (count column)
OVERHEAD
This traces kernel functions and maintains in-kernel timestamps and a histogram,
which are asynchronously copied to user-space. This method is very efficient,
and the overhead for most storage I/O rates (< 10k IOPS) should be negligible.
If you have a higher IOPS storage environment, test and quantify the overhead
before use.
SOURCE
This is from bcc.
https://
github.com/
iovisor/
bcc
Also look in the bcc distribution for a companion _examples.txt file containing
example usage, output, and commentary for this tool.
OS
Linux
STABILITY
Unstable - in development.
AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg
SEE ALSO
biosnoop(8)