3.3 /proc/<pid>/io - Display the IO accounting fields
3.4 /proc/<pid>/coredump_filter - Core dump filtering settings
3.5 /proc/<pid>/mountinfo - Information about mounts
+ 3.6 /proc/<pid>/comm & /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/comm
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VmExe: 68 kB
VmLib: 1412 kB
VmPTE: 20 kb
+ VmSwap: 0 kB
Threads: 1
SigQ: 0/28578
SigPnd: 0000000000000000
contains details information about the process itself. Its fields are
explained in Table 1-4.
-Table 1-2: Contents of the statm files (as of 2.6.30-rc7)
+(for SMP CONFIG users)
+For making accounting scalable, RSS related information are handled in
+asynchronous manner and the vaule may not be very precise. To see a precise
+snapshot of a moment, you can see /proc/<pid>/smaps file and scan page table.
+It's slow but very precise.
+
+Table 1-2: Contents of the status files (as of 2.6.30-rc7)
..............................................................................
Field Content
Name filename of the executable
VmExe size of text segment
VmLib size of shared library code
VmPTE size of page table entries
+ VmSwap size of swap usage (the number of referred swapents)
Threads number of threads
SigQ number of signals queued/max. number for queue
SigPnd bitmap of pending signals for the thread
cgtime guest time of the task children in jiffies
..............................................................................
-The /proc/PID/map file containing the currently mapped memory regions and
+The /proc/PID/maps file containing the currently mapped memory regions and
their access permissions.
The format is:
modules List of loaded modules
mounts Mounted filesystems
net Networking info (see text)
+ pagetypeinfo Additional page allocator information (see text) (2.5)
partitions Table of partitions known to the system
pci Deprecated info of PCI bus (new way -> /proc/bus/pci/,
decoupled by lspci (2.4)
IRQs which have not yet been allocated/activated, and hence which lack a
/proc/irq/[0-9]* directory.
+The node file on an SMP system shows the node to which the device using the IRQ
+reports itself as being attached. This hardware locality information does not
+include information about any possible driver locality preference.
+
prof_cpu_mask specifies which CPUs are to be profiled by the system wide
profiler. Default value is ffffffff (all cpus).
Node 0, zone Normal 1 0 0 1 101 8 ...
Node 0, zone HighMem 2 0 0 1 1 0 ...
-Memory fragmentation is a problem under some workloads, and buddyinfo is a
+External fragmentation is a problem under some workloads, and buddyinfo is a
useful tool for helping diagnose these problems. Buddyinfo will give you a
clue as to how big an area you can safely allocate, or why a previous
allocation failed.
ZONE_DMA, 4 chunks of 2^1*PAGE_SIZE in ZONE_DMA, 101 chunks of 2^4*PAGE_SIZE
available in ZONE_NORMAL, etc...
+More information relevant to external fragmentation can be found in
+pagetypeinfo.
+
+> cat /proc/pagetypeinfo
+Page block order: 9
+Pages per block: 512
+
+Free pages count per migrate type at order 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
+Node 0, zone DMA, type Unmovable 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0
+Node 0, zone DMA, type Reclaimable 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
+Node 0, zone DMA, type Movable 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 2
+Node 0, zone DMA, type Reserve 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
+Node 0, zone DMA, type Isolate 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
+Node 0, zone DMA32, type Unmovable 103 54 77 1 1 1 11 8 7 1 9
+Node 0, zone DMA32, type Reclaimable 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
+Node 0, zone DMA32, type Movable 169 152 113 91 77 54 39 13 6 1 452
+Node 0, zone DMA32, type Reserve 1 2 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 0
+Node 0, zone DMA32, type Isolate 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
+
+Number of blocks type Unmovable Reclaimable Movable Reserve Isolate
+Node 0, zone DMA 2 0 5 1 0
+Node 0, zone DMA32 41 6 967 2 0
+
+Fragmentation avoidance in the kernel works by grouping pages of different
+migrate types into the same contiguous regions of memory called page blocks.
+A page block is typically the size of the default hugepage size e.g. 2MB on
+X86-64. By keeping pages grouped based on their ability to move, the kernel
+can reclaim pages within a page block to satisfy a high-order allocation.
+
+The pagetypinfo begins with information on the size of a page block. It
+then gives the same type of information as buddyinfo except broken down
+by migrate-type and finishes with details on how many page blocks of each
+type exist.
+
+If min_free_kbytes has been tuned correctly (recommendations made by hugeadm
+from libhugetlbfs http://sourceforge.net/projects/libhugetlbfs/), one can
+make an estimate of the likely number of huge pages that can be allocated
+at a given point in time. All the "Movable" blocks should be allocatable
+unless memory has been mlock()'d. Some of the Reclaimable blocks should
+also be allocatable although a lot of filesystem metadata may have to be
+reclaimed to achieve this.
+
..............................................................................
meminfo:
...] 1375103 17405 0 0 0 0 0 0
...] 1703981 5535 0 0 0 3 0 0
-In addition, each Channel Bond interface has it's own directory. For
+In addition, each Channel Bond interface has its own directory. For
example, the bond0 device will have a directory called /proc/net/bond0/.
It will contain information that is specific to that bond, such as the
current slaves of the bond, the link status of the slaves, and how
- irq: servicing interrupts
- softirq: servicing softirqs
- steal: involuntary wait
-- guest: running a guest
+- guest: running a normal guest
+- guest_nice: running a niced guest
The "intr" line gives counts of interrupts serviced since boot time, for each
of the possible system interrupts. The first column is the total of all
includes (but is not limited to) those created by calls to the fork() and
clone() system calls.
-The "procs_running" line gives the number of processes currently running on
-CPUs.
+The "procs_running" line gives the total number of threads that are
+running or ready to run (i.e., the total number of runnable threads).
The "procs_blocked" line gives the number of processes currently blocked,
waiting for I/O to complete.
..............................................................................
File Content
mb_groups details of multiblock allocator buddy cache of free blocks
- mb_history multiblock allocation history
..............................................................................
* if the task was reniced, its score doubles
* superuser or direct hardware access tasks (CAP_SYS_ADMIN, CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
or CAP_SYS_RAWIO) have their score divided by 4
- * if oom condition happened in one cpuset and checked task does not belong
+ * if oom condition happened in one cpuset and checked process does not belong
to it, its score is divided by 8
* the resulting score is multiplied by two to the power of oom_adj, i.e.
points <<= oom_adj when it is positive and
In other words: The number of bytes which this process caused to not happen,
by truncating pagecache. A task can cause "negative" IO too. If this task
truncates some dirty pagecache, some IO which another task has been accounted
-for (in it's write_bytes) will not be happening. We _could_ just subtract that
+for (in its write_bytes) will not be happening. We _could_ just subtract that
from the truncating task's write_bytes, but there is information loss in doing
that.
Documentation/filesystems/sharedsubtree.txt
+
+3.6 /proc/<pid>/comm & /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/comm
+--------------------------------------------------------
+These files provide a method to access a tasks comm value. It also allows for
+a task to set its own or one of its thread siblings comm value. The comm value
+is limited in size compared to the cmdline value, so writing anything longer
+then the kernel's TASK_COMM_LEN (currently 16 chars) will result in a truncated
+comm value.