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pfmon (1)
  • >> pfmon (1) ( Linux man: Команды и прикладные программы пользовательского уровня )
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    NAME

    pfmon - a hardware-based performance monitoring tool
     
    

    SYNOPSIS

    pfmon [OPTION] [PROGNAME]
    
    
     

    DESCRIPTION

    The pfmon tool is a command line performance monitoring tool using the perfmon interface to access to hardware performance counters of certain processors. This version supports the following processors:
    Itanium processors
    Itanium, Itanium 2 (McKinley, Madison and variants), Dual-Core Itanium 2 (Montecito). Pfmon runs with any 2.6.x kernels for Itanium processors.

    AMD X86-64 processors
    You need to have a kernel with perfmon v2.2 or higher or pfmon to work.

    Intel Pentium M and P6 processors
    You need to have a kernel with perfmon v2.2 or higher or pfmon to work.

    With pfmon, it is possible to monitor a single thread or the entire system. It is also possible to monitorin multi-process and multi-threaded programs. For each, it is possible to collect simple counts or profiles.

    The set of events that can be measured depends on the underlying processor. Similarly certains options are specific to a processor model. In general pfmon gives acess to all processor-specific monitoring features.

     

    generic options

    Pfmon provides the following options on all processors:
    -h or --help
    display list of available options and exit
    -V or --version
    print pfmon version information and exit
    -l[regex] or --show-events[=regex]
    If regex is not provided, pfmon lists the names of all available events for the current processor. Otherwise only the events matching the regular expression are printed.
    --long-show-events[=regex]
    If regex is not provided, pfmon lists all available events for the current processor with a abbreviated list of attributes all one one line. Otherwise only the events matching the regular expression are printed.
    -i event or --event-info=event
    Display detailed information about an event. The event parameter can either be the event code, the event name, or a regular expression. In case multiple events match the expression, they are all printed.
    -u, -3, or --user-level
    Monitor at the user level for all events. By default, this option is turned on.
    -k, -0, or --kernel-level
    Monitor at the kernel level for all events. By default, this option is turned off.
    -1
    Monitor execution at privilege level 1. By default, this option is turned off.
    -2
    Monitor execution at privilege level 2. By default, this option is turned off.
    -e ev1,ev2,... or --events=ev1,ev2,...
    Select events to monitor. The events are specified by name or event code. If there are multiple events, they must be passed as a comma separated list without spaces. The maximum number of events depends on the underlying processors. Each -e option forms a set of events, multiple sets can be defined by specifying the -e option multiple times. Events related options always apply to the last defined sets. All events from a set are measured together. Pfmon uses the perfmon interface to multiplex the sets on the actual processors. In case multiple sets are used, pfmon scales the final count to provides estimates of what the actual count would have been had all the events been measured throughout the entire duration of the run. Pfmon does not re-arrange events between sets in case they cannot be measured together.
    -I or --info
    Print information related to the pfmon version, the support processor models and built-in sampling modules.
    -t secs or --session-timeout=secs
    Duration of the monitoring session expressed in seconds. Once the timeout expires, pfmon stops monitoring and print final counts or profiles.
    -S format or --smpl-module-info=format
    Display information about a sampling module.
    --debug
    Enable debug output (for experts).
    --verbose
    Print more information about the execution of pfmon.
    --outfile=filename
    Print final counts in the file called filename. By default, all results (count or profiles) are printed on the terminal.
    --append
    Append results (counts or profile) to the current output file. If --outfile or --smpl-outfile are not provided results are printed on the screen.
    --overflow-block
    Block the monitored thread when the sampling buffer becomes full. This option is only available in per-thread mode. By default, this option is turned off meaning tha the monitored thread keeps on running, with monitoring disabled, while pfmon is processing the sampling buffer. In other words, there may be blind spots.
    --system-wide
    Create a system wide monitoring session where pfmon measured all threads running on a set of processors. By default this option is turned off, i.e., pfmon operates in per-thread mode. By default, system-wide mode measures the same events on all available processors. It is possible to restrict to a subset of processor using the --cpu-list option.
    --smpl-outfile=filename
    Save profiles into the file called filename. By default, profiles are printed on the terminal.
    --long-smpl-periods=val1,val2,...
    Set the sampling period to reload into the overflowed counter(s) after the last sample is recorded into the sampling buffer, i.e. when the buffer becomes full. The values must be passed in the same order as the events the refer to. For instance, if the events are passed as -eev1,ev2 then sampling periods for ev1 must be the first, and for ev2, it must be the second. It is possible to skip a period, by providing an empty element in the list, e.g., --long-smpl-periods=,val2. Sampling periods are expressed in the same unit as the event, they refer to. If an event counts the number of instructions retired, then the sampling period is using the same unit, i.e., instructions retired. To sampling every 100,000 instructions, you can pass --long-smpl-periods=100000.
    --short-smpl-periods=val1,val2,...
    Set the sampling to reload into the overflowed counter(s) after a sample is recorded into the buffer and when that sample is not the last, i.e., when the buffer still has space remaining. Other than that, this option works exactly like --long-smpl-periods.
    --smpl-entries=n
    Selects the number of samples that the kernel sampling buffer can hold. The default size is determined dynamically by pfmon based on the size of a sample and system resource limits such as the amount of locked memory allowed for a user process (as reported by ulimit).
    --with-header
    Generates a header before printing counts or profiles. The header contains information about the configuration of the host systems and about the measurement being made.
    --cpu-list=num,num1-num2,...
    For system-wide mode, this option specifies the list of processors to monitor. Without this option, all available processors are monitored. Processors can be specified individually with their index, or by range.
    --aggregate-results
    aggregate counts and profiles output. By default, this option is off meaning that results are per-thread or per-CPU.
    --trigger-code-start-address=addr
    Start monitoring the first time code executes at address addr. The address can be specified in hexadecimal or with a symbol.
    --trigger-code-stop-address=addr
    Stop monitoring the first time code executes at address addr. The address can be specified in hexadecimal or with a symbol.
    --trigger-data-start-address=addr
    Start monitoring when the data address at address addr is accessed. By default, this is for any read or write access.
    --trigger-data-stop-address=addr
    Stop monitoring when data address at address addr is accessed. By default, this is for any read of write access.
    --trigger-code-repeat
    By default, the start and stop code triggers are activated only the first time they are reached. With this option, it is possible to repeat the start/stop behavior each time the execution crosses the trigger address.
    --trigger-code-follow
    Apply the start/stop code triggers to all monitored threads. By default, triggers are only applied to the first thread. This option has no effect on system-wide measurements.
    --trigger-data-repeat
    By default, the start and stop data triggers are activated only the first time they are reached. With this option, it is possible to repeat the start/stop behavior each time the data address is accessed.
    --trigger-data-follow
    Apply the start/stop data triggers to all monitored threads. By default, triggers are only applied to the first thread. This option has no effect on system-wide measurements.
    --trigger-data-ro
    Data trigger are activated on read access only. By default, they are activated on read or write access.
    --trigger-data-wo
    Data trigger activated on write access only. By default, they are activated on read or write access.
    --trigger-start-delay=secs
    Number of seconds before activating monitoring. By default, monitoring is activated immediatly, except when code/data triggers are used.
    Set privilege level per event. The levels apply to the current set, i.e. the last -e option. The levels are specified in the same order as the events. Accepted values for privileges are: u, k, 0, 1, 2, 3 or any combinations thereof.
    --us-counter-format
    Print counts using commas, e.g., 1,024.
    --eu-counter-format
    Print count using points, e.g., 1.024.
    --hex-counter-format
    Print count using hexadecimal, e.g., 0x400.
    --smpl-module=name
    Select the sampling module. By default the first module that matches the PMU model is used. This is typically the detailed-* module. To figure out which modules are supports, use the -I option.
    --show-time
    Show real,user, and system time for the command executed in per-thread mode.
    --symbol-file=filename
    ELF image containing the symbol table for the command being monitored. By default, pfmon uses the binary image on disk.
    --sysmap-file=filename
    System.map format file containing the kernel symbol table.
    --check-events-only
    Verify combination of events and exit. No measurement is performed.
    --smpl-periods-random=mask1:seed1,...
    Apply randomization to long and short periods. For each period, a seed and a mask value must be passed. The mask is a bitmask representing the range of variation for randomization. The seed can be any value.
    --smpl-print-counts
    When sampling, the final counts for the counters are not printed by default. This option forces counts to be printed at the end of a sampling measurement.
    --attach-task pid
    Attach to thread identified by pid that is already running. User must have permission to attach to the thread.
    --reset-non-smpl-periods
    At the end of a sampling period, reset all counters.
    --follow-fork
    Monitoring continues across fork(). By default monitoring is not propagated to child processes. This option has no effect in system-wide mode.
    --follow-vfork
    Monitoring continues across vfork(). By default monitoring is not propagated to child processes. This option has no effect in system-wide mode.
    --follow-pthread
    Monitoring continues across pthread_create(). By default monitoring is not propagated to new threads. This option has no effect in system-wide mode.
    --follow-exec[=pattern]
    Monitoring follows through the exec*() system call. By default monitoring stops at exec*(). It is possible to specify a regular expression pattern to filter out which command gets monitored. Without the pattern all commands are monitored.
    --follow-exec-exclude=pattern
    Monitoring follows through the exec*() system call. By default monitoring stops at exec*(). This option is the counter-part of --follow-exec in that the pattern specifies the command which must be excluded from monitoring. Depending on the monitored workload, it may be easier to specify the commands to excludes rather than the commands to include.
    --follow-all
    This option is equivalent to specifying all of --follow-fork, --follow-vfork, --follow-pthreads, --follow-exec.
    --no-cmd-output
    Redirect all output of executed commands to /dev/null.
    --exec-split-results
    Generate separate results output for execution before and after exec*().
    --resolve-addresses
    Resolve all code/data addresses in profiles using symbol table information. If the symbol information is not present, the raw address is printed. By default, only raw addresses are printed.
    --extra-smpl-pmds=num,num1-num2,...
    Specify a list of extra PMD register to include in samples. Those PMD registers are typically virtual PMD registers not tied to counters.
    --demangle-cpp
    C++ symbol demangling. By default, no symbol demangling is performed.
    --demangle-java
    Java symbol demangling. By default, no symbol demangling is performed.
    --saturate-smpl-buffer
    Stop collecting samples the first time the sampling buffer becomes full. In other words, simply collect the first N entries when --smpl-entries=N. By default, this option is off.
    --pin-command
    Pin executed command on the CPUs specified by --cpu-list. This option is only relavant in system-wide mode.
    --switch-timeout=milliseconds
    The number of milliseconds before switching from one event set to the next. Depending on the granularity of the underlying operating system timer tick, the timeout may be rounded up. If the difference with the user provided timeout exeeds 2%, pfmon prints a warning message.
    --dont-start
    Do not activate monitoring. This option is useful on architectures where it is possible to start/stop counters directly from the user level.
    --excl-idle
    Exclude idle threads from system-wide measurement.
    --cpu-set-relative
    With this option, CPU identifications for --cpu--list are relative to cpu_set affinity. By default, they are relative to actual CPU0.

     

    SEE ALSO

    Visit http://perfmon2.sf.net for more detailed documentation including processor specific options.

     

    AUTHOR

    Stephane Eranian <eranian@hpl.hp.com>


     

    Index

    NAME
    SYNOPSIS
    DESCRIPTION
    generic options
    SEE ALSO
    AUTHOR


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