btreplay: fix device IO remap functionality
[blktrace.git] / doc / blkparse.1
CommitLineData
fbdf23ec 1.TH BLKPARSE 1 "March 6, 2007" "blktrace git\-20070306202522" ""
98eee4e4
JA
2
3
4.SH NAME
5blkparse \- produce formatted output of event streams of block devices
6
7
8.SH SYNOPSIS
9.B blkparse [ \fIoptions\fR ]
10.br
11
12
13.SH DESCRIPTION
14The \fIblkparse\fR utility will attempt to combine streams of events for
15various devices on various CPUs, and produce a formatted output of the event
16information. Specifically, it will take the (machine-readable) output of the
17\fIblktrace\fR utility and convert it to a nicely formatted and human-readable
18form.
19
20As with \fIblktrace\fR, some details concerning \fIblkparse\fR
21will help in understanding the command line options presented below.
22
23
24.TP 2
25\-
26By default, \fIblkparse\fR expects to run in a post-processing mode; one where
27the trace events have been saved by a previous run of blktrace, and blkparse
28is combining event streams and dumping formatted data.
29
30blkparse may be run in a live manner concurrently with blktrace by specifying
31\fB\-i \-\fR to blkparse, and combining it with the live option for blktrace.
32An example would be:
33
34 % blktrace \-d /dev/sda \-o \- | blkparse \-i \-
35
36.TP 2
37\-
38You can set how many blkparse batches event reads via the \fB\-b\fR option, the
39default is to handle events in batches of 512.
40
41.TP 2
42\-
43If you have saved event traces in blktrace with different output names (via
44the \fB\-o\fR option to blktrace), you must specify the same input name via the
45\fB\-i\fR option.
46
47.TP 2
48\-
49The format of the output data can be controlled via the \fB\-f\fR or \fB\-F\fR
50options \-\- see OUTPUT DESCRIPTION AND FORMATTING for details.
51
52.PP
53By default, blkparse sends formatted data to standard output. This may
54be changed via the \fB\-o\fR option, or text output can be disabled via the
55\fB\-O\fR option. A merged binary stream can be produced using the \fB\-d\fR
56option.
57
58
59
60.SH OPTIONS
541c9bf6
ES
61\-A \fIhex-mask\fR
62.br
63\-\-set-mask=\fIhex-mask\fR
64.RS
65Set filter mask to \fIhex-mask\fR, see blktrace (8) for masks
66.RE
67
68\-a \fImask\fR
69.br
70\-\-act-mask=\fImask\fR
71.RS
72Add \fImask\fR to current filter, see blktrace (8) for masks
73.RE
74
75\-D \fIdir\fR
76.br
77\-\-input-directory=\fIdir\fR
78.RS
79Prepend \fIdir\fR to input file names
80.RE
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81
82\-b \fIbatch\fR
83.br
84\-\-batch={batch}
85.RS
86Standard input read batching
87.RE
88
89\-i \fIfile\fR
90.br
91\-\-input=\fIfile\fR
92.RS
93Specifies base name for input files \-\- default is \fIdevice\fR.blktrace.\fIcpu\fR.
94
95As noted above, specifying \fB\-i \-\fR runs in live mode with blktrace
96(reading data from standard in).
97.RE
98
99\-F \fItyp,fmt\fR
100.br
101\-\-format=\fItyp,fmt\fR
102.br
103\-f \fIfmt\fR
104.br
105\-\-format\-spec=\fIfmt\fR
106.RS
107Sets output format
108(See OUTPUT DESCRIPTION AND FORMATTING for details.)
109
110The \-f form specifies a format for all events
111
112The \-F form allows one to specify a format for a specific
113event type. The single\-character \fItyp\fR field is one of the
114action specifiers described in ACTION IDENTIFIERS.
115.RE
116
19cfaf3f
AB
117\-M
118.br
119\-\-no-msgs
120.RS
121When \-d is specified, this will stop messages from being output to the
122file. (Can seriously reduce the size of the resultant file when using
123the CFQ I/O scheduler.)
124.RE
125
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126\-h
127.br
128\-\-hash\-by\-name
129.RS
130Hash processes by name, not by PID
131.RE
132
133\-o \fIfile\fR
134.br
135\-\-output=\fIfile\fR
136.RS
137Output file
138.RE
139
140\-O
141.br
142\-\-no\-text\-output
143.RS
144Do \fInot\fR produce text output, used for binary (\fB\-d\fR) only
145.RE
146
147\-d \fIfile\fR
148.br
149\-\-dump\-binary=\fIfile\fR
150.RS
151Binary output file
152.RE
153
154\-q
155.br
156\-\-quiet
157.RS
158Quiet mode
159.RE
160
161\-s
162.br
163\-\-per\-program\-stats
164.RS
165Displays data sorted by program
166.RE
167
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WZ
168\-S \fIevent\fR
169.br
170\-\-sort\-program\-stats=\fIevent\fR
171.br
172.RS
173Displays each program's data sorted by program name or io event, like
174Queued, Read, Write and Complete. When \-S is specified the \-s will be ignored.
175The capital letters Q,R,W,C stand for KB, then q/r/w/c stand for IO.
176
177If you want to soct programs by how many data they queued, you can use:
178
179blkparse -i sda.blktrace. -q \-S Q \-o sda.parse
180.RE
181
182
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183\-t
184.br
185\-\-track\-ios
186.RS
187Display time deltas per IO
188.RE
189
190\-w \fIspan\fR
191.br
192\-\-stopwatch=\fIspan\fR
193.RS
194Display traces for the \fIspan\fR specified \-\- where span can be:
195.br
196\fIend\-time\fR \-\- Display traces from time 0 through \fIend\-time\fR (in ns)
197.br
198or
199.br
200\fIstart:end\-time\fR \-\- Display traces from time \fIstart\fR
201through end\-time (in ns).
202.RE
203
204\-v
205.br
206\-\-verbose
207.RS
208More verbose marginal on marginal errors
209.RE
210
211\-V
212.br
213\-\-version
214.RS
215Display version
216.RE
217
218
219.SH "TRACE ACTIONS"
220The following trace actions are recognised:
221
222.HP 4
223\fBC -- complete\fR
224A previously issued request has been completed. The output will detail the
225sector and size of that request, as well as the success or failure of it.
226
227.HP 4
228\fBD -- issued\fR
229A request that previously resided on the block layer queue or in the i/o
230scheduler has been sent to the driver.
231
232.HP 4
233\fBI -- inserted\fR
234A request is being sent to the i/o scheduler for addition to the internal queue
235and later service by the driver. The request is fully formed at this time.
236
237.HP 4
238\fBQ -- queued\fR
239This notes intent to queue i/o at the given location. No real requests exists
240yet.
241
242.HP 4
243\fBB -- bounced\fR
244The data pages attached to this \fIbio\fR are not reachable by the hardware
245and must be bounced to a lower memory location. This causes a big slowdown in
246i/o performance, since the data must be copied to/from kernel buffers. Usually
247this can be fixed with using better hardware -- either a better i/o controller,
248or a platform with an IOMMU.
249
250.HP 4
251\fBM -- back merge\fR
252A previously inserted request exists that ends on the boundary of where this i/o
253begins, so the i/o scheduler can merge them together.
254
255.HP 4
256\fBF -- front merge\fR
257Same as the back merge, except this i/o ends where a previously inserted
258requests starts.
259
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260.HP 4
261\fBM -- front or back merge\fR
262One of the above.
263
264.HP 4
265\fBG -- get request\fR
266To send any type of request to a block device, a \fIstruct request\fR
267container must be allocated first.
268
269.HP 4
270\fBS -- sleep\fR
271No available request structures were available, so the issuer has to wait for
272one to be freed.
273
274.HP 4
275\fBP -- plug\fR
276When i/o is queued to a previously empty block device queue, Linux will plug the
277queue in anticipation of future ios being added before this data is needed.
278
279.HP 4
280\fBU -- unplug\fR
281Some request data already queued in the device, start sending requests to the
282driver. This may happen automatically if a timeout period has passed (see next
283entry) or if a number of requests have been added to the queue.
284
285.HP 4
286\fBT -- unplug due to timer\fR
287If nobody requests the i/o that was queued after plugging the queue, Linux will
288automatically unplug it after a defined period has passed.
289
290.HP 4
291\fBX -- split\fR
292On raid or device mapper setups, an incoming i/o may straddle a device or
293internal zone and needs to be chopped up into smaller pieces for service. This
294may indicate a performance problem due to a bad setup of that raid/dm device,
295but may also just be part of normal boundary conditions. dm is notably bad at
296this and will clone lots of i/o.
297
298.HP 4
299\fBA -- remap\fR
300For stacked devices, incoming i/o is remapped to device below it in the i/o
301stack. The remap action details what exactly is being remapped to what.
302
93d9e5b5
WZ
303.HP 4
304\fBR -- requeue\fR
305Put a request back on queue.
306
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307
308
309
310.SH "OUTPUT DESCRIPTION AND FORMATTING"
311
312The output from blkparse can be tailored for specific use -- in particular, to ease
313parsing of output, and/or limit output fields to those the user wants to see. The
314data for fields which can be output include:
315
316.IP \fBa\fR 4
317Action, a (small) string (1 or 2 characters) -- see table below for more details
318
319.IP \fBc\fR 4
320CPU id
321
322.IP \fBC\fR 4
323Command
324
325.IP \fBd\fR 4
326RWBS field, a (small) string (1-3 characters) -- see section below for more details
327
328.IP \fBD\fR 4
3297-character string containing the major and minor numbers of
330the event's device (separated by a comma).
331
332.IP \fBe\fR 4
333Error value
334
335.IP \fBm\fR 4
336Minor number of event's device.
337
338.IP \fBM\fR 4
339Major number of event's device.
340
341.IP \fBn\fR 4
342Number of blocks
343
344.IP \fBN\fR 4
345Number of bytes
346
347.IP \fBp\fR 4
348Process ID
349
350.IP \fBP\fR 4
351Display packet data \-\- series of hexadecimal values
352
353.IP \fBs\fR 4
354Sequence numbers
355
356.IP \fBS\fR 4
357Sector number
358
359.IP \fBt\fR 4
360Time stamp (nanoseconds)
361
362.IP \fBT\fR 4
363Time stamp (seconds)
364
365.IP \fBu\fR 4
366Elapsed value in microseconds (\fI\-t\fR command line option)
367
368.IP \fBU\fR 4
369Payload unsigned integer
370
371.PP
372Note that the user can optionally specify field display width, and optionally a
373left-aligned specifier. These precede field specifiers, with a '%' character,
374followed by the optional left-alignment specifier (\-) followed by the width (a
375decimal number) and then the field.
376
377Thus, to specify the command in a 12-character field that is left aligned:
378
379 \-f "%\-12C"
380
381
382.SH "ACTION IDENTIFIERS"
383
384The following table shows the various actions which may be output:
385
386.IP A
387IO was remapped to a different device
388
389.IP B
390IO bounced
391
392.IP C
393IO completion
394
395.IP D
396IO issued to driver
397
398.IP F
399IO front merged with request on queue
400
401.IP G
402Get request
403
404.IP I
405IO inserted onto request queue
406
407.IP M
408IO back merged with request on queue
409
410.IP P
411Plug request
412
413.IP Q
414IO handled by request queue code
415
416.IP S
417Sleep request
418
419.IP T
420Unplug due to timeout
421
422.IP U
423Unplug request
424
425.IP X
426Split
427
428
429.SH "RWBS DESCRIPTION"
430
64c03161
DW
431This is a small string containing at least one character ('R' for read, 'W'
432for write, or 'D' for block discard operation), and optionally either
433a 'B' (for barrier operations) or 'S' (for synchronous operations).
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434
435
436.SH "DEFAULT OUTPUT"
437
438The standard header (or initial fields displayed) include:
439
440 "%D %2c %8s %5T.%9t %5p %2a %3d"
441
442Breaking this down:
443
444.IP \fB%D\fR
445Displays the event's device major/minor as: %3d,%\-3d.
446
447.IP \fB%2c\fR
448CPU ID (2-character field).
449
450.IP \fB%8s\fR
451Sequence number
452
453.IP \fB%5T.%9t\fR
4545-character field for the seconds portion of the time stamp and a 9-character field for the nanoseconds in the time stamp.
455
456.IP \fB%5p\fR
4575-character field for the process ID.
458
459.IP \fB%2a\fR
4602-character field for one of the actions.
461
462.IP \fB%3d\fR
4633-character field for the RWBS data.
464
465Seeing this in action:
466
467 8,0 3 1 0.000000000 697 G W 223490 + 8 [kjournald]
468
469The header is the data in this line up to the 223490 (starting block).
470The default output for all event types includes this header.
471
472
473
474.SH "DEFAULT OUTPUT PER ACTION"
475
476\fBC \-\- complete\fR
477.RS 4
478If a payload is present, this is presented between
479parenthesis following the header, followed by the error value.
480
481If no payload is present, the sector and number of blocks are presented
482(with an intervening plus (+) character). If the \fB\-t\fR option
483was specified, then the elapsed time is presented. In either case,
484it is followed by the error value for the completion.
485.RE
486
487\fBB \-\- bounced\fR
488.br
489\fBD \-\- issued\fR
490.br
491\fBI \-\- inserted\fR
492.br
493\fBQ \-\- queued\fR
494.RS 4
495If a payload is present, the number of payload bytes
496is output, followed by the payload in hexadecimal between parenthesis.
497
498If no payload is present, the sector and number of blocks are presented
499(with an intervening plus (+) character). If the \fB\-t\fR option was
500specified, then the elapsed time is presented (in parenthesis). In
501either case, it is followed by the command associated with the event
502(surrounded by square brackets).
503.RE
504
505\fBF \-\- front merge\fR
506.br
507\fBG \-\- get request\fR
508.br
509\fBM \-\- back merge\fR
510.br
511\fBS \-\- sleep\fR
512.RS 4
513The starting sector and number of blocks is output
514(with an intervening plus (+) character), followed by the command
515associated with the event (surrounded by square brackets).
516.RE
517
518\fBP \-\- plug\fR
519.RS 4
520The command associated with the event (surrounded by
521square brackets) is output.
522.RE
523
524\fBU \-\- unplug\fR
525.br
526\fBT \-\- unplug due to timer\fR
527.RS 4
528The command associated with the event
529(surrounded by square brackets) is output, followed by the number of
530requests outstanding.
531.RE
532
533\fBX \-\- split\fR
534.RS 4
535The original starting sector followed by the new
536sector (separated by a slash (/) is output, followed by the command
537associated with the event (surrounded by square brackets).
538.RE
539
540\fBA \-\- remap\fR
541.RS 4
542Sector and length is output, along with the original
543device and sector offset.
544.RE
545
546
547.SH EXAMPLES
88d38b4d 548To trace the i/o on the device \fI/dev/sda\fB and parse the output to human
98eee4e4
JA
549readable form, use the following command:
550
551 % blktrace \-d /dev/sda \-o \- | blkparse \-i \-
552
553(see \fIblktrace\fR (8) for more information).
554This same behaviour can be achieve with the convenience script \fIbtrace\fR.
555The command
556
557 % btrace /dev/sda
558
559has exactly the same effect as the previous command. See \fIbtrace\fR (8) for
560more information.
561
562To trace the i/o on a device and save the output for later processing with
563\fIblkparse\fR, use \fIblktrace\fR like this:
564
565 % blktrace /dev/sda /dev/sdb
566
567This will trace i/o on the devices \fI/dev/sda\fR and \fI/dev/sdb\fR and save
568the recorded information in the files \fIsda\fR and \fIsdb\fR in the current
569directory, for the two different devices, respectively. This trace
570information can later be parsed by the \fIblkparse\fR utility:
571
572 % blkparse sda sdb
573
574which will output the previously recorded tracing information in human
575readable form to stdout.
576
577
578.SH AUTHORS
579\fIblkparse\fR was written by Jens Axboe, Alan D. Brunelle and Nathan Scott. This
580man page was created from the \fIblktrace\fR documentation by Bas Zoetekouw.
581
582
583.SH "REPORTING BUGS"
584Report bugs to <linux\-btrace@vger.kernel.org>
585
586.SH COPYRIGHT
587Copyright \(co 2006 Jens Axboe, Alan D. Brunelle and Nathan Scott.
588.br
589This is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of
590the GNU General Public License <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
591There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
592.br
593This manual page was created for Debian by Bas Zoetekouw. It was derived from
594the documentation provided by the authors and it may be used, distributed and
595modified under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2.
596.br
597On Debian systems, the text of the GNU General Public License can be found in
598/usr/share/common\-licenses/GPL\-2.
599
600.SH "SEE ALSO"
601btrace (8), blktrace (8), verify_blkparse (1), blkrawverify (1), btt (1)
602