Hello Bryn,

Thanks much for clarification !

Regards,
Asha

-----Original Message-----
From: Bryn M. Reeves [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2017 5:04 PM
To: A M, Ashalatha <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [dm-devel] dm stats

On Wed, Dec 21, 2016 at 10:49:06AM +0000, A M, Ashalatha wrote:
> In this documentation, would like to know what is the command to be used to 
> create/print/list stats.
> 
> @stats_create <range> <step> [<program_id> [<aux_data>]]
> 
> @stats_print <region_id> [<starting_line> <number_of_lines>]
> 
> @stats_list [<program_id>]

These are device-mapper messages that you can send to a device to create, 
print, or list statistics regions.

All range and step arguments are in sectors and the messages are issued with 
the 'dmsetup message' command.

For example:

  # dmsetup message vg_hex/root 0 "@stats_list" 
  0: 35325952+2048 2048 dmstats -
  1: 35325952+2048 2048 dmstats -
  2: 44908544+16384 16384 dmstats DMS_GROUP=vm.img:2#-

This is however a very low-level interface to the dmstats facility; users are 
encouraged to use the userspace library (part of libdevmapper
- see libdevmapper.h for API documentation), or the 'dmstats' command to manage 
device-mapper statistics.

  # dmstats list
  Name             GrpID RgID ObjType RgStart RgSize  #Areas ArSize  ProgID 
  vg_hex-root          -    0 region   16.84g   1.00m      1   1.00m dmstats
  vg_hex-root          -    1 region   16.84g   1.00m      1   1.00m dmstats
  vm.img               2    2 region   21.41g   8.00m      1   8.00m dmstats
  
This has the benefit of a simpler command interface, automatic rate conversion 
for derived metrics (MB/s, queue length, etc.), configurable time and size 
units, flexible field control, grouping, aliasing and many other convenient 
features - see man 8 dmstats for further details of the command interface.

> Also, it is documented that 11 stats(Documentation/iostats.txt) would be 
> reported and additional counters as well:
> 
> 12. the total time spent reading in milliseconds
> 
> 13. the total time spent writing in milliseconds
> 
> So are these same as "read_ticks" and "write_ticks" else how different from 
> the ticks?

Yes: these are the fields reported by dmstats as 'read_ticks' and 
'write_ticks'. They differ from 'read_time' and 'write_time' in that they are 
the time spent _servicing_ (i.e. actively processing) read and write requests - 
the two '_time' fields instead track the total accumulated time for all 
requests (the time from the request being submitted to the time when it is 
completed, summed for all requests).

Regards,
Bryn.


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