This series of patches adds per-container (cgroup) filtering capability to per-cpu monitoring. In other words, we can monitor all threads belonging to a specific cgroup and running on a specific CPU.
This is useful to measure what is going on inside a cgroup. Something that cannot easily and cheaply be achieved with either per-thread or per-cpu mode. Cgroups can span multiple CPUs. CPUs can be shared between cgroups. Cgroups can have lots of threads. Threads can come and go during a measurement. To measure per-cgroup today requires using per-thread mode and attaching to all the current threads inside a cgroup and tracking new threads. That would require scanning of /proc/PID, which is subject to race conditions, and creating an event for each thread, each event requiring kernel memory. The approach taken by this patch is to leverage the per-cpu mode by simply adding a filtering capability on context switch only when necessary. That way the amount of kernel memory used remains bound by the number of CPUs. We also do not have to scan /proc. We are only interested in cgroup level counts, not per-thread. The cgroup to monitor is designated by passing a file descriptor opened on a new per-cgroup file in the cgroup filesystem (perf_event.perf). The option must be activated by setting perf_event_attr.cgroup=1 and passing a valid file descriptor in perf_event_attr.cgroup_fd. Those are the only two ABI extensions. The patch also includes changes to the perf tool to make use of cgroup filtering. Both perf stat and perf record have been extended to support cgroup via a new -G option. The cgroup is specified per event: $ perf stat -B -a -e cycles:u,cycles:u,cycles:u -G test1,,test2 -- sleep 1 Performance counter stats for 'sleep 1': 2,368,667,414 cycles test1 2,369,661,459 cycles <not counted> cycles test2 1.001856890 seconds time elapsed Here, we measure cycles in 3 different cgroups. When a cgroup is omitted, the "root" cgroup is used, i.e., all threads executing on the monitored CPUs are measured. In the second version, time tracking has been updated. In cgroup mode, time_enabled tracks the time during which the cgroup was active, i.e., threads from the cgroup executed on the monitored CPU. The meaning of time_running is unchanged. In non-cgroup mode, time_enabled stills tracks wall-clock time for per-cpu events. Here is an example: In one shell I do: $ echo $$ >/cgroup/test1/perf_events.perf $ taskset -c 1 noploop 600 In another shell I do: $ taskset -c 1 noploop 600 Both noploops are competing on CPU1 (part of cgroup test1) $ perf stat -B -a -e cycles:u,cycles:u,cycles:u -G test1,,test2 -- sleep 1 Performance counter stats for 'sleep 1': 1,190,595,954 cycles test1 2,372,471,023 cycles <not counted> cycles test2 1.001845567 seconds time elapsed The second count reflects activity across all CPUs and cgroups. The first count reflects was happened inside cgroup test1. As shown, the noploop running inside test1, only got half the CPU time. In the third version, we have dropped dependency on NR_CPUS in favor of dynamic allocation with alloc_percpu(). We have also renamed get_event_time() to something more explicit: perf_event_time(). We cleaned the code so it compiles with CONFIG_CGROUPS disabled. We have also fixed a bug in the perf tool sampling module builtin-record.c PATCH 0/2: introduction PATCH 1/2: kernel changes PATCH 2/2: perf tool changes Signed-off-by: Stephane Eranian <eran...@google.com> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net Dev2Dev email is sponsored by: Show off your parallel programming skills. Enter the Intel(R) Threading Challenge 2010. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-thread-sfd _______________________________________________ perfmon2-devel mailing list perfmon2-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/perfmon2-devel