| Per-task statistics interface |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| |
| Taskstats is a netlink-based interface for sending per-task and |
| per-process statistics from the kernel to userspace. |
| |
| Taskstats was designed for the following benefits: |
| |
| - efficiently provide statistics during lifetime of a task and on its exit |
| - unified interface for multiple accounting subsystems |
| - extensibility for use by future accounting patches |
| |
| Terminology |
| ----------- |
| |
| "pid", "tid" and "task" are used interchangeably and refer to the standard |
| Linux task defined by struct task_struct. per-pid stats are the same as |
| per-task stats. |
| |
| "tgid", "process" and "thread group" are used interchangeably and refer to the |
| tasks that share an mm_struct i.e. the traditional Unix process. Despite the |
| use of tgid, there is no special treatment for the task that is thread group |
| leader - a process is deemed alive as long as it has any task belonging to it. |
| |
| Usage |
| ----- |
| |
| To get statistics during a task's lifetime, userspace opens a unicast netlink |
| socket (NETLINK_GENERIC family) and sends commands specifying a pid or a tgid. |
| The response contains statistics for a task (if pid is specified) or the sum of |
| statistics for all tasks of the process (if tgid is specified). |
| |
| To obtain statistics for tasks which are exiting, the userspace listener |
| sends a register command and specifies a cpumask. Whenever a task exits on |
| one of the cpus in the cpumask, its per-pid statistics are sent to the |
| registered listener. Using cpumasks allows the data received by one listener |
| to be limited and assists in flow control over the netlink interface and is |
| explained in more detail below. |
| |
| If the exiting task is the last thread exiting its thread group, |
| an additional record containing the per-tgid stats is also sent to userspace. |
| The latter contains the sum of per-pid stats for all threads in the thread |
| group, both past and present. |
| |
| getdelays.c is a simple utility demonstrating usage of the taskstats interface |
| for reporting delay accounting statistics. Users can register cpumasks, |
| send commands and process responses, listen for per-tid/tgid exit data, |
| write the data received to a file and do basic flow control by increasing |
| receive buffer sizes. |
| |
| Interface |
| --------- |
| |
| The user-kernel interface is encapsulated in include/linux/taskstats.h |
| |
| To avoid this documentation becoming obsolete as the interface evolves, only |
| an outline of the current version is given. taskstats.h always overrides the |
| description here. |
| |
| struct taskstats is the common accounting structure for both per-pid and |
| per-tgid data. It is versioned and can be extended by each accounting subsystem |
| that is added to the kernel. The fields and their semantics are defined in the |
| taskstats.h file. |
| |
| The data exchanged between user and kernel space is a netlink message belonging |
| to the NETLINK_GENERIC family and using the netlink attributes interface. |
| The messages are in the format |
| |
| +----------+- - -+-------------+-------------------+ |
| | nlmsghdr | Pad | genlmsghdr | taskstats payload | |
| +----------+- - -+-------------+-------------------+ |
| |
| |
| The taskstats payload is one of the following three kinds: |
| |
| 1. Commands: Sent from user to kernel. Commands to get data on |
| a pid/tgid consist of one attribute, of type TASKSTATS_CMD_ATTR_PID/TGID, |
| containing a u32 pid or tgid in the attribute payload. The pid/tgid denotes |
| the task/process for which userspace wants statistics. |
| |
| Commands to register/deregister interest in exit data from a set of cpus |
| consist of one attribute, of type |
| TASKSTATS_CMD_ATTR_REGISTER/DEREGISTER_CPUMASK and contain a cpumask in the |
| attribute payload. The cpumask is specified as an ascii string of |
| comma-separated cpu ranges e.g. to listen to exit data from cpus 1,2,3,5,7,8 |
| the cpumask would be "1-3,5,7-8". If userspace forgets to deregister interest |
| in cpus before closing the listening socket, the kernel cleans up its interest |
| set over time. However, for the sake of efficiency, an explicit deregistration |
| is advisable. |
| |
| 2. Response for a command: sent from the kernel in response to a userspace |
| command. The payload is a series of three attributes of type: |
| |
| a) TASKSTATS_TYPE_AGGR_PID/TGID : attribute containing no payload but indicates |
| a pid/tgid will be followed by some stats. |
| |
| b) TASKSTATS_TYPE_PID/TGID: attribute whose payload is the pid/tgid whose stats |
| are being returned. |
| |
| c) TASKSTATS_TYPE_STATS: attribute with a struct taskstats as payload. The |
| same structure is used for both per-pid and per-tgid stats. |
| |
| 3. New message sent by kernel whenever a task exits. The payload consists of a |
| series of attributes of the following type: |
| |
| a) TASKSTATS_TYPE_AGGR_PID: indicates next two attributes will be pid+stats |
| b) TASKSTATS_TYPE_PID: contains exiting task's pid |
| c) TASKSTATS_TYPE_STATS: contains the exiting task's per-pid stats |
| d) TASKSTATS_TYPE_AGGR_TGID: indicates next two attributes will be tgid+stats |
| e) TASKSTATS_TYPE_TGID: contains tgid of process to which task belongs |
| f) TASKSTATS_TYPE_STATS: contains the per-tgid stats for exiting task's process |
| |
| |
| per-tgid stats |
| -------------- |
| |
| Taskstats provides per-process stats, in addition to per-task stats, since |
| resource management is often done at a process granularity and aggregating task |
| stats in userspace alone is inefficient and potentially inaccurate (due to lack |
| of atomicity). |
| |
| However, maintaining per-process, in addition to per-task stats, within the |
| kernel has space and time overheads. To address this, the taskstats code |
| accumulates each exiting task's statistics into a process-wide data structure. |
| When the last task of a process exits, the process level data accumulated also |
| gets sent to userspace (along with the per-task data). |
| |
| When a user queries to get per-tgid data, the sum of all other live threads in |
| the group is added up and added to the accumulated total for previously exited |
| threads of the same thread group. |
| |
| Extending taskstats |
| ------------------- |
| |
| There are two ways to extend the taskstats interface to export more |
| per-task/process stats as patches to collect them get added to the kernel |
| in future: |
| |
| 1. Adding more fields to the end of the existing struct taskstats. Backward |
| compatibility is ensured by the version number within the |
| structure. Userspace will use only the fields of the struct that correspond |
| to the version its using. |
| |
| 2. Defining separate statistic structs and using the netlink attributes |
| interface to return them. Since userspace processes each netlink attribute |
| independently, it can always ignore attributes whose type it does not |
| understand (because it is using an older version of the interface). |
| |
| |
| Choosing between 1. and 2. is a matter of trading off flexibility and |
| overhead. If only a few fields need to be added, then 1. is the preferable |
| path since the kernel and userspace don't need to incur the overhead of |
| processing new netlink attributes. But if the new fields expand the existing |
| struct too much, requiring disparate userspace accounting utilities to |
| unnecessarily receive large structures whose fields are of no interest, then |
| extending the attributes structure would be worthwhile. |
| |
| Flow control for taskstats |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| When the rate of task exits becomes large, a listener may not be able to keep |
| up with the kernel's rate of sending per-tid/tgid exit data leading to data |
| loss. This possibility gets compounded when the taskstats structure gets |
| extended and the number of cpus grows large. |
| |
| To avoid losing statistics, userspace should do one or more of the following: |
| |
| - increase the receive buffer sizes for the netlink sockets opened by |
| listeners to receive exit data. |
| |
| - create more listeners and reduce the number of cpus being listened to by |
| each listener. In the extreme case, there could be one listener for each cpu. |
| Users may also consider setting the cpu affinity of the listener to the subset |
| of cpus to which it listens, especially if they are listening to just one cpu. |
| |
| Despite these measures, if the userspace receives ENOBUFS error messages |
| indicated overflow of receive buffers, it should take measures to handle the |
| loss of data. |
| |
| ---- |