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607 lines
33 KiB
ReStructuredText
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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0+ OR CC-BY-4.0)
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======================================================
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Discovering Linux kernel subsystems used by a workload
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======================================================
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:Authors: - Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
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- Shefali Sharma <sshefali021@gmail.com>
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:maintained-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
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Key Points
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==========
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* Understanding system resources necessary to build and run a workload
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is important.
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* Linux tracing and strace can be used to discover the system resources
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in use by a workload. The completeness of the system usage information
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depends on the completeness of coverage of a workload.
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* Performance and security of the operating system can be analyzed with
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the help of tools such as:
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`perf <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/perf.1.html>`_,
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`stress-ng <https://www.mankier.com/1/stress-ng>`_,
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`paxtest <https://github.com/opntr/paxtest-freebsd>`_.
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* Once we discover and understand the workload needs, we can focus on them
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to avoid regressions and use it to evaluate safety considerations.
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Methodology
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===========
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`strace <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/strace.1.html>`_ is a
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diagnostic, instructional, and debugging tool and can be used to discover
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the system resources in use by a workload. Once we discover and understand
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the workload needs, we can focus on them to avoid regressions and use it
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to evaluate safety considerations. We use strace tool to trace workloads.
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This method of tracing using strace tells us the system calls invoked by
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the workload and doesn't include all the system calls that can be invoked
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by it. In addition, this tracing method tells us just the code paths within
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these system calls that are invoked. As an example, if a workload opens a
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file and reads from it successfully, then the success path is the one that
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is traced. Any error paths in that system call will not be traced. If there
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is a workload that provides full coverage of a workload then the method
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outlined here will trace and find all possible code paths. The completeness
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of the system usage information depends on the completeness of coverage of a
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workload.
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The goal is tracing a workload on a system running a default kernel without
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requiring custom kernel installs.
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How do we gather fine-grained system information?
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=================================================
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strace tool can be used to trace system calls made by a process and signals
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it receives. System calls are the fundamental interface between an
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application and the operating system kernel. They enable a program to
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request services from the kernel. For instance, the open() system call in
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Linux is used to provide access to a file in the file system. strace enables
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us to track all the system calls made by an application. It lists all the
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system calls made by a process and their resulting output.
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You can generate profiling data combining strace and perf record tools to
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record the events and information associated with a process. This provides
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insight into the process. "perf annotate" tool generates the statistics of
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each instruction of the program. This document goes over the details of how
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to gather fine-grained information on a workload's usage of system resources.
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We used strace to trace the perf, stress-ng, paxtest workloads to illustrate
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our methodology to discover resources used by a workload. This process can
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be applied to trace other workloads.
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Getting the system ready for tracing
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====================================
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Before we can get started we will show you how to get your system ready.
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We assume that you have a Linux distribution running on a physical system
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or a virtual machine. Most distributions will include strace command. Let’s
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install other tools that aren’t usually included to build Linux kernel.
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Please note that the following works on Debian based distributions. You
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might have to find equivalent packages on other Linux distributions.
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Install tools to build Linux kernel and tools in kernel repository.
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scripts/ver_linux is a good way to check if your system already has
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the necessary tools::
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sudo apt-get build-essentials flex bison yacc
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sudo apt install libelf-dev systemtap-sdt-dev libaudit-dev libslang2-dev libperl-dev libdw-dev
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cscope is a good tool to browse kernel sources. Let's install it now::
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sudo apt-get install cscope
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Install stress-ng and paxtest::
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apt-get install stress-ng
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apt-get install paxtest
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Workload overview
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=================
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As mentioned earlier, we used strace to trace perf bench, stress-ng and
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paxtest workloads to show how to analyze a workload and identify Linux
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subsystems used by these workloads. Let's start with an overview of these
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three workloads to get a better understanding of what they do and how to
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use them.
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perf bench (all) workload
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-------------------------
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The perf bench command contains multiple multi-threaded microkernel
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benchmarks for executing different subsystems in the Linux kernel and
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system calls. This allows us to easily measure the impact of changes,
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which can help mitigate performance regressions. It also acts as a common
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benchmarking framework, enabling developers to easily create test cases,
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integrate transparently, and use performance-rich tooling subsystems.
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Stress-ng netdev stressor workload
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----------------------------------
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stress-ng is used for performing stress testing on the kernel. It allows
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you to exercise various physical subsystems of the computer, as well as
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interfaces of the OS kernel, using "stressor-s". They are available for
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CPU, CPU cache, devices, I/O, interrupts, file system, memory, network,
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operating system, pipelines, schedulers, and virtual machines. Please refer
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to the `stress-ng man-page <https://www.mankier.com/1/stress-ng>`_ to
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find the description of all the available stressor-s. The netdev stressor
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starts specified number (N) of workers that exercise various netdevice
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ioctl commands across all the available network devices.
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paxtest kiddie workload
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-----------------------
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paxtest is a program that tests buffer overflows in the kernel. It tests
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kernel enforcements over memory usage. Generally, execution in some memory
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segments makes buffer overflows possible. It runs a set of programs that
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attempt to subvert memory usage. It is used as a regression test suite for
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PaX, but might be useful to test other memory protection patches for the
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kernel. We used paxtest kiddie mode which looks for simple vulnerabilities.
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What is strace and how do we use it?
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====================================
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As mentioned earlier, strace which is a useful diagnostic, instructional,
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and debugging tool and can be used to discover the system resources in use
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by a workload. It can be used:
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* To see how a process interacts with the kernel.
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* To see why a process is failing or hanging.
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* For reverse engineering a process.
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* To find the files on which a program depends.
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* For analyzing the performance of an application.
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* For troubleshooting various problems related to the operating system.
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In addition, strace can generate run-time statistics on times, calls, and
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errors for each system call and report a summary when program exits,
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suppressing the regular output. This attempts to show system time (CPU time
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spent running in the kernel) independent of wall clock time. We plan to use
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these features to get information on workload system usage.
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strace command supports basic, verbose, and stats modes. strace command when
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run in verbose mode gives more detailed information about the system calls
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invoked by a process.
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Running strace -c generates a report of the percentage of time spent in each
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system call, the total time in seconds, the microseconds per call, the total
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number of calls, the count of each system call that has failed with an error
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and the type of system call made.
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* Usage: strace <command we want to trace>
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* Verbose mode usage: strace -v <command>
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* Gather statistics: strace -c <command>
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We used the “-c” option to gather fine-grained run-time statistics in use
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by three workloads we have chose for this analysis.
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* perf
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* stress-ng
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* paxtest
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What is cscope and how do we use it?
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====================================
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Now let’s look at `cscope <https://cscope.sourceforge.net/>`_, a command
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line tool for browsing C, C++ or Java code-bases. We can use it to find
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all the references to a symbol, global definitions, functions called by a
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function, functions calling a function, text strings, regular expression
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patterns, files including a file.
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We can use cscope to find which system call belongs to which subsystem.
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This way we can find the kernel subsystems used by a process when it is
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executed.
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Let’s checkout the latest Linux repository and build cscope database::
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git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git linux
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cd linux
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cscope -R -p10 # builds cscope.out database before starting browse session
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cscope -d -p10 # starts browse session on cscope.out database
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Note: Run "cscope -R -p10" to build the database and c"scope -d -p10" to
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enter into the browsing session. cscope by default cscope.out database.
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To get out of this mode press ctrl+d. -p option is used to specify the
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number of file path components to display. -p10 is optimal for browsing
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kernel sources.
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What is perf and how do we use it?
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==================================
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Perf is an analysis tool based on Linux 2.6+ systems, which abstracts the
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CPU hardware difference in performance measurement in Linux, and provides
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a simple command line interface. Perf is based on the perf_events interface
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exported by the kernel. It is very useful for profiling the system and
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finding performance bottlenecks in an application.
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If you haven't already checked out the Linux mainline repository, you can do
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so and then build kernel and perf tool::
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git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git linux
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cd linux
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make -j3 all
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cd tools/perf
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make
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Note: The perf command can be built without building the kernel in the
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repository and can be run on older kernels. However matching the kernel
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and perf revisions gives more accurate information on the subsystem usage.
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We used "perf stat" and "perf bench" options. For a detailed information on
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the perf tool, run "perf -h".
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perf stat
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---------
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The perf stat command generates a report of various hardware and software
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events. It does so with the help of hardware counter registers found in
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modern CPUs that keep the count of these activities. "perf stat cal" shows
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stats for cal command.
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Perf bench
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----------
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The perf bench command contains multiple multi-threaded microkernel
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benchmarks for executing different subsystems in the Linux kernel and
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system calls. This allows us to easily measure the impact of changes,
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which can help mitigate performance regressions. It also acts as a common
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benchmarking framework, enabling developers to easily create test cases,
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integrate transparently, and use performance-rich tooling.
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"perf bench all" command runs the following benchmarks:
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* sched/messaging
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* sched/pipe
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* syscall/basic
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* mem/memcpy
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* mem/memset
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What is stress-ng and how do we use it?
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=======================================
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As mentioned earlier, stress-ng is used for performing stress testing on
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the kernel. It allows you to exercise various physical subsystems of the
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computer, as well as interfaces of the OS kernel, using stressor-s. They
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are available for CPU, CPU cache, devices, I/O, interrupts, file system,
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memory, network, operating system, pipelines, schedulers, and virtual
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machines.
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The netdev stressor starts N workers that exercise various netdevice ioctl
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commands across all the available network devices. The following ioctls are
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exercised:
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* SIOCGIFCONF, SIOCGIFINDEX, SIOCGIFNAME, SIOCGIFFLAGS
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* SIOCGIFADDR, SIOCGIFNETMASK, SIOCGIFMETRIC, SIOCGIFMTU
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* SIOCGIFHWADDR, SIOCGIFMAP, SIOCGIFTXQLEN
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The following command runs the stressor::
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stress-ng --netdev 1 -t 60 --metrics command.
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We can use the perf record command to record the events and information
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associated with a process. This command records the profiling data in the
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perf.data file in the same directory.
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Using the following commands you can record the events associated with the
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netdev stressor, view the generated report perf.data and annotate the to
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view the statistics of each instruction of the program::
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perf record stress-ng --netdev 1 -t 60 --metrics command.
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perf report
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perf annotate
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What is paxtest and how do we use it?
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=====================================
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paxtest is a program that tests buffer overflows in the kernel. It tests
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kernel enforcements over memory usage. Generally, execution in some memory
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segments makes buffer overflows possible. It runs a set of programs that
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attempt to subvert memory usage. It is used as a regression test suite for
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PaX, and will be useful to test other memory protection patches for the
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kernel.
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paxtest provides kiddie and blackhat modes. The paxtest kiddie mode runs
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in normal mode, whereas the blackhat mode tries to get around the protection
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of the kernel testing for vulnerabilities. We focus on the kiddie mode here
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and combine "paxtest kiddie" run with "perf record" to collect CPU stack
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traces for the paxtest kiddie run to see which function is calling other
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functions in the performance profile. Then the "dwarf" (DWARF's Call Frame
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Information) mode can be used to unwind the stack.
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The following command can be used to view resulting report in call-graph
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format::
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perf record --call-graph dwarf paxtest kiddie
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perf report --stdio
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Tracing workloads
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=================
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Now that we understand the workloads, let's start tracing them.
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Tracing perf bench all workload
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-------------------------------
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Run the following command to trace perf bench all workload::
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strace -c perf bench all
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**System Calls made by the workload**
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The below table shows the system calls invoked by the workload, number of
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times each system call is invoked, and the corresponding Linux subsystem.
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| System Call | # calls | Linux Subsystem | System Call (API) |
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+===================+===========+=================+=========================+
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| getppid | 10000001 | Process Mgmt | sys_getpid() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| clone | 1077 | Process Mgmt. | sys_clone() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| prctl | 23 | Process Mgmt. | sys_prctl() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| prlimit64 | 7 | Process Mgmt. | sys_prlimit64() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| getpid | 10 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getpid() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| uname | 3 | Process Mgmt. | sys_uname() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| sysinfo | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_sysinfo() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| getuid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getuid() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| getgid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getgid() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| geteuid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_geteuid() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| getegid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getegid |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| close | 49951 | Filesystem | sys_close() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| pipe | 604 | Filesystem | sys_pipe() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| openat | 48560 | Filesystem | sys_opennat() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| fstat | 8338 | Filesystem | sys_fstat() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| stat | 1573 | Filesystem | sys_stat() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| pread64 | 9646 | Filesystem | sys_pread64() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| getdents64 | 1873 | Filesystem | sys_getdents64() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| access | 3 | Filesystem | sys_access() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| lstat | 1880 | Filesystem | sys_lstat() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| lseek | 6 | Filesystem | sys_lseek() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| ioctl | 3 | Filesystem | sys_ioctl() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| dup2 | 1 | Filesystem | sys_dup2() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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| execve | 2 | Filesystem | sys_execve() |
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+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
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|
| fcntl | 8779 | Filesystem | sys_fcntl() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| statfs | 1 | Filesystem | sys_statfs() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| epoll_create | 2 | Filesystem | sys_epoll_create() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| epoll_ctl | 64 | Filesystem | sys_epoll_ctl() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| newfstatat | 8318 | Filesystem | sys_newfstatat() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| eventfd2 | 192 | Filesystem | sys_eventfd2() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| mmap | 243 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_mmap() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| mprotect | 32 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_mprotect() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| brk | 21 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_brk() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| munmap | 128 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_munmap() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| set_mempolicy | 156 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_set_mempolicy() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| set_tid_address | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_set_tid_address() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| set_robust_list | 1 | Futex | sys_set_robust_list() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| futex | 341 | Futex | sys_futex() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| sched_getaffinity | 79 | Scheduler | sys_sched_getaffinity() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| sched_setaffinity | 223 | Scheduler | sys_sched_setaffinity() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| socketpair | 202 | Network | sys_socketpair() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigprocmask | 21 | Signal | sys_rt_sigprocmask() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigaction | 36 | Signal | sys_rt_sigaction() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigreturn | 2 | Signal | sys_rt_sigreturn() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| wait4 | 889 | Time | sys_wait4() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| clock_nanosleep | 37 | Time | sys_clock_nanosleep() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| capget | 4 | Capability | sys_capget() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tracing stress-ng netdev stressor workload
|
|||
|
------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Run the following command to trace stress-ng netdev stressor workload::
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
strace -c stress-ng --netdev 1 -t 60 --metrics
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**System Calls made by the workload**
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The below table shows the system calls invoked by the workload, number of
|
|||
|
times each system call is invoked, and the corresponding Linux subsystem.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| System Call | # calls | Linux Subsystem | System Call (API) |
|
|||
|
+===================+===========+=================+=========================+
|
|||
|
| openat | 74 | Filesystem | sys_openat() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| close | 75 | Filesystem | sys_close() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| read | 58 | Filesystem | sys_read() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| fstat | 20 | Filesystem | sys_fstat() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| flock | 10 | Filesystem | sys_flock() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| write | 7 | Filesystem | sys_write() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| getdents64 | 8 | Filesystem | sys_getdents64() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| pread64 | 8 | Filesystem | sys_pread64() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| lseek | 1 | Filesystem | sys_lseek() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| access | 2 | Filesystem | sys_access() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| getcwd | 1 | Filesystem | sys_getcwd() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| execve | 1 | Filesystem | sys_execve() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| mmap | 61 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_mmap() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| munmap | 3 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_munmap() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| mprotect | 20 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_mprotect() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| mlock | 2 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_mlock() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| brk | 3 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_brk() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigaction | 21 | Signal | sys_rt_sigaction() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigprocmask | 1 | Signal | sys_rt_sigprocmask() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| sigaltstack | 1 | Signal | sys_sigaltstack() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigreturn | 1 | Signal | sys_rt_sigreturn() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| getpid | 8 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getpid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| prlimit64 | 5 | Process Mgmt. | sys_prlimit64() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| arch_prctl | 2 | Process Mgmt. | sys_arch_prctl() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| sysinfo | 2 | Process Mgmt. | sys_sysinfo() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| getuid | 2 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getuid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| uname | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_uname() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| setpgid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_setpgid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| getrusage | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getrusage() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| geteuid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_geteuid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| getppid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getppid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| sendto | 3 | Network | sys_sendto() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| connect | 1 | Network | sys_connect() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| socket | 1 | Network | sys_socket() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| clone | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_clone() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| set_tid_address | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_set_tid_address() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| wait4 | 2 | Time | sys_wait4() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| alarm | 1 | Time | sys_alarm() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
| set_robust_list | 1 | Futex | sys_set_robust_list() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tracing paxtest kiddie workload
|
|||
|
-------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Run the following command to trace paxtest kiddie workload::
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
strace -c paxtest kiddie
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**System Calls made by the workload**
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The below table shows the system calls invoked by the workload, number of
|
|||
|
times each system call is invoked, and the corresponding Linux subsystem.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| System Call | # calls | Linux Subsystem | System Call (API) |
|
|||
|
+===================+===========+=================+======================+
|
|||
|
| read | 3 | Filesystem | sys_read() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| write | 11 | Filesystem | sys_write() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| close | 41 | Filesystem | sys_close() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| stat | 24 | Filesystem | sys_stat() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| fstat | 2 | Filesystem | sys_fstat() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| pread64 | 6 | Filesystem | sys_pread64() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| access | 1 | Filesystem | sys_access() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| pipe | 1 | Filesystem | sys_pipe() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| dup2 | 24 | Filesystem | sys_dup2() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| execve | 1 | Filesystem | sys_execve() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| fcntl | 26 | Filesystem | sys_fcntl() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| openat | 14 | Filesystem | sys_openat() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigaction | 7 | Signal | sys_rt_sigaction() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| rt_sigreturn | 38 | Signal | sys_rt_sigreturn() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| clone | 38 | Process Mgmt. | sys_clone() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| wait4 | 44 | Time | sys_wait4() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| mmap | 7 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_mmap() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| mprotect | 3 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_mprotect() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| munmap | 1 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_munmap() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| brk | 3 | Memory Mgmt. | sys_brk() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| getpid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getpid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| getuid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getuid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| getgid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getgid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| geteuid | 2 | Process Mgmt. | sys_geteuid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| getegid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getegid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| getppid | 1 | Process Mgmt. | sys_getppid() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
| arch_prctl | 2 | Process Mgmt. | sys_arch_prctl() |
|
|||
|
+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Conclusion
|
|||
|
==========
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This document is intended to be used as a guide on how to gather fine-grained
|
|||
|
information on the resources in use by workloads using strace.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
References
|
|||
|
==========
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* `Discovery Linux Kernel Subsystems used by OpenAPS <https://elisa.tech/blog/2022/02/02/discovery-linux-kernel-subsystems-used-by-openaps>`_
|
|||
|
* `ELISA-White-Papers-Discovering Linux kernel subsystems used by a workload <https://github.com/elisa-tech/ELISA-White-Papers/blob/master/Processes/Discovering_Linux_kernel_subsystems_used_by_a_workload.md>`_
|
|||
|
* `strace <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/strace.1.html>`_
|
|||
|
* `perf <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/perf.1.html>`_
|
|||
|
* `paxtest README <https://github.com/opntr/paxtest-freebsd/blob/hardenedbsd/0.9.14-hbsd/README>`_
|
|||
|
* `stress-ng <https://www.mankier.com/1/stress-ng>`_
|
|||
|
* `Monitoring and managing system status and performance <https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/monitoring_and_managing_system_status_and_performance/index>`_
|