1runqslower(8) System Manager's Manual runqslower(8)
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6 runqslower - Trace long process scheduling delays.
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9 runqslower [-p PID] [-t TID] [-P] [min_us]
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12 This measures the time a task spends waiting on a run queue (or equiva‐
13 lent scheduler data structure) for a turn on-CPU, and shows occurrences
14 of time exceeding passed threshold. This time should be small, but a
15 task may need to wait its turn due to CPU load. The higher the CPU
16 load, the longer a task will generally need to wait its turn.
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18 This tool measures two types of run queue latency:
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20 1. The time from a task being enqueued on a run queue to its context
21 switch and execution. This traces ttwu_do_wakeup(), wake_up_new_task()
22 -> finish_task_switch() with either raw tracepoints (if supported) or
23 kprobes and instruments the run queue latency after a voluntary context
24 switch.
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26 2. The time from when a task was involuntary context switched and still
27 in the runnable state, to when it next executed. This is instrumented
28 from finish_task_switch() alone.
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30 The overhead of this tool may become significant for some workloads:
31 see the OVERHEAD section.
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33 This works by tracing various kernel scheduler functions using dynamic
34 tracing, and will need updating to match any changes to these func‐
35 tions.
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37 Since this uses BPF, only the root user can use this tool.
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40 CONFIG_BPF and bcc.
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43 -h Print usage message.
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45 -p PID Only show this PID (filtered in kernel for efficiency).
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47 -t TID Only show this TID (filtered in kernel for efficiency).
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49 min_us Minimum scheduling delay in microseconds to output.
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51 -P Also show previous task comm and TID.
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54 Show scheduling delays longer than 10ms:
55 # runqslower
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57 Show scheduling delays longer than 1ms for process with PID 123:
58 # runqslower -p 123 1000
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61 TIME Time of when scheduling event occurred.
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63 COMM Process name.
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65 PID Process ID.
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67 LAT(us)
68 Scheduling latency from time when task was ready to run to the
69 time it was assigned to a CPU to run.
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72 This traces scheduler functions, which can become very frequent. While
73 eBPF has very low overhead, and this tool uses in-kernel maps for effi‐
74 ciency, the frequency of scheduler events for some workloads may be
75 high enough that the overhead of this tool becomes significant. Measure
76 in a lab environment to quantify the overhead before use.
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79 This is from bcc.
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81 https://github.com/iovisor/bcc
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83 Also look in the bcc distribution for a companion _examples.txt file
84 containing example usage, output, and commentary for this tool.
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87 Linux
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90 Unstable - in development.
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93 Ivan Babrou, original BCC Python version Andrii Nakryiko, CO-RE version
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96 runqlen(8), runqlat(8), pidstat(1)
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100USER COMMANDS 2016-02-07 runqslower(8)