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zfsslower_example.txt
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zfsslower_example.txt
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Demonstrations of zfsslower, the Linux eBPF/bcc version.
zfsslower shows ZFS reads, writes, opens, and fsyncs, slower than a threshold.
It has been written to work on ZFS on Linux (http://zfsonlinux.org). For
example:
# ./zfsslower
Tracing ZFS operations slower than 10 ms
TIME COMM PID T BYTES OFF_KB LAT(ms) FILENAME
06:31:28 dd 25570 W 131072 38784 303.92 data1
06:31:34 dd 25686 W 131072 38784 388.28 data1
06:31:35 dd 25686 W 131072 78720 519.66 data1
06:31:35 dd 25686 W 131072 116992 405.94 data1
06:31:35 dd 25686 W 131072 153600 433.52 data1
06:31:36 dd 25686 W 131072 188672 314.37 data1
06:31:36 dd 25686 W 131072 222336 372.33 data1
06:31:36 dd 25686 W 131072 254592 309.59 data1
06:31:37 dd 25686 W 131072 285440 304.52 data1
06:31:37 dd 25686 W 131072 315008 236.45 data1
06:31:37 dd 25686 W 131072 343424 193.54 data1
06:31:38 dd 25686 W 131072 370560 286.07 data1
06:31:38 dd 25686 W 131072 396672 251.92 data1
[...]
This shows writes to a "data1" file, each taking well over the 10 ms threshold.
the slowest, on the 3rd line of output, reached 519.66 ms for a 128 Kbyte
write by the "dd" command.
This "latency" is measured from when the operation was issued from the VFS
interface to the file system (via the ZFS POSIX layer), to when it completed.
This spans everything: block device I/O (disk I/O), file system CPU cycles,
file system locks, run queue latency, etc. This is a better measure of the
latency suffered by applications reading from the file system than measuring
this down at the block device interface.
Note that this only traces the common file system operations previously
listed: other file system operations (eg, inode operations including
getattr()) are not traced.
A threshold of 0 will trace all operations. Warning: the output will be
verbose, as it will include all file system cache hits.
# ./zfsslower 0
Tracing ZFS operations
TIME COMM PID T BYTES OFF_KB LAT(ms) FILENAME
06:36:07 dd 32242 O 0 0 0.01 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 0 0.25 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 128 0.03 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 256 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 384 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 512 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 640 0.03 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 768 0.03 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 896 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 1024 0.28 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 1152 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 1280 0.03 data1
[...]
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 13824 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 13952 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 14080 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 14208 398.92 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 14336 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 14464 0.04 data1
06:36:07 dd 32242 W 131072 15104 0.03 data1
[...]
The output now includes the open operation for this file ("O"), and then the
writes. Most of the writes are very fast, with only an occasional outlier that
is in the hundreds of milliseconds.
Fortunately this is not a real world environment: I setup a zpool on top of a
XFS file system for testing purposes. More debugging using other tools will
explain these outliers: possibly XFS flushing.
Here's a random read workload, and showing operations slower than 1 ms:
# ./zfsslower 1
Tracing ZFS operations slower than 1 ms
TIME COMM PID T BYTES OFF_KB LAT(ms) FILENAME
06:47:30 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 97840 1.03 data1
06:47:30 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 416744 1.12 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 228856 1.96 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 452248 1.02 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 315288 5.90 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 752696 1.20 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 481832 1.39 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 673752 1.39 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 691736 1.01 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 694776 1.78 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 403328 3.75 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 567688 1.08 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 694280 1.31 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 669280 1.06 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 426608 1.56 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 42512 1.01 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 22944 1.33 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 427432 1.48 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 261320 1.28 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 132248 1.23 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 96936 1.04 data1
06:47:31 randread.pl 15431 R 8192 482800 2.63 data1
[...]
A -j option will print just the fields (parsable output, csv):
# ./zfsslower -j 1
ENDTIME_us,TASK,PID,TYPE,BYTES,OFFSET_b,LATENCY_us,FILE
252305490911,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,163446784,1156,data1
252305493852,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,321437696,1129,data1
252305498839,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,475152384,1154,data1
252305505515,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,49094656,1082,data1
252305506774,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,470401024,1245,data1
252305509265,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,553246720,2412,data1
252305512365,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,20963328,1093,data1
252305513755,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,304111616,1350,data1
252305583330,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,166174720,1154,data1
252305593913,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,175079424,1241,data1
252305602833,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,305340416,3307,data1
252305608663,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,655958016,2704,data1
252305611212,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,40951808,1033,data1
252305614609,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,318922752,2687,data1
252305623800,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,246734848,2983,data1
252305711125,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,581795840,1091,data1
252305728694,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,710483968,1034,data1
252305762046,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,329367552,1405,data1
252305798215,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,44482560,1030,data1
252305806748,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,660602880,1069,data1
252305826360,randread.pl,17922,R,8192,616144896,2327,data1
[...]
USAGE message:
# ./zfsslower -h
usage: zfsslower [-h] [-j] [-p PID] [min_ms]
Trace common ZFS file operations slower than a threshold
positional arguments:
min_ms minimum I/O duration to trace, in ms (default 10)
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-j, --csv just print fields: comma-separated values
-p PID, --pid PID trace this PID only
examples:
./zfsslower # trace operations slower than 10 ms (default)
./zfsslower 1 # trace operations slower than 1 ms
./zfsslower -j 1 # ... 1 ms, parsable output (csv)
./zfsslower 0 # trace all operations (warning: verbose)
./zfsslower -p 185 # trace PID 185 only