1\documentclass{article} 2\usepackage{epsfig,placeins} 3 4% 5% Copyright (C) 2007 Alan D. Brunelle <Alan.Brunelle@hp.com> 6% 7% This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 8% it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 9% the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 10% (at your option) any later version. 11% 12% This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 13% but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 14% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 15% GNU General Public License for more details. 16% 17% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 18% along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 19% Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA 20% 21% vi :set textwidth=75 22 23\title{\texttt{btt} User Guide} 24\author{Alan D. Brunelle (Alan.Brunelle@hp.com)} 25\date{30 October 2008} 26 27\begin{document} 28\maketitle 29%-------------- 30\section{\label{sec:intro}Introduction} 31 32\texttt{btt} is a post-processing tool for the block layer IO tracing 33tool called blktrace. As noted in its Users Guide, blktrace 34 35 \begin{quotation} 36 is a block layer IO tracing mechanism which provides detailed 37 information about request queue operations up to user space. 38 \end{quotation} 39 40blktrace is capable of producing tremendous amounts of output in the 41form of multiple individual traces per IO executed during the traced 42run. It is also capable of producing some general statistics concerning 43IO rates and the like. \texttt{btt} goes further and produces a variety 44of overall statistics about each of the individual handling of IOs, and 45provides data we believe is useful to plot to provide visual comparisons 46for evaluation. 47 48This document will discuss \texttt{btt} usage, provide some sample output, 49and also show some interesting plots generated from the data provided 50by the \texttt{btt} utility. 51 52\bigskip 53A short note on the ordering of this document -- the actual 54command-line usage section occurs relatively late in the document (see 55section~\ref{sec:cmd-line}), as we felt that discussing some of the 56capabilities and output formats would make the parameter discussion 57easier. 58 59\bigskip 60 This document refers to the output formats generated by \texttt{btt} 61 version 2.00. However, the descriptions are general enough to cover 62 output formats prior to that. 63 64\newpage\tableofcontents 65 66\newpage\section{\label{sec:getting-started}Getting Started} 67 68 The simple pipeline to get going with \texttt{btt} is to perform the 69 following steps: 70 71 \begin{enumerate} 72 \item Run \texttt{blktrace}, specifying whatever devices and other 73 parameters you want. You must save the traces to disk in this step, 74 btt does not work in live mode. 75 76 \item After tracing completes, run \texttt{blkrawverify}, specifying 77 all devices that were traced (or at least on all devices that you 78 will use \texttt{btt} with -- section~\ref{sec:o-D} shows how you 79 can dictate which devices to use with btt). If blkrawverify finds 80 errors in the trace streams saved, it is best to recapture the data 81 -- utilizing \texttt{btt} on \emph{unclean} trace files produces 82 inconsistent results. 83 84 While this step is optional, we have found that performing this 85 helps to ensure data coming from \texttt{btt} makes the most sense. 86 87 \item Run \texttt{blkparse} with the \texttt{-d} option specifying 88 a file to store the combined binary stream. (e.g.: \texttt{blkparse 89 -d bp.bin ...}). 90 91 \texttt{blktrace} produces a series of binary files 92 containing parallel trace streams -- one file per CPU per 93 device. \texttt{blkparse} provides the ability to combine all the 94 files into one time-ordered stream of traces for all devices. 95 96 \item Run \texttt{btt} specifying the file produced by 97 \texttt{blkparse} utilizing the \texttt{-i} option (e.g.: \texttt{btt 98 -i bp.bin ...}). 99 100 \end{enumerate} 101 102\newpage\section{\label{sec:output-overview}Output Overview} 103 104 The major default areas of output provided by \texttt{btt} 105 include\label{tl-defs}: 106 107\begin{description} 108 \item[average component times across all IOs] The time line of each IO 109 is broken down into 3 major regions: 110 111 \begin{enumerate} 112 \item Time needed to insert or merge an incoming IO onto the request 113 queue. This is the average time from when the IO enters the block 114 IO layer (queue trace) until it is inserted (insert trace). 115 116 This is denoted as \emph{Q2I} time. 117 118 This is also broken down into two component times\footnote{On 119 occasion there are also some time spent \emph{sleeping} waiting 120 for a request. That occurs between the Q and G operations. You 121 will see these listed as \texttt{S2G} times.}: 122 123 \begin{description} 124 \item[Q2G] Time needed to \emph{get} a request (get request 125 trace). 126 127 \item[G2I] Time needed to put that request onto the request 128 queue (insert trace). 129 \end{description} 130 131 For \emph{merged} requests -- an incoming request that is merged 132 with a previously submitted request -- we calculate \emph{Q2M}, the 133 amount of time between the queue trace and the merge trace. 134 135 \item Time spent on the request queue. The average time from when 136 the IO is inserted or merged onto the request queue, until it is 137 issued (issue trace) to the lower level driver. 138 139 Referred to as \emph{I2D} time\footnote{The \emph{issue} trace 140 is represented by a D in the blkparse output, hence its usage in 141 btt to refer to issue traces. Note that an I is used to refer to 142 \emph{insert} traces.}. 143 144 \item Driver and device time -- the average time from when the 145 actual IO was issued to the driver until is completed (completion 146 trace) back to the block IO layer. 147 148 This is referred to as the \emph{D2C} time\ 149 \end{enumerate} 150 151 Two other sets of results are presented in this section: 152 153 \begin{enumerate} 154 \item \emph{Q2Q} which measures the time between queue traces 155 in the system. This provides some idea as to how quickly IOs are 156 being handed to the block IO layer. 157 158 \item \emph{Q2C} which measures the times for the complete life cycle 159 of IOs during the run\footnote{One of the areas that needs some 160 work in \texttt{btt} is to better understand the multiplex nature of 161 IOs during a run. In theory, one would like ${Q2I} + {I2D} + {D2C} 162 = {Q2C}$ however, typically there are multiple queue traces that 163 are combined via merges into a single IO issued and completed. We 164 currently average the queue-to-insert and queue-to-merge times, 165 and thus tend to be quite close to the expected equation.} 166 167 \end{enumerate} 168 169 For each row in this output, we provide a minimum, average, maximum 170 (which are all presented in seconds), and overall count. As an 171 example\footnote{As with this display, the author has taken some liberty 172 in reformatting the output for better display on the printed page.}: 173 174\begin{verbatim} 175ALL MIN AVG MAX N 176---- ------------- ------------- ------------- ----------- 177Q2Q 0.000000058 0.000012761 9.547941661 2262310 178Q2I 0.000000272 0.000005995 0.104588839 2262311 179I2D 0.000001446 0.094992714 0.239636864 2262311 180D2C 0.000193721 0.030406554 1.634221408 2262311 181Q2C 0.000207665 0.125405263 1.830917198 2262311 182\end{verbatim} 183 184 When tracking \emph{device mapper} devices, we also break down the 185 \emph{Q2A} and \emph{Q2C} times for those IOs. 186 187 \item[Device Overhead] 188 189 Using the data from the previous chart, we can then provide some idea 190 as to where IO spend most of the time on average. The following output 191 shows the percentage of time spent in each of the phases of an 192IO\footnote{It should be noted that incoming requests either go through: 193 194\begin{enumerate} 195 \item Q2G + Q2I 196 197 or 198 199 \item Q2M 200\end{enumerate} 201 before proceeding to I2D and D2C.} 202 203\begin{verbatim} 204 DEV | Q2G G2I Q2M I2D D2C 205---------- | --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- 206 ( 8, 80) | 0.0013% 0.0004% 0.0006% 88.5005% 11.4988% 207---------- | --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- 208 Overall | 0.0003% 0.0001% 0.0041% 21.4998% 78.4958% 209\end{verbatim} 210 211 \item[Device Merge Information] 212 213 A key measurement when making changes in the system (software \emph{or} 214 hardware) is to understand the block IO layer ends up merging incoming 215 requests into fewer, but larger, IOs to the underlying driver. In this 216 section, we show the number of incoming requests (Q), the number of 217 issued requests (D) and the resultant ratio. We also provide values 218 for the minimum, average and maximum IOs generated. 219 220 Looking at the following example: 221 222\begin{verbatim} 223 DEV | #Q #D Ratio | BLKmin BLKavg BLKmax Total 224---------- | ------- ----- ----- | ------ ------ ------ ------- 225 ( 68, 64) | 2262311 18178 124.5 | 2 124 128 2262382 226\end{verbatim} 227 228 we see that (on average) the block IO layer is combining upwards of 229 125 incoming requests into a single request down the IO stack. The 230 resultant average IO size is 124 blocks. 231 232 \item[Device Seek Information] 233 234 Another useful measure is the variability in the sector distances 235 between consecutively \emph{received -- queued} and \emph{submitted 236 -- issued} IOs. The next two sections provides some rudimentary 237 statistics to gauge the general nature of the sector differences 238 between IOs. Values provided include the number of seeks (number of IOs 239 submitted to lower level drivers), the \emph{mean} distance between 240 IOs, the \emph{median} value for all seeks, and the \emph{mode} - 241 the value(s) and the counts are provided for the latter. 242 243 The first of the two sections displays values for Q2Q seek distances -- 244 providing a set of indicators showing how close incoming IO requests 245 are to each other. The second section shows D2D seek distances -- 246 providing a set of indicators showing how close the IO requests are 247 that are handled by underlying drivers. 248 249\begin{verbatim} 250 DEV | NSEEKS MEAN MEDIAN | MODE 251--------- | ------ ------- ------ | ------- 252( 68, 64) | 18178 19611.3 0 | 0(17522) 253\end{verbatim} 254 255 We have almost exclusively seen median and mode values of 0, indicating 256 that seeks tend to have an equal amount of forward and backwards 257 seeks. The larger the count for the mode in comparison to the total 258 number of seeks is indicative as to how many IOs are coming out of 259 the block IO layer in adjacent sectors. (Obviously, the higher this 260 percentage, the better the underlying subsystems can handle them.) 261 262 \item[Request Queue Plug Information] 263 264 During normal operation, requests queues are \emph{plugged} and during 265 such times the IO request queue elements are not able to be processed 266 by underlying drivers. The next section shows how often the request 267 queue was in such a state. 268 269\begin{verbatim} 270 DEV | # Plugs # Timer Us | % Time Q Plugged 271--------- | ------- ---------- | ---------------- 272( 68, 64) | 833( 0) | 0.356511895% 273\end{verbatim} 274 275 There are two major reasons why request queues are unplugged, and both 276 are represented in the above table. 277 278 \begin{enumerate} 279 \item Explicit unplug request from some subsystem in the kernel. 280 281 \item Timed unplugs, due to a request queue exceeding some temporal 282 limit for being plugged. 283 \end{enumerate} 284 285 The total number of unplugs is equal to the number of plugs less the 286 ones due to timer unplugs. 287 288 \item[IOs per Unplug \& Unplugs-due-to-timeout] 289 290 In this subsection one can see the average number of IOs on the request 291 queue at the time of an unplug or unplug due to a timeout. The following 292 sample shows a sample of both unplug sections: 293 294\begin{verbatim} 295==================== Plug Information ==================== 296 297 DEV | # Plugs # Timer Us | % Time Q Plugged 298---------- | ---------- ---------- | ---------------- 299 ( 8, 0) | 1171( 123) | 0.280946640% 300 ( 8, 32) | 4( 0) | 0.000325469% 301---------- | ---------- ---------- | ---------------- 302 Overall | # Plugs # Timer Us | % Time Q Plugged 303 Average | 587( 61) | 0.140636055% 304 305 DEV | IOs/Unp IOs/Unp(to) 306---------- | ---------- ---------- 307 ( 8, 0) | 9.2 8.8 308 ( 8, 32) | 2.5 0.0 309---------- | ---------- ---------- 310 DEV | IOs/Unp IOs/Unp(to) 311 Overall | 9.2 8.8 312\end{verbatim} 313 314 This table and the preceding one have to be considered together -- 315 in the sample output in the immediately preceding table one can see 316 how the larger number of data values for device (8,0) dominates in 317 the overall average. 318 319 \item[Active Requests At Q Information] 320 321 An important consideration when analyzing block IO schedulers is to 322 know how many requests the scheduler has to work with. The metric 323 provided in this section details how many requests (on average) were 324 being held by the IO scheduler when an incoming IO request was being 325 handled. To determine this, \texttt{btt} keeps track of how many Q 326 requests came in, and subtracts requests that have been issued (D). 327 328 Here is a sample output of this sections: 329 330\begin{verbatim} 331==================== Active Requests At Q Information ==================== 332 333 DEV | Avg Reqs @ Q 334---------- | ------------- 335 ( 65, 80) | 12.0 336 ( 65,240) | 16.9 337... 338 ( 66,112) | 44.2 339---------- | ------------- 340 Overall | Avgs Reqs @ Q 341 Average | 17.4 342\end{verbatim} 343 344\end{description} 345 346\newpage 347\subsection*{\label{sec:detailed-data}Detailed Data} 348 349 In addition to the default sections output, if one supplies the 350 \texttt{--all-data} or \texttt{-A} argument (see section~\ref{sec:o-A}) 351 to \texttt{btt} further sections are output: 352 353\begin{description} 354 \item[Per Process] As traces are emitted, they are tagged with the 355 process ID of the currently running thread in the kernel. The process 356 names are also preserved, and mapped to the ID. For each of the parts 357 of the time line discussed above on page~\pageref{tl-defs}, a chart is 358 provided which breaks down the traces according to process ID (name). 359 360 One must be aware, however, that the process ID may not have anything 361 to do with the originating IO. For example, if an application is 362 doing buffered IO, then the actual submitted IOs will most likely 363 come from some page buffer management daemon thread (like pdflush, 364 or kjournald for example). Similarly, completion traces are rarely 365 (if ever?) going to be associated with the process which submitted 366 the IO in the first place. 367 368 Here is a sample portion of this type of chart, showing Q2Q times 369 per process: 370 371\begin{verbatim} 372 Q2Q MIN AVG MAX N 373------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ------- 374mkfs.ext3 0.000000778 0.000009074 1.797176188 1899371 375mount 0.000000885 0.000672513 0.030638128 73 376pdflush 0.000000790 0.000006752 0.247231307 179791 377\end{verbatim} 378 379 \item[Per Process Averages] The average columns from the above charts, 380 are also presented in their own chart. 381 382 \item[Per Device] Similar to the per-process display, \texttt{btt} 383 will also break down the various parts of an IOs time line based upon a 384 per-device criteria. Here's a portion of this area, displayed showing 385 the issued to complete times (D2C). 386 387\begin{verbatim} 388 D2C MIN AVG MAX N 389--------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ------ 390( 65, 80) 0.000140488 0.001076906 0.149739869 169112 391( 65, 96) 0.000142762 0.001215221 0.173263182 155488 392( 65,112) 0.000145221 0.001254966 0.124929936 165726 393( 65,128) 0.000141896 0.001159596 0.775231052 169015 394( 65,144) 0.000140832 0.001290985 0.211384698 210661 395( 65,160) 0.000139915 0.001175554 0.073512063 133973 396( 65,176) 0.000141254 0.001104870 0.073231310 145764 397( 65,192) 0.000141453 0.001234460 0.167622507 140618 398... 399\end{verbatim} 400 401 \item[Per Device Averages] The average columns from the above charts, 402 are also presented in their own chart. 403 404 \item[Q2D Histogram] A display of histogram buckets for the Q to D times 405 -- basically, from where an IO enters the block IO layer for a given 406 device, and when it is dispatched. The buckets are arranged via the 407 time in seconds, as in: 408 409\begin{verbatim} 410==================== Q2D Histogram ==================== 411 412 DEV | <.005 <.010 <.025 <.050 <.075 <.100 <.250 <.500 < 1.0 >=1.0 413 --------- | ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== 414 ( 66, 80) | 61.2 7.9 12.1 7.9 3.0 1.4 1.5 0.2 0.0 4.6 415 ( 65,192) | 42.3 5.0 8.7 30.0 8.9 3.0 1.8 0.1 0.0 0.1 416 ( 65,128) | 34.3 5.3 8.9 32.0 9.7 3.7 5.3 0.6 0.0 0.1 417... 418 ( 65, 64) | 59.9 4.2 6.0 24.6 4.2 0.8 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.1 419 ( 66, 64) | 62.6 8.1 12.7 7.9 2.4 0.6 0.1 0.0 0.0 5.4 420========== | ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== 421 AVG | 52.9 6.2 10.0 20.1 5.3 1.7 1.4 0.2 0.0 2.1 422\end{verbatim} 423 424\end{description} 425 426\newpage\section{\label{sec:data-files}Data Files Output} 427 428 Besides the averages output by default, the following 3 files are also 429 created with data points which may be plotted. 430 431\begin{description} 432 \item[\emph{file}.dat] This file provides a notion of \emph{activity} 433 for the system, devices and processes. The details of this file are 434 provided in section~\ref{sec:activity}. 435 436 \item[\emph{file}\_qhist.dat] Provides histogram data for the size of 437 incoming IO requests, for more information see section~\ref{sec:qhist}. 438 439 \item[\emph{file}\_dhist.dat] Provides histogram data for the size 440 of IO requests submitted to lower layer drivers, for more information 441 see section~\ref{sec:dhist}. 442 443\end{description} 444 445 In addition to the default data files output, there are optional data 446 files which can be generated by btt. These include: 447 448 \begin{description} 449 \item[subset of \texttt{.avg} data, easily parsed ] When the 450 \texttt{-X} option is specified \emph{and} the \texttt{-o} has also 451 been specified, then a subset of the data produced by default is 452 copied to another file that is \emph{more easily parsed.} Refer to 453 section~\ref{sec:o-X} for full details. 454 455 \item[iostat] iostat-like data can be distilled by btt, and is 456 described in section~\ref{sec:iostat}. 457 458 \item[per IO detail] Each and every IO traced can be output in a form 459 that shows each of the IO components on consecutive lines (rather 460 than grepping through a blkparse output file for example). The 461 details on this file is included in section~\ref{sec:per-io}. 462 463 \item[iostat] Latency information -- both Q2d, D2c and Q2C -- 464 on a per-IO basis can be generated. These are described in 465 section~\ref{sec:lat}. 466 467 \item[seek details] A set of data files containing all IO-to-IO 468 sector differences can be output, with details found in 469 section~\ref{sec:seek}. 470 471 \item[unplug histogram details] A data file per device containing 472 histogram output for the amount of IOs released at unplug time. 473 Section~\ref{sec:o-u} has more details. 474 \end{description} 475 476\newpage\section{\label{sec:activity}Activity Data File} 477 478 The activity data file contains a series of data values that indicate 479 those periods of time when queue and complete traces are being 480 processed. The values happen to be in a format easily handled by 481 xmgrace\footnote{\texttt{http://plasma-gate.weizmann.ac.il/Grace/} 482 ``Grace is a WYSIWYG 2D plotting tool for the X Window System and 483 M*tif.''}, but is easy to parse for other plotting and/or analysis 484 programs. 485 486 The file is split into pairs of sets of data points, where each pair 487 contains a set of queue activity and a set of completion activity. The 488 points are presented with the first column (X values) being the time 489 (in seconds), and the second column (Y values) providing an on/off 490 type of setting. For each pair, the Y values have two settings off 491 (low) and on (high). For example, here is a snippet of a file showing 492 some Q activity: 493 494\begin{verbatim} 495# Total System 496# Total System : q activity 4970.000000000 0.0 4980.000000000 0.4 4990.000070381 0.4 5000.000070381 0.0 5011.023482637 0.0 5021.023482637 0.4 5036.998746618 0.4 5046.998746618 0.0 5057.103336799 0.0 5067.103336799 0.4 50717.235419786 0.4 50817.235419786 0.0 50926.783361447 0.0 51026.783361447 0.4 51126.832454929 0.4 51226.832454929 0.0 51328.870431266 0.0 51428.870431266 0.4 51528.870431266 0.4 51628.870431266 0.0 517\end{verbatim} 518 519 What this indicates is that there was q activity for the system 520 from 0.000000000 through 0.000070381, but was inactive from there to 521 1.023482637, and so on. Section~\ref{sec:o-d} contains details on how 522 to adjust btt's notion of what constitutes activity. 523 524 The pairs are arranged as follows: 525 526 \begin{itemize} 527 \item First there is the total system activity -- meaning activity 528 in either queue or completion traces across all devices. 529 530 \item Next comes per-device activity information -- for each device 531 being traced, that request queues Q and C traces are presented. 532 533 \item Last we present pairs per-process. 534 \end{itemize} 535 536 Using this, one is then able to plot regions of activity versus 537 inactivity -- and one can gather a sense of deltas between the queueing 538 of IOs and when they are completed. Figure~\ref{fig:activity} shows 539 a very simplistic chart showing some activity: 540 541 \begin{figure}[hb] 542 \leavevmode\centering 543 \epsfig{file=activity.eps,width=4.5in} 544 \caption{\label{fig:activity}Simple Activity Chart} 545 \end{figure} 546 547 When the black line (system Q activity) is \emph{high}, then the system 548 is seeing relatively continuous incoming queues. Conversely, when it is 549 low, it represents an extended period of time where no queue requests 550 were coming in. Similarly for the red line and C activity. 551 552\newpage\section{\label{sec:hist}Histogram Data Files} 553 554 The histogram data files provide information concerning incoming and 555 outgoing IO sizes (in blocks). For simplicity, the histogram buckets 556 are one-for-one for sizes up to 1,024 blocks in the IO, and then a 557 single bucket for all sizes greater than or equal to 1,024 blocks. 558 559 The files are again in grace-friendly format, with the first set 560 containing data for the first 1,023 buckets, and a separate set 561 representing sizes $\ge 1024$ blocks. (This is done so that one can 562 easily use a separate formatting specification for the latter set.) 563 564 The first column (X values) is the various IO sizes, and the second 565 column (Y values) represents the number of IOs of that size. 566 567\subsection*{\label{sec:qhist}Q Histogram Data File} 568 569 Figure~\ref{fig:qhist} is a sample graph generated from data used during 570 some real-world analysis\footnote{Note the logarithmic nature of the 571 Y axis for this chart.}. With the visual representation provided by 572 this, one can quickly discern some different characteristics between 573 the 3 runs -- in particular, one can see that there is only a single 574 red point (representing 8 blocks per IO), whereas the other two had 575 multiple data points greater than 8 blocks. 576 577 \begin{figure}[hb] 578 \leavevmode\centering 579 \epsfig{file=qhist.eps,width=4.5in} 580 \caption{\label{fig:qhist}Q Histogram} 581 \end{figure} 582 583\subsection*{\label{sec:dhist}D Histogram Data File} 584 585 Figure~\ref{fig:dhist} is a sample graph generated from data used during 586 some real-world analysis\footnote{Note the logarithmic nature of the 587 Y axis for this chart.}. Again, visually, one can see that the black 588 and blue dots are somewhat similar below about 192 blocks per IO going 589 out. And then one can make the broad generalization of higher reds, 590 lower blues and blacks in the middle. 591 592 \begin{figure}[hb] 593 \leavevmode\centering 594 \epsfig{file=dhist.eps,width=4.5in} 595 \caption{\label{fig:dhist}D Histogram} 596 \end{figure} 597 598\newpage\section{\label{sec:iostat}iostat Data File} 599 \texttt{btt} attempts to produce the results from running an 600 \texttt{iostat -x} command in parallel with the system as it is being 601 traced. The fields (columns) generated by the \texttt{--iostat} or 602 \texttt{-I} option can be seen from the following output snippet -- 603 note that the line has been split to fit on the printed page: 604 605\begin{verbatim} 606Device: rrqm/s wrqm/s r/s w/s rsec/s wsec/s 607 rkB/s wkB/s avgrq-sz avgqu-sz await svctm %util Stamp 608... 609( 8, 16) 0.00 0.00 0.00 1005.30 0.00 152806.36 610 0.00 76403.18 152.00 31.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 71.79 611... 612( 8, 16) 1.02 5.80 0.34 1.07 4.03 55.62 613 2.02 27.81 42.13 0.61 0.00 21.90 0.00 TOTAL 614\end{verbatim} 615 616 Note that the STAMP field contains the runtime (in seconds) for that 617 line of data. 618 619\newpage\section{\label{sec:per-io}Per-IO Data File} 620 621 \texttt{btt} can produce a text file containing time line data for each 622 IO processed. The time line data contains rudimentary information for 623 the following stages: 624 625 \begin{itemize} 626 \item queue traces 627 \item get request traces 628 \item insert traces 629 \item merge traces 630 \item issue traces 631 \item completion traces 632 \item remap traces 633 \end{itemize} 634 635 The \emph{--per-io-dump} or \emph{-p} option triggers this behavior, 636 and will produce a file containing streams of IOs (separated by blank 637 spaces). As an example, here is a snippet of 4 IOs that were merged 638 together, you will note there are 3 merged IOs, and 1 inserted in the 639 stream. The issue and completion traces are replicated per IO. 640 641\begin{verbatim} 642 66,0 : 0.763283556 Q 6208+8 643 0.763300157 I 6208+8 644 0.763296365 G 6208+8 645 0.763338848 D 6208+32 646 0.763705760 C 6208+32 647 648 66,0 : 0.763314550 Q 6224+8 649 0.763315341 M 6224+8 650 0.763338848 D 6208+32 651 0.763705760 C 6208+32 652 653 66,0 : 0.763321010 Q 6232+8 654 0.763321775 M 6232+8 655 0.763338848 D 6208+32 656 0.763705760 C 6208+32 657 658 65,240: 0.763244173 Q 6216+8 659 0.763244974 M 6216+8 660 0.763374288 D 6208+32 661 0.763826610 C 6208+32 662\end{verbatim} 663 664 The columns provide the following information: 665 666 \begin{enumerate} 667 \item Device major/minor. 668 669 \item Time of the trace (seconds from the start of the run) 670 671 \item Trace type 672 673 \item start block + number of blocks 674 \end{enumerate} 675 676\newpage\section{\label{sec:lat}\label{sec:lat-q2d}\label{sec:lat-q2c}\label{sec:lat-d2c}Latency Data Files} 677 678 The latency data files which can be optionally produced by \texttt{btt} 679 provide per-IO latency information, one for queue time (Q2D), one 680 for total IO time (Q2C) and one for latencies induced by lower layer 681 drivers and devices (D2C). 682 683 In both cases, the first column (X values) represent runtime (seconds), 684 while the second column (Y values) shows the actual latency for a 685 command at that time (either Q2D, D2C or Q2C). 686 687\newpage\section{\label{sec:seek}Seek Data Files} 688 689 \texttt{btt} can also produce two data files containing all IO-to-IO sector 690 deltas, providing seek information which can then be plotted. The 691 produced data file contains 3 sets of data: 692 693 \begin{enumerate} 694 \item Combined data -- all read and write IOs 695 696 \item Read data -- just seek deltas for reads 697 698 \item Write data -- just seek deltas for writes 699 \end{enumerate} 700 701 The format of the output file names is to have the name generated by 702 the following fields separated by underscores (\texttt{\_}): 703 704 \begin{itemize} 705 \item The prefix provided as the argument to the \texttt{-s} option. 706 \item The major and minor numbers of the device separated by a comma. 707 \item The string \texttt{q2q} or \texttt{d2d}, indicating the Q2Q or 708 D2D seeks, respectively. 709 \item One of the following characters: 710 \begin{description} 711 \item[r] For read (device to system) IOs 712 \item[w] For write (system to device) IOs 713 \item[c] Combined -- both read and write IOs 714 \end{description} 715 \end{itemize} 716 717 An example name would be after specifying \texttt{-s seek} would be: 718 \texttt{seek\_065,048\_q2q\_w.dat}. 719 720 The format of the data is to have the runtime values (seconds since 721 the start of the run) in column 1 (X values); and the difference in 722 sectors from the previous IO in column 2 (Y values). Here is a snippet 723 of the first few items from a file: 724 725\begin{verbatim} 726# Combined 727 0.000034733 35283790.0 728 0.000106453 35283790.0 729 0.005239009 35283950.0 730 0.006968575 35283886.0 731 0.007218709 35283694.0 732 0.012145393 35283566.0 733 0.014980835 -35848914.0 734 0.024239323 -35848914.0 735 0.024249402 -35848914.0 736 0.025707095 -35849072.0 737 ... 738\end{verbatim} 739 740 Figure~\ref{fig:seek} shows a simple graph that can be produced which 741 provides visual details concerning seek patterns. 742 743 \begin{figure}[h!] 744 \leavevmode\centering 745 \epsfig{file=seek.eps,width=4.5in} 746 \caption{\label{fig:seek}Seek Chart} 747 \end{figure} 748 \FloatBarrier 749 750 The seek difference is calculated in one of two ways: 751 752 \begin{description} 753 \item[default] By default, the seek distance is calculated as the 754 \emph{closest} distance between the previous IO and this IO. The 755 concept of \emph{closeness} means that it could either be the 756 \emph{end} of the previous IO and the beginning of the next, or the 757 end of this IO and the start of the next. 758 759 \item[\texttt{-a}] If the \texttt{-a} or \texttt{--seek-absolute} 760 option is specified, then the seek distance is simply the difference 761 between the end of the previous IO and the start of this IO. 762 \end{description} 763 764\newpage\subsection{\label{sec:sps-spec}Seeks Per Second} 765 766 When the \texttt{-m} option provides a name, Q2Q and/or D2D seeks 767 will trigger \texttt{btt} to output seeks-per-second information. The 768 first column will contain a time value (seconds), and the second column 769 will indicate the number of seeks per second at that point. 770 771 When there is only a single data point within a 1-second window, 772 \texttt{btt} will just output the time value for the point, and the 773 value 1.0 in the second column. If there is no perceived difference 774 in the times present for the current sample, then the second columns 775 value is the number of seeks present at that time. 776 777 Otherwise, if $\alpha$ and $\Omega$ are the first and last times 778 seen within a 1-second window, and $\nu$ are the number of seeks seen 779 in that time frame, then: 780 781 \begin{description} 782 \item[column 1] Midway point in time for this span, or: \hfill$\alpha + 783 {{(\Omega - \alpha)} / 2}$ 784 785 \item[column 2] Average seeks per second over this span, or: \hfill$\nu / 786 {(\Omega - \alpha)}$ 787 \end{description} 788 789 Figure~\ref{fig:sps} shows a simple pair of graphs generated from 790 \texttt{-m} output: 791 792 \begin{figure}[h!] 793 \leavevmode\centering 794 \epsfig{file=sps.eps,width=4.5in} 795 \caption{\label{fig:sps}Seeks-per-second Chart} 796 \end{figure} 797 \FloatBarrier 798 799\newpage\section{\label{sec:cmd-line}Command Line} 800 801\begin{verbatim} 802Usage: btt 2.08 803[ -a | --seek-absolute ] 804[ -A | --all-data ] 805[ -B <output name> | --dump-blocknos=<output name> ] 806[ -d <seconds> | --range-delta=<seconds> ] 807[ -D <dev;...> | --devices=<dev;...> ] 808[ -e <exe,...> | --exes=<exe,...> ] 809[ -h | --help ] 810[ -i <input name> | --input-file=<input name> ] 811[ -I <output name> | --iostat=<output name> ] 812[ -l <output name> | --d2c-latencies=<output name> ] 813[ -L <freq> | --periodic-latencies=<freq> ] 814[ -m <output name> | --seeks-per-second=<output name> ] 815[ -M <dev map> | --dev-maps=<dev map> 816[ -o <output name> | --output-file=<output name> ] 817[ -p <output name> | --per-io-dump=<output name> ] 818[ -P <output name> | --per-io-trees=<output name> ] 819[ -q <output name> | --q2c-latencies=<output name> ] 820[ -Q <output name> | --active-queue-depth=<output name> ] 821[ -r | --no-remaps ] 822[ -s <output name> | --seeks=<output name> ] 823[ -S <interval> | --iostat-interval=<interval> ] 824[ -t <sec> | --time-start=<sec> ] 825[ -T <sec> | --time-end=<sec> ] 826[ -u <output name> | --unplug-hist=<output name> ] 827[ -V | --version ] 828[ -v | --verbose ] 829[ -X | --easy-parse-avgs ] 830[ -z <output name> | --q2d-latencies=<output name> ] 831\end{verbatim} 832 833\subsection{\label{sec:o-a}\texttt{--seek-absolute}/\texttt{-a}} 834 835 When specified on the command line, this directs btt to calculate 836 seek distances based solely upon the ending block address of one IO, 837 and the start of the next. By default \texttt{btt} uses the concept 838 of the closeness to either the beginning or end of the previous IO. See 839 section~\ref{sec:seek} for more details about seek distances. 840 841\subsection{\label{sec:o-A}\texttt{--all-data}/\texttt{-A}} 842 843 Normally \texttt{btt} will not print out verbose information 844 concerning per-process and per-device data (as outlined in 845 section~\ref{sec:detailed-data}). If you desire that level of 846 detail you can specify this option. 847 848\subsection{\label{sec:o-B}\texttt{--dump-blocknos}/\texttt{-B}} 849 850 This option will output absolute block numbers to three files prefixed 851 by the specified output name: 852 853 \begin{description} 854 \item[\emph{prefix}\_\emph{device}\_r.dat] All read block numbers are 855 output, first column is time (seconds), second is the block number, 856 and the third column is the ending block number. 857 858 \item[\emph{prefix}\_\emph{device}\_w.dat] All write block numbers are 859 output, first column is time (seconds), second is the block number, 860 and the third column is the ending block number. 861 862 \item[\emph{prefix}\_\emph{device}\_c.dat] All block numbers (read 863 and write) are output, first column is time (seconds), second is 864 the block number, and the third column is the ending block number. 865 \end{description} 866 867\subsection{\label{sec:o-d}\texttt{--range-delta}/\texttt{-d}} 868 869 Section~\ref{sec:activity} discussed how \texttt{btt} outputs a file 870 containing Q and C activity, the notion of \emph{active} traces simply 871 means that there are Q or C traces occurring within a certain period 872 of each other. The default values is 0.1 seconds; with this option 873 allowing one to change that granularity. The smaller the value, the 874 more data points provided. 875 876\subsection{\label{sec:o-D}\texttt{--devices}/\texttt{-D}} 877 878 Normally, \texttt{btt} will produce data for all devices detected in 879 the traces parsed. With this option, one can reduce the analysis to 880 one or more devices provided in the string passed to this option. The 881 device identifiers are the major and minor number of each device, and 882 each device identifier is separated by a colon (:). A valid specifier 883 for devices 8,0 and 8,8 would then be: \texttt{"8,0:8,8"}. 884 885\subsection{\label{sec:o-e}\texttt{--exes}/\texttt{-e}} 886 887 Likewise, \texttt{btt} will produce data for all processes (executables) 888 found in the traces. With this option, one can specify which processes 889 you want displayed in the output. The format of the string passed is 890 a list of executable \emph{names} separated by commas (,). An example 891 would be \texttt{"-e mkfs.ext3,mount"}. 892 893\subsection{\label{sec:o-h}\texttt{--help}/\texttt{-h}} 894 895 Prints out the simple help information, as seen at the top of 896 section~\ref{sec:cmd-line}. 897 898\subsection{\label{sec:o-i}\texttt{--input-file}/\texttt{-i}} 899 900 Specifies the binary input file that \texttt{btt} will interpret traces 901 in. See section~\ref{sec:getting-started} for information concerning 902 binary trace files. 903 904\subsection{\label{sec:o-I}\texttt{--iostat}/\texttt{-I}} 905 906 This option triggers \texttt{btt} to generate iostat-like output to the 907 file specified. Refer to section~\ref{sec:iostat} for more information 908 on the output produced. 909 910\subsection{\label{sec:o-l}\texttt{--d2c-latencies}/\texttt{-l}} 911 912 This option instructs \texttt{btt} to generate the D2C latency file 913 discussed in section~\ref{sec:lat-d2c}. 914 915\subsection{\label{sec:o-L}\texttt{--periodic-latencies}/\texttt{-L}} 916 917 When given a value greater than 0, this option will create two data 918 files (q2c \& d2c) per device containing a periodic timestamp \& 919 average latency over that period. 920 921\subsection{\label{sec:o-m}\texttt{--seeks-per-second}\texttt{-m}} 922 923 Tells \texttt{btt} to output seeks per second information. Each device 924 being measured can have up to 2 files output: One with Q2Q information 925 and one with D2D seek information. Information on the output produced 926 can be found in section~\ref{sec:sps-spec}. 927 928 \begin{quote} 929 \textbf{Note: This requires seek output to be selected -- see 930 section~\ref{sec:seek}.} 931 \end{quote} 932 933\subsection{\label{sec:o-M}\texttt{--dev-maps}/\texttt{-M}} 934 935 Internal option, still under construction. 936 937\subsection{\label{sec:o-o}\texttt{--output-file}/\texttt{-o}} 938 939 Normally \texttt{btt} sends the statistical output (covered in 940 section~\ref{sec:output-overview}) to standard out, if you specify 941 this option this data is redirected to the file specified. 942 943\subsection{\label{sec:o-p}\texttt{--per-io-dump}/\texttt{-p}} 944 945 This option tells \texttt{btt} to generate the per IO dump file as 946 discussed in section~\ref{sec:per-io}. 947 948\subsection{\label{sec:o-P}\texttt{--per-io-tress}/\texttt{-P}} 949 950The \texttt{-P} option will generate a file that contains a list of all IO 951"sequences" - showing only the Q, D \& C operation times. The D \& C 952time values are separated from the Q time values with a vertical bar. 953 954\subsection{\label{sec:o-q}\texttt{--q2c-latencies}/\texttt{-q}} 955 956 This option instructs \texttt{btt} to generate the Q2C latency file 957 discussed in section~\ref{sec:lat-q2c}. 958 959\subsection{\label{sec:o-Q}\texttt{--active-queue-depth}/\texttt{-Q}} 960 961 This option tells \texttt{btt} to generate a data file (using the given 962 name as a base) which contains: A time stamp in the first column, 963 and then the number of \emph{active} requests issued to the device 964 driver. (The value is incremented when an \emph{issue} is performend, 965 and decremented when a \emph{complete} is performed. 966 967\subsection{\label{sec:o-r}\texttt{--no-remaps}/\texttt{-r}} 968 969 Ignore remap traces; older kernels did not implement the full remap PDU. 970 971\subsection{\label{sec:o-s}\texttt{--seeks}/\texttt{-s}} 972 973 This option instructs \texttt{btt} to generate the seek data file 974 discussed in section~\ref{sec:seek}. 975 976\subsection{\label{sec:o-S}\texttt{--iostat-interval}/\texttt{-S}} 977 978 The normal \texttt{iostat} command allows one to specify the snapshot 979 interval, likewise, \texttt{btt} allows one to specify how many seconds 980 between its generation of snapshots of the data via this option. Details 981 about the iostat-like capabilities of \texttt{btt} may be found in 982 section~\ref{sec:iostat}. 983 984\subsection{\label{sec:o-tT}\texttt{--time-start}/\texttt{-t} and 985\texttt{--time-end}/\texttt{T}} 986 987 \begin{quote} 988 \emph{This \texttt{btt} capability is still under construction, results are 989 not always consistent at this point in time.} 990 \end{quote} 991 992 These options allow one to dictate to \texttt{btt} when to start and stop 993 parsing of trace data in terms of seconds since the start of the run. The 994 trace chosen will be between the start time (or 0.0 if not 995 specified) and end time (or the end of the run) specified. 996 997\subsection{\label{sec:o-u}\texttt{--unplug-hist}/\texttt{-u}} 998 999 This option instructs \texttt{btt} to generate a data file containing 1000 histogram information for \emph{unplug} traces on a per device 1001 basis. It shows how many times an unplug was hit with a specified 1002 number of IOs released. There are 21 output values into the file, as 1003 follows: 1004 1005 \medskip 1006 \begin{tabular}{ll} 1007\textbf{X value} & \textbf{Representing Counts} \\\hline 10080 & 0\dots\/4 \\ 10091 & 5\dots\/9 \\ 10102 & 10\dots\/14 \\ 1011\dots & \dots\dots\\ 101219 & 95\dots\/99 \\ 101320 & 100+ \\ 1014 \end{tabular} 1015 1016 \medskip 1017 The file name(s) generated use the text string passed as an argument for 1018 the prefix, followed by the device identifier in \texttt{major,minor} 1019 form, with a \texttt{.dat} extension (as an example, with \texttt{-u 1020 up\_hist} specified on the command line: \texttt{up\_hist\_008,032.dat}. 1021 1022\subsection{\label{sec:o-V}\texttt{--version}/\texttt{-V}} 1023 1024 Prints out the \texttt{btt} version, and exits. 1025 1026\subsection{\label{sec:o-v}\texttt{--verbose}/\texttt{-v}} 1027 1028 While \texttt{btt} is processing data, it will put out periodic (1-second 1029 granularity) values describing the progress it is making through the 1030 input trace stream. The value describes how many traces have been 1031 processed. At the end of the run, the overall number of traces, trace 1032 rate (number of thousands of traces per second), and the real time for 1033 trace processing and output are displayed. Example (note: the interim 1034 trace counts are put out with carriage returns, hence, they overwrite 1035 each time): 1036 1037\begin{verbatim} 1038# btt -i bp.bin -o btt -v 1039Sending range data to bttX.dat 1040Sending stats data to bttX.avg 1041 287857 t 10421414173 t 10431691581 t 1044... 10454581291 traces @ 279.7 Ktps 104616.379036+0.000005=16.379041 1047\end{verbatim} 1048 1049\subsection{\label{sec:o-X}\texttt{--easy-parse-avgs}/\texttt{-X}} 1050 1051 \emph{Some} of the data produced by default can also be shipped 1052 simultaneously to another file in an easy to parse form. When 1053 the \texttt{-o} option is selected (thus producing a file with a 1054 \texttt{.avg} exentsion), \emph{and} the \texttt{-X} flag is present, 1055 then \texttt{btt} will generate this file. 1056 1057 The format is space-delimited values starting with a 3-character 1058 \emph{record} indicator, then the device information (either major,minor 1059 or the device name when \texttt{-M} is specified), and then a number of 1060 fields representing data values. The following table shows the record 1061 identifiers and the fields provided: 1062 1063 \bigskip 1064 \begin{tabular}{|l|l|}\hline 1065 \textbf{Record} & \textbf{Description}\\\hline 1066 \texttt{DMI} & Device Merge Information:\\ 1067 & \#Q \#D Ratio BLKmin BLKavg BLKmax Total\\\hline 1068 \texttt{QSK} & Device Q2Q Seek Information:\\ 1069 & NSEEKS MEAN MEDIAN MODE N-MODE mode\ldots\\\hline 1070 \texttt{DSK} & Device D2D Seek Information:\\ 1071 & NSEEKS MEAN MEDIAN MODE N-MODE mode\ldots\\\hline 1072 \texttt{PLG} & Plug Information:\\ 1073 & \#Plugs \#TimerUnplugs \%TimeQPlugged\\\hline 1074 \texttt{UPG} & Unplug Information:\\ 1075 & IOsPerUnplug IOsPerUnplugTimeout\\\hline 1076 \texttt{ARQ} & Active Requests at Q Information:\\ 1077 & AvgReqs@Q\\\hline\hline 1078 \texttt{Q2Q} & Queue-to-Queue times:\\ 1079 \texttt{Q2G} & Queue-to-GetRequest times:\\ 1080 \texttt{S2G} & Sleep-to-GetRequest times:\\ 1081 \texttt{G2I} & GetRequest-to-Insert times:\\ 1082 \texttt{Q2M} & Queue-to-Merge times:\\ 1083 \texttt{I2D} & Insert-to-Issue times:\\ 1084 \texttt{M2D} & Merge-to-Issue times:\\ 1085 \texttt{D2C} & Issue-to-Complete times:\\ 1086 \texttt{Q2C} & Queue-to-Complete times:\\ 1087 & MIN AVG MAX N\\\hline 1088 \end{tabular} 1089 1090 \bigskip 1091 A sample output file would look like: 1092 1093 \begin{verbatim} 1094Q2Q 0.000000001 0.003511356 9.700000000 309906 1095Q2G 0.000000001 0.774586535 805.300000000 106732 1096S2G 0.000000001 0.072525952 0.370000000 578 1097G2I 0.000000001 0.000001125 0.010000000 106732 1098Q2M 0.000000001 0.730763626 751.820000000 204040 1099I2D 0.000000001 1.270720538 612.880000000 106948 1100M2D 0.000000001 0.992355230 428.930000000 203114 1101D2C 0.000000001 0.008681311 137.020000000 307343 1102Q2C 0.000000001 1.304370794 805.660000000 308921 1103DMI 8,16 309907 106729 2.903681286 8 182 1024 19504768 1104QSK 8,16 309907 167200.935561314 0 0 235708 1105DSK 8,16 106729 433247.436563633 0 0 33974 1106PLG 8,16 40824 382 0.008881420 1107UPG 8,16 1.993361748 1.866492147 1108ARQ 8,16 12.938165321 1109 \end{verbatim} 1110 1111\subsection{\label{sec:o-z}\texttt{--q2d-latencies}/\texttt{-l}} 1112 1113 This option instructs \texttt{btt} to generate the Q2D latency file 1114 discussed in section~\ref{sec:lat-q2d}. 1115 1116\newpage\section{\label{sec:bno_plot}bno\_plot.py} 1117 1118Included with the distribution is a simple 3D plotting utility based 1119upon the block numbers output when \texttt{-B} is specified (see 1120section~\ref{sec:o-B} for more details about the \texttt{-B option}). The 1121display will display \emph{each} IO generated, with the time (seconds) 1122along the X-axis, the block number (start) along the Y-axis and the 1123number of blocks transferred in the IO represented along the Z-axis. 1124 1125The script requires Python\footnote{\texttt{www.python.org}} and 1126gnuplot\footnote{\texttt{www.gnuplot.info}}, and will enter interactive 1127mode after the image is produced. In this interactive mode one can enter 1128gnuplot commands at the \texttt{'gnuplot>'} prompt, and/or can change 1129the viewpoint within the 3D image by \emph{left-click-hold} and moving 1130the mouse. A sample screen shot can be seen in figure~\ref{fig:bno_plot} on 1131page~\pageref{fig:bno_plot}. 1132 1133\subsection*{\texttt{bno\_plot.py} Command Line Options} 1134 1135\begin{quotation} 1136\begin{verbatim} 1137 1138$ bno_plot.py --help 1139 1140bno_plot.py 1141 [ -h | --help ] 1142 [ -K | --keys-below ] 1143 [ -v | --verbose ] 1144 [ <file...> ] 1145 1146Utilizes gnuplot to generate a 3D plot of the block number 1147output from btt. If no <files> are specified, it will 1148utilize all files generated after btt was run with -B 1149blknos (meaning: all files of the form blknos*[rw].dat). 1150 1151The -K option forces bno_plot.py to put the keys below the 1152graph, typically all keys for input files are put in the 1153upper right corner of the graph. If the number of devices 1154exceed 10, then bno_plot.py will automatically push the 1155keys under the graph. 1156 1157To exit the plotter, enter 'quit' or ^D at the 'gnuplot> ' 1158prompt. 1159\end{verbatim} 1160\end{quotation} 1161 1162\begin{figure}[b] 1163\leavevmode\centering 1164\epsfig{file=bno_plot.eps,width=5.5in} 1165\caption{\label{fig:bno_plot}Sample \texttt{bno\_plot.py} Screen Shot} 1166\end{figure} 1167 1168\clearpage 1169\newpage\section{\label{sec:appendix}Sample \texttt{btt} 1170Output} 1171 Here is a complete output file from a btt run, illustrating a lot of the 1172 capabilities of btt. 1173\input{sample-btt-output.tex} 1174 1175\end{document} 1176\subsection{\label{sec:o-B}\texttt{--dump-blocknos}/\texttt{-B}} 1177