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1 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 T H E /proc F I L E S Y S T E M
3 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4 /proc/sys Terrehon Bowden <terrehon@pacbell.net> October 7 1999
5 Bodo Bauer <bb@ricochet.net>
6
7 2.4.x update Jorge Nerin <comandante@zaralinux.com> November 14 2000
8 move /proc/sys Shen Feng <shen@cn.fujitsu.com> April 1 2009
9 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10 Version 1.3 Kernel version 2.2.12
11 Kernel version 2.4.0-test11-pre4
12 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
13 fixes/update part 1.1 Stefani Seibold <stefani@seibold.net> June 9 2009
14
15 Table of Contents
16 -----------------
17
18 0 Preface
19 0.1 Introduction/Credits
20 0.2 Legal Stuff
21
22 1 Collecting System Information
23 1.1 Process-Specific Subdirectories
24 1.2 Kernel data
25 1.3 IDE devices in /proc/ide
26 1.4 Networking info in /proc/net
27 1.5 SCSI info
28 1.6 Parallel port info in /proc/parport
29 1.7 TTY info in /proc/tty
30 1.8 Miscellaneous kernel statistics in /proc/stat
31 1.9 Ext4 file system parameters
32
33 2 Modifying System Parameters
34
35 3 Per-Process Parameters
36 3.1 /proc/<pid>/oom_adj & /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj - Adjust the oom-killer
37 score
38 3.2 /proc/<pid>/oom_score - Display current oom-killer score
39 3.3 /proc/<pid>/io - Display the IO accounting fields
40 3.4 /proc/<pid>/coredump_filter - Core dump filtering settings
41 3.5 /proc/<pid>/mountinfo - Information about mounts
42 3.6 /proc/<pid>/comm & /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/comm
43 3.7 /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/children - Information about task children
44 3.8 /proc/<pid>/fdinfo/<fd> - Information about opened file
45 3.9 /proc/<pid>/map_files - Information about memory mapped files
46 3.10 /proc/<pid>/timerslack_ns - Task timerslack value
47 3.11 /proc/<pid>/patch_state - Livepatch patch operation state
48
49 4 Configuring procfs
50 4.1 Mount options
51
52 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
53 Preface
54 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
55
56 0.1 Introduction/Credits
57 ------------------------
58
59 This documentation is part of a soon (or so we hope) to be released book on
60 the SuSE Linux distribution. As there is no complete documentation for the
61 /proc file system and we've used many freely available sources to write these
62 chapters, it seems only fair to give the work back to the Linux community.
63 This work is based on the 2.2.* kernel version and the upcoming 2.4.*. I'm
64 afraid it's still far from complete, but we hope it will be useful. As far as
65 we know, it is the first 'all-in-one' document about the /proc file system. It
66 is focused on the Intel x86 hardware, so if you are looking for PPC, ARM,
67 SPARC, AXP, etc., features, you probably won't find what you are looking for.
68 It also only covers IPv4 networking, not IPv6 nor other protocols - sorry. But
69 additions and patches are welcome and will be added to this document if you
70 mail them to Bodo.
71
72 We'd like to thank Alan Cox, Rik van Riel, and Alexey Kuznetsov and a lot of
73 other people for help compiling this documentation. We'd also like to extend a
74 special thank you to Andi Kleen for documentation, which we relied on heavily
75 to create this document, as well as the additional information he provided.
76 Thanks to everybody else who contributed source or docs to the Linux kernel
77 and helped create a great piece of software... :)
78
79 If you have any comments, corrections or additions, please don't hesitate to
80 contact Bodo Bauer at bb@ricochet.net. We'll be happy to add them to this
81 document.
82
83 The latest version of this document is available online at
84 http://tldp.org/LDP/Linux-Filesystem-Hierarchy/html/proc.html
85
86 If the above direction does not works for you, you could try the kernel
87 mailing list at linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org and/or try to reach me at
88 comandante@zaralinux.com.
89
90 0.2 Legal Stuff
91 ---------------
92
93 We don't guarantee the correctness of this document, and if you come to us
94 complaining about how you screwed up your system because of incorrect
95 documentation, we won't feel responsible...
96
97 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
98 CHAPTER 1: COLLECTING SYSTEM INFORMATION
99 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
100
101 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
102 In This Chapter
103 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
104 * Investigating the properties of the pseudo file system /proc and its
105 ability to provide information on the running Linux system
106 * Examining /proc's structure
107 * Uncovering various information about the kernel and the processes running
108 on the system
109 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
110
111
112 The proc file system acts as an interface to internal data structures in the
113 kernel. It can be used to obtain information about the system and to change
114 certain kernel parameters at runtime (sysctl).
115
116 First, we'll take a look at the read-only parts of /proc. In Chapter 2, we
117 show you how you can use /proc/sys to change settings.
118
119 1.1 Process-Specific Subdirectories
120 -----------------------------------
121
122 The directory /proc contains (among other things) one subdirectory for each
123 process running on the system, which is named after the process ID (PID).
124
125 The link self points to the process reading the file system. Each process
126 subdirectory has the entries listed in Table 1-1.
127
128
129 Table 1-1: Process specific entries in /proc
130 ..............................................................................
131 File Content
132 clear_refs Clears page referenced bits shown in smaps output
133 cmdline Command line arguments
134 cpu Current and last cpu in which it was executed (2.4)(smp)
135 cwd Link to the current working directory
136 environ Values of environment variables
137 exe Link to the executable of this process
138 fd Directory, which contains all file descriptors
139 maps Memory maps to executables and library files (2.4)
140 mem Memory held by this process
141 root Link to the root directory of this process
142 stat Process status
143 statm Process memory status information
144 status Process status in human readable form
145 wchan Present with CONFIG_KALLSYMS=y: it shows the kernel function
146 symbol the task is blocked in - or "0" if not blocked.
147 pagemap Page table
148 stack Report full stack trace, enable via CONFIG_STACKTRACE
149 smaps an extension based on maps, showing the memory consumption of
150 each mapping and flags associated with it
151 numa_maps an extension based on maps, showing the memory locality and
152 binding policy as well as mem usage (in pages) of each mapping.
153 ..............................................................................
154
155 For example, to get the status information of a process, all you have to do is
156 read the file /proc/PID/status:
157
158 >cat /proc/self/status
159 Name: cat
160 State: R (running)
161 Tgid: 5452
162 Pid: 5452
163 PPid: 743
164 TracerPid: 0 (2.4)
165 Uid: 501 501 501 501
166 Gid: 100 100 100 100
167 FDSize: 256
168 Groups: 100 14 16
169 VmPeak: 5004 kB
170 VmSize: 5004 kB
171 VmLck: 0 kB
172 VmHWM: 476 kB
173 VmRSS: 476 kB
174 RssAnon: 352 kB
175 RssFile: 120 kB
176 RssShmem: 4 kB
177 VmData: 156 kB
178 VmStk: 88 kB
179 VmExe: 68 kB
180 VmLib: 1412 kB
181 VmPTE: 20 kb
182 VmSwap: 0 kB
183 HugetlbPages: 0 kB
184 CoreDumping: 0
185 Threads: 1
186 SigQ: 0/28578
187 SigPnd: 0000000000000000
188 ShdPnd: 0000000000000000
189 SigBlk: 0000000000000000
190 SigIgn: 0000000000000000
191 SigCgt: 0000000000000000
192 CapInh: 00000000fffffeff
193 CapPrm: 0000000000000000
194 CapEff: 0000000000000000
195 CapBnd: ffffffffffffffff
196 NoNewPrivs: 0
197 Seccomp: 0
198 voluntary_ctxt_switches: 0
199 nonvoluntary_ctxt_switches: 1
200
201 This shows you nearly the same information you would get if you viewed it with
202 the ps command. In fact, ps uses the proc file system to obtain its
203 information. But you get a more detailed view of the process by reading the
204 file /proc/PID/status. It fields are described in table 1-2.
205
206 The statm file contains more detailed information about the process
207 memory usage. Its seven fields are explained in Table 1-3. The stat file
208 contains details information about the process itself. Its fields are
209 explained in Table 1-4.
210
211 (for SMP CONFIG users)
212 For making accounting scalable, RSS related information are handled in an
213 asynchronous manner and the value may not be very precise. To see a precise
214 snapshot of a moment, you can see /proc/<pid>/smaps file and scan page table.
215 It's slow but very precise.
216
217 Table 1-2: Contents of the status files (as of 4.8)
218 ..............................................................................
219 Field Content
220 Name filename of the executable
221 Umask file mode creation mask
222 State state (R is running, S is sleeping, D is sleeping
223 in an uninterruptible wait, Z is zombie,
224 T is traced or stopped)
225 Tgid thread group ID
226 Ngid NUMA group ID (0 if none)
227 Pid process id
228 PPid process id of the parent process
229 TracerPid PID of process tracing this process (0 if not)
230 Uid Real, effective, saved set, and file system UIDs
231 Gid Real, effective, saved set, and file system GIDs
232 FDSize number of file descriptor slots currently allocated
233 Groups supplementary group list
234 NStgid descendant namespace thread group ID hierarchy
235 NSpid descendant namespace process ID hierarchy
236 NSpgid descendant namespace process group ID hierarchy
237 NSsid descendant namespace session ID hierarchy
238 VmPeak peak virtual memory size
239 VmSize total program size
240 VmLck locked memory size
241 VmPin pinned memory size
242 VmHWM peak resident set size ("high water mark")
243 VmRSS size of memory portions. It contains the three
244 following parts (VmRSS = RssAnon + RssFile + RssShmem)
245 RssAnon size of resident anonymous memory
246 RssFile size of resident file mappings
247 RssShmem size of resident shmem memory (includes SysV shm,
248 mapping of tmpfs and shared anonymous mappings)
249 VmData size of private data segments
250 VmStk size of stack segments
251 VmExe size of text segment
252 VmLib size of shared library code
253 VmPTE size of page table entries
254 VmSwap amount of swap used by anonymous private data
255 (shmem swap usage is not included)
256 HugetlbPages size of hugetlb memory portions
257 CoreDumping process's memory is currently being dumped
258 (killing the process may lead to a corrupted core)
259 Threads number of threads
260 SigQ number of signals queued/max. number for queue
261 SigPnd bitmap of pending signals for the thread
262 ShdPnd bitmap of shared pending signals for the process
263 SigBlk bitmap of blocked signals
264 SigIgn bitmap of ignored signals
265 SigCgt bitmap of caught signals
266 CapInh bitmap of inheritable capabilities
267 CapPrm bitmap of permitted capabilities
268 CapEff bitmap of effective capabilities
269 CapBnd bitmap of capabilities bounding set
270 NoNewPrivs no_new_privs, like prctl(PR_GET_NO_NEW_PRIV, ...)
271 Seccomp seccomp mode, like prctl(PR_GET_SECCOMP, ...)
272 Cpus_allowed mask of CPUs on which this process may run
273 Cpus_allowed_list Same as previous, but in "list format"
274 Mems_allowed mask of memory nodes allowed to this process
275 Mems_allowed_list Same as previous, but in "list format"
276 voluntary_ctxt_switches number of voluntary context switches
277 nonvoluntary_ctxt_switches number of non voluntary context switches
278 ..............................................................................
279
280 Table 1-3: Contents of the statm files (as of 2.6.8-rc3)
281 ..............................................................................
282 Field Content
283 size total program size (pages) (same as VmSize in status)
284 resident size of memory portions (pages) (same as VmRSS in status)
285 shared number of pages that are shared (i.e. backed by a file, same
286 as RssFile+RssShmem in status)
287 trs number of pages that are 'code' (not including libs; broken,
288 includes data segment)
289 lrs number of pages of library (always 0 on 2.6)
290 drs number of pages of data/stack (including libs; broken,
291 includes library text)
292 dt number of dirty pages (always 0 on 2.6)
293 ..............................................................................
294
295
296 Table 1-4: Contents of the stat files (as of 2.6.30-rc7)
297 ..............................................................................
298 Field Content
299 pid process id
300 tcomm filename of the executable
301 state state (R is running, S is sleeping, D is sleeping in an
302 uninterruptible wait, Z is zombie, T is traced or stopped)
303 ppid process id of the parent process
304 pgrp pgrp of the process
305 sid session id
306 tty_nr tty the process uses
307 tty_pgrp pgrp of the tty
308 flags task flags
309 min_flt number of minor faults
310 cmin_flt number of minor faults with child's
311 maj_flt number of major faults
312 cmaj_flt number of major faults with child's
313 utime user mode jiffies
314 stime kernel mode jiffies
315 cutime user mode jiffies with child's
316 cstime kernel mode jiffies with child's
317 priority priority level
318 nice nice level
319 num_threads number of threads
320 it_real_value (obsolete, always 0)
321 start_time time the process started after system boot
322 vsize virtual memory size
323 rss resident set memory size
324 rsslim current limit in bytes on the rss
325 start_code address above which program text can run
326 end_code address below which program text can run
327 start_stack address of the start of the main process stack
328 esp current value of ESP
329 eip current value of EIP
330 pending bitmap of pending signals
331 blocked bitmap of blocked signals
332 sigign bitmap of ignored signals
333 sigcatch bitmap of caught signals
334 0 (place holder, used to be the wchan address, use /proc/PID/wchan instead)
335 0 (place holder)
336 0 (place holder)
337 exit_signal signal to send to parent thread on exit
338 task_cpu which CPU the task is scheduled on
339 rt_priority realtime priority
340 policy scheduling policy (man sched_setscheduler)
341 blkio_ticks time spent waiting for block IO
342 gtime guest time of the task in jiffies
343 cgtime guest time of the task children in jiffies
344 start_data address above which program data+bss is placed
345 end_data address below which program data+bss is placed
346 start_brk address above which program heap can be expanded with brk()
347 arg_start address above which program command line is placed
348 arg_end address below which program command line is placed
349 env_start address above which program environment is placed
350 env_end address below which program environment is placed
351 exit_code the thread's exit_code in the form reported by the waitpid system call
352 ..............................................................................
353
354 The /proc/PID/maps file containing the currently mapped memory regions and
355 their access permissions.
356
357 The format is:
358
359 address perms offset dev inode pathname
360
361 08048000-08049000 r-xp 00000000 03:00 8312 /opt/test
362 08049000-0804a000 rw-p 00001000 03:00 8312 /opt/test
363 0804a000-0806b000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [heap]
364 a7cb1000-a7cb2000 ---p 00000000 00:00 0
365 a7cb2000-a7eb2000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0
366 a7eb2000-a7eb3000 ---p 00000000 00:00 0
367 a7eb3000-a7ed5000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0
368 a7ed5000-a8008000 r-xp 00000000 03:00 4222 /lib/libc.so.6
369 a8008000-a800a000 r--p 00133000 03:00 4222 /lib/libc.so.6
370 a800a000-a800b000 rw-p 00135000 03:00 4222 /lib/libc.so.6
371 a800b000-a800e000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0
372 a800e000-a8022000 r-xp 00000000 03:00 14462 /lib/libpthread.so.0
373 a8022000-a8023000 r--p 00013000 03:00 14462 /lib/libpthread.so.0
374 a8023000-a8024000 rw-p 00014000 03:00 14462 /lib/libpthread.so.0
375 a8024000-a8027000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0
376 a8027000-a8043000 r-xp 00000000 03:00 8317 /lib/ld-linux.so.2
377 a8043000-a8044000 r--p 0001b000 03:00 8317 /lib/ld-linux.so.2
378 a8044000-a8045000 rw-p 0001c000 03:00 8317 /lib/ld-linux.so.2
379 aff35000-aff4a000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack]
380 ffffe000-fffff000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0 [vdso]
381
382 where "address" is the address space in the process that it occupies, "perms"
383 is a set of permissions:
384
385 r = read
386 w = write
387 x = execute
388 s = shared
389 p = private (copy on write)
390
391 "offset" is the offset into the mapping, "dev" is the device (major:minor), and
392 "inode" is the inode on that device. 0 indicates that no inode is associated
393 with the memory region, as the case would be with BSS (uninitialized data).
394 The "pathname" shows the name associated file for this mapping. If the mapping
395 is not associated with a file:
396
397 [heap] = the heap of the program
398 [stack] = the stack of the main process
399 [vdso] = the "virtual dynamic shared object",
400 the kernel system call handler
401
402 or if empty, the mapping is anonymous.
403
404 The /proc/PID/smaps is an extension based on maps, showing the memory
405 consumption for each of the process's mappings. For each of mappings there
406 is a series of lines such as the following:
407
408 08048000-080bc000 r-xp 00000000 03:02 13130 /bin/bash
409 Size: 1084 kB
410 Rss: 892 kB
411 Pss: 374 kB
412 Shared_Clean: 892 kB
413 Shared_Dirty: 0 kB
414 Private_Clean: 0 kB
415 Private_Dirty: 0 kB
416 Referenced: 892 kB
417 Anonymous: 0 kB
418 LazyFree: 0 kB
419 AnonHugePages: 0 kB
420 ShmemPmdMapped: 0 kB
421 Shared_Hugetlb: 0 kB
422 Private_Hugetlb: 0 kB
423 Swap: 0 kB
424 SwapPss: 0 kB
425 KernelPageSize: 4 kB
426 MMUPageSize: 4 kB
427 Locked: 0 kB
428 VmFlags: rd ex mr mw me dw
429
430 the first of these lines shows the same information as is displayed for the
431 mapping in /proc/PID/maps. The remaining lines show the size of the mapping
432 (size), the amount of the mapping that is currently resident in RAM (RSS), the
433 process' proportional share of this mapping (PSS), the number of clean and
434 dirty private pages in the mapping.
435
436 The "proportional set size" (PSS) of a process is the count of pages it has
437 in memory, where each page is divided by the number of processes sharing it.
438 So if a process has 1000 pages all to itself, and 1000 shared with one other
439 process, its PSS will be 1500.
440 Note that even a page which is part of a MAP_SHARED mapping, but has only
441 a single pte mapped, i.e. is currently used by only one process, is accounted
442 as private and not as shared.
443 "Referenced" indicates the amount of memory currently marked as referenced or
444 accessed.
445 "Anonymous" shows the amount of memory that does not belong to any file. Even
446 a mapping associated with a file may contain anonymous pages: when MAP_PRIVATE
447 and a page is modified, the file page is replaced by a private anonymous copy.
448 "LazyFree" shows the amount of memory which is marked by madvise(MADV_FREE).
449 The memory isn't freed immediately with madvise(). It's freed in memory
450 pressure if the memory is clean. Please note that the printed value might
451 be lower than the real value due to optimizations used in the current
452 implementation. If this is not desirable please file a bug report.
453 "AnonHugePages" shows the ammount of memory backed by transparent hugepage.
454 "ShmemPmdMapped" shows the ammount of shared (shmem/tmpfs) memory backed by
455 huge pages.
456 "Shared_Hugetlb" and "Private_Hugetlb" show the ammounts of memory backed by
457 hugetlbfs page which is *not* counted in "RSS" or "PSS" field for historical
458 reasons. And these are not included in {Shared,Private}_{Clean,Dirty} field.
459 "Swap" shows how much would-be-anonymous memory is also used, but out on swap.
460 For shmem mappings, "Swap" includes also the size of the mapped (and not
461 replaced by copy-on-write) part of the underlying shmem object out on swap.
462 "SwapPss" shows proportional swap share of this mapping. Unlike "Swap", this
463 does not take into account swapped out page of underlying shmem objects.
464 "Locked" indicates whether the mapping is locked in memory or not.
465
466 "VmFlags" field deserves a separate description. This member represents the kernel
467 flags associated with the particular virtual memory area in two letter encoded
468 manner. The codes are the following:
469 rd - readable
470 wr - writeable
471 ex - executable
472 sh - shared
473 mr - may read
474 mw - may write
475 me - may execute
476 ms - may share
477 gd - stack segment growns down
478 pf - pure PFN range
479 dw - disabled write to the mapped file
480 lo - pages are locked in memory
481 io - memory mapped I/O area
482 sr - sequential read advise provided
483 rr - random read advise provided
484 dc - do not copy area on fork
485 de - do not expand area on remapping
486 ac - area is accountable
487 nr - swap space is not reserved for the area
488 ht - area uses huge tlb pages
489 ar - architecture specific flag
490 dd - do not include area into core dump
491 sd - soft-dirty flag
492 mm - mixed map area
493 hg - huge page advise flag
494 nh - no-huge page advise flag
495 mg - mergable advise flag
496
497 Note that there is no guarantee that every flag and associated mnemonic will
498 be present in all further kernel releases. Things get changed, the flags may
499 be vanished or the reverse -- new added.
500
501 This file is only present if the CONFIG_MMU kernel configuration option is
502 enabled.
503
504 Note: reading /proc/PID/maps or /proc/PID/smaps is inherently racy (consistent
505 output can be achieved only in the single read call).
506 This typically manifests when doing partial reads of these files while the
507 memory map is being modified. Despite the races, we do provide the following
508 guarantees:
509
510 1) The mapped addresses never go backwards, which implies no two
511 regions will ever overlap.
512 2) If there is something at a given vaddr during the entirety of the
513 life of the smaps/maps walk, there will be some output for it.
514
515
516 The /proc/PID/clear_refs is used to reset the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG
517 bits on both physical and virtual pages associated with a process, and the
518 soft-dirty bit on pte (see Documentation/vm/soft-dirty.txt for details).
519 To clear the bits for all the pages associated with the process
520 > echo 1 > /proc/PID/clear_refs
521
522 To clear the bits for the anonymous pages associated with the process
523 > echo 2 > /proc/PID/clear_refs
524
525 To clear the bits for the file mapped pages associated with the process
526 > echo 3 > /proc/PID/clear_refs
527
528 To clear the soft-dirty bit
529 > echo 4 > /proc/PID/clear_refs
530
531 To reset the peak resident set size ("high water mark") to the process's
532 current value:
533 > echo 5 > /proc/PID/clear_refs
534
535 Any other value written to /proc/PID/clear_refs will have no effect.
536
537 The /proc/pid/pagemap gives the PFN, which can be used to find the pageflags
538 using /proc/kpageflags and number of times a page is mapped using
539 /proc/kpagecount. For detailed explanation, see Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt.
540
541 The /proc/pid/numa_maps is an extension based on maps, showing the memory
542 locality and binding policy, as well as the memory usage (in pages) of
543 each mapping. The output follows a general format where mapping details get
544 summarized separated by blank spaces, one mapping per each file line:
545
546 address policy mapping details
547
548 00400000 default file=/usr/local/bin/app mapped=1 active=0 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=4
549 00600000 default file=/usr/local/bin/app anon=1 dirty=1 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=4
550 3206000000 default file=/lib64/ld-2.12.so mapped=26 mapmax=6 N0=24 N3=2 kernelpagesize_kB=4
551 320621f000 default file=/lib64/ld-2.12.so anon=1 dirty=1 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=4
552 3206220000 default file=/lib64/ld-2.12.so anon=1 dirty=1 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=4
553 3206221000 default anon=1 dirty=1 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=4
554 3206800000 default file=/lib64/libc-2.12.so mapped=59 mapmax=21 active=55 N0=41 N3=18 kernelpagesize_kB=4
555 320698b000 default file=/lib64/libc-2.12.so
556 3206b8a000 default file=/lib64/libc-2.12.so anon=2 dirty=2 N3=2 kernelpagesize_kB=4
557 3206b8e000 default file=/lib64/libc-2.12.so anon=1 dirty=1 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=4
558 3206b8f000 default anon=3 dirty=3 active=1 N3=3 kernelpagesize_kB=4
559 7f4dc10a2000 default anon=3 dirty=3 N3=3 kernelpagesize_kB=4
560 7f4dc10b4000 default anon=2 dirty=2 active=1 N3=2 kernelpagesize_kB=4
561 7f4dc1200000 default file=/anon_hugepage\040(deleted) huge anon=1 dirty=1 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=2048
562 7fff335f0000 default stack anon=3 dirty=3 N3=3 kernelpagesize_kB=4
563 7fff3369d000 default mapped=1 mapmax=35 active=0 N3=1 kernelpagesize_kB=4
564
565 Where:
566 "address" is the starting address for the mapping;
567 "policy" reports the NUMA memory policy set for the mapping (see vm/numa_memory_policy.txt);
568 "mapping details" summarizes mapping data such as mapping type, page usage counters,
569 node locality page counters (N0 == node0, N1 == node1, ...) and the kernel page
570 size, in KB, that is backing the mapping up.
571
572 1.2 Kernel data
573 ---------------
574
575 Similar to the process entries, the kernel data files give information about
576 the running kernel. The files used to obtain this information are contained in
577 /proc and are listed in Table 1-5. Not all of these will be present in your
578 system. It depends on the kernel configuration and the loaded modules, which
579 files are there, and which are missing.
580
581 Table 1-5: Kernel info in /proc
582 ..............................................................................
583 File Content
584 apm Advanced power management info
585 buddyinfo Kernel memory allocator information (see text) (2.5)
586 bus Directory containing bus specific information
587 cmdline Kernel command line
588 cpuinfo Info about the CPU
589 devices Available devices (block and character)
590 dma Used DMS channels
591 filesystems Supported filesystems
592 driver Various drivers grouped here, currently rtc (2.4)
593 execdomains Execdomains, related to security (2.4)
594 fb Frame Buffer devices (2.4)
595 fs File system parameters, currently nfs/exports (2.4)
596 ide Directory containing info about the IDE subsystem
597 interrupts Interrupt usage
598 iomem Memory map (2.4)
599 ioports I/O port usage
600 irq Masks for irq to cpu affinity (2.4)(smp?)
601 isapnp ISA PnP (Plug&Play) Info (2.4)
602 kcore Kernel core image (can be ELF or A.OUT(deprecated in 2.4))
603 kmsg Kernel messages
604 ksyms Kernel symbol table
605 loadavg Load average of last 1, 5 & 15 minutes
606 locks Kernel locks
607 meminfo Memory info
608 misc Miscellaneous
609 modules List of loaded modules
610 mounts Mounted filesystems
611 net Networking info (see text)
612 pagetypeinfo Additional page allocator information (see text) (2.5)
613 partitions Table of partitions known to the system
614 pci Deprecated info of PCI bus (new way -> /proc/bus/pci/,
615 decoupled by lspci (2.4)
616 rtc Real time clock
617 scsi SCSI info (see text)
618 slabinfo Slab pool info
619 softirqs softirq usage
620 stat Overall statistics
621 swaps Swap space utilization
622 sys See chapter 2
623 sysvipc Info of SysVIPC Resources (msg, sem, shm) (2.4)
624 tty Info of tty drivers
625 uptime Wall clock since boot, combined idle time of all cpus
626 version Kernel version
627 video bttv info of video resources (2.4)
628 vmallocinfo Show vmalloced areas
629 ..............................................................................
630
631 You can, for example, check which interrupts are currently in use and what
632 they are used for by looking in the file /proc/interrupts:
633
634 > cat /proc/interrupts
635 CPU0
636 0: 8728810 XT-PIC timer
637 1: 895 XT-PIC keyboard
638 2: 0 XT-PIC cascade
639 3: 531695 XT-PIC aha152x
640 4: 2014133 XT-PIC serial
641 5: 44401 XT-PIC pcnet_cs
642 8: 2 XT-PIC rtc
643 11: 8 XT-PIC i82365
644 12: 182918 XT-PIC PS/2 Mouse
645 13: 1 XT-PIC fpu
646 14: 1232265 XT-PIC ide0
647 15: 7 XT-PIC ide1
648 NMI: 0
649
650 In 2.4.* a couple of lines where added to this file LOC & ERR (this time is the
651 output of a SMP machine):
652
653 > cat /proc/interrupts
654
655 CPU0 CPU1
656 0: 1243498 1214548 IO-APIC-edge timer
657 1: 8949 8958 IO-APIC-edge keyboard
658 2: 0 0 XT-PIC cascade
659 5: 11286 10161 IO-APIC-edge soundblaster
660 8: 1 0 IO-APIC-edge rtc
661 9: 27422 27407 IO-APIC-edge 3c503
662 12: 113645 113873 IO-APIC-edge PS/2 Mouse
663 13: 0 0 XT-PIC fpu
664 14: 22491 24012 IO-APIC-edge ide0
665 15: 2183 2415 IO-APIC-edge ide1
666 17: 30564 30414 IO-APIC-level eth0
667 18: 177 164 IO-APIC-level bttv
668 NMI: 2457961 2457959
669 LOC: 2457882 2457881
670 ERR: 2155
671
672 NMI is incremented in this case because every timer interrupt generates a NMI
673 (Non Maskable Interrupt) which is used by the NMI Watchdog to detect lockups.
674
675 LOC is the local interrupt counter of the internal APIC of every CPU.
676
677 ERR is incremented in the case of errors in the IO-APIC bus (the bus that
678 connects the CPUs in a SMP system. This means that an error has been detected,
679 the IO-APIC automatically retry the transmission, so it should not be a big
680 problem, but you should read the SMP-FAQ.
681
682 In 2.6.2* /proc/interrupts was expanded again. This time the goal was for
683 /proc/interrupts to display every IRQ vector in use by the system, not
684 just those considered 'most important'. The new vectors are:
685
686 THR -- interrupt raised when a machine check threshold counter
687 (typically counting ECC corrected errors of memory or cache) exceeds
688 a configurable threshold. Only available on some systems.
689
690 TRM -- a thermal event interrupt occurs when a temperature threshold
691 has been exceeded for the CPU. This interrupt may also be generated
692 when the temperature drops back to normal.
693
694 SPU -- a spurious interrupt is some interrupt that was raised then lowered
695 by some IO device before it could be fully processed by the APIC. Hence
696 the APIC sees the interrupt but does not know what device it came from.
697 For this case the APIC will generate the interrupt with a IRQ vector
698 of 0xff. This might also be generated by chipset bugs.
699
700 RES, CAL, TLB -- rescheduling, call and TLB flush interrupts are
701 sent from one CPU to another per the needs of the OS. Typically,
702 their statistics are used by kernel developers and interested users to
703 determine the occurrence of interrupts of the given type.
704
705 The above IRQ vectors are displayed only when relevant. For example,
706 the threshold vector does not exist on x86_64 platforms. Others are
707 suppressed when the system is a uniprocessor. As of this writing, only
708 i386 and x86_64 platforms support the new IRQ vector displays.
709
710 Of some interest is the introduction of the /proc/irq directory to 2.4.
711 It could be used to set IRQ to CPU affinity, this means that you can "hook" an
712 IRQ to only one CPU, or to exclude a CPU of handling IRQs. The contents of the
713 irq subdir is one subdir for each IRQ, and two files; default_smp_affinity and
714 prof_cpu_mask.
715
716 For example
717 > ls /proc/irq/
718 0 10 12 14 16 18 2 4 6 8 prof_cpu_mask
719 1 11 13 15 17 19 3 5 7 9 default_smp_affinity
720 > ls /proc/irq/0/
721 smp_affinity
722
723 smp_affinity is a bitmask, in which you can specify which CPUs can handle the
724 IRQ, you can set it by doing:
725
726 > echo 1 > /proc/irq/10/smp_affinity
727
728 This means that only the first CPU will handle the IRQ, but you can also echo
729 5 which means that only the first and third CPU can handle the IRQ.
730
731 The contents of each smp_affinity file is the same by default:
732
733 > cat /proc/irq/0/smp_affinity
734 ffffffff
735
736 There is an alternate interface, smp_affinity_list which allows specifying
737 a cpu range instead of a bitmask:
738
739 > cat /proc/irq/0/smp_affinity_list
740 1024-1031
741
742 The default_smp_affinity mask applies to all non-active IRQs, which are the
743 IRQs which have not yet been allocated/activated, and hence which lack a
744 /proc/irq/[0-9]* directory.
745
746 The node file on an SMP system shows the node to which the device using the IRQ
747 reports itself as being attached. This hardware locality information does not
748 include information about any possible driver locality preference.
749
750 prof_cpu_mask specifies which CPUs are to be profiled by the system wide
751 profiler. Default value is ffffffff (all cpus if there are only 32 of them).
752
753 The way IRQs are routed is handled by the IO-APIC, and it's Round Robin
754 between all the CPUs which are allowed to handle it. As usual the kernel has
755 more info than you and does a better job than you, so the defaults are the
756 best choice for almost everyone. [Note this applies only to those IO-APIC's
757 that support "Round Robin" interrupt distribution.]
758
759 There are three more important subdirectories in /proc: net, scsi, and sys.
760 The general rule is that the contents, or even the existence of these
761 directories, depend on your kernel configuration. If SCSI is not enabled, the
762 directory scsi may not exist. The same is true with the net, which is there
763 only when networking support is present in the running kernel.
764
765 The slabinfo file gives information about memory usage at the slab level.
766 Linux uses slab pools for memory management above page level in version 2.2.
767 Commonly used objects have their own slab pool (such as network buffers,
768 directory cache, and so on).
769
770 ..............................................................................
771
772 > cat /proc/buddyinfo
773
774 Node 0, zone DMA 0 4 5 4 4 3 ...
775 Node 0, zone Normal 1 0 0 1 101 8 ...
776 Node 0, zone HighMem 2 0 0 1 1 0 ...
777
778 External fragmentation is a problem under some workloads, and buddyinfo is a
779 useful tool for helping diagnose these problems. Buddyinfo will give you a
780 clue as to how big an area you can safely allocate, or why a previous
781 allocation failed.
782
783 Each column represents the number of pages of a certain order which are
784 available. In this case, there are 0 chunks of 2^0*PAGE_SIZE available in
785 ZONE_DMA, 4 chunks of 2^1*PAGE_SIZE in ZONE_DMA, 101 chunks of 2^4*PAGE_SIZE
786 available in ZONE_NORMAL, etc...
787
788 More information relevant to external fragmentation can be found in
789 pagetypeinfo.
790
791 > cat /proc/pagetypeinfo
792 Page block order: 9
793 Pages per block: 512
794
795 Free pages count per migrate type at order 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
796 Node 0, zone DMA, type Unmovable 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0
797 Node 0, zone DMA, type Reclaimable 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
798 Node 0, zone DMA, type Movable 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 2
799 Node 0, zone DMA, type Reserve 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
800 Node 0, zone DMA, type Isolate 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
801 Node 0, zone DMA32, type Unmovable 103 54 77 1 1 1 11 8 7 1 9
802 Node 0, zone DMA32, type Reclaimable 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
803 Node 0, zone DMA32, type Movable 169 152 113 91 77 54 39 13 6 1 452
804 Node 0, zone DMA32, type Reserve 1 2 2 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 0
805 Node 0, zone DMA32, type Isolate 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
806
807 Number of blocks type Unmovable Reclaimable Movable Reserve Isolate
808 Node 0, zone DMA 2 0 5 1 0
809 Node 0, zone DMA32 41 6 967 2 0
810
811 Fragmentation avoidance in the kernel works by grouping pages of different
812 migrate types into the same contiguous regions of memory called page blocks.
813 A page block is typically the size of the default hugepage size e.g. 2MB on
814 X86-64. By keeping pages grouped based on their ability to move, the kernel
815 can reclaim pages within a page block to satisfy a high-order allocation.
816
817 The pagetypinfo begins with information on the size of a page block. It
818 then gives the same type of information as buddyinfo except broken down
819 by migrate-type and finishes with details on how many page blocks of each
820 type exist.
821
822 If min_free_kbytes has been tuned correctly (recommendations made by hugeadm
823 from libhugetlbfs https://github.com/libhugetlbfs/libhugetlbfs/), one can
824 make an estimate of the likely number of huge pages that can be allocated
825 at a given point in time. All the "Movable" blocks should be allocatable
826 unless memory has been mlock()'d. Some of the Reclaimable blocks should
827 also be allocatable although a lot of filesystem metadata may have to be
828 reclaimed to achieve this.
829
830 ..............................................................................
831
832 meminfo:
833
834 Provides information about distribution and utilization of memory. This
835 varies by architecture and compile options. The following is from a
836 16GB PIII, which has highmem enabled. You may not have all of these fields.
837
838 > cat /proc/meminfo
839
840 MemTotal: 16344972 kB
841 MemFree: 13634064 kB
842 MemAvailable: 14836172 kB
843 Buffers: 3656 kB
844 Cached: 1195708 kB
845 SwapCached: 0 kB
846 Active: 891636 kB
847 Inactive: 1077224 kB
848 HighTotal: 15597528 kB
849 HighFree: 13629632 kB
850 LowTotal: 747444 kB
851 LowFree: 4432 kB
852 SwapTotal: 0 kB
853 SwapFree: 0 kB
854 Dirty: 968 kB
855 Writeback: 0 kB
856 AnonPages: 861800 kB
857 Mapped: 280372 kB
858 Shmem: 644 kB
859 Slab: 284364 kB
860 SReclaimable: 159856 kB
861 SUnreclaim: 124508 kB
862 PageTables: 24448 kB
863 NFS_Unstable: 0 kB
864 Bounce: 0 kB
865 WritebackTmp: 0 kB
866 CommitLimit: 7669796 kB
867 Committed_AS: 100056 kB
868 VmallocTotal: 112216 kB
869 VmallocUsed: 428 kB
870 VmallocChunk: 111088 kB
871 AnonHugePages: 49152 kB
872 ShmemHugePages: 0 kB
873 ShmemPmdMapped: 0 kB
874
875
876 MemTotal: Total usable ram (i.e. physical ram minus a few reserved
877 bits and the kernel binary code)
878 MemFree: The sum of LowFree+HighFree
879 MemAvailable: An estimate of how much memory is available for starting new
880 applications, without swapping. Calculated from MemFree,
881 SReclaimable, the size of the file LRU lists, and the low
882 watermarks in each zone.
883 The estimate takes into account that the system needs some
884 page cache to function well, and that not all reclaimable
885 slab will be reclaimable, due to items being in use. The
886 impact of those factors will vary from system to system.
887 Buffers: Relatively temporary storage for raw disk blocks
888 shouldn't get tremendously large (20MB or so)
889 Cached: in-memory cache for files read from the disk (the
890 pagecache). Doesn't include SwapCached
891 SwapCached: Memory that once was swapped out, is swapped back in but
892 still also is in the swapfile (if memory is needed it
893 doesn't need to be swapped out AGAIN because it is already
894 in the swapfile. This saves I/O)
895 Active: Memory that has been used more recently and usually not
896 reclaimed unless absolutely necessary.
897 Inactive: Memory which has been less recently used. It is more
898 eligible to be reclaimed for other purposes
899 HighTotal:
900 HighFree: Highmem is all memory above ~860MB of physical memory
901 Highmem areas are for use by userspace programs, or
902 for the pagecache. The kernel must use tricks to access
903 this memory, making it slower to access than lowmem.
904 LowTotal:
905 LowFree: Lowmem is memory which can be used for everything that
906 highmem can be used for, but it is also available for the
907 kernel's use for its own data structures. Among many
908 other things, it is where everything from the Slab is
909 allocated. Bad things happen when you're out of lowmem.
910 SwapTotal: total amount of swap space available
911 SwapFree: Memory which has been evicted from RAM, and is temporarily
912 on the disk
913 Dirty: Memory which is waiting to get written back to the disk
914 Writeback: Memory which is actively being written back to the disk
915 AnonPages: Non-file backed pages mapped into userspace page tables
916 AnonHugePages: Non-file backed huge pages mapped into userspace page tables
917 Mapped: files which have been mmaped, such as libraries
918 Shmem: Total memory used by shared memory (shmem) and tmpfs
919 ShmemHugePages: Memory used by shared memory (shmem) and tmpfs allocated
920 with huge pages
921 ShmemPmdMapped: Shared memory mapped into userspace with huge pages
922 Slab: in-kernel data structures cache
923 SReclaimable: Part of Slab, that might be reclaimed, such as caches
924 SUnreclaim: Part of Slab, that cannot be reclaimed on memory pressure
925 PageTables: amount of memory dedicated to the lowest level of page
926 tables.
927 NFS_Unstable: NFS pages sent to the server, but not yet committed to stable
928 storage
929 Bounce: Memory used for block device "bounce buffers"
930 WritebackTmp: Memory used by FUSE for temporary writeback buffers
931 CommitLimit: Based on the overcommit ratio ('vm.overcommit_ratio'),
932 this is the total amount of memory currently available to
933 be allocated on the system. This limit is only adhered to
934 if strict overcommit accounting is enabled (mode 2 in
935 'vm.overcommit_memory').
936 The CommitLimit is calculated with the following formula:
937 CommitLimit = ([total RAM pages] - [total huge TLB pages]) *
938 overcommit_ratio / 100 + [total swap pages]
939 For example, on a system with 1G of physical RAM and 7G
940 of swap with a `vm.overcommit_ratio` of 30 it would
941 yield a CommitLimit of 7.3G.
942 For more details, see the memory overcommit documentation
943 in vm/overcommit-accounting.
944 Committed_AS: The amount of memory presently allocated on the system.
945 The committed memory is a sum of all of the memory which
946 has been allocated by processes, even if it has not been
947 "used" by them as of yet. A process which malloc()'s 1G
948 of memory, but only touches 300M of it will show up as
949 using 1G. This 1G is memory which has been "committed" to
950 by the VM and can be used at any time by the allocating
951 application. With strict overcommit enabled on the system
952 (mode 2 in 'vm.overcommit_memory'),allocations which would
953 exceed the CommitLimit (detailed above) will not be permitted.
954 This is useful if one needs to guarantee that processes will
955 not fail due to lack of memory once that memory has been
956 successfully allocated.
957 VmallocTotal: total size of vmalloc memory area
958 VmallocUsed: amount of vmalloc area which is used
959 VmallocChunk: largest contiguous block of vmalloc area which is free
960
961 ..............................................................................
962
963 vmallocinfo:
964
965 Provides information about vmalloced/vmaped areas. One line per area,
966 containing the virtual address range of the area, size in bytes,
967 caller information of the creator, and optional information depending
968 on the kind of area :
969
970 pages=nr number of pages
971 phys=addr if a physical address was specified
972 ioremap I/O mapping (ioremap() and friends)
973 vmalloc vmalloc() area
974 vmap vmap()ed pages
975 user VM_USERMAP area
976 vpages buffer for pages pointers was vmalloced (huge area)
977 N<node>=nr (Only on NUMA kernels)
978 Number of pages allocated on memory node <node>
979
980 > cat /proc/vmallocinfo
981 0xffffc20000000000-0xffffc20000201000 2101248 alloc_large_system_hash+0x204 ...
982 /0x2c0 pages=512 vmalloc N0=128 N1=128 N2=128 N3=128
983 0xffffc20000201000-0xffffc20000302000 1052672 alloc_large_system_hash+0x204 ...
984 /0x2c0 pages=256 vmalloc N0=64 N1=64 N2=64 N3=64
985 0xffffc20000302000-0xffffc20000304000 8192 acpi_tb_verify_table+0x21/0x4f...
986 phys=7fee8000 ioremap
987 0xffffc20000304000-0xffffc20000307000 12288 acpi_tb_verify_table+0x21/0x4f...
988 phys=7fee7000 ioremap
989 0xffffc2000031d000-0xffffc2000031f000 8192 init_vdso_vars+0x112/0x210
990 0xffffc2000031f000-0xffffc2000032b000 49152 cramfs_uncompress_init+0x2e ...
991 /0x80 pages=11 vmalloc N0=3 N1=3 N2=2 N3=3
992 0xffffc2000033a000-0xffffc2000033d000 12288 sys_swapon+0x640/0xac0 ...
993 pages=2 vmalloc N1=2
994 0xffffc20000347000-0xffffc2000034c000 20480 xt_alloc_table_info+0xfe ...
995 /0x130 [x_tables] pages=4 vmalloc N0=4
996 0xffffffffa0000000-0xffffffffa000f000 61440 sys_init_module+0xc27/0x1d00 ...
997 pages=14 vmalloc N2=14
998 0xffffffffa000f000-0xffffffffa0014000 20480 sys_init_module+0xc27/0x1d00 ...
999 pages=4 vmalloc N1=4
1000 0xffffffffa0014000-0xffffffffa0017000 12288 sys_init_module+0xc27/0x1d00 ...
1001 pages=2 vmalloc N1=2
1002 0xffffffffa0017000-0xffffffffa0022000 45056 sys_init_module+0xc27/0x1d00 ...
1003 pages=10 vmalloc N0=10
1004
1005 ..............................................................................
1006
1007 softirqs:
1008
1009 Provides counts of softirq handlers serviced since boot time, for each cpu.
1010
1011 > cat /proc/softirqs
1012 CPU0 CPU1 CPU2 CPU3
1013 HI: 0 0 0 0
1014 TIMER: 27166 27120 27097 27034
1015 NET_TX: 0 0 0 17
1016 NET_RX: 42 0 0 39
1017 BLOCK: 0 0 107 1121
1018 TASKLET: 0 0 0 290
1019 SCHED: 27035 26983 26971 26746
1020 HRTIMER: 0 0 0 0
1021 RCU: 1678 1769 2178 2250
1022
1023
1024 1.3 IDE devices in /proc/ide
1025 ----------------------------
1026
1027 The subdirectory /proc/ide contains information about all IDE devices of which
1028 the kernel is aware. There is one subdirectory for each IDE controller, the
1029 file drivers and a link for each IDE device, pointing to the device directory
1030 in the controller specific subtree.
1031
1032 The file drivers contains general information about the drivers used for the
1033 IDE devices:
1034
1035 > cat /proc/ide/drivers
1036 ide-cdrom version 4.53
1037 ide-disk version 1.08
1038
1039 More detailed information can be found in the controller specific
1040 subdirectories. These are named ide0, ide1 and so on. Each of these
1041 directories contains the files shown in table 1-6.
1042
1043
1044 Table 1-6: IDE controller info in /proc/ide/ide?
1045 ..............................................................................
1046 File Content
1047 channel IDE channel (0 or 1)
1048 config Configuration (only for PCI/IDE bridge)
1049 mate Mate name
1050 model Type/Chipset of IDE controller
1051 ..............................................................................
1052
1053 Each device connected to a controller has a separate subdirectory in the
1054 controllers directory. The files listed in table 1-7 are contained in these
1055 directories.
1056
1057
1058 Table 1-7: IDE device information
1059 ..............................................................................
1060 File Content
1061 cache The cache
1062 capacity Capacity of the medium (in 512Byte blocks)
1063 driver driver and version
1064 geometry physical and logical geometry
1065 identify device identify block
1066 media media type
1067 model device identifier
1068 settings device setup
1069 smart_thresholds IDE disk management thresholds
1070 smart_values IDE disk management values
1071 ..............................................................................
1072
1073 The most interesting file is settings. This file contains a nice overview of
1074 the drive parameters:
1075
1076 # cat /proc/ide/ide0/hda/settings
1077 name value min max mode
1078 ---- ----- --- --- ----
1079 bios_cyl 526 0 65535 rw
1080 bios_head 255 0 255 rw
1081 bios_sect 63 0 63 rw
1082 breada_readahead 4 0 127 rw
1083 bswap 0 0 1 r
1084 file_readahead 72 0 2097151 rw
1085 io_32bit 0 0 3 rw
1086 keepsettings 0 0 1 rw
1087 max_kb_per_request 122 1 127 rw
1088 multcount 0 0 8 rw
1089 nice1 1 0 1 rw
1090 nowerr 0 0 1 rw
1091 pio_mode write-only 0 255 w
1092 slow 0 0 1 rw
1093 unmaskirq 0 0 1 rw
1094 using_dma 0 0 1 rw
1095
1096
1097 1.4 Networking info in /proc/net
1098 --------------------------------
1099
1100 The subdirectory /proc/net follows the usual pattern. Table 1-8 shows the
1101 additional values you get for IP version 6 if you configure the kernel to
1102 support this. Table 1-9 lists the files and their meaning.
1103
1104
1105 Table 1-8: IPv6 info in /proc/net
1106 ..............................................................................
1107 File Content
1108 udp6 UDP sockets (IPv6)
1109 tcp6 TCP sockets (IPv6)
1110 raw6 Raw device statistics (IPv6)
1111 igmp6 IP multicast addresses, which this host joined (IPv6)
1112 if_inet6 List of IPv6 interface addresses
1113 ipv6_route Kernel routing table for IPv6
1114 rt6_stats Global IPv6 routing tables statistics
1115 sockstat6 Socket statistics (IPv6)
1116 snmp6 Snmp data (IPv6)
1117 ..............................................................................
1118
1119
1120 Table 1-9: Network info in /proc/net
1121 ..............................................................................
1122 File Content
1123 arp Kernel ARP table
1124 dev network devices with statistics
1125 dev_mcast the Layer2 multicast groups a device is listening too
1126 (interface index, label, number of references, number of bound
1127 addresses).
1128 dev_stat network device status
1129 ip_fwchains Firewall chain linkage
1130 ip_fwnames Firewall chain names
1131 ip_masq Directory containing the masquerading tables
1132 ip_masquerade Major masquerading table
1133 netstat Network statistics
1134 raw raw device statistics
1135 route Kernel routing table
1136 rpc Directory containing rpc info
1137 rt_cache Routing cache
1138 snmp SNMP data
1139 sockstat Socket statistics
1140 tcp TCP sockets
1141 udp UDP sockets
1142 unix UNIX domain sockets
1143 wireless Wireless interface data (Wavelan etc)
1144 igmp IP multicast addresses, which this host joined
1145 psched Global packet scheduler parameters.
1146 netlink List of PF_NETLINK sockets
1147 ip_mr_vifs List of multicast virtual interfaces
1148 ip_mr_cache List of multicast routing cache
1149 ..............................................................................
1150
1151 You can use this information to see which network devices are available in
1152 your system and how much traffic was routed over those devices:
1153
1154 > cat /proc/net/dev
1155 Inter-|Receive |[...
1156 face |bytes packets errs drop fifo frame compressed multicast|[...
1157 lo: 908188 5596 0 0 0 0 0 0 [...
1158 ppp0:15475140 20721 410 0 0 410 0 0 [...
1159 eth0: 614530 7085 0 0 0 0 0 1 [...
1160
1161 ...] Transmit
1162 ...] bytes packets errs drop fifo colls carrier compressed
1163 ...] 908188 5596 0 0 0 0 0 0
1164 ...] 1375103 17405 0 0 0 0 0 0
1165 ...] 1703981 5535 0 0 0 3 0 0
1166
1167 In addition, each Channel Bond interface has its own directory. For
1168 example, the bond0 device will have a directory called /proc/net/bond0/.
1169 It will contain information that is specific to that bond, such as the
1170 current slaves of the bond, the link status of the slaves, and how
1171 many times the slaves link has failed.
1172
1173 1.5 SCSI info
1174 -------------
1175
1176 If you have a SCSI host adapter in your system, you'll find a subdirectory
1177 named after the driver for this adapter in /proc/scsi. You'll also see a list
1178 of all recognized SCSI devices in /proc/scsi:
1179
1180 >cat /proc/scsi/scsi
1181 Attached devices:
1182 Host: scsi0 Channel: 00 Id: 00 Lun: 00
1183 Vendor: IBM Model: DGHS09U Rev: 03E0
1184 Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 03
1185 Host: scsi0 Channel: 00 Id: 06 Lun: 00
1186 Vendor: PIONEER Model: CD-ROM DR-U06S Rev: 1.04
1187 Type: CD-ROM ANSI SCSI revision: 02
1188
1189
1190 The directory named after the driver has one file for each adapter found in
1191 the system. These files contain information about the controller, including
1192 the used IRQ and the IO address range. The amount of information shown is
1193 dependent on the adapter you use. The example shows the output for an Adaptec
1194 AHA-2940 SCSI adapter:
1195
1196 > cat /proc/scsi/aic7xxx/0
1197
1198 Adaptec AIC7xxx driver version: 5.1.19/3.2.4
1199 Compile Options:
1200 TCQ Enabled By Default : Disabled
1201 AIC7XXX_PROC_STATS : Disabled
1202 AIC7XXX_RESET_DELAY : 5
1203 Adapter Configuration:
1204 SCSI Adapter: Adaptec AHA-294X Ultra SCSI host adapter
1205 Ultra Wide Controller
1206 PCI MMAPed I/O Base: 0xeb001000
1207 Adapter SEEPROM Config: SEEPROM found and used.
1208 Adaptec SCSI BIOS: Enabled
1209 IRQ: 10
1210 SCBs: Active 0, Max Active 2,
1211 Allocated 15, HW 16, Page 255
1212 Interrupts: 160328
1213 BIOS Control Word: 0x18b6
1214 Adapter Control Word: 0x005b
1215 Extended Translation: Enabled
1216 Disconnect Enable Flags: 0xffff
1217 Ultra Enable Flags: 0x0001
1218 Tag Queue Enable Flags: 0x0000
1219 Ordered Queue Tag Flags: 0x0000
1220 Default Tag Queue Depth: 8
1221 Tagged Queue By Device array for aic7xxx host instance 0:
1222 {255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255}
1223 Actual queue depth per device for aic7xxx host instance 0:
1224 {1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1}
1225 Statistics:
1226 (scsi0:0:0:0)
1227 Device using Wide/Sync transfers at 40.0 MByte/sec, offset 8
1228 Transinfo settings: current(12/8/1/0), goal(12/8/1/0), user(12/15/1/0)
1229 Total transfers 160151 (74577 reads and 85574 writes)
1230 (scsi0:0:6:0)
1231 Device using Narrow/Sync transfers at 5.0 MByte/sec, offset 15
1232 Transinfo settings: current(50/15/0/0), goal(50/15/0/0), user(50/15/0/0)
1233 Total transfers 0 (0 reads and 0 writes)
1234
1235
1236 1.6 Parallel port info in /proc/parport
1237 ---------------------------------------
1238
1239 The directory /proc/parport contains information about the parallel ports of
1240 your system. It has one subdirectory for each port, named after the port
1241 number (0,1,2,...).
1242
1243 These directories contain the four files shown in Table 1-10.
1244
1245
1246 Table 1-10: Files in /proc/parport
1247 ..............................................................................
1248 File Content
1249 autoprobe Any IEEE-1284 device ID information that has been acquired.
1250 devices list of the device drivers using that port. A + will appear by the
1251 name of the device currently using the port (it might not appear
1252 against any).
1253 hardware Parallel port's base address, IRQ line and DMA channel.
1254 irq IRQ that parport is using for that port. This is in a separate
1255 file to allow you to alter it by writing a new value in (IRQ
1256 number or none).
1257 ..............................................................................
1258
1259 1.7 TTY info in /proc/tty
1260 -------------------------
1261
1262 Information about the available and actually used tty's can be found in the
1263 directory /proc/tty.You'll find entries for drivers and line disciplines in
1264 this directory, as shown in Table 1-11.
1265
1266
1267 Table 1-11: Files in /proc/tty
1268 ..............................................................................
1269 File Content
1270 drivers list of drivers and their usage
1271 ldiscs registered line disciplines
1272 driver/serial usage statistic and status of single tty lines
1273 ..............................................................................
1274
1275 To see which tty's are currently in use, you can simply look into the file
1276 /proc/tty/drivers:
1277
1278 > cat /proc/tty/drivers
1279 pty_slave /dev/pts 136 0-255 pty:slave
1280 pty_master /dev/ptm 128 0-255 pty:master
1281 pty_slave /dev/ttyp 3 0-255 pty:slave
1282 pty_master /dev/pty 2 0-255 pty:master
1283 serial /dev/cua 5 64-67 serial:callout
1284 serial /dev/ttyS 4 64-67 serial
1285 /dev/tty0 /dev/tty0 4 0 system:vtmaster
1286 /dev/ptmx /dev/ptmx 5 2 system
1287 /dev/console /dev/console 5 1 system:console
1288 /dev/tty /dev/tty 5 0 system:/dev/tty
1289 unknown /dev/tty 4 1-63 console
1290
1291
1292 1.8 Miscellaneous kernel statistics in /proc/stat
1293 -------------------------------------------------
1294
1295 Various pieces of information about kernel activity are available in the
1296 /proc/stat file. All of the numbers reported in this file are aggregates
1297 since the system first booted. For a quick look, simply cat the file:
1298
1299 > cat /proc/stat
1300 cpu 2255 34 2290 22625563 6290 127 456 0 0 0
1301 cpu0 1132 34 1441 11311718 3675 127 438 0 0 0
1302 cpu1 1123 0 849 11313845 2614 0 18 0 0 0
1303 intr 114930548 113199788 3 0 5 263 0 4 [... lots more numbers ...]
1304 ctxt 1990473
1305 btime 1062191376
1306 processes 2915
1307 procs_running 1
1308 procs_blocked 0
1309 softirq 183433 0 21755 12 39 1137 231 21459 2263
1310
1311 The very first "cpu" line aggregates the numbers in all of the other "cpuN"
1312 lines. These numbers identify the amount of time the CPU has spent performing
1313 different kinds of work. Time units are in USER_HZ (typically hundredths of a
1314 second). The meanings of the columns are as follows, from left to right:
1315
1316 - user: normal processes executing in user mode
1317 - nice: niced processes executing in user mode
1318 - system: processes executing in kernel mode
1319 - idle: twiddling thumbs
1320 - iowait: In a word, iowait stands for waiting for I/O to complete. But there
1321 are several problems:
1322 1. Cpu will not wait for I/O to complete, iowait is the time that a task is
1323 waiting for I/O to complete. When cpu goes into idle state for
1324 outstanding task io, another task will be scheduled on this CPU.
1325 2. In a multi-core CPU, the task waiting for I/O to complete is not running
1326 on any CPU, so the iowait of each CPU is difficult to calculate.
1327 3. The value of iowait field in /proc/stat will decrease in certain
1328 conditions.
1329 So, the iowait is not reliable by reading from /proc/stat.
1330 - irq: servicing interrupts
1331 - softirq: servicing softirqs
1332 - steal: involuntary wait
1333 - guest: running a normal guest
1334 - guest_nice: running a niced guest
1335
1336 The "intr" line gives counts of interrupts serviced since boot time, for each
1337 of the possible system interrupts. The first column is the total of all
1338 interrupts serviced including unnumbered architecture specific interrupts;
1339 each subsequent column is the total for that particular numbered interrupt.
1340 Unnumbered interrupts are not shown, only summed into the total.
1341
1342 The "ctxt" line gives the total number of context switches across all CPUs.
1343
1344 The "btime" line gives the time at which the system booted, in seconds since
1345 the Unix epoch.
1346
1347 The "processes" line gives the number of processes and threads created, which
1348 includes (but is not limited to) those created by calls to the fork() and
1349 clone() system calls.
1350
1351 The "procs_running" line gives the total number of threads that are
1352 running or ready to run (i.e., the total number of runnable threads).
1353
1354 The "procs_blocked" line gives the number of processes currently blocked,
1355 waiting for I/O to complete.
1356
1357 The "softirq" line gives counts of softirqs serviced since boot time, for each
1358 of the possible system softirqs. The first column is the total of all
1359 softirqs serviced; each subsequent column is the total for that particular
1360 softirq.
1361
1362
1363 1.9 Ext4 file system parameters
1364 -------------------------------
1365
1366 Information about mounted ext4 file systems can be found in
1367 /proc/fs/ext4. Each mounted filesystem will have a directory in
1368 /proc/fs/ext4 based on its device name (i.e., /proc/fs/ext4/hdc or
1369 /proc/fs/ext4/dm-0). The files in each per-device directory are shown
1370 in Table 1-12, below.
1371
1372 Table 1-12: Files in /proc/fs/ext4/<devname>
1373 ..............................................................................
1374 File Content
1375 mb_groups details of multiblock allocator buddy cache of free blocks
1376 ..............................................................................
1377
1378 2.0 /proc/consoles
1379 ------------------
1380 Shows registered system console lines.
1381
1382 To see which character device lines are currently used for the system console
1383 /dev/console, you may simply look into the file /proc/consoles:
1384
1385 > cat /proc/consoles
1386 tty0 -WU (ECp) 4:7
1387 ttyS0 -W- (Ep) 4:64
1388
1389 The columns are:
1390
1391 device name of the device
1392 operations R = can do read operations
1393 W = can do write operations
1394 U = can do unblank
1395 flags E = it is enabled
1396 C = it is preferred console
1397 B = it is primary boot console
1398 p = it is used for printk buffer
1399 b = it is not a TTY but a Braille device
1400 a = it is safe to use when cpu is offline
1401 major:minor major and minor number of the device separated by a colon
1402
1403 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1404 Summary
1405 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1406 The /proc file system serves information about the running system. It not only
1407 allows access to process data but also allows you to request the kernel status
1408 by reading files in the hierarchy.
1409
1410 The directory structure of /proc reflects the types of information and makes
1411 it easy, if not obvious, where to look for specific data.
1412 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1413
1414 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1415 CHAPTER 2: MODIFYING SYSTEM PARAMETERS
1416 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1417
1418 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1419 In This Chapter
1420 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1421 * Modifying kernel parameters by writing into files found in /proc/sys
1422 * Exploring the files which modify certain parameters
1423 * Review of the /proc/sys file tree
1424 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1425
1426
1427 A very interesting part of /proc is the directory /proc/sys. This is not only
1428 a source of information, it also allows you to change parameters within the
1429 kernel. Be very careful when attempting this. You can optimize your system,
1430 but you can also cause it to crash. Never alter kernel parameters on a
1431 production system. Set up a development machine and test to make sure that
1432 everything works the way you want it to. You may have no alternative but to
1433 reboot the machine once an error has been made.
1434
1435 To change a value, simply echo the new value into the file. An example is
1436 given below in the section on the file system data. You need to be root to do
1437 this. You can create your own boot script to perform this every time your
1438 system boots.
1439
1440 The files in /proc/sys can be used to fine tune and monitor miscellaneous and
1441 general things in the operation of the Linux kernel. Since some of the files
1442 can inadvertently disrupt your system, it is advisable to read both
1443 documentation and source before actually making adjustments. In any case, be
1444 very careful when writing to any of these files. The entries in /proc may
1445 change slightly between the 2.1.* and the 2.2 kernel, so if there is any doubt
1446 review the kernel documentation in the directory /usr/src/linux/Documentation.
1447 This chapter is heavily based on the documentation included in the pre 2.2
1448 kernels, and became part of it in version 2.2.1 of the Linux kernel.
1449
1450 Please see: Documentation/sysctl/ directory for descriptions of these
1451 entries.
1452
1453 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1454 Summary
1455 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1456 Certain aspects of kernel behavior can be modified at runtime, without the
1457 need to recompile the kernel, or even to reboot the system. The files in the
1458 /proc/sys tree can not only be read, but also modified. You can use the echo
1459 command to write value into these files, thereby changing the default settings
1460 of the kernel.
1461 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1462
1463 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1464 CHAPTER 3: PER-PROCESS PARAMETERS
1465 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1466
1467 3.1 /proc/<pid>/oom_adj & /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj- Adjust the oom-killer score
1468 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1469
1470 These file can be used to adjust the badness heuristic used to select which
1471 process gets killed in out of memory conditions.
1472
1473 The badness heuristic assigns a value to each candidate task ranging from 0
1474 (never kill) to 1000 (always kill) to determine which process is targeted. The
1475 units are roughly a proportion along that range of allowed memory the process
1476 may allocate from based on an estimation of its current memory and swap use.
1477 For example, if a task is using all allowed memory, its badness score will be
1478 1000. If it is using half of its allowed memory, its score will be 500.
1479
1480 There is an additional factor included in the badness score: the current memory
1481 and swap usage is discounted by 3% for root processes.
1482
1483 The amount of "allowed" memory depends on the context in which the oom killer
1484 was called. If it is due to the memory assigned to the allocating task's cpuset
1485 being exhausted, the allowed memory represents the set of mems assigned to that
1486 cpuset. If it is due to a mempolicy's node(s) being exhausted, the allowed
1487 memory represents the set of mempolicy nodes. If it is due to a memory
1488 limit (or swap limit) being reached, the allowed memory is that configured
1489 limit. Finally, if it is due to the entire system being out of memory, the
1490 allowed memory represents all allocatable resources.
1491
1492 The value of /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj is added to the badness score before it
1493 is used to determine which task to kill. Acceptable values range from -1000
1494 (OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MIN) to +1000 (OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MAX). This allows userspace to
1495 polarize the preference for oom killing either by always preferring a certain
1496 task or completely disabling it. The lowest possible value, -1000, is
1497 equivalent to disabling oom killing entirely for that task since it will always
1498 report a badness score of 0.
1499
1500 Consequently, it is very simple for userspace to define the amount of memory to
1501 consider for each task. Setting a /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj value of +500, for
1502 example, is roughly equivalent to allowing the remainder of tasks sharing the
1503 same system, cpuset, mempolicy, or memory controller resources to use at least
1504 50% more memory. A value of -500, on the other hand, would be roughly
1505 equivalent to discounting 50% of the task's allowed memory from being considered
1506 as scoring against the task.
1507
1508 For backwards compatibility with previous kernels, /proc/<pid>/oom_adj may also
1509 be used to tune the badness score. Its acceptable values range from -16
1510 (OOM_ADJUST_MIN) to +15 (OOM_ADJUST_MAX) and a special value of -17
1511 (OOM_DISABLE) to disable oom killing entirely for that task. Its value is
1512 scaled linearly with /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj.
1513
1514 The value of /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj may be reduced no lower than the last
1515 value set by a CAP_SYS_RESOURCE process. To reduce the value any lower
1516 requires CAP_SYS_RESOURCE.
1517
1518 Caveat: when a parent task is selected, the oom killer will sacrifice any first
1519 generation children with separate address spaces instead, if possible. This
1520 avoids servers and important system daemons from being killed and loses the
1521 minimal amount of work.
1522
1523
1524 3.2 /proc/<pid>/oom_score - Display current oom-killer score
1525 -------------------------------------------------------------
1526
1527 This file can be used to check the current score used by the oom-killer is for
1528 any given <pid>. Use it together with /proc/<pid>/oom_score_adj to tune which
1529 process should be killed in an out-of-memory situation.
1530
1531
1532 3.3 /proc/<pid>/io - Display the IO accounting fields
1533 -------------------------------------------------------
1534
1535 This file contains IO statistics for each running process
1536
1537 Example
1538 -------
1539
1540 test:/tmp # dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/test.dat &
1541 [1] 3828
1542
1543 test:/tmp # cat /proc/3828/io
1544 rchar: 323934931
1545 wchar: 323929600
1546 syscr: 632687
1547 syscw: 632675
1548 read_bytes: 0
1549 write_bytes: 323932160
1550 cancelled_write_bytes: 0
1551
1552
1553 Description
1554 -----------
1555
1556 rchar
1557 -----
1558
1559 I/O counter: chars read
1560 The number of bytes which this task has caused to be read from storage. This
1561 is simply the sum of bytes which this process passed to read() and pread().
1562 It includes things like tty IO and it is unaffected by whether or not actual
1563 physical disk IO was required (the read might have been satisfied from
1564 pagecache)
1565
1566
1567 wchar
1568 -----
1569
1570 I/O counter: chars written
1571 The number of bytes which this task has caused, or shall cause to be written
1572 to disk. Similar caveats apply here as with rchar.
1573
1574
1575 syscr
1576 -----
1577
1578 I/O counter: read syscalls
1579 Attempt to count the number of read I/O operations, i.e. syscalls like read()
1580 and pread().
1581
1582
1583 syscw
1584 -----
1585
1586 I/O counter: write syscalls
1587 Attempt to count the number of write I/O operations, i.e. syscalls like
1588 write() and pwrite().
1589
1590
1591 read_bytes
1592 ----------
1593
1594 I/O counter: bytes read
1595 Attempt to count the number of bytes which this process really did cause to
1596 be fetched from the storage layer. Done at the submit_bio() level, so it is
1597 accurate for block-backed filesystems. <please add status regarding NFS and
1598 CIFS at a later time>
1599
1600
1601 write_bytes
1602 -----------
1603
1604 I/O counter: bytes written
1605 Attempt to count the number of bytes which this process caused to be sent to
1606 the storage layer. This is done at page-dirtying time.
1607
1608
1609 cancelled_write_bytes
1610 ---------------------
1611
1612 The big inaccuracy here is truncate. If a process writes 1MB to a file and
1613 then deletes the file, it will in fact perform no writeout. But it will have
1614 been accounted as having caused 1MB of write.
1615 In other words: The number of bytes which this process caused to not happen,
1616 by truncating pagecache. A task can cause "negative" IO too. If this task
1617 truncates some dirty pagecache, some IO which another task has been accounted
1618 for (in its write_bytes) will not be happening. We _could_ just subtract that
1619 from the truncating task's write_bytes, but there is information loss in doing
1620 that.
1621
1622
1623 Note
1624 ----
1625
1626 At its current implementation state, this is a bit racy on 32-bit machines: if
1627 process A reads process B's /proc/pid/io while process B is updating one of
1628 those 64-bit counters, process A could see an intermediate result.
1629
1630
1631 More information about this can be found within the taskstats documentation in
1632 Documentation/accounting.
1633
1634 3.4 /proc/<pid>/coredump_filter - Core dump filtering settings
1635 ---------------------------------------------------------------
1636 When a process is dumped, all anonymous memory is written to a core file as
1637 long as the size of the core file isn't limited. But sometimes we don't want
1638 to dump some memory segments, for example, huge shared memory or DAX.
1639 Conversely, sometimes we want to save file-backed memory segments into a core
1640 file, not only the individual files.
1641
1642 /proc/<pid>/coredump_filter allows you to customize which memory segments
1643 will be dumped when the <pid> process is dumped. coredump_filter is a bitmask
1644 of memory types. If a bit of the bitmask is set, memory segments of the
1645 corresponding memory type are dumped, otherwise they are not dumped.
1646
1647 The following 9 memory types are supported:
1648 - (bit 0) anonymous private memory
1649 - (bit 1) anonymous shared memory
1650 - (bit 2) file-backed private memory
1651 - (bit 3) file-backed shared memory
1652 - (bit 4) ELF header pages in file-backed private memory areas (it is
1653 effective only if the bit 2 is cleared)
1654 - (bit 5) hugetlb private memory
1655 - (bit 6) hugetlb shared memory
1656 - (bit 7) DAX private memory
1657 - (bit 8) DAX shared memory
1658
1659 Note that MMIO pages such as frame buffer are never dumped and vDSO pages
1660 are always dumped regardless of the bitmask status.
1661
1662 Note that bits 0-4 don't affect hugetlb or DAX memory. hugetlb memory is
1663 only affected by bit 5-6, and DAX is only affected by bits 7-8.
1664
1665 The default value of coredump_filter is 0x33; this means all anonymous memory
1666 segments, ELF header pages and hugetlb private memory are dumped.
1667
1668 If you don't want to dump all shared memory segments attached to pid 1234,
1669 write 0x31 to the process's proc file.
1670
1671 $ echo 0x31 > /proc/1234/coredump_filter
1672
1673 When a new process is created, the process inherits the bitmask status from its
1674 parent. It is useful to set up coredump_filter before the program runs.
1675 For example:
1676
1677 $ echo 0x7 > /proc/self/coredump_filter
1678 $ ./some_program
1679
1680 3.5 /proc/<pid>/mountinfo - Information about mounts
1681 --------------------------------------------------------
1682
1683 This file contains lines of the form:
1684
1685 36 35 98:0 /mnt1 /mnt2 rw,noatime master:1 - ext3 /dev/root rw,errors=continue
1686 (1)(2)(3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)
1687
1688 (1) mount ID: unique identifier of the mount (may be reused after umount)
1689 (2) parent ID: ID of parent (or of self for the top of the mount tree)
1690 (3) major:minor: value of st_dev for files on filesystem
1691 (4) root: root of the mount within the filesystem
1692 (5) mount point: mount point relative to the process's root
1693 (6) mount options: per mount options
1694 (7) optional fields: zero or more fields of the form "tag[:value]"
1695 (8) separator: marks the end of the optional fields
1696 (9) filesystem type: name of filesystem of the form "type[.subtype]"
1697 (10) mount source: filesystem specific information or "none"
1698 (11) super options: per super block options
1699
1700 Parsers should ignore all unrecognised optional fields. Currently the
1701 possible optional fields are:
1702
1703 shared:X mount is shared in peer group X
1704 master:X mount is slave to peer group X
1705 propagate_from:X mount is slave and receives propagation from peer group X (*)
1706 unbindable mount is unbindable
1707
1708 (*) X is the closest dominant peer group under the process's root. If
1709 X is the immediate master of the mount, or if there's no dominant peer
1710 group under the same root, then only the "master:X" field is present
1711 and not the "propagate_from:X" field.
1712
1713 For more information on mount propagation see:
1714
1715 Documentation/filesystems/sharedsubtree.txt
1716
1717
1718 3.6 /proc/<pid>/comm & /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/comm
1719 --------------------------------------------------------
1720 These files provide a method to access a tasks comm value. It also allows for
1721 a task to set its own or one of its thread siblings comm value. The comm value
1722 is limited in size compared to the cmdline value, so writing anything longer
1723 then the kernel's TASK_COMM_LEN (currently 16 chars) will result in a truncated
1724 comm value.
1725
1726
1727 3.7 /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/children - Information about task children
1728 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
1729 This file provides a fast way to retrieve first level children pids
1730 of a task pointed by <pid>/<tid> pair. The format is a space separated
1731 stream of pids.
1732
1733 Note the "first level" here -- if a child has own children they will
1734 not be listed here, one needs to read /proc/<children-pid>/task/<tid>/children
1735 to obtain the descendants.
1736
1737 Since this interface is intended to be fast and cheap it doesn't
1738 guarantee to provide precise results and some children might be
1739 skipped, especially if they've exited right after we printed their
1740 pids, so one need to either stop or freeze processes being inspected
1741 if precise results are needed.
1742
1743
1744 3.8 /proc/<pid>/fdinfo/<fd> - Information about opened file
1745 ---------------------------------------------------------------
1746 This file provides information associated with an opened file. The regular
1747 files have at least three fields -- 'pos', 'flags' and mnt_id. The 'pos'
1748 represents the current offset of the opened file in decimal form [see lseek(2)
1749 for details], 'flags' denotes the octal O_xxx mask the file has been
1750 created with [see open(2) for details] and 'mnt_id' represents mount ID of
1751 the file system containing the opened file [see 3.5 /proc/<pid>/mountinfo
1752 for details].
1753
1754 A typical output is
1755
1756 pos: 0
1757 flags: 0100002
1758 mnt_id: 19
1759
1760 All locks associated with a file descriptor are shown in its fdinfo too.
1761
1762 lock: 1: FLOCK ADVISORY WRITE 359 00:13:11691 0 EOF
1763
1764 The files such as eventfd, fsnotify, signalfd, epoll among the regular pos/flags
1765 pair provide additional information particular to the objects they represent.
1766
1767 Eventfd files
1768 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1769 pos: 0
1770 flags: 04002
1771 mnt_id: 9
1772 eventfd-count: 5a
1773
1774 where 'eventfd-count' is hex value of a counter.
1775
1776 Signalfd files
1777 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1778 pos: 0
1779 flags: 04002
1780 mnt_id: 9
1781 sigmask: 0000000000000200
1782
1783 where 'sigmask' is hex value of the signal mask associated
1784 with a file.
1785
1786 Epoll files
1787 ~~~~~~~~~~~
1788 pos: 0
1789 flags: 02
1790 mnt_id: 9
1791 tfd: 5 events: 1d data: ffffffffffffffff pos:0 ino:61af sdev:7
1792
1793 where 'tfd' is a target file descriptor number in decimal form,
1794 'events' is events mask being watched and the 'data' is data
1795 associated with a target [see epoll(7) for more details].
1796
1797 The 'pos' is current offset of the target file in decimal form
1798 [see lseek(2)], 'ino' and 'sdev' are inode and device numbers
1799 where target file resides, all in hex format.
1800
1801 Fsnotify files
1802 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1803 For inotify files the format is the following
1804
1805 pos: 0
1806 flags: 02000000
1807 inotify wd:3 ino:9e7e sdev:800013 mask:800afce ignored_mask:0 fhandle-bytes:8 fhandle-type:1 f_handle:7e9e0000640d1b6d
1808
1809 where 'wd' is a watch descriptor in decimal form, ie a target file
1810 descriptor number, 'ino' and 'sdev' are inode and device where the
1811 target file resides and the 'mask' is the mask of events, all in hex
1812 form [see inotify(7) for more details].
1813
1814 If the kernel was built with exportfs support, the path to the target
1815 file is encoded as a file handle. The file handle is provided by three
1816 fields 'fhandle-bytes', 'fhandle-type' and 'f_handle', all in hex
1817 format.
1818
1819 If the kernel is built without exportfs support the file handle won't be
1820 printed out.
1821
1822 If there is no inotify mark attached yet the 'inotify' line will be omitted.
1823
1824 For fanotify files the format is
1825
1826 pos: 0
1827 flags: 02
1828 mnt_id: 9
1829 fanotify flags:10 event-flags:0
1830 fanotify mnt_id:12 mflags:40 mask:38 ignored_mask:40000003
1831 fanotify ino:4f969 sdev:800013 mflags:0 mask:3b ignored_mask:40000000 fhandle-bytes:8 fhandle-type:1 f_handle:69f90400c275b5b4
1832
1833 where fanotify 'flags' and 'event-flags' are values used in fanotify_init
1834 call, 'mnt_id' is the mount point identifier, 'mflags' is the value of
1835 flags associated with mark which are tracked separately from events
1836 mask. 'ino', 'sdev' are target inode and device, 'mask' is the events
1837 mask and 'ignored_mask' is the mask of events which are to be ignored.
1838 All in hex format. Incorporation of 'mflags', 'mask' and 'ignored_mask'
1839 does provide information about flags and mask used in fanotify_mark
1840 call [see fsnotify manpage for details].
1841
1842 While the first three lines are mandatory and always printed, the rest is
1843 optional and may be omitted if no marks created yet.
1844
1845 Timerfd files
1846 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1847
1848 pos: 0
1849 flags: 02
1850 mnt_id: 9
1851 clockid: 0
1852 ticks: 0
1853 settime flags: 01
1854 it_value: (0, 49406829)
1855 it_interval: (1, 0)
1856
1857 where 'clockid' is the clock type and 'ticks' is the number of the timer expirations
1858 that have occurred [see timerfd_create(2) for details]. 'settime flags' are
1859 flags in octal form been used to setup the timer [see timerfd_settime(2) for
1860 details]. 'it_value' is remaining time until the timer exiration.
1861 'it_interval' is the interval for the timer. Note the timer might be set up
1862 with TIMER_ABSTIME option which will be shown in 'settime flags', but 'it_value'
1863 still exhibits timer's remaining time.
1864
1865 3.9 /proc/<pid>/map_files - Information about memory mapped files
1866 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
1867 This directory contains symbolic links which represent memory mapped files
1868 the process is maintaining. Example output:
1869
1870 | lr-------- 1 root root 64 Jan 27 11:24 333c600000-333c620000 -> /usr/lib64/ld-2.18.so
1871 | lr-------- 1 root root 64 Jan 27 11:24 333c81f000-333c820000 -> /usr/lib64/ld-2.18.so
1872 | lr-------- 1 root root 64 Jan 27 11:24 333c820000-333c821000 -> /usr/lib64/ld-2.18.so
1873 | ...
1874 | lr-------- 1 root root 64 Jan 27 11:24 35d0421000-35d0422000 -> /usr/lib64/libselinux.so.1
1875 | lr-------- 1 root root 64 Jan 27 11:24 400000-41a000 -> /usr/bin/ls
1876
1877 The name of a link represents the virtual memory bounds of a mapping, i.e.
1878 vm_area_struct::vm_start-vm_area_struct::vm_end.
1879
1880 The main purpose of the map_files is to retrieve a set of memory mapped
1881 files in a fast way instead of parsing /proc/<pid>/maps or
1882 /proc/<pid>/smaps, both of which contain many more records. At the same
1883 time one can open(2) mappings from the listings of two processes and
1884 comparing their inode numbers to figure out which anonymous memory areas
1885 are actually shared.
1886
1887 3.10 /proc/<pid>/timerslack_ns - Task timerslack value
1888 ---------------------------------------------------------
1889 This file provides the value of the task's timerslack value in nanoseconds.
1890 This value specifies a amount of time that normal timers may be deferred
1891 in order to coalesce timers and avoid unnecessary wakeups.
1892
1893 This allows a task's interactivity vs power consumption trade off to be
1894 adjusted.
1895
1896 Writing 0 to the file will set the tasks timerslack to the default value.
1897
1898 Valid values are from 0 - ULLONG_MAX
1899
1900 An application setting the value must have PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH_FSCREDS level
1901 permissions on the task specified to change its timerslack_ns value.
1902
1903 3.11 /proc/<pid>/patch_state - Livepatch patch operation state
1904 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1905 When CONFIG_LIVEPATCH is enabled, this file displays the value of the
1906 patch state for the task.
1907
1908 A value of '-1' indicates that no patch is in transition.
1909
1910 A value of '0' indicates that a patch is in transition and the task is
1911 unpatched. If the patch is being enabled, then the task hasn't been
1912 patched yet. If the patch is being disabled, then the task has already
1913 been unpatched.
1914
1915 A value of '1' indicates that a patch is in transition and the task is
1916 patched. If the patch is being enabled, then the task has already been
1917 patched. If the patch is being disabled, then the task hasn't been
1918 unpatched yet.
1919
1920
1921 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1922 Configuring procfs
1923 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1924
1925 4.1 Mount options
1926 ---------------------
1927
1928 The following mount options are supported:
1929
1930 hidepid= Set /proc/<pid>/ access mode.
1931 gid= Set the group authorized to learn processes information.
1932
1933 hidepid=0 means classic mode - everybody may access all /proc/<pid>/ directories
1934 (default).
1935
1936 hidepid=1 means users may not access any /proc/<pid>/ directories but their
1937 own. Sensitive files like cmdline, sched*, status are now protected against
1938 other users. This makes it impossible to learn whether any user runs
1939 specific program (given the program doesn't reveal itself by its behaviour).
1940 As an additional bonus, as /proc/<pid>/cmdline is unaccessible for other users,
1941 poorly written programs passing sensitive information via program arguments are
1942 now protected against local eavesdroppers.
1943
1944 hidepid=2 means hidepid=1 plus all /proc/<pid>/ will be fully invisible to other
1945 users. It doesn't mean that it hides a fact whether a process with a specific
1946 pid value exists (it can be learned by other means, e.g. by "kill -0 $PID"),
1947 but it hides process' uid and gid, which may be learned by stat()'ing
1948 /proc/<pid>/ otherwise. It greatly complicates an intruder's task of gathering
1949 information about running processes, whether some daemon runs with elevated
1950 privileges, whether other user runs some sensitive program, whether other users
1951 run any program at all, etc.
1952
1953 gid= defines a group authorized to learn processes information otherwise
1954 prohibited by hidepid=. If you use some daemon like identd which needs to learn
1955 information about processes information, just add identd to this group.