On Fri, 2005-12-02 at 17:46 -0500, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Hi - > > On Fri, Dec 02, 2005 at 02:31:56PM -0800, Badari Pulavarty wrote: > > On Fri, 2005-12-02 at 17:15 -0500, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > > [...] > > > #! stap > > > probe kernel.function("add_to_page_cache") { > > > printf("pid %d added pages (%d)\n", pid(), $mapping->nrpages) > > > } > > > probe kernel.function("__remove_from_page_cache") { > > > printf("pid %d removed pages (%d)\n", pid(), $page->mapping->nrpages) > > > } > > > > [...] Having by "pid" basis is not good enough. I need per > > file/mapping basis collected and sent to user-space on-demand. > > If you can characterize all your data needs in terms of points to > insert hooks (breakpoint addresses) and expressions to sample there, > systemtap scripts can probably track the relationships. (We have > associative arrays, looping, etc.) > > > Is systemtap hooked to relayfs to send data across to user-land ? > > printf() is not an option. > > systemtap can optionally use relayfs. The printf you see here does > not relate to/invoke the kernel printk, if that's what you're worried > about. Hmm. You are right. Is there a way another user-level program/utility access some of the data maintained in those arrays ? > > > And also, I need to have this probe, installed from the boot time > > and collecting all the information - so I can access it when I need > > it > > We haven't done much work yet to address on-demand kind of interaction > with a systemtap probe session. However, one could fake it by > associating data-printing operations with events that are triggered > purposely from userspace, like running a particular system call from a > particularly named process. > > > which means this bloats kernel memory. [...] > > The degree of bloat is under the operator's control: systemtap only > uses initialization-time memory allocation, so its arrays can fill up. Does this mean that I can do something like page_cache[0xffff8100c4c6b298] = $mapping->nrpages ? And this won't generate bloated arrays ? Here is what I wrote earlier to capture some of the pagecache data. Unfortunately, I can't capture whatever happend before inserting the problem. So it won't give me information about all whats there in the pagecache. BTW, if you prefer - we can move the discussion to systemtap. (I have few questions/issues on ret probes & accessability of arguments - since I want to do this on return). Thanks, Badari