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Daniel W. S. Almeidacb630322020-01-29 01:49:17 -03001============================
Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +11002Kernel NFS Server Statistics
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Daniel W. S. Almeidacb630322020-01-29 01:49:17 -03005:Authors: Greg Banks <gnb@sgi.com> - 26 Mar 2009
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Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +11007This document describes the format and semantics of the statistics
8which the kernel NFS server makes available to userspace. These
9statistics are available in several text form pseudo files, each of
10which is described separately below.
11
12In most cases you don't need to know these formats, as the nfsstat(8)
13program from the nfs-utils distribution provides a helpful command-line
14interface for extracting and printing them.
15
16All the files described here are formatted as a sequence of text lines,
17separated by newline '\n' characters. Lines beginning with a hash
18'#' character are comments intended for humans and should be ignored
19by parsing routines. All other lines contain a sequence of fields
20separated by whitespace.
21
22/proc/fs/nfsd/pool_stats
Daniel W. S. Almeidacb630322020-01-29 01:49:17 -030023========================
Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +110024
25This file is available in kernels from 2.6.30 onwards, if the
26/proc/fs/nfsd filesystem is mounted (it almost always should be).
27
28The first line is a comment which describes the fields present in
29all the other lines. The other lines present the following data as
30a sequence of unsigned decimal numeric fields. One line is shown
31for each NFS thread pool.
32
33All counters are 64 bits wide and wrap naturally. There is no way
34to zero these counters, instead applications should do their own
35rate conversion.
36
37pool
38 The id number of the NFS thread pool to which this line applies.
39 This number does not change.
40
41 Thread pool ids are a contiguous set of small integers starting
42 at zero. The maximum value depends on the thread pool mode, but
43 currently cannot be larger than the number of CPUs in the system.
44 Note that in the default case there will be a single thread pool
45 which contains all the nfsd threads and all the CPUs in the system,
46 and thus this file will have a single line with a pool id of "0".
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48packets-arrived
49 Counts how many NFS packets have arrived. More precisely, this
50 is the number of times that the network stack has notified the
51 sunrpc server layer that new data may be available on a transport
52 (e.g. an NFS or UDP socket or an NFS/RDMA endpoint).
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54 Depending on the NFS workload patterns and various network stack
55 effects (such as Large Receive Offload) which can combine packets
56 on the wire, this may be either more or less than the number
57 of NFS calls received (which statistic is available elsewhere).
58 However this is a more accurate and less workload-dependent measure
59 of how much CPU load is being placed on the sunrpc server layer
60 due to NFS network traffic.
61
62sockets-enqueued
63 Counts how many times an NFS transport is enqueued to wait for
64 an nfsd thread to service it, i.e. no nfsd thread was considered
65 available.
66
67 The circumstance this statistic tracks indicates that there was NFS
68 network-facing work to be done but it couldn't be done immediately,
69 thus introducing a small delay in servicing NFS calls. The ideal
70 rate of change for this counter is zero; significantly non-zero
71 values may indicate a performance limitation.
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Scott Mayhew72faeda2015-04-29 10:38:26 -040073 This can happen because there are too few nfsd threads in the thread
74 pool for the NFS workload (the workload is thread-limited), in which
75 case configuring more nfsd threads will probably improve the
76 performance of the NFS workload.
Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +110077
78threads-woken
79 Counts how many times an idle nfsd thread is woken to try to
80 receive some data from an NFS transport.
81
82 This statistic tracks the circumstance where incoming
83 network-facing NFS work is being handled quickly, which is a good
84 thing. The ideal rate of change for this counter will be close
85 to but less than the rate of change of the packets-arrived counter.
86
Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +110087threads-timedout
88 Counts how many times an nfsd thread triggered an idle timeout,
89 i.e. was not woken to handle any incoming network packets for
90 some time.
91
92 This statistic counts a circumstance where there are more nfsd
93 threads configured than can be used by the NFS workload. This is
94 a clue that the number of nfsd threads can be reduced without
95 affecting performance. Unfortunately, it's only a clue and not
96 a strong indication, for a couple of reasons:
97
98 - Currently the rate at which the counter is incremented is quite
99 slow; the idle timeout is 60 minutes. Unless the NFS workload
100 remains constant for hours at a time, this counter is unlikely
101 to be providing information that is still useful.
102
103 - It is usually a wise policy to provide some slack,
104 i.e. configure a few more nfsds than are currently needed,
105 to allow for future spikes in load.
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107
108Note that incoming packets on NFS transports will be dealt with in
109one of three ways. An nfsd thread can be woken (threads-woken counts
110this case), or the transport can be enqueued for later attention
111(sockets-enqueued counts this case), or the packet can be temporarily
112deferred because the transport is currently being used by an nfsd
113thread. This last case is not very interesting and is not explicitly
Daniel W. S. Almeidacb630322020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300114counted, but can be inferred from the other counters thus::
Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100115
Daniel W. S. Almeidacb630322020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300116 packets-deferred = packets-arrived - ( sockets-enqueued + threads-woken )
Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100117
118
119More
Daniel W. S. Almeidacb630322020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300120====
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Greg Banksb5cbc362009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100122Descriptions of the other statistics file should go here.