Daniel W. S. Almeida | cb63032 | 2020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | ============================ |
Greg Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2 | Kernel NFS Server Statistics |
| 3 | ============================ |
| 4 | |
Daniel W. S. Almeida | cb63032 | 2020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 5 | :Authors: Greg Banks <gnb@sgi.com> - 26 Mar 2009 |
| 6 | |
Greg Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 7 | This document describes the format and semantics of the statistics |
| 8 | which the kernel NFS server makes available to userspace. These |
| 9 | statistics are available in several text form pseudo files, each of |
| 10 | which is described separately below. |
| 11 | |
| 12 | In most cases you don't need to know these formats, as the nfsstat(8) |
| 13 | program from the nfs-utils distribution provides a helpful command-line |
| 14 | interface for extracting and printing them. |
| 15 | |
| 16 | All the files described here are formatted as a sequence of text lines, |
| 17 | separated by newline '\n' characters. Lines beginning with a hash |
| 18 | '#' character are comments intended for humans and should be ignored |
| 19 | by parsing routines. All other lines contain a sequence of fields |
| 20 | separated by whitespace. |
| 21 | |
| 22 | /proc/fs/nfsd/pool_stats |
Daniel W. S. Almeida | cb63032 | 2020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 23 | ======================== |
Greg Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 24 | |
| 25 | This 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 | |
| 28 | The first line is a comment which describes the fields present in |
| 29 | all the other lines. The other lines present the following data as |
| 30 | a sequence of unsigned decimal numeric fields. One line is shown |
| 31 | for each NFS thread pool. |
| 32 | |
| 33 | All counters are 64 bits wide and wrap naturally. There is no way |
| 34 | to zero these counters, instead applications should do their own |
| 35 | rate conversion. |
| 36 | |
| 37 | pool |
| 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". |
| 47 | |
| 48 | packets-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). |
| 53 | |
| 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 | |
| 62 | sockets-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. |
| 72 | |
Scott Mayhew | 72faeda | 2015-04-29 10:38:26 -0400 | [diff] [blame] | 73 | 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 Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 77 | |
| 78 | threads-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 Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 87 | threads-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. |
| 106 | |
| 107 | |
| 108 | Note that incoming packets on NFS transports will be dealt with in |
| 109 | one of three ways. An nfsd thread can be woken (threads-woken counts |
| 110 | this case), or the transport can be enqueued for later attention |
| 111 | (sockets-enqueued counts this case), or the packet can be temporarily |
| 112 | deferred because the transport is currently being used by an nfsd |
| 113 | thread. This last case is not very interesting and is not explicitly |
Daniel W. S. Almeida | cb63032 | 2020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 114 | counted, but can be inferred from the other counters thus:: |
Greg Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 115 | |
Daniel W. S. Almeida | cb63032 | 2020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 116 | packets-deferred = packets-arrived - ( sockets-enqueued + threads-woken ) |
Greg Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 117 | |
| 118 | |
| 119 | More |
Daniel W. S. Almeida | cb63032 | 2020-01-29 01:49:17 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 120 | ==== |
| 121 | |
Greg Banks | b5cbc36 | 2009-03-26 17:45:27 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 122 | Descriptions of the other statistics file should go here. |