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funclatency(8) System Manager's Manual funclatency(8)

NAME

funclatency - Time functions and print latency as a histogram.

SYNOPSIS

funclatency [-h] [-p PID] [-i INTERVAL] [-d DURATION] [-T] [-u] [-m] [-F] [-r] [-v] pattern

DESCRIPTION

This tool traces function calls and times their duration (latency), and shows the latency distribution as a histogram. The time is measured from when the function is called to when it returns, and is inclusive of both on-CPU time and time spent blocked.

This tool uses in-kernel eBPF maps for storing timestamps and the histogram, for efficiency.

Currently nested or recursive functions are not supported properly, and timestamps will be overwritten, creating dubious output. Try to match single functions, or groups of functions that run at the same stack layer, and don't ultimately call each other.

WARNING: This uses dynamic tracing of (what can be many) functions, an activity that has had issues on some kernel versions (risk of panics or freezes). Test, and know what you are doing, before use.

Since this uses BPF, only the root user can use this tool.

REQUIREMENTS

CONFIG_BPF and bcc.

OPTIONS

pattern Function name or search pattern. Supports "*" wildcards. See EXAMPLES. You can also use -r for regular expressions. -h Print usage message.
-p PID
Trace this process ID only.
-i INTERVAL
Print output every interval seconds.
-d DURATION
Total duration of trace, in seconds.
-T
Include timestamps on output.
-u
Output histogram in microseconds.
-m
Output histogram in milliseconds.
-F
Print a separate histogram per function matched.
-r
Use regular expressions for the search pattern.
-v
Print the BPF program (for debugging purposes).

EXAMPLES

Time the do_sys_open() kernel function, and print the distribution as a histogram:
# funclatency do_sys_open
Time the read() function in libc across all processes on the system:
# funclatency c:read
Time vfs_read(), and print the histogram in units of microseconds:
# funclatency -u vfs_read
Time do_nanosleep(), and print the histogram in units of milliseconds:
# funclatency -m do_nanosleep
Time libc open(), and print output every 2 seconds, for duration 10 seconds:
# funclatency -i 2 -d 10 c:read
Time vfs_read(), and print output every 5 seconds, with timestamps:
# funclatency -mTi 5 vfs_read
Time vfs_read() for process ID 181 only:
# funclatency -p 181 vfs_read:
Time both vfs_fstat() and vfs_fstatat() calls, by use of a wildcard:
# funclatency 'vfs_fstat*'
Time both vfs_fstat* calls, and print a separate histogram for each:
# funclatency -F 'vfs_fstat*'

FIELDS

necs
Nanosecond range
usecs
Microsecond range
msecs
Millisecond range
count
How many calls fell into this range
distribution
An ASCII bar chart to visualize the distribution (count column)

OVERHEAD

This traces kernel functions and maintains in-kernel timestamps and a histogram, which are asynchronously copied to user-space. While this method is very efficient, the rate of kernel functions can also be very high (>1M/sec), at which point the overhead is expected to be measurable. Measure in a test environment and understand overheads before use. You can also use funccount to measure the rate of kernel functions over a short duration, to set some expectations before use.

SOURCE

This is from bcc.
https://github.com/iovisor/bcc

Also look in the bcc distribution for a companion _examples.txt file containing example usage, output, and commentary for this tool.

OS

Linux

STABILITY

Unstable - in development.

AUTHOR

Brendan Gregg, Sasha Goldshtein

SEE ALSO

funccount(8)
2015-08-18 USER COMMANDS