.\" t .\" Copyright 2003,2004 Andi Kleen, SuSE Labs. .\" .\" Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this .\" manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are .\" preserved on all copies. .\" .\" Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this .\" manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the .\" entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a .\" permission notice identical to this one. .\" .\" Since the Linux kernel and libraries are constantly changing, this .\" manual page may be incorrect or out-of-date. The author(s) assume no .\" responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from .\" the use of the information contained herein. .\" .\" Formatted or processed versions of this manual, if unaccompanied by .\" the source, must acknowledge the copyright and authors of this work. .TH NUMACTL 8 "Mar 2004" "SuSE Labs" "Linux Administrator's Manual" .SH NAME numactl \- Control NUMA policy for processes or shared memory .SH SYNOPSIS .B numactl [ .B \-\-all ] [ .B \-\-interleave nodes ] [ .B \-\-preferred node ] [ .B \-\-membind nodes ] [ .B \-\-cpunodebind nodes ] [ .B \-\-physcpubind cpus ] [ .B \-\-localalloc ] [\-\-] command {arguments ...} .br .B numactl \-\-show .br .B numactl \-\-hardware .br .B numactl [ .B \-\-huge ] [ .B \-\-offset offset ] [ .B \-\-shmmode shmmode ] [ .B \-\-length length ] [ .B \-\-strict ] .br [ .B \-\-shmid id ] .B \-\-shm shmkeyfile | .B \-\-file tmpfsfile .br [ .B \-\-touch ] [ .B \-\-dump ] [ .B \-\-dump-nodes ] memory policy .SH DESCRIPTION .B numactl runs processes with a specific NUMA scheduling or memory placement policy. The policy is set for command and inherited by all of its children. In addition it can set persistent policy for shared memory segments or files. .PP Use -- before command if using command options that could be confused with numactl options. .PP .I nodes may be specified as N,N,N or N-N or N,N-N or N-N,N-N and so forth. Relative .I nodes may be specifed as +N,N,N or +N-N or +N,N-N and so forth. The + indicates that the node numbers are relative to the process' set of allowed nodes in its current cpuset. A !N-N notation indicates the inverse of N-N, in other words all nodes except N-N. If used with + notation, specify !+N-N. When .I same is specified the previous nodemask specified on the command line is used. all means all nodes in the current cpuset. .PP Instead of a number a node can also be: .TS tab(|); l l. netdev:DEV|The node connected to network device DEV. file:PATH |The node the block device of PATH. ip:HOST |The node of the network device of HOST block:PATH|The node of block device PATH pci:[seg:]bus:dev[:func]|The node of a PCI device. .TE Note that block resolves the kernel block device names only for udev names in /dev use .I file: .TP Policy settings are: .TP .B \-\-all, \-a Unset default cpuset awareness, so user can use all possible CPUs/nodes for following policy settings. .TP .B \-\-interleave=nodes, \-i nodes Set a memory interleave policy. Memory will be allocated using round robin on .I nodes. When memory cannot be allocated on the current interleave target fall back to other nodes. Multiple nodes may be specified on --interleave, --membind and --cpunodebind. .TP .B \-\-membind=nodes, \-m nodes Only allocate memory from nodes. Allocation will fail when there is not enough memory available on these nodes. .I nodes may be specified as noted above. .TP .B \-\-cpunodebind=nodes, \-N nodes Only execute .I command on the CPUs of .I nodes. Note that nodes may consist of multiple CPUs. .I nodes may be specified as noted above. .TP .B \-\-physcpubind=cpus, \-C cpus Only execute .I process on .I cpus. This accepts cpu numbers as shown in the .I processor fields of .I /proc/cpuinfo, or relative cpus as in relative to the current cpuset. You may specify "all", which means all cpus in the current cpuset. Physical .I cpus may be specified as N,N,N or N-N or N,N-N or N-N,N-N and so forth. Relative .I cpus may be specifed as +N,N,N or +N-N or +N,N-N and so forth. The + indicates that the cpu numbers are relative to the process' set of allowed cpus in its current cpuset. A !N-N notation indicates the inverse of N-N, in other words all cpus except N-N. If used with + notation, specify !+N-N. .TP .B \-\-localalloc, \-l Always allocate on the current node. .TP .B \-\-preferred=node Preferably allocate memory on .I node, but if memory cannot be allocated there fall back to other nodes. This option takes only a single node number. Relative notation may be used. .TP .B \-\-show, \-s Show NUMA policy settings of the current process. .TP .B \-\-hardware, \-H Show inventory of available nodes on the system. .TP 0 Numactl can set up policy for a SYSV shared memory segment or a file in shmfs/hugetlbfs. This policy is persistent and will be used by all mappings from that shared memory. The order of options matters here. The specification must at least include either of .I \-\-shm, .I \-\-shmid, .I \-\-file to specify the shared memory segment or file and a memory policy like described above ( .I \-\-interleave, .I \-\-localalloc, .I \-\-preferred, .I \-\-membind ). .TP .B \-\-huge When creating a SYSV shared memory segment use huge pages. Only valid before \-\-shmid or \-\-shm .TP .B \-\-offset Specify offset into the shared memory segment. Default 0. Valid units are .I m (for MB), .I g (for GB), .I k (for KB), otherwise it specifies bytes. .TP .B \-\-strict Give an error when a page in the policied area in the shared memory segment already was faulted in with a conflicting policy. Default is to silently ignore this. .TP .B \-\-shmmode shmmode Only valid before \-\-shmid or \-\-shm When creating a shared memory segment set it to numeric mode .I shmmode. .TP .B \-\-length length Apply policy to .I length range in the shared memory segment or make the segment length long Default is to use the remaining length Required when a shared memory segment is created and specifies the length of the new segment then. Valid units are .I m (for MB), .I g (for GB), .I k (for KB), otherwise it specifies bytes. .TP .B \-\-shmid id Create or use an shared memory segment with numeric ID .I id .TP .B \-\-shm shmkeyfile Create or use an shared memory segment, with the ID generated using .I ftok(3) from shmkeyfile .TP .B \-\-file tmpfsfile Set policy for a file in tmpfs or hugetlbfs .TP .B \-\-touch Touch pages to enforce policy early. Default is to not touch them, the policy is applied when an applications maps and accesses a page. .TP .B \-\-dump Dump policy in the specified range. .TP .B \-\-dump-nodes Dump all nodes of the specific range (very verbose!) .TP Valid node specifiers .TS tab(:); l l. all:All nodes number:Node number number1{,number2}:Node number1 and Node number2 number1-number2:Nodes from number1 to number2 ! nodes:Invert selection of the following specification. .TE .SH EXAMPLES numactl \-\-physcpubind=+0-4,8-12 myapplic arguments Run myapplic on cpus 0-4 and 8-12 of the current cpuset. numactl \-\-interleave=all bigdatabase arguments Run big database with its memory interleaved on all CPUs. numactl \-\-cpunodebind=0 \-\-membind=0,1 process Run process on node 0 with memory allocated on node 0 and 1. numactl \-\-cpunodebind=0 \-\-membind=0,1 -- process -l Run process as above, but with an option (-l) that would be confused with a numactl option. numactl \-\-cpunodebind=netdev:eth0 \-\-membind=netdev:eth0 network-server Run network-server on the node of network device eth0 with its memory also in the same node. numactl \-\-preferred=1 numactl \-\-show Set preferred node 1 and show the resulting state. numactl --interleave=all --shm /tmp/shmkey Interleave all of the sysv shared memory region specified by /tmp/shmkey over all nodes. Place a tmpfs file on 2 nodes: numactl --membind=2 dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/shm/A bs=1M count=1024 numactl --membind=3 dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/shm/A seek=1024 bs=1M count=1024 numactl --localalloc /dev/shm/file Reset the policy for the shared memory file .I file to the default localalloc policy. .SH NOTES Requires an NUMA policy aware kernel. Command is not executed using a shell. If you want to use shell metacharacters in the child use sh -c as wrapper. Setting policy for a hugetlbfs file does currently not work because it cannot be extended by truncate. Shared memory segments larger than numactl's address space cannot be completely policied. This could be a problem on 32bit architectures. Changing it piece by piece may work. The old .I --cpubind which accepts node numbers, not cpu numbers, is deprecated and replaced with the new .I --cpunodebind and .I --physcpubind options. .SH FILES .I /proc/cpuinfo for the listing of active CPUs. See .I proc(5) for details. .I /sys/devices/system/node/node*/numastat for NUMA memory hit statistics. .SH COPYRIGHT Copyright 2002,2004 Andi Kleen, SuSE Labs. numactl and the demo programs are under the GNU General Public License, v.2 .SH SEE ALSO .I set_mempolicy(2) , .I get_mempolicy(2) , .I mbind(2) , .I sched_setaffinity(2) , .I sched_getaffinity(2) , .I proc(5) , .I ftok(3) , .I shmat(2) , .I migratepages(8)