Difference between revisions of "I/O sniffing"
From Linuxintro
imported>ThorstenStaerk |
imported>ThorstenStaerk |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
<abbr title="device (major/minor number)">8,96</abbr> <abbr title="processor">7</abbr> <abbr title="sequence number">106</abbr> <abbr title="timestamp">0.373952974</abbr> <abbr title="PID">11364</abbr> <abbr title="Event">D</abbr> <abbr title="Action">W</abbr> <abbr title="starting block + blocks">0 + 8</abbr> <abbr title="process">[kworker/7:2]</abbr> | <abbr title="device (major/minor number)">8,96</abbr> <abbr title="processor">7</abbr> <abbr title="sequence number">106</abbr> <abbr title="timestamp">0.373952974</abbr> <abbr title="PID">11364</abbr> <abbr title="Event">D</abbr> <abbr title="Action">W</abbr> <abbr title="starting block + blocks">0 + 8</abbr> <abbr title="process">[kworker/7:2]</abbr> | ||
8,96 7 107 0.374456639 47 C W 0 + 8 [0] | 8,96 7 107 0.374456639 47 C W 0 + 8 [0] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Event can be: | ||
+ | RWBS |
Revision as of 05:34, 25 May 2013
You can do I/O sniffing using the command blktrace. blktrace will show you every request that goes to the disk.
Example:
# blktrace -d /dev/sdg -o - | blkparse -i - [...] 8,96 7 106 0.373952974 11364 D W 0 + 8 [kworker/7:2] 8,96 7 107 0.374456639 47 C W 0 + 8 [0]
Event can be:
RWBS