xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/rctl/rctl.8 (revision eb69d1f144a6fcc765d1b9d44a5ae8082353e70b)
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26.\" $FreeBSD$
27.\"
28.Dd May 28, 2017
29.Dt RCTL 8
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm rctl
33.Nd display and update resource limits database
34.Sh SYNOPSIS
35.Nm
36.Op Fl h
37.Op Fl n
38.Op Ar filter Ar ...
39.Nm
40.Fl a
41.Ar rule Ar ...
42.Nm
43.Fl l
44.Op Fl h
45.Op Fl n
46.Ar filter Ar ...
47.Nm
48.Fl r
49.Ar filter Ar ...
50.Nm
51.Fl u
52.Op Fl h
53.Ar filter Ar ...
54.Sh DESCRIPTION
55When called without options, the
56.Nm
57command writes currently defined RCTL rules to standard output.
58.Pp
59If a
60.Ar filter
61argument is specified, only rules matching the filter are displayed.
62The options are as follows:
63.Bl -tag -width indent
64.It Fl a Ar rule
65Add
66.Ar rule
67to the RCTL database.
68.It Fl l Ar filter
69Display rules applicable to the process defined by
70.Ar filter .
71Note that this is different from showing the rules when called without
72any options, as it shows not just the rules with subject equal to that
73of process, but also rules for the user, jail, and login class applicable
74to the process.
75.It Fl r Ar filter
76Remove rules matching
77.Ar filter
78from the RCTL database.
79.It Fl u Ar filter
80Display resource utilization for a subject
81.Po
82.Sy process ,
83.Sy user ,
84.Sy loginclass
85or
86.Sy jail
87.Pc
88matching the
89.Ar filter .
90.It Fl h
91"Human-readable" output.
92Use unit suffixes: Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte,
93Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte.
94.It Fl n
95Display user IDs numerically rather than converting them to a user name.
96.El
97.Pp
98Modifying rules affects all currently running and future processes matching
99the rule.
100.Sh RULE SYNTAX
101Syntax for a rule is subject:subject-id:resource:action=amount/per.
102.Pp
103.Bl -tag -width "subject-id" -compact -offset indent
104.It subject
105defines the kind of entity the rule applies to.
106It can be either
107.Sy process ,
108.Sy user ,
109.Sy loginclass ,
110or
111.Sy jail .
112.It subject-id
113identifies the
114.Em subject .
115It can be a process ID, user name, numerical user ID, login class name from
116.Xr login.conf 5 ,
117or jail name.
118.It resource
119identifies the resource the rule controls.
120See the
121.Sx RESOURCES
122section below for details.
123.It action
124defines what will happen when a process exceeds the allowed
125.Em amount .
126See the
127.Sx ACTIONS
128section below for details.
129.It amount
130defines how much of the resource a process can use before
131the defined
132.Em action
133triggers.
134Resources which limit bytes may use prefixes from
135.Xr expand_number 3 .
136.It per
137defines what entity the
138.Em amount
139gets accounted for.
140For example, rule "loginclass:users:vmem:deny=100M/process" means
141that each process of any user belonging to login class "users" may allocate
142up to 100MB of virtual memory.
143Rule "loginclass:users:vmem:deny=100M/user" would mean that for each
144user belonging to the login class "users", the sum of virtual memory allocated
145by all the processes of that user will not exceed 100MB.
146Rule "loginclass:users:vmem:deny=100M/loginclass" would mean that the sum of
147virtual memory allocated by all processes of all users belonging to that login
148class will not exceed 100MB.
149.El
150.Pp
151A valid rule has all those fields specified, except for
152.Em per ,
153which defaults
154to the value of
155.Em subject .
156.Pp
157A filter is a rule for which one of more fields other than
158.Em per
159is left empty.
160For example, a filter that matches every rule could be written as ":::=/",
161or, in short, ":".
162A filter that matches all the login classes would be "loginclass:".
163A filter that matches all defined rules for
164.Sy maxproc
165resource would be
166"::maxproc".
167.Sh SUBJECTS
168.Bl -column -offset 3n "pseudoterminals" ".Sy username or numerical User ID"
169.It Sy process Ta numerical Process ID
170.It Sy user Ta user name or numerical User ID
171.It Sy loginclass Ta login class from
172.Xr login.conf 5
173.It Sy jail Ta jail name
174.El
175.Sh RESOURCES
176.Bl -column -offset 3n "pseudoterminals"
177.It Sy cputime Ta "CPU time, in seconds"
178.It Sy datasize Ta "data size, in bytes"
179.It Sy stacksize Ta "stack size, in bytes"
180.It Sy coredumpsize Ta "core dump size, in bytes"
181.It Sy memoryuse Ta "resident set size, in bytes"
182.It Sy memorylocked Ta "locked memory, in bytes"
183.It Sy maxproc Ta "number of processes"
184.It Sy openfiles Ta "file descriptor table size"
185.It Sy vmemoryuse Ta "address space limit, in bytes"
186.It Sy pseudoterminals Ta "number of PTYs"
187.It Sy swapuse Ta "swap space that may be reserved or used, in bytes"
188.It Sy nthr Ta "number of threads"
189.It Sy msgqqueued Ta "number of queued SysV messages"
190.It Sy msgqsize Ta "SysV message queue size, in bytes"
191.It Sy nmsgq Ta "number of SysV message queues"
192.It Sy nsem Ta "number of SysV semaphores"
193.It Sy nsemop Ta "number of SysV semaphores modified in a single semop(2) call"
194.It Sy nshm Ta "number of SysV shared memory segments"
195.It Sy shmsize Ta "SysV shared memory size, in bytes"
196.It Sy wallclock Ta "wallclock time, in seconds"
197.It Sy pcpu Ta "%CPU, in percents of a single CPU core"
198.It Sy readbps Ta "filesystem reads, in bytes per second"
199.It Sy writebps Ta "filesystem writes, in bytes per second"
200.It Sy readiops Ta "filesystem reads, in operations per second"
201.It Sy writeiops Ta "filesystem writes, in operations per second"
202.El
203.Sh ACTIONS
204.Bl -column -offset 3n "pseudoterminals"
205.It Sy deny Ta deny the allocation; not supported for
206.Sy cputime ,
207.Sy wallclock ,
208.Sy readbps ,
209.Sy writebps ,
210.Sy readiops ,
211and
212.Sy writeiops
213.It Sy log Ta "log a warning to the console"
214.It Sy devctl Ta "send notification to"
215.Xr devd 8
216using
217.Sy system
218= "RCTL",
219.Sy subsystem
220= "rule",
221.Sy type
222= "matched"
223.It sig*	e.g.
224.Sy sigterm ;
225send a signal to the offending process.
226See
227.Xr signal 3
228for a list of supported signals
229.It Sy throttle Ta "slow down process execution"; only supported for
230.Sy readbps ,
231.Sy writebps ,
232.Sy readiops ,
233and
234.Sy writeiops .
235.El
236.Pp
237Not all actions are supported for all resources.
238Attempting to add a rule with an action not supported by a given resource will
239result in error.
240.Sh EXIT STATUS
241.Ex -std
242.Sh EXAMPLES
243Prevent user "joe" from allocating more than 1GB of virtual memory:
244.Dl Nm Fl a Ar user:joe:vmemoryuse:deny=1g
245.Pp
246Remove all RCTL rules:
247.Dl Nm Fl r Ar \&:
248.Pp
249Display resource utilization information for jail named "www":
250.Dl Nm Fl hu Ar jail:www
251.Pp
252Display all the rules applicable to process with PID 512:
253.Dl Nm Fl l Ar process:512
254.Pp
255Display all rules:
256.Dl Nm
257.Pp
258Display all rules matching user "joe":
259.Dl Nm Ar user:joe
260.Pp
261Display all rules matching login classes:
262.Dl Nm Ar loginclass:
263.Sh SEE ALSO
264.Xr rctl 4 ,
265.Xr rctl.conf 5
266.Sh HISTORY
267The
268.Nm
269command appeared in
270.Fx 9.0 .
271.Sh AUTHORS
272.An -nosplit
273The
274.Nm
275was developed by
276.An Edward Tomasz Napierala Aq Mt trasz@FreeBSD.org
277under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation.
278.Sh BUGS
279Limiting
280.Sy memoryuse
281may kill the machine due to thrashing.
282.Pp
283The
284.Sy readiops
285and
286.Sy writeiops
287counters are only approximations.
288Like
289.Sy readbps
290and
291.Sy writebps ,
292they are calculated in the filesystem layer, where it is difficult
293or even impossible to observe actual disk device operations.
294.Pp
295The
296.Sy writebps
297and
298.Sy writeiops
299resources generally account for writes to the filesystem cache,
300not to actual devices.
301