xref: /freebsd/usr.sbin/pstat/pstat.8 (revision c0086bf20280407ccd3ed5a4ef984ce90f56b9ab)
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35.\"     @(#)pstat.8	8.5 (Berkeley) 5/13/94
36.\" $FreeBSD$
37.\"
38.Dd August 20, 2008
39.Dt PSTAT 8
40.Os
41.Sh NAME
42.Nm pstat ,
43.Nm swapinfo
44.Nd display system data structures
45.Sh SYNOPSIS
46.Nm
47.Op Fl Tfghkmnst
48.Op Fl M Ar core Op Fl N Ar system
49.Nm swapinfo
50.Op Fl ghkm
51.Op Fl M Ar core Op Fl N Ar system
52.Sh DESCRIPTION
53The
54.Nm
55utility displays open file entry, swap space utilization,
56terminal state, and vnode data structures.
57.Pp
58If invoked as
59.Nm swapinfo
60the
61.Fl s
62option is implied, and only the
63.Fl k , m , g ,
64and
65.Fl h
66options are legal.
67.Pp
68If the
69.Fl M
70option is not specified, information is obtained from
71the currently running kernel via the
72.Xr sysctl 3
73interface.
74Otherwise, information is read from the specified core file,
75using the name list from the specified kernel image (or from
76the default image).
77.Pp
78The following options are available:
79.Bl -tag -width indent
80.It Fl n
81Print devices out by major/minor instead of name.
82.It Fl h
83.Dq Human-readable
84output.
85Use unit suffixes when printing swap partition sizes:
86Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte.
87.It Fl k
88Print sizes in kilobytes, regardless of the setting of the
89.Ev BLOCKSIZE
90environment variable.
91.It Fl m
92Print sizes in megabytes, regardless of the setting of the
93.Ev BLOCKSIZE
94environment variable.
95.It Fl g
96Print sizes in gigabytes, regardless of the setting of the
97.Ev BLOCKSIZE
98environment variable.
99.It Fl T
100Print the number of used and free slots in several system tables.
101This is useful for checking to see how large system tables have become
102if the system is under heavy load.
103.It Fl f
104Print the open file table with these headings:
105.Bl -tag -width indent
106.It LOC
107The core location of this table entry.
108.It TYPE
109The type of object the file table entry points to.
110.It FLG
111Miscellaneous state variables encoded thus:
112.Pp
113.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
114.It R
115open for reading
116.It W
117open for writing
118.It A
119open for appending
120.It I
121signal pgrp when data ready
122.El
123.It CNT
124Number of processes that know this open file.
125.It MSG
126Number of messages outstanding for this file.
127.It DATA
128The location of the vnode table entry or socket structure for this file.
129.It OFFSET
130The file offset (see
131.Xr lseek 2 ) .
132.El
133.It Fl s
134Print information about swap space usage on all the
135swap areas compiled into the kernel.
136The first column is the device name of the partition.
137The next column is
138the total space available in the partition.
139The
140.Ar Used
141column indicates the total blocks used so far; the
142.Ar Available
143column indicates how much space is remaining on each partition.
144The
145.Ar Capacity
146reports the percentage of space used.
147.Pp
148If more than one partition is configured into the system, totals for all
149of the statistics will be reported in the final line of the report.
150.It Fl t
151Print table for terminals
152with these headings:
153.Bl -tag -width indent
154.It LINE
155Device name.
156.It INQ
157Number of characters that can be stored in the input queue.
158.It CAN
159Number of characters in the input queue which can be read.
160.It LIN
161Number of characters in the input queue which cannot be read yet.
162.It LOW
163Low water mark for input.
164.It OUTQ
165Number of characters that can be stored in the output queue.
166.It USE
167Number of bytes in the output queue.
168.It LOW
169Low water mark for output.
170.It COL
171Calculated column position of terminal.
172.It SESS
173Kernel address of the session structure.
174.It PGID
175Process group for which this is the controlling terminal.
176.It STATE
177Miscellaneous state variables encoded thus:
178.Pp
179.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
180.It I
181init/lock-state device nodes present
182.It C
183callout device nodes present
184.It O
185opened
186.It c
187console in use
188.It G
189gone
190.It B
191busy in
192.Xr open 2
193.It Y
194send SIGIO for input events
195.It L
196next character is literal
197.It H
198high watermark reached
199.It X
200open for exclusive use
201.It S
202output stopped (ixon flow control)
203.It l
204block mode input routine in use
205.It Z
206connection lost
207.It s
208i/o being snooped
209.It b
210busy in
211.Xr read 2
212or
213.Xr write 2
214.El
215.Pp
216The
217.Ql i
218and
219.Ql o
220characters refer to the previous character, to differentiate between
221input and output.
222.El
223.It Fl M
224Extract values associated with the name list from the specified core.
225.It Fl N
226If
227.Fl M
228is also specified,
229extract the name list from the specified system instead of the default,
230which is the kernel image the system has booted from.
231.El
232.Sh SEE ALSO
233.Xr ps 1 ,
234.Xr systat 1 ,
235.Xr stat 2 ,
236.Xr fs 5 ,
237.Xr iostat 8 ,
238.Xr vmstat 8
239.Rs
240.%T UNIX Implementation
241.%A K. Thompson
242.Re
243.Sh HISTORY
244The
245.Nm
246utility appeared in
247.Bx 4.0 .
248.Sh BUGS
249Does not understand
250.Tn NFS
251swap servers.
252