xref: /illumos-gate/usr/src/man/man1/mpss.so.1.1 (revision eb9a1df2aeb866bf1de4494433b6d7e5fa07b3ae)
te
Copyright (c) 2002, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved
The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
MPSS.SO.1 1 "Feb 20, 2002"
NAME
mpss.so.1 - shared object for setting preferred page size
SYNOPSIS

mpss.so.1
DESCRIPTION

The mpss.so.1 shared object provides a means by which the preferred stack and/or heap page size can be selectively configured for launched processes and their descendants. To enable mpss.so.1, the following string needs to be present in the environment (see ld.so.1(1)) along with one or more MPSS (Multiple Page Size Support) environment variables:

LD_PRELOAD=$LD_PRELOAD:mpss.so.1
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

Once preloaded, the mpss.so.1 shared object reads the following environment variables to determine any preferred page size requirements and any processes these may be specific to. MPSSHEAP=size

MPSSSTACK=size

MPSSHEAP and MPSSSTACK specify the preferred page sizes for the heap and stack, respectively. The specified page size(s) are applied to all created processes. size must be a supported page size (see pagesize(1)) or 0, in which case the system will select an appropriate page size (see memcntl(2)). size can be qualified with K, M, G, or T to specify Kilobytes, Megabytes, Gigabytes, or Terabytes respectively.

MPSSCFGFILE=config-file

config-file is a text file which contains one or more mpss configuration entries of the form:

exec-name exec-args:heap-size:stack-size
exec-name specifies the name of an application or executable. The corresponding preferred page size(s) are set for newly created processes (see getexecname(3C)) that match the first exec-name found in the file. exec-name can be a full pathname, a base name or a pattern string. See File Name Generation in sh(1) for a discussion of pattern matching. exec-args is an optionally specified pattern string to match against arguments. Preferred page size(s) are set only if exec-args is not specified or occurs within the arguments to exec-name. If heap-size and/or stack-size are not specified, the corresponding preferred page size(s) will not be set. MPSSCFGFILE takes precedence over MPSSHEAP and MPSSSTACK. When MPSSCFGFILE is not set, preferred page size settings are taken from file /etc/mpss.conf if it exists.
MPSSERRFILE=pathname

By default, error messages are logged via syslog(3C) using level LOG_ERR and facility LOG_USER. If MPSSERRFILE contains a valid pathname (such as /dev/stderr), error messages will be logged there instead.

EXAMPLES

Example 1 Configuring preferred page sizes using MPSSCFGFILE

The following Bourne shell commands (see sh(1)) configure the preferred page sizes to a select set of applications with exec names that begin with foo, using the MPSSCFGFILE environment variable. The MPSS configuration file, mpsscfg, is assumed to have been previously created via a text editor like vi(1). The cat(1) command is only dumping out the contents.

example$ LD_PRELOAD=$LD_PRELOAD:mpss.so.1
example$ MPSSCFGFILE=mpsscfg
example$ export LD_PRELOAD MPSSCFGFILE
example$ cat $MPSSCFGFILE
foo*:512K:64K

Once the application has been started, pmap (see proc(1)) can be used to view the actual page sizes configured:

example$ foobar &
example$ pmap -s `pgrep foobar`

If the desired page size is not configured (shown in the pmap output), it may be due to errors in the MPSS configuration file or environment variables. Check the error log (by default: /var/adm/messages) for errors.

If no errors can be found, resource or alignment constraints may be responsible. See the NOTES section.

Example 2 Configuring preferred page sizes using MPSSHEAP and MPSSSTACK

The following Bourne shell commands configure 512K heap and 64K stack preferred page sizes for all applications using the MPSSHEAP and MPSSSTACK environment variables.

example$ LD_PRELOAD=$LD_PRELOAD:mpss.so.1
example$ MPSSHEAP=512K
example$ MPSSSTACK=64K
example$ export LD_PRELOAD MPSSHEAP MPSSSTACK

Example 3 Precedence rules (continuation from Example 2)

The preferred page size configuration in MPSSCFGFILE overrides MPSSHEAP and MPSSTACK. Appending the following commands to those in Example 2 would mean that all applications will be configured with 512K heap and 64K stack preferred page sizes with the exception of those applications, the ls command, and all applications beginning with ora that have ora1 as an argument, in the configuration file.

example$ MPSSCFGFILE=mpsscfg2
example$ export MPSSCFGFILE
example$ cat $MPSSCFGFILE
ls::
ora* ora1:4m:4m
FILES
/usr/lib/ld/map.bssalign

A template link-editor mapfile for aligning bss (see NOTES).

/etc/mpss.conf

Configuration file

ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Interface Stability Evolving
SEE ALSO

cat(1), ld(1), ld.so.1(1), pagesize(1), ppgsz(1), proc(1), sh(1), vi(1), exec(2), fork(2), memcntl(2), getexecname(3C), getpagesize(3C), syslog(3C), proc(4), attributes(5)

NOTES

The heap and stack preferred page sizes are inherited. A child process has the same preferred page sizes as its parent. On exec(2), the preferred page sizes are set back to the default system page size unless a preferred page size has been configured via the mpss shared object.

ppgsz(1), a proc tool, can also be used to set the preferred stack and/or heap page sizes. It cannot selectively configure the page size for descendents based on name matches.

See also NOTES under ppgsz(1).