xref: /linux/Documentation/admin-guide/sysctl/kernel.rst (revision 8067a32512d7c3747efcbca843c2433f572a4ee5)
1===================================
2Documentation for /proc/sys/kernel/
3===================================
4
5.. See scripts/check-sysctl-docs to keep this up to date
6
7
8Copyright (c) 1998, 1999,  Rik van Riel <riel@nl.linux.org>
9
10Copyright (c) 2009,        Shen Feng<shen@cn.fujitsu.com>
11
12For general info and legal blurb, please look in
13Documentation/admin-guide/sysctl/index.rst.
14
15------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16
17This file contains documentation for the sysctl files in
18``/proc/sys/kernel/``.
19
20The files in this directory can be used to tune and monitor
21miscellaneous and general things in the operation of the Linux
22kernel. Since some of the files *can* be used to screw up your
23system, it is advisable to read both documentation and source
24before actually making adjustments.
25
26Currently, these files might (depending on your configuration)
27show up in ``/proc/sys/kernel``:
28
29.. contents:: :local:
30
31
32acct
33====
34
35::
36
37    highwater lowwater frequency
38
39If BSD-style process accounting is enabled these values control
40its behaviour. If free space on filesystem where the log lives
41goes below ``lowwater``\ % accounting suspends. If free space gets
42above ``highwater``\ % accounting resumes. ``frequency`` determines
43how often do we check the amount of free space (value is in
44seconds). Default:
45
46::
47
48    4 2 30
49
50That is, suspend accounting if free space drops below 2%; resume it
51if it increases to at least 4%; consider information about amount of
52free space valid for 30 seconds.
53
54
55acpi_video_flags
56================
57
58See Documentation/power/video.rst. This allows the video resume mode to be set,
59in a similar fashion to the ``acpi_sleep`` kernel parameter, by
60combining the following values:
61
62= =======
631 s3_bios
642 s3_mode
654 s3_beep
66= =======
67
68arch
69====
70
71The machine hardware name, the same output as ``uname -m``
72(e.g. ``x86_64`` or ``aarch64``).
73
74auto_msgmni
75===========
76
77This variable has no effect and may be removed in future kernel
78releases. Reading it always returns 0.
79Up to Linux 3.17, it enabled/disabled automatic recomputing of
80`msgmni`_
81upon memory add/remove or upon IPC namespace creation/removal.
82Echoing "1" into this file enabled msgmni automatic recomputing.
83Echoing "0" turned it off. The default value was 1.
84
85
86bootloader_type (x86 only)
87==========================
88
89This gives the bootloader type number as indicated by the bootloader,
90shifted left by 4, and OR'd with the low four bits of the bootloader
91version.  The reason for this encoding is that this used to match the
92``type_of_loader`` field in the kernel header; the encoding is kept for
93backwards compatibility.  That is, if the full bootloader type number
94is 0x15 and the full version number is 0x234, this file will contain
95the value 340 = 0x154.
96
97See the ``type_of_loader`` and ``ext_loader_type`` fields in
98Documentation/x86/boot.rst for additional information.
99
100
101bootloader_version (x86 only)
102=============================
103
104The complete bootloader version number.  In the example above, this
105file will contain the value 564 = 0x234.
106
107See the ``type_of_loader`` and ``ext_loader_ver`` fields in
108Documentation/x86/boot.rst for additional information.
109
110
111bpf_stats_enabled
112=================
113
114Controls whether the kernel should collect statistics on BPF programs
115(total time spent running, number of times run...). Enabling
116statistics causes a slight reduction in performance on each program
117run. The statistics can be seen using ``bpftool``.
118
119= ===================================
1200 Don't collect statistics (default).
1211 Collect statistics.
122= ===================================
123
124
125cad_pid
126=======
127
128This is the pid which will be signalled on reboot (notably, by
129Ctrl-Alt-Delete). Writing a value to this file which doesn't
130correspond to a running process will result in ``-ESRCH``.
131
132See also `ctrl-alt-del`_.
133
134
135cap_last_cap
136============
137
138Highest valid capability of the running kernel.  Exports
139``CAP_LAST_CAP`` from the kernel.
140
141
142.. _core_pattern:
143
144core_pattern
145============
146
147``core_pattern`` is used to specify a core dumpfile pattern name.
148
149* max length 127 characters; default value is "core"
150* ``core_pattern`` is used as a pattern template for the output
151  filename; certain string patterns (beginning with '%') are
152  substituted with their actual values.
153* backward compatibility with ``core_uses_pid``:
154
155	If ``core_pattern`` does not include "%p" (default does not)
156	and ``core_uses_pid`` is set, then .PID will be appended to
157	the filename.
158
159* corename format specifiers
160
161	========	==========================================
162	%<NUL>		'%' is dropped
163	%%		output one '%'
164	%p		pid
165	%P		global pid (init PID namespace)
166	%i		tid
167	%I		global tid (init PID namespace)
168	%u		uid (in initial user namespace)
169	%g		gid (in initial user namespace)
170	%d		dump mode, matches ``PR_SET_DUMPABLE`` and
171			``/proc/sys/fs/suid_dumpable``
172	%s		signal number
173	%t		UNIX time of dump
174	%h		hostname
175	%e		executable filename (may be shortened, could be changed by prctl etc)
176	%f      	executable filename
177	%E		executable path
178	%c		maximum size of core file by resource limit RLIMIT_CORE
179	%<OTHER>	both are dropped
180	========	==========================================
181
182* If the first character of the pattern is a '|', the kernel will treat
183  the rest of the pattern as a command to run.  The core dump will be
184  written to the standard input of that program instead of to a file.
185
186
187core_pipe_limit
188===============
189
190This sysctl is only applicable when `core_pattern`_ is configured to
191pipe core files to a user space helper (when the first character of
192``core_pattern`` is a '|', see above).
193When collecting cores via a pipe to an application, it is occasionally
194useful for the collecting application to gather data about the
195crashing process from its ``/proc/pid`` directory.
196In order to do this safely, the kernel must wait for the collecting
197process to exit, so as not to remove the crashing processes proc files
198prematurely.
199This in turn creates the possibility that a misbehaving userspace
200collecting process can block the reaping of a crashed process simply
201by never exiting.
202This sysctl defends against that.
203It defines how many concurrent crashing processes may be piped to user
204space applications in parallel.
205If this value is exceeded, then those crashing processes above that
206value are noted via the kernel log and their cores are skipped.
2070 is a special value, indicating that unlimited processes may be
208captured in parallel, but that no waiting will take place (i.e. the
209collecting process is not guaranteed access to ``/proc/<crashing
210pid>/``).
211This value defaults to 0.
212
213
214core_uses_pid
215=============
216
217The default coredump filename is "core".  By setting
218``core_uses_pid`` to 1, the coredump filename becomes core.PID.
219If `core_pattern`_ does not include "%p" (default does not)
220and ``core_uses_pid`` is set, then .PID will be appended to
221the filename.
222
223
224ctrl-alt-del
225============
226
227When the value in this file is 0, ctrl-alt-del is trapped and
228sent to the ``init(1)`` program to handle a graceful restart.
229When, however, the value is > 0, Linux's reaction to a Vulcan
230Nerve Pinch (tm) will be an immediate reboot, without even
231syncing its dirty buffers.
232
233Note:
234  when a program (like dosemu) has the keyboard in 'raw'
235  mode, the ctrl-alt-del is intercepted by the program before it
236  ever reaches the kernel tty layer, and it's up to the program
237  to decide what to do with it.
238
239
240dmesg_restrict
241==============
242
243This toggle indicates whether unprivileged users are prevented
244from using ``dmesg(8)`` to view messages from the kernel's log
245buffer.
246When ``dmesg_restrict`` is set to 0 there are no restrictions.
247When ``dmesg_restrict`` is set to 1, users must have
248``CAP_SYSLOG`` to use ``dmesg(8)``.
249
250The kernel config option ``CONFIG_SECURITY_DMESG_RESTRICT`` sets the
251default value of ``dmesg_restrict``.
252
253
254domainname & hostname
255=====================
256
257These files can be used to set the NIS/YP domainname and the
258hostname of your box in exactly the same way as the commands
259domainname and hostname, i.e.::
260
261	# echo "darkstar" > /proc/sys/kernel/hostname
262	# echo "mydomain" > /proc/sys/kernel/domainname
263
264has the same effect as::
265
266	# hostname "darkstar"
267	# domainname "mydomain"
268
269Note, however, that the classic darkstar.frop.org has the
270hostname "darkstar" and DNS (Internet Domain Name Server)
271domainname "frop.org", not to be confused with the NIS (Network
272Information Service) or YP (Yellow Pages) domainname. These two
273domain names are in general different. For a detailed discussion
274see the ``hostname(1)`` man page.
275
276
277firmware_config
278===============
279
280See Documentation/driver-api/firmware/fallback-mechanisms.rst.
281
282The entries in this directory allow the firmware loader helper
283fallback to be controlled:
284
285* ``force_sysfs_fallback``, when set to 1, forces the use of the
286  fallback;
287* ``ignore_sysfs_fallback``, when set to 1, ignores any fallback.
288
289
290ftrace_dump_on_oops
291===================
292
293Determines whether ``ftrace_dump()`` should be called on an oops (or
294kernel panic). This will output the contents of the ftrace buffers to
295the console.  This is very useful for capturing traces that lead to
296crashes and outputting them to a serial console.
297
298= ===================================================
2990 Disabled (default).
3001 Dump buffers of all CPUs.
3012 Dump the buffer of the CPU that triggered the oops.
302= ===================================================
303
304
305ftrace_enabled, stack_tracer_enabled
306====================================
307
308See Documentation/trace/ftrace.rst.
309
310
311hardlockup_all_cpu_backtrace
312============================
313
314This value controls the hard lockup detector behavior when a hard
315lockup condition is detected as to whether or not to gather further
316debug information. If enabled, arch-specific all-CPU stack dumping
317will be initiated.
318
319= ============================================
3200 Do nothing. This is the default behavior.
3211 On detection capture more debug information.
322= ============================================
323
324
325hardlockup_panic
326================
327
328This parameter can be used to control whether the kernel panics
329when a hard lockup is detected.
330
331= ===========================
3320 Don't panic on hard lockup.
3331 Panic on hard lockup.
334= ===========================
335
336See Documentation/admin-guide/lockup-watchdogs.rst for more information.
337This can also be set using the nmi_watchdog kernel parameter.
338
339
340hotplug
341=======
342
343Path for the hotplug policy agent.
344Default value is ``CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER_PATH``, which in turn defaults
345to the empty string.
346
347This file only exists when ``CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER`` is enabled. Most
348modern systems rely exclusively on the netlink-based uevent source and
349don't need this.
350
351
352hung_task_all_cpu_backtrace
353===========================
354
355If this option is set, the kernel will send an NMI to all CPUs to dump
356their backtraces when a hung task is detected. This file shows up if
357CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK and CONFIG_SMP are enabled.
358
3590: Won't show all CPUs backtraces when a hung task is detected.
360This is the default behavior.
361
3621: Will non-maskably interrupt all CPUs and dump their backtraces when
363a hung task is detected.
364
365
366hung_task_panic
367===============
368
369Controls the kernel's behavior when a hung task is detected.
370This file shows up if ``CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK`` is enabled.
371
372= =================================================
3730 Continue operation. This is the default behavior.
3741 Panic immediately.
375= =================================================
376
377
378hung_task_check_count
379=====================
380
381The upper bound on the number of tasks that are checked.
382This file shows up if ``CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK`` is enabled.
383
384
385hung_task_timeout_secs
386======================
387
388When a task in D state did not get scheduled
389for more than this value report a warning.
390This file shows up if ``CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK`` is enabled.
391
3920 means infinite timeout, no checking is done.
393
394Possible values to set are in range {0:``LONG_MAX``/``HZ``}.
395
396
397hung_task_check_interval_secs
398=============================
399
400Hung task check interval. If hung task checking is enabled
401(see `hung_task_timeout_secs`_), the check is done every
402``hung_task_check_interval_secs`` seconds.
403This file shows up if ``CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK`` is enabled.
404
4050 (default) means use ``hung_task_timeout_secs`` as checking
406interval.
407
408Possible values to set are in range {0:``LONG_MAX``/``HZ``}.
409
410
411hung_task_warnings
412==================
413
414The maximum number of warnings to report. During a check interval
415if a hung task is detected, this value is decreased by 1.
416When this value reaches 0, no more warnings will be reported.
417This file shows up if ``CONFIG_DETECT_HUNG_TASK`` is enabled.
418
419-1: report an infinite number of warnings.
420
421
422hyperv_record_panic_msg
423=======================
424
425Controls whether the panic kmsg data should be reported to Hyper-V.
426
427= =========================================================
4280 Do not report panic kmsg data.
4291 Report the panic kmsg data. This is the default behavior.
430= =========================================================
431
432
433ignore-unaligned-usertrap
434=========================
435
436On architectures where unaligned accesses cause traps, and where this
437feature is supported (``CONFIG_SYSCTL_ARCH_UNALIGN_NO_WARN``;
438currently, ``arc`` and ``ia64``), controls whether all unaligned traps
439are logged.
440
441= =============================================================
4420 Log all unaligned accesses.
4431 Only warn the first time a process traps. This is the default
444  setting.
445= =============================================================
446
447See also `unaligned-trap`_ and `unaligned-dump-stack`_. On ``ia64``,
448this allows system administrators to override the
449``IA64_THREAD_UAC_NOPRINT`` ``prctl`` and avoid logs being flooded.
450
451
452kexec_load_disabled
453===================
454
455A toggle indicating if the ``kexec_load`` syscall has been disabled.
456This value defaults to 0 (false: ``kexec_load`` enabled), but can be
457set to 1 (true: ``kexec_load`` disabled).
458Once true, kexec can no longer be used, and the toggle cannot be set
459back to false.
460This allows a kexec image to be loaded before disabling the syscall,
461allowing a system to set up (and later use) an image without it being
462altered.
463Generally used together with the `modules_disabled`_ sysctl.
464
465
466kptr_restrict
467=============
468
469This toggle indicates whether restrictions are placed on
470exposing kernel addresses via ``/proc`` and other interfaces.
471
472When ``kptr_restrict`` is set to 0 (the default) the address is hashed
473before printing.
474(This is the equivalent to %p.)
475
476When ``kptr_restrict`` is set to 1, kernel pointers printed using the
477%pK format specifier will be replaced with 0s unless the user has
478``CAP_SYSLOG`` and effective user and group ids are equal to the real
479ids.
480This is because %pK checks are done at read() time rather than open()
481time, so if permissions are elevated between the open() and the read()
482(e.g via a setuid binary) then %pK will not leak kernel pointers to
483unprivileged users.
484Note, this is a temporary solution only.
485The correct long-term solution is to do the permission checks at
486open() time.
487Consider removing world read permissions from files that use %pK, and
488using `dmesg_restrict`_ to protect against uses of %pK in ``dmesg(8)``
489if leaking kernel pointer values to unprivileged users is a concern.
490
491When ``kptr_restrict`` is set to 2, kernel pointers printed using
492%pK will be replaced with 0s regardless of privileges.
493
494
495modprobe
496========
497
498The full path to the usermode helper for autoloading kernel modules,
499by default ``CONFIG_MODPROBE_PATH``, which in turn defaults to
500"/sbin/modprobe".  This binary is executed when the kernel requests a
501module.  For example, if userspace passes an unknown filesystem type
502to mount(), then the kernel will automatically request the
503corresponding filesystem module by executing this usermode helper.
504This usermode helper should insert the needed module into the kernel.
505
506This sysctl only affects module autoloading.  It has no effect on the
507ability to explicitly insert modules.
508
509This sysctl can be used to debug module loading requests::
510
511    echo '#! /bin/sh' > /tmp/modprobe
512    echo 'echo "$@" >> /tmp/modprobe.log' >> /tmp/modprobe
513    echo 'exec /sbin/modprobe "$@"' >> /tmp/modprobe
514    chmod a+x /tmp/modprobe
515    echo /tmp/modprobe > /proc/sys/kernel/modprobe
516
517Alternatively, if this sysctl is set to the empty string, then module
518autoloading is completely disabled.  The kernel will not try to
519execute a usermode helper at all, nor will it call the
520kernel_module_request LSM hook.
521
522If CONFIG_STATIC_USERMODEHELPER=y is set in the kernel configuration,
523then the configured static usermode helper overrides this sysctl,
524except that the empty string is still accepted to completely disable
525module autoloading as described above.
526
527modules_disabled
528================
529
530A toggle value indicating if modules are allowed to be loaded
531in an otherwise modular kernel.  This toggle defaults to off
532(0), but can be set true (1).  Once true, modules can be
533neither loaded nor unloaded, and the toggle cannot be set back
534to false.  Generally used with the `kexec_load_disabled`_ toggle.
535
536
537.. _msgmni:
538
539msgmax, msgmnb, and msgmni
540==========================
541
542``msgmax`` is the maximum size of an IPC message, in bytes. 8192 by
543default (``MSGMAX``).
544
545``msgmnb`` is the maximum size of an IPC queue, in bytes. 16384 by
546default (``MSGMNB``).
547
548``msgmni`` is the maximum number of IPC queues. 32000 by default
549(``MSGMNI``).
550
551
552msg_next_id, sem_next_id, and shm_next_id (System V IPC)
553========================================================
554
555These three toggles allows to specify desired id for next allocated IPC
556object: message, semaphore or shared memory respectively.
557
558By default they are equal to -1, which means generic allocation logic.
559Possible values to set are in range {0:``INT_MAX``}.
560
561Notes:
562  1) kernel doesn't guarantee, that new object will have desired id. So,
563     it's up to userspace, how to handle an object with "wrong" id.
564  2) Toggle with non-default value will be set back to -1 by kernel after
565     successful IPC object allocation. If an IPC object allocation syscall
566     fails, it is undefined if the value remains unmodified or is reset to -1.
567
568
569ngroups_max
570===========
571
572Maximum number of supplementary groups, _i.e._ the maximum size which
573``setgroups`` will accept. Exports ``NGROUPS_MAX`` from the kernel.
574
575
576
577nmi_watchdog
578============
579
580This parameter can be used to control the NMI watchdog
581(i.e. the hard lockup detector) on x86 systems.
582
583= =================================
5840 Disable the hard lockup detector.
5851 Enable the hard lockup detector.
586= =================================
587
588The hard lockup detector monitors each CPU for its ability to respond to
589timer interrupts. The mechanism utilizes CPU performance counter registers
590that are programmed to generate Non-Maskable Interrupts (NMIs) periodically
591while a CPU is busy. Hence, the alternative name 'NMI watchdog'.
592
593The NMI watchdog is disabled by default if the kernel is running as a guest
594in a KVM virtual machine. This default can be overridden by adding::
595
596   nmi_watchdog=1
597
598to the guest kernel command line (see
599Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.rst).
600
601
602nmi_wd_lpm_factor (PPC only)
603============================
604
605Factor to apply to the NMI watchdog timeout (only when ``nmi_watchdog`` is
606set to 1). This factor represents the percentage added to
607``watchdog_thresh`` when calculating the NMI watchdog timeout during an
608LPM. The soft lockup timeout is not impacted.
609
610A value of 0 means no change. The default value is 200 meaning the NMI
611watchdog is set to 30s (based on ``watchdog_thresh`` equal to 10).
612
613
614numa_balancing
615==============
616
617Enables/disables and configures automatic page fault based NUMA memory
618balancing.  Memory is moved automatically to nodes that access it often.
619The value to set can be the result of ORing the following:
620
621= =================================
6220 NUMA_BALANCING_DISABLED
6231 NUMA_BALANCING_NORMAL
6242 NUMA_BALANCING_MEMORY_TIERING
625= =================================
626
627Or NUMA_BALANCING_NORMAL to optimize page placement among different
628NUMA nodes to reduce remote accessing.  On NUMA machines, there is a
629performance penalty if remote memory is accessed by a CPU. When this
630feature is enabled the kernel samples what task thread is accessing
631memory by periodically unmapping pages and later trapping a page
632fault. At the time of the page fault, it is determined if the data
633being accessed should be migrated to a local memory node.
634
635The unmapping of pages and trapping faults incur additional overhead that
636ideally is offset by improved memory locality but there is no universal
637guarantee. If the target workload is already bound to NUMA nodes then this
638feature should be disabled.
639
640Or NUMA_BALANCING_MEMORY_TIERING to optimize page placement among
641different types of memory (represented as different NUMA nodes) to
642place the hot pages in the fast memory.  This is implemented based on
643unmapping and page fault too.
644
645numa_balancing_promote_rate_limit_MBps
646======================================
647
648Too high promotion/demotion throughput between different memory types
649may hurt application latency.  This can be used to rate limit the
650promotion throughput.  The per-node max promotion throughput in MB/s
651will be limited to be no more than the set value.
652
653A rule of thumb is to set this to less than 1/10 of the PMEM node
654write bandwidth.
655
656oops_all_cpu_backtrace
657======================
658
659If this option is set, the kernel will send an NMI to all CPUs to dump
660their backtraces when an oops event occurs. It should be used as a last
661resort in case a panic cannot be triggered (to protect VMs running, for
662example) or kdump can't be collected. This file shows up if CONFIG_SMP
663is enabled.
664
6650: Won't show all CPUs backtraces when an oops is detected.
666This is the default behavior.
667
6681: Will non-maskably interrupt all CPUs and dump their backtraces when
669an oops event is detected.
670
671
672osrelease, ostype & version
673===========================
674
675::
676
677  # cat osrelease
678  2.1.88
679  # cat ostype
680  Linux
681  # cat version
682  #5 Wed Feb 25 21:49:24 MET 1998
683
684The files ``osrelease`` and ``ostype`` should be clear enough.
685``version``
686needs a little more clarification however. The '#5' means that
687this is the fifth kernel built from this source base and the
688date behind it indicates the time the kernel was built.
689The only way to tune these values is to rebuild the kernel :-)
690
691
692overflowgid & overflowuid
693=========================
694
695if your architecture did not always support 32-bit UIDs (i.e. arm,
696i386, m68k, sh, and sparc32), a fixed UID and GID will be returned to
697applications that use the old 16-bit UID/GID system calls, if the
698actual UID or GID would exceed 65535.
699
700These sysctls allow you to change the value of the fixed UID and GID.
701The default is 65534.
702
703
704panic
705=====
706
707The value in this file determines the behaviour of the kernel on a
708panic:
709
710* if zero, the kernel will loop forever;
711* if negative, the kernel will reboot immediately;
712* if positive, the kernel will reboot after the corresponding number
713  of seconds.
714
715When you use the software watchdog, the recommended setting is 60.
716
717
718panic_on_io_nmi
719===============
720
721Controls the kernel's behavior when a CPU receives an NMI caused by
722an IO error.
723
724= ==================================================================
7250 Try to continue operation (default).
7261 Panic immediately. The IO error triggered an NMI. This indicates a
727  serious system condition which could result in IO data corruption.
728  Rather than continuing, panicking might be a better choice. Some
729  servers issue this sort of NMI when the dump button is pushed,
730  and you can use this option to take a crash dump.
731= ==================================================================
732
733
734panic_on_oops
735=============
736
737Controls the kernel's behaviour when an oops or BUG is encountered.
738
739= ===================================================================
7400 Try to continue operation.
7411 Panic immediately.  If the `panic` sysctl is also non-zero then the
742  machine will be rebooted.
743= ===================================================================
744
745
746panic_on_stackoverflow
747======================
748
749Controls the kernel's behavior when detecting the overflows of
750kernel, IRQ and exception stacks except a user stack.
751This file shows up if ``CONFIG_DEBUG_STACKOVERFLOW`` is enabled.
752
753= ==========================
7540 Try to continue operation.
7551 Panic immediately.
756= ==========================
757
758
759panic_on_unrecovered_nmi
760========================
761
762The default Linux behaviour on an NMI of either memory or unknown is
763to continue operation. For many environments such as scientific
764computing it is preferable that the box is taken out and the error
765dealt with than an uncorrected parity/ECC error get propagated.
766
767A small number of systems do generate NMIs for bizarre random reasons
768such as power management so the default is off. That sysctl works like
769the existing panic controls already in that directory.
770
771
772panic_on_warn
773=============
774
775Calls panic() in the WARN() path when set to 1.  This is useful to avoid
776a kernel rebuild when attempting to kdump at the location of a WARN().
777
778= ================================================
7790 Only WARN(), default behaviour.
7801 Call panic() after printing out WARN() location.
781= ================================================
782
783
784panic_print
785===========
786
787Bitmask for printing system info when panic happens. User can chose
788combination of the following bits:
789
790=====  ============================================
791bit 0  print all tasks info
792bit 1  print system memory info
793bit 2  print timer info
794bit 3  print locks info if ``CONFIG_LOCKDEP`` is on
795bit 4  print ftrace buffer
796bit 5  print all printk messages in buffer
797bit 6  print all CPUs backtrace (if available in the arch)
798=====  ============================================
799
800So for example to print tasks and memory info on panic, user can::
801
802  echo 3 > /proc/sys/kernel/panic_print
803
804
805panic_on_rcu_stall
806==================
807
808When set to 1, calls panic() after RCU stall detection messages. This
809is useful to define the root cause of RCU stalls using a vmcore.
810
811= ============================================================
8120 Do not panic() when RCU stall takes place, default behavior.
8131 panic() after printing RCU stall messages.
814= ============================================================
815
816max_rcu_stall_to_panic
817======================
818
819When ``panic_on_rcu_stall`` is set to 1, this value determines the
820number of times that RCU can stall before panic() is called.
821
822When ``panic_on_rcu_stall`` is set to 0, this value is has no effect.
823
824perf_cpu_time_max_percent
825=========================
826
827Hints to the kernel how much CPU time it should be allowed to
828use to handle perf sampling events.  If the perf subsystem
829is informed that its samples are exceeding this limit, it
830will drop its sampling frequency to attempt to reduce its CPU
831usage.
832
833Some perf sampling happens in NMIs.  If these samples
834unexpectedly take too long to execute, the NMIs can become
835stacked up next to each other so much that nothing else is
836allowed to execute.
837
838===== ========================================================
8390     Disable the mechanism.  Do not monitor or correct perf's
840      sampling rate no matter how CPU time it takes.
841
8421-100 Attempt to throttle perf's sample rate to this
843      percentage of CPU.  Note: the kernel calculates an
844      "expected" length of each sample event.  100 here means
845      100% of that expected length.  Even if this is set to
846      100, you may still see sample throttling if this
847      length is exceeded.  Set to 0 if you truly do not care
848      how much CPU is consumed.
849===== ========================================================
850
851
852perf_event_paranoid
853===================
854
855Controls use of the performance events system by unprivileged
856users (without CAP_PERFMON).  The default value is 2.
857
858For backward compatibility reasons access to system performance
859monitoring and observability remains open for CAP_SYS_ADMIN
860privileged processes but CAP_SYS_ADMIN usage for secure system
861performance monitoring and observability operations is discouraged
862with respect to CAP_PERFMON use cases.
863
864===  ==================================================================
865 -1  Allow use of (almost) all events by all users.
866
867     Ignore mlock limit after perf_event_mlock_kb without
868     ``CAP_IPC_LOCK``.
869
870>=0  Disallow ftrace function tracepoint by users without
871     ``CAP_PERFMON``.
872
873     Disallow raw tracepoint access by users without ``CAP_PERFMON``.
874
875>=1  Disallow CPU event access by users without ``CAP_PERFMON``.
876
877>=2  Disallow kernel profiling by users without ``CAP_PERFMON``.
878===  ==================================================================
879
880
881perf_event_max_stack
882====================
883
884Controls maximum number of stack frames to copy for (``attr.sample_type &
885PERF_SAMPLE_CALLCHAIN``) configured events, for instance, when using
886'``perf record -g``' or '``perf trace --call-graph fp``'.
887
888This can only be done when no events are in use that have callchains
889enabled, otherwise writing to this file will return ``-EBUSY``.
890
891The default value is 127.
892
893
894perf_event_mlock_kb
895===================
896
897Control size of per-cpu ring buffer not counted against mlock limit.
898
899The default value is 512 + 1 page
900
901
902perf_event_max_contexts_per_stack
903=================================
904
905Controls maximum number of stack frame context entries for
906(``attr.sample_type & PERF_SAMPLE_CALLCHAIN``) configured events, for
907instance, when using '``perf record -g``' or '``perf trace --call-graph fp``'.
908
909This can only be done when no events are in use that have callchains
910enabled, otherwise writing to this file will return ``-EBUSY``.
911
912The default value is 8.
913
914
915perf_user_access (arm64 only)
916=================================
917
918Controls user space access for reading perf event counters. When set to 1,
919user space can read performance monitor counter registers directly.
920
921The default value is 0 (access disabled).
922
923See Documentation/arm64/perf.rst for more information.
924
925
926pid_max
927=======
928
929PID allocation wrap value.  When the kernel's next PID value
930reaches this value, it wraps back to a minimum PID value.
931PIDs of value ``pid_max`` or larger are not allocated.
932
933
934ns_last_pid
935===========
936
937The last pid allocated in the current (the one task using this sysctl
938lives in) pid namespace. When selecting a pid for a next task on fork
939kernel tries to allocate a number starting from this one.
940
941
942powersave-nap (PPC only)
943========================
944
945If set, Linux-PPC will use the 'nap' mode of powersaving,
946otherwise the 'doze' mode will be used.
947
948
949==============================================================
950
951printk
952======
953
954The four values in printk denote: ``console_loglevel``,
955``default_message_loglevel``, ``minimum_console_loglevel`` and
956``default_console_loglevel`` respectively.
957
958These values influence printk() behavior when printing or
959logging error messages. See '``man 2 syslog``' for more info on
960the different loglevels.
961
962======================== =====================================
963console_loglevel         messages with a higher priority than
964                         this will be printed to the console
965default_message_loglevel messages without an explicit priority
966                         will be printed with this priority
967minimum_console_loglevel minimum (highest) value to which
968                         console_loglevel can be set
969default_console_loglevel default value for console_loglevel
970======================== =====================================
971
972
973printk_delay
974============
975
976Delay each printk message in ``printk_delay`` milliseconds
977
978Value from 0 - 10000 is allowed.
979
980
981printk_ratelimit
982================
983
984Some warning messages are rate limited. ``printk_ratelimit`` specifies
985the minimum length of time between these messages (in seconds).
986The default value is 5 seconds.
987
988A value of 0 will disable rate limiting.
989
990
991printk_ratelimit_burst
992======================
993
994While long term we enforce one message per `printk_ratelimit`_
995seconds, we do allow a burst of messages to pass through.
996``printk_ratelimit_burst`` specifies the number of messages we can
997send before ratelimiting kicks in.
998
999The default value is 10 messages.
1000
1001
1002printk_devkmsg
1003==============
1004
1005Control the logging to ``/dev/kmsg`` from userspace:
1006
1007========= =============================================
1008ratelimit default, ratelimited
1009on        unlimited logging to /dev/kmsg from userspace
1010off       logging to /dev/kmsg disabled
1011========= =============================================
1012
1013The kernel command line parameter ``printk.devkmsg=`` overrides this and is
1014a one-time setting until next reboot: once set, it cannot be changed by
1015this sysctl interface anymore.
1016
1017==============================================================
1018
1019
1020pty
1021===
1022
1023See Documentation/filesystems/devpts.rst.
1024
1025
1026random
1027======
1028
1029This is a directory, with the following entries:
1030
1031* ``boot_id``: a UUID generated the first time this is retrieved, and
1032  unvarying after that;
1033
1034* ``uuid``: a UUID generated every time this is retrieved (this can
1035  thus be used to generate UUIDs at will);
1036
1037* ``entropy_avail``: the pool's entropy count, in bits;
1038
1039* ``poolsize``: the entropy pool size, in bits;
1040
1041* ``urandom_min_reseed_secs``: obsolete (used to determine the minimum
1042  number of seconds between urandom pool reseeding). This file is
1043  writable for compatibility purposes, but writing to it has no effect
1044  on any RNG behavior;
1045
1046* ``write_wakeup_threshold``: when the entropy count drops below this
1047  (as a number of bits), processes waiting to write to ``/dev/random``
1048  are woken up. This file is writable for compatibility purposes, but
1049  writing to it has no effect on any RNG behavior.
1050
1051
1052randomize_va_space
1053==================
1054
1055This option can be used to select the type of process address
1056space randomization that is used in the system, for architectures
1057that support this feature.
1058
1059==  ===========================================================================
10600   Turn the process address space randomization off.  This is the
1061    default for architectures that do not support this feature anyways,
1062    and kernels that are booted with the "norandmaps" parameter.
1063
10641   Make the addresses of mmap base, stack and VDSO page randomized.
1065    This, among other things, implies that shared libraries will be
1066    loaded to random addresses.  Also for PIE-linked binaries, the
1067    location of code start is randomized.  This is the default if the
1068    ``CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK`` option is enabled.
1069
10702   Additionally enable heap randomization.  This is the default if
1071    ``CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK`` is disabled.
1072
1073    There are a few legacy applications out there (such as some ancient
1074    versions of libc.so.5 from 1996) that assume that brk area starts
1075    just after the end of the code+bss.  These applications break when
1076    start of the brk area is randomized.  There are however no known
1077    non-legacy applications that would be broken this way, so for most
1078    systems it is safe to choose full randomization.
1079
1080    Systems with ancient and/or broken binaries should be configured
1081    with ``CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK`` enabled, which excludes the heap from process
1082    address space randomization.
1083==  ===========================================================================
1084
1085
1086real-root-dev
1087=============
1088
1089See Documentation/admin-guide/initrd.rst.
1090
1091
1092reboot-cmd (SPARC only)
1093=======================
1094
1095??? This seems to be a way to give an argument to the Sparc
1096ROM/Flash boot loader. Maybe to tell it what to do after
1097rebooting. ???
1098
1099
1100sched_energy_aware
1101==================
1102
1103Enables/disables Energy Aware Scheduling (EAS). EAS starts
1104automatically on platforms where it can run (that is,
1105platforms with asymmetric CPU topologies and having an Energy
1106Model available). If your platform happens to meet the
1107requirements for EAS but you do not want to use it, change
1108this value to 0.
1109
1110task_delayacct
1111===============
1112
1113Enables/disables task delay accounting (see
1114Documentation/accounting/delay-accounting.rst. Enabling this feature incurs
1115a small amount of overhead in the scheduler but is useful for debugging
1116and performance tuning. It is required by some tools such as iotop.
1117
1118sched_schedstats
1119================
1120
1121Enables/disables scheduler statistics. Enabling this feature
1122incurs a small amount of overhead in the scheduler but is
1123useful for debugging and performance tuning.
1124
1125sched_util_clamp_min
1126====================
1127
1128Max allowed *minimum* utilization.
1129
1130Default value is 1024, which is the maximum possible value.
1131
1132It means that any requested uclamp.min value cannot be greater than
1133sched_util_clamp_min, i.e., it is restricted to the range
1134[0:sched_util_clamp_min].
1135
1136sched_util_clamp_max
1137====================
1138
1139Max allowed *maximum* utilization.
1140
1141Default value is 1024, which is the maximum possible value.
1142
1143It means that any requested uclamp.max value cannot be greater than
1144sched_util_clamp_max, i.e., it is restricted to the range
1145[0:sched_util_clamp_max].
1146
1147sched_util_clamp_min_rt_default
1148===============================
1149
1150By default Linux is tuned for performance. Which means that RT tasks always run
1151at the highest frequency and most capable (highest capacity) CPU (in
1152heterogeneous systems).
1153
1154Uclamp achieves this by setting the requested uclamp.min of all RT tasks to
11551024 by default, which effectively boosts the tasks to run at the highest
1156frequency and biases them to run on the biggest CPU.
1157
1158This knob allows admins to change the default behavior when uclamp is being
1159used. In battery powered devices particularly, running at the maximum
1160capacity and frequency will increase energy consumption and shorten the battery
1161life.
1162
1163This knob is only effective for RT tasks which the user hasn't modified their
1164requested uclamp.min value via sched_setattr() syscall.
1165
1166This knob will not escape the range constraint imposed by sched_util_clamp_min
1167defined above.
1168
1169For example if
1170
1171	sched_util_clamp_min_rt_default = 800
1172	sched_util_clamp_min = 600
1173
1174Then the boost will be clamped to 600 because 800 is outside of the permissible
1175range of [0:600]. This could happen for instance if a powersave mode will
1176restrict all boosts temporarily by modifying sched_util_clamp_min. As soon as
1177this restriction is lifted, the requested sched_util_clamp_min_rt_default
1178will take effect.
1179
1180seccomp
1181=======
1182
1183See Documentation/userspace-api/seccomp_filter.rst.
1184
1185
1186sg-big-buff
1187===========
1188
1189This file shows the size of the generic SCSI (sg) buffer.
1190You can't tune it just yet, but you could change it on
1191compile time by editing ``include/scsi/sg.h`` and changing
1192the value of ``SG_BIG_BUFF``.
1193
1194There shouldn't be any reason to change this value. If
1195you can come up with one, you probably know what you
1196are doing anyway :)
1197
1198
1199shmall
1200======
1201
1202This parameter sets the total amount of shared memory pages that
1203can be used system wide. Hence, ``shmall`` should always be at least
1204``ceil(shmmax/PAGE_SIZE)``.
1205
1206If you are not sure what the default ``PAGE_SIZE`` is on your Linux
1207system, you can run the following command::
1208
1209	# getconf PAGE_SIZE
1210
1211
1212shmmax
1213======
1214
1215This value can be used to query and set the run time limit
1216on the maximum shared memory segment size that can be created.
1217Shared memory segments up to 1Gb are now supported in the
1218kernel.  This value defaults to ``SHMMAX``.
1219
1220
1221shmmni
1222======
1223
1224This value determines the maximum number of shared memory segments.
12254096 by default (``SHMMNI``).
1226
1227
1228shm_rmid_forced
1229===============
1230
1231Linux lets you set resource limits, including how much memory one
1232process can consume, via ``setrlimit(2)``.  Unfortunately, shared memory
1233segments are allowed to exist without association with any process, and
1234thus might not be counted against any resource limits.  If enabled,
1235shared memory segments are automatically destroyed when their attach
1236count becomes zero after a detach or a process termination.  It will
1237also destroy segments that were created, but never attached to, on exit
1238from the process.  The only use left for ``IPC_RMID`` is to immediately
1239destroy an unattached segment.  Of course, this breaks the way things are
1240defined, so some applications might stop working.  Note that this
1241feature will do you no good unless you also configure your resource
1242limits (in particular, ``RLIMIT_AS`` and ``RLIMIT_NPROC``).  Most systems don't
1243need this.
1244
1245Note that if you change this from 0 to 1, already created segments
1246without users and with a dead originative process will be destroyed.
1247
1248
1249sysctl_writes_strict
1250====================
1251
1252Control how file position affects the behavior of updating sysctl values
1253via the ``/proc/sys`` interface:
1254
1255  ==   ======================================================================
1256  -1   Legacy per-write sysctl value handling, with no printk warnings.
1257       Each write syscall must fully contain the sysctl value to be
1258       written, and multiple writes on the same sysctl file descriptor
1259       will rewrite the sysctl value, regardless of file position.
1260   0   Same behavior as above, but warn about processes that perform writes
1261       to a sysctl file descriptor when the file position is not 0.
1262   1   (default) Respect file position when writing sysctl strings. Multiple
1263       writes will append to the sysctl value buffer. Anything past the max
1264       length of the sysctl value buffer will be ignored. Writes to numeric
1265       sysctl entries must always be at file position 0 and the value must
1266       be fully contained in the buffer sent in the write syscall.
1267  ==   ======================================================================
1268
1269
1270softlockup_all_cpu_backtrace
1271============================
1272
1273This value controls the soft lockup detector thread's behavior
1274when a soft lockup condition is detected as to whether or not
1275to gather further debug information. If enabled, each cpu will
1276be issued an NMI and instructed to capture stack trace.
1277
1278This feature is only applicable for architectures which support
1279NMI.
1280
1281= ============================================
12820 Do nothing. This is the default behavior.
12831 On detection capture more debug information.
1284= ============================================
1285
1286
1287softlockup_panic
1288=================
1289
1290This parameter can be used to control whether the kernel panics
1291when a soft lockup is detected.
1292
1293= ============================================
12940 Don't panic on soft lockup.
12951 Panic on soft lockup.
1296= ============================================
1297
1298This can also be set using the softlockup_panic kernel parameter.
1299
1300
1301soft_watchdog
1302=============
1303
1304This parameter can be used to control the soft lockup detector.
1305
1306= =================================
13070 Disable the soft lockup detector.
13081 Enable the soft lockup detector.
1309= =================================
1310
1311The soft lockup detector monitors CPUs for threads that are hogging the CPUs
1312without rescheduling voluntarily, and thus prevent the 'migration/N' threads
1313from running, causing the watchdog work fail to execute. The mechanism depends
1314on the CPUs ability to respond to timer interrupts which are needed for the
1315watchdog work to be queued by the watchdog timer function, otherwise the NMI
1316watchdog — if enabled — can detect a hard lockup condition.
1317
1318
1319stack_erasing
1320=============
1321
1322This parameter can be used to control kernel stack erasing at the end
1323of syscalls for kernels built with ``CONFIG_GCC_PLUGIN_STACKLEAK``.
1324
1325That erasing reduces the information which kernel stack leak bugs
1326can reveal and blocks some uninitialized stack variable attacks.
1327The tradeoff is the performance impact: on a single CPU system kernel
1328compilation sees a 1% slowdown, other systems and workloads may vary.
1329
1330= ====================================================================
13310 Kernel stack erasing is disabled, STACKLEAK_METRICS are not updated.
13321 Kernel stack erasing is enabled (default), it is performed before
1333  returning to the userspace at the end of syscalls.
1334= ====================================================================
1335
1336
1337stop-a (SPARC only)
1338===================
1339
1340Controls Stop-A:
1341
1342= ====================================
13430 Stop-A has no effect.
13441 Stop-A breaks to the PROM (default).
1345= ====================================
1346
1347Stop-A is always enabled on a panic, so that the user can return to
1348the boot PROM.
1349
1350
1351sysrq
1352=====
1353
1354See Documentation/admin-guide/sysrq.rst.
1355
1356
1357tainted
1358=======
1359
1360Non-zero if the kernel has been tainted. Numeric values, which can be
1361ORed together. The letters are seen in "Tainted" line of Oops reports.
1362
1363======  =====  ==============================================================
1364     1  `(P)`  proprietary module was loaded
1365     2  `(F)`  module was force loaded
1366     4  `(S)`  kernel running on an out of specification system
1367     8  `(R)`  module was force unloaded
1368    16  `(M)`  processor reported a Machine Check Exception (MCE)
1369    32  `(B)`  bad page referenced or some unexpected page flags
1370    64  `(U)`  taint requested by userspace application
1371   128  `(D)`  kernel died recently, i.e. there was an OOPS or BUG
1372   256  `(A)`  an ACPI table was overridden by user
1373   512  `(W)`  kernel issued warning
1374  1024  `(C)`  staging driver was loaded
1375  2048  `(I)`  workaround for bug in platform firmware applied
1376  4096  `(O)`  externally-built ("out-of-tree") module was loaded
1377  8192  `(E)`  unsigned module was loaded
1378 16384  `(L)`  soft lockup occurred
1379 32768  `(K)`  kernel has been live patched
1380 65536  `(X)`  Auxiliary taint, defined and used by for distros
1381131072  `(T)`  The kernel was built with the struct randomization plugin
1382======  =====  ==============================================================
1383
1384See Documentation/admin-guide/tainted-kernels.rst for more information.
1385
1386Note:
1387  writes to this sysctl interface will fail with ``EINVAL`` if the kernel is
1388  booted with the command line option ``panic_on_taint=<bitmask>,nousertaint``
1389  and any of the ORed together values being written to ``tainted`` match with
1390  the bitmask declared on panic_on_taint.
1391  See Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.rst for more details on
1392  that particular kernel command line option and its optional
1393  ``nousertaint`` switch.
1394
1395threads-max
1396===========
1397
1398This value controls the maximum number of threads that can be created
1399using ``fork()``.
1400
1401During initialization the kernel sets this value such that even if the
1402maximum number of threads is created, the thread structures occupy only
1403a part (1/8th) of the available RAM pages.
1404
1405The minimum value that can be written to ``threads-max`` is 1.
1406
1407The maximum value that can be written to ``threads-max`` is given by the
1408constant ``FUTEX_TID_MASK`` (0x3fffffff).
1409
1410If a value outside of this range is written to ``threads-max`` an
1411``EINVAL`` error occurs.
1412
1413
1414traceoff_on_warning
1415===================
1416
1417When set, disables tracing (see Documentation/trace/ftrace.rst) when a
1418``WARN()`` is hit.
1419
1420
1421tracepoint_printk
1422=================
1423
1424When tracepoints are sent to printk() (enabled by the ``tp_printk``
1425boot parameter), this entry provides runtime control::
1426
1427    echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/tracepoint_printk
1428
1429will stop tracepoints from being sent to printk(), and::
1430
1431    echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/tracepoint_printk
1432
1433will send them to printk() again.
1434
1435This only works if the kernel was booted with ``tp_printk`` enabled.
1436
1437See Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.rst and
1438Documentation/trace/boottime-trace.rst.
1439
1440
1441.. _unaligned-dump-stack:
1442
1443unaligned-dump-stack (ia64)
1444===========================
1445
1446When logging unaligned accesses, controls whether the stack is
1447dumped.
1448
1449= ===================================================
14500 Do not dump the stack. This is the default setting.
14511 Dump the stack.
1452= ===================================================
1453
1454See also `ignore-unaligned-usertrap`_.
1455
1456
1457unaligned-trap
1458==============
1459
1460On architectures where unaligned accesses cause traps, and where this
1461feature is supported (``CONFIG_SYSCTL_ARCH_UNALIGN_ALLOW``; currently,
1462``arc`` and ``parisc``), controls whether unaligned traps are caught
1463and emulated (instead of failing).
1464
1465= ========================================================
14660 Do not emulate unaligned accesses.
14671 Emulate unaligned accesses. This is the default setting.
1468= ========================================================
1469
1470See also `ignore-unaligned-usertrap`_.
1471
1472
1473unknown_nmi_panic
1474=================
1475
1476The value in this file affects behavior of handling NMI. When the
1477value is non-zero, unknown NMI is trapped and then panic occurs. At
1478that time, kernel debugging information is displayed on console.
1479
1480NMI switch that most IA32 servers have fires unknown NMI up, for
1481example.  If a system hangs up, try pressing the NMI switch.
1482
1483
1484unprivileged_bpf_disabled
1485=========================
1486
1487Writing 1 to this entry will disable unprivileged calls to ``bpf()``;
1488once disabled, calling ``bpf()`` without ``CAP_SYS_ADMIN`` or ``CAP_BPF``
1489will return ``-EPERM``. Once set to 1, this can't be cleared from the
1490running kernel anymore.
1491
1492Writing 2 to this entry will also disable unprivileged calls to ``bpf()``,
1493however, an admin can still change this setting later on, if needed, by
1494writing 0 or 1 to this entry.
1495
1496If ``BPF_UNPRIV_DEFAULT_OFF`` is enabled in the kernel config, then this
1497entry will default to 2 instead of 0.
1498
1499= =============================================================
15000 Unprivileged calls to ``bpf()`` are enabled
15011 Unprivileged calls to ``bpf()`` are disabled without recovery
15022 Unprivileged calls to ``bpf()`` are disabled
1503= =============================================================
1504
1505watchdog
1506========
1507
1508This parameter can be used to disable or enable the soft lockup detector
1509*and* the NMI watchdog (i.e. the hard lockup detector) at the same time.
1510
1511= ==============================
15120 Disable both lockup detectors.
15131 Enable both lockup detectors.
1514= ==============================
1515
1516The soft lockup detector and the NMI watchdog can also be disabled or
1517enabled individually, using the ``soft_watchdog`` and ``nmi_watchdog``
1518parameters.
1519If the ``watchdog`` parameter is read, for example by executing::
1520
1521   cat /proc/sys/kernel/watchdog
1522
1523the output of this command (0 or 1) shows the logical OR of
1524``soft_watchdog`` and ``nmi_watchdog``.
1525
1526
1527watchdog_cpumask
1528================
1529
1530This value can be used to control on which cpus the watchdog may run.
1531The default cpumask is all possible cores, but if ``NO_HZ_FULL`` is
1532enabled in the kernel config, and cores are specified with the
1533``nohz_full=`` boot argument, those cores are excluded by default.
1534Offline cores can be included in this mask, and if the core is later
1535brought online, the watchdog will be started based on the mask value.
1536
1537Typically this value would only be touched in the ``nohz_full`` case
1538to re-enable cores that by default were not running the watchdog,
1539if a kernel lockup was suspected on those cores.
1540
1541The argument value is the standard cpulist format for cpumasks,
1542so for example to enable the watchdog on cores 0, 2, 3, and 4 you
1543might say::
1544
1545  echo 0,2-4 > /proc/sys/kernel/watchdog_cpumask
1546
1547
1548watchdog_thresh
1549===============
1550
1551This value can be used to control the frequency of hrtimer and NMI
1552events and the soft and hard lockup thresholds. The default threshold
1553is 10 seconds.
1554
1555The softlockup threshold is (``2 * watchdog_thresh``). Setting this
1556tunable to zero will disable lockup detection altogether.
1557