xref: /linux/Documentation/admin-guide/workload-tracing.rst (revision d6296cb65320be16dbf20f2fd584ddc25f3437cd)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0+ OR CC-BY-4.0)
2
3======================================================
4Discovering Linux kernel subsystems used by a workload
5======================================================
6
7:Authors: - Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
8          - Shefali Sharma <sshefali021@gmail.com>
9:maintained-by: Shuah Khan <skhan@linuxfoundation.org>
10
11Key Points
12==========
13
14 * Understanding system resources necessary to build and run a workload
15   is important.
16 * Linux tracing and strace can be used to discover the system resources
17   in use by a workload. The completeness of the system usage information
18   depends on the completeness of coverage of a workload.
19 * Performance and security of the operating system can be analyzed with
20   the help of tools such as:
21   `perf <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/perf.1.html>`_,
22   `stress-ng <https://www.mankier.com/1/stress-ng>`_,
23   `paxtest <https://github.com/opntr/paxtest-freebsd>`_.
24 * Once we discover and understand the workload needs, we can focus on them
25   to avoid regressions and use it to evaluate safety considerations.
26
27Methodology
28===========
29
30`strace <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/strace.1.html>`_ is a
31diagnostic, instructional, and debugging tool and can be used to discover
32the system resources in use by a workload. Once we discover and understand
33the workload needs, we can focus on them to avoid regressions and use it
34to evaluate safety considerations. We use strace tool to trace workloads.
35
36This method of tracing using strace tells us the system calls invoked by
37the workload and doesn't include all the system calls that can be invoked
38by it. In addition, this tracing method tells us just the code paths within
39these system calls that are invoked. As an example, if a workload opens a
40file and reads from it successfully, then the success path is the one that
41is traced. Any error paths in that system call will not be traced. If there
42is a workload that provides full coverage of a workload then the method
43outlined here will trace and find all possible code paths. The completeness
44of the system usage information depends on the completeness of coverage of a
45workload.
46
47The goal is tracing a workload on a system running a default kernel without
48requiring custom kernel installs.
49
50How do we gather fine-grained system information?
51=================================================
52
53strace tool can be used to trace system calls made by a process and signals
54it receives. System calls are the fundamental interface between an
55application and the operating system kernel. They enable a program to
56request services from the kernel. For instance, the open() system call in
57Linux is used to provide access to a file in the file system. strace enables
58us to track all the system calls made by an application. It lists all the
59system calls made by a process and their resulting output.
60
61You can generate profiling data combining strace and perf record tools to
62record the events and information associated with a process. This provides
63insight into the process. "perf annotate" tool generates the statistics of
64each instruction of the program. This document goes over the details of how
65to gather fine-grained information on a workload's usage of system resources.
66
67We used strace to trace the perf, stress-ng, paxtest workloads to illustrate
68our methodology to discover resources used by a workload. This process can
69be applied to trace other workloads.
70
71Getting the system ready for tracing
72====================================
73
74Before we can get started we will show you how to get your system ready.
75We assume that you have a Linux distribution running on a physical system
76or a virtual machine. Most distributions will include strace command. Let’s
77install other tools that aren’t usually included to build Linux kernel.
78Please note that the following works on Debian based distributions. You
79might have to find equivalent packages on other Linux distributions.
80
81Install tools to build Linux kernel and tools in kernel repository.
82scripts/ver_linux is a good way to check if your system already has
83the necessary tools::
84
85  sudo apt-get build-essentials flex bison yacc
86  sudo apt install libelf-dev systemtap-sdt-dev libaudit-dev libslang2-dev libperl-dev libdw-dev
87
88cscope is a good tool to browse kernel sources. Let's install it now::
89
90  sudo apt-get install cscope
91
92Install stress-ng and paxtest::
93
94  apt-get install stress-ng
95  apt-get install paxtest
96
97Workload overview
98=================
99
100As mentioned earlier, we used strace to trace perf bench, stress-ng and
101paxtest workloads to show how to analyze a workload and identify Linux
102subsystems used by these workloads. Let's start with an overview of these
103three workloads to get a better understanding of what they do and how to
104use them.
105
106perf bench (all) workload
107-------------------------
108
109The perf bench command contains multiple multi-threaded microkernel
110benchmarks for executing different subsystems in the Linux kernel and
111system calls. This allows us to easily measure the impact of changes,
112which can help mitigate performance regressions. It also acts as a common
113benchmarking framework, enabling developers to easily create test cases,
114integrate transparently, and use performance-rich tooling subsystems.
115
116Stress-ng netdev stressor workload
117----------------------------------
118
119stress-ng is used for performing stress testing on the kernel. It allows
120you to exercise various physical subsystems of the computer, as well as
121interfaces of the OS kernel, using "stressor-s". They are available for
122CPU, CPU cache, devices, I/O, interrupts, file system, memory, network,
123operating system, pipelines, schedulers, and virtual machines. Please refer
124to the `stress-ng man-page <https://www.mankier.com/1/stress-ng>`_ to
125find the description of all the available stressor-s. The netdev stressor
126starts specified number (N) of workers that exercise various netdevice
127ioctl commands across all the available network devices.
128
129paxtest kiddie workload
130-----------------------
131
132paxtest is a program that tests buffer overflows in the kernel. It tests
133kernel enforcements over memory usage. Generally, execution in some memory
134segments makes buffer overflows possible. It runs a set of programs that
135attempt to subvert memory usage. It is used as a regression test suite for
136PaX, but might be useful to test other memory protection patches for the
137kernel. We used paxtest kiddie mode which looks for simple vulnerabilities.
138
139What is strace and how do we use it?
140====================================
141
142As mentioned earlier, strace which is a useful diagnostic, instructional,
143and debugging tool and can be used to discover the system resources in use
144by a workload. It can be used:
145
146 * To see how a process interacts with the kernel.
147 * To see why a process is failing or hanging.
148 * For reverse engineering a process.
149 * To find the files on which a program depends.
150 * For analyzing the performance of an application.
151 * For troubleshooting various problems related to the operating system.
152
153In addition, strace can generate run-time statistics on times, calls, and
154errors for each system call and report a summary when program exits,
155suppressing the regular output. This attempts to show system time (CPU time
156spent running in the kernel) independent of wall clock time. We plan to use
157these features to get information on workload system usage.
158
159strace command supports basic, verbose, and stats modes. strace command when
160run in verbose mode gives more detailed information about the system calls
161invoked by a process.
162
163Running strace -c generates a report of the percentage of time spent in each
164system call, the total time in seconds, the microseconds per call, the total
165number of calls, the count of each system call that has failed with an error
166and the type of system call made.
167
168 * Usage: strace <command we want to trace>
169 * Verbose mode usage: strace -v <command>
170 * Gather statistics: strace -c <command>
171
172We used the “-c” option to gather fine-grained run-time statistics in use
173by three workloads we have chose for this analysis.
174
175 * perf
176 * stress-ng
177 * paxtest
178
179What is cscope and how do we use it?
180====================================
181
182Now let’s look at `cscope <https://cscope.sourceforge.net/>`_, a command
183line tool for browsing C, C++ or Java code-bases. We can use it to find
184all the references to a symbol, global definitions, functions called by a
185function, functions calling a function, text strings, regular expression
186patterns, files including a file.
187
188We can use cscope to find which system call belongs to which subsystem.
189This way we can find the kernel subsystems used by a process when it is
190executed.
191
192Let’s checkout the latest Linux repository and build cscope database::
193
194  git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git linux
195  cd linux
196  cscope -R -p10  # builds cscope.out database before starting browse session
197  cscope -d -p10  # starts browse session on cscope.out database
198
199Note: Run "cscope -R -p10" to build the database and c"scope -d -p10" to
200enter into the browsing session. cscope by default cscope.out database.
201To get out of this mode press ctrl+d. -p option is used to specify the
202number of file path components to display. -p10 is optimal for browsing
203kernel sources.
204
205What is perf and how do we use it?
206==================================
207
208Perf is an analysis tool based on Linux 2.6+ systems, which abstracts the
209CPU hardware difference in performance measurement in Linux, and provides
210a simple command line interface. Perf is based on the perf_events interface
211exported by the kernel. It is very useful for profiling the system and
212finding performance bottlenecks in an application.
213
214If you haven't already checked out the Linux mainline repository, you can do
215so and then build kernel and perf tool::
216
217  git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git linux
218  cd linux
219  make -j3 all
220  cd tools/perf
221  make
222
223Note: The perf command can be built without building the kernel in the
224repository and can be run on older kernels. However matching the kernel
225and perf revisions gives more accurate information on the subsystem usage.
226
227We used "perf stat" and "perf bench" options. For a detailed information on
228the perf tool, run "perf -h".
229
230perf stat
231---------
232The perf stat command generates a report of various hardware and software
233events. It does so with the help of hardware counter registers found in
234modern CPUs that keep the count of these activities. "perf stat cal" shows
235stats for cal command.
236
237Perf bench
238----------
239The perf bench command contains multiple multi-threaded microkernel
240benchmarks for executing different subsystems in the Linux kernel and
241system calls. This allows us to easily measure the impact of changes,
242which can help mitigate performance regressions. It also acts as a common
243benchmarking framework, enabling developers to easily create test cases,
244integrate transparently, and use performance-rich tooling.
245
246"perf bench all" command runs the following benchmarks:
247
248 * sched/messaging
249 * sched/pipe
250 * syscall/basic
251 * mem/memcpy
252 * mem/memset
253
254What is stress-ng and how do we use it?
255=======================================
256
257As mentioned earlier, stress-ng is used for performing stress testing on
258the kernel. It allows you to exercise various physical subsystems of the
259computer, as well as interfaces of the OS kernel, using stressor-s. They
260are available for CPU, CPU cache, devices, I/O, interrupts, file system,
261memory, network, operating system, pipelines, schedulers, and virtual
262machines.
263
264The netdev stressor starts N workers that exercise various netdevice ioctl
265commands across all the available network devices. The following ioctls are
266exercised:
267
268 * SIOCGIFCONF, SIOCGIFINDEX, SIOCGIFNAME, SIOCGIFFLAGS
269 * SIOCGIFADDR, SIOCGIFNETMASK, SIOCGIFMETRIC, SIOCGIFMTU
270 * SIOCGIFHWADDR, SIOCGIFMAP, SIOCGIFTXQLEN
271
272The following command runs the stressor::
273
274  stress-ng --netdev 1 -t 60 --metrics command.
275
276We can use the perf record command to record the events and information
277associated with a process. This command records the profiling data in the
278perf.data file in the same directory.
279
280Using the following commands you can record the events associated with the
281netdev stressor, view the generated report perf.data and annotate the to
282view the statistics of each instruction of the program::
283
284  perf record stress-ng --netdev 1 -t 60 --metrics command.
285  perf report
286  perf annotate
287
288What is paxtest and how do we use it?
289=====================================
290
291paxtest is a program that tests buffer overflows in the kernel. It tests
292kernel enforcements over memory usage. Generally, execution in some memory
293segments makes buffer overflows possible. It runs a set of programs that
294attempt to subvert memory usage. It is used as a regression test suite for
295PaX, and will be useful to test other memory protection patches for the
296kernel.
297
298paxtest provides kiddie and blackhat modes. The paxtest kiddie mode runs
299in normal mode, whereas the blackhat mode tries to get around the protection
300of the kernel testing for vulnerabilities. We focus on the kiddie mode here
301and combine "paxtest kiddie" run with "perf record" to collect CPU stack
302traces for the paxtest kiddie run to see which function is calling other
303functions in the performance profile. Then the "dwarf" (DWARF's Call Frame
304Information) mode can be used to unwind the stack.
305
306The following command can be used to view resulting report in call-graph
307format::
308
309  perf record --call-graph dwarf paxtest kiddie
310  perf report --stdio
311
312Tracing workloads
313=================
314
315Now that we understand the workloads, let's start tracing them.
316
317Tracing perf bench all workload
318-------------------------------
319
320Run the following command to trace perf bench all workload::
321
322 strace -c perf bench all
323
324**System Calls made by the workload**
325
326The below table shows the system calls invoked by the workload, number of
327times each system call is invoked, and the corresponding Linux subsystem.
328
329+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
330| System Call       | # calls   | Linux Subsystem | System Call (API)       |
331+===================+===========+=================+=========================+
332| getppid           | 10000001  | Process Mgmt    | sys_getpid()            |
333+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
334| clone             | 1077      | Process Mgmt.   | sys_clone()             |
335+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
336| prctl             | 23        | Process Mgmt.   | sys_prctl()             |
337+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
338| prlimit64         | 7         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_prlimit64()         |
339+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
340| getpid            | 10        | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getpid()            |
341+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
342| uname             | 3         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_uname()             |
343+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
344| sysinfo           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_sysinfo()           |
345+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
346| getuid            | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getuid()            |
347+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
348| getgid            | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getgid()            |
349+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
350| geteuid           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_geteuid()           |
351+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
352| getegid           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getegid             |
353+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
354| close             | 49951     | Filesystem      | sys_close()             |
355+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
356| pipe              | 604       | Filesystem      | sys_pipe()              |
357+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
358| openat            | 48560     | Filesystem      | sys_opennat()           |
359+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
360| fstat             | 8338      | Filesystem      | sys_fstat()             |
361+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
362| stat              | 1573      | Filesystem      | sys_stat()              |
363+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
364| pread64           | 9646      | Filesystem      | sys_pread64()           |
365+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
366| getdents64        | 1873      | Filesystem      | sys_getdents64()        |
367+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
368| access            | 3         | Filesystem      | sys_access()            |
369+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
370| lstat             | 1880      | Filesystem      | sys_lstat()             |
371+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
372| lseek             | 6         | Filesystem      | sys_lseek()             |
373+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
374| ioctl             | 3         | Filesystem      | sys_ioctl()             |
375+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
376| dup2              | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_dup2()              |
377+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
378| execve            | 2         | Filesystem      | sys_execve()            |
379+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
380| fcntl             | 8779      | Filesystem      | sys_fcntl()             |
381+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
382| statfs            | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_statfs()            |
383+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
384| epoll_create      | 2         | Filesystem      | sys_epoll_create()      |
385+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
386| epoll_ctl         | 64        | Filesystem      | sys_epoll_ctl()         |
387+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
388| newfstatat        | 8318      | Filesystem      | sys_newfstatat()        |
389+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
390| eventfd2          | 192       | Filesystem      | sys_eventfd2()          |
391+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
392| mmap              | 243       | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_mmap()              |
393+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
394| mprotect          | 32        | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_mprotect()          |
395+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
396| brk               | 21        | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_brk()               |
397+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
398| munmap            | 128       | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_munmap()            |
399+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
400| set_mempolicy     | 156       | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_set_mempolicy()     |
401+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
402| set_tid_address   | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_set_tid_address()   |
403+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
404| set_robust_list   | 1         | Futex           | sys_set_robust_list()   |
405+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
406| futex             | 341       | Futex           | sys_futex()             |
407+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
408| sched_getaffinity | 79        | Scheduler       | sys_sched_getaffinity() |
409+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
410| sched_setaffinity | 223       | Scheduler       | sys_sched_setaffinity() |
411+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
412| socketpair        | 202       | Network         | sys_socketpair()        |
413+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
414| rt_sigprocmask    | 21        | Signal          | sys_rt_sigprocmask()    |
415+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
416| rt_sigaction      | 36        | Signal          | sys_rt_sigaction()      |
417+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
418| rt_sigreturn      | 2         | Signal          | sys_rt_sigreturn()      |
419+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
420| wait4             | 889       | Time            | sys_wait4()             |
421+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
422| clock_nanosleep   | 37        | Time            | sys_clock_nanosleep()   |
423+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
424| capget            | 4         | Capability      | sys_capget()            |
425+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
426
427Tracing stress-ng netdev stressor workload
428------------------------------------------
429
430Run the following command to trace stress-ng netdev stressor workload::
431
432  strace -c  stress-ng --netdev 1 -t 60 --metrics
433
434**System Calls made by the workload**
435
436The below table shows the system calls invoked by the workload, number of
437times each system call is invoked, and the corresponding Linux subsystem.
438
439+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
440| System Call       | # calls   | Linux Subsystem | System Call (API)       |
441+===================+===========+=================+=========================+
442| openat            | 74        | Filesystem      | sys_openat()            |
443+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
444| close             | 75        | Filesystem      | sys_close()             |
445+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
446| read              | 58        | Filesystem      | sys_read()              |
447+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
448| fstat             | 20        | Filesystem      | sys_fstat()             |
449+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
450| flock             | 10        | Filesystem      | sys_flock()             |
451+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
452| write             | 7         | Filesystem      | sys_write()             |
453+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
454| getdents64        | 8         | Filesystem      | sys_getdents64()        |
455+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
456| pread64           | 8         | Filesystem      | sys_pread64()           |
457+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
458| lseek             | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_lseek()             |
459+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
460| access            | 2         | Filesystem      | sys_access()            |
461+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
462| getcwd            | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_getcwd()            |
463+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
464| execve            | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_execve()            |
465+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
466| mmap              | 61        | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_mmap()              |
467+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
468| munmap            | 3         | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_munmap()            |
469+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
470| mprotect          | 20        | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_mprotect()          |
471+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
472| mlock             | 2         | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_mlock()             |
473+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
474| brk               | 3         | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_brk()               |
475+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
476| rt_sigaction      | 21        | Signal          | sys_rt_sigaction()      |
477+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
478| rt_sigprocmask    | 1         | Signal          | sys_rt_sigprocmask()    |
479+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
480| sigaltstack       | 1         | Signal          | sys_sigaltstack()       |
481+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
482| rt_sigreturn      | 1         | Signal          | sys_rt_sigreturn()      |
483+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
484| getpid            | 8         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getpid()            |
485+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
486| prlimit64         | 5         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_prlimit64()         |
487+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
488| arch_prctl        | 2         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_arch_prctl()        |
489+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
490| sysinfo           | 2         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_sysinfo()           |
491+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
492| getuid            | 2         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getuid()            |
493+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
494| uname             | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_uname()             |
495+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
496| setpgid           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_setpgid()           |
497+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
498| getrusage         | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getrusage()         |
499+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
500| geteuid           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_geteuid()           |
501+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
502| getppid           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getppid()           |
503+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
504| sendto            | 3         | Network         | sys_sendto()            |
505+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
506| connect           | 1         | Network         | sys_connect()           |
507+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
508| socket            | 1         | Network         | sys_socket()            |
509+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
510| clone             | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_clone()             |
511+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
512| set_tid_address   | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_set_tid_address()   |
513+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
514| wait4             | 2         | Time            | sys_wait4()             |
515+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
516| alarm             | 1         | Time            | sys_alarm()             |
517+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
518| set_robust_list   | 1         | Futex           | sys_set_robust_list()   |
519+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+-------------------------+
520
521Tracing paxtest kiddie workload
522-------------------------------
523
524Run the following command to trace paxtest kiddie workload::
525
526 strace -c paxtest kiddie
527
528**System Calls made by the workload**
529
530The below table shows the system calls invoked by the workload, number of
531times each system call is invoked, and the corresponding Linux subsystem.
532
533+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
534| System Call       | # calls   | Linux Subsystem | System Call (API)    |
535+===================+===========+=================+======================+
536| read              | 3         | Filesystem      | sys_read()           |
537+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
538| write             | 11        | Filesystem      | sys_write()          |
539+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
540| close             | 41        | Filesystem      | sys_close()          |
541+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
542| stat              | 24        | Filesystem      | sys_stat()           |
543+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
544| fstat             | 2         | Filesystem      | sys_fstat()          |
545+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
546| pread64           | 6         | Filesystem      | sys_pread64()        |
547+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
548| access            | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_access()         |
549+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
550| pipe              | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_pipe()           |
551+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
552| dup2              | 24        | Filesystem      | sys_dup2()           |
553+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
554| execve            | 1         | Filesystem      | sys_execve()         |
555+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
556| fcntl             | 26        | Filesystem      | sys_fcntl()          |
557+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
558| openat            | 14        | Filesystem      | sys_openat()         |
559+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
560| rt_sigaction      | 7         | Signal          | sys_rt_sigaction()   |
561+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
562| rt_sigreturn      | 38        | Signal          | sys_rt_sigreturn()   |
563+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
564| clone             | 38        | Process Mgmt.   | sys_clone()          |
565+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
566| wait4             | 44        | Time            | sys_wait4()          |
567+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
568| mmap              | 7         | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_mmap()           |
569+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
570| mprotect          | 3         | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_mprotect()       |
571+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
572| munmap            | 1         | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_munmap()         |
573+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
574| brk               | 3         | Memory Mgmt.    | sys_brk()            |
575+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
576| getpid            | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getpid()         |
577+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
578| getuid            | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getuid()         |
579+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
580| getgid            | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getgid()         |
581+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
582| geteuid           | 2         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_geteuid()        |
583+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
584| getegid           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getegid()        |
585+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
586| getppid           | 1         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_getppid()        |
587+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
588| arch_prctl        | 2         | Process Mgmt.   | sys_arch_prctl()     |
589+-------------------+-----------+-----------------+----------------------+
590
591Conclusion
592==========
593
594This document is intended to be used as a guide on how to gather fine-grained
595information on the resources in use by workloads using strace.
596
597References
598==========
599
600 * `Discovery Linux Kernel Subsystems used by OpenAPS <https://elisa.tech/blog/2022/02/02/discovery-linux-kernel-subsystems-used-by-openaps>`_
601 * `ELISA-White-Papers-Discovering Linux kernel subsystems used by a workload <https://github.com/elisa-tech/ELISA-White-Papers/blob/master/Processes/Discovering_Linux_kernel_subsystems_used_by_a_workload.md>`_
602 * `strace <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/strace.1.html>`_
603 * `perf <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/perf.1.html>`_
604 * `paxtest README <https://github.com/opntr/paxtest-freebsd/blob/hardenedbsd/0.9.14-hbsd/README>`_
605 * `stress-ng <https://www.mankier.com/1/stress-ng>`_
606 * `Monitoring and managing system status and performance <https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/monitoring_and_managing_system_status_and_performance/index>`_
607