source: gpfs_3.1_ker2.6.20/share/man/man8/mmpmon.8 @ 84

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1.TH mmpmon 02/16/06
2mmpmon Command
3.SH "Name"
4.PP
5\fBmmpmon\fR - Manages performance monitoring and displays
6performance information.
7.SH "Synopsis"
8.PP
9\fBmmpmon\fR [\fB-i\fR \fICommandFile\fR]
10[\fB-d\fR \fIIntegerDelayValue\fR] [\fB-p\fR]
11[\fB-r\fR \fIIntegerRepeatValue\fR] [\fB-s\fR]
12[\fB-t\fR \fIIntegerTimeoutValue\fR]
13.SH "Description"
14.PP
15Before attempting to use \fBmmpmon\fR, IBM suggests that you
16review this command entry, then read the entire chapter,
17\fIMonitoring GPFS I/O performance with the mmpmon
18command\fR in
19\fIGeneral Parallel File
20System: Advanced Administration Guide\fR.
21.PP
22Use the \fBmmpmon\fR command to manage GPFS performance monitoring
23functions and display performance monitoring data. The \fBmmpmon\fR
24command reads requests from an input file or standard input (stdin), and
25writes responses to standard output (stdout). Error messages go to
26standard error (stderr). Prompts, if not suppressed, go to
27stderr.
28.PP
29When running \fBmmpmon\fR in such a way that it continually reads input
30from a pipe (the driving script or application never intends to send an
31end-of-file to \fBmmpmon\fR), set the \fB-r\fR option value to 1 (or use
32the default value of 1) to prevent \fBmmpmon\fR from caching the input
33records. This avoids unnecessary memory consumption.
34.PP
35\fBResults\fR
36.PP
37The performance monitoring request is sent to the GPFS daemon running on
38the same node that is running the \fBmmpmon\fR command.
39.PP
40All results from the request are written to stdout.
41.PP
42There are two output formats:
43.RS +3
44.HP 3
45\(bu Human readable, intended for direct viewing.
46.sp
47In this format, the results are keywords that describe the value presented,
48followed by the value. For example:
49.sp
50.nf
51disks: 2
52.fi
53.sp
54.HP 3
55\(bu Machine readable, an easily parsed format intended for further analysis by
56scripts or applications.
57.sp
58In this format, the results are strings with values presented as
59keyword/value pairs. The keywords are delimited by underscores (_) and
60blanks to make them easier to locate.
61.RE
62.PP
63For details on how to interpret the \fBmmpmon\fR command results,
64see
65\fIMonitoring GPFS I/O performance with the
66mmpmon command\fR in
67\fIGeneral
68Parallel File System: Advanced Administration
69Guide\fR.
70.SH "Parameters"
71.PP
72.RS +3
73\fB-i \fICommandFile\fR
74\fR
75.RE
76.RS +9
77The input file contains \fBmmpmon\fR command requests, one per
78line. Use of the \fB-i\fR flag implies use of the \fB-s\fR
79flag. For interactive use, just omit the \fB-i\fR flag. In
80this case, the input is then read from stdin, allowing \fBmmpmon\fR to take
81keyboard input or output piped from a user script or application
82program.
83.PP
84Leading blanks in the input file are ignored. A line beginning with
85a pound sign (#) is treated as a comment. Leading blanks in a line
86whose first non-blank character is a pound sign (#) are ignored.
87.PP
88This table describes the \fBmmpmon\fR requests.
89.br
90.PP
91\fBTable 7. Input requests to the mmpmon command\fR
92.br
93.sp
94.RS +0.1i
95.nf
96.TS
97tab(~);
98 l l.
99Request                             Description
100--------------------------------------------------------
101fs_io_s                 Display I/O statistics
102                        per mounted file system
103io_s                    Display I/O statistics
104                        for the entire node
105nlist add \fIname\fR[\fIname\fR...] Add node names to a list
106                        of nodes for processing
107nlist del               Delete a node list
108nlist new \fIname\fR[\fIname\fR...] Create a new node list
109nlist s                 Show the contents of the
110                        current node list
111nlist sub \fIname\fR[\fIname\fR...] Delete node names from a
112                        list of nodes for processing
113once \fIrequest\fR            Indicates that the request
114                        is to be performed only once
115reset                   Reset statistics to zero
116rhist nr                Change the request histogram
117                        facility request size and
118                        latency ranges
119rhist off               Disable the request histogram
120                        facility. This is the default.
121rhist on                Enable the request histogram
122                        facility
123rhist p                 Display the request histogram
124                        facility pattern
125rhist reset             Reset the request histogram
126                        facility data to zero
127rhist s                 Display the request histogram
128                        facility statistics values
129source \fIfilename\fR         Read \fBmmpmon\fR requests from
130                        a file
131ver                     Display \fBmmpmon\fR version
132.TE
133.sp
134.fi
135.RE
136.RE
137.SH "Options"
138.PP
139.RS +3
140\fB-d \fIIntegerDelayValue\fR
141\fR
142.RE
143.RS +9
144Specifies a number of milliseconds to sleep after one invocation of all
145the requests in the input file. The default value is 1000. This
146value must be an integer greater than or equal to 500 and less than or equal
147to 8000000.
148.PP
149The input file is processed as follows: The first request is
150processed, it is sent to the GPFS daemon, the responses for this request are
151received and processed, the results for this request are displayed, and then
152the next request is processed and so forth. When all requests from the
153input file have been processed once, the \fBmmpmon\fR command sleeps for
154the specified number of milliseconds. When this time elapses,
155\fBmmpmon\fR wakes up and processes the input file again, depending on the
156value of the \fB-r\fR flag.
157.RE
158.PP
159.RS +3
160\fB-p
161\fR
162.RE
163.RS +9
164Indicates to generate output that can be parsed by a script or
165program. If this option is not specified, human readable output is
166produced.
167.RE
168.PP
169.RS +3
170\fB-r \fIIntegerRepeatValue\fR
171\fR
172.RE
173.RS +9
174Specifies the number of times to run all the requests in the input
175file.
176.PP
177The default value is one. Specify an integer between zero and
1788000000. Zero means to run forever, in which case processing continues
179until it is interrupted. This feature is used, for example, by a
180driving script or application program that repeatedly reads the result from a
181pipe.
182.PP
183The \fBonce\fR prefix directive can be used to override the
184\fB-r\fR flag. See the description of \fBonce\fR in
185\fIMonitoring GPFS I/O performance with the mmpmon
186command\fR in
187\fIGeneral Parallel File
188System: Advanced Administration Guide\fR.
189.RE
190.PP
191.RS +3
192\fB-s
193\fR
194.RE
195.RS +9
196Indicates to suppress the prompt on input.
197.PP
198Use of the \fB-i\fR flag implies use of the \fB-s\fR flag. For
199use in a pipe or with redirected input (<), the \fB-s\fR flag is
200preferred. If not suppressed, the prompts go to standard error
201(stderr).
202.RE
203.PP
204.RS +3
205\fB-t \fIIntegerTimeoutValue\fR
206\fR
207.RE
208.RS +9
209Specifies a number of seconds to wait for responses from the GPFS daemon
210before considering the connection to have failed.
211.PP
212The default value is 60. This value must be an integer greater than
213or equal to 1 and less than or equal to 8000000.
214.RE
215.SH "Exit status"
216.PP
217.PP
218.RS +3
219\fB0
220\fR
221.RE
222.RS +9
223Successful completion.
224.RE
225.PP
226.RS +3
227\fB1
228\fR
229.RE
230.RS +9
231Various errors (insufficient memory, input file not found, incorrect
232option, and so forth).
233.RE
234.PP
235.RS +3
236\fB3
237\fR
238.RE
239.RS +9
240Either no commands were entered interactively, or there were no
241\fBmmpmon\fR commands in the input file. The input file was empty,
242or consisted of all blanks or comments.
243.RE
244.PP
245.RS +3
246\fB4
247\fR
248.RE
249.RS +9
250\fBmmpmon\fR terminated due to a request that was not valid.
251.RE
252.PP
253.RS +3
254\fB5
255\fR
256.RE
257.RS +9
258An internal error has occurred.
259.RE
260.PP
261.RS +3
262\fB111
263\fR
264.RE
265.RS +9
266An internal error has occurred. A message will follow.
267.RE
268.PP
269\fBRestrictions\fR
270.RS +3
271.HP 3
2721. Up to five instances of \fBmmpmon\fR may be run on a given node
273concurrently. However, concurrent users may interfere with each
274other. See
275\fIMonitoring GPFS I/O
276performance with the mmpmon command\fR in
277\fIGeneral Parallel File System: Advanced
278Administration Guide\fR.
279.HP 3
2802. Do not alter the input file while \fBmmpmon\fR is running.
281.HP 3
2823. The input file must contain valid input requests, one per line.
283When an incorrect request is detected by \fBmmpmon\fR, it issues an error
284message and terminates. Input requests that appear in the input file
285before the first incorrect request are processed by \fBmmpmon\fR.
286.RE
287.SH "Security"
288.PP
289The \fBmmpmon\fR command must be run by a user with root authority, on
290the node for which statistics are desired.
291.SH "Examples"
292.RS +3
293.HP 3
2941. Assume that \fBinfile\fR contains these requests:
295.sp
296.nf
297ver
298io_s
299fs_io_s
300rhist off
301.fi
302.sp
303and this command is issued:
304.sp
305.nf
306mmpmon -i infile -r 10 -d 5000
307.fi
308.sp
309The output (sent to stdout) is similar to this:
310.sp
311.nf
312mmpmon node 192.168.1.8 name node1 version 3.1.0
313mmpmon node 192.168.1.8 name node1 io_s OK
314timestamp:      1083350358/935524
315bytes read:              0
316bytes written:           0
317opens:                   0
318closes:                  0
319reads:                   0
320writes:                  0
321readdir:                 0
322inode updates:           0
323mmpmon node 192.168.1.8 name node1 fs_io_s status 1
324no file systems mounted
325mmpmon node 192.168.1.8 name node1 rhist off OK
326.fi
327.sp
328.sp
329The requests in the input file are run 10 times, with a delay of 5000
330milliseconds (5 seconds) between invocations.
331.HP 3
3322. Here is the previous example with the \fB-p\fR flag:
333.sp
334.nf
335mmpmon -i infile -p -r 10 -d 5000
336.fi
337.sp
338The output (sent to stdout) is similar to this:
339.sp
340.nf
341_ver_ _n_ 192.168.1.8 _nn_ node1 _v_ 2 _lv_ 3 _vt_ 0
342_io_s_ _n_ 192.168.1.8 _nn_ node1 _rc_ 0 _t_ 1084195701 _tu_ 350714 _br_ 0 _bw_ 0 _oc_ 0
343     _cc_ 0 _rdc_ 0 _wc_ 0 _dir_ 0 _iu_ 0
344_fs_io_s_ _n_ 192.168.1.8 _nn_ node1 _rc_ 1 _t_ 1084195701 _tu_ 364489 _cl_ - _fs_ -_rhist_\
345     _n_ 192.168.1.8 _nn_ node1 _req_ off _rc_ 0 _t_ 1084195701 _tu_ 378217
346.fi
347.sp
348.HP 3
3493. This is an example of \fBfs_io_s\fR with a mounted file system:
350.sp
351.nf
352mmpmon node 198.168.1.8 name node1 fs_io_s OK
353cluster: node1.localdomain
354filesystem: gpfs1
355disks: 1
356timestamp: 1093352136/799285
357bytes read: 52428800
358bytes written: 87031808
359opens: 6
360closes: 4
361reads: 51
362writes: 83
363readdir: 0
364inode updates: 11
365mmpmon node 198.168.1.8 name node1 fs_io_s OK
366cluster: node1.localdomain
367filesystem: gpfs2
368disks: 2
369timestamp: 1093352136/799285
370bytes read: 87031808
371bytes written: 52428800
372opens: 4
373closes: 3
374reads: 12834
375writes: 50
376readdir: 0
377inode updates: 9
378.fi
379.sp
380.HP 3
3814. Here is the previous example with the \fB-p\fR flag:
382.sp
383.nf
384_fs_io_s_ _n_ 198.168.1.8 _nn_ node1 _rc_ 0 _t_ 1093352061 _tu_ 93867 _cl_ node1.localdomain
385 _fs_ gpfs1 _d_ 1 _br_ 52428800 _bw_ 87031808 _oc_ 6 _cc_ 4 _rdc_ 51 _wc_ 83 _dir_ 0 _iu_ 10
386_fs_io_s_ _n_ 198.168.1.8 _nn_ node1 _rc_ 0 _t_ 1093352061 _tu_ 93867 _cl_ node1.localdomain
387  _fs_ gpfs2 _d_ 2 _br_ 87031808 _bw_ 52428800 _oc_ 4 _cc_ 3 _rdc_ 12834 _wc_ 50 _dir_ 0 _iu_ 8
388.fi
389.sp
390This output consists of two strings.
391.HP 3
3925. This is an example of \fBio_s\fR with a mounted file system:
393.sp
394.nf
395mmpmon node 198.168.1.8 name node1 io_s OK
396timestamp: 1093351951/587570
397bytes read: 139460608
398bytes written: 139460608
399opens: 10
400closes: 7
401reads: 12885
402writes: 133
403readdir: 0
404inode updates: 14
405.fi
406.sp
407.HP 3
4086. Here is the previous example with the \fB-p\fR flag:
409.sp
410.nf
411_io_s_ _n_ 198.168.1.8 _nn_ node1 _rc_ 0 _t_ 1093351982 _tu_ 356420 _br_ 139460608\
412 _bw_ 139460608 _oc_ 10 _cc_ 7 _rdc_ 0 _wc_ 133 _dir_ 0 _iu_ 14
413.fi
414.sp
415This output consists of one string.
416.RE
417.PP
418For several more examples, see
419\fIMonitoring GPFS I/O performance with the mmpmon
420command\fR in
421\fIGeneral Parallel File
422System: Advanced Administration Guide\fR.
423.SH "Location"
424.PP
425\fB/usr/lpp/mmfs/bin\fR
426.PP
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