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I/O statistics fields---------------Last modified Sep 30, 2003Since 2.4.20 (and some versions before, with patches), and 2.5.45,more extensive disk statistics have been introduced to help measure diskactivity. Tools such as sar and iostat typically interpret these and dothe work for you, but in case you are interested in creating your owntools, the fields are explained here.In 2.4 now, the information is found as additional fields in/proc/partitions. In 2.6, the same information is found in twoplaces: one is in the file /proc/diskstats, and the other is withinthe sysfs file system, which must be mounted in order to obtainthe information. Throughout this document we'll assume that sysfsis mounted on /sys, although of course it may be mounted anywhere.Both /proc/diskstats and sysfs use the same source for the informationand so should not differ.Here are examples of these different formats:2.4:3 0 39082680 hda 446216 784926 9550688 4382310 424847 312726 5922052 19310380 0 3376340 237051603 1 9221278 hda1 35486 0 35496 38030 0 0 0 0 0 38030 380302.6 sysfs:446216 784926 9550688 4382310 424847 312726 5922052 19310380 0 3376340 2370516035486 38030 38030 380302.6 diskstats:3 0 hda 446216 784926 9550688 4382310 424847 312726 5922052 19310380 0 3376340 237051603 1 hda1 35486 38030 38030 38030On 2.4 you might execute "grep 'hda ' /proc/partitions". On 2.6, you havea choice of "cat /sys/block/hda/stat" or "grep 'hda ' /proc/diskstats".The advantage of one over the other is that the sysfs choice works wellif you are watching a known, small set of disks. /proc/diskstats maybe a better choice if you are watching a large number of disks becauseyou'll avoid the overhead of 50, 100, or 500 or more opens/closes witheach snapshot of your disk statistics.In 2.4, the statistics fields are those after the device name. Inthe above example, the first field of statistics would be 446216.By contrast, in 2.6 if you look at /sys/block/hda/stat, you'llfind just the eleven fields, beginning with 446216. If you look at/proc/diskstats, the eleven fields will be preceded by the major andminor device numbers, and device name. Each of these formats provideeleven fields of statistics, each meaning exactly the same things.All fields except field 9 are cumulative since boot. Field 9 shouldgo to zero as I/Os complete; all others only increase. Yes, these are32 bit unsigned numbers, and on a very busy or long-lived system theymay wrap. Applications should be prepared to deal with that; unlessyour observations are measured in large numbers of minutes or hours,they should not wrap twice before you notice them.Each set of stats only applies to the indicated device; if you wantsystem-wide stats you'll have to find all the devices and sum them all up.Field 1 -- # of reads issuedThis is the total number of reads completed successfully.Field 2 -- # of reads merged, field 6 -- # of writes mergedReads and writes which are adjacent to each other may be merged forefficiency. Thus two 4K reads may become one 8K read before it isultimately handed to the disk, and so it will be counted (and queued)as only one I/O. This field lets you know how often this was done.Field 3 -- # of sectors readThis is the total number of sectors read successfully.Field 4 -- # of milliseconds spent readingThis is the total number of milliseconds spent by all reads (asmeasured from __make_request() to end_that_request_last()).Field 5 -- # of writes completedThis is the total number of writes completed successfully.Field 7 -- # of sectors writtenThis is the total number of sectors written successfully.Field 8 -- # of milliseconds spent writingThis is the total number of milliseconds spent by all writes (asmeasured from __make_request() to end_that_request_last()).Field 9 -- # of I/Os currently in progressThe only field that should go to zero. Incremented as requests aregiven to appropriate struct request_queue and decremented as they finish.Field 10 -- # of milliseconds spent doing I/OsThis field is increases so long as field 9 is nonzero.Field 11 -- weighted # of milliseconds spent doing I/OsThis field is incremented at each I/O start, I/O completion, I/Omerge, or read of these stats by the number of I/Os in progress(field 9) times the number of milliseconds spent doing I/O since thelast update of this field. This can provide an easy measure of bothI/O completion time and the backlog that may be accumulating.To avoid introducing performance bottlenecks, no locks are held whilemodifying these counters. This implies that minor inaccuracies may beintroduced when changes collide, so (for instance) adding up all theread I/Os issued per partition should equal those made to the disks ...but due to the lack of locking it may only be very close.In 2.6, there are counters for each cpu, which made the lack of lockingalmost a non-issue. When the statistics are read, the per-cpu countersare summed (possibly overflowing the unsigned 32-bit variable they aresummed to) and the result given to the user. There is no convenientuser interface for accessing the per-cpu counters themselves.Disks vs Partitions-------------------There were significant changes between 2.4 and 2.6 in the I/O subsystem.As a result, some statistic information disappeared. The translation froma disk address relative to a partition to the disk address relative tothe host disk happens much earlier. All merges and timings now happenat the disk level rather than at both the disk and partition level asin 2.4. Consequently, you'll see a different statistics output on 2.6 forpartitions from that for disks. There are only *four* fields availablefor partitions on 2.6 machines. This is reflected in the examples above.Field 1 -- # of reads issuedThis is the total number of reads issued to this partition.Field 2 -- # of sectors readThis is the total number of sectors requested to be read from thispartition.Field 3 -- # of writes issuedThis is the total number of writes issued to this partition.Field 4 -- # of sectors writtenThis is the total number of sectors requested to be written tothis partition.Note that since the address is translated to a disk-relative one, and norecord of the partition-relative address is kept, the subsequent successor failure of the read cannot be attributed to the partition. In otherwords, the number of reads for partitions is counted slightly before timeof queuing for partitions, and at completion for whole disks. This isa subtle distinction that is probably uninteresting for most cases.Additional notes----------------In 2.6, sysfs is not mounted by default. If your distribution ofLinux hasn't added it already, here's the line you'll want to add toyour /etc/fstab:none /sys sysfs defaults 0 0In 2.6, all disk statistics were removed from /proc/stat. In 2.4, theyappear in both /proc/partitions and /proc/stat, although the ones in/proc/stat take a very different format from those in /proc/partitions(see proc(5), if your system has it.)-- ricklind@us.ibm.com
