Provided by: bpftrace_0.17.0-1_amd64
NAME
biolatency.bt - Block I/O latency as a histogram. Uses bpftrace/eBPF.
SYNOPSIS
biolatency.bt
DESCRIPTION
This tool summarizes time (latency) spent in block device I/O (disk I/O) as a power-of-2 histogram. This allows the distribution to be studied, including modes and outliers. There are often two modes, one for device cache hits and one for cache misses, which can be shown by this tool. Latency outliers will also be shown. This tool currently works by dynamic tracing of the blk_account*() kernel functions, which will need updating to match any changes to these functions in future kernels versions. Since this uses BPF, only the root user can use this tool.
REQUIREMENTS
CONFIG_BPF and bpftrace.
EXAMPLES
Trace block device I/O (disk I/O), and print a latency histogram on Ctrl-C: # biolatency.bt
FIELDS
1st, 2nd This is a range of latency, in microseconds (shown in "[...)" set notation). 3rd A column showing the count of operations in this range. 4th This is an ASCII histogram representing the count column.
OVERHEAD
Since block device I/O usually has a relatively low frequency (< 10,000/s), the overhead for this tool is expected to be negligible. For high IOPS storage systems, test and quantify before use.
SOURCE
This is from bpftrace. https://github.com/iovisor/bpftrace Also look in the bpftrace distribution for a companion _examples.txt file containing example usage, output, and commentary for this tool. This is a bpftrace version of the bcc tool of the same name. The bcc tool may provide more options and customizations. https://github.com/iovisor/bcc
OS
Linux
STABILITY
Unstable - in development.
AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg
SEE ALSO
biosnoop.bt(8)