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vmtouch.pod

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NAME

vmtouch - the Virtual Memory Toucher

SYNOPSIS

vmtouch [OPTIONS] ... FILES OR DIRECTORIES ...

DESCRIPTION

Portable file system cache diagnostics and control.

vmtouch opens every file provided on the command line and maps it into virtual memory with mmap(2). The mappings are opened read-only. It recursively crawls any directories and does the same to all files it finds within them.

With no options, vmtouch will not read from (touch) any memory pages. It will only use mincore(2) to determine how many pages of each file are actually resident in memory. Before exiting, it will print a summary of the total pages encountered and how many were resident.

-t

Touch virtual memory pages. Reads a byte from each page of the file. If the page is not resident in memory, a page fault will be generated and the page will be read from disk into the file system's memory cache.

Note: Although each page is guaranteed to have been brought into memory, the page might be evicted from memory by the time the vmtouch command completes.

-e

Evict the mapped pages from the file system cache. They will need to be read in from disk the next time they are accessed. This is the inverse of -t.

Note: Even if the eviction is successful, pages may be paged back into memory by the time the vmtouch command completes.

Note: This option is not portable to all systems. See PORTABILITY below.

-l

Lock pages into physical memory. This option works the same as -t except it calls mlock(2) on all the memory mappings and doesn't close the descriptors when finished. At the end of the crawl, if successful, vmtouch will block indefinitely. The files will be locked in physical memory until the vmtouch process is killed.

Note: While the vmtouch process is holding memory locks, any processes that access the locked pages will not cause non-resident page faults or address-translation faults although they may still cause TLB misses.

Note: Because vmtouch holds file descriptors open it may reach the RLIMIT_NOFILE process file descriptor limit. In this case it will try to increase the descriptor limit which will only work if the process is run with root privileges. Similarly, root privileges are required to exceed the RLIMIT_MEMLOCK limit. Even with root privileges, -l is limited by both the system file descriptor limit and the system limit on "wired memory".

-L

This option is the same as -l except that it uses mlockall(2) at the end of the crawl rather than individually mlock(2)ing each file. Because of this, other unrelated pages belonging to the vmtouch process will also be locked in memory.

-d

Daemon mode. After performing the crawl, disassociate from the terminal and run in the background as a daemon. This option can only be used with the -l or -L locking modes.

-m <max file size>

Maximum file size to map into virtual memory. Files that are larger than this will be skipped. Examples: 4096, 4k, 100M, 1.5G. The default is 500M.

-p <size range> or <size>

Page mode. Maps the portion of the file specified by a range instead of the entire file. Size format same as for -m. Omitted range start (end) value means start (end) of file. Single <size> value is equivalent to -<size>, i.e. map the first <size> bytes. Examples: 4k-50k, 100M-2G, -5M, -.

-f

Follow symbolic links. With this option, vmtouch will descend into symbolic links that point to directories and will touch regular files pointed to by symbolic links. Symbolic link loops are detected and issue warnings.

-F

During the crawl, don't recurse into directories that have separate filesystems mounted on them. This is handy to avoid accidentally touching other filesystems that have been mounted underneath your target directory.

-i <pattern>

Can be specified multiple times. Ignores files and directories that match any of the provided patterns. The pattern may include wildcards (remember to escape them from your shell). This option stops the crawl, so can be used to ignore directories and all their contents. Example: vmtouch -i .git -i '*.bak' .

-I <pattern>

Can be specified multiple times. Only processes filenames matching one or more of the provided patterns. The pattern may include wildcards (remember to escape them from your shell). Example: vmtouch -I '*.c' -I '*.h' .

-b <list file>

The list of files/directories to crawl is read from the specified list file, which by default should be a newline-separated list, for example the output from the find command. If the list file is "-" then this list is read from standard input. Example: find /usr/lib -type f | vmtouch -b -

-0

If -b ("batch mode") is in effect, assume the list file is delimited with NUL bytes instead of newlines, for example the output from find -print0. This is useful in case your filenames contain newline characters themselves.

-P <pidfile>

Create a PID file. This option can only be provided in combination with -l or -L. The PID file will be automatically deleted when vmtouch gets a termination signal (SIGINT, SIGTERM, SIGQUIT).

-v

Verbose mode. While crawling, print out every file being processed along with its total number of pages and the number of its pages that are currently resident in memory to standard output.

-q

Quiet mode. Suppress the end of crawl summary and all warnings that are normally printed to standard error. On success print nothing. Fatal errors print a single error message line to standard error.

-h

Normally, if multiple files both point to the same inode then vmtouch will ignore all but the first it finds so as to avoid double-counting their pages. This option overrides this behaviour and double-counts anyways.

PORTABILITY

The page residency summaries depend on mincore(2) which first appeared in 4.4BSD but is not present on all unix systems.

The -l and -L locking options depends on mlock(2) or mlockall(2), both of which are specified by POSIX.1b-1993, Real-Time Extensions.

The -e page eviction option is the least portable. On Linux it uses posix_fadvise(2) with POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED advice to inform the kernel that the file should be evicted from the file system cache. posix_fadvise(2) is specified by POSIX.1-2003 TC1. On FreeBSD, the pages are invalidated with msync(2)'s MS_INVALIDATE flag. msync(2) is specified by POSIX.1b-1993, Real-Time Extensions, although this call is not required to remove pages from the file system cache. Some systems like OpenBSD 4.3 don't have posix_fadvise(2), don't evict the pages on an msync(2)/MS_INVALIDATE, and don't evict the pages with madvise(2)/MADV_DONTNEED so -e isn't supported on those systems yet. Using -e on systems that don't yet support it is a fatal error.

SUPPORTED SYSTEMS

All vmtouch features have been confirmed to work on the following systems:

Linux 2.6+
FreeBSD 4.X
FreeBSD 7.X
Solaris 10
OS X 10.x
HP-UX 11.31+patches (see below)

Systems that support everything except eviction:

OpenBSD 4.3

CPUs that have been tested:

x86
amd64 (x86-64)
SPARC
ARMv7

We would like to support as many systems as possible so please send us any success reports, failure reports or patches. Thanks!

SYSTEM NOTES

Shane Seymour did the HP-UX port and says that either 32-bit or 64-bit binaries can be compiled (just use +DD64 for 64-bit). However, mincore(2) was added to HP-UX 11.31 via patches and at least the following patches need to be installed: PHKL_38651, PHKL_38708, PHKL_38686, PHKL_38688, and PHCO_38658 (or patches that supersede those ones).

SEE ALSO

Not all the following manual pages may exist in every unix dialect to which vmtouch has been ported.

vmstat(8), touch(1), mmap(2), mincore(2), mlock(2), mlockall(2), msync(2), madvise(2), posix_fadvise(2)

AUTHOR

Written by Doug Hoyte <doug@hcsw.org>