4.3.5. Tracking Most Frequently Used System Calls
timeout.stp from Section 4.3.4, “Monitoring Polling Applications” helps you identify which applications are polling by pointing out which ones used the following system calls most frequently:
poll
select
epoll
itimer
futex
nanosleep
signal
However, in some systems, a different system call might be responsible for excessive polling. If you suspect that a polling application is using a different system call to poll, you need to identify first the top system calls used by the system. To do this, use topsys.stp.
topsys.stp
#! /usr/bin/env stap # # This script continuously lists the top 20 systemcalls in the interval # 5 seconds # global syscalls_count probe syscall.* { syscalls_count[name]++ } function print_systop () { printf ("%25s %10s\n", "SYSCALL", "COUNT") foreach (syscall in syscalls_count- limit 20) { printf("%25s %10d\n", syscall, syscalls_count[syscall]) } delete syscalls_count } probe timer.s(5) { print_systop () printf("--------------------------------------------------------------\n") }
topsys.stp lists the top 20 system calls used by the system per 5-second interval. It also lists how many times each system call was used during that period. Refer to Example 4.15, “topsys.stp Sample Output” for a sample output.
Example 4.15. topsys.stp Sample Output
-------------------------------------------------------------- SYSCALL COUNT gettimeofday 1857 read 1821 ioctl 1568 poll 1033 close 638 open 503 select 455 write 391 writev 335 futex 303 recvmsg 251 socket 137 clock_gettime 124 rt_sigprocmask 121 sendto 120 setitimer 106 stat 90 time 81 sigreturn 72 fstat 66 --------------------------------------------------------------