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hardirqs(8) System Manager's Manual hardirqs(8)

NAME

hardirqs - Measure hard IRQ (hard interrupt) event time. Uses Linux eBPF/bcc.

SYNOPSIS

hardirqs [-h] [-T] [-N] [-C] [-d] [interval] [outputs]

DESCRIPTION

This summarizes the time spent servicing hard IRQs (hard interrupts), and can show this time as either totals or histogram distributions. A system-wide summary of this time is shown by the %irq column of mpstat(1), and event counts (but not times) are shown by /proc/interrupts.

WARNING: This currently uses dynamic tracing of hard interrupts. You should understand what this means before use. Try in a test environment. Future versions should switch to tracepoints.

Since this uses BPF, only the root user can use this tool.

REQUIREMENTS

CONFIG_BPF and bcc.

OPTIONS

-h
Print usage message.
-T
Include timestamps on output.
-N
Output in nanoseconds.
-C
Count events only.
-d
Show IRQ time distribution as histograms.

EXAMPLES

Sum hard IRQ event time until Ctrl-C:
# hardirqs
Show hard IRQ event time as histograms:
# hardirqs -d
Print 1 second summaries, 10 times:
# hardirqs 1 10
1 second summaries, printed in nanoseconds, with timestamps:
# hardirqs -NT 1

FIELDS

HARDIRQ
The irq action name for this hard IRQ.
TOTAL_usecs
Total time spent in this hard IRQ in microseconds.
TOTAL_nsecs
Total time spent in this hard IRQ in nanoseconds.
usecs
Range of microseconds for this bucket.
nsecs
Range of nanoseconds for this bucket.
count
Number of hard IRQs in this time range.
distribution
ASCII representation of the distribution (the count column).

OVERHEAD

This traces kernel functions and maintains in-kernel counts, which are asynchronously copied to user-space. While the rate of interrupts be very high (>1M/sec), this is a relatively efficient way to trace these events, and so the overhead is expected to be small for normal workloads, but could become noticeable for heavy workloads. Measure in a test environment before use.

SOURCE

This is from bcc.
https://github.com/iovisor/bcc

Also look in the bcc distribution for a companion _examples.txt file containing example usage, output, and commentary for this tool.

OS

Linux

STABILITY

Unstable - in development.

AUTHOR

Brendan Gregg

SEE ALSO

softirqs(8)
2015-10-20 USER COMMANDS