cpupower-monitor(1)


NAME

   cpupower-monitor - Report processor frequency and idle statistics

SYNOPSIS

   cpupower monitor -l

   cpupower monitor [-c][-m <mon1>,[<mon2>,...]]  [-i seconds]
   cpupower monitor [-c][-m <mon1>,[<mon2>,...]]  command

DESCRIPTION

   cpupower-monitor   reports processor topology, frequency and idle power
   state statistics. Either command is forked and statistics  are  printed
   upon its completion, or statistics are printed periodically.

   cpupower-monitor   implements  independent  processor  sleep  state and
   frequency counters. Some are retrieved from kernel statistics, some are
   directly  reading  out  hardware  registers.  Use -l to get an overview
   which are supported on your system.

Options

   -l
       List available monitors on your system.  Additional  details  about
       each monitor are shown:

         *      The  name in quotation marks which can be passed to the -m
                parameter.

         *      The number of different counters the monitor  supports  in
                brackets.

         *      The amount of time in seconds the counters might overflow,
                due to implementation constraints.

         *      The name  and  a  description  of  each  counter  and  its
                processor hierarchy level coverage in square brackets:

             *      [T] -> Thread

             *      [C] -> Core

             *      [P] -> Processor Package (Socket)

             *      [M] -> Machine/Platform wide counter

   -m <mon1>,<mon2>,...
       Only  display specific monitors. Use the monitor string(s) provided
       by -l option.

   -i seconds
       Measure intervall.

   -c
       Schedule the process on  every  core  before  starting  and  ending
       measuring.  This could be needed for the Idle_Stats monitor when no
       other MSR based monitor  (has  to  be  run  on  the  core  that  is
       measured)  is  run  in parallel.  This is to wake up the processors
       from deeper sleep states and let the kernel re -account its cpuidle
       (C-state)  information  before  reading  the  cpuidle  timings from
       sysfs.

   command
       Measure  idle  and  frequency  characteristics  of   an   arbitrary
       command/workload.   The  executable  command is forked and upon its
       exit, statistics gathered since it was forked are displayed.

   -v
       Increase verbosity if the binary was compiled with the DEBUG option
       set.

MONITOR DESCRIPTIONS

   Idle_Stats
   Shows  statistics of the cpuidle kernel subsystem. Values are retrieved
   from /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpuidle/state*/.  The kernel  updates
   these  values  every  time  an idle state is entered or left. Therefore
   there can be some inaccuracy when cores are in an idle state  for  some
   time  when the measure starts or ends. In worst case it can happen that
   one core stayed in an idle state for the whole  measure  time  and  the
   idle state usage time as exported by the kernel did not get updated. In
   this case a state residency of 0 percent is shown while it was 100.

   Mperf
   The name comes from the aperf/mperf (average and maximum) MSR registers
   used which are available on recent X86 processors. It shows the average
   frequency (including boost frequencies).  The fact that on  all  recent
   hardware  the  mperf  timer  stops ticking in any idle state it is also
   used to show C0 (processor is active) and Cx (processor is in any sleep
   state)  times.  These  counters do not have the inaccuracy restrictions
   the "Idle_Stats" counters may show.  May work  poorly  on  Linux-2.6.20
   through   2.6.29,   as   the   acpi-cpufreq   kernel  frequency  driver
   periodically cleared aperf/mperf registers in those kernels.

   Nehalem SandyBridge HaswellExtended
   Intel Core and Package sleep state  counters.   Threads  (hyperthreaded
   cores)  may  not  be able to enter deeper core states if its sibling is
   utilized.  Deepest package sleep states  may  in  reality  show  up  as
   machine/platform wide sleep states and can only be entered if all cores
   are idle. Look up Intel manuals (some are provided  in  the  References
   section)  for  further  details.   The monitors are named after the CPU
   family where the sleep state capabilities got introduced  and  may  not
   match  exactly  the CPU name of the platform.  For example an IvyBridge
   processor has sleep state capabilities which got introduced in  Nehalem
   and SandyBridge processor families.  Thus on an IvyBridge processor one
   will get Nehalem and SandyBridge sleep state monitors.  HaswellExtended
   extra package sleep state capabilities are available only in a specific
   Haswell (family 0x45) and probably also other future processors.

   Fam_12h Fam_14h
   AMD laptop and desktop processor  (family  12h  and  14h)  sleep  state
   counters.   The  registers are accessed via PCI and therefore can still
   be read out while cores have been offlined.

   There is one special counter: NBP1 (North Bridge P1).  This one  always
   returns  0  or  1, depending on whether the North Bridge P1 power state
   got entered at least once during measure time.   Being  able  to  enter
   NBP1  state  also depends on graphics power management.  Therefore this
   counter can be used  to  verify  whether  the  graphics'  driver  power
   management is working as expected.

EXAMPLES

   cpupower monitor -l" may show:
       Monitor "Mperf" (3 states) - Might overflow after 922000000 s

          ...

       Monitor "Idle_Stats" (3 states) - Might overflow after 4294967295 s

          ...

   cpupower monitor -m "Idle_Stats,Mperf" scp /tmp/test /nfs/tmp

   Monitor  the scp command, show both Mperf and Idle_Stats states counter
   statistics, but in exchanged order.

   Be careful that the typical command to fully utilize one CPU by doing:

   cpupower monitor cat /dev/zero >/dev/null

   Does not work as expected, because the measured output is redirected to
   /dev/null. This could get workarounded by putting the line into an own,
   tiny shell script. Hit CTRL-c to terminate  the  command  and  get  the
   measure output displayed.

REFERENCES

   "BIOS   and   Kernel  Developer's  Guide  (BKDG)  for  AMD  Family  14h
   Processors" http://support.amd.com/us/Processor_TechDocs/43170.pdf

   "Intel  Turbo  Boost  Technology  in  Intel  Core  Microarchitecture
   (Nehalem)                       Based                       Processors"
   http://download.intel.com/design/processor/applnots/320354.pdf

   "Intel 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer's  Manual  Volume
   3B:               System               Programming               Guide"
   http://www.intel.com/products/processor/manuals

FILES

   /dev/cpu/*/msr
   /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpuidle/state*/.

SEE ALSO

   powertop(8), msr(4), vmstat(8)

AUTHORS

   Written by Thomas Renninger <trenn@suse.de>

   Nehalem, SandyBridge monitors and command passing
   based on turbostat.8 from Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com>

                              22/02/2011               CPUPOWER-MONITOR(1)





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