1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3=============== 4Detailed Usages 5=============== 6 7DAMON provides below interfaces for different users. 8 9- *DAMON user space tool.* 10 `This <https://github.com/awslabs/damo>`_ is for privileged people such as 11 system administrators who want a just-working human-friendly interface. 12 Using this, users can use the DAMON’s major features in a human-friendly way. 13 It may not be highly tuned for special cases, though. It supports both 14 virtual and physical address spaces monitoring. For more detail, please 15 refer to its `usage document 16 <https://github.com/awslabs/damo/blob/next/USAGE.md>`_. 17- *sysfs interface.* 18 :ref:`This <sysfs_interface>` is for privileged user space programmers who 19 want more optimized use of DAMON. Using this, users can use DAMON’s major 20 features by reading from and writing to special sysfs files. Therefore, 21 you can write and use your personalized DAMON sysfs wrapper programs that 22 reads/writes the sysfs files instead of you. The `DAMON user space tool 23 <https://github.com/awslabs/damo>`_ is one example of such programs. It 24 supports both virtual and physical address spaces monitoring. Note that this 25 interface provides only simple :ref:`statistics <damos_stats>` for the 26 monitoring results. For detailed monitoring results, DAMON provides a 27 :ref:`tracepoint <tracepoint>`. 28- *debugfs interface.* 29 :ref:`This <debugfs_interface>` is almost identical to :ref:`sysfs interface 30 <sysfs_interface>`. This will be removed after next LTS kernel is released, 31 so users should move to the :ref:`sysfs interface <sysfs_interface>`. 32- *Kernel Space Programming Interface.* 33 :doc:`This </mm/damon/api>` is for kernel space programmers. Using this, 34 users can utilize every feature of DAMON most flexibly and efficiently by 35 writing kernel space DAMON application programs for you. You can even extend 36 DAMON for various address spaces. For detail, please refer to the interface 37 :doc:`document </mm/damon/api>`. 38 39.. _sysfs_interface: 40 41sysfs Interface 42=============== 43 44DAMON sysfs interface is built when ``CONFIG_DAMON_SYSFS`` is defined. It 45creates multiple directories and files under its sysfs directory, 46``<sysfs>/kernel/mm/damon/``. You can control DAMON by writing to and reading 47from the files under the directory. 48 49For a short example, users can monitor the virtual address space of a given 50workload as below. :: 51 52 # cd /sys/kernel/mm/damon/admin/ 53 # echo 1 > kdamonds/nr && echo 1 > kdamonds/0/contexts/nr 54 # echo vaddr > kdamonds/0/contexts/0/operations 55 # echo 1 > kdamonds/0/contexts/0/targets/nr 56 # echo $(pidof <workload>) > kdamonds/0/contexts/0/targets/0/pid 57 # echo on > kdamonds/0/state 58 59Files Hierarchy 60--------------- 61 62The files hierarchy of DAMON sysfs interface is shown below. In the below 63figure, parents-children relations are represented with indentations, each 64directory is having ``/`` suffix, and files in each directory are separated by 65comma (","). :: 66 67 /sys/kernel/mm/damon/admin 68 │ kdamonds/nr_kdamonds 69 │ │ 0/state,pid 70 │ │ │ contexts/nr_contexts 71 │ │ │ │ 0/avail_operations,operations 72 │ │ │ │ │ monitoring_attrs/ 73 │ │ │ │ │ │ intervals/sample_us,aggr_us,update_us 74 │ │ │ │ │ │ nr_regions/min,max 75 │ │ │ │ │ targets/nr_targets 76 │ │ │ │ │ │ 0/pid_target 77 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ regions/nr_regions 78 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 0/start,end 79 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ ... 80 │ │ │ │ │ │ ... 81 │ │ │ │ │ schemes/nr_schemes 82 │ │ │ │ │ │ 0/action 83 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ access_pattern/ 84 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ sz/min,max 85 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ nr_accesses/min,max 86 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ age/min,max 87 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ quotas/ms,bytes,reset_interval_ms 88 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ weights/sz_permil,nr_accesses_permil,age_permil 89 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ watermarks/metric,interval_us,high,mid,low 90 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ stats/nr_tried,sz_tried,nr_applied,sz_applied,qt_exceeds 91 │ │ │ │ │ │ ... 92 │ │ │ │ ... 93 │ │ ... 94 95Root 96---- 97 98The root of the DAMON sysfs interface is ``<sysfs>/kernel/mm/damon/``, and it 99has one directory named ``admin``. The directory contains the files for 100privileged user space programs' control of DAMON. User space tools or deamons 101having the root permission could use this directory. 102 103kdamonds/ 104--------- 105 106The monitoring-related information including request specifications and results 107are called DAMON context. DAMON executes each context with a kernel thread 108called kdamond, and multiple kdamonds could run in parallel. 109 110Under the ``admin`` directory, one directory, ``kdamonds``, which has files for 111controlling the kdamonds exist. In the beginning, this directory has only one 112file, ``nr_kdamonds``. Writing a number (``N``) to the file creates the number 113of child directories named ``0`` to ``N-1``. Each directory represents each 114kdamond. 115 116kdamonds/<N>/ 117------------- 118 119In each kdamond directory, two files (``state`` and ``pid``) and one directory 120(``contexts``) exist. 121 122Reading ``state`` returns ``on`` if the kdamond is currently running, or 123``off`` if it is not running. Writing ``on`` or ``off`` makes the kdamond be 124in the state. Writing ``commit`` to the ``state`` file makes kdamond reads the 125user inputs in the sysfs files except ``state`` file again. Writing 126``update_schemes_stats`` to ``state`` file updates the contents of stats files 127for each DAMON-based operation scheme of the kdamond. For details of the 128stats, please refer to :ref:`stats section <sysfs_schemes_stats>`. 129 130If the state is ``on``, reading ``pid`` shows the pid of the kdamond thread. 131 132``contexts`` directory contains files for controlling the monitoring contexts 133that this kdamond will execute. 134 135kdamonds/<N>/contexts/ 136---------------------- 137 138In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_contexts``. Writing a 139number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named as 140``0`` to ``N-1``. Each directory represents each monitoring context. At the 141moment, only one context per kdamond is supported, so only ``0`` or ``1`` can 142be written to the file. 143 144contexts/<N>/ 145------------- 146 147In each context directory, two files (``avail_operations`` and ``operations``) 148and three directories (``monitoring_attrs``, ``targets``, and ``schemes``) 149exist. 150 151DAMON supports multiple types of monitoring operations, including those for 152virtual address space and the physical address space. You can get the list of 153available monitoring operations set on the currently running kernel by reading 154``avail_operations`` file. Based on the kernel configuration, the file will 155list some or all of below keywords. 156 157 - vaddr: Monitor virtual address spaces of specific processes 158 - fvaddr: Monitor fixed virtual address ranges 159 - paddr: Monitor the physical address space of the system 160 161Please refer to :ref:`regions sysfs directory <sysfs_regions>` for detailed 162differences between the operations sets in terms of the monitoring target 163regions. 164 165You can set and get what type of monitoring operations DAMON will use for the 166context by writing one of the keywords listed in ``avail_operations`` file and 167reading from the ``operations`` file. 168 169contexts/<N>/monitoring_attrs/ 170------------------------------ 171 172Files for specifying attributes of the monitoring including required quality 173and efficiency of the monitoring are in ``monitoring_attrs`` directory. 174Specifically, two directories, ``intervals`` and ``nr_regions`` exist in this 175directory. 176 177Under ``intervals`` directory, three files for DAMON's sampling interval 178(``sample_us``), aggregation interval (``aggr_us``), and update interval 179(``update_us``) exist. You can set and get the values in micro-seconds by 180writing to and reading from the files. 181 182Under ``nr_regions`` directory, two files for the lower-bound and upper-bound 183of DAMON's monitoring regions (``min`` and ``max``, respectively), which 184controls the monitoring overhead, exist. You can set and get the values by 185writing to and rading from the files. 186 187For more details about the intervals and monitoring regions range, please refer 188to the Design document (:doc:`/mm/damon/design`). 189 190contexts/<N>/targets/ 191--------------------- 192 193In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_targets``. Writing a 194number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named ``0`` 195to ``N-1``. Each directory represents each monitoring target. 196 197targets/<N>/ 198------------ 199 200In each target directory, one file (``pid_target``) and one directory 201(``regions``) exist. 202 203If you wrote ``vaddr`` to the ``contexts/<N>/operations``, each target should 204be a process. You can specify the process to DAMON by writing the pid of the 205process to the ``pid_target`` file. 206 207.. _sysfs_regions: 208 209targets/<N>/regions 210------------------- 211 212When ``vaddr`` monitoring operations set is being used (``vaddr`` is written to 213the ``contexts/<N>/operations`` file), DAMON automatically sets and updates the 214monitoring target regions so that entire memory mappings of target processes 215can be covered. However, users could want to set the initial monitoring region 216to specific address ranges. 217 218In contrast, DAMON do not automatically sets and updates the monitoring target 219regions when ``fvaddr`` or ``paddr`` monitoring operations sets are being used 220(``fvaddr`` or ``paddr`` have written to the ``contexts/<N>/operations``). 221Therefore, users should set the monitoring target regions by themselves in the 222cases. 223 224For such cases, users can explicitly set the initial monitoring target regions 225as they want, by writing proper values to the files under this directory. 226 227In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_regions``. Writing a 228number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named ``0`` 229to ``N-1``. Each directory represents each initial monitoring target region. 230 231regions/<N>/ 232------------ 233 234In each region directory, you will find two files (``start`` and ``end``). You 235can set and get the start and end addresses of the initial monitoring target 236region by writing to and reading from the files, respectively. 237 238contexts/<N>/schemes/ 239--------------------- 240 241For usual DAMON-based data access aware memory management optimizations, users 242would normally want the system to apply a memory management action to a memory 243region of a specific access pattern. DAMON receives such formalized operation 244schemes from the user and applies those to the target memory regions. Users 245can get and set the schemes by reading from and writing to files under this 246directory. 247 248In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_schemes``. Writing a 249number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named ``0`` 250to ``N-1``. Each directory represents each DAMON-based operation scheme. 251 252schemes/<N>/ 253------------ 254 255In each scheme directory, four directories (``access_pattern``, ``quotas``, 256``watermarks``, and ``stats``) and one file (``action``) exist. 257 258The ``action`` file is for setting and getting what action you want to apply to 259memory regions having specific access pattern of the interest. The keywords 260that can be written to and read from the file and their meaning are as below. 261 262 - ``willneed``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_WILLNEED`` 263 - ``cold``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_COLD`` 264 - ``pageout``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_PAGEOUT`` 265 - ``hugepage``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_HUGEPAGE`` 266 - ``nohugepage``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_NOHUGEPAGE`` 267 - ``lru_prio``: Prioritize the region on its LRU lists. 268 - ``lru_deprio``: Deprioritize the region on its LRU lists. 269 - ``stat``: Do nothing but count the statistics 270 271schemes/<N>/access_pattern/ 272--------------------------- 273 274The target access pattern of each DAMON-based operation scheme is constructed 275with three ranges including the size of the region in bytes, number of 276monitored accesses per aggregate interval, and number of aggregated intervals 277for the age of the region. 278 279Under the ``access_pattern`` directory, three directories (``sz``, 280``nr_accesses``, and ``age``) each having two files (``min`` and ``max``) 281exist. You can set and get the access pattern for the given scheme by writing 282to and reading from the ``min`` and ``max`` files under ``sz``, 283``nr_accesses``, and ``age`` directories, respectively. 284 285schemes/<N>/quotas/ 286------------------- 287 288Optimal ``target access pattern`` for each ``action`` is workload dependent, so 289not easy to find. Worse yet, setting a scheme of some action too aggressive 290can cause severe overhead. To avoid such overhead, users can limit time and 291size quota for each scheme. In detail, users can ask DAMON to try to use only 292up to specific time (``time quota``) for applying the action, and to apply the 293action to only up to specific amount (``size quota``) of memory regions having 294the target access pattern within a given time interval (``reset interval``). 295 296When the quota limit is expected to be exceeded, DAMON prioritizes found memory 297regions of the ``target access pattern`` based on their size, access frequency, 298and age. For personalized prioritization, users can set the weights for the 299three properties. 300 301Under ``quotas`` directory, three files (``ms``, ``bytes``, 302``reset_interval_ms``) and one directory (``weights``) having three files 303(``sz_permil``, ``nr_accesses_permil``, and ``age_permil``) in it exist. 304 305You can set the ``time quota`` in milliseconds, ``size quota`` in bytes, and 306``reset interval`` in milliseconds by writing the values to the three files, 307respectively. You can also set the prioritization weights for size, access 308frequency, and age in per-thousand unit by writing the values to the three 309files under the ``weights`` directory. 310 311schemes/<N>/watermarks/ 312----------------------- 313 314To allow easy activation and deactivation of each scheme based on system 315status, DAMON provides a feature called watermarks. The feature receives five 316values called ``metric``, ``interval``, ``high``, ``mid``, and ``low``. The 317``metric`` is the system metric such as free memory ratio that can be measured. 318If the metric value of the system is higher than the value in ``high`` or lower 319than ``low`` at the memoent, the scheme is deactivated. If the value is lower 320than ``mid``, the scheme is activated. 321 322Under the watermarks directory, five files (``metric``, ``interval_us``, 323``high``, ``mid``, and ``low``) for setting each value exist. You can set and 324get the five values by writing to the files, respectively. 325 326Keywords and meanings of those that can be written to the ``metric`` file are 327as below. 328 329 - none: Ignore the watermarks 330 - free_mem_rate: System's free memory rate (per thousand) 331 332The ``interval`` should written in microseconds unit. 333 334.. _sysfs_schemes_stats: 335 336schemes/<N>/stats/ 337------------------ 338 339DAMON counts the total number and bytes of regions that each scheme is tried to 340be applied, the two numbers for the regions that each scheme is successfully 341applied, and the total number of the quota limit exceeds. This statistics can 342be used for online analysis or tuning of the schemes. 343 344The statistics can be retrieved by reading the files under ``stats`` directory 345(``nr_tried``, ``sz_tried``, ``nr_applied``, ``sz_applied``, and 346``qt_exceeds``), respectively. The files are not updated in real time, so you 347should ask DAMON sysfs interface to updte the content of the files for the 348stats by writing a special keyword, ``update_schemes_stats`` to the relevant 349``kdamonds/<N>/state`` file. 350 351Example 352~~~~~~~ 353 354Below commands applies a scheme saying "If a memory region of size in [4KiB, 3558KiB] is showing accesses per aggregate interval in [0, 5] for aggregate 356interval in [10, 20], page out the region. For the paging out, use only up to 35710ms per second, and also don't page out more than 1GiB per second. Under the 358limitation, page out memory regions having longer age first. Also, check the 359free memory rate of the system every 5 seconds, start the monitoring and paging 360out when the free memory rate becomes lower than 50%, but stop it if the free 361memory rate becomes larger than 60%, or lower than 30%". :: 362 363 # cd <sysfs>/kernel/mm/damon/admin 364 # # populate directories 365 # echo 1 > kdamonds/nr_kdamonds; echo 1 > kdamonds/0/contexts/nr_contexts; 366 # echo 1 > kdamonds/0/contexts/0/schemes/nr_schemes 367 # cd kdamonds/0/contexts/0/schemes/0 368 # # set the basic access pattern and the action 369 # echo 4096 > access_patterns/sz/min 370 # echo 8192 > access_patterns/sz/max 371 # echo 0 > access_patterns/nr_accesses/min 372 # echo 5 > access_patterns/nr_accesses/max 373 # echo 10 > access_patterns/age/min 374 # echo 20 > access_patterns/age/max 375 # echo pageout > action 376 # # set quotas 377 # echo 10 > quotas/ms 378 # echo $((1024*1024*1024)) > quotas/bytes 379 # echo 1000 > quotas/reset_interval_ms 380 # # set watermark 381 # echo free_mem_rate > watermarks/metric 382 # echo 5000000 > watermarks/interval_us 383 # echo 600 > watermarks/high 384 # echo 500 > watermarks/mid 385 # echo 300 > watermarks/low 386 387Please note that it's highly recommended to use user space tools like `damo 388<https://github.com/awslabs/damo>`_ rather than manually reading and writing 389the files as above. Above is only for an example. 390 391.. _debugfs_interface: 392 393debugfs Interface 394================= 395 396DAMON exports eight files, ``attrs``, ``target_ids``, ``init_regions``, 397``schemes``, ``monitor_on``, ``kdamond_pid``, ``mk_contexts`` and 398``rm_contexts`` under its debugfs directory, ``<debugfs>/damon/``. 399 400 401Attributes 402---------- 403 404Users can get and set the ``sampling interval``, ``aggregation interval``, 405``update interval``, and min/max number of monitoring target regions by 406reading from and writing to the ``attrs`` file. To know about the monitoring 407attributes in detail, please refer to the :doc:`/mm/damon/design`. For 408example, below commands set those values to 5 ms, 100 ms, 1,000 ms, 10 and 4091000, and then check it again:: 410 411 # cd <debugfs>/damon 412 # echo 5000 100000 1000000 10 1000 > attrs 413 # cat attrs 414 5000 100000 1000000 10 1000 415 416 417Target IDs 418---------- 419 420Some types of address spaces supports multiple monitoring target. For example, 421the virtual memory address spaces monitoring can have multiple processes as the 422monitoring targets. Users can set the targets by writing relevant id values of 423the targets to, and get the ids of the current targets by reading from the 424``target_ids`` file. In case of the virtual address spaces monitoring, the 425values should be pids of the monitoring target processes. For example, below 426commands set processes having pids 42 and 4242 as the monitoring targets and 427check it again:: 428 429 # cd <debugfs>/damon 430 # echo 42 4242 > target_ids 431 # cat target_ids 432 42 4242 433 434Users can also monitor the physical memory address space of the system by 435writing a special keyword, "``paddr\n``" to the file. Because physical address 436space monitoring doesn't support multiple targets, reading the file will show a 437fake value, ``42``, as below:: 438 439 # cd <debugfs>/damon 440 # echo paddr > target_ids 441 # cat target_ids 442 42 443 444Note that setting the target ids doesn't start the monitoring. 445 446 447Initial Monitoring Target Regions 448--------------------------------- 449 450In case of the virtual address space monitoring, DAMON automatically sets and 451updates the monitoring target regions so that entire memory mappings of target 452processes can be covered. However, users can want to limit the monitoring 453region to specific address ranges, such as the heap, the stack, or specific 454file-mapped area. Or, some users can know the initial access pattern of their 455workloads and therefore want to set optimal initial regions for the 'adaptive 456regions adjustment'. 457 458In contrast, DAMON do not automatically sets and updates the monitoring target 459regions in case of physical memory monitoring. Therefore, users should set the 460monitoring target regions by themselves. 461 462In such cases, users can explicitly set the initial monitoring target regions 463as they want, by writing proper values to the ``init_regions`` file. Each line 464of the input should represent one region in below form.:: 465 466 <target idx> <start address> <end address> 467 468The ``target idx`` should be the index of the target in ``target_ids`` file, 469starting from ``0``, and the regions should be passed in address order. For 470example, below commands will set a couple of address ranges, ``1-100`` and 471``100-200`` as the initial monitoring target region of pid 42, which is the 472first one (index ``0``) in ``target_ids``, and another couple of address 473ranges, ``20-40`` and ``50-100`` as that of pid 4242, which is the second one 474(index ``1``) in ``target_ids``.:: 475 476 # cd <debugfs>/damon 477 # cat target_ids 478 42 4242 479 # echo "0 1 100 480 0 100 200 481 1 20 40 482 1 50 100" > init_regions 483 484Note that this sets the initial monitoring target regions only. In case of 485virtual memory monitoring, DAMON will automatically updates the boundary of the 486regions after one ``update interval``. Therefore, users should set the 487``update interval`` large enough in this case, if they don't want the 488update. 489 490 491Schemes 492------- 493 494For usual DAMON-based data access aware memory management optimizations, users 495would simply want the system to apply a memory management action to a memory 496region of a specific access pattern. DAMON receives such formalized operation 497schemes from the user and applies those to the target processes. 498 499Users can get and set the schemes by reading from and writing to ``schemes`` 500debugfs file. Reading the file also shows the statistics of each scheme. To 501the file, each of the schemes should be represented in each line in below 502form:: 503 504 <target access pattern> <action> <quota> <watermarks> 505 506You can disable schemes by simply writing an empty string to the file. 507 508Target Access Pattern 509~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 510 511The ``<target access pattern>`` is constructed with three ranges in below 512form:: 513 514 min-size max-size min-acc max-acc min-age max-age 515 516Specifically, bytes for the size of regions (``min-size`` and ``max-size``), 517number of monitored accesses per aggregate interval for access frequency 518(``min-acc`` and ``max-acc``), number of aggregate intervals for the age of 519regions (``min-age`` and ``max-age``) are specified. Note that the ranges are 520closed interval. 521 522Action 523~~~~~~ 524 525The ``<action>`` is a predefined integer for memory management actions, which 526DAMON will apply to the regions having the target access pattern. The 527supported numbers and their meanings are as below. 528 529 - 0: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_WILLNEED`` 530 - 1: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_COLD`` 531 - 2: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_PAGEOUT`` 532 - 3: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_HUGEPAGE`` 533 - 4: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_NOHUGEPAGE`` 534 - 5: Do nothing but count the statistics 535 536Quota 537~~~~~ 538 539Optimal ``target access pattern`` for each ``action`` is workload dependent, so 540not easy to find. Worse yet, setting a scheme of some action too aggressive 541can cause severe overhead. To avoid such overhead, users can limit time and 542size quota for the scheme via the ``<quota>`` in below form:: 543 544 <ms> <sz> <reset interval> <priority weights> 545 546This makes DAMON to try to use only up to ``<ms>`` milliseconds for applying 547the action to memory regions of the ``target access pattern`` within the 548``<reset interval>`` milliseconds, and to apply the action to only up to 549``<sz>`` bytes of memory regions within the ``<reset interval>``. Setting both 550``<ms>`` and ``<sz>`` zero disables the quota limits. 551 552When the quota limit is expected to be exceeded, DAMON prioritizes found memory 553regions of the ``target access pattern`` based on their size, access frequency, 554and age. For personalized prioritization, users can set the weights for the 555three properties in ``<priority weights>`` in below form:: 556 557 <size weight> <access frequency weight> <age weight> 558 559Watermarks 560~~~~~~~~~~ 561 562Some schemes would need to run based on current value of the system's specific 563metrics like free memory ratio. For such cases, users can specify watermarks 564for the condition.:: 565 566 <metric> <check interval> <high mark> <middle mark> <low mark> 567 568``<metric>`` is a predefined integer for the metric to be checked. The 569supported numbers and their meanings are as below. 570 571 - 0: Ignore the watermarks 572 - 1: System's free memory rate (per thousand) 573 574The value of the metric is checked every ``<check interval>`` microseconds. 575 576If the value is higher than ``<high mark>`` or lower than ``<low mark>``, the 577scheme is deactivated. If the value is lower than ``<mid mark>``, the scheme 578is activated. 579 580.. _damos_stats: 581 582Statistics 583~~~~~~~~~~ 584 585It also counts the total number and bytes of regions that each scheme is tried 586to be applied, the two numbers for the regions that each scheme is successfully 587applied, and the total number of the quota limit exceeds. This statistics can 588be used for online analysis or tuning of the schemes. 589 590The statistics can be shown by reading the ``schemes`` file. Reading the file 591will show each scheme you entered in each line, and the five numbers for the 592statistics will be added at the end of each line. 593 594Example 595~~~~~~~ 596 597Below commands applies a scheme saying "If a memory region of size in [4KiB, 5988KiB] is showing accesses per aggregate interval in [0, 5] for aggregate 599interval in [10, 20], page out the region. For the paging out, use only up to 60010ms per second, and also don't page out more than 1GiB per second. Under the 601limitation, page out memory regions having longer age first. Also, check the 602free memory rate of the system every 5 seconds, start the monitoring and paging 603out when the free memory rate becomes lower than 50%, but stop it if the free 604memory rate becomes larger than 60%, or lower than 30%".:: 605 606 # cd <debugfs>/damon 607 # scheme="4096 8192 0 5 10 20 2" # target access pattern and action 608 # scheme+=" 10 $((1024*1024*1024)) 1000" # quotas 609 # scheme+=" 0 0 100" # prioritization weights 610 # scheme+=" 1 5000000 600 500 300" # watermarks 611 # echo "$scheme" > schemes 612 613 614Turning On/Off 615-------------- 616 617Setting the files as described above doesn't incur effect unless you explicitly 618start the monitoring. You can start, stop, and check the current status of the 619monitoring by writing to and reading from the ``monitor_on`` file. Writing 620``on`` to the file starts the monitoring of the targets with the attributes. 621Writing ``off`` to the file stops those. DAMON also stops if every target 622process is terminated. Below example commands turn on, off, and check the 623status of DAMON:: 624 625 # cd <debugfs>/damon 626 # echo on > monitor_on 627 # echo off > monitor_on 628 # cat monitor_on 629 off 630 631Please note that you cannot write to the above-mentioned debugfs files while 632the monitoring is turned on. If you write to the files while DAMON is running, 633an error code such as ``-EBUSY`` will be returned. 634 635 636Monitoring Thread PID 637--------------------- 638 639DAMON does requested monitoring with a kernel thread called ``kdamond``. You 640can get the pid of the thread by reading the ``kdamond_pid`` file. When the 641monitoring is turned off, reading the file returns ``none``. :: 642 643 # cd <debugfs>/damon 644 # cat monitor_on 645 off 646 # cat kdamond_pid 647 none 648 # echo on > monitor_on 649 # cat kdamond_pid 650 18594 651 652 653Using Multiple Monitoring Threads 654--------------------------------- 655 656One ``kdamond`` thread is created for each monitoring context. You can create 657and remove monitoring contexts for multiple ``kdamond`` required use case using 658the ``mk_contexts`` and ``rm_contexts`` files. 659 660Writing the name of the new context to the ``mk_contexts`` file creates a 661directory of the name on the DAMON debugfs directory. The directory will have 662DAMON debugfs files for the context. :: 663 664 # cd <debugfs>/damon 665 # ls foo 666 # ls: cannot access 'foo': No such file or directory 667 # echo foo > mk_contexts 668 # ls foo 669 # attrs init_regions kdamond_pid schemes target_ids 670 671If the context is not needed anymore, you can remove it and the corresponding 672directory by putting the name of the context to the ``rm_contexts`` file. :: 673 674 # echo foo > rm_contexts 675 # ls foo 676 # ls: cannot access 'foo': No such file or directory 677 678Note that ``mk_contexts``, ``rm_contexts``, and ``monitor_on`` files are in the 679root directory only. 680 681 682.. _tracepoint: 683 684Tracepoint for Monitoring Results 685================================= 686 687DAMON provides the monitoring results via a tracepoint, 688``damon:damon_aggregated``. While the monitoring is turned on, you could 689record the tracepoint events and show results using tracepoint supporting tools 690like ``perf``. For example:: 691 692 # echo on > monitor_on 693 # perf record -e damon:damon_aggregated & 694 # sleep 5 695 # kill 9 $(pidof perf) 696 # echo off > monitor_on 697 # perf script 698