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 </vm/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 </vm/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
68kdamonds/nr_kdamonds
69    │ │ 0/state,pid
70    │ │ │ contexts/nr_contexts
71    │ │ │ │ 0/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 ``update_schemes_stats`` to ``state`` file updates the
125contents of stats files for each DAMON-based operation scheme of the kdamond.
126For details of the stats, please refer to :ref:`stats section
127<sysfs_schemes_stats>`.
128
129If the state is ``on``, reading ``pid`` shows the pid of the kdamond thread.
130
131``contexts`` directory contains files for controlling the monitoring contexts
132that this kdamond will execute.
133
134kdamonds/<N>/contexts/
135----------------------
136
137In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_contexts``.  Writing a
138number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named as
139``0`` to ``N-1``.  Each directory represents each monitoring context.  At the
140moment, only one context per kdamond is supported, so only ``0`` or ``1`` can
141be written to the file.
142
143contexts/<N>/
144-------------
145
146In each context directory, one file (``operations``) and three directories
147(``monitoring_attrs``, ``targets``, and ``schemes``) exist.
148
149DAMON supports multiple types of monitoring operations, including those for
150virtual address space and the physical address space.  You can set and get what
151type of monitoring operations DAMON will use for the context by writing one of
152below keywords to, and reading from the file.
153
154 - vaddr: Monitor virtual address spaces of specific processes
155 - paddr: Monitor the physical address space of the system
156
157contexts/<N>/monitoring_attrs/
158------------------------------
159
160Files for specifying attributes of the monitoring including required quality
161and efficiency of the monitoring are in ``monitoring_attrs`` directory.
162Specifically, two directories, ``intervals`` and ``nr_regions`` exist in this
163directory.
164
165Under ``intervals`` directory, three files for DAMON's sampling interval
166(``sample_us``), aggregation interval (``aggr_us``), and update interval
167(``update_us``) exist.  You can set and get the values in micro-seconds by
168writing to and reading from the files.
169
170Under ``nr_regions`` directory, two files for the lower-bound and upper-bound
171of DAMON's monitoring regions (``min`` and ``max``, respectively), which
172controls the monitoring overhead, exist.  You can set and get the values by
173writing to and rading from the files.
174
175For more details about the intervals and monitoring regions range, please refer
176to the Design document (:doc:`/vm/damon/design`).
177
178contexts/<N>/targets/
179---------------------
180
181In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_targets``.  Writing a
182number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named ``0``
183to ``N-1``.  Each directory represents each monitoring target.
184
185targets/<N>/
186------------
187
188In each target directory, one file (``pid_target``) and one directory
189(``regions``) exist.
190
191If you wrote ``vaddr`` to the ``contexts/<N>/operations``, each target should
192be a process.  You can specify the process to DAMON by writing the pid of the
193process to the ``pid_target`` file.
194
195targets/<N>/regions
196-------------------
197
198When ``vaddr`` monitoring operations set is being used (``vaddr`` is written to
199the ``contexts/<N>/operations`` file), DAMON automatically sets and updates the
200monitoring target regions so that entire memory mappings of target processes
201can be covered.  However, users could want to set the initial monitoring region
202to specific address ranges.
203
204In contrast, DAMON do not automatically sets and updates the monitoring target
205regions when ``paddr`` monitoring operations set is being used (``paddr`` is
206written to the ``contexts/<N>/operations``).  Therefore, users should set the
207monitoring target regions by themselves in the case.
208
209For such cases, users can explicitly set the initial monitoring target regions
210as they want, by writing proper values to the files under this directory.
211
212In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_regions``.  Writing a
213number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named ``0``
214to ``N-1``.  Each directory represents each initial monitoring target region.
215
216regions/<N>/
217------------
218
219In each region directory, you will find two files (``start`` and ``end``).  You
220can set and get the start and end addresses of the initial monitoring target
221region by writing to and reading from the files, respectively.
222
223contexts/<N>/schemes/
224---------------------
225
226For usual DAMON-based data access aware memory management optimizations, users
227would normally want the system to apply a memory management action to a memory
228region of a specific access pattern.  DAMON receives such formalized operation
229schemes from the user and applies those to the target memory regions.  Users
230can get and set the schemes by reading from and writing to files under this
231directory.
232
233In the beginning, this directory has only one file, ``nr_schemes``.  Writing a
234number (``N``) to the file creates the number of child directories named ``0``
235to ``N-1``.  Each directory represents each DAMON-based operation scheme.
236
237schemes/<N>/
238------------
239
240In each scheme directory, four directories (``access_pattern``, ``quotas``,
241``watermarks``, and ``stats``) and one file (``action``) exist.
242
243The ``action`` file is for setting and getting what action you want to apply to
244memory regions having specific access pattern of the interest.  The keywords
245that can be written to and read from the file and their meaning are as below.
246
247 - ``willneed``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_WILLNEED``
248 - ``cold``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_COLD``
249 - ``pageout``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_PAGEOUT``
250 - ``hugepage``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_HUGEPAGE``
251 - ``nohugepage``: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_NOHUGEPAGE``
252 - ``stat``: Do nothing but count the statistics
253
254schemes/<N>/access_pattern/
255---------------------------
256
257The target access pattern of each DAMON-based operation scheme is constructed
258with three ranges including the size of the region in bytes, number of
259monitored accesses per aggregate interval, and number of aggregated intervals
260for the age of the region.
261
262Under the ``access_pattern`` directory, three directories (``sz``,
263``nr_accesses``, and ``age``) each having two files (``min`` and ``max``)
264exist.  You can set and get the access pattern for the given scheme by writing
265to and reading from the ``min`` and ``max`` files under ``sz``,
266``nr_accesses``, and ``age`` directories, respectively.
267
268schemes/<N>/quotas/
269-------------------
270
271Optimal ``target access pattern`` for each ``action`` is workload dependent, so
272not easy to find.  Worse yet, setting a scheme of some action too aggressive
273can cause severe overhead.  To avoid such overhead, users can limit time and
274size quota for each scheme.  In detail, users can ask DAMON to try to use only
275up to specific time (``time quota``) for applying the action, and to apply the
276action to only up to specific amount (``size quota``) of memory regions having
277the target access pattern within a given time interval (``reset interval``).
278
279When the quota limit is expected to be exceeded, DAMON prioritizes found memory
280regions of the ``target access pattern`` based on their size, access frequency,
281and age.  For personalized prioritization, users can set the weights for the
282three properties.
283
284Under ``quotas`` directory, three files (``ms``, ``bytes``,
285``reset_interval_ms``) and one directory (``weights``) having three files
286(``sz_permil``, ``nr_accesses_permil``, and ``age_permil``) in it exist.
287
288You can set the ``time quota`` in milliseconds, ``size quota`` in bytes, and
289``reset interval`` in milliseconds by writing the values to the three files,
290respectively.  You can also set the prioritization weights for size, access
291frequency, and age in per-thousand unit by writing the values to the three
292files under the ``weights`` directory.
293
294schemes/<N>/watermarks/
295-----------------------
296
297To allow easy activation and deactivation of each scheme based on system
298status, DAMON provides a feature called watermarks.  The feature receives five
299values called ``metric``, ``interval``, ``high``, ``mid``, and ``low``.  The
300``metric`` is the system metric such as free memory ratio that can be measured.
301If the metric value of the system is higher than the value in ``high`` or lower
302than ``low`` at the memoent, the scheme is deactivated.  If the value is lower
303than ``mid``, the scheme is activated.
304
305Under the watermarks directory, five files (``metric``, ``interval_us``,
306``high``, ``mid``, and ``low``) for setting each value exist.  You can set and
307get the five values by writing to the files, respectively.
308
309Keywords and meanings of those that can be written to the ``metric`` file are
310as below.
311
312 - none: Ignore the watermarks
313 - free_mem_rate: System's free memory rate (per thousand)
314
315The ``interval`` should written in microseconds unit.
316
317.. _sysfs_schemes_stats:
318
319schemes/<N>/stats/
320------------------
321
322DAMON counts the total number and bytes of regions that each scheme is tried to
323be applied, the two numbers for the regions that each scheme is successfully
324applied, and the total number of the quota limit exceeds.  This statistics can
325be used for online analysis or tuning of the schemes.
326
327The statistics can be retrieved by reading the files under ``stats`` directory
328(``nr_tried``, ``sz_tried``, ``nr_applied``, ``sz_applied``, and
329``qt_exceeds``), respectively.  The files are not updated in real time, so you
330should ask DAMON sysfs interface to updte the content of the files for the
331stats by writing a special keyword, ``update_schemes_stats`` to the relevant
332``kdamonds/<N>/state`` file.
333
334Example
335~~~~~~~
336
337Below commands applies a scheme saying "If a memory region of size in [4KiB,
3388KiB] is showing accesses per aggregate interval in [0, 5] for aggregate
339interval in [10, 20], page out the region.  For the paging out, use only up to
34010ms per second, and also don't page out more than 1GiB per second.  Under the
341limitation, page out memory regions having longer age first.  Also, check the
342free memory rate of the system every 5 seconds, start the monitoring and paging
343out when the free memory rate becomes lower than 50%, but stop it if the free
344memory rate becomes larger than 60%, or lower than 30%". ::
345
346    # cd <sysfs>/kernel/mm/damon/admin
347    # # populate directories
348    # echo 1 > kdamonds/nr_kdamonds; echo 1 > kdamonds/0/contexts/nr_contexts;
349    # echo 1 > kdamonds/0/contexts/0/schemes/nr_schemes
350    # cd kdamonds/0/contexts/0/schemes/0
351    # # set the basic access pattern and the action
352    # echo 4096 > access_patterns/sz/min
353    # echo 8192 > access_patterns/sz/max
354    # echo 0 > access_patterns/nr_accesses/min
355    # echo 5 > access_patterns/nr_accesses/max
356    # echo 10 > access_patterns/age/min
357    # echo 20 > access_patterns/age/max
358    # echo pageout > action
359    # # set quotas
360    # echo 10 > quotas/ms
361    # echo $((1024*1024*1024)) > quotas/bytes
362    # echo 1000 > quotas/reset_interval_ms
363    # # set watermark
364    # echo free_mem_rate > watermarks/metric
365    # echo 5000000 > watermarks/interval_us
366    # echo 600 > watermarks/high
367    # echo 500 > watermarks/mid
368    # echo 300 > watermarks/low
369
370Please note that it's highly recommended to use user space tools like `damo
371<https://github.com/awslabs/damo>`_ rather than manually reading and writing
372the files as above.  Above is only for an example.
373
374.. _debugfs_interface:
375
376debugfs Interface
377=================
378
379DAMON exports eight files, ``attrs``, ``target_ids``, ``init_regions``,
380``schemes``, ``monitor_on``, ``kdamond_pid``, ``mk_contexts`` and
381``rm_contexts`` under its debugfs directory, ``<debugfs>/damon/``.
382
383
384Attributes
385----------
386
387Users can get and set the ``sampling interval``, ``aggregation interval``,
388``update interval``, and min/max number of monitoring target regions by
389reading from and writing to the ``attrs`` file.  To know about the monitoring
390attributes in detail, please refer to the :doc:`/vm/damon/design`.  For
391example, below commands set those values to 5 ms, 100 ms, 1,000 ms, 10 and
3921000, and then check it again::
393
394    # cd <debugfs>/damon
395    # echo 5000 100000 1000000 10 1000 > attrs
396    # cat attrs
397    5000 100000 1000000 10 1000
398
399
400Target IDs
401----------
402
403Some types of address spaces supports multiple monitoring target.  For example,
404the virtual memory address spaces monitoring can have multiple processes as the
405monitoring targets.  Users can set the targets by writing relevant id values of
406the targets to, and get the ids of the current targets by reading from the
407``target_ids`` file.  In case of the virtual address spaces monitoring, the
408values should be pids of the monitoring target processes.  For example, below
409commands set processes having pids 42 and 4242 as the monitoring targets and
410check it again::
411
412    # cd <debugfs>/damon
413    # echo 42 4242 > target_ids
414    # cat target_ids
415    42 4242
416
417Users can also monitor the physical memory address space of the system by
418writing a special keyword, "``paddr\n``" to the file.  Because physical address
419space monitoring doesn't support multiple targets, reading the file will show a
420fake value, ``42``, as below::
421
422    # cd <debugfs>/damon
423    # echo paddr > target_ids
424    # cat target_ids
425    42
426
427Note that setting the target ids doesn't start the monitoring.
428
429
430Initial Monitoring Target Regions
431---------------------------------
432
433In case of the virtual address space monitoring, DAMON automatically sets and
434updates the monitoring target regions so that entire memory mappings of target
435processes can be covered.  However, users can want to limit the monitoring
436region to specific address ranges, such as the heap, the stack, or specific
437file-mapped area.  Or, some users can know the initial access pattern of their
438workloads and therefore want to set optimal initial regions for the 'adaptive
439regions adjustment'.
440
441In contrast, DAMON do not automatically sets and updates the monitoring target
442regions in case of physical memory monitoring.  Therefore, users should set the
443monitoring target regions by themselves.
444
445In such cases, users can explicitly set the initial monitoring target regions
446as they want, by writing proper values to the ``init_regions`` file.  Each line
447of the input should represent one region in below form.::
448
449    <target idx> <start address> <end address>
450
451The ``target idx`` should be the index of the target in ``target_ids`` file,
452starting from ``0``, and the regions should be passed in address order.  For
453example, below commands will set a couple of address ranges, ``1-100`` and
454``100-200`` as the initial monitoring target region of pid 42, which is the
455first one (index ``0``) in ``target_ids``, and another couple of address
456ranges, ``20-40`` and ``50-100`` as that of pid 4242, which is the second one
457(index ``1``) in ``target_ids``.::
458
459    # cd <debugfs>/damon
460    # cat target_ids
461    42 4242
462    # echo "0   1       100
463            0   100     200
464            1   20      40
465            1   50      100" > init_regions
466
467Note that this sets the initial monitoring target regions only.  In case of
468virtual memory monitoring, DAMON will automatically updates the boundary of the
469regions after one ``update interval``.  Therefore, users should set the
470``update interval`` large enough in this case, if they don't want the
471update.
472
473
474Schemes
475-------
476
477For usual DAMON-based data access aware memory management optimizations, users
478would simply want the system to apply a memory management action to a memory
479region of a specific access pattern.  DAMON receives such formalized operation
480schemes from the user and applies those to the target processes.
481
482Users can get and set the schemes by reading from and writing to ``schemes``
483debugfs file.  Reading the file also shows the statistics of each scheme.  To
484the file, each of the schemes should be represented in each line in below
485form::
486
487    <target access pattern> <action> <quota> <watermarks>
488
489You can disable schemes by simply writing an empty string to the file.
490
491Target Access Pattern
492~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
493
494The ``<target access pattern>`` is constructed with three ranges in below
495form::
496
497    min-size max-size min-acc max-acc min-age max-age
498
499Specifically, bytes for the size of regions (``min-size`` and ``max-size``),
500number of monitored accesses per aggregate interval for access frequency
501(``min-acc`` and ``max-acc``), number of aggregate intervals for the age of
502regions (``min-age`` and ``max-age``) are specified.  Note that the ranges are
503closed interval.
504
505Action
506~~~~~~
507
508The ``<action>`` is a predefined integer for memory management actions, which
509DAMON will apply to the regions having the target access pattern.  The
510supported numbers and their meanings are as below.
511
512 - 0: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_WILLNEED``
513 - 1: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_COLD``
514 - 2: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_PAGEOUT``
515 - 3: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_HUGEPAGE``
516 - 4: Call ``madvise()`` for the region with ``MADV_NOHUGEPAGE``
517 - 5: Do nothing but count the statistics
518
519Quota
520~~~~~
521
522Optimal ``target access pattern`` for each ``action`` is workload dependent, so
523not easy to find.  Worse yet, setting a scheme of some action too aggressive
524can cause severe overhead.  To avoid such overhead, users can limit time and
525size quota for the scheme via the ``<quota>`` in below form::
526
527    <ms> <sz> <reset interval> <priority weights>
528
529This makes DAMON to try to use only up to ``<ms>`` milliseconds for applying
530the action to memory regions of the ``target access pattern`` within the
531``<reset interval>`` milliseconds, and to apply the action to only up to
532``<sz>`` bytes of memory regions within the ``<reset interval>``.  Setting both
533``<ms>`` and ``<sz>`` zero disables the quota limits.
534
535When the quota limit is expected to be exceeded, DAMON prioritizes found memory
536regions of the ``target access pattern`` based on their size, access frequency,
537and age.  For personalized prioritization, users can set the weights for the
538three properties in ``<priority weights>`` in below form::
539
540    <size weight> <access frequency weight> <age weight>
541
542Watermarks
543~~~~~~~~~~
544
545Some schemes would need to run based on current value of the system's specific
546metrics like free memory ratio.  For such cases, users can specify watermarks
547for the condition.::
548
549    <metric> <check interval> <high mark> <middle mark> <low mark>
550
551``<metric>`` is a predefined integer for the metric to be checked.  The
552supported numbers and their meanings are as below.
553
554 - 0: Ignore the watermarks
555 - 1: System's free memory rate (per thousand)
556
557The value of the metric is checked every ``<check interval>`` microseconds.
558
559If the value is higher than ``<high mark>`` or lower than ``<low mark>``, the
560scheme is deactivated.  If the value is lower than ``<mid mark>``, the scheme
561is activated.
562
563.. _damos_stats:
564
565Statistics
566~~~~~~~~~~
567
568It also counts the total number and bytes of regions that each scheme is tried
569to be applied, the two numbers for the regions that each scheme is successfully
570applied, and the total number of the quota limit exceeds.  This statistics can
571be used for online analysis or tuning of the schemes.
572
573The statistics can be shown by reading the ``schemes`` file.  Reading the file
574will show each scheme you entered in each line, and the five numbers for the
575statistics will be added at the end of each line.
576
577Example
578~~~~~~~
579
580Below commands applies a scheme saying "If a memory region of size in [4KiB,
5818KiB] is showing accesses per aggregate interval in [0, 5] for aggregate
582interval in [10, 20], page out the region.  For the paging out, use only up to
58310ms per second, and also don't page out more than 1GiB per second.  Under the
584limitation, page out memory regions having longer age first.  Also, check the
585free memory rate of the system every 5 seconds, start the monitoring and paging
586out when the free memory rate becomes lower than 50%, but stop it if the free
587memory rate becomes larger than 60%, or lower than 30%".::
588
589    # cd <debugfs>/damon
590    # scheme="4096 8192  0 5    10 20    2"  # target access pattern and action
591    # scheme+=" 10 $((1024*1024*1024)) 1000" # quotas
592    # scheme+=" 0 0 100"                     # prioritization weights
593    # scheme+=" 1 5000000 600 500 300"       # watermarks
594    # echo "$scheme" > schemes
595
596
597Turning On/Off
598--------------
599
600Setting the files as described above doesn't incur effect unless you explicitly
601start the monitoring.  You can start, stop, and check the current status of the
602monitoring by writing to and reading from the ``monitor_on`` file.  Writing
603``on`` to the file starts the monitoring of the targets with the attributes.
604Writing ``off`` to the file stops those.  DAMON also stops if every target
605process is terminated.  Below example commands turn on, off, and check the
606status of DAMON::
607
608    # cd <debugfs>/damon
609    # echo on > monitor_on
610    # echo off > monitor_on
611    # cat monitor_on
612    off
613
614Please note that you cannot write to the above-mentioned debugfs files while
615the monitoring is turned on.  If you write to the files while DAMON is running,
616an error code such as ``-EBUSY`` will be returned.
617
618
619Monitoring Thread PID
620---------------------
621
622DAMON does requested monitoring with a kernel thread called ``kdamond``.  You
623can get the pid of the thread by reading the ``kdamond_pid`` file.  When the
624monitoring is turned off, reading the file returns ``none``. ::
625
626    # cd <debugfs>/damon
627    # cat monitor_on
628    off
629    # cat kdamond_pid
630    none
631    # echo on > monitor_on
632    # cat kdamond_pid
633    18594
634
635
636Using Multiple Monitoring Threads
637---------------------------------
638
639One ``kdamond`` thread is created for each monitoring context.  You can create
640and remove monitoring contexts for multiple ``kdamond`` required use case using
641the ``mk_contexts`` and ``rm_contexts`` files.
642
643Writing the name of the new context to the ``mk_contexts`` file creates a
644directory of the name on the DAMON debugfs directory.  The directory will have
645DAMON debugfs files for the context. ::
646
647    # cd <debugfs>/damon
648    # ls foo
649    # ls: cannot access 'foo': No such file or directory
650    # echo foo > mk_contexts
651    # ls foo
652    # attrs  init_regions  kdamond_pid  schemes  target_ids
653
654If the context is not needed anymore, you can remove it and the corresponding
655directory by putting the name of the context to the ``rm_contexts`` file. ::
656
657    # echo foo > rm_contexts
658    # ls foo
659    # ls: cannot access 'foo': No such file or directory
660
661Note that ``mk_contexts``, ``rm_contexts``, and ``monitor_on`` files are in the
662root directory only.
663
664
665.. _tracepoint:
666
667Tracepoint for Monitoring Results
668=================================
669
670DAMON provides the monitoring results via a tracepoint,
671``damon:damon_aggregated``.  While the monitoring is turned on, you could
672record the tracepoint events and show results using tracepoint supporting tools
673like ``perf``.  For example::
674
675    # echo on > monitor_on
676    # perf record -e damon:damon_aggregated &
677    # sleep 5
678    # kill 9 $(pidof perf)
679    # echo off > monitor_on
680    # perf script
681