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Resource Management, Oracle Solaris Zones, and Oracle Solaris 10 Zones Developer's Guide Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
1. Resource Management in the Oracle Solaris Operating System
3. Using the C Interface to Extended Accounting
Overview of the C Interface to Extended Accounting
Extended Accounting API Functions
Programming Issues With exacct Files
4. Using the Perl Interface to Extended Accounting
7. Design Considerations for Resource Management Applications in Oracle Solaris Zones
This section provides code examples for accessing exacct files.
Example 3-1 Displaying exacct Data for a Designated pid
This example displays a specific pid's exacct data snapshot from the kernel.
... ea_object_t *scratch; int unpk_flag = EUP_ALLOC; /* use the same allocation flag */ /* for unpack and free */ /* Omit return value checking, to keep code samples short */ bsize = getacct(P_PID, pid, NULL, 0); buf = malloc(bsize); /* Retrieve exacct object and unpack */ getacct(P_PID, pid, buf, bsize); ea_unpack_object(&scratch, unpk_flag, buf, bsize); /* Display the exacct record */ disp_obj(scratch); if (scratch->eo_type == EO_GROUP) { disp_group(scratch); } ea_free_object(scratch, unpk_flag); ...
Example 3-2 Identifying Individual Tasks During a Kernel Build
This example evaluates kernel builds and displays a string that describes the portion of the source tree being built by this task make. Display the portion of the source being built to aid in the per-source-directory analysis.
The key points for this example include the following:
To aggregate the time for a make, which could include many processes, each make is initiated as a task. Child make processes are created as different tasks. To aggregate across the makefile tree, the parent-child task relationship must be identified.
Add a tag with this information to the task's exacct file. Add a current working directory string that describes the portion of the source tree being built by this task make.
ea_set_item(&cwd, EXT_STRING | EXC_LOCAL | MY_CWD, cwdbuf, strlen(cwdbuf));
... /* Omit return value checking and error processing */ /* to keep code sample short */ ptid = gettaskid(); /* Save "parent" task-id */ tid = settaskid(getprojid(), TASK_NORMAL); /* Create new task */ /* Set data for item objects ptskid and cwd */ ea_set_item(&ptskid, EXT_UINT32 | EXC_LOCAL | MY_PTID, &ptid, 0); ea_set_item(&cwd, EXT_STRING | EXC_LOCAL | MY_CWD, cwdbuf, strlen(cwdbuf)); /* Set grp object and attach ptskid and cwd to grp */ ea_set_group(&grp, EXT_GROUP | EXC_LOCAL | EXD_GROUP_HEADER); ea_attach_to_group(&grp, &ptskid); ea_attach_to_group(&grp, &cwd); /* Pack the object and put it back into the accounting stream */ ea_buflen = ea_pack_object(&grp, ea_buf, sizeof(ea_buf)); putacct(P_TASKID, tid, ea_buf, ea_buflen, EP_EXACCT_OBJECT); /* Memory management: free memory allocate in ea_set_item */ ea_free_item(&cwd, EUP_ALLOC); ...
Example 3-3 Reading and Displaying the Contents of a System exacct File
This example shows how to read and display a system exacct file for a process or a task.
The key points for this example include the following:
Call ea_get_object() to get the next object in the file. Call ea_get_object() in a loop until EOF enables a complete traversal of the exacct file.
catalog_name() uses the catalog_item structure to convert an Oracle Solaris catalog's type ID to a meaningful string that describes the content of the object's data. The type ID is obtained by masking the lowest 24 bits, or 3 bytes.
switch(o->eo_catalog & EXT_TYPE_MASK) { case EXT_UINT8: printf(" 8: %u", o->eo_item.ei_uint8); break; case EXT_UINT16: ... }
The upper 4 bits of TYPE_MASK are used to find out the data type to print the object's actual data.
disp_group() takes a pointer to a group object and the number of objects in the group. For each object in the group, disp_group() calls disp_obj() and recursively calls disp_group() if the object is a group object.
/* Omit return value checking and error processing */ /* to keep code sample short */ main(int argc, char *argv) { ea_file_t ef; ea_object_t scratch; char *fname; fname = argv[1]; ea_open(&ef, fname, NULL, EO_NO_VALID_HDR, O_RDONLY, 0); bzero(&scratch, sizeof (ea_object_t)); while (ea_get_object(&ef, &scratch) != -1) { disp_obj(&scratch); if (scratch.eo_type == EO_GROUP) disp_group(&ef, scratch.eo_group.eg_nobjs); bzero(&scratch, sizeof (ea_object_t)); } ea_close(&ef); } struct catalog_item { /* convert Oracle Solaris catalog's type ID */ /* to a meaningful string */ int type; char *name; } catalog[] = { { EXD_VERSION, "version\t" }, ... { EXD_PROC_PID, " pid\t" }, ... }; static char * catalog_name(int type) { int i = 0; while (catalog[i].type != EXD_NONE) { if (catalog[i].type == type) return (catalog[i].name); else i++; } return ("unknown\t"); } static void disp_obj(ea_object_t *o) { printf("%s\t", catalog_name(o->eo_catalog & 0xffffff)); switch(o->eo_catalog & EXT_TYPE_MASK) { case EXT_UINT8: printf(" 8: %u", o->eo_item.ei_uint8); break; case EXT_UINT16: ... } static void disp_group(ea_file_t *ef, uint_t nobjs) { for (i = 0; i < nobjs; i++) { ea_get_object(ef, &scratch)); disp_obj(&scratch); if (scratch.eo_type == EO_GROUP) disp_group(ef, scratch.eo_group.eg_nobjs); } }