msacc
Module
Module Summary
Since
Description
This module implements some convenience functions for analyzing microstate accounting data. For details about how to use the basic api and what the different states represent see erlang:statistics(microstate_accounting).
Basic Scenario
1> msacc:start(1000). ok 2> msacc:print(). Average thread real-time : 1000513 us Accumulated system run-time : 2213 us Average scheduler run-time : 1076 us Thread aux check_io emulator gc other port sleep Stats per thread: async( 0) 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 100.00% async( 1) 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 100.00% aux( 1) 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 99.99% scheduler( 1) 0.00% 0.03% 0.13% 0.00% 0.01% 0.00% 99.82% scheduler( 2) 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.03% 0.00% 99.97% Stats per type: async 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 100.00% aux 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 99.99% scheduler 0.00% 0.02% 0.06% 0.00% 0.02% 0.00% 99.89% ok
This first command enables microstate accounting for 1000 milliseconds. See start/0, stop/0, reset/0 and start/1 for more details. The second command prints the statistics gathered during that time. First three general statistics are printed.
- Average real-time
- The average time spent collecting data in the threads. This should be close to the time which data was collected.
- System run-time
- The total run-time of all threads in the system. This is what you get if you call msacc:stats(total_runtime,Stats).
- Average scheduler run-time
- The average run-time for the schedulers. This is the average amount of time the schedulers did not sleep.
Then one column per state is printed with a the percentage of time this thread spent in the state out of it's own real-time. After the thread specific time, the accumulated time for each type of thread is printed in a similar format.
Since we have the average real-time and the percentage spent in each state we can easily calculate the time spent in each state by multiplying Average thread real-time with Thread state %, i.e. to get the time Scheduler 1 spent in the emulator state we do 1000513us * 0.13% = 1300us.
Data Types
#{'$type' := msacc_data,
type := msacc_type(),
id := msacc_id(),
counters := msacc_data_counters()}
A map containing the different microstate accounting states and the number of microseconds spent in it.
#{'$type' := msacc_stats,
type := msacc_type(),
id := msacc_id(),
system := float(),
counters := msacc_stats_counters()}
A map containing information about a specific thread. The percentages in the map can be either run-time or real-time depending on if runtime or realtime was requested from stats/2. system is the percentage of total system time for this specific thread.
A map containing the different microstate accounting states. Each value in the map contains another map with the percentage of time that this thread has spent in the specific state. Both the percentage of system time and the time for that specific thread is part of the map.
alloc |
aux |
bif |
busy_wait |
check_io |
emulator |
ets |
gc |
gc_fullsweep |
nif |
other |
port |
send |
sleep |
timers
The different states that a thread can be in. See erlang:statistics(microstate_accounting) for details.
The different options that can be given to print/2.
Exports
OTP 19.0 |
This function checks whether microstate accounting is available or not.
OTP 19.0 |
Start microstate accounting. Returns whether it was previously enabled or disabled.
OTP 19.0 |
Types
Resets all counters and then starts microstate accounting for the given milliseconds.
OTP 19.0 |
Stop microstate accounting. Returns whether is was previously enabled or disabled.
OTP 19.0 |
Reset microstate accounting counters. Returns whether is was enabled or disabled.
OTP 19.0 |
Prints the current microstate accounting to standard out. Same as msacc:print(msacc:stats(),#{}).
OTP 19.0 |
Types
Print the given microstate statistics values to stdout. Same as msacc:print(DataOrStats,#{}).
OTP 19.0 |
Print the given microstate statistics values to standard out. With many states this can be quite verbose. See the top of this reference manual for a brief description of what the fields mean.
It is possible to print more specific types of statistics by first manipulating the DataOrStats using stats/2. For instance if you want to print the percentage of run-time for each thread you can do:
msacc:print(msacc:stats(runtime,msacc:stats())).
If you want to only print run-time per thread type you can do:
msacc:print(msacc:stats(type,msacc:stats(runtime,msacc:stats()))).
Options
- system
- Print percentage of time spent in each state out of system time as well as thread time. Default: false.
OTP 19.0 |
Types
Print the given microstate statistics values to the given file or device. The other arguments behave the same way as for print/2.
stats() -> msacc_data()
|
OTP 19.0 |
Returns a runtime system independent version of the microstate statistics data presented by erlang:statistics(microstate_accounting). All counters have been normalized to be in microsecond resolution.
OTP 19.0 |
Returns the system time for the given microstate statistics values. System time is the accumulated time of all threads.
- realtime
- Returns all time recorded for all threads.
- runtime
- Returns all time spent doing work for all threads, i.e. all time not spent in the sleep state.
stats(Analysis, Stats) -> msacc_stats()
|
OTP 19.0 |
Returns fractions of real-time or run-time spent in the various threads from the given microstate statistics values.
OTP 19.0 |
Returns a list of microstate statistics values where the values for all threads of the same type has been merged.
to_file(Filename) -> ok | {error, file:posix()} |
OTP 19.0 |
Types
Dumps the current microstate statistics counters to a file that can be parsed with file:consult/1.
from_file(Filename) -> msacc_data()
|
OTP 19.0 |
Types
Read a file dump produced by to_file(Filename).