View Source instrument (runtime_tools v2.1)
Analysis and Utility Functions for Instrumentation
The module instrument
contains support for studying the resource usage in an
Erlang runtime system. Currently, only the allocation of memory can be studied.
Note
Since this module inspects internal details of the runtime system it may differ greatly from one version to another. We make no compatibility guarantees in this module.
See Also
Summary
Types
A summary of allocated block sizes (including their headers) grouped by their
Origin
and Type
.
A histogram of block sizes where each interval's upper bound is twice as high as the one before it.
AllocatorType
is the type of the allocator that employs this carrier.
Functions
Shorthand for allocations(#{})
.
Returns a summary of all tagged allocations in the system, optionally filtered by allocator type and scheduler id.
Shorthand for carriers(#{})
.
Returns a summary of all carriers in the system, optionally filtered by allocator type and scheduler id.
Types
-type allocation_summary() :: {HistogramStart :: non_neg_integer(), UnscannedSize :: non_neg_integer(), Allocations :: #{Origin :: allocation_origin() => #{Type :: atom() => block_histogram()}}}.
A summary of allocated block sizes (including their headers) grouped by their
Origin
and Type
.
Origin
is generally which NIF or driver that allocated the blocks, or 'system'
if it could not be determined.
Type
is the allocation category that the blocks belong to, e.g. db_term
,
message
or binary
. The categories correspond to those in
erl_alloc.types.
If one or more carriers could not be scanned in full without harming the
responsiveness of the system, UnscannedSize
is the number of bytes that had to
be skipped.
-type block_histogram() :: tuple().
A histogram of block sizes where each interval's upper bound is twice as high as the one before it.
The upper bound of the first interval is provided by the function that returned the histogram, and the last interval has no upper bound.
For example, the histogram below has 40 (message
) blocks between 128-256 bytes
in size, 78 blocks between 256-512 bytes,2 blocks between 512-1024 bytes, and 2
blocks between 1-2KB.
> instrument:allocations(#{ histogram_start => 128, histogram_width => 15 }).
{ok, {128, 0, #{ message => {0,40,78,2,2,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0}, ... } }}
-type carrier_info_list() :: {HistogramStart :: non_neg_integer(), Carriers :: [{AllocatorType :: atom(), InPool :: boolean(), TotalSize :: non_neg_integer(), UnscannedSize :: non_neg_integer(), Allocations :: [{Type :: atom(), Count :: non_neg_integer(), Size :: non_neg_integer()}], FreeBlocks :: block_histogram()}]}.
AllocatorType
is the type of the allocator that employs this carrier.
InPool
is whether the carrier is in the migration pool.
TotalSize
is the total size of the carrier, including its header.
Allocations
is a summary of the allocated blocks in the carrier. Note that
carriers may contain multiple different block types when carrier pools are
shared between different allocator types (see the
erts_alloc
documentation for more details).
FreeBlocks
is a histogram of the free block sizes in the carrier.
If the carrier could not be scanned in full without harming the responsiveness
of the system, UnscannedSize
is the number of bytes that had to be skipped.
Functions
-spec allocations() -> {ok, Result} | {error, Reason} when Result :: allocation_summary(), Reason :: not_enabled.
Shorthand for allocations(#{})
.
-spec allocations(Options) -> {ok, Result} | {error, Reason} when Result :: allocation_summary(), Reason :: not_enabled, Options :: #{scheduler_ids => [non_neg_integer()], allocator_types => [atom()], histogram_start => pos_integer(), histogram_width => pos_integer(), flags => [per_process | per_port | per_mfa]}.
Returns a summary of all tagged allocations in the system, optionally filtered by allocator type and scheduler id.
Only binaries and allocations made by NIFs and drivers are tagged by default,
but this can be configured an a per-allocator basis with the
+M<S>atags
emulator option.
If the specified allocator types are not enabled, the call will fail with
{error, not_enabled}
.
The following options can be used:
allocator_types
- The allocator types that will be searched.Specifying a specific allocator type may lead to strange results when carrier migration between different allocator types has been enabled: you may see unexpected types (e.g. process heaps when searching binary_alloc), or fewer blocks than expected if the carriers the blocks are on have been migrated out to an allocator of a different type.
Defaults to all
alloc_util
allocators.scheduler_ids
- The scheduler ids whose allocator instances will be searched. A scheduler id of 0 will refer to the global instance that is not tied to any particular scheduler. Defaults to all schedulers and the global instance.histogram_start
- The upper bound of the first interval in the allocated block size histograms. Defaults to 128.histogram_width
- The number of intervals in the allocated block size histograms. Defaults to 18.flags
- Controls how to group the output, for example showing allocations on a per-process basis (when possible) rather than only a NIF/driver-basis. Defaults to[]
.
Example:
> instrument:allocations(#{ histogram_start => 128, histogram_width => 15 }).
{ok,{128,0,
#{udp_inet =>
#{driver_event_state => {0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,0,0}},
system =>
#{heap => {0,0,0,0,20,4,2,2,2,3,0,1,0,0,1},
db_term => {271,3,1,52,80,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0},
code => {0,0,0,5,3,6,11,22,19,20,10,2,1,0,0},
binary => {18,0,0,0,7,0,0,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0},
message => {0,40,78,2,2,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0},
... }
spawn_forker =>
#{driver_select_data_state =>
{1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0}},
ram_file_drv => #{drv_binary => {0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0}},
prim_file =>
#{process_specific_data => {2,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0},
nif_trap_export_entry => {0,4,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0},
monitor_extended => {0,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0},
drv_binary => {0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,3,5,0,0,0,1,0},
binary => {0,4,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0}},
prim_buffer =>
#{nif_internal => {0,4,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0},
binary => {0,4,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0}}}}}
-spec carriers() -> {ok, Result} | {error, Reason} when Result :: carrier_info_list(), Reason :: not_enabled.
Shorthand for carriers(#{})
.
-spec carriers(Options) -> {ok, Result} | {error, Reason} when Result :: carrier_info_list(), Reason :: not_enabled, Options :: #{scheduler_ids => [non_neg_integer()], allocator_types => [atom()], histogram_start => pos_integer(), histogram_width => pos_integer()}.
Returns a summary of all carriers in the system, optionally filtered by allocator type and scheduler id.
If the specified allocator types are not enabled, the call will fail with
{error, not_enabled}
.
The following options can be used:
allocator_types
- The allocator types that will be searched. Defaults to allalloc_util
allocators.scheduler_ids
- The scheduler ids whose allocator instances will be searched. A scheduler id of 0 will refer to the global instance that is not tied to any particular scheduler. Defaults to all schedulers and the global instance.histogram_start
- The upper bound of the first interval in the free block size histograms. Defaults to 512.histogram_width
- The number of intervals in the free block size histograms. Defaults to 14.
Example:
> instrument:carriers(#{ histogram_start => 512, histogram_width => 8 }).
{ok,{512,
[{driver_alloc,false,262144,0,
[{driver_alloc,1,32784}],
{0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1}},
{binary_alloc,false,32768,0,
[{binary_alloc,15,4304}],
{3,0,0,0,1,0,0,0}},
{...}|...]}}