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pidpersec_example.txt
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pidpersec_example.txt
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Demonstrations of pidpersec, the Linux bpftrace/eBPF version.
Tracing new processes:
# ./pidpersec.bt
Attaching 4 probes...
Tracing new processes... Hit Ctrl-C to end.
22:29:50 PIDs/sec: @: 121
22:29:51 PIDs/sec: @: 120
22:29:52 PIDs/sec: @: 122
22:29:53 PIDs/sec: @: 124
22:29:54 PIDs/sec: @: 123
22:29:55 PIDs/sec: @: 121
22:29:56 PIDs/sec: @: 121
22:29:57 PIDs/sec: @: 121
22:29:58 PIDs/sec: @: 49
22:29:59 PIDs/sec:
22:30:00 PIDs/sec:
22:30:01 PIDs/sec:
22:30:02 PIDs/sec:
^C
The output begins by showing a rate of new processes over 120 per second.
That then ends at time 22:29:59, and for the next few seconds there are zero
new processes per second.
The following example shows a Linux build launched at 6:33:40, on a 36 CPU
server, with make -j36:
# ./pidpersec.bt
Attaching 4 probes...
Tracing new processes... Hit Ctrl-C to end.
06:33:38 PIDs/sec:
06:33:39 PIDs/sec:
06:33:40 PIDs/sec: @: 2314
06:33:41 PIDs/sec: @: 2517
06:33:42 PIDs/sec: @: 1345
06:33:43 PIDs/sec: @: 1752
06:33:44 PIDs/sec: @: 1744
06:33:45 PIDs/sec: @: 1549
06:33:46 PIDs/sec: @: 1643
06:33:47 PIDs/sec: @: 1487
06:33:48 PIDs/sec: @: 1534
06:33:49 PIDs/sec: @: 1279
06:33:50 PIDs/sec: @: 1392
06:33:51 PIDs/sec: @: 1556
06:33:52 PIDs/sec: @: 1580
06:33:53 PIDs/sec: @: 1944
A Linux kernel build involves launched many thousands of short-lived processes,
which can be seen in the above output: a rate of over 1,000 processes per
second.
There is another version of this tool in bcc: https://github.com/iovisor/bcc