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* DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
@ 2004-08-19 22:22 Miles Lane
  2004-08-19 23:01 ` Karim Yaghmour
  2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Miles Lane @ 2004-08-19 22:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:

"Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix 
and Linux."


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
@ 2004-08-19 22:33   ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-20 10:08     ` Alex Bennee
  2004-08-20  0:23   ` Florian Weimer
                     ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2004-08-19 22:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Julien Oster; +Cc: Miles Lane, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Gwe, 2004-08-20 at 00:23, Julien Oster wrote:
> Come on, it's profiling. As presented by that article, it is even more
> micro optimization than one would think. What with tweaking the disk
> I/O improvements and all... If my harddisk accesses were a microsecond
> more immediate or my filesystem giving a quantum more transfer rate,
> it would be nice, but I certainly wouldn't get enthusiastic and I bet
> nobody would even notice.

Yes and no. LTT is just profiling too. Both of them are making people
notice because they allow that system profiling work to be done by 
two-banana grade operations staff not by the company wizard.

Neither are perfect - users want a "why is it going slow button"
with a "make it work" and "beat the crap out of the user who caused it"
option set.

"Profiling for the people" as it were.. (as opposed to the current
fad of 'profiling the people')

Alan


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-19 22:22 DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels? Miles Lane
@ 2004-08-19 23:01 ` Karim Yaghmour
  2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Karim Yaghmour @ 2004-08-19 23:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Miles Lane
  Cc: linux-kernel, Thomas Zanussi, Richard J Moore, Robert Wisniewski,
	Michel Dagenais


Miles Lane wrote:
> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:
> 
> "Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix 
> and Linux."

We've been pushing for the inclusion of the Linux Trace Toolkit in the kernel
for the past 5 years. As of late, it seems that the pending argument against
its inclusion is: How is this useful to end users? In answer to that, I had
already posted the same pointer as above:
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=108938594031379&w=2

Since then, I've had the chance to discuss this matter at the Kernel Summit,
and again I was told that this was a sales problem (i.e. it must be
demonstrated that this is actually useful to users.) So, as the developers
of the Linux Trace Toolkit, it would help us a lot if you could explain to
this list why the sort of functionality provided by DTrace is something you
would personally find useful.

Thanks,

Karim
-- 
Author, Speaker, Developer, Consultant
Pushing Embedded and Real-Time Linux Systems Beyond the Limits
http://www.opersys.com || karim@opersys.com || 1-866-677-4546


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-19 22:22 DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels? Miles Lane
  2004-08-19 23:01 ` Karim Yaghmour
@ 2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
  2004-08-19 22:33   ` Alan Cox
                     ` (3 more replies)
  1 sibling, 4 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Julien Oster @ 2004-08-19 23:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Miles Lane; +Cc: linux-kernel

Miles Lane <miles.lane@comcast.net> writes:

> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:
> "Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix 
> and Linux."

That article is way too hypey.

It sounds like one of those strange american commercials you see
sometimes at night, where two overenthusiastic persons are telling you
how much that strange fruit juice machine has changed their lives,
with making them loose 200 pounds in 6 days and improving their
performance at beach volleyball a lot due to subneutronic antigravity
manipulation. You usually can't watch those commercials for longer
than 5 minutes.

The same applies to that article, I couldn't even read it completely,
it was just too much.

And is it just me or did that article really take that long to
mentioning what dtrace actually IS?

Come on, it's profiling. As presented by that article, it is even more
micro optimization than one would think. What with tweaking the disk
I/O improvements and all... If my harddisk accesses were a microsecond
more immediate or my filesystem giving a quantum more transfer rate,
it would be nice, but I certainly wouldn't get enthusiastic and I bet
nobody would even notice.

Maybe, without that article, I would recognize it as a fine thing (and
by "fine" I don't mean "the best thing since sliced bread"), but that
piece of text was just too ridiculous to take anything serious.

I sure hope that article is meant sarcastically. By the way, did I
miss something or is profiling suddenly a new thing again?

Regards,
Julien

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
  2004-08-19 22:33   ` Alan Cox
@ 2004-08-20  0:23   ` Florian Weimer
  2004-08-20 13:34     ` Alexander Nyberg
  2004-08-21  6:03   ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-31 20:16   ` Timothy Miller
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Florian Weimer @ 2004-08-20  0:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Miles Lane; +Cc: linux-kernel

* Julien Oster:

> Miles Lane <miles.lane@comcast.net> writes:
>
>> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:
>> "Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix 
>> and Linux."
>
> That article is way too hypey.

Maybe, but DTrace seems to solve one really pressing problem: tracking
disk I/O to the processes causing it.  Unexplained high I/O
utilization is a *very* common problem, and there aren't any tools to
diagnose it.

Most other system resources can be tracked quite easily: disk space,
CPU time, committed address space, even network I/O (with tcpdump and
netstat -p).  But there's no such thing for disk I/O.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-19 22:33   ` Alan Cox
@ 2004-08-20 10:08     ` Alex Bennee
  2004-08-20 11:21       ` Robert Schwebel
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alex Bennee @ 2004-08-20 10:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox; +Cc: Julien Oster, Miles Lane, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Thu, 2004-08-19 at 23:33, Alan Cox wrote:
> On Gwe, 2004-08-20 at 00:23, Julien Oster wrote:
> > Come on, it's profiling. As presented by that article, it is even more
> <snip>
> "Profiling for the people" as it were.. (as opposed to the current
> fad of 'profiling the people')

Well profiling for user space developers. Certainly for embedded "soft
realtime" work I've found LTT really useful in understanding where the
contentions where in my user-space code. And also why the old pthread
mutex didn't work well with SCHED_RT priorities :-(

If it was my choice I'd like to see LTT merged, but of course its not
all about me much as I wish it was ;-)

-- 
Alex, Kernel Hacker: http://www.bennee.com/~alex/

Assembly language experience is [important] for the maturity
and understanding of how computers work that it provides.
		-- D. Gries


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-20 10:08     ` Alex Bennee
@ 2004-08-20 11:21       ` Robert Schwebel
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Robert Schwebel @ 2004-08-20 11:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Fri, Aug 20, 2004 at 11:08:21AM +0100, Alex Bennee wrote:
> Well profiling for user space developers. Certainly for embedded "soft
> realtime" work I've found LTT really useful in understanding where the
> contentions where in my user-space code. And also why the old pthread
> mutex didn't work well with SCHED_RT priorities :-(
> 
> If it was my choice I'd like to see LTT merged, but of course its not
> all about me much as I wish it was ;-)

Same here - LTT turned out to be a useful tool for debugging performance
issues in several USB gadget drivers. Sure, it would have been possible
to instrument the boxes with the scope and trace things in hardware, but
with LTT it was much easier to handle. 

Robert
-- 
 Dipl.-Ing. Robert Schwebel | http://www.pengutronix.de
 Pengutronix - Linux Solutions for Science and Industry
   Handelsregister:  Amtsgericht Hildesheim, HRA 2686
     Hornemannstraße 12,  31137 Hildesheim, Germany
    Phone: +49-5121-28619-0 |  Fax: +49-5121-28619-4

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-20  0:23   ` Florian Weimer
@ 2004-08-20 13:34     ` Alexander Nyberg
  2004-08-20 13:46       ` Florian Weimer
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alexander Nyberg @ 2004-08-20 13:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Florian Weimer; +Cc: Miles Lane, linux-kernel

On Fri, 2004-08-20 at 02:23, Florian Weimer wrote:
> * Julien Oster:
> 
> > Miles Lane <miles.lane@comcast.net> writes:
> >
> >> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:
> >> "Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix 
> >> and Linux."
> >
> > That article is way too hypey.
> 
> Maybe, but DTrace seems to solve one really pressing problem: tracking
> disk I/O to the processes causing it.  Unexplained high I/O
> utilization is a *very* common problem, and there aren't any tools to
> diagnose it.
>
> Most other system resources can be tracked quite easily: disk space,
> CPU time, committed address space, even network I/O (with tcpdump and
> netstat -p).  But there's no such thing for disk I/O.

Why can't this be done be looking at the major faults a process causes?

Not very slick indeed, but it can be done.

I wrote a small silly /proc/pid/stat parser at
http://serkiaden.mine.nu/procextract.c 

One could quite easily hack up a tool to monitor I/O per process or
does it need to be very more precise?


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-20 13:34     ` Alexander Nyberg
@ 2004-08-20 13:46       ` Florian Weimer
  2004-08-20 16:46         ` David S. Miller
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Florian Weimer @ 2004-08-20 13:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alexander Nyberg; +Cc: Miles Lane, linux-kernel

* Alexander Nyberg:

>> Most other system resources can be tracked quite easily: disk space,
>> CPU time, committed address space, even network I/O (with tcpdump and
>> netstat -p).  But there's no such thing for disk I/O.
>
> Why can't this be done be looking at the major faults a process causes?

Because only paging results in major faults, normal I/O with
read()/write() (or the p*() variants) does not.

> One could quite easily hack up a tool to monitor I/O per process or
> does it need to be very more precise?

It would be nice to obtain file names, too.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-20 13:46       ` Florian Weimer
@ 2004-08-20 16:46         ` David S. Miller
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: David S. Miller @ 2004-08-20 16:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Florian Weimer; +Cc: alexn, miles.lane, linux-kernel

On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 15:46:33 +0200
Florian Weimer <fw@deneb.enyo.de> wrote:

> > One could quite easily hack up a tool to monitor I/O per process or
> > does it need to be very more precise?
> 
> It would be nice to obtain file names, too.

I bet you could even implement this quite simply as
a new special oprofile event.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
  2004-08-19 22:33   ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-20  0:23   ` Florian Weimer
@ 2004-08-21  6:03   ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-21  6:12     ` David S. Miller
                       ` (2 more replies)
  2004-08-31 20:16   ` Timothy Miller
  3 siblings, 3 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tomasz Kłoczko @ 2004-08-21  6:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Julien Oster; +Cc: Miles Lane, linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 5783 bytes --]

On Fri, 20 Aug 2004, Julien Oster wrote:

> Miles Lane <miles.lane@comcast.net> writes:
>
>> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:
>> "Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix
>> and Linux."
>
> That article is way too hypey.
>
> It sounds like one of those strange american commercials you see
> sometimes at night, where two overenthusiastic persons are telling you
> how much that strange fruit juice machine has changed their lives,
> with making them loose 200 pounds in 6 days and improving their
> performance at beach volleyball a lot due to subneutronic antigravity
> manipulation. You usually can't watch those commercials for longer
> than 5 minutes.

Probably you did try use DTrace even less than 5 minutes :->

> The same applies to that article, I couldn't even read it completely,
> it was just too much.
>
> And is it just me or did that article really take that long to
> mentioning what dtrace actually IS?
>
> Come on, it's profiling.

Bullsh* :-|

DTrace is development tool for kernel and *application* develepers
because it have some tracing functionalities .. but *ALSO* .. not mainly.
It can be used *ALSO* as profiling tool but this functionality is small 
piece of this and most exciting part of DTrace is outhere both above 
areas. *ALSO* DTrace can bring classic profiling/tracing tasks to new much 
more effective level (look below on [1]).
For many cases where I try use DTrace and which I heard where it was uses 
by my friends it was used on normal *administration* tasks (look for 
example on SysAdmin DTrace article where on beging this article was used 
example how DTrace can be used for finding source of some 
system misconfiguration) where before was used tools like variouse 
{k,vm,prt,net,io,nfs,lock,...}stat tools and in mamy cases it allow answer 
for the same administrators question where this tools can't be used in
simple way or where answering on some question can take so much time where 
many people will say "huh .. _maybe_ I will try this later".

Again: DTrace is *ALSO* admininstration tool and this is why I can't
understand why in IBM KProbe/DProbe patch it is marked as "depends on
DEBUG_KERNEL" which is IMO bigest mistake on thinking level about this :>

In Solaris DTrace is enabled in _normal production_ kernel and you can 
hang any probe or probes set without restarting system or any runed
application which was compiled withoud debug info.

[1] Remember: if you want profile some part of code you mast _first_
(re)compile them with profiling enabled. If you wand debug some code first 
you must (re)compile code with enabled generate debug info. All this takes 
time .. and in all this cases you must restart system or traced
application (also takes time).
In many cases (even not trivial) using DTrace you can perform 
tracing/profiling/measuring _without recompiling and also without_
_restating_ runed code (which is *very valueable*) .. all this in few
seconds.

Some enterprise systems have limited summary time to few hours per year 
and restart cycle can take houre or more (checking and initialize hardware
components). If you will try say for admin this kind system "restat your
system using this kernel image which have enabled some additional printk() 
and show me syslog output" probaly you will never see this admin again.
Also mamy bugs can be observed _only_ on highly loaded systems where
adding ptrace() based tracing can even kill system (trace using DTrace
takes less power from system than ptrace()).

For bring few levels up kernel *development* speed on finding some bugs 
source and measure some consequences adding/modifing some part of code
it will be good have two very well prepared on Solaris things:
- crash dumps,
- DTrace.
On Solaris also you can combine above (you can generate crash dump using 
signal from DTrace program and you can review DTrace data from system 
crash dump image).

When you see some strange behavior without system destabization 
current/cassic Linux kernel development look now like:
1) if you have good kernel knowledge you can imagine which part of them
    is source of same observed strange behavior,
2) after looking on kernel source you can cut of area to part where bug
    exist,
3) after few recompilations you can say in which area bug exist and after
    few other iteration stage 3) you can say what maust be fixed.
This classic way.

New way using DTrace can look like:
1) by using few times modified DTrace *programs* (in many cases
    prepared in one line command line parameters) you can locate which part
    of runng code (for example by what is on stack) is source of observed
    behavior,
2) after locate bad area code you can find associated to this source code,
3) and now from this limited area you can start thinging about "what I
    must know about kernel" for finding source of problem.

New way is kind of anal development. In much more cases it will allow
find source of bug and have source even prepare better or worse fix
by _not only_ highly expirinced kernel developers.
Also stage 1) and 2) can be performed by *not real developer* (?!).

In classic way if you are not skilled you can't even try pass 1) stage :>
Passing classic variant stage 3) requires installed development 
enviroment.

kloczek
PS. Very interesting commens about this thread is on Bryan Cantrill 
(DTrace developer) blog:
http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/bmc/20040820#dtrace_on_lkml
Bryan blog is also yet another Dtrace knowledge source ..
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
*Ludzie nie mają problemów, tylko sobie sami je stwarzają*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tomasz Kłoczko, sys adm @zie.pg.gda.pl|*e-mail: kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl*

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-21  6:03   ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-21  6:12     ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-21  6:22       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-21 12:12     ` Julien Oster
  2004-08-22 11:35     ` Alan Cox
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: David S. Miller @ 2004-08-21  6:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tomasz K³oczko; +Cc: usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel

On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 08:03:10 +0200 (CEST)
Tomasz K³oczko <kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> wrote:

> [1] Remember: if you want profile some part of code you mast _first_
> (re)compile them with profiling enabled.

If you use oprofile or valgrind, no you don't.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-21  6:12     ` David S. Miller
@ 2004-08-21  6:22       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tomasz Kłoczko @ 2004-08-21  6:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David S. Miller; +Cc: usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 651 bytes --]

On Fri, 20 Aug 2004, David S. Miller wrote:

> On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 08:03:10 +0200 (CEST)
> Tomasz Kłoczko <kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> wrote:
>
>> [1] Remember: if you want profile some part of code you mast _first_
>> (re)compile them with profiling enabled.
>
> If you use oprofile or valgrind, no you don't.

Of course .. but oprofile can't be used on areas where DTrace can be :)

kloczek
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
*Ludzie nie mają problemów, tylko sobie sami je stwarzają*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tomasz Kłoczko, sys adm @zie.pg.gda.pl|*e-mail: kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl*

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-21  6:03   ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-21  6:12     ` David S. Miller
@ 2004-08-21 12:12     ` Julien Oster
  2004-08-21 13:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-21 21:49       ` Bryan Cantrill
  2004-08-22 11:35     ` Alan Cox
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Julien Oster @ 2004-08-21 12:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tomasz Kłoczko
  Cc: Julien Oster, Miles Lane, linux-kernel, Bryan Cantrill

Tomasz Kłoczko <kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> writes:

Hello Tomasz,

> Probably you did try use DTrace even less than 5 minutes :->

No, I didn't. I clearly referred to that article, not to dtrace itself.

> PS. Very interesting commens about this thread is on Bryan Cantrill
> (DTrace developer) blog:
> http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/bmc/20040820#dtrace_on_lkml
> Bryan blog is also yet another Dtrace knowledge source ..

Oh, yeah, great. A whole blog entry dedicated to me. Now I am a moron,
absolutely clueless and I am "looking to confirm preconceived notions
rather than understand new technology".

Sorry, but that goes a little too far. No, I didn't try out dtrace
and, right after reading the article (and that's the important thing!)
I didn't seek for further information about it, I'm not a Solaris
System Administrator right now (I was, some years ago). And all I was
saying is that this *article* was just ridiculous.

Please read this paragraph of my response to it again:

| Maybe, without that article, I would recognize it as a fine thing
| (and by "fine" I don't mean "the best thing since sliced bread"),
| but that piece of text was just too ridiculous to take anything
| serious.

That should make it obvious, shouldn't it? I would have written the
same thing If I read a similar article about, for example, vmware, UML
or valgrind - and I really think those are really great inventions.

But in that article, I was just missing the objectiveness. A quick
note about the fact that Sun's been introducing dtrace for Solaris 10
and what it is, what it does, would have been much better instead of
talking about a "Cantrill explosion", how "DTrace has completely
changed the way I do business" (actual quotes).

Florian and Alan told me in a quick and objective manner why dtrace is
a good thing, and I am glad for that information. I never stated that
DTrace was a bad thing. I repeat it again - if I had any use for it,
and I maybe have in future - it looks like I would consider DTrace a
very nice thing to have. From the (non-insulting) replys I got, I
understood that DTrace actually is one.

Bryan Cantrill, I can understand that you have to defend DTrace. But
please, PLEASE stop saying that I am a clueless moron if I wasn't even
ranting about you, ranting about DTrace, but just about *that single
article* and it's presentation of DTrace to me.

And then all those comments about Linux users and developers being
very defensive about DTrace... heck, can't I even critisize the
quality of an ARTICLE without being accused of being a Linux maniac
which fights against Solaris? I am using Solaris myself. Some years
ago, I was a System Administrator for - guess what - Solaris
machines. The last thing I want to step into is a religious war
between Solaris and Linux. Does that mean I am not allowed to express
my opinion about the public press anymore?

I read about dtrace now, I think it's a good invention. If at any
place at any time we two would meet I maybe would say to you "Bryan, I
like DTrace very much". If I was to administer Solaris systems right
now, I would probably even say: "Bryan, DTrace has helped me a
lot". But I would STILL say that that article was CRAP, because that
is just what that article is from my point of view.

Now, I really don't know how to make this any more clear.

Julien

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-21 12:12     ` Julien Oster
@ 2004-08-21 13:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-21 21:49       ` Bryan Cantrill
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tomasz Kłoczko @ 2004-08-21 13:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Julien Oster; +Cc: Julien Oster, Miles Lane, linux-kernel, Bryan Cantrill

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 2692 bytes --]

On Sat, 21 Aug 2004, Julien Oster wrote:
[..]
>> PS. Very interesting commens about this thread is on Bryan Cantrill
>> (DTrace developer) blog:
>> http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/bmc/20040820#dtrace_on_lkml
>> Bryan blog is also yet another Dtrace knowledge source ..
>
> Oh, yeah, great. A whole blog entry dedicated to me. Now I am a moron,
> absolutely clueless and I am "looking to confirm preconceived notions
> rather than understand new technology".
>
> Sorry, but that goes a little too far. No, I didn't try out dtrace
> and, right after reading the article (and that's the important thing!)
> I didn't seek for further information about it, I'm not a Solaris
> System Administrator right now (I was, some years ago). And all I was
> saying is that this *article* was just ridiculous.

s/DTrace/<something_other>/ .. and yes in any other cases also if you are
not never using this <something_other> and try say publicaly what is it 
maybe you can't be moron but your camment ~100% will be _like_ moron
comment :_)
Why in this case you are comment like moron ? Because DTrace is 
consequense spending may hundrets hours by many many people (probablty not 
only from Sun and not only developers) .. it is probaly bigest innovation 
on operating system word in last few years.

It is very hard to describe in short article what DTrace is and what is not ..
and I can undestand why peple like you after reading some short text will 
see in this *only* tracing tool or *only* profiling tool (*olny* tools 
which they know) .. simple because tool like DTrace partialy creates
new class of tools.
You can know debuger, profiler, any other (statical) tracing tool and 
maybe some tools for measuring some interesting parameters but DTrace 
isn't simple combination above because it have programing abilities. For 
example you can add expression when and what from some bigger set 
parameters/points must be traced or not .. all depending on current 
program/kernel state.

DTrace power isn't in hooking atomic probes abilities but in combine this 
with very small but smart/powerfull programable VM and on collecting some 
data in few usefull forms (tables [1], hashes ..) and reporting all this 
in readable form. This why current Linux KProbe/DProbe isn't so usefull as 
current Solaris DTrace.

[1] in simple tables or tables indexed using probe results or eveven
current stack path or other vector some variables set.

kloczek
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
*Ludzie nie mają problemów, tylko sobie sami je stwarzają*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tomasz Kłoczko, sys adm @zie.pg.gda.pl|*e-mail: kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl*

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-21 12:12     ` Julien Oster
  2004-08-21 13:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-21 21:49       ` Bryan Cantrill
  2004-08-23 23:08         ` Christoph Halder
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Bryan Cantrill @ 2004-08-21 21:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Julien Oster; +Cc: kloczek, usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel, bmc


> > PS. Very interesting commens about this thread is on Bryan Cantrill
> > (DTrace developer) blog:
> > http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/bmc/20040820#dtrace_on_lkml
> > Bryan blog is also yet another Dtrace knowledge source ..
> 
> Oh, yeah, great. A whole blog entry dedicated to me. Now I am a moron,
> absolutely clueless and I am "looking to confirm preconceived notions
> rather than understand new technology".
> 
> Sorry, but that goes a little too far. No, I didn't try out dtrace
> and, right after reading the article (and that's the important thing!)
> I didn't seek for further information about it, I'm not a Solaris
> System Administrator right now (I was, some years ago). And all I was
> saying is that this *article* was just ridiculous.

As a reminder, you _didn't_ read the entire article, by your own admission:

  That article is way too hypey...  I couldn't even read it completely,
  it was just too much.

And that was actually my point:  you spent more time denigrating the article
for lack of supporting detail than it would have taken you to _finish_ the
article and discover those supporting details.  

> But in that article, I was just missing the objectiveness. A quick
> note about the fact that Sun's been introducing dtrace for Solaris 10
> and what it is, what it does, would have been much better instead of
> talking about a "Cantrill explosion", how "DTrace has completely
> changed the way I do business" (actual quotes).

You don't like customer quotes?  It seems to me that quotes like that
one (or like the other customer quotes that appear in the article)
give weight to the claims.  Don't you like to hear from people who have
actually _used_ a technology?  I know that I do -- those who have used
a technology are likely to have a much more balanced view on its
strengths and weaknesses than those who have just read about it.  (Indeed,
this is true of pretty much anything -- experience matters.)

> Florian and Alan told me in a quick and objective manner why dtrace is
> a good thing, and I am glad for that information. I never stated that
> DTrace was a bad thing. 

Oh really?  You wrote:

  Come on, it's profiling. As presented by that article, it is even more
  micro optimization than one would think. What with tweaking the disk
  I/O improvements and all... If my harddisk accesses were a microsecond
  more immediate or my filesystem giving a quantum more transfer rate,
  it would be nice, but I certainly wouldn't get enthusiastic and I bet
  nobody would even notice.

So come on, yourself:  it's _not_ just "profiling" and DTrace finds
problems that are _much_ larger than "micro-optimizations" (indeed, that's
the whole damn point), and finishing the article would have told you that.

> Bryan Cantrill, I can understand that you have to defend DTrace. But
> please, PLEASE stop saying that I am a clueless moron if I wasn't even
> ranting about you, ranting about DTrace, but just about *that single
> article* and it's presentation of DTrace to me.

You were attacking more than just the article; you ended with:

  I sure hope that article is meant sarcastically. By the way, did I
  miss something or is profiling suddenly a new thing again?

You asked if you were missing something, and I replied that you were
missing plenty.  Presumably you now feel informed (if a little embarrassed),
and I think that those that you misinformed also now realize that what
you provided them was misinformation.  So as far as I'm concerned, that's
the end of that.

	- Bryan

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bryan Cantrill, Solaris Kernel Development.       http://blogs.sun.com/bmc

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-21  6:03   ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-21  6:12     ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-21 12:12     ` Julien Oster
@ 2004-08-22 11:35     ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-22 18:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-23 19:48       ` Robert Milkowski
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2004-08-22 11:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tomasz Kłoczko; +Cc: Julien Oster, Miles Lane, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sad, 2004-08-21 at 07:03, Tomasz Kłoczko wrote:
> Again: DTrace is *ALSO* admininstration tool and this is why I can't
> understand why in IBM KProbe/DProbe patch it is marked as "depends on
> DEBUG_KERNEL" which is IMO bigest mistake on thinking level about this :>

Because its a debugging feature

> In Solaris DTrace is enabled in _normal production_ kernel and you can 
> hang any probe or probes set without restarting system or any runed
> application which was compiled withoud debug info.

Solaris only runs on large computers. You don't want kprobes randomly on
your phone, pda, wireless router. Solaris deals with an extremely narrow
market segment of "big computers for people with lots of money".

> [1] Remember: if you want profile some part of code you mast _first_
> (re)compile them with profiling enabled. If you wand debug some code

OProfile doesn't require this. 

> Some enterprise systems have limited summary time to few hours per year 
> and restart cycle can take houre or more (checking and initialize hardware
> components). If you will try say for admin this kind system "restat your

Enterprise users generally get kernels from vendors who have done the
analysis of needs for them (and hopefully got it right). They generally
don't ftp 2.6.8.1 type make config and try it out.

> For bring few levels up kernel *development* speed on finding some bugs 
> source and measure some consequences adding/modifing some part of code
> it will be good have two very well prepared on Solaris things:
> - crash dumps,
> - DTrace.

We have crash dumps - at least all the enterprise vendors do. Linus
doesn't seem to like that stuff so much.

> When you see some strange behavior without system destabization 
> current/cassic Linux kernel development look now like:
> 1) if you have good kernel knowledge you can imagine which part of them
>     is source of same observed strange behavior,
> 2) after looking on kernel source you can cut of area to part where bug
>     exist,
> 3) after few recompilations you can say in which area bug exist and after
>     few other iteration stage 3) you can say what maust be fixed.

Actually I generally
-	Glance across the load meters
-	Ask ps where everything is waiting
-	Potentially turn on oprofile
-	Potentially use netfilter to see who is causing all my traffic
-	Maybe strace a few apps to see what is up
-	Educate the user concerned (if needed)

I've already got the symbols (and they are in the debuginfo package from
the rpm build too). I could insmod kgdb but that level of
debugging is generally inappropriate. 

DTrace value is ease of use value.

> http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/bmc/20040820#dtrace_on_lkml
> Bryan blog is also yet another Dtrace knowledge source ..

Coo I thought only the Sun CEO spent his life making inappropriate
comments 8)


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 11:35     ` Alan Cox
@ 2004-08-22 18:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-22 18:46         ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-22 23:03         ` John Levon
  2004-08-23 19:48       ` Robert Milkowski
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tomasz Kłoczko @ 2004-08-22 18:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox; +Cc: Julien Oster, Miles Lane, Linux Kernel Mailing List

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 5888 bytes --]

On Sun, 22 Aug 2004, Alan Cox wrote:

> On Sad, 2004-08-21 at 07:03, Tomasz K?oczko wrote:
>> Again: DTrace is *ALSO* admininstration tool and this is why I can't
>> understand why in IBM KProbe/DProbe patch it is marked as "depends on
>> DEBUG_KERNEL" which is IMO bigest mistake on thinking level about this :>
>
> Because its a debugging feature

KProbe on ground/idea is very similar to DTrace -> DTrace isn't only
debuging tools -> KProbe cen be used not only for debuging.

Yes it *is* debugging feature but it is much more and can be used *also* 
for mamy other things. So marking them as DEBUG_KERNEL dependens is wrong.

>> In Solaris DTrace is enabled in _normal production_ kernel and you can
>> hang any probe or probes set without restarting system or any runed
>> application which was compiled withoud debug info.
>
> Solaris only runs on large computers. You don't want kprobes randomly on
> your phone, pda, wireless router. Solaris deals with an extremely narrow
> market segment of "big computers for people with lots of money".

No Anal. You are wrong. DTrace isn't only for big computers .. it is not 
even for computers but for *finding souce some bugs or other behaviors* 
(not only bugs or bad behaviors :) without specify system size and/or 
price and/or importance and/or is it runed on developmer computer on not.

Ones more: DTrace isn't classic tracing/debuging/measuring tool. It is
much much more and some additional DTrace abilities aren't used only by
developers but also by administrators for finding source veriouse
problems which in spe *aren't bugs* on application or system code level.
And this why DTrace is enabled in distribution/production kernel.
You can have perfect system and perfect application but because system
and applications coexist in one enviroment this will create not empty set
bad cases.
Using yor thing path: KProbe/Dtrace is for development and yes it must 
depend on DEBUG_KERNEL.
ptrace() is also for tracing and ver offen used by developers but it is 
enabled by default and it is not only for developers. So .. ptrace() must 
also depend on DEBUG_KERNEL.
This is of corse wrong .. why ? Because strace just like DTrace/KProbe 
isn't only development tool and/or for developers.

IIRC all Dtrace probes can be divided in to two classes: zero effect and 
near zero effect. First mean: if you don't use probe this do not degrade 
system speed (it uses online self modified binary code without
reservation memory by nop instructions for insert call entry on 
compilation stage). In Solaris kernel exist few thousands avalaible probes 
and IIRC only very small subset is "near zero effect" (uses nop 
instructions).
All other *do not degrade system speed* and this *why* this 
is enabled in production kernel because price this is ~nothing !!

Solaris have very well archived binary compatibilities even on kernel 
level. This offen will mean: you can use some binary modules from older 
kernels and use them with good effect in latest Solaris. Latest Solaris 
(SX) have DTrace.
1 + 1 = you can trace some old code in some limited area (not the same as 
in code prepared for kernel with DTrace) using DTrace using "zero effect" 
probes if you know some entry points in this code.
The same for usser space applications.

>> [1] Remember: if you want profile some part of code you mast _first_
>> (re)compile them with profiling enabled. If you wand debug some code
>
> OProfile doesn't require this.

As same as KProbe/DTrace. Can you use OProfile for something other tnan 
profiling ? Probably yes and this answer opens: probably it will be good 
prepare some common code for KProbe and Oprofile.

>> Some enterprise systems have limited summary time to few hours per year
>> and restart cycle can take houre or more (checking and initialize hardware
>> components). If you will try say for admin this kind system "restat your
>
> Enterprise users generally get kernels from vendors who have done the
> analysis of needs for them (and hopefully got it right). They generally
> don't ftp 2.6.8.1 type make config and try it out.

But using thins like KProbe (which is similar to DTrace) for many Linux
developers will ollow better find bugs in 2.6.8.1 :)
Are they enterprise users ? Is it realy subject _only_ chained to 
"enterprise users" or "vendors" ? IMO no.
And again: DTrace *isn't only for kernel* (current KProbe too) and it is
much more than tracinfg tool so it is importand for developers and not 
develpers too.
So it will be good stop disscuss about "yes or no ?" and start about
"how and when in Linux ?" ..

>> For bring few levels up kernel *development* speed on finding some bugs
>> source and measure some consequences adding/modifing some part of code
>> it will be good have two very well prepared on Solaris things:
>> - crash dumps,
>> - DTrace.
>
> We have crash dumps - at least all the enterprise vendors do. Linus
> doesn't seem to like that stuff so much.

Linux CD to Solaris CD have very long distance ..
Yes it work but compare to Solaris state and as says my fiend "ca~ it only 
work".
It need some more advanced additional tools for analize and report data
from CD.

To Linus: things like CD or KProbe/DProbe allow catch problem by not 
skilled person and analize them in something other in diffret location in 
much more easier way than now. If now in source tree is integrated 
OProfile it will be good integrate ASAP also things like KProbes and CD.
It is not only extenging entropy kernel tree. IMO KProbe can bring some
functionalities wich can be common also for OProfile and probably in 
future IMO OProfile can be droped.

kloczek
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
*Ludzie nie mają problemów, tylko sobie sami je stwarzają*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tomasz Kłoczko, sys adm @zie.pg.gda.pl|*e-mail: kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl*

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 18:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-22 18:46         ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-23 17:34           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-22 23:03         ` John Levon
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2004-08-22 18:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tomasz Kłoczko; +Cc: Julien Oster, Miles Lane, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sul, 2004-08-22 at 19:27, Tomasz Kłoczko wrote:
> Using yor thing path: KProbe/Dtrace is for development and yes it must 
> depend on DEBUG_KERNEL.
> ptrace() is also for tracing and ver offen used by developers but it is 
> enabled by default and it is not only for developers. So .. ptrace() must 
> also depend on DEBUG_KERNEL.

ptrace is for debugging user space, as for example is oprofile. kprobes
is for debugging including kernel internal goings on

> compilation stage). In Solaris kernel exist few thousands avalaible probes 
> and IIRC only very small subset is "near zero effect" (uses nop 
> instructions).

Sounds like a kprobes clone 8). 

> > OProfile doesn't require this.
> 
> As same as KProbe/DTrace. Can you use OProfile for something other tnan 
> profiling ? Probably yes and this answer opens: probably it will be good 
> prepare some common code for KProbe and Oprofile.

Oprofile lets you work on stuff like cache affinity, tuning array walks
and prefetches. Short of running the app under cachegrind its one of the
most detailed ways of getting all the profile register data from the x86
processors.

> So it will be good stop disscuss about "yes or no ?" and start about
> "how and when in Linux ?" ..

When you send patches ?

> > We have crash dumps - at least all the enterprise vendors do. Linus
> > doesn't seem to like that stuff so much.
> It need some more advanced additional tools for analize and report data
> from CD.

Standard debugging tools. The system dumps across the network to a
server and then you can analyse it offline

> OProfile it will be good integrate ASAP also things like KProbes and CD.
> It is not only extenging entropy kernel tree. IMO KProbe can bring some
> functionalities wich can be common also for OProfile and probably in 
> future IMO OProfile can be droped.

You clearly haven't understood what Oprofile does. Its a parallel
technology that is more in common with say Intel's vtune.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 17:18                               ` Christer Weinigel
@ 2004-08-22 19:22                                 ` Joerg Schilling
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Joerg Schilling @ 2004-08-22 19:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel

Julien Oster wrote:

>> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:
>> "Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix 
>> and Linux."

>That article is way too hypey.

The article is ay too pessimisctic compared to the real possibilities that 
Dtrace offers.


>The same applies to that article, I couldn't even read it completely,
>it was just too much.

If you did not read it completely, how cah you judge about it?

Jörg

-- 
 EMail:joerg@schily.isdn.cs.tu-berlin.de (home) Jörg Schilling D-13353 Berlin
       js@cs.tu-berlin.de		(uni)  If you don't have iso-8859-1
       schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de	(work) chars I am J"org Schilling
 URL:  http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de/usr/schilling ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 19:26                             ` PATCH: cdrecord: avoiding scsi device numbering for ide devices Tonnerre
@ 2004-08-22 20:14                               ` Joerg Schilling
  2004-08-22 20:33                                 ` Tonnerre
  2004-08-23 17:40                                 ` Horst von Brand
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Joerg Schilling @ 2004-08-22 20:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel

Alan Cox wrote:

>> In Solaris DTrace is enabled in _normal production_ kernel and you can 
>> hang any probe or probes set without restarting system or any runed
>> application which was compiled withoud debug info.
>
>Solaris only runs on large computers. You don't want kprobes randomly on
>your phone, pda, wireless router. Solaris deals with an extremely narrow
>market segment of "big computers for people with lots of money".
...
>> http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/bmc/20040820#dtrace_on_lkml
>> Bryan blog is also yet another Dtrace knowledge source ..
>
>Coo I thought only the Sun CEO spent his life making inappropriate
>comments 8)

It seems that Alan does not like to miss a single day to degrade his 
credibiltiy :-(

A fact based discussion looks different...

-	What is a "large computer"?

-	What is an "extremely narrow market segment"?
	What is the evidence of this statement compared to Linux?

-	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Linux?

-	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Solaris?

People who cannot answer these questions should not try to start mad
speculations on derived conclusions.

The size of the loadable dtrace module is ~ 100 kB, this is nothing bad even 
for small appliances these days.

Guess what Brian Cantrill is running on his notebook?

Guess what machine Brian is using to run dtrace demos on shows?

And hey, Brian is even able to make a 4 hour demo within a single hour on this 
machine ;-)

Dtrace is a powerful idea that gives unbelievable new opportinities to 
developers, sysadmins and users. 


Jörg

-- 
 EMail:joerg@schily.isdn.cs.tu-berlin.de (home) Jörg Schilling D-13353 Berlin
       js@cs.tu-berlin.de		(uni)  If you don't have iso-8859-1
       schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de	(work) chars I am J"org Schilling
 URL:  http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de/usr/schilling ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 20:14                               ` DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels? Joerg Schilling
@ 2004-08-22 20:33                                 ` Tonnerre
  2004-08-22 20:38                                   ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-22 20:43                                   ` Joerg Schilling
  2004-08-23 17:40                                 ` Horst von Brand
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tonnerre @ 2004-08-22 20:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Joerg Schilling; +Cc: linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1320 bytes --]

Salut,

On Sun, Aug 22, 2004 at 10:14:12PM +0200, Joerg Schilling wrote:
> -	What is a "large computer"?

I'd refer to a computer as a large computer when its calculation power
is several times  larger than the one home computers  of the same time
have (or if  it's a really large machine, such  as the Honeywell DDPs,
but that's another dimension of "large").

> -	What is an "extremely narrow market segment"?

A market  segment not  reaching waste portions  of all customers  in a
market. Think of catfood.

> 	What is the evidence of this statement compared to Linux?

Linux is  actually widely employed  in the home computer  *and* server
market,  plus embedded  devices.  I  mean, did  you  ever see  someone
running Solaris on their video decoder?

> -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Linux?

Intel 8086  processor with  a few ko  of RAM,  with a floppy  drive, a
monitor and a floppy, I think. If you take only the normal kernel into
account that will be an 80386 processor.

> -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Solaris?

At least more RAM and a more capable processor.

> And hey, Brian is even able to make a 4 hour demo within a single hour on this 
> machine ;-)

Greeeat. I can do that too on my Powerbook G5.

				Tonnerre

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 20:33                                 ` Tonnerre
@ 2004-08-22 20:38                                   ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-22 20:43                                   ` Joerg Schilling
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2004-08-22 20:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tonnerre; +Cc: Joerg Schilling, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sul, 2004-08-22 at 21:33, Tonnerre wrote:
> > -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Linux?
> 
> Intel 8086  processor with  a few ko  of RAM,  with a floppy  drive, a
> monitor and a floppy, I think. If you take only the normal kernel into
> account that will be an 80386 processor.

Minimum for an x86 kernel is about 2Mb and 386 CPU. The 8086 subset
kernel isn't really "Linux", its more an escaped insanity. For non x86
you need a bottom end mmuless 32bit processor and a couple of Mb.

There are folks driving the size down (the -tiny patches) because
2Mb for the entire system is still too large for some users.

Alan


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 20:33                                 ` Tonnerre
  2004-08-22 20:38                                   ` Alan Cox
@ 2004-08-22 20:43                                   ` Joerg Schilling
  2004-08-22 21:37                                     ` Christer Weinigel
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Joerg Schilling @ 2004-08-22 20:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: tonnerre, schilling; +Cc: linux-kernel

Tonnerre <tonnerre@thundrix.ch> wrote:

> > -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Linux?
>
> Intel 8086  processor with  a few ko  of RAM,  with a floppy  drive, a
> monitor and a floppy, I think. If you take only the normal kernel into
> account that will be an 80386 processor.

A few k ?????

> > -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Solaris?
>
> At least more RAM and a more capable processor.

Looks like a speculation. 

> > And hey, Brian is even able to make a 4 hour demo within a single hour on this 
> > machine ;-)
>
> Greeeat. I can do that too on my Powerbook G5.

Can you do it by typing in _all_ commands and dtrace programs in real time?

Jörg

-- 
 EMail:joerg@schily.isdn.cs.tu-berlin.de (home) Jörg Schilling D-13353 Berlin
       js@cs.tu-berlin.de		(uni)  If you don't have iso-8859-1
       schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de	(work) chars I am J"org Schilling
 URL:  http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de/usr/schilling ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 20:43                                   ` Joerg Schilling
@ 2004-08-22 21:37                                     ` Christer Weinigel
  2004-08-23 11:44                                       ` Joerg Schilling
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Christer Weinigel @ 2004-08-22 21:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Joerg Schilling; +Cc: tonnerre, linux-kernel

Joerg Schilling <schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de> writes:

> Tonnerre <tonnerre@thundrix.ch> wrote:
> 
> > > -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Linux?
> >
> > Intel 8086  processor with  a few ko  of RAM,  with a floppy  drive, a
> > monitor and a floppy, I think. If you take only the normal kernel into
> > account that will be an 80386 processor.
> 
> A few k ?????

It depends on your definition of "a few k" :-)

    http://elks.sourceforge.net/

It will run fine on an 8086 with 512 kBytes of RAM, but I its possible
to get by with as little as 200kByte of RAM.

I work with embedded Linux systems and the standard configuration for
the stuff I do is with a small embedded processor such as the Motorola
MPC860 or the Axis Etrax 100 (about as fast as an i486) and 8MByte of
RAM and 4MByte of flash.  It's really no problem running in 2MByte of
RAM and 2MByte of flash but then the system really just does one thing
such as initializing a routing table and then routing data back and
forth.  To be able to get OpenSSL running in there and so on I really
need 8MByte of RAM.

> > > -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Solaris?
> >
> > At least more RAM and a more capable processor.
> 
> Looks like a speculation. 

Well, I think Solaris is still supported on my SPARCclassic, but I
really really wouldn't like to try it with only 8MByte of RAM.  

  /Christer

-- 
"Just how much can I get away with and still go to heaven?"

Freelance consultant specializing in device driver programming for Linux 
Christer Weinigel <christer@weinigel.se>  http://www.weinigel.se

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 18:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-22 18:46         ` Alan Cox
@ 2004-08-22 23:03         ` John Levon
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: John Levon @ 2004-08-22 23:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tomasz K?oczko
  Cc: Alan Cox, Julien Oster, Miles Lane, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sun, Aug 22, 2004 at 08:27:38PM +0200, Tomasz K?oczko wrote:

> As same as KProbe/DTrace. Can you use OProfile for something other tnan 
> profiling ? Probably yes and this answer opens: probably it will be good 
> prepare some common code for KProbe and Oprofile.

I don't see an overlap here, except maybe the possibility of delivering
sample events into the kprobes framework

> It is not only extenging entropy kernel tree. IMO KProbe can bring some
> functionalities wich can be common also for OProfile and probably in 
> future IMO OProfile can be droped.

This seems extremely unlikely to say the least, compare the methods
used.

regards
john

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 21:37                                     ` Christer Weinigel
@ 2004-08-23 11:44                                       ` Joerg Schilling
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Joerg Schilling @ 2004-08-23 11:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: schilling, christer; +Cc: tonnerre, linux-kernel

Christer Weinigel <christer@weinigel.se> wrote:

> It depends on your definition of "a few k" :-)
>
>     http://elks.sourceforge.net/
>
> It will run fine on an 8086 with 512 kBytes of RAM, but I its possible
> to get by with as little as 200kByte of RAM.

But this would not be a UNIX system... (see my other mail).

> I work with embedded Linux systems and the standard configuration for
> the stuff I do is with a small embedded processor such as the Motorola
> MPC860 or the Axis Etrax 100 (about as fast as an i486) and 8MByte of
> RAM and 4MByte of flash.  It's really no problem running in 2MByte of
> RAM and 2MByte of flash but then the system really just does one thing
> such as initializing a routing table and then routing data back and
> forth.  To be able to get OpenSSL running in there and so on I really
> need 8MByte of RAM.

If you don't try to run fancy stuff (like a GUI), I am sure that Solaris
will run with a machine that has something between 2 and 4 MB of RAM.

Note that if you design new embedded hardware, you typically think in
units of 16 MB.

Jörg

-- 
 EMail:joerg@schily.isdn.cs.tu-berlin.de (home) Jörg Schilling D-13353 Berlin
       js@cs.tu-berlin.de		(uni)  If you don't have iso-8859-1
       schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de	(work) chars I am J"org Schilling
 URL:  http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de/usr/schilling ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 18:46         ` Alan Cox
@ 2004-08-23 17:34           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tomasz Kłoczko @ 2004-08-23 17:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox; +Cc: Julien Oster, Miles Lane, Linux Kernel Mailing List

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 1987 bytes --]

On Sun, 22 Aug 2004, Alan Cox wrote:

> On Sul, 2004-08-22 at 19:27, Tomasz K?oczko wrote:
>> Using yor thing path: KProbe/Dtrace is for development and yes it must
>> depend on DEBUG_KERNEL.
>> ptrace() is also for tracing and ver offen used by developers but it is
>> enabled by default and it is not only for developers. So .. ptrace() must
>> also depend on DEBUG_KERNEL.
>
> ptrace is for debugging user space, as for example is oprofile. kprobes
> is for debugging including kernel internal goings on

Yes. It *is* for debuging/tracing in kernel space but like DTrace is 
*also* in user space.

>> compilation stage). In Solaris kernel exist few thousands avalaible probes
>> and IIRC only very small subset is "near zero effect" (uses nop
>> instructions).
>
> Sounds like a kprobes clone 8).

Look on some time stamps both projects.
Seems KProbes is clone DTrace ..

>>> OProfile doesn't require this.
>>
>> As same as KProbe/DTrace. Can you use OProfile for something other tnan
>> profiling ? Probably yes and this answer opens: probably it will be good
>> prepare some common code for KProbe and Oprofile.
>
> Oprofile lets you work on stuff like cache affinity, tuning array walks
> and prefetches. Short of running the app under cachegrind its one of the
> most detailed ways of getting all the profile register data from the x86
> processors.

The same is KProbes but you can combined with small programs associated 
with called probes. Again: DTrace/KProbes is much more than traditional
profiling/tracing/measuring tools.

>> So it will be good stop disscuss about "yes or no ?" and start about
>> "how and when in Linux ?" ..
>
> When you send patches ?

KProbes patches was annouced on lkml few times.

kloczek
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
*Ludzie nie mają problemów, tylko sobie sami je stwarzają*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tomasz Kłoczko, sys adm @zie.pg.gda.pl|*e-mail: kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl*

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 20:14                               ` DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels? Joerg Schilling
  2004-08-22 20:33                                 ` Tonnerre
@ 2004-08-23 17:40                                 ` Horst von Brand
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Horst von Brand @ 2004-08-23 17:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Joerg Schilling; +Cc: linux-kernel

Joerg Schilling <schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de> said:
> Alan Cox wrote:
> 
> >> In Solaris DTrace is enabled in _normal production_ kernel and you can 
> >> hang any probe or probes set without restarting system or any runed
> >> application which was compiled withoud debug info.
> >
> >Solaris only runs on large computers. You don't want kprobes randomly on
> >your phone, pda, wireless router. Solaris deals with an extremely narrow
> >market segment of "big computers for people with lots of money".
> ...
> >> http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/bmc/20040820#dtrace_on_lkml
> >> Bryan blog is also yet another Dtrace knowledge source ..
> >
> >Coo I thought only the Sun CEO spent his life making inappropriate
> >comments 8)
> 
> It seems that Alan does not like to miss a single day to degrade his 
> credibiltiy :-(

Strangely, it doesn't seem to affect his credibility at all. Yours, OTOH...

> A fact based discussion looks different...
> 
> -	What is a "large computer"?

Current Sun Enterprise. Typically several CPUs, several GiB RAM, connected
via fiber to TiB storage array.

> -	What is an "extremely narrow market segment"?

The one for the above machines. Duh...

> 	What is the evidence of this statement compared to Linux?

Millions of machines vs a few tens of thousands?

> -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Linux?

Palm Pilot V or thereabouts.

> -	What are the minimum requirements for a machine to run Solaris?

Out of my league. My Sparc Ultra 1 can't. It is running Linux (Aurora)
quite happily, BTW.

> People who cannot answer these questions should not try to start mad
> speculations on derived conclusions.

Great! Does that mean you will /finally/ shut up?

PS: I do know for a fact that Alan did/does meddle with this kind of hardware.

> The size of the loadable dtrace module is ~ 100 kB, this is nothing bad even 
> for small appliances these days.

Add that, and a lot of other similarly small random junk, and we are soon
talking serious MiBs... Larry McVoy has made it very clear here that
Slowlaris got that bloated way one tiny, unnoticeable, not too relevant
feature at a time.
-- 
Dr. Horst H. von Brand                   User #22616 counter.li.org
Departamento de Informatica                     Fono: +56 32 654431
Universidad Tecnica Federico Santa Maria              +56 32 654239
Casilla 110-V, Valparaiso, Chile                Fax:  +56 32 797513

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
       [not found]         ` <2w9Dq-65C-13@gated-at.bofh.it>
@ 2004-08-23 18:19           ` Andi Kleen
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Andi Kleen @ 2004-08-23 18:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: John Levon; +Cc: linux-kernel

John Levon <levon@movementarian.org> writes:

> On Sun, Aug 22, 2004 at 08:27:38PM +0200, Tomasz K?oczko wrote:
>
>> As same as KProbe/DTrace. Can you use OProfile for something other tnan 
>> profiling ? Probably yes and this answer opens: probably it will be good 
>> prepare some common code for KProbe and Oprofile.
>
> I don't see an overlap here, except maybe the possibility of delivering
> sample events into the kprobes framework

Not sure what you mean with "delivering into the kprobes framework"
kprobes currently only uses printk which really isn't up to the 
task of any significant data delivery. The IBM people have relayfs
to solve this problem, eventually this should be probably
merged too. Without something like relayfs i don't see any way
to compete with dtrace.

-Andi


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-22 11:35     ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-22 18:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-23 19:48       ` Robert Milkowski
  2004-08-24  0:39         ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-28 19:16         ` Alan Cox
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Robert Milkowski @ 2004-08-23 19:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox
  Cc: Tomasz Kłoczko, Julien Oster, Miles Lane,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 4713 bytes --]

On Sun, 22 Aug 2004, Alan Cox wrote:
> On Sad, 2004-08-21 at 07:03, Tomasz Kłoczko wrote:
>> In Solaris DTrace is enabled in _normal production_ kernel and you can
>> hang any probe or probes set without restarting system or any runed
>> application which was compiled withoud debug info.
>
> Solaris only runs on large computers. You don't want kprobes randomly on
> your phone, pda, wireless router. Solaris deals with an extremely narrow
> market segment of "big computers for people with lots of money".

Overstatement.
Solaris runs on x86 platform, and runs quite well.
And guess what - DTrace runs on x86 like a charm.

>> [1] Remember: if you want profile some part of code you mast _first_
>> (re)compile them with profiling enabled. If you wand debug some code
>
> OProfile doesn't require this.

I must admit I don't know OProfile.
But can you profile already running application without interuption (not 
to mention stopping it) to it? Sure, DTrace introduces some overhead but 
if it's not acceptable just stop DTrace and application again runs with 
its original speed.
What about getting structure contents, function arguments and returns, 
etc... all on the fly. And then D languages which saves a lot of time with 
its aggregations, thread local variables, speculations. Sure you can use 
Perl, AWK, and so on - but it takes time - a lot of time.


>> Some enterprise systems have limited summary time to few hours per year
>> and restart cycle can take houre or more (checking and initialize hardware
>> components). If you will try say for admin this kind system "restat your
>
> Enterprise users generally get kernels from vendors who have done the
> analysis of needs for them (and hopefully got it right). They generally
> don't ftp 2.6.8.1 type make config and try it out.


I think you missed the point.
DTrace is not only about kernel, and it's definitly not a tool for ONLY 
kernel developers. It's a great tool for user land developers and for sys 
admins. And it's really easy (well...) to corelate data from kernel and 
application. All in production and it just works.

I think Tomasz was writing not only about kernel/system uptimes but also 
about application uptimes. And DTrace can help in both cases.

Coming back to kernel - if you have for example some kind of memory leak 
in kernel then support guys can provide you with DTrace script, see what's 
going on and get problem solved without unnecessary system restarts. Then
provide you with new kernel (patch). So even if enterprise user do not 
want recompile its own kernel, if there's a kernel problem DTrace can save 
him some downtime.


> Actually I generally
> -	Glance across the load meters
> -	Ask ps where everything is waiting
> -	Potentially turn on oprofile
> -	Potentially use netfilter to see who is causing all my traffic
> -	Maybe strace a few apps to see what is up
> -	Educate the user concerned (if needed)
>
> I've already got the symbols (and they are in the debuginfo package from
> the rpm build too). I could insmod kgdb but that level of
> debugging is generally inappropriate.
>
> DTrace value is ease of use value.


Sure it's one of its values.
I would add safety of running DTrace in a production. In fact it sould be 
number one feature. DTrace does great job in preventing you from crashing 
system or applications.
I would add that there is easy (at least a lot easier then without DTrace)
way to understand what's going on in system and which appliacation and why 
is cousing it. For example Bryan example with xcalls. And all of that in 
production systems.

Sure, you can make your own module on Linux, load it and trace whatever 
you want. But:

   1. it's not easy
   2. requires quite knowledge about kernel
   3. could easly crash your kernel
   4. takes time
   5. only kernel level - what about applications and correlation between
      apps and kernel?
   ...
   ...


My point is DTrace is really awesome tool.
Sure you can do many things without DTrace but it will take much more 
time. And there are a lot of things you can do with DTrace which are 
really hard to do in a production using it.

It just saves your time and gives you answers to questions you would not 
even ask before DTrace 'coz of inacceptable time it would take to answer 
them. It's really 'fun' to see what's going on in system and/or 
appliactions with DTrace.

My post sounds almost like marketing crap - but it is really what I find 
in DTrace. I must admit that I did not really appreciate this tool until 
I've started using it.


-- 
 						Robert Milkowski
 						milek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-21 21:49       ` Bryan Cantrill
@ 2004-08-23 23:08         ` Christoph Halder
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Christoph Halder @ 2004-08-23 23:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Bryan Cantrill
  Cc: Julien Oster, kloczek, usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel,
	bmc

Bryan Cantrill wrote:

>>Sorry, but that goes a little too far. No, I didn't try out dtrace
>>and, right after reading the article (and that's the important thing!)
>>I didn't seek for further information about it, I'm not a Solaris
>>System Administrator right now (I was, some years ago). And all I was
>>saying is that this *article* was just ridiculous.

I believe that the main problem in this dispute is just a 
missunderstanding based on cultural differences between Europe and 
America and the way articles are written and perceived.

>>But in that article, I was just missing the objectiveness. A quick
>>note about the fact that Sun's been introducing dtrace for Solaris 10
>>and what it is, what it does, would have been much better instead of
>>talking about a "Cantrill explosion", how "DTrace has completely
>>changed the way I do business" (actual quotes).

True, to europeans this sounds far too overenthusiastic - almost like a 
commercial - and will most certainly lead to the impression, that the 
article is not very serious.

Europeans try to write serious articles VERY neutral - any personal 
opinion(s) will only be a short statement at the very end of the article.

It's just what we are used to!

> You don't like customer quotes?  It seems to me that quotes like that
> one (or like the other customer quotes that appear in the article)
> give weight to the claims.  Don't you like to hear from people who have
> actually _used_ a technology?  I know that I do -- those who have used
> a technology are likely to have a much more balanced view on its
> strengths and weaknesses than those who have just read about it.  (Indeed,
> this is true of pretty much anything -- experience matters.)

Nobody likes them here, really. A product should stand out and prove 
quality by its own, we don't like to be told about it by people we don't 
personally know.(even if they may have a good reputation)

Another example to what europeans will regard as "unserious".
When we watch american commercials, which are sometimes broadcasted in 
Tv, we very often think about this as very odd. Simply very different to 
how this is done in Europe.

"Customer Quotes" have a very, VERY bad reputation, it smells like 
manipulation (whether it is or not).

>>Bryan Cantrill, I can understand that you have to defend DTrace. But
>>please, PLEASE stop saying that I am a clueless moron if I wasn't even
>>ranting about you, ranting about DTrace, but just about *that single
>>article* and it's presentation of DTrace to me.

Personal insults will not lead to anything, and IMHO should not be made 
at all. A response sticking to the facts might have been more useful.

> You were attacking more than just the article; you ended with:
> 
>   I sure hope that article is meant sarcastically. By the way, did I
>   miss something or is profiling suddenly a new thing again?

Maybe a lapse made by Julien.
But the main topic still seems to be the style the article was written in.

> You asked if you were missing something, and I replied that you were
> missing plenty.  Presumably you now feel informed (if a little embarrassed),
> and I think that those that you misinformed also now realize that what
> you provided them was misinformation.  So as far as I'm concerned, that's
> the end of that.

Embarrassed?
Yes he most certainly will be, but what information did he provide to 
others? I dont't see much information about DTrace itself.

I hope nobody feels offended by my statements.

Christoph Halder

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-23 19:48       ` Robert Milkowski
@ 2004-08-24  0:39         ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-28 19:16         ` Alan Cox
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: David S. Miller @ 2004-08-24  0:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robert Milkowski; +Cc: alan, kloczek, usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel

On Mon, 23 Aug 2004 21:48:57 +0200 (CEST)
Robert Milkowski <milek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> wrote:

> >> [1] Remember: if you want profile some part of code you mast _first_
> >> (re)compile them with profiling enabled. If you wand debug some code
> >
> > OProfile doesn't require this.
> 
> I must admit I don't know OProfile.
> But can you profile already running application without interuption (not 
> to mention stopping it) to it?

Yes, this is exactly what oprofile allows you to do.
Same with things like valgrind.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
@ 2004-08-24  4:14 Joerg Schilling
  2004-08-28 19:15 ` Alan Cox
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Joerg Schilling @ 2004-08-24  4:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel

Christoph Halder wrote:

>True, to europeans this sounds far too overenthusiastic - almost like a 
>commercial - and will most certainly lead to the impression, that the 
>article is not very serious.
>
>Europeans try to write serious articles VERY neutral - any personal 
>opinion(s) will only be a short statement at the very end of the article.

No, it is definitely not overestimated.

It is more likely to rather be the opposite and you will find this out if you
try to use dtrace or attend a demo.

Dou you know of any other system where you can say:

	Print me a strack trace with symbols for all processes on this
	computer (even stripped ones) that call gettimeofday() within the
	next few seconds.

Note that you do not need a special kernel, no reboot, no restart of 
applications.

There are a lot more possibilities including tracing kernel routines on a 
production kernel but it would take too long to describe them....

Jörg

-- 
 EMail:joerg@schily.isdn.cs.tu-berlin.de (home) Jörg Schilling D-13353 Berlin
       js@cs.tu-berlin.de		(uni)  If you don't have iso-8859-1
       schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de	(work) chars I am J"org Schilling
 URL:  http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de/usr/schilling ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
       [not found] <2wAWW-12a-11@gated-at.bofh.it>
@ 2004-08-24 13:04 ` Pascal Schmidt
  2004-08-24 13:07   ` Joerg Schilling
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Pascal Schmidt @ 2004-08-24 13:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Joerg Schilling; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 06:20:06 +0200, you wrote in linux.kernel:

> Dou you know of any other system where you can say:
>
> 	Print me a strack trace with symbols for all processes on this
> 	computer (even stripped ones) that call gettimeofday() within the
> 	next few seconds.

Well, this is by far off-topic here now, but how does this solve
the general problem of knowing that gettimeofday() might be a
problem in the given situation? But yeah, once you know that,
the functionality is useful, no doubt.

-- 
Ciao,
Pascal

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-24 13:04 ` Pascal Schmidt
@ 2004-08-24 13:07   ` Joerg Schilling
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Joerg Schilling @ 2004-08-24 13:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: schilling, der.eremit; +Cc: linux-kernel

Pascal Schmidt <der.eremit@email.de> wrote:

> On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 06:20:06 +0200, you wrote in linux.kernel:
>
> > Dou you know of any other system where you can say:
> >
> > 	Print me a strack trace with symbols for all processes on this
> > 	computer (even stripped ones) that call gettimeofday() within the
> > 	next few seconds.
>
> Well, this is by far off-topic here now, but how does this solve
> the general problem of knowing that gettimeofday() might be a
> problem in the given situation? But yeah, once you know that,
> the functionality is useful, no doubt.

If you did not get it yet, it's an example to show what may be done.
There are many more features. Just fetch the

	"Solaris Dynamic Tracing Guide" 

manual as PDF for more information - it's 300 pages.

Jörg

-- 
 EMail:joerg@schily.isdn.cs.tu-berlin.de (home) Jörg Schilling D-13353 Berlin
       js@cs.tu-berlin.de		(uni)  If you don't have iso-8859-1
       schilling@fokus.fraunhofer.de	(work) chars I am J"org Schilling
 URL:  http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de/usr/schilling ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-24  4:14 Joerg Schilling
@ 2004-08-28 19:15 ` Alan Cox
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2004-08-28 19:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Joerg Schilling; +Cc: Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Maw, 2004-08-24 at 05:14, Joerg Schilling wrote:
> Dou you know of any other system where you can say:
> 
> 	Print me a strack trace with symbols for all processes on this
> 	computer (even stripped ones) that call gettimeofday() within the
> 	next few seconds.
> 
> Note that you do not need a special kernel, no reboot, no restart of 
> applications.

Linux, BSD since 1990 or so.... For that matter I can do the same for
dynamically linked applications at library level. The difference is that
I don't have a happy point-and-click UI for it I have to go write a
little bit of code and the efficiency level. The SuSE proposed patch for
syscall restriction conveniently offers a way to remove the overhead.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-23 19:48       ` Robert Milkowski
  2004-08-24  0:39         ` David S. Miller
@ 2004-08-28 19:16         ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-29  0:14           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-29 10:29           ` Robert Milkowski
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2004-08-28 19:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Robert Milkowski
  Cc: Tomasz Kłoczko, Julien Oster, Miles Lane,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Llu, 2004-08-23 at 20:48, Robert Milkowski wrote:
> Solaris runs on x86 platform, and runs quite well.
> And guess what - DTrace runs on x86 like a charm.

Larger x86 boxes. I can't seem to find PDA's with Solaris or phones
with Solaris or $70 wireless routers with Solaris.

> I must admit I don't know OProfile.
> But can you profile already running application without interuption

Yes

> What about getting structure contents, function arguments and returns, 
> etc... all on the fly.

ptrace. Actually there are folks who want to take ptrace a bit further
for some things - at least one vendor posted some proposals which when
recast into ptrace extensions look good.

> I think you missed the point.

Nope

> Sure, you can make your own module on Linux, load it and trace whatever 
> you want. But:

Why do that, why not use the existing functionality that the kernel
provides built on the stuff Intel AMD and friends stuck in the CPU. I'm
not claiming our debugging tools are as good as dtrace but most of it
(especially with kprobes patches installed) is essentially a UI design
issue.

Alan


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-28 19:16         ` Alan Cox
@ 2004-08-29  0:14           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-29  5:30             ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-29 10:29           ` Robert Milkowski
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tomasz Kłoczko @ 2004-08-29  0:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox
  Cc: Robert Milkowski, Julien Oster, Miles Lane,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 997 bytes --]

On Sat, 28 Aug 2004, Alan Cox wrote:

> On Llu, 2004-08-23 at 20:48, Robert Milkowski wrote:
>> Solaris runs on x86 platform, and runs quite well.
>> And guess what - DTrace runs on x86 like a charm.
>
> Larger x86 boxes. I can't seem to find PDA's with Solaris or phones
> with Solaris or $70 wireless routers with Solaris.

I don't thing naming anything larger than PDA or phone as "large 
computer" is correct/acceptable :o)
If fact Solaris works quite well on usual desktop size computer.

Probalby after full porting Solaris to x86 using system on embeded 
system definitely will not be only potential solution.
Even if Solaris after this still can'd be useable on embeded-like systems
this can't matter on DTrace subject :)

kloczek
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
*Ludzie nie mają problemów, tylko sobie sami je stwarzają*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tomasz Kłoczko, sys adm @zie.pg.gda.pl|*e-mail: kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl*

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-29  0:14           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-29  5:30             ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-29 10:45               ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-29 10:53               ` Robert Milkowski
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: David S. Miller @ 2004-08-29  5:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tomasz K³oczko
  Cc: alan, milek, usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel

On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 02:14:03 +0200 (CEST)
Tomasz K³oczko <kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> wrote:

> If fact Solaris works quite well on usual desktop size computer.

Check out the Solaris driver selection on x86 these days,
it still stinks.  It is unlikely they'll ever have the coverage
Linux does any time soon.

Frankly, if the only specific technical feature Sun has to brag
about in Solaris 10 is DTrace, that's pretty sad.  Even more so,
most of the bugs I see being fixed in Solaris kernel patches
are performance regressions against Linux.  This, given how things
were 6 or 7 years ago and the things the Solaris folks used to
flame us for, I find particularly amusing.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-28 19:16         ` Alan Cox
  2004-08-29  0:14           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-29 10:29           ` Robert Milkowski
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Robert Milkowski @ 2004-08-29 10:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox
  Cc: Tomasz Kłoczko, Julien Oster, Miles Lane,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sat, 28 Aug 2004, Alan Cox wrote:

> On Llu, 2004-08-23 at 20:48, Robert Milkowski wrote:
>> Solaris runs on x86 platform, and runs quite well.
>> And guess what - DTrace runs on x86 like a charm.
>
> Larger x86 boxes. I can't seem to find PDA's with Solaris or phones
> with Solaris or $70 wireless routers with Solaris.

Yeah, I can agree with you that tools like DTrace aren't very usefull on 
PDA or on phone. :)

>> I must admit I don't know OProfile.
>> But can you profile already running application without interuption
>
> Yes
>
>> What about getting structure contents, function arguments and returns,
>> etc... all on the fly.
>
> ptrace. Actually there are folks who want to take ptrace a bit further
> for some things - at least one vendor posted some proposals which when
> recast into ptrace extensions look good.
>
>> I think you missed the point.
>
> Nope
>
>> Sure, you can make your own module on Linux, load it and trace whatever
>> you want. But:
>
> Why do that, why not use the existing functionality that the kernel
> provides built on the stuff Intel AMD and friends stuck in the CPU. I'm
> not claiming our debugging tools are as good as dtrace but most of it
> (especially with kprobes patches installed) is essentially a UI design
> issue.

ok, so maybe real example.

Let's say you want aggregate by user stack if given thread number of 
specified process is taken off cpu by scheduler and is in SLEEP state and 
is off cpu for more then one second. You want output evey 10s. With DTrace 
it's relly simple. Ususally if I want quick answer I'm gonna write like 
this:

bash-2.05b# dtrace -n sched:::off-cpu'/curlwpsinfo->pr_state == SSLEEP &&
                       pid == 18819 && tid == 3/{self->t1 = timestamp;}'
                    -n sched:::on-cpu'/self->t1 && (timestamp - self->t1)
                       > 1000000000/{@[ustack()]=count();self->t1=0;}'
                    -n tick-10s'{printa(@);}'

But this is not so readable so let put it in a more readable form (script)

#!/usr/sbin/dtace -s

sched:::off-cpu
/curlwpsinfo->pr_state == SSLEEP &&  pid == 18819 && tid == 3/
{
   {self->t1 = timestamp;
}

sched:::on-cpu
/self->t1 && (timestamp - self->t1) > 1000000000/
{
   @[ustack()]=count();
   self->t1 = 0;
}

tick-10s
{
   printa(@);
}


Here is what you get:

  25  34812                        :tick-10s

               libc.so.1`__pollsys+0x4
               libc.so.1`poll+0x88
               wpserver`wpio_loop_pool+0x9c
               libc.so.1`_lwp_start
                26


Which means you get 26 times the same stack.



Or maybe another example which shows how one can easly learn something 
about apps behaviour and about system.

Let's say you see a lot of fspgin's in vmstat and want to know which 
applications are cousing it. And to complicate things you have some 
applications running from inted like daemon (so fork() + exec() every 
request) and of course you want aggregate as a whole for such application.

So, with DTrace:

bash-2.05b# dtrace -n vminfo:::fspgin'{@[execname]=sum(arg0);}'
dtrace: description 'vminfo:::fspgin' matched 1 probe
^C

   Application-A                                                   282
   Application-B                                                   304
   Application-C                                                   335
   zsched                                                         1200
bash-2.05b#

Well, now yo can go further and see Application-C in more detail.
But instead let's say you don't know why zsched is cousing fspgins.
So lets' learn why.

bash-2.05b# dtrace -n vminfo:::fspgin'/execname == "zsched"/{@[stack()]=count();}'
dtrace: description 'vminfo:::fspgin' matched 1 probe
^C


               genunix`pageio_setup+0x1f8
               nfs`nfs3_readahead+0xc0
               nfs`nfs_async_start+0x2c8
               unix`thread_start+0x4
               405
bash-2.05b#


Well, it's doing nfs3 read aheads.
You can disable read aheads for nfs3 and see if it disappears - and it 
does. And all in a production without stopping anything.

Simple, easy and safe.

Now how much work and knowledge would it be needed to get the same results 
with KProbes, oprofile, ... and how much time will it take?

And how easy would it be with KProbes to panick kernel?
All examples above I've just did on a production server.

DTrace lets you correlate data from kernel level and application level 
which is really usuefull. It gives sys admins the power to answer to see
what is really happening in system and why.

And these are simple cases which do not show all DTrace features.
Real fun starts with more complicated examples :)

Of course you can do SOME things with DProbes or Oprofile that you 
could with DTrace but usually it 
will take MUCH more time with them then with DTrace. And there are things 
you can do 
with DTrace which you can't with DProbes and others in a reasonable time 
period.

btw: about UI - it's really important. DTrace agreagations for example
      save a lot of time in analyzing data. Especially when usually you
      get huge amount of data to analyze from a production systems. With
     'D' language you get most of data aggregation done during
     collectioning data. I know there's Perl, Awk, etc. but it takes time.

btw2: you mention ptrace, AFAIK it would have more performance impact then
       DTrace/KProbes technologies. Second, I'm not sure if it's still the
       case, but there were (are?) some problems using ptrace on threaded
       applications. And still all you see is application level - no
       correlation between kernel and app (for example you want to see
       if given code path in application is cousing fspgins or xcalls or
       something else...)

btw3: and Oprofile, Kprobes, ptrace are separate tools and you have
       then corelate data which will often be not possible.


-- 
 						Robert Milkowski
 						milek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-29  5:30             ` David S. Miller
@ 2004-08-29 10:45               ` Tomasz Kłoczko
  2004-08-29 17:46                 ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-29 10:53               ` Robert Milkowski
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 45+ messages in thread
From: Tomasz Kłoczko @ 2004-08-29 10:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David S. Miller; +Cc: alan, milek, usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 2331 bytes --]


<disclaimer>
I'm not try to advocate on Solaris or on Linux. I'm interested to 
incorporate DTrace like solution in Liunux.
</disclaimer>

On Sat, 28 Aug 2004, David S. Miller wrote:

> On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 02:14:03 +0200 (CEST)
> Tomasz Kłoczko <kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> wrote:
>
>> If fact Solaris works quite well on usual desktop size computer.
>
> Check out the Solaris driver selection on x86 these days,
> it still stinks.  It is unlikely they'll ever have the coverage
> Linux does any time soon.
>
> Frankly, if the only specific technical feature Sun has to brag
> about in Solaris 10 is DTrace, that's pretty sad.  Even more so,
> most of the bugs I see being fixed in Solaris kernel patches
> are performance regressions against Linux.  This, given how things
> were 6 or 7 years ago and the things the Solaris folks used to
> flame us for, I find particularly amusing.

What about zoning (which seems is much more than simple jailing) ? What 
about zfs which will be probably will next comparable to DTrace step 
forward ? (probably will come with next express build). On big computers 
Solaris also have much more better scaleability than Linux (I'm offen 
smile when I'm see questions like "Is Linux enterprise ready ?" ;). On 
small servers Linux is good alternative or in many cases is comparable (on 
choosing OS can decide another not stricte technical things) or is 
slightly better solution (for exemple now much more easied find well 
skilled adminis on Linux than on Solaris) but on medium or large computers 
(workgroup and higher solutions) stll in mamny cases is worse or much more 
worse solution for example in hardware utilization and needed 
funcitionalities (I'm talking about Linux vs. Solaris on sparc and also on 
x86 platform). Even on two way systems Solaris (10) still *much more*
*better* handles threads ..

For me isn't so importand how many hardware correctly handles this or 
another OS. If choosen OS handles correctly my hardware I'm quite happy
(in my case Linux still can't handle SunSwift T1000 NIC on my E250 ;o)

kloczek
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
*Ludzie nie mają problemów, tylko sobie sami je stwarzają*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tomasz Kłoczko, sys adm @zie.pg.gda.pl|*e-mail: kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl*

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-29  5:30             ` David S. Miller
  2004-08-29 10:45               ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-29 10:53               ` Robert Milkowski
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Robert Milkowski @ 2004-08-29 10:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David S. Miller
  Cc: Tomasz K³oczko, alan, usenet-20040502, miles.lane,
	linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: TEXT/PLAIN, Size: 2580 bytes --]

On Sat, 28 Aug 2004, David S. Miller wrote:

> On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 02:14:03 +0200 (CEST)
> Tomasz Kłoczko <kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> wrote:
>
>> If fact Solaris works quite well on usual desktop size computer.
>
> Check out the Solaris driver selection on x86 these days,
> it still stinks.  It is unlikely they'll ever have the coverage
> Linux does any time soon.

You are right with that. However it's getting better.
On the other hand Solaris works on a really wide spectrum of x86 servers 
(Dell, HP, IBM). I've installed it on x86 servers from 1-way to 8-way 
Compaqs. I've installed it on several desktop systems too.
But you are right - Linux has more drivers on x86 for some 'exotic' 
hardware and home use. And has much more drivers for PCI RAID cards.


> Frankly, if the only specific technical feature Sun has to brag
> about in Solaris 10 is DTrace, that's pretty sad.  Even more so,
> most of the bugs I see being fixed in Solaris kernel patches
> are performance regressions against Linux.  This, given how things
> were 6 or 7 years ago and the things the Solaris folks used to
> flame us for, I find particularly amusing.

1. Why do you think that DTrace is the onle 'cool' feature in Solaris 10?
    Please stop FUD.

    Frankly, if the only specific technical feature Linux has to brag about
    in Linux 2.6 is KProbes, that's pretty sad.

    :P


2. "most of the bugs I see being fixed in Solaris kernel patches"

     1. there are no patches to Solaris 10 kernel so far, so you can't
        see them

     2. you are probably talking about some patches for Solaris 9 kernel
        coming from project ATLAS (performance improvements on x86 - to be
        as fast or faster then other OSes on the same hardware)

     3. and definitely you overstated saying these are most of the patches
        in fact I would be suprised if there are more then 10-20 such
        patches (and hundreds others). Maybe you see this 'coz you are
        looking for word 'Linux' in patches? :)))


3. "Solaris folks used to flame us for,"

     You know - there're trolls in every community.


And this thread was about DTrace and Linux tracing technologies (and not 
trolls, PDAs, other features)... and I know, Linux can run on PDAs.
Ok, so when it comes to profiling and debugging:

 	1. Solaris has DTrace, ptools ant others
 	2. Linux runs on PDAs

:)))))))

ps. sorry for that... on the other hand a little bit of humour is ok :)


-- 
 						Robert Milkowski
 						milek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-29 10:45               ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-29 17:46                 ` David S. Miller
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: David S. Miller @ 2004-08-29 17:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tomasz K³oczko
  Cc: alan, milek, usenet-20040502, miles.lane, linux-kernel

On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 12:45:12 +0200 (CEST)
Tomasz K³oczko <kloczek@rudy.mif.pg.gda.pl> wrote:

> Even on two way systems Solaris (10) still *much more*
> *better* handles threads ..

Back this up with facts.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

* Re: DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels?
  2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
                     ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-08-21  6:03   ` Tomasz Kłoczko
@ 2004-08-31 20:16   ` Timothy Miller
  3 siblings, 0 replies; 45+ messages in thread
From: Timothy Miller @ 2004-08-31 20:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Julien Oster; +Cc: Miles Lane, linux-kernel



Julien Oster wrote:
> Miles Lane <miles.lane@comcast.net> writes:
> 
> 
>>http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/08/dtrace_user_take/:
>>"Sun sees DTrace as a big advantage for Solaris over other versions of Unix 
>>and Linux."
> 
> 
> That article is way too hypey.
> 
> It sounds like one of those strange american commercials you see
> sometimes at night, where two overenthusiastic persons are telling you
> how much that strange fruit juice machine has changed their lives,
> with making them loose 200 pounds in 6 days and improving their
> performance at beach volleyball a lot due to subneutronic antigravity
> manipulation. You usually can't watch those commercials for longer
> than 5 minutes.
> 
> The same applies to that article, I couldn't even read it completely,
> it was just too much.
> 
> And is it just me or did that article really take that long to
> mentioning what dtrace actually IS?
> 
> Come on, it's profiling. As presented by that article, it is even more
> micro optimization than one would think. What with tweaking the disk
> I/O improvements and all... If my harddisk accesses were a microsecond
> more immediate or my filesystem giving a quantum more transfer rate,
> it would be nice, but I certainly wouldn't get enthusiastic and I bet
> nobody would even notice.
> 
> Maybe, without that article, I would recognize it as a fine thing (and
> by "fine" I don't mean "the best thing since sliced bread"), but that
> piece of text was just too ridiculous to take anything serious.
> 
> I sure hope that article is meant sarcastically. By the way, did I
> miss something or is profiling suddenly a new thing again?
> 

[I have 4000 emails from lkml to read, so please forgive me if this 
discussion is dead.]

DTrace was exactly what we needed here to figure out what was making our 
E450 server perform so badly.  We managed to find and eliminate all 
sorts of bottlenecks, and now, all of our NFS activity is CPU bound on 
the server.

Perhaps Linux never suffers from these sorts of problems that require 
tuning things such as inode cache sizes, etc???


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 45+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2004-09-01  0:48 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 45+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2004-08-19 22:22 DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels? Miles Lane
2004-08-19 23:01 ` Karim Yaghmour
2004-08-19 23:23 ` Julien Oster
2004-08-19 22:33   ` Alan Cox
2004-08-20 10:08     ` Alex Bennee
2004-08-20 11:21       ` Robert Schwebel
2004-08-20  0:23   ` Florian Weimer
2004-08-20 13:34     ` Alexander Nyberg
2004-08-20 13:46       ` Florian Weimer
2004-08-20 16:46         ` David S. Miller
2004-08-21  6:03   ` Tomasz Kłoczko
2004-08-21  6:12     ` David S. Miller
2004-08-21  6:22       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
2004-08-21 12:12     ` Julien Oster
2004-08-21 13:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
2004-08-21 21:49       ` Bryan Cantrill
2004-08-23 23:08         ` Christoph Halder
2004-08-22 11:35     ` Alan Cox
2004-08-22 18:27       ` Tomasz Kłoczko
2004-08-22 18:46         ` Alan Cox
2004-08-23 17:34           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
2004-08-22 23:03         ` John Levon
2004-08-23 19:48       ` Robert Milkowski
2004-08-24  0:39         ` David S. Miller
2004-08-28 19:16         ` Alan Cox
2004-08-29  0:14           ` Tomasz Kłoczko
2004-08-29  5:30             ` David S. Miller
2004-08-29 10:45               ` Tomasz Kłoczko
2004-08-29 17:46                 ` David S. Miller
2004-08-29 10:53               ` Robert Milkowski
2004-08-29 10:29           ` Robert Milkowski
2004-08-31 20:16   ` Timothy Miller
     [not found] <2ptdY-42Y-55@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found] ` <2uPdM-380-11@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]   ` <2uUwL-6VP-11@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]     ` <2uWfh-8jo-29@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]       ` <2uXl0-Gt-27@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]         ` <2vge2-63k-15@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]           ` <2vgQF-6Ai-39@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]             ` <2vipq-7O8-15@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]               ` <2vj2b-8md-9@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]                 ` <2vDtS-bq-19@gated-at.bofh.it>
2004-08-21 15:01                   ` PATCH: cdrecord: avoiding scsi device numbering for ide devices Pascal Schmidt
2004-08-21 15:57                     ` Joerg Schilling
2004-08-22 11:56                       ` Joerg Schilling
2004-08-22 13:13                         ` Pascal Schmidt
2004-08-22 16:00                           ` Christer Weinigel
2004-08-22 16:32                             ` Joerg Schilling
2004-08-22 17:18                               ` Christer Weinigel
2004-08-22 19:22                                 ` DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels? Joerg Schilling
2004-08-22 19:26                             ` PATCH: cdrecord: avoiding scsi device numbering for ide devices Tonnerre
2004-08-22 20:14                               ` DTrace-like analysis possible with future Linux kernels? Joerg Schilling
2004-08-22 20:33                                 ` Tonnerre
2004-08-22 20:38                                   ` Alan Cox
2004-08-22 20:43                                   ` Joerg Schilling
2004-08-22 21:37                                     ` Christer Weinigel
2004-08-23 11:44                                       ` Joerg Schilling
2004-08-23 17:40                                 ` Horst von Brand
     [not found] <2v3Ad-5tc-29@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found] ` <2v4w9-6aQ-5@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]   ` <2vxeJ-4kg-3@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]     ` <2vZNN-7AT-33@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]       ` <2w5q4-34M-1@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found]         ` <2w9Dq-65C-13@gated-at.bofh.it>
2004-08-23 18:19           ` Andi Kleen
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2004-08-24  4:14 Joerg Schilling
2004-08-28 19:15 ` Alan Cox
     [not found] <2wAWW-12a-11@gated-at.bofh.it>
2004-08-24 13:04 ` Pascal Schmidt
2004-08-24 13:07   ` Joerg Schilling

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