Wandering Thoughts archives

2012-01-13

Notes on what Linux's /proc/<pid>/smaps fields mean

Because I was just digging around in the kernel source to determine this (it's a long story), here is some notes about what the fields of the smaps file mean and how they're calculated. The factory for this particular sausage is fs/proc/task_mmu.c (at least as of the current git tree).

For each VMA mapping that gets listed in smaps, the kernel walks all of the PTEs associated with it and looks at all of the known pages. Each PTE is then counted up:

  • the full PTE size is counted as Rss.
  • if the page has been used recently, it's added to Referenced.
  • if the page is mapped in only one process it is labeled as private; its full size is added to Pss.
  • if the page is mapped in more than one process it is shared and the amount it adds to Pss is divided by the number of processes that have it mapped.

(If the PTE is for something in swap it only adds to the Swap size.)

Note that a 'private' page is not quite as private as you might think. Because processes map pages independently of each other, it's possible to have a shared page that is currently mapped only by a single process (eg only one process may have called an obscure libc function recently); such pages are counted in 'private'.

The Size of a mapping is how much address space it covers.

If the mapping has been locked into memory via mlock() or the like, Locked is the same as Pss (ie, it is this process's fair share of the amount of locked memory for this mapping); otherwise it is 0 kB.

Given that looking at smaps requires walking the pages of all of the VMAs, I suspect that it's a reasonably costly operation. It'd probably be a bad idea to build a tool that did it a lot, especially if the tool scanned all processes in the system.

(Smem uses smaps, but it doesn't normally run repeatedly in the way that, say, top does.)

SmapsFields written at 01:36:35; Add Comment


Page tools: See As Normal.
Search:
Login: Password:
Atom Syndication: Recent Pages, Recent Comments.

This dinky wiki is brought to you by the Insane Hackers Guild, Python sub-branch.