Friday, December 4, 2009

How to Profile Memory in Linux.

Disclaimer:

I found this great article on a Linux mailing list. It is written by Jake Dawley-Carr and I honestly do not know what the copyright is on it but since it was posted on a mailing list, I assume it is in public domain. If the author contacts me, I will remove it but meanwhile, I would like to republish it because there is no knowing how long the article is going to be indexed and it would be too bad it to get lost.


HOWTO: Profile Memory in a Linux System

1. Introduction

It's important to determine how your system utilizes it's
resources. If your systems performance is unacceptable, it is
necessary to determine which resource is slowing the system
down. This document attempts to identify the following:

a. What is the system memory usage per unit time?
b. How much swap is being used per unit time?
c. What does each process' memory use look like over time?
d. What processes are using the most memory?

I used a RedHat-7.3 machine (kernel-2.4.18) for my experiments,
but any modern Linux distribution with the commands "ps" and
"free" would work.

2. Definitions

RAM (Random Access Memory) - Location where programs reside when
they are running. Other names for this are system memory or
physical memory. The purpose of this document is to determine if
you have enough of this.

Memory Buffers - A page cache for the virtual memory system. The
kernel keeps track of frequently accessed memory and stores the
pages here.

Memory Cached - Any modern operating system will cache files
frequently accessed. You can see the effects of this with the
following commands:

for i in 1 2 ; do
free -o
time grep -r foo /usr/bin >/dev/null 2>/dev/null
done

Memory Used - Amount of RAM in use by the computer. The kernel
will attempt to use as much of this as possible through buffers
and caching.

Swap - It is possible to extend the memory space of the computer
by using the hard drive as memory. This is called swap. Hard
drives are typically several orders of magnitude slower than RAM
so swap is only used when no RAM is available.

Swap Used - Amount of swap space used by the computer.

PID (Process IDentifier) - Each process (or instance of a running
program) has a unique number. This number is called a PID.

PPID (Parent Process IDentifier) - A process (or running program)
can create new processes. The new process created is called a
child process. The original process is called the parent
process. The child process has a PPID equal to the PID of the
parent process. There are two exceptions to this rule. The first
is a program called "init". This process always has a PID of 1 and
a PPID of 0. The second exception is when a parent process exit
all of the child processes are adopted by the "init" process and
have a PPID of 1.

VSIZE (Virtual memory SIZE) - The amount of memory the process is
currently using. This includes the amount in RAM and the amount in
swap.

RSS (Resident Set Size) - The portion of a process that exists in
physical memory (RAM). The rest of the program exists in swap. If
the computer has not used swap, this number will be equal to
VSIZE.

3. What consumes System Memory?

The kernel - The kernel will consume a couple of MB of memory. The
memory that the kernel consumes can not be swapped out to
disk. This memory is not reported by commands such as "free" or
"ps".

Running programs - Programs that have been executed will consume
memory while they run.

Memory Buffers - The amount of memory used is managed by the
kernel. You can get the amount with "free".

Memory Cached - The amount of memory used is managed by the
kernel. You can get the amount with "free".

4. Determining System Memory Usage

The inputs to this section were obtained with the command:

free -o

The command "free" is a c program that reads the "/proc"
filesystem.

There are three elements that are useful when determining the
system memory usage. They are:

a. Memory Used
b. Memory Used - Memory Buffers - Memory Cached
c. Swap Used

A graph of "Memory Used" per unit time will show the "Memory Used"
asymptotically approach the total amount of memory in the system
under heavy use. This is normal, as RAM unused is RAM wasted.

A graph of "Memory Used - Memory Buffered - Memory Cached" per
unit time will give a good sense of the memory use of your
applications minus the effects of your operating system. As you
start new applications, this value should go up. As you quit
applications, this value should go down. If an application has a
severe memory leak, this line will have a positive slope.

A graph of "Swap Used" per unit time will display the swap
usage. When the system is low on RAM, a program called kswapd will
swap parts of process if they haven't been used for some time. If
the amount of swap continues to climb at a steady rate, you may
have a memory leak or you might need more RAM.

5. Per Process Memory Usage

The inputs to this section were obtained with the command:

ps -eo pid,ppid,rss,vsize,pcpu,pmem,cmd -ww --sort=pid

The command "ps" is a c program that reads the "/proc"
filesystem.

There are two elements that are useful when determining the per
process memory usage. They are:

a. RSS
b. VSIZE

A graph of RSS per unit time will show how much RAM the process is
using over time.

A graph of VSIZE per unit time will show how large the process is
over time.

6. Collecting Data

a. Reboot the system. This will reset your systems memory use

b. Run the following commands every ten seconds and redirect the
results to a file.

free -o
ps -eo pid,ppid,rss,vsize,pcpu,pmem,cmd -ww --sort=pid

c. Do whatever you normally do on your system

d. Stop logging your data

7. Generate a Graph

a. System Memory Use

For the output of "free", place the following on one graph

1. X-axis is "MB Used"

2. Y-axis is unit time

3. Memory Used per unit time

4. Memory Used - Memory Buffered - Memory Cached per unit time

5. Swap Used per unit time

b. Per Process Memory Use

For the output of "ps", place the following on one graph

1. X-axis is "MB Used"

2. Y-axis is unit time

3. For each process with %MEM > 10.0

a. RSS per unit time

b. VSIZE per unit time

8. Understand the Graphs

a. System Memory Use

"Memory Used" will approach "Memory Total"

If "Memory Used - Memory Buffered - Memory Cached" is 75% of
"Memory Used", you either have a memory leak or you need to
purchase more memory.

b. Per Process Memory Use

This graph will tell you what processes are hogging the
memory.

If the VSIZE of any of these programs has a constant, positive
slope, it may have a memory leak.

Reference : http://www.freshblurbs.com/how-profile-memory-linux