On Thu, 3 Dec 1998 13:39:42 +0000 (GMT), Tigran Aivazian
<tigran@aivazian.demon.co.uk> said:
> IMHO, this should be done on a fine-grained (partition level) rather than
> coarse (drive) level. There is enough information in
> ll_rw_blk.c/add_request() to do it now but, of course, kernel_stat
> structure will have to be seriously modified.
> There is something frustrating about the quality and speed of Linux
> development. I.e. the quality is too high and the speed is too high,
> in other words, I can implement this disk stat feature, but I bet
> someone else has already done it and is just about to release his
> patch to Linus soon...
Yep, done that. :)
I have patches for 2.0.34/35 and 2.1.125 already working, outputing
both per-partition and per-spindle access stats via /proc/partitions.
A "sard" front-end gives human-readable output. (It is modeled on the
output of the SVR4 "sar -d" output.)
Currently you get average %utilisation; average request queue length;
number of K transfered plus number of distinct IOs for reads, writes
and combined; and average request service time for each disk and each
partition.
Look for
ftp://ftp.uk.linux.org:/pub/linux/sct/fs/sard-0.2.tar.gz
for the patches and sard source code. The plan is to integrate this
into 2.3 once we have got a more sensible kdev_t in the kernel.
--Stephen
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