1*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 2*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * CDDL HEADER START 3*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 4*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the 5*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Common Development and Distribution License, Version 1.0 only 6*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance 7*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * with the License. 8*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 9*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE 10*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. 11*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * See the License for the specific language governing permissions 12*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * and limitations under the License. 13*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 14*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each 15*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. 16*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the 17*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying 18*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 19*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 20*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * CDDL HEADER END 21*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 22*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 23*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. 24*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Use is subject to license terms. 25*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 26*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 27*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #ifndef _SYS_KSTAT_H 28*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define _SYS_KSTAT_H 29*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 30*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #pragma ident "%Z%%M% %I% %E% SMI" 31*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 32*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 33*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Definition of general kernel statistics structures and /dev/kstat ioctls 34*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 35*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 36*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #include <sys/types.h> 37*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #include <sys/time.h> 38*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 39*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #ifdef __cplusplus 40*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern "C" { 41*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif 42*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 43*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef int kid_t; /* unique kstat id */ 44*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 45*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 46*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Kernel statistics driver (/dev/kstat) ioctls 47*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 48*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 49*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_IOC_BASE ('K' << 8) 50*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 51*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_IOC_CHAIN_ID KSTAT_IOC_BASE | 0x01 52*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_IOC_READ KSTAT_IOC_BASE | 0x02 53*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_IOC_WRITE KSTAT_IOC_BASE | 0x03 54*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 55*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 56*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * /dev/kstat ioctl usage (kd denotes /dev/kstat descriptor): 57*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 58*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kcid = ioctl(kd, KSTAT_IOC_CHAIN_ID, NULL); 59*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kcid = ioctl(kd, KSTAT_IOC_READ, kstat_t *); 60*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kcid = ioctl(kd, KSTAT_IOC_WRITE, kstat_t *); 61*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 62*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 63*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_STRLEN 31 /* 30 chars + NULL; must be 16 * n - 1 */ 64*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 65*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 66*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The generic kstat header 67*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 68*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 69*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef struct kstat { 70*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 71*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Fields relevant to both kernel and user 72*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 73*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t ks_crtime; /* creation time (from gethrtime()) */ 74*0Sstevel@tonic-gate struct kstat *ks_next; /* kstat chain linkage */ 75*0Sstevel@tonic-gate kid_t ks_kid; /* unique kstat ID */ 76*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char ks_module[KSTAT_STRLEN]; /* provider module name */ 77*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uchar_t ks_resv; /* reserved, currently just padding */ 78*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int ks_instance; /* provider module's instance */ 79*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char ks_name[KSTAT_STRLEN]; /* kstat name */ 80*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uchar_t ks_type; /* kstat data type */ 81*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char ks_class[KSTAT_STRLEN]; /* kstat class */ 82*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uchar_t ks_flags; /* kstat flags */ 83*0Sstevel@tonic-gate void *ks_data; /* kstat type-specific data */ 84*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t ks_ndata; /* # of type-specific data records */ 85*0Sstevel@tonic-gate size_t ks_data_size; /* total size of kstat data section */ 86*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t ks_snaptime; /* time of last data shapshot */ 87*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 88*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Fields relevant to kernel only 89*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 90*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int (*ks_update)(struct kstat *, int); /* dynamic update */ 91*0Sstevel@tonic-gate void *ks_private; /* arbitrary provider-private data */ 92*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int (*ks_snapshot)(struct kstat *, void *, int); 93*0Sstevel@tonic-gate void *ks_lock; /* protects this kstat's data */ 94*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } kstat_t; 95*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 96*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #ifdef _SYSCALL32 97*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 98*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef int32_t kid32_t; 99*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 100*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef struct kstat32 { 101*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 102*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Fields relevant to both kernel and user 103*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 104*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t ks_crtime; 105*0Sstevel@tonic-gate caddr32_t ks_next; /* struct kstat pointer */ 106*0Sstevel@tonic-gate kid32_t ks_kid; 107*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char ks_module[KSTAT_STRLEN]; 108*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint8_t ks_resv; 109*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int32_t ks_instance; 110*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char ks_name[KSTAT_STRLEN]; 111*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint8_t ks_type; 112*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char ks_class[KSTAT_STRLEN]; 113*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint8_t ks_flags; 114*0Sstevel@tonic-gate caddr32_t ks_data; /* type-specific data */ 115*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint32_t ks_ndata; 116*0Sstevel@tonic-gate size32_t ks_data_size; 117*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t ks_snaptime; 118*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 119*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Fields relevant to kernel only (only needed here for padding) 120*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 121*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int32_t _ks_update; 122*0Sstevel@tonic-gate caddr32_t _ks_private; 123*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int32_t _ks_snapshot; 124*0Sstevel@tonic-gate caddr32_t _ks_lock; 125*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } kstat32_t; 126*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 127*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif /* _SYSCALL32 */ 128*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 129*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 130*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat structure and locking strategy 131*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 132*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Each kstat consists of a header section (a kstat_t) and a data section. 133*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The system maintains a set of kstats, protected by kstat_chain_lock. 134*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_chain_lock protects all additions to/deletions from this set, 135*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * as well as all changes to kstat headers. kstat data sections are 136*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * *optionally* protected by the per-kstat ks_lock. If ks_lock is non-NULL, 137*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat clients (e.g. /dev/kstat) will acquire this lock for all of their 138*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * operations on that kstat. It is up to the kstat provider to decide whether 139*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * guaranteeing consistent data to kstat clients is sufficiently important 140*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * to justify the locking cost. Note, however, that most statistic updates 141*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * already occur under one of the provider's mutexes, so if the provider sets 142*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ks_lock to point to that mutex, then kstat data locking is free. 143*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 144*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * NOTE: variable-size kstats MUST employ kstat data locking, to prevent 145*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * data-size races with kstat clients. 146*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 147*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * NOTE: ks_lock is really of type (kmutex_t *); it is declared as (void *) 148*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * in the kstat header so that users don't have to be exposed to all of the 149*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kernel's lock-related data structures. 150*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 151*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 152*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #if defined(_KERNEL) 153*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 154*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_ENTER(k) \ 155*0Sstevel@tonic-gate { kmutex_t *lp = (k)->ks_lock; if (lp) mutex_enter(lp); } 156*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 157*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_EXIT(k) \ 158*0Sstevel@tonic-gate { kmutex_t *lp = (k)->ks_lock; if (lp) mutex_exit(lp); } 159*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 160*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_UPDATE(k, rw) (*(k)->ks_update)((k), (rw)) 161*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 162*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_SNAPSHOT(k, buf, rw) (*(k)->ks_snapshot)((k), (buf), (rw)) 163*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 164*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif /* defined(_KERNEL) */ 165*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 166*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 167*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat time 168*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 169*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * All times associated with kstats (e.g. creation time, snapshot time, 170*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_timer_t and kstat_io_t timestamps, etc.) are 64-bit nanosecond values, 171*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * as returned by gethrtime(). The accuracy of these timestamps is machine 172*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * dependent, but the precision (units) is the same across all platforms. 173*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 174*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 175*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 176*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat identity (KID) 177*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 178*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Each kstat is assigned a unique KID (kstat ID) when it is added to the 179*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * global kstat chain. The KID is used as a cookie by /dev/kstat to 180*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * request information about the corresponding kstat. There is also 181*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * an identity associated with the entire kstat chain, kstat_chain_id, 182*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * which is bumped each time a kstat is added or deleted. /dev/kstat uses 183*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the chain ID to detect changes in the kstat chain (e.g., a new disk 184*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * coming online) between ioctl()s. 185*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 186*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 187*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 188*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat module, kstat instance 189*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 190*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ks_module and ks_instance contain the name and instance of the module 191*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * that created the kstat. In cases where there can only be one instance, 192*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ks_instance is 0. The kernel proper (/kernel/unix) uses "unix" as its 193*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * module name. 194*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 195*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 196*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 197*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat name 198*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 199*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ks_name gives a meaningful name to a kstat. The full kstat namespace 200*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * is module.instance.name, so the name only need be unique within a 201*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * module. kstat_create() will fail if you try to create a kstat with 202*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * an already-used (ks_module, ks_instance, ks_name) triplet. Spaces are 203*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * allowed in kstat names, but strongly discouraged, since they hinder 204*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * awk-style processing at user level. 205*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 206*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 207*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 208*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat type 209*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 210*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The kstat mechanism provides several flavors of kstat data, defined 211*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * below. The "raw" kstat type is just treated as an array of bytes; you 212*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * can use this to export any kind of data you want. 213*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 214*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Some kstat types allow multiple data structures per kstat, e.g. 215*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_TYPE_NAMED; others do not. This is part of the spec for each 216*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat data type. 217*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 218*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * User-level tools should *not* rely on the #define KSTAT_NUM_TYPES. To 219*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * get this information, read out the standard system kstat "kstat_types". 220*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 221*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 222*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_TYPE_RAW 0 /* can be anything */ 223*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* ks_ndata >= 1 */ 224*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_TYPE_NAMED 1 /* name/value pair */ 225*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* ks_ndata >= 1 */ 226*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_TYPE_INTR 2 /* interrupt statistics */ 227*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* ks_ndata == 1 */ 228*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_TYPE_IO 3 /* I/O statistics */ 229*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* ks_ndata == 1 */ 230*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_TYPE_TIMER 4 /* event timer */ 231*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* ks_ndata >= 1 */ 232*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 233*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_NUM_TYPES 5 234*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 235*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 236*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat class 237*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 238*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Each kstat can be characterized as belonging to some broad class 239*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * of statistics, e.g. disk, tape, net, vm, streams, etc. This field 240*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * can be used as a filter to extract related kstats. The following 241*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * values are currently in use: disk, tape, net, controller, vm, kvm, 242*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * hat, streams, kstat, and misc. (The kstat class encompasses things 243*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * like kstat_types.) 244*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 245*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 246*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 247*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat flags 248*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 249*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Any of the following flags may be passed to kstat_create(). They are 250*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * all zero by default. 251*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 252*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_FLAG_VIRTUAL: 253*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 254*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Tells kstat_create() not to allocate memory for the 255*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat data section; instead, you will set the ks_data 256*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * field to point to the data you wish to export. This 257*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * provides a convenient way to export existing data 258*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * structures. 259*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 260*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_FLAG_VAR_SIZE: 261*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 262*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The size of the kstat you are creating will vary over time. 263*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * For example, you may want to use the kstat mechanism to 264*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * export a linked list. NOTE: The kstat framework does not 265*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * manage the data section, so all variable-size kstats must be 266*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * virtual kstats. Moreover, variable-size kstats MUST employ 267*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat data locking to prevent data-size races with kstat 268*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * clients. See the section on "kstat snapshot" for details. 269*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 270*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_FLAG_WRITABLE: 271*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 272*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Makes the kstat's data section writable by root. 273*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The ks_snapshot routine (see below) does not need to check for 274*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * this; permission checking is handled in the kstat driver. 275*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 276*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_FLAG_PERSISTENT: 277*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 278*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Indicates that this kstat is to be persistent over time. 279*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * For persistent kstats, kstat_delete() simply marks the 280*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat as dormant; a subsequent kstat_create() reactivates 281*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the kstat. This feature is provided so that statistics 282*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * are not lost across driver close/open (e.g., raw disk I/O 283*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * on a disk with no mounted partitions.) 284*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * NOTE: Persistent kstats cannot be virtual, since ks_data 285*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * points to garbage as soon as the driver goes away. 286*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 287*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The following flags are maintained by the kstat framework: 288*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 289*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_FLAG_DORMANT: 290*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 291*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * For persistent kstats, indicates that the kstat is in the 292*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * dormant state (e.g., the corresponding device is closed). 293*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 294*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_FLAG_INVALID: 295*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 296*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * This flag is set when a kstat is in a transitional state, 297*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * e.g. between kstat_create() and kstat_install(). 298*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat clients must not attempt to access the kstat's data 299*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * if this flag is set. 300*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 301*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 302*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_FLAG_VIRTUAL 0x01 303*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_FLAG_VAR_SIZE 0x02 304*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_FLAG_WRITABLE 0x04 305*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_FLAG_PERSISTENT 0x08 306*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_FLAG_DORMANT 0x10 307*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_FLAG_INVALID 0x20 308*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 309*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 310*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Dynamic update support 311*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 312*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The kstat mechanism allows for an optional ks_update function to update 313*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat data. This is useful for drivers where the underlying device 314*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * keeps cheap hardware stats, but extraction is expensive. Instead of 315*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * constantly keeping the kstat data section up to date, you can supply a 316*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ks_update function which updates the kstat's data section on demand. 317*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * To take advantage of this feature, simply set the ks_update field before 318*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * calling kstat_install(). 319*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 320*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The ks_update function, if supplied, must have the following structure: 321*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 322*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * int 323*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * foo_kstat_update(kstat_t *ksp, int rw) 324*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * { 325*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * if (rw == KSTAT_WRITE) { 326*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ... update the native stats from ksp->ks_data; 327*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * return EACCES if you don't support this 328*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * } else { 329*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ... update ksp->ks_data from the native stats 330*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * } 331*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * } 332*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 333*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The ks_update return codes are: 0 for success, EACCES if you don't allow 334*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_WRITE, and EIO for any other type of error. 335*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 336*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * In general, the ks_update function may need to refer to provider-private 337*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * data; for example, it may need a pointer to the provider's raw statistics. 338*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The ks_private field is available for this purpose. Its use is entirely 339*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * at the provider's discretion. 340*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 341*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * All variable-size kstats MUST supply a ks_update routine, which computes 342*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * and sets ks_data_size (and ks_ndata if that is meaningful), since these 343*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * are needed to perform kstat snapshots (see below). 344*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 345*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * No kstat locking should be done inside the ks_update routine. The caller 346*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * will already be holding the kstat's ks_lock (to ensure consistent data). 347*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 348*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 349*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_READ 0 350*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_WRITE 1 351*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 352*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 353*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Kstat snapshot 354*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 355*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * In order to get a consistent view of a kstat's data, clients must obey 356*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the kstat's locking strategy. However, these clients may need to perform 357*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * operations on the data which could cause a fault (e.g. copyout()), or 358*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * operations which are simply expensive. Doing so could cause deadlock 359*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (e.g. if you're holding a disk's kstat lock which is ultimately required 360*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * to resolve a copyout() fault), performance degradation (since the providers' 361*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * activity is serialized at the kstat lock), device timing problems, etc. 362*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 363*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * To avoid these problems, kstat data is provided via snapshots. Taking 364*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * a snapshot is a simple process: allocate a wired-down kernel buffer, 365*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * acquire the kstat's data lock, copy the data into the buffer ("take the 366*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * snapshot"), and release the lock. This ensures that the kstat's data lock 367*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * will be held as briefly as possible, and that no faults will occur while 368*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the lock is held. 369*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 370*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Normally, the snapshot is taken by default_kstat_snapshot(), which 371*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * timestamps the data (sets ks_snaptime), copies it, and does a little 372*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * massaging to deal with incomplete transactions on i/o kstats. However, 373*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * this routine only works for kstats with contiguous data (the typical case). 374*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * If you create a kstat whose data is, say, a linked list, you must provide 375*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * your own ks_snapshot routine. The routine you supply must have the 376*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * following prototype (replace "foo" with something appropriate): 377*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 378*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * int foo_kstat_snapshot(kstat_t *ksp, void *buf, int rw); 379*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 380*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The minimal snapshot routine -- one which copies contiguous data that 381*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * doesn't need any massaging -- would be this: 382*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 383*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ksp->ks_snaptime = gethrtime(); 384*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * if (rw == KSTAT_WRITE) 385*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * bcopy(buf, ksp->ks_data, ksp->ks_data_size); 386*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * else 387*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * bcopy(ksp->ks_data, buf, ksp->ks_data_size); 388*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * return (0); 389*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 390*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * A more illuminating example is taking a snapshot of a linked list: 391*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 392*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ksp->ks_snaptime = gethrtime(); 393*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * if (rw == KSTAT_WRITE) 394*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * return (EACCES); ... See below ... 395*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * for (foo = first_foo; foo; foo = foo->next) { 396*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * bcopy((char *) foo, (char *) buf, sizeof (struct foo)); 397*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * buf = ((struct foo *) buf) + 1; 398*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * } 399*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * return (0); 400*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 401*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * In the example above, we have decided that we don't want to allow 402*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_WRITE access, so we return EACCES if this is attempted. 403*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 404*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The key points are: 405*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 406*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (1) ks_snaptime must be set (via gethrtime()) to timestamp the data. 407*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (2) Data gets copied from the kstat to the buffer on KSTAT_READ, 408*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * and from the buffer to the kstat on KSTAT_WRITE. 409*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (3) ks_snapshot return values are: 0 for success, EACCES if you 410*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * don't allow KSTAT_WRITE, and EIO for any other type of error. 411*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 412*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Named kstats (see section on "Named statistics" below) containing long 413*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * strings (KSTAT_DATA_STRING) need special handling. The kstat driver 414*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * assumes that all strings are copied into the buffer after the array of 415*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * named kstats, and the pointers (KSTAT_NAMED_STR_PTR()) are updated to point 416*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * into the copy within the buffer. The default snapshot routine does this, 417*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * but overriding routines should contain at least the following: 418*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 419*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * if (rw == KSTAT_READ) { 420*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_named_t *knp = buf; 421*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * char *end = knp + ksp->ks_ndata; 422*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * uint_t i; 423*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 424*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ... Do the regular copy ... 425*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * bcopy(ksp->ks_data, buf, sizeof (kstat_named_t) * ksp->ks_ndata); 426*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 427*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * for (i = 0; i < ksp->ks_ndata; i++, knp++) { 428*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * if (knp[i].data_type == KSTAT_DATA_STRING && 429*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_NAMED_STR_PTR(knp) != NULL) { 430*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * bcopy(KSTAT_NAMED_STR_PTR(knp), end, 431*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_NAMED_STR_BUFLEN(knp)); 432*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_NAMED_STR_PTR(knp) = end; 433*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * end += KSTAT_NAMED_STR_BUFLEN(knp); 434*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * } 435*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * } 436*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 437*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 438*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 439*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Named statistics. 440*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 441*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * List of arbitrary name=value statistics. 442*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 443*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 444*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef struct kstat_named { 445*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char name[KSTAT_STRLEN]; /* name of counter */ 446*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uchar_t data_type; /* data type */ 447*0Sstevel@tonic-gate union { 448*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char c[16]; /* enough for 128-bit ints */ 449*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int32_t i32; 450*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint32_t ui32; 451*0Sstevel@tonic-gate struct { 452*0Sstevel@tonic-gate union { 453*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char *ptr; /* NULL-term string */ 454*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #if defined(_KERNEL) && defined(_MULTI_DATAMODEL) 455*0Sstevel@tonic-gate caddr32_t ptr32; 456*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif 457*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char __pad[8]; /* 64-bit padding */ 458*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } addr; 459*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint32_t len; /* # bytes for strlen + '\0' */ 460*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } string; 461*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 462*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The int64_t and uint64_t types are not valid for a maximally conformant 463*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 32-bit compilation environment (cc -Xc) using compilers prior to the 464*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * introduction of C99 conforming compiler (reference ISO/IEC 9899:1990). 465*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * In these cases, the visibility of i64 and ui64 is only permitted for 466*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 64-bit compilation environments or 32-bit non-maximally conformant 467*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * C89 or C90 ANSI C compilation environments (cc -Xt and cc -Xa). In the 468*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * C99 ANSI C compilation environment, the long long type is supported. 469*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The _INT64_TYPE is defined by the implementation (see sys/int_types.h). 470*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 471*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #if defined(_INT64_TYPE) 472*0Sstevel@tonic-gate int64_t i64; 473*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint64_t ui64; 474*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif 475*0Sstevel@tonic-gate long l; 476*0Sstevel@tonic-gate ulong_t ul; 477*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 478*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* These structure members are obsolete */ 479*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 480*0Sstevel@tonic-gate longlong_t ll; 481*0Sstevel@tonic-gate u_longlong_t ull; 482*0Sstevel@tonic-gate float f; 483*0Sstevel@tonic-gate double d; 484*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } value; /* value of counter */ 485*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } kstat_named_t; 486*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 487*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_CHAR 0 488*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_INT32 1 489*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_UINT32 2 490*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_INT64 3 491*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_UINT64 4 492*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 493*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #if !defined(_LP64) 494*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_LONG KSTAT_DATA_INT32 495*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_ULONG KSTAT_DATA_UINT32 496*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #else 497*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #if !defined(_KERNEL) 498*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_LONG KSTAT_DATA_INT64 499*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_ULONG KSTAT_DATA_UINT64 500*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #else 501*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_LONG 7 /* only visible to the kernel */ 502*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_ULONG 8 /* only visible to the kernel */ 503*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif /* !_KERNEL */ 504*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif /* !_LP64 */ 505*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 506*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 507*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Statistics exporting named kstats with long strings (KSTAT_DATA_STRING) 508*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * may not make the assumption that ks_data_size is equal to (ks_ndata * sizeof 509*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (kstat_named_t)). ks_data_size in these cases is equal to the sum of the 510*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * amount of space required to store the strings (ie, the sum of 511*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * KSTAT_NAMED_STR_BUFLEN() for all KSTAT_DATA_STRING statistics) plus the 512*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * space required to store the kstat_named_t's. 513*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 514*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The default update routine will update ks_data_size automatically for 515*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * variable-length kstats containing long strings (using the default update 516*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * routine only makes sense if the string is the only thing that is changing 517*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * in size, and ks_ndata is constant). Fixed-length kstats containing long 518*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * strings must explicitly change ks_data_size (after creation but before 519*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * initialization) to reflect the correct amount of space required for the 520*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * long strings and the kstat_named_t's. 521*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 522*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_STRING 9 523*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 524*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* These types are obsolete */ 525*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 526*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_LONGLONG KSTAT_DATA_INT64 527*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_ULONGLONG KSTAT_DATA_UINT64 528*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_FLOAT 5 529*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_DATA_DOUBLE 6 530*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 531*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_NAMED_PTR(kptr) ((kstat_named_t *)(kptr)->ks_data) 532*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 533*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 534*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Retrieve the pointer of the string contained in the given named kstat. 535*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 536*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_NAMED_STR_PTR(knptr) ((knptr)->value.string.addr.ptr) 537*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 538*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 539*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Retrieve the length of the buffer required to store the string in the given 540*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * named kstat. 541*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 542*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_NAMED_STR_BUFLEN(knptr) ((knptr)->value.string.len) 543*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 544*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 545*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Interrupt statistics. 546*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 547*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * An interrupt is a hard interrupt (sourced from the hardware device 548*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * itself), a soft interrupt (induced by the system via the use of 549*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * some system interrupt source), a watchdog interrupt (induced by 550*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * a periodic timer call), spurious (an interrupt entry point was 551*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * entered but there was no interrupt condition to service), 552*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * or multiple service (an interrupt condition was detected and 553*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * serviced just prior to returning from any of the other types). 554*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 555*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Measurement of the spurious class of interrupts is useful for 556*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * autovectored devices in order to pinpoint any interrupt latency 557*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * problems in a particular system configuration. 558*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 559*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Devices that have more than one interrupt of the same 560*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * type should use multiple structures. 561*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 562*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 563*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_INTR_HARD 0 564*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_INTR_SOFT 1 565*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_INTR_WATCHDOG 2 566*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_INTR_SPURIOUS 3 567*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_INTR_MULTSVC 4 568*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 569*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_NUM_INTRS 5 570*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 571*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef struct kstat_intr { 572*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t intrs[KSTAT_NUM_INTRS]; /* interrupt counters */ 573*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } kstat_intr_t; 574*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 575*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_INTR_PTR(kptr) ((kstat_intr_t *)(kptr)->ks_data) 576*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 577*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 578*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * I/O statistics. 579*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 580*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 581*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef struct kstat_io { 582*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 583*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 584*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Basic counters. 585*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 586*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The counters should be updated at the end of service 587*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (e.g., just prior to calling biodone()). 588*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 589*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 590*0Sstevel@tonic-gate u_longlong_t nread; /* number of bytes read */ 591*0Sstevel@tonic-gate u_longlong_t nwritten; /* number of bytes written */ 592*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t reads; /* number of read operations */ 593*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t writes; /* number of write operations */ 594*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 595*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 596*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Accumulated time and queue length statistics. 597*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 598*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Accumulated time statistics are kept as a running sum 599*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * of "active" time. Queue length statistics are kept as a 600*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * running sum of the product of queue length and elapsed time 601*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * at that length -- i.e., a Riemann sum for queue length 602*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * integrated against time. (You can also think of the active time 603*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * as a Riemann sum, for the boolean function (queue_length > 0) 604*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * integrated against time, or you can think of it as the 605*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Lebesgue measure of the set on which queue_length > 0.) 606*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 607*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ^ 608*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * | _________ 609*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 8 | i4 | 610*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * | | | 611*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Queue 6 | | 612*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Length | _________ | | 613*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 4 | i2 |_______| | 614*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * | | i3 | 615*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 2_______| | 616*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * | i1 | 617*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * |_______________________________| 618*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Time-> t1 t2 t3 t4 619*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 620*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * At each change of state (entry or exit from the queue), 621*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * we add the elapsed time (since the previous state change) 622*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * to the active time if the queue length was non-zero during 623*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * that interval; and we add the product of the elapsed time 624*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * times the queue length to the running length*time sum. 625*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 626*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * This method is generalizable to measuring residency 627*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * in any defined system: instead of queue lengths, think 628*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * of "outstanding RPC calls to server X". 629*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 630*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * A large number of I/O subsystems have at least two basic 631*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * "lists" of transactions they manage: one for transactions 632*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * that have been accepted for processing but for which processing 633*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * has yet to begin, and one for transactions which are actively 634*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * being processed (but not done). For this reason, two cumulative 635*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * time statistics are defined here: wait (pre-service) time, 636*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * and run (service) time. 637*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 638*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * All times are 64-bit nanoseconds (hrtime_t), as returned by 639*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * gethrtime(). 640*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 641*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The units of cumulative busy time are accumulated nanoseconds. 642*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The units of cumulative length*time products are elapsed time 643*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * times queue length. 644*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 645*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Updates to the fields below are performed implicitly by calls to 646*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * these five functions: 647*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 648*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_waitq_enter() 649*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_waitq_exit() 650*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_runq_enter() 651*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_runq_exit() 652*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 653*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_waitq_to_runq() (see below) 654*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_runq_back_to_waitq() (see below) 655*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 656*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Since kstat_waitq_exit() is typically followed immediately 657*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * by kstat_runq_enter(), there is a single kstat_waitq_to_runq() 658*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * function which performs both operations. This is a performance 659*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * win since only one timestamp is required. 660*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 661*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * In some instances, it may be necessary to move a request from 662*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the run queue back to the wait queue, e.g. for write throttling. 663*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * For these situations, call kstat_runq_back_to_waitq(). 664*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 665*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * These fields should never be updated by any other means. 666*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 667*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 668*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t wtime; /* cumulative wait (pre-service) time */ 669*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t wlentime; /* cumulative wait length*time product */ 670*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t wlastupdate; /* last time wait queue changed */ 671*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t rtime; /* cumulative run (service) time */ 672*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t rlentime; /* cumulative run length*time product */ 673*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t rlastupdate; /* last time run queue changed */ 674*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 675*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t wcnt; /* count of elements in wait state */ 676*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t rcnt; /* count of elements in run state */ 677*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 678*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } kstat_io_t; 679*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 680*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_IO_PTR(kptr) ((kstat_io_t *)(kptr)->ks_data) 681*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 682*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 683*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Event timer statistics - cumulative elapsed time and number of events. 684*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 685*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Updates to these fields are performed implicitly by calls to 686*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_timer_start() and kstat_timer_stop(). 687*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 688*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 689*0Sstevel@tonic-gate typedef struct kstat_timer { 690*0Sstevel@tonic-gate char name[KSTAT_STRLEN]; /* event name */ 691*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uchar_t resv; /* reserved */ 692*0Sstevel@tonic-gate u_longlong_t num_events; /* number of events */ 693*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t elapsed_time; /* cumulative elapsed time */ 694*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t min_time; /* shortest event duration */ 695*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t max_time; /* longest event duration */ 696*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t start_time; /* previous event start time */ 697*0Sstevel@tonic-gate hrtime_t stop_time; /* previous event stop time */ 698*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } kstat_timer_t; 699*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 700*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #define KSTAT_TIMER_PTR(kptr) ((kstat_timer_t *)(kptr)->ks_data) 701*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 702*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #if defined(_KERNEL) 703*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 704*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #include <sys/t_lock.h> 705*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 706*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern kid_t kstat_chain_id; /* bumped at each state change */ 707*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_init(void); /* initialize kstat framework */ 708*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 709*0Sstevel@tonic-gate /* 710*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Adding and deleting kstats. 711*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 712*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The typical sequence to add a kstat is: 713*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 714*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ksp = kstat_create(module, instance, name, class, type, ndata, flags); 715*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * if (ksp) { 716*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ... provider initialization, if necessary 717*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_install(ksp); 718*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * } 719*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 720*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * There are three logically distinct steps here: 721*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 722*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Step 1: System Initialization (kstat_create) 723*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 724*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_create() performs system initialization. kstat_create() 725*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * allocates memory for the entire kstat (header plus data), initializes 726*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * all header fields, initializes the data section to all zeroes, assigns 727*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * a unique KID, and puts the kstat onto the system's kstat chain. 728*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The returned kstat is marked invalid (KSTAT_FLAG_INVALID is set), 729*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * because the provider (caller) has not yet had a chance to initialize 730*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the data section. 731*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 732*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * By default, kstats are exported to all zones on the system. A kstat may be 733*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * created via kstat_create_zone() to specify a zone to which the statistics 734*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * should be exported. kstat_zone_add() may be used to specify additional 735*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * zones to which the statistics are to be exported. 736*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 737*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Step 2: Provider Initialization 738*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 739*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The provider performs any necessary initialization of the data section, 740*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * e.g. setting the name fields in a KSTAT_TYPE_NAMED. Virtual kstats set 741*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the ks_data field at this time. The provider may also set the ks_update, 742*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * ks_snapshot, ks_private, and ks_lock fields if necessary. 743*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 744*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Step 3: Installation (kstat_install) 745*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 746*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Once the kstat is completely initialized, kstat_install() clears the 747*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * INVALID flag, thus making the kstat accessible to the outside world. 748*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_install() also clears the DORMANT flag for persistent kstats. 749*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 750*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Removing a kstat from the system 751*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 752*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_delete(ksp) removes ksp from the kstat chain and frees all 753*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * associated system resources. NOTE: When you call kstat_delete(), 754*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * you must NOT be holding that kstat's ks_lock. Otherwise, you may 755*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * deadlock with a kstat reader. 756*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 757*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * Persistent kstats 758*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 759*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * From the provider's point of view, persistence is transparent. The only 760*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * difference between ephemeral (normal) kstats and persistent kstats 761*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * is that you pass KSTAT_FLAG_PERSISTENT to kstat_create(). Magically, 762*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * this has the effect of making your data visible even when you're 763*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * not home. Persistence is important to tools like iostat, which want 764*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * to get a meaningful picture of disk activity. Without persistence, 765*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * raw disk i/o statistics could never accumulate: they would come and 766*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * go with each open/close of the raw device. 767*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * 768*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The magic of persistence works by slightly altering the behavior of 769*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * kstat_create() and kstat_delete(). The first call to kstat_create() 770*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * creates a new kstat, as usual. However, kstat_delete() does not 771*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * actually delete the kstat: it performs one final update of the data 772*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * (i.e., calls the ks_update routine), marks the kstat as dormant, and 773*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * sets the ks_lock, ks_update, ks_private, and ks_snapshot fields back 774*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * to their default values (since they might otherwise point to garbage, 775*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * e.g. if the provider is going away). kstat clients can still access 776*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the dormant kstat just like a live kstat; they just continue to see 777*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * the final data values as long as the kstat remains dormant. 778*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * All subsequent kstat_create() calls simply find the already-existing, 779*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * dormant kstat and return a pointer to it, without altering any fields. 780*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * The provider then performs its usual initialization sequence, and 781*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * calls kstat_install(). kstat_install() uses the old data values to 782*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * initialize the native data (i.e., ks_update is called with KSTAT_WRITE), 783*0Sstevel@tonic-gate * thus making it seem like you were never gone. 784*0Sstevel@tonic-gate */ 785*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 786*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern kstat_t *kstat_create(char *, int, char *, char *, uchar_t, 787*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t, uchar_t); 788*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern kstat_t *kstat_create_zone(char *, int, char *, char *, uchar_t, 789*0Sstevel@tonic-gate uint_t, uchar_t, zoneid_t); 790*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_install(kstat_t *); 791*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_delete(kstat_t *); 792*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_named_setstr(kstat_named_t *knp, const char *src); 793*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_set_string(char *, char *); 794*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_delete_byname(char *, int, char *); 795*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_delete_byname_zone(char *, int, char *, zoneid_t); 796*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_named_init(kstat_named_t *, char *, uchar_t); 797*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_timer_init(kstat_timer_t *, char *); 798*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_waitq_enter(kstat_io_t *); 799*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_waitq_exit(kstat_io_t *); 800*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_runq_enter(kstat_io_t *); 801*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_runq_exit(kstat_io_t *); 802*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_waitq_to_runq(kstat_io_t *); 803*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_runq_back_to_waitq(kstat_io_t *); 804*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_timer_start(kstat_timer_t *); 805*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_timer_stop(kstat_timer_t *); 806*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 807*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_zone_add(kstat_t *, zoneid_t); 808*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_zone_remove(kstat_t *, zoneid_t); 809*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern int kstat_zone_find(kstat_t *, zoneid_t); 810*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 811*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern kstat_t *kstat_hold_bykid(kid_t kid, zoneid_t); 812*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern kstat_t *kstat_hold_byname(char *, int, char *, zoneid_t); 813*0Sstevel@tonic-gate extern void kstat_rele(kstat_t *); 814*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 815*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif /* defined(_KERNEL) */ 816*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 817*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #ifdef __cplusplus 818*0Sstevel@tonic-gate } 819*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif 820*0Sstevel@tonic-gate 821*0Sstevel@tonic-gate #endif /* _SYS_KSTAT_H */ 822