Linux Performance Monitoring
Disk I/O
Section titled “Disk I/O”/proc/diskstats
Section titled “/proc/diskstats”The manual page can be accessed by typing: info proc, which says to refer to Documentation/iostats.txt in the linux
source.
I installed the linux-source package and referred to /usr/src/linux/Documentation/iostats.txt.
The field explanations are:
Field 1 -- # of reads completed This is the total number of reads completed successfully.Field 2 -- # of reads merged, field 6 -- # of writes merged Reads and writes which are adjacent to each other may be merged for efficiency. Thus two 4K reads may become one 8K read before it is ultimately handed to the disk, and so it will be counted (and queued) as only one I/O. This field lets you know how often this was done.Field 3 -- # of sectors read This is the total number of sectors read successfully.Field 4 -- # of milliseconds spent reading This is the total number of milliseconds spent by all reads (as measured from __make_request() to end_that_request_last()).Field 5 -- # of writes completed This is the total number of writes completed successfully.Field 7 -- # of sectors written This is the total number of sectors written successfully.Field 8 -- # of milliseconds spent writing This is the total number of milliseconds spent by all writes (as measured from __make_request() to end_that_request_last()).Field 9 -- # of I/Os currently in progress The only field that should go to zero. Incremented as requests are given to appropriate struct request_queue and decremented as they finish.Field 10 -- # of milliseconds spent doing I/Os This field is increases so long as field 9 is nonzero.Field 11 -- weighted # of milliseconds spent doing I/Os This field is incremented at each I/O start, I/O completion, I/O merge, or read of these stats by the number of I/Os in progress (field 9) times the number of milliseconds spent doing I/O since the last update of this field. This can provide an easy measure of both I/O completion time and the backlog that may be accumulating.