CPUSET(1) | MidnightBSD General Commands Manual | CPUSET(1) |
cpuset
— configure
processor sets
cpuset |
[-l cpu-list]
[-n policy:domain-list]
[-s setid]
cmd ... |
cpuset |
[-l cpu-list]
[-n policy:domain-list]
[-s setid]
-p pid |
cpuset |
[-c ] [-l
cpu-list] [-n
policy:domain-list] -C
-p pid |
cpuset |
[-c ] [-l
cpu-list] [-n
policy:domain-list] [-j
jail | -p
pid | -t
tid | -s
setid | -x
irq] |
cpuset |
-g [-cir ]
[-d domain |
-j jail |
-p pid |
-t tid |
-s setid |
-x irq] |
The cpuset
command can be used to assign
processor sets to processes, run commands constrained to a given set or list
of processors and memory domains, and query information about processor
binding, memory binding and policy, sets, and available processors and
memory domains in the system.
cpuset
requires a target to modify or
query. The target may be specified as a command, process id, thread id, a
cpuset id, an irq, a jail, or a NUMA domain. Using
-g
the target's set id or mask may be queried. Using
-l
or -s
the target's CPU
mask or set id may be set. If no target is specified,
cpuset
operates on itself. Not all combinations of
operations and targets are supported. For example, you may not set the id of
an existing set or query and launch a command at the same time.
There are two sets applicable to each process and one private mask
per thread. Every process in the system belongs to a cpuset. By default
processes are started in set 1. The mask or id may be queried using
-c
. Each thread also has a private mask of CPUs it
is allowed to run on that must be a subset of the assigned set. And finally,
there is a root set, numbered 0, that is immutable. This last set is the
list of all possible CPUs in the system and is queried using
-r
.
Most sets include NUMA memory domain and policy information. This
can be inspected with -g
and set with
-n
. This will specify which NUMA domains are visible
to the process and affect where anonymous memory and file pages will be
stored on first access. Files accessed first by other processes may specify
conflicting policy.
When running a command it may join a set specified with
-s
otherwise a new set is created. In addition, a
mask for the command may be specified using -l
. When
used in conjunction with -c
the mask modifies the
supplied or created set rather than the private mask for the thread.
The options are as follows:
-C
-c
-d
domain-g
cpuset
to print either a list of valid CPUs
or, using -i
, the id of the target.-i
-g
option print the id rather
than the valid mask of the target.-j
jail-l
cpu-list-n
policy:domain-list-l
. Valid policies
include first-touch (ft), round-robin (rr), prefer and interleave (il).
First-touch allocates on the local domain when memory is available.
Round-robin alternates between every possible domain page at a time. The
prefer policy accepts only a single domain in the set. The parent of the
set is consulted if the preferred domain is unavailable. Interleave
operates like round-robin with an implementation defined stripe width. See
domainset(9) for
more details on policies.-p
pid-s
setid-r
-t
tid-x
irqThe cpuset
utility exits 0 on
success, and >0 if an error occurs.
Create a new group with CPUs 0-4 inclusive and run /bin/sh on it:
cpuset -c -l 0-4 /bin/sh
Query the mask of CPUs the ⟨sh pid⟩ is allowed to run on:
cpuset -g -p <sh
pid>
Restrict /bin/sh to run on CPUs 0 and 2 while its group is still allowed to run on CPUs 0-4:
cpuset -l 0,2 -p <sh
pid>
Modify the cpuset /bin/sh belongs to restricting it to CPUs 0 and 2:
cpuset -l 0,2 -c -p <sh
pid>
Modify the cpuset all threads are in by default to contain only the first 4 CPUs, leaving the rest idle:
cpuset -l 0-3 -s 1
Print the id of the cpuset /bin/sh is in:
cpuset -g -i -p <sh
pid>
Move the pid into the specified cpuset setid so it may be managed with other pids in that set:
cpuset -s <setid> -p
<pid>
Create a new cpuset that is restricted to CPUs 0 and 2 and move pid into the new set:
cpuset -C -c -l 0,2 -p
<pid>
The cpuset
command first appeared in
FreeBSD 7.1.
Jeffrey Roberson <jeff@FreeBSD.org>
July 3, 2018 | midnightbsd-3.1 |