#What is cgroup-utils?
cgroup-utils provides utility tools and libraries for control groups of Linux. For example, cgutil top is a top-like tool which shows activities of running processes in control groups.
#Installation
$ sudo pip install cgroup-utils
$ git clone git:https://github.com/peo3/cgroup-utils.git
$ cd cgroup-utils
$ python setup.py build
$ sudo python setup.py install
###Packaging (rpm)
$ python setup.py bdist --formats=rpm
#Available commands
- configs
- event
- mkdir
- pgrep
- rmdir
- stats
- top
- tree
##cgutil configs
This command show you configurations of cgroups. By default, it shows only changed configurations.
###Example output
$ cgutil configs -o memory
<root>
notify_on_release=1
release_agent=/usr/lib/ulatencyd/ulatencyd_cleanup.lua
sys_essential
swappiness=0
notify_on_release=1
sys_bg
swappiness=100
notify_on_release=1
##cgutil event
This command makes cgroup.event_control easy to use. It exits when a state of a target cgroup crosses a threshold which you set, thus, you can know the state of the cgroup has changed.
###Example output
$ cgutil event /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/system/sshd.service/memory.usage_in_bytes +1M
$ # It exits when memory usage of processes in the cgroup has increased one more MB.
##cgutil pgrep
This command is alike pgrep
command but it shows cgroups in addtion to PIDs.
###Example output
$ cgutil pgrep ssh
/: 15072
/: 15074
/system/sshd.service: 630
$ cgutil pgrep ssh -l -f
/: 15072 sshd: ozaki-r [priv]
/: 15074 sshd: ozaki-r@pts/2
/: 15157 /bin/python /bin/cgutil pgrep ssh -l -f
/system/sshd.service: 630 /usr/sbin/sshd -D
##cgutil stats
This command shows you states of cgroups.
###Example output
$ cgutil stats
<root>
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system/sm-client.service
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system/sendmail.service
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system/vboxadd-service.service
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system/colord.service
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system/colord-sane.service
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system/udisks2.service
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
system/cups.service
stat={'throttled_time': 0L, 'nr_periods': 0L, 'nr_throttled': 0L}
##cgutil top
This command is alike top
command but it shows activities in a unit of cgroups.
###Example output
$ cgutil top -i -n 2 -b
18.1 msec to collect statistics
[ CPUACCT ] [ BLKIO ] [ MEMORY ]
USR SYS READ WRITE TOTAL RSS SWAP # NAME
0.0% 0.0% 0.0 /s 0.0 /s 0.0 48.0k 0.0 97 usr_1000/default
20.5 msec to collect statistics
[ CPUACCT ] [ BLKIO ] [ MEMORY ]
USR SYS READ WRITE TOTAL RSS SWAP # NAME
0.0% 0.0% 0.0 /s 0.0 /s 128.0k 4.0k 0.0 104 sys_daemon
0.0% 0.0% 0.0 /s 0.0 /s -64.0k 0.0 0.0 0 sys_essential
0.0% 0.0% 0.0 /s 0.0 /s 108.0k 32.0k 0.0 97 usr_1000/default
##cgutil tree
This command shows you tree structure of cgroups.
###Example outputs $ cgutil tree -o blkio `system +sm-client.service +sendmail.service +vboxadd-service.service +colord.service +colord-sane.service +udisks2.service +cups.service +rtkit-daemon.service
(snip)
[email protected]
+udev.service
`systemd-journald.service
#Supported Linux Version
3.8.y
##Supported subsystems
- blkio (and its debug feature)
- cpuset
- cpu and cpuacct
- devices
- freezer
- hugetlb
- memory
- net_cls
- net_prio
#License
The tools are distributed under GPLv2. See COPYING for more detail.