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Date:      Sat, 26 Mar 2005 06:03:39 +1100
From:      Peter Jeremy <PeterJeremy@optushome.com.au>
To:        Yan Yu <yanyu@CS.UCLA.EDU>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: a Q on measuring system performance.
Message-ID:  <20050325190339.GD43123@cirb503493.alcatel.com.au>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.GSO.4.58.0503242211100.5835@panther.cs.ucla.edu>
References:  <20050318160528.GQ51688@smp500.sitetronics.com> <20050319080215.GX51688@smp500.sitetronics.com> <20050319.230230.35850068.imp@bsdimp.com> <Pine.GSO.4.58.0503242211100.5835@panther.cs.ucla.edu>

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On Thu, 2005-Mar-24 23:21:54 -0800, Yan Yu wrote:
>I am trying to measure the overhead added by these instrumentation code.
>my plan is:
>  in my user space program, i have something like the following:
>--------------------------------------------
>        gettimeofday(&prev_time, NULL);
>        for (i=0; i< 1000; i++)
>        {
>                fd = fopen("tmp", "r" );
>                if (fd == NULL)
>                {
>                        break;
>                }
>                cnt ++;
>        }
>
>        gettimeofday(&cur_time, NULL);
>        t_lapse= misc_tv_offset( &cur_time, &prev_time );
>
>----------------------------------------------------

That approach is reasonable (but the above code leaks file
descriptors) .  You might want to increase 1000 and/or use rdtsc() for
timing depending on your accuracy/resolution requirements.

>I would run this for the unmodified kernel, and instrumented kernel.
>compare the t_lapse, my concern is that t_lapse includes context switch
>time when the user process is taken out of run queue.

So would gprof.  And gprof has much higher overheads and a granularity
of 10usec.

-- 
Peter Jeremy



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