perf-kvm(1) ============== NAME ---- perf-kvm - Tool to trace/measure kvm guest os SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'perf kvm' [--host] [--guest] [--guestmount= [--guestkallsyms= --guestmodules= | --guestvmlinux=]] {top|record|report|diff|buildid-list} 'perf kvm' [--host] [--guest] [--guestkallsyms= --guestmodules= | --guestvmlinux=] {top|record|report|diff|buildid-list} DESCRIPTION ----------- There are a couple of variants of perf kvm: 'perf kvm [options] top ' to generates and displays a performance counter profile of guest os in realtime of an arbitrary workload. 'perf kvm record ' to record the performance couinter profile of an arbitrary workload and save it into a perf data file. If both --host and --guest are input, the perf data file name is perf.data.kvm. If there is no --host but --guest, the file name is perf.data.guest. If there is no --guest but --host, the file name is perf.data.host. 'perf kvm report' to display the performance counter profile information recorded via perf kvm record. 'perf kvm diff' to displays the performance difference amongst two perf.data files captured via perf record. 'perf kvm buildid-list' to display the buildids found in a perf data file, so that other tools can be used to fetch packages with matching symbol tables for use by perf report. OPTIONS ------- --host=:: Collect host side perforamnce profile. --guest=:: Collect guest side perforamnce profile. --guestmount=:: Guest os root file system mount directory. Users mounts guest os root directories under by a specific filesystem access method, typically, sshfs. For example, start 2 guest os. The one's pid is 8888 and the other's is 9999. #mkdir ~/guestmount; cd ~/guestmount #sshfs -o allow_other,direct_io -p 5551 localhost:/ 8888/ #sshfs -o allow_other,direct_io -p 5552 localhost:/ 9999/ #perf kvm --host --guest --guestmount=~/guestmount top --guestkallsyms=:: Guest os /proc/kallsyms file copy. 'perf' kvm' reads it to get guest kernel symbols. Users copy it out from guest os. --guestmodules=:: Guest os /proc/modules file copy. 'perf' kvm' reads it to get guest kernel module information. Users copy it out from guest os. --guestvmlinux=:: Guest os kernel vmlinux. SEE ALSO -------- linkperf:perf-top[1] perf-record[1] perf-report[1] perf-diff[1] perf-buildid-list[1]