fsstat(1M) System Administration Commands fsstat(1M)NAMEfsstat - report file system statistics
SYNOPSISfsstat [-a|f|i|n|v] [-T | u|d] {-F | {fstype|path}...}
[interval [count]]
DESCRIPTIONfsstat reports kernel file operation activity by the file system type
(fstype) or by the path name, which is converted to a mount point. The
first set of lines of output reports all activity since:
o The file system module was loaded (in the case of fstype)
o The file system was mounted (in the case of mount point)
Statistics are gathered at the file system independent layer at both
the fstype and the mount point levels. However, not all file system
types are represented in the gathering of statistics. (See the NOTES
section of this man page.)
The output of fsstat is dependent on the mode (option) requested. All
statistic fields are displayed using "smart numbers" which automati‐
cally scale the units in a human readable form that fits in a maximum
of 5 characters. For example:
100 is displayed as 100
2048 is displayed as 2K
3000000 is displayed as 2.86M
The unit modifiers are: K (Kbyte), M (Mbyte), G (Gbyte), T (terabyte),
P (petabyte), and E (exabyte).
During the execution of fsstat, the state of the system can change. If
relevant, a state change message is included in the fsstat output in
one of the following forms:
<<mount point no longer available: {path}>>
<<file system module no longer loaded: {fstype}>>
After the state change messages are displayed, fsstat continues to dis‐
play the statistics as directed. If all of the fstypes and mount points
that fsstat was reporting on are no longer available, then fsstat
exits.
The user is required to specify the -F option (all available file sys‐
tem types) or a list of one or more fstypes and/or mount points.
The default report shows general file system activity. This display
combines similar operations into general categories as follows:
new file Number of creation operations for file system objects
(for example, files, directories, symlinks, etc.)
name remov Number of name removal operations
name chng Number of name change operations
attr get Number of object attribute retrieval operations
attr set Number of object attribute change operations
lookup ops Number of object lookup operations
rddir ops Number of read directory operations
read ops Number of data read operations
read bytes Bytes transferred by data read operations
write ops Number of data write operations
write bytes Bytes transferred by data write operations
The entity being reported on (fstype or mount point) is displayed in
the last column.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-a Report the activity for kernel attribute operations. The fol‐
lowing statistics are reported:
getattr Number of file attribute retrieval calls
setattr Number of file attribute modification calls
getsec Number of file security attribute retrieval calls
setsec Number of file security attribute modification
calls
The entity being reported on (fstype or mount point) is dis‐
played in the last column.
-f Report the full activity for all kernel file operations. Each
file operation is listed in the left column. The following
statistics are reported for each operation:
#ops Number of calls for this operation
bytes Average transfer size in bytes (only applies to
read, write, readdir)
The entity being reported on (fstype or mount point) is dis‐
played in the first row.
-i Reports the activity for kernel I/O operations. The following
statistics are reported:
read ops Number of data read calls
read bytes Number of bytes read
write ops Number of data write calls
write bytes Number of bytes written
rddir ops Number of read directory calls
rddir bytes Number of bytes read by reading directories
rwlock ops Number of internal file system lock operations
rwulock ops Number of internal file system unlock opera‐
tions
The entity being reported on (fstype or mount point) is dis‐
played in the last column.
-n Reports the activity for kernel naming operations. The fol‐
lowing statistics are reported:
lookup Number of file name retrieval calls
creat Number of file creation calls
remov Number of file remove calls
link Number of link calls
renam Number of file renaming calls
mkdir Number of directory creation calls
rmdir Number of directory removal calls
rddir Number of directory read calls
symlink Number of symlink creation calls
rdlink Number of symlink read calls
The entity being reported on (fstype or mount point) is dis‐
played in the last column.
-v Reports the activity for calls to the virtual memory opera‐
tions. The following statistics are reported.
map Number of calls mapping a file
addmap Number of calls setting additional mapping to a
mapped file
delmap Number of calls deleting mapping to a file
getpag Number of calls retrieving a page of data from a
file
putpag Number of calls writing a page of data to a file
pagio Number of calls to transfer pages in file system
swap files
The entity being reported on (fstype or mount point) is dis‐
played in the last column.
-F Report on all available file system types.
-T u|d Display a time stamp.
Specify u for a printed representation of the internal repre‐
sentation of time (see time(2)) Specify d for the standard
date format. (See date(1)). The time stamp is only used when
an interval is set.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
count Display only count reports.
fstype Explicitly specify the file system type(s) to be reported.
The file system module must be loaded.
interval Report once each interval seconds.
path Specify the path(s) of the mount point(s) to be reported.
If path is not a mount point, the mount point containing
path will be determined and displayed in the output.
If no interval and no count are specified, a single report is printed
and fsstat exits. If an interval is specified but no count is speci‐
fied, fsstat prints reports every interval seconds indefinitely until
the command is interrupted.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Displaying General Activity
The following example shows general activity for all file system types.
$ fsstat-F
new name name attr attr lookup rddir read read write write
file remov chng get set ops ops ops bytes ops bytes
313K 214K 38.5K 2.16M 56.2K 8.36M 52.8K 19.7M 39.9G 18.8M 39.1G ufs
0 0 0 2.95K 0 3.81K 282 2.52K 466K 0 0 proc
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 nfs
10 8 2 86 9 98 15 413 103M 8.43K 1.05G zfs
13 14 4 98 16 125 10 1.01K 258M 15.9K 127M lofs
8.73K 3.29K 5.25K 55.3K 37 1.20M 44 37.9K 38.3M 47.2K 35.9M tmpfs
0 0 0 4.93K 0 0 0 1.08K 913K 0 0 mntfs
3 2 1 503 3 897 13 122 25.8K 128 272K nfs3
10 8 0 615 10 10.1K 18 61 45.6K 292 2.26M nfs4
Example 2 Displaying Naming Activity
The following example shows the naming activity for ufs, nfs, nfs3,
nfs4, and tmpfs:
$ fsstat-n ufs nfs nfs3 nfs4 tmpfs
lookup creat remov link renam mkdir rmdir rddir symlnk rdlnk
3.57M 3.10K 586 6 24 115 100 30.2K 5 330K ufs
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 nfs
18.3K 3 5 0 0 0 0 1.03K 2 346 nfs3
535 0 0 0 0 0 0 46 0 4 nfs4
146 24 15 0 0 4 0 4 0 0 tmpfs
Example 3 Displaying Attribute Activity
The following example shows the attribute activity for the FS type ufs
and the mounted file systems "/" and "/export/home" every three seconds
for every third iteration:
# fsstat-a ufs / /export/home 3 3
getattr setattr getsec setsec
378K 91.9K 11.8K 0 ufs
367K 82.3K 11.6K 0 /
11.3K 9.6K 198 0 /export/home
4.97K 2.27K 163 0 ufs
3.94K 1.36K 162 0 /
1.03K 927 1 0 /export/home
2.30K 1.06K 73 0 ufs
1.95K 766 71 0 /
361 317 2 0 /export/home
2.33K 1.06K 78 0 ufs
1.64K 451 77 0 /
711 631 1 0 /export/home
Example 4 Displaying File Operation Statistics
The following example shows the statistics for each file operation for
"/" (using the -f option):
$ fsstat-f /
Mountpoint: /
operation #ops bytes
open 8.54K
close 9.8K
read 43.6K 65.9M
write 1.57K 2.99M
ioctl 2.06K
setfl 4
getattr 40.3K
setattr 38
access 9.19K
lookup 203K
create 595
remove 56
link 0
rename 9
mkdir 19
rmdir 0
readdir 2.02K 2.27M
symlink 4
readlink 8.31K
fsync 199
inactive 2.96K
fid 0
rwlock 47.2K
rwunlock 47.2K
seek 29.1K
cmp 42.9K
frlock 4.45K
space 8
realvp 3.25K
getpage 104K
putpage 2.69K
map 13.2K
addmap 34.4K
delmap 33.4K
poll 287
dump 0
pathconf 54
pageio 0
dumpctl 0
dispose 23.8K
getsecattr 697
setsecattr 0
shrlock 0
vnevent 0
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
See environ(5) for descriptions of the following environment variables
that affect the execution of fsstat: LANG, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LC_MES‐
SAGES, LC_TIME, and NLSPATH.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
1 A fatal error occurred. A fatal error could be a failed system
call or another internal error.
2 Invalid command-line options were specified.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │SUNWcs │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│CSI │Enabled │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Interface Stability │See below. │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
The command-line options are Uncommitted. The human-readable output is
not considered an interface.
SEE ALSOdate(1), time(2), attributes(5)NOTES
All display options (-a, -f, -i, -n, -v) are mutually exclusive. Enter‐
ing more than one of these options will result in an error.
The fstype and path operands must appear after the option, but before
the interval or count on the command line. For example, "fsstat -a
fstype interval". Preference is given to fstype so that if a user
wishes to see the statistics for a directory that has the same name as
an fstype (for example, ufs), then the path must be specified unambigu‐
ously (for example, ./ufs). Similarly, in order to define a file with a
numeric name (for example, "10") from an interval or count operand, the
name should be prefixed accordingly (for example, ./10).
When an interval is used, headers repeat after more than 12 lines of
statistics have been displayed and the set of lines to be displayed in
the current interval have completed.
Statistics are not displayed for all pseudo-filesystems. The output
displayed with the -F option shows which of the loaded filesystem types
are supported.
Unbundled file systems may not be recognized by fsstat.
The command-line options are classified as Uncommitted and could
change. The output is not considered to be an interface. The construc‐
tion of higher level software tools depend on either the command-line
options or the output of fsstat is not recommended.
SunOS 5.11 5 Jan 2007 fsstat(1M)