On Mon, Jun 10, 2024 at 1:17 AM Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Jun 7, 2024 at 11:31 PM Andrei Vagin <avagin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Tue, Jun 04, 2024 at 05:24:48PM -0700, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: > > > /proc/<pid>/maps file is extremely useful in practice for various tasks > > > involving figuring out process memory layout, what files are backing any > > > given memory range, etc. One important class of applications that > > > absolutely rely on this are profilers/stack symbolizers (perf tool being one > > > of them). Patterns of use differ, but they generally would fall into two > > > categories. > > > > > > In on-demand pattern, a profiler/symbolizer would normally capture stack > > > trace containing absolute memory addresses of some functions, and would > > > then use /proc/<pid>/maps file to find corresponding backing ELF files > > > (normally, only executable VMAs are of interest), file offsets within > > > them, and then continue from there to get yet more information (ELF > > > symbols, DWARF information) to get human-readable symbolic information. > > > This pattern is used by Meta's fleet-wide profiler, as one example. > > > > > > In preprocessing pattern, application doesn't know the set of addresses > > > of interest, so it has to fetch all relevant VMAs (again, probably only > > > executable ones), store or cache them, then proceed with profiling and > > > stack trace capture. Once done, it would do symbolization based on > > > stored VMA information. This can happen at much later point in time. > > > This patterns is used by perf tool, as an example. > > > > > > In either case, there are both performance and correctness requirement > > > involved. This address to VMA information translation has to be done as > > > efficiently as possible, but also not miss any VMA (especially in the > > > case of loading/unloading shared libraries). In practice, correctness > > > can't be guaranteed (due to process dying before VMA data can be > > > captured, or shared library being unloaded, etc), but any effort to > > > maximize the chance of finding the VMA is appreciated. > > > > > > Unfortunately, for all the /proc/<pid>/maps file universality and > > > usefulness, it doesn't fit the above use cases 100%. > > > > > > First, it's main purpose is to emit all VMAs sequentially, but in > > > practice captured addresses would fall only into a smaller subset of all > > > process' VMAs, mainly containing executable text. Yet, library would > > > need to parse most or all of the contents to find needed VMAs, as there > > > is no way to skip VMAs that are of no use. Efficient library can do the > > > linear pass and it is still relatively efficient, but it's definitely an > > > overhead that can be avoided, if there was a way to do more targeted > > > querying of the relevant VMA information. > > > > > > Second, it's a text based interface, which makes its programmatic use from > > > applications and libraries more cumbersome and inefficient due to the > > > need to handle text parsing to get necessary pieces of information. The > > > overhead is actually payed both by kernel, formatting originally binary > > > VMA data into text, and then by user space application, parsing it back > > > into binary data for further use. > > > > I was trying to solve all these issues in a more generic way: > > https://lwn.net/Articles/683371/ > > > > Can you please provide a tl;dr summary of that effort? task_diag is a generic interface designed to efficiently gather information about running processes. It addresses the limitations of traditional /proc/PID/* files. This binary interface utilizes the netlink protocol, inspired by the socket diag interface. Input is provided as a netlink message detailing the desired information, and the kernel responds with a set of netlink messages containing the results. Compared to struct-based interfaces like this one or statx, the netlink-based approach can be more flexible, particularly when dealing with numerous optional parameters. BTW, David Ahern made some adjustments in task_diag to optimize the same things that are targeted here. task_diag hasn't been merged to the kernel. I don't remember all the arguments, it was some time ago. The primary concern was the introduction of redundant functionality. It would have been the second interface offering similar capabilities, without a plan to deprecate the older interface. Furthermore, there wasn't sufficient demand to justify the addition of a new interface at the time. Thanks, Andrei