Em Tue, Apr 07, 2020 at 07:52:56PM +0300, Alexey Budankov escreveu: > > On 07.04.2020 19:36, Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo wrote: > > Em Tue, Apr 07, 2020 at 05:54:27PM +0300, Alexey Budankov escreveu: > >> Could makes sense adding cap_ipc_lock to the binary to isolate from this: > >> kernel/events/core.c: 6101 > >> if ((locked > lock_limit) && perf_is_paranoid() && > >> !capable(CAP_IPC_LOCK)) { > >> ret = -EPERM; > >> goto unlock; > >> } > > That did the trick, I'll update the documentation and include in my > > "Committer testing" section: > Looks like top mode somehow reaches perf mmap limit described here [1]. > Using -m option solves the issue avoiding cap_ipc_lock on my 8 cores machine: > perf top -e cycles -m 1 So this would read better? diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/perf-security.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/perf-security.rst index ed33682e26b0..d44dd24b0244 100644 --- a/Documentation/admin-guide/perf-security.rst +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/perf-security.rst @@ -127,8 +127,8 @@ taken to create such groups of privileged Perf users. :: - # setcap "cap_perfmon,cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf - # setcap -v "cap_perfmon,cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf + # setcap "cap_perfmon,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf + # setcap -v "cap_perfmon,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf perf: OK # getcap perf perf = cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog,cap_perfmon+ep @@ -140,6 +140,10 @@ i.e.: # setcap "38,cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf +Note that you may need to have 'cap_ipc_lock' in the mix for tools such as +'perf top', alternatively use 'perf top -m N', to reduce the memory that +it uses for the perf ring buffer, see the memory allocation section below. + As a result, members of perf_users group are capable of conducting performance monitoring and observability by using functionality of the configured Perf tool executable that, when executes, passes perf_events