On 8/15/23, Alexander Leidinger <alexan...@leidinger.net> wrote: > Am 2023-08-15 14:41, schrieb Mateusz Guzik: > >> With this in mind can you provide: sysctl kern.maxvnodes >> vfs.wantfreevnodes vfs.freevnodes vfs.vnodes_created vfs.numvnodes >> vfs.recycles_free vfs.recycles > > After a reboot: > kern.maxvnodes: 10485760 > vfs.wantfreevnodes: 2621440 > vfs.freevnodes: 24696 > vfs.vnodes_created: 1658162 > vfs.numvnodes: 173937 > vfs.recycles_free: 0 > vfs.recycles: 0 > >> Meanwhile if there is tons of recycles, you can damage control by >> bumping kern.maxvnodes. > > Looks like there are not much free directly after the reboot. I will > check the values tomorrow after the periodic run again and maybe > increase by 10 or 100 so see if it makes a difference. > >> If this is not the problem you can use dtrace to figure it out. > > dtrace-count on vnlru_read_freevnodes() and vnlru_free_locked()? Or > something else? >
I mean checking where find is spending time instead of speculating. There is no productized way to do it so to speak, but the following crapper should be good enough: #pragma D option dynvarsize=32m profile:::profile-997 /execname == "find"/ { @oncpu[stack(), "oncpu"] = count(); } /* * The p_flag & 0x4 test filters out kernel threads. */ sched:::off-cpu /execname == "find"/ { self->ts = timestamp; } sched:::on-cpu /self->ts/ { @offcpu[stack(30), "offcpu"] = sum(timestamp - self->ts); self->ts = 0; } dtrace:::END { normalize(@offcpu, 1000000); printa("%k\n%s\n%@d\n\n", @offcpu); printa("%k\n%s\n%@d\n\n", @oncpu); } just leave it running as: dtrace -s script.d -o output kill it after periodic finishes. it blindly assumes there will be no other processes named "find" messing around. > Bye, > Alexander. > > -- > http://www.Leidinger.net alexan...@leidinger.net: PGP 0x8F31830F9F2772BF > http://www.FreeBSD.org netch...@freebsd.org : PGP 0x8F31830F9F2772BF > -- Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik gmail.com>