How can I see which CPU core a thread is running in?
In Linux, supposing a thread's pid is [pid], from the directory /proc/[pid] we can get many useful information. For example, these proc files, /proc/[pid]/status,/proc/[pid]/stat and /proc/[pid]/schedstat are all useful. But how can I get the CPU core number that a thread is running in? If a thread is in sleep state, how can I know which core it will run after it is scheduled again?
BTW, is there a way to dump the process(thread) list of running and sleeping tasks for each CPU core?
Solution 1:
The "top" command may help towards this, it does not have CPU-grouped list of threads but rather you can see the list of threads (probably for a single process) and which CPU cores the threads are running on by
top -H -p {PROC_ID}
then pressing f to go into field selection, j to enable the CPU core column, and Enter to display.
Solution 2:
The answer below is no longer accurate as of 2014
Tasks don't sleep in any particular core. And the scheduler won't know ahead of time which core it will run a thread on because that will depend on future usage of those cores.
To get the information you want, look in /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/status. The third field will be an 'R' if the thread is running. The sixth from the last field will be the core the thread is currently running on, or the core it last ran on (or was migrated to) if it's not currently running.
31466 (bc) S 31348 31466 31348 34819 31466 4202496 2557 0 0 0 5006 16 0 0 20 0 1 0 10196934 121827328 1091 18446744073709551615 4194304 4271839 140737264235072 140737264232056 217976807456 0 0 0 137912326 18446744071581662243 0 0 17 3 0 0 0 0 0
Not currently running. Last ran on core 3.
31466 (bc) R 31348 31466 31348 34819 31466 4202496 2557 0 0 0 3818 12 0 0 20 0 1 0 10196934 121827328 1091 18446744073709551615 4194304 4271839 140737264235072 140737264231824 4235516 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 17 2 0 0 0 0 0
Currently running on core 2.
To see what the rest of the fields mean, have a look at the Linux kernel source -- specifically the do_task_stat
function in fs/proc/array.c
or Documentation/filesystems/stat.txt
.
Note that all of this information may be obsolete by the time you get it. It was true at some point between when you made the open
call on the file in proc and when that call returned.
Solution 3:
You can also use ps
, something like this:
ps -mo pid,tid,%cpu,psr -p `pgrep BINARY-NAME`
Solution 4:
The threads are not necessary to bound one particular Core (if you did not pin it). Therefore to see the continuous switching of the core you can use (a modified answer of Dmitry):
watch -tdn0.5 ps -mo pid,tid,%cpu,psr -p \`pgrep BINARY-NAME\`
For example:
watch -tdn0.5 ps -mo pid,tid,%cpu,psr -p \`pgrep firefox\`
Solution 5:
This can be done with top
command. The default top
command output does not show these details. To view this detail you will have to press f key while on top command interface and then press j(press Enter key after you pressed j). Now the output will show you details regarding a process and which processor its running. A sample output is shown below.
top - 04:24:03 up 96 days, 13:41, 1 user, load average: 0.11, 0.14, 0.15
Tasks: 173 total, 1 running, 172 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
Cpu(s): 7.1%us, 0.2%sy, 0.0%ni, 88.4%id, 0.1%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 4.2%st
Mem: 1011048k total, 950984k used, 60064k free, 9320k buffers
Swap: 524284k total, 113160k used, 411124k free, 96420k cached
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ P COMMAND
12426 nginx 20 0 345m 47m 29m S 77.6 4.8 40:24.92 7 php-fpm
6685 mysql 20 0 3633m 34m 2932 S 4.3 3.5 63:12.91 4 mysqld
19014 root 20 0 15084 1188 856 R 1.3 0.1 0:01.20 4 top
9 root 20 0 0 0 0 S 1.0 0.0 129:42.53 1 rcu_sched
6349 memcache 20 0 355m 12m 224 S 0.3 1.2 9:34.82 6 memcached
1 root 20 0 19404 212 36 S 0.0 0.0 0:20.64 3 init
2 root 20 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:30.02 4 kthreadd
3 root 20 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:12.45 0 ksoftirqd/0
The P
column in the output shows the processor core number where the process is currently being executed. Monitoring this for a few minutes will make you understand that a pid is switching processor cores in between. You can also verify whether your pid for which you have set affinity is running on that particular core only
top
f navigation screen ( a live system example ) :
Fields Management for window 1:Def, whose current sort field is forest view
Navigate with Up/Dn, Right selects for move then <Enter> or Left commits,
'd' or <Space> toggles display, 's' sets sort. Use 'q' or <Esc> to end!
* PID = Process Id
* USER = Effective User Name
* PR = Priority
* NI = Nice Value
* VIRT = Virtual Image (KiB)
* RES = Resident Size (KiB)
* SHR = Shared Memory (KiB)
* S = Process Status
* %CPU = CPU Usage
* %MEM = Memory Usage (RES)
* TIME+ = CPU Time, hundredths
* COMMAND = Command Name/Line
PPID = Parent Process pid
UID = Effective User Id
RUID = Real User Id
RUSER = Real User Name
SUID = Saved User Id
SUSER = Saved User Name
GID = Group Id
GROUP = Group Name
PGRP = Process Group Id
TTY = Controlling Tty
TPGID = Tty Process Grp Id
SID = Session Id
nTH = Number of Threads
* P = Last Used Cpu (SMP)
TIME = CPU Time
SWAP = Swapped Size (KiB)
CODE = Code Size (KiB)
DATA = Data+Stack (KiB)
nMaj = Major Page Faults
nMin = Minor Page Faults
nDRT = Dirty Pages Count
WCHAN = Sleeping in Function
Flags = Task Flags <sched.h>
CGROUPS = Control Groups
SUPGIDS = Supp Groups IDs
SUPGRPS = Supp Groups Names
TGID = Thread Group Id
ENVIRON = Environment vars
vMj = Major Faults delta
vMn = Minor Faults delta
USED = Res+Swap Size (KiB)
nsIPC = IPC namespace Inode
nsMNT = MNT namespace Inode
nsNET = NET namespace Inode
nsPID = PID namespace Inode
nsUSER = USER namespace Inode
nsUTS = UTS namespace Inode