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[doc/manual.git] / LustreProc.xml
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-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
-<chapter version="5.0" xml:lang="en-US" xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xl="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xml:id='lustreproc'>
+<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
+<!-- This document was created with Syntext Serna Free. --><chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xl="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" version="5.0" xml:lang="en-US" xml:id="lustreproc">
   <info>
-    <title xml:id='lustreproc.title'>LustreProc</title>
+    <title xml:id="lustreproc.title">LustreProc</title>
   </info>
-  <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1301083" xreflabel=""/>The /proc file system acts as an interface to internal data structures in the kernel. The /proc variables can be used to control aspects of Lustre performance and provide information.</para>
-  <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290340" xreflabel=""/>This chapter describes Lustre /proc entries and includes the following sections:</para>
-  <itemizedlist><listitem>
+  <para>The <literal>/proc</literal> file system acts as an interface to internal data structures in the kernel. The <literal>/proc</literal> variables can be used to control aspects of Lustre performance and provide information.</para>
+  <para>This chapter describes Lustre /proc entries and includes the following sections:</para>
+  <itemizedlist>
+    <listitem>
       <para><xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438271_90999"/></para>
     </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
+    <listitem>
       <para><xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438271_78950"/></para>
     </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
+    <listitem>
       <para><xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438271_83523"/></para>
     </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-
-    <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_90999">
-      <title>31.1 Proc Entries for Lustre</title>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290360" xreflabel=""/>This section describes /proc entries for Lustre.</para>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290361" xreflabel=""/>31.1.1 Locating Lustre <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1296151" xreflabel=""/>File Systems and Servers</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290362" xreflabel=""/>Use the proc files on the MGS to locate the following:</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290363" xreflabel=""/> All known file systems</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290364" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/fs/lustre/mgs/MGS/filesystems
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291584" xreflabel=""/>spfs
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291587" xreflabel=""/>lustre
-</screen>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290367" xreflabel=""/> The server names participating in a file system (for each file system that has at least one server running)</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290368" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/fs/lustre/mgs/MGS/live/spfs
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291593" xreflabel=""/>fsname: spfs
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291596" xreflabel=""/>flags: 0x0         gen: 7
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291599" xreflabel=""/>spfs-MDT0000
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291602" xreflabel=""/>spfs-OST0000
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290373" xreflabel=""/>All servers are named according to this convention: &lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;MDT|OST&gt;&lt;XXXX&gt; This can be shown for live servers under /proc/fs/lustre/devices:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290374" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/fs/lustre/devices 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290375" xreflabel=""/>0 UP mgs MGS MGS 11
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290376" xreflabel=""/>1 UP mgc MGC192.168.10.34@tcp 1f45bb57-d9be-2ddb-c0b0-5431a49226705
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290377" xreflabel=""/>2 UP mdt MDS MDS_uuid 3
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290378" xreflabel=""/>3 UP lov lustre-mdtlov lustre-mdtlov_UUID 4
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290379" xreflabel=""/>4 UP mds lustre-MDT0000 lustre-MDT0000_UUID 7
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290380" xreflabel=""/>5 UP osc lustre-OST0000-osc lustre-mdtlov_UUID 5
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290381" xreflabel=""/>6 UP osc lustre-OST0001-osc lustre-mdtlov_UUID 5
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290382" xreflabel=""/>7 UP lov lustre-clilov-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa04
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290383" xreflabel=""/>8 UP mdc lustre-MDT0000-mdc-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa05
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290384" xreflabel=""/>9 UP osc lustre-OST0000-osc-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa05
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290385" xreflabel=""/>10 UP osc lustre-OST0001-osc-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa05
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290386" xreflabel=""/>Or from the device label at any time:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290387" xreflabel=""/># e2label /dev/sda
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290388" xreflabel=""/>lustre-MDT0000
-</screen>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290389" xreflabel=""/>31.1.2 Lustre <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1296153" xreflabel=""/>Timeouts</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294163" xreflabel=""/>Lustre uses two types of timeouts.</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294195" xreflabel=""/>LND timeouts that ensure point-to-point communications complete in finite time in the presence of failures. These timeouts are logged with the S_LND flag set. They may <emphasis>not</emphasis> be printed as console messages, so you should check the Lustre log for D_NETERROR messages, or enable printing of D_NETERROR messages to the console (echo + neterror &gt; /proc/sys/lnet/printk).</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294211" xreflabel=""/>Congested routers can be a source of spurious LND timeouts. To avoid this, increase the number of LNET router buffers to reduce back-pressure and/or increase LND timeouts on all nodes on all connected networks. You should also consider increasing the total number of LNET router nodes in the system so that the aggregate router bandwidth matches the aggregate server bandwidth.</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294177" xreflabel=""/>Lustre timeouts that ensure Lustre RPCs complete in finite time in the presence of failures. These timeouts should <emphasis>always</emphasis> be printed as console messages. If Lustre timeouts are not accompanied by LNET timeouts, then you need to increase the lustre timeout on both servers and clients.</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294236" xreflabel=""/>Specific Lustre timeouts are described below.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290390" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/timeout</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290391" xreflabel=""/>This is the time period that a client waits for a server to complete an RPC (default is 100s). Servers wait half of this time for a normal client RPC to complete and a quarter of this time for a single bulk request (read or write of up to 1 MB) to complete. The client pings recoverable targets (MDS and OSTs) at one quarter of the timeout, and the server waits one and a half times the timeout before evicting a client for being &quot;stale.&quot;</para>
-                <note><para>Lustre sends periodic 'PING' messages to servers with which it had no communication for a specified period of time. Any network activity on the file system that triggers network traffic toward servers also works as a health check.</para></note>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292930" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/ldlm_timeout</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290393" xreflabel=""/>This is the time period for which a server will wait for a client to reply to an initial AST (lock cancellation request) where default is 20s for an OST and 6s for an MDS. If the client replies to the AST, the server will give it a normal timeout (half of the client timeout) to flush any dirty data and release the lock.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290394" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/fail_loc</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290395" xreflabel=""/>This is the internal debugging failure hook.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290396" xreflabel=""/>See lustre/include/linux/obd_support.h for the definitions of individual failure locations. The default value is 0 (zero).</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290397" xreflabel=""/>sysctl -w lustre.fail_loc=0x80000122 # drop a single reply
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290398" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/dump_on_timeout</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290399" xreflabel=""/>This triggers dumps of the Lustre debug log when timeouts occur. The default value is 0 (zero).</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294958" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/dump_on_eviction</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294959" xreflabel=""/>This triggers dumps of the Lustre debug log when an eviction occurs. The default value is 0 (zero). By default, debug logs are dumped to the /tmp folder; this location can be changed via /proc.</para>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292935" xreflabel=""/>31.1.3 Adaptive <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1293380" xreflabel=""/>Timeouts</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292944" xreflabel=""/>Lustre offers an adaptive mechanism to set RPC timeouts. The adaptive timeouts feature (enabled, by default) causes servers to track actual RPC completion times, and to report estimated completion times for future RPCs back to clients. The clients use these estimates to set their future RPC timeout values. If server request processing slows down for any reason, the RPC completion estimates increase, and the clients allow more time for RPC completion.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293013" xreflabel=""/>If RPCs queued on the server approach their timeouts, then the server sends an early reply to the client, telling the client to allow more time. In this manner, clients avoid RPC timeouts and disconnect/reconnect cycles. Conversely, as a server speeds up, RPC timeout values decrease, allowing faster detection of non-responsive servers and faster attempts to reconnect to a server&apos;s failover partner.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292945" xreflabel=""/>In previous Lustre versions, the static obd_timeout (/proc/sys/lustre/timeout) value was used as the maximum completion time for all RPCs; this value also affected the client-server ping interval and initial recovery timer. Now, with adaptive timeouts, obd_timeout is only used for the ping interval and initial recovery estimate. When a client reconnects during recovery, the server uses the client&apos;s timeout value to reset the recovery wait period; i.e., the server learns how long the client had been willing to wait, and takes this into account when adjusting the recovery period.</para>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292947" xreflabel=""/>31.1.3.1 Configuring <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1293381" xreflabel=""/>Adaptive Timeouts</title>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292948" xreflabel=""/>One of the goals of adaptive timeouts is to relieve users from having to tune the obd_timeout value. In general, obd_timeout should no longer need to be changed. However, there are several parameters related to adaptive timeouts that users can set. In most situations, the default values should be used.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299111" xreflabel=""/>The following parameters can be set persistently system-wide using lctl conf_param on the MGS. For example, lctl conf_param work1.sys.at_max=1500 sets the at_max value for all servers and clients using the work1 file system.</para>
-                  <note><para>Nodes using multiple Lustre file systems must use the same at_* values for all file systems.)</para></note>
-           <informaltable frame="all">
-            <tgroup cols="2">
-              <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <thead>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294373" xreflabel=""/>Parameter</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294375" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </thead>
-              <tbody>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294377" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">at_min</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294379" xreflabel=""/>Sets the minimum adaptive timeout (in seconds). Default value is 0. The at_min parameter is the minimum processing time that a server will report. Clients base their timeouts on this value, but they do not use this value directly. If you experience cases in which, for unknown reasons, the adaptive timeout value is too short and clients time out their RPCs (usually due to temporary network outages), then you can increase the at_min value to compensate for this. Ideally, users should leave at_min set to its default.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294381" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">at_max</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299206" xreflabel=""/>Sets the maximum adaptive timeout (in seconds). The at_max parameter is an upper-limit on the service time estimate, and is used as a &apos;failsafe&apos; in case of rogue/bad/buggy code that would lead to never-ending estimate increases. If at_max is reached, an RPC request is considered &apos;broken&apos; and should time out.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294383" xreflabel=""/>Setting at_max to 0 causes adaptive timeouts to be disabled and the old fixed-timeout method (obd_timeout) to be used. This is the default value in Lustre 1.6.5.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294387" xreflabel=""/> </para>
-                      
-                      <note><para>It is possible that slow hardware might validly cause the service estimate to increase beyond the default value of at_max. In this case, you should increase at_max to the maximum time you are willing to wait for an RPC completion.</para></note></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294390" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">at_history</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294392" xreflabel=""/>Sets a time period (in seconds) within which adaptive timeouts remember the slowest event that occurred. Default value is 600.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294394" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">at_early_margin</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294396" xreflabel=""/>Sets how far before the deadline Lustre sends an early reply. Default value is 5<footnote><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294399" xreflabel=""/>This default was chosen as a reasonable time in which to send a reply from the point at which it was sent.</para></footnote>.</para></entry>
-          
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294401" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">at_extra</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294403" xreflabel=""/>Sets the incremental amount of time that a server asks for, with each early reply. The server does not know how much time the RPC will take, so it asks for a fixed value. Default value is 30<footnote><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294406" xreflabel=""/>This default was chosen as a balance between sending too many early replies for the same RPC and overestimating the actual completion time</para></footnote>. When a server finds a queued request about to time out (and needs to send an early reply out), the server adds the at_extra value. If the time expires, the Lustre client enters recovery status and reconnects to restore it to normal status.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294407" xreflabel=""/>If you see multiple early replies for the same RPC asking for multiple 30-second increases, change the at_extra value to a larger number to cut down on early replies sent and, therefore, network load.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294409" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">ldlm_enqueue_min</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294411" xreflabel=""/>Sets the minimum lock enqueue time. Default value is 100. The ldlm_enqueue time is the maximum of the measured enqueue estimate (influenced by at_min and at_max parameters), multiplied by a weighting factor, and the ldlm_enqueue_min setting. LDLM lock enqueues were based on the obd_timeout value; now they have a dedicated minimum value. Lock enqueues increase as the measured enqueue times increase (similar to adaptive timeouts).</para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </tbody>
-            </tgroup>
-          </informaltable>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293587" xreflabel=""/>Adaptive timeouts are enabled, by default. To disable adaptive timeouts, at run time, set at_max to 0. On the MGS, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294471" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl conf_param &lt;fsname&gt;.sys.at_max=0
-</screen>
-                  <note><para>Changing adaptive timeouts status at runtime may cause transient timeout, reconnect, recovery, etc.</para></note>
-        </section>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292959" xreflabel=""/>31.1.3.2 Interpreting <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1293383" xreflabel=""/>Adaptive Timeouts Information</title>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299183" xreflabel=""/>Adaptive timeouts information can be read from /proc/fs/lustre/*/timeouts files (for each service and client) or with the lctl command.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294311" xreflabel=""/>This is an example from the /proc/fs/lustre/*/timeouts files:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293196" xreflabel=""/>cfs21:~# cat /proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/timeouts
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299178" xreflabel=""/>This is an example using the lctl command:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294318" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl get_param -n ost.*.ost_io.timeouts
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294307" xreflabel=""/>This is the sample output:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294322" xreflabel=""/>service : cur 33  worst 34 (at 1193427052, 0d0h26m40s ago) 1 1 33 2
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292962" xreflabel=""/>The ost_io service on this node is currently reporting an estimate of 33 seconds. The worst RPC service time was 34 seconds, and it happened 26 minutes ago.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293207" xreflabel=""/>The output also provides a history of service times. In the example, there are 4 &quot;bins&quot; of adaptive_timeout_history, with the maximum RPC time in each bin reported. In 0-150 seconds, the maximum RPC time was 1, with the same result in 150-300 seconds. From 300-450 seconds, the worst (maximum) RPC time was 33 seconds, and from 450-600s the worst time was 2 seconds. The current estimated service time is the maximum value of the 4 bins (33 seconds in this example).</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294437" xreflabel=""/>Service times (as reported by the servers) are also tracked in the client OBDs:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292965" xreflabel=""/>cfs21:# lctl get_param osc.*.timeouts
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292966" xreflabel=""/>last reply : 1193428639, 0d0h00m00s ago
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292967" xreflabel=""/>network    : cur   1  worst   2 (at 1193427053, 0d0h26m26s ago)   1   1   1\
-   1
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292968" xreflabel=""/>portal 6   : cur  33  worst  34 (at 1193427052, 0d0h26m27s ago)  33  33  33\
-   2
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292969" xreflabel=""/>portal 28  : cur   1  worst   1 (at 1193426141, 0d0h41m38s ago)   1   1   1\
-   1
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292970" xreflabel=""/>portal 7   : cur   1  worst   1 (at 1193426141, 0d0h41m38s ago)   1   0   1\
-   1
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292971" xreflabel=""/>portal 17  : cur   1  worst   1 (at 1193426177, 0d0h41m02s ago)   1   0   0\
-   1
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292972" xreflabel=""/>In this case, RPCs to portal 6, the OST_IO_PORTAL (see lustre/include/lustre/lustre_idl.h), shows the history of what the ost_io portal has reported as the service estimate.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292974" xreflabel=""/>Server statistic files also show the range of estimates in the normal min/max/sum/sumsq manner.</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292975" xreflabel=""/>cfs21:~# lctl get_param mdt.*.mdt.stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292976" xreflabel=""/>...
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292977" xreflabel=""/>req_timeout               6 samples [sec] 1 10 15 105
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292978" xreflabel=""/>...
-</screen>
-        </section>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290400" xreflabel=""/>31.1.4 LNET <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1296164" xreflabel=""/>Information</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291795" xreflabel=""/>This section describes /proc entries for LNET information.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290401" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/peers</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290402" xreflabel=""/>Shows all NIDs known to this node and also gives information on the queue state.</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290403" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/sys/lnet/peers
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290404" xreflabel=""/>nid                        refs            state           max             \
-rtr             min             tx              min             queue
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290405" xreflabel=""/>0@lo                       1               ~rtr            0               \
-0               0               0               0               0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290406" xreflabel=""/>192.168.10.35@tcp  1               ~rtr            8               8       \
-        8               8               6               0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290407" xreflabel=""/>192.168.10.36@tcp  1               ~rtr            8               8       \
-        8               8               6               0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290408" xreflabel=""/>192.168.10.37@tcp  1               ~rtr            8               8       \
-        8               8               6               0
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290449" xreflabel=""/>The fields are explained below:</para>
-        <informaltable frame="all">
-          <tgroup cols="2">
-            <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <thead>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291804" xreflabel=""/>Field</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291806" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </thead>
-            <tbody>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291808" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">refs</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291810" xreflabel=""/>A reference count (principally used for debugging)</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291812" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">state</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291863" xreflabel=""/>Only valid to refer to routers. Possible values:</para><itemizedlist><listitem>
-                      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291864" xreflabel=""/> ~ rtr (indicates this node is not a router)</para>
-                    </listitem>
-<listitem>
-                      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291865" xreflabel=""/> up/down (indicates this node is a router)</para>
-                    </listitem>
-<listitem>
-                      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291871" xreflabel=""/> auto_fail must be enabled</para>
-                    </listitem>
-</itemizedlist></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291816" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">max</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291818" xreflabel=""/>Maximum number of concurrent sends from this peer</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291820" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">rtr</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291822" xreflabel=""/>Routing buffer credits.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291824" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">min</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291826" xreflabel=""/>Minimum routing buffer credits seen.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291828" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">tx</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291830" xreflabel=""/>Send credits.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291832" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">min</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291834" xreflabel=""/>Minimum send credits seen.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291836" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">queue</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291838" xreflabel=""/>Total bytes in active/queued sends.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </tbody>
-          </tgroup>
-        </informaltable>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290450" xreflabel=""/>Credits work like a semaphore. At start they are initialized to allow a certain number of operations (8 in this example). LNET keeps a track of the minimum value so that you can see how congested a resource was.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290451" xreflabel=""/>If rtr/tx is less than max, there are operations in progress. The number of operations is equal to rtr or tx subtracted from max.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290452" xreflabel=""/>If rtr/tx is greater that max, there are operations blocking.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290453" xreflabel=""/>LNET also limits concurrent sends and router buffers allocated to a single peer so that no peer can occupy all these resources.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290454" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/nis</emphasis></para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290455" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/sys/lnet/nis
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290456" xreflabel=""/>nid                                refs            peer            max     \
-        tx              min
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290457" xreflabel=""/>0@lo                               3               0               0       \
-        0               0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290458" xreflabel=""/>192.168.10.34@tcp          4               8               256             \
-256             252
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290459" xreflabel=""/>Shows the current queue health on this node. The fields are explained below:</para>
+  </itemizedlist>
+  <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_90999">
+    <title>31.1 Proc Entries for Lustre</title>
+    <para>This section describes <literal>/proc</literal> entries for Lustre.</para>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.1.1 Locating Lustre File Systems and Servers</title>
+      <para>Use the proc files on the MGS to locate the following:</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para> All known file systems</para>
+          <screen># cat /proc/fs/lustre/mgs/MGS/filesystems
+spfs
+lustre</screen>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para> The server names participating in a file system (for each file system that has at least one server running)</para>
+          <screen># cat /proc/fs/lustre/mgs/MGS/live/spfs
+fsname: spfs
+flags: 0x0         gen: 7
+spfs-MDT0000
+spfs-OST0000</screen>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>All servers are named according to this convention: <literal>&lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;MDT|OST&gt;&lt;XXXX&gt;</literal>. This can be shown for live servers under <literal>/proc/fs/lustre/devices</literal>:</para>
+      <screen># cat /proc/fs/lustre/devices 
+0 UP mgs MGS MGS 11
+1 UP mgc MGC192.168.10.34@tcp 1f45bb57-d9be-2ddb-c0b0-5431a49226705
+2 UP mdt MDS MDS_uuid 3
+3 UP lov lustre-mdtlov lustre-mdtlov_UUID 4
+4 UP mds lustre-MDT0000 lustre-MDT0000_UUID 7
+5 UP osc lustre-OST0000-osc lustre-mdtlov_UUID 5
+6 UP osc lustre-OST0001-osc lustre-mdtlov_UUID 5
+7 UP lov lustre-clilov-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa04
+8 UP mdc lustre-MDT0000-mdc-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa05
+9 UP osc lustre-OST0000-osc-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa05
+10 UP osc lustre-OST0001-osc-ce63ca00 08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa05</screen>
+      <para>Or from the device label at any time:</para>
+      <screen># e2label /dev/sda
+lustre-MDT0000</screen>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.1.2 Lustre Timeouts</title>
+      <para>Lustre uses two types of timeouts.</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>LND timeouts that ensure point-to-point communications complete in finite time in the presence of failures. These timeouts are logged with the <literal>S_LND</literal> flag set. They may <emphasis>not</emphasis> be printed as console messages, so you should check the Lustre log for <literal>D_NETERROR</literal> messages, or enable printing of <literal>D_NETERROR</literal> messages to the console (<literal>echo + neterror &gt; /proc/sys/lnet/printk</literal>).</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>Congested routers can be a source of spurious LND timeouts. To avoid this, increase the number of LNET router buffers to reduce back-pressure and/or increase LND timeouts on all nodes on all connected networks. You should also consider increasing the total number of LNET router nodes in the system so that the aggregate router bandwidth matches the aggregate server bandwidth.</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Lustre timeouts that ensure Lustre RPCs complete in finite time in the presence of failures. These timeouts should <emphasis>always</emphasis> be printed as console messages. If Lustre timeouts are not accompanied by LNET timeouts, then you need to increase the lustre timeout on both servers and clients.</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>Specific Lustre timeouts are described below.</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/timeout</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This is the time period that a client waits for a server to complete an RPC (default is 100s). Servers wait half of this time for a normal client RPC to complete and a quarter of this time for a single bulk request (read or write of up to 1 MB) to complete. The client pings recoverable targets (MDS and OSTs) at one quarter of the timeout, and the server waits one and a half times the timeout before evicting a client for being &quot;stale.&quot;</para>
+      <note>
+        <para>Lustre sends periodic &apos;PING&apos; messages to servers with which it had no communication for a specified period of time. Any network activity on the file system that triggers network traffic toward servers also works as a health check.</para>
+      </note>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/ldlm_timeout</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This is the time period for which a server will wait for a client to reply to an initial AST (lock cancellation request) where default is 20s for an OST and 6s for an MDS. If the client replies to the AST, the server will give it a normal timeout (half of the client timeout) to flush any dirty data and release the lock.</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/fail_loc</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This is the internal debugging failure hook.</para>
+      <para>See <literal>lustre/include/linux/obd_support.h</literal> for the definitions of individual failure locations. The default value is 0 (zero).</para>
+      <screen>sysctl -w lustre.fail_loc=0x80000122 # drop a single reply</screen>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/dump_on_timeout</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This triggers dumps of the Lustre debug log when timeouts occur. The default value is 0 (zero).</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lustre/dump_on_eviction</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This triggers dumps of the Lustre debug log when an eviction occurs. The default value is 0 (zero). By default, debug logs are dumped to the /tmp folder; this location can be changed via /proc.</para>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.1.3 Adaptive Timeouts</title>
+      <para>Lustre offers an adaptive mechanism to set RPC timeouts. The adaptive timeouts feature (enabled, by default) causes servers to track actual RPC completion times, and to report estimated completion times for future RPCs back to clients. The clients use these estimates to set their future RPC timeout values. If server request processing slows down for any reason, the RPC completion estimates increase, and the clients allow more time for RPC completion.</para>
+      <para>If RPCs queued on the server approach their timeouts, then the server sends an early reply to the client, telling the client to allow more time. In this manner, clients avoid RPC timeouts and disconnect/reconnect cycles. Conversely, as a server speeds up, RPC timeout values decrease, allowing faster detection of non-responsive servers and faster attempts to reconnect to a server&apos;s failover partner.</para>
+      <para>In previous Lustre versions, the static obd_timeout (<literal>/proc/sys/lustre/timeout</literal>) value was used as the maximum completion time for all RPCs; this value also affected the client-server ping interval and initial recovery timer. Now, with adaptive timeouts, obd_timeout is only used for the ping interval and initial recovery estimate. When a client reconnects during recovery, the server uses the client&apos;s timeout value to reset the recovery wait period; i.e., the server learns how long the client had been willing to wait, and takes this into account when adjusting the recovery period.</para>
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.1.3.1 Configuring Adaptive Timeouts</title>
+        <para>One of the goals of adaptive timeouts is to relieve users from having to tune the <literal>obd_timeout</literal> value. In general, <literal>obd_timeout</literal> should no longer need to be changed. However, there are several parameters related to adaptive timeouts that users can set. In most situations, the default values should be used.</para>
+        <para>The following parameters can be set persistently system-wide using <literal>lctl conf_param</literal> on the MGS. For example, <literal>lctl conf_param work1.sys.at_max=1500</literal> sets the at_max value for all servers and clients using the work1 file system.</para>
+        <note>
+          <para>Nodes using multiple Lustre file systems must use the same <literal>at_*</literal> values for all file systems.)</para>
+        </note>
         <informaltable frame="all">
           <tgroup cols="2">
             <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
             <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
             <thead>
               <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291912" xreflabel=""/>Field</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291914" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Parameter</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </thead>
             <tbody>
               <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291963" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">nid</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291965" xreflabel=""/>Network interface</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291967" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">refs</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291969" xreflabel=""/>Internal reference counter</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291971" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">peer</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291973" xreflabel=""/>Number of peer-to-peer send credits on this NID. Credits are used to size buffer pools</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291975" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">max</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291977" xreflabel=""/>Total number of send credits on this NID.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291979" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">tx</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291981" xreflabel=""/>Current number of send credits available on this NID.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291983" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">min</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291985" xreflabel=""/>Lowest number of send credits available on this NID.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291987" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">queue</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291989" xreflabel=""/>Total bytes in active/queued sends.</para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">at_min</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Sets the minimum adaptive timeout (in seconds). Default value is 0. The at_min parameter is the minimum processing time that a server will report. Clients base their timeouts on this value, but they do not use this value directly. If you experience cases in which, for unknown reasons, the adaptive timeout value is too short and clients time out their RPCs (usually due to temporary network outages), then you can increase the at_min value to compensate for this. Ideally, users should leave at_min set to its default.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">at_max</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Sets the maximum adaptive timeout (in seconds). The <literal>at_max</literal> parameter is an upper-limit on the service time estimate, and is used as a &apos;failsafe&apos; in case of rogue/bad/buggy code that would lead to never-ending estimate increases. If at_max is reached, an RPC request is considered &apos;broken&apos; and should time out.</para>
+                  <para>Setting at_max to 0 causes adaptive timeouts to be disabled and the old fixed-timeout method (<literal>obd_timeout</literal>) to be used. This is the default value in Lustre 1.6.5.</para>
+                  <note>
+                    <para>It is possible that slow hardware might validly cause the service estimate to increase beyond the default value of at_max. In this case, you should increase at_max to the maximum time you are willing to wait for an RPC completion.</para>
+                  </note>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">at_history</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Sets a time period (in seconds) within which adaptive timeouts remember the slowest event that occurred. Default value is 600.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">at_early_margin</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Sets how far before the deadline Lustre sends an early reply. Default value is 5<footnote>
+                      <para>This default was chosen as a reasonable time in which to send a reply from the point at which it was sent.</para>
+                    </footnote>.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">at_extra</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Sets the incremental amount of time that a server asks for, with each early reply. The server does not know how much time the RPC will take, so it asks for a fixed value. Default value is 30<footnote>
+                      <para>This default was chosen as a balance between sending too many early replies for the same RPC and overestimating the actual completion time</para>
+                    </footnote>. When a server finds a queued request about to time out (and needs to send an early reply out), the server adds the at_extra value. If the time expires, the Lustre client enters recovery status and reconnects to restore it to normal status.</para>
+                  <para>If you see multiple early replies for the same RPC asking for multiple 30-second increases, change the at_extra value to a larger number to cut down on early replies sent and, therefore, network load.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">ldlm_enqueue_min</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> Sets the minimum lock enqueue time. Default value is 100. The <literal>ldlm_enqueue</literal> time is the maximum of the measured enqueue estimate (influenced by at_min and at_max parameters), multiplied by a weighting factor, and the <literal>ldlm_enqueue_min</literal> setting. LDLM lock enqueues were based on the <literal>obd_timeout</literal> value; now they have a dedicated minimum value. Lock enqueues increase as the measured enqueue times increase (similar to adaptive timeouts).</para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </tbody>
           </tgroup>
         </informaltable>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290494" xreflabel=""/>Subtracting max - tx yields the number of sends currently active. A large or increasing number of active sends may indicate a problem.</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290495" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/sys/lnet/nis
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290496" xreflabel=""/>nid                                refs            peer            max     \
-        tx              min
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290497" xreflabel=""/>0@lo                               2               0               0       \
-        0               0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290498" xreflabel=""/>10.67.73.173@tcp           4               8               256             \
-256             253
-</screen>
+        <para>Adaptive timeouts are enabled, by default. To disable adaptive timeouts, at run time, set <literal>at_max</literal> to 0. On the MGS, run:</para>
+        <screen>$ lctl conf_param &lt;fsname&gt;.sys.at_max=0</screen>
+        <note>
+          <para>Changing adaptive timeouts status at runtime may cause transient timeout, reconnect, recovery, etc.</para>
+        </note>
       </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290499" xreflabel=""/>31.1.5 Free Space <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1296165" xreflabel=""/>Distribution</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296514" xreflabel=""/>Free-space stripe weighting, as set, gives a priority of &quot;0&quot; to free space (versus trying to place the stripes &quot;widely&quot; -- nicely distributed across OSSs and OSTs to maximize network balancing). To adjust this priority (as a percentage), use the qos_prio_free proc tunable:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296515" xreflabel=""/>$ cat /proc/fs/lustre/lov/&lt;fsname&gt;-mdtlov/qos_prio_free
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.1.3.2 Interpreting Adaptive Timeouts Information</title>
+        <para>Adaptive timeouts information can be read from <literal>/proc/fs/lustre/*/timeouts</literal> files (for each service and client) or with the lctl command.</para>
+        <para>This is an example from the <literal>/proc/fs/lustre/*/timeouts</literal> files:</para>
+        <screen>cfs21:~# cat /proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/timeouts</screen>
+        <para>This is an example using the <literal>lctl</literal> command:</para>
+        <screen>$ lctl get_param -n ost.*.ost_io.timeouts</screen>
+        <para>This is the sample output:</para>
+        <screen>service : cur 33  worst 34 (at 1193427052, 0d0h26m40s ago) 1 1 33 2</screen>
+        <para>The <literal>ost_io</literal> service on this node is currently reporting an estimate of 33 seconds. The worst RPC service time was 34 seconds, and it happened 26 minutes ago.</para>
+        <para>The output also provides a history of service times. In the example, there are 4 &quot;bins&quot; of <literal>adaptive_timeout_history</literal>, with the maximum RPC time in each bin reported. In 0-150 seconds, the maximum RPC time was 1, with the same result in 150-300 seconds. From 300-450 seconds, the worst (maximum) RPC time was 33 seconds, and from 450-600s the worst time was 2 seconds. The current estimated service time is the maximum value of the 4 bins (33 seconds in this example).</para>
+        <para>Service times (as reported by the servers) are also tracked in the client OBDs:</para>
+        <screen>cfs21:# lctl get_param osc.*.timeouts
+last reply : 1193428639, 0d0h00m00s ago
+network    : cur   1  worst   2 (at 1193427053, 0d0h26m26s ago)   1   1   1   1
+portal 6   : cur  33  worst  34 (at 1193427052, 0d0h26m27s ago)  33  33  33   2
+portal 28  : cur   1  worst   1 (at 1193426141, 0d0h41m38s ago)   1   1   1   1
+portal 7   : cur   1  worst   1 (at 1193426141, 0d0h41m38s ago)   1   0   1   1
+portal 17  : cur   1  worst   1 (at 1193426177, 0d0h41m02s ago)   1   0   0   1
 </screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296516" xreflabel=""/>Currently, the default is 90%. You can permanently set this value by running this command on the MGS:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296517" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl conf_param &lt;fsname&gt;-MDT0000.lov.qos_prio_free=90
+        <para>In this case, RPCs to portal 6, the <literal>OST_IO_PORTAL</literal> (see <literal>lustre/include/lustre/lustre_idl.h</literal>), shows the history of what the <literal>ost_io</literal> portal has reported as the service estimate.</para>
+        <para>Server statistic files also show the range of estimates in the normal min/max/sum/sumsq manner.</para>
+        <screen>cfs21:~# lctl get_param mdt.*.mdt.stats
+...
+req_timeout               6 samples [sec] 1 10 15 105
+...
 </screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296518" xreflabel=""/>Setting the priority to 100% means that OSS distribution does not count in the weighting, but the stripe assignment is still done via weighting. If OST 2 has twice as much free space as OST 1, it is twice as likely to be used, but it is NOT guaranteed to be used.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290506" xreflabel=""/>Also note that free-space stripe weighting does not activate until two OSTs are imbalanced by more than 20%. Until then, a faster round-robin stripe allocator is used. (The new round-robin order also maximizes network balancing.)</para>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296529" xreflabel=""/>31.1.5.1 Managing Stripe Allocation</title>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296530" xreflabel=""/>The MDS uses two methods to manage stripe allocation and determine which OSTs to use for file object storage:</para>
-          <itemizedlist><listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296531" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">QOS</emphasis></para>
-            </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297308" xreflabel=""/>Quality of Service (QOS) considers an OST's available blocks, speed, and the number of existing objects, etc. Using these criteria, the MDS selects OSTs with more free space more often than OSTs with less free space.</para>
-          <itemizedlist><listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297309" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">RR</emphasis></para>
-            </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296534" xreflabel=""/>Round-Robin (RR) allocates objects evenly across all OSTs. The RR stripe allocator is faster than QOS, and used often because it distributes space usage/load best in most situations, maximizing network balancing and improving performance.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296535" xreflabel=""/>Whether QOS or RR is used depends on the setting of the qos_threshold_rr proc tunable. The qos_threshold_rr variable specifies a percentage threshold where the use of QOS or RR becomes more/less likely. The qos_threshold_rr tunable can be set as an integer, from 0 to 100, and results in this stripe allocation behavior:</para>
-          <itemizedlist><listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296536" xreflabel=""/> If qos_threshold_rr is set to 0, then QOS is always used</para>
-            </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296537" xreflabel=""/> If qos_threshold_rr is set to 100, then RR is always used</para>
-            </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296538" xreflabel=""/> The larger the qos_threshold_rr setting, the greater the possibility that RR is used instead of QOS</para>
-            </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        </section>
       </section>
     </section>
-    <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_78950">
-      <title>31.2 Lustre I/O <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290508" xreflabel=""/>Tunables</title>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290510" xreflabel=""/>The section describes I/O tunables.</para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290511" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/llite/&lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;uid&gt;/max_cache_mb</emphasis></para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290512" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ce63ca00/max_cached_mb 128
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.1.4 LNET Information</title>
+      <para>This section describes<literal> /proc</literal> entries for LNET information.</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/peers</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>Shows all NIDs known to this node and also gives information on the queue state.</para>
+      <screen># cat /proc/sys/lnet/peers
+nid                        refs            state           max             rtr             min             tx              min             queue
+0@lo                       1               ~rtr            0               0               0               0               0               0
+192.168.10.35@tcp  1               ~rtr            8               8               8               8               6               0
+192.168.10.36@tcp  1               ~rtr            8               8               8               8               6               0
+192.168.10.37@tcp  1               ~rtr            8               8               8               8               6               0</screen>
+      <para>The fields are explained below:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Field</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>refs</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>A reference count (principally used for debugging)</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>state</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Only valid to refer to routers. Possible values:</para>
+                <itemizedlist>
+                  <listitem>
+                    <para>~ rtr (indicates this node is not a router)</para>
+                  </listitem>
+                  <listitem>
+                    <para>up/down (indicates this node is a router)</para>
+                  </listitem>
+                  <listitem>
+                    <para>auto_fail must be enabled</para>
+                  </listitem>
+                </itemizedlist>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">max</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Maximum number of concurrent sends from this peer</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">rtr</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Routing buffer credits.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>min</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Minimum routing buffer credits seen.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">tx</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Send credits.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>min</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Minimum send credits seen.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>queue</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Total bytes in active/queued sends.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+      <para>Credits work like a semaphore. At start they are initialized to allow a certain number of operations (8 in this example). LNET keeps a track of the minimum value so that you can see how congested a resource was.</para>
+      <para>If <literal>rtr/tx</literal> is less than max, there are operations in progress. The number of operations is equal to <literal>rtr</literal> or <literal>tx</literal> subtracted from max.</para>
+      <para>If <literal>rtr/tx</literal> is greater that max, there are operations blocking.</para>
+      <para>LNET also limits concurrent sends and router buffers allocated to a single peer so that no peer can occupy all these resources.</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/nis</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <screen># cat /proc/sys/lnet/nis
+nid                                refs            peer            max             tx              min
+0@lo                               3               0               0               0               0
+192.168.10.34@tcp          4               8               256             256             252
 </screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290513" xreflabel=""/>This tunable is the maximum amount of inactive data cached by the client (default is 3/4 of RAM).</para>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290515" xreflabel=""/>31.2.1 Client I/O RPC<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290514" xreflabel=""/> Stream Tunables</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290516" xreflabel=""/>The Lustre engine always attempts to pack an optimal amount of data into each I/O RPC and attempts to keep a consistent number of issued RPCs in progress at a time. Lustre exposes several tuning variables to adjust behavior according to network conditions and cluster size. Each OSC has its own tree of these tunables. For example:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290517" xreflabel=""/>$ ls -d /proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_client_ost1_MNT_client_2 /localhost
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290518" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost1_MNT_localhost
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290519" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost2_MNT_localhost
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290520" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost3_MNT_localhost
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290521" xreflabel=""/>$ ls /proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost1_MNT_localhost
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290522" xreflabel=""/>blocksizefilesfree max_dirty_mb ost_server_uuid stats
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290523" xreflabel=""/>... and so on.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290524" xreflabel=""/>RPC stream tunables are described below.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291134" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/max_dirty_mb</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291135" xreflabel=""/>This tunable controls how many MBs of dirty data can be written and queued up in the OSC. POSIX file writes that are cached contribute to this count. When the limit is reached, additional writes stall until previously-cached writes are written to the server. This may be changed by writing a single ASCII integer to the file. Only values between 0 and 512 are allowable. If 0 is given, no writes are cached. Performance suffers noticeably unless you use large writes (1 MB or more).</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290527" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/cur_dirty_bytes</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290528" xreflabel=""/>This tunable is a read-only value that returns the current amount of bytes written and cached on this OSC.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290529" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/max_pages_per_rpc</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290530" xreflabel=""/>This tunable is the maximum number of pages that will undergo I/O in a single RPC to the OST. The minimum is a single page and the maximum for this setting is platform dependent (256 for i386/x86_64, possibly less for ia64/PPC with larger PAGE_SIZE), though generally amounts to a total of 1 MB in the RPC.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290531" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/max_rpcs_in_flight</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296189" xreflabel=""/>This tunable is the maximum number of concurrent RPCs in flight from an OSC to its OST. If the OSC tries to initiate an RPC but finds that it already has the same number of RPCs outstanding, it will wait to issue further RPCs until some complete. The minimum setting is 1 and maximum setting is 32. If you are looking to improve small file I/O performance, increase the max_rpcs_in_flight value.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290533" xreflabel=""/>To maximize performance, the value for max_dirty_mb is recommended to be 4 * max_pages_per_rpc * max_rpcs_in_flight.</para>
-                <note><para>The &lt;object name&gt; varies depending on the specific Lustre configuration. For &lt;object name&gt; examples, refer to the sample command output.</para></note>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290536" xreflabel=""/>31.2.2 Watching the <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290535" xreflabel=""/>Client RPC Stream</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290537" xreflabel=""/>The same directory contains a rpc_stats file with a histogram showing the composition of previous RPCs. The histogram can be cleared by writing any value into the rpc_stats file.</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290538" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/fs/lustre/osc/spfs-OST0000-osc-c45f9c00/rpc_stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290539" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time:                                     1174867307.156604 (secs.\
-usecs)
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290540" xreflabel=""/>read RPCs in flight:                               0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290541" xreflabel=""/>write RPCs in flight:                              0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290542" xreflabel=""/>pending write pages:                               0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290543" xreflabel=""/>pending read pages:                                0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290544" xreflabel=""/>                   read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290545" xreflabel=""/>pages per rpc              rpcs    %       cum     %       |       rpcs    \
-%       cum     %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290546" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0               |       0               \
-0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290547" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290548" xreflabel=""/>                   read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290549" xreflabel=""/>rpcs in flight             rpcs    %       cum     %       |       rpcs    \
-%       cum     %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290550" xreflabel=""/>0:                 0       0       0               |       0               \
-0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290551" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290552" xreflabel=""/>                   read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290553" xreflabel=""/>offset                     rpcs    %       cum     %       |       rpcs    \
-%       cum     %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290554" xreflabel=""/>0:                 0       0       0               |       0               \
-0       0
+      <para>Shows the current queue health on this node. The fields are explained below:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Field</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">nid</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Network interface</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">refs</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Internal reference counter</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>peer</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of peer-to-peer send credits on this NID. Credits are used to size buffer pools</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">max</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Total number of send credits on this NID.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>tx</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Current number of send credits available on this NID.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>min</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Lowest number of send credits available on this NID.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>queue</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Total bytes in active/queued sends.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+      <para>Subtracting <literal>max</literal> - <literal>tx</literal> yields the number of sends currently active. A large or increasing number of active sends may indicate a problem.</para>
+      <screen># cat /proc/sys/lnet/nis
+nid                                refs            peer            max             tx              min
+0@lo                               2               0               0               0               0
+10.67.73.173@tcp           4               8               256             256             253
 </screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298886" xreflabel=""/>Where:</para>
-        <informaltable frame="all">
-          <tgroup cols="2">
-            <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <thead>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298854" xreflabel=""/>Field</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298856" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </thead>
-            <tbody>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298858" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">{read,write} RPCs in flight</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298860" xreflabel=""/>Number of read/write RPCs issued by the OSC, but not complete at the time of the snapshot. This value should always be less than or equal to max_rpcs_in_flight.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298862" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">pending {read,write} pages</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298911" xreflabel=""/>Number of pending read/write pages that have been queued for I/O in the OSC.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298866" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">pages per RPC</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298924" xreflabel=""/>When an RPC is sent, the number of pages it consists of is recorded (in order). A single page RPC increments the 0: row.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298871" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">RPCs in flight</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298873" xreflabel=""/>When an RPC is sent, the number of other RPCs that are pending is recorded. When the first RPC is sent, the 0: row is incremented. If the first RPC is sent while another is pending, the 1: row is incremented and so on. As each RPC *completes*, the number of pending RPCs is not tabulated.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298973" xreflabel=""/>This table is a good way to visualize the concurrency of the RPC stream. Ideally, you will see a large clump around the max_rpcs_in_flight value, which shows that the network is being kept busy.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299025" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">offset</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299027" xreflabel=""/> </para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </tbody>
-          </tgroup>
-        </informaltable>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290565" xreflabel=""/>31.2.3 Client Read-Write <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290564" xreflabel=""/>Offset Survey</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290566" xreflabel=""/>The offset_stats parameter maintains statistics for occurrences where a series of read or write calls from a process did not access the next sequential location. The offset field is reset to 0 (zero) whenever a different file is read/written.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293887" xreflabel=""/>Read/write offset statistics are off, by default. The statistics can be activated by writing anything into the offset_stats file.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290567" xreflabel=""/>Example:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290568" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-f57dee00/rw_offset_stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290569" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time: 1155748884.591028 (secs.usecs)
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290570" xreflabel=""/>R/W                PID             RANGE START             RANGE END       \
-        SMALLEST EXTENT         LARGEST EXTENT                          OFF\
-SET
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290571" xreflabel=""/>R          8385            0                       128                     \
-128                     128                             0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290572" xreflabel=""/>R          8385            0                       224                     \
-224                     224                             -128
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290573" xreflabel=""/>W          8385            0                       250                     \
-50                      100                             0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290574" xreflabel=""/>W          8385            100                     1110                    \
-10                      500                             -150
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290575" xreflabel=""/>W          8384            0                       5233                    \
-5233                    5233                            0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290576" xreflabel=""/>R          8385            500                     600                     \
-100                     100                             -610
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290611" xreflabel=""/>Where:</para>
-        <informaltable frame="all">
-          <tgroup cols="2">
-            <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <thead>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291997" xreflabel=""/>Field</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291999" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </thead>
-            <tbody>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292045" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">R/W</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292047" xreflabel=""/>Whether the non-sequential call was a read or write</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292049" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">PID</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292051" xreflabel=""/>Process ID which made the read/write call.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292053" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Range Start/Range End</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292055" xreflabel=""/>Range in which the read/write calls were sequential.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292056" xreflabel=""/> </para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292058" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Smallest Extent</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292060" xreflabel=""/>Smallest extent (single read/write) in the corresponding range.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292062" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Largest Extent</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292064" xreflabel=""/>Largest extent (single read/write) in the corresponding range.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292066" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Offset</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292068" xreflabel=""/>Difference from the previous range end to the current range start.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292069" xreflabel=""/>For example, Smallest-Extent indicates that the writes in the range 100 to 1110 were sequential, with a minimum write of 10 and a maximum write of 500. This range was started with an offset of -150. That means this is the difference between the last entry's range-end and this entry's range-start for the same file.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292070" xreflabel=""/>The rw_offset_stats file can be cleared by writing to it:</para><screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292071" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292072" xreflabel=""/>echo &gt; /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-f57dee00/rw_offset_stats
-</screen></entry>
-              </row>
-            </tbody>
-          </tgroup>
-        </informaltable>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290613" xreflabel=""/>31.2.4 Client Read-Write <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290612" xreflabel=""/>Extents Survey</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290614" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Client-Based I/O Extent Size Survey</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290615" xreflabel=""/>The rw_extent_stats histogram in the llite directory shows you the statistics for the sizes of the read-write I/O extents. This file does not maintain the per-process statistics.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290616" xreflabel=""/>Example:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290617" xreflabel=""/>$ cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ee5af200/extents_stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293904" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time:                     1213828728.348516 (secs.usecs)
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294259" xreflabel=""/>                           read            |               write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294260" xreflabel=""/>extents                    calls   %       cum%    |       calls   %       \
-cum%
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290621" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294257" xreflabel=""/>0K - 4K :          0       0       0       |       2       2       2
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293950" xreflabel=""/>4K - 8K :          0       0       0       |       0       0       2
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293918" xreflabel=""/>8K - 16K :         0       0       0       |       0       0       2
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293922" xreflabel=""/>16K - 32K :                0       0       0       |       20      23      \
-26
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293926" xreflabel=""/>32K - 64K :                0       0       0       |       0       0       \
-26
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293930" xreflabel=""/>64K - 128K :               0       0       0       |       51      60      \
-86
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293934" xreflabel=""/>128K - 256K :              0       0       0       |       0       0       \
-86
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293938" xreflabel=""/>256K - 512K :              0       0       0       |       0       0       \
-86
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293942" xreflabel=""/>512K - 1024K :             0       0       0       |       0       0       \
-86
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293946" xreflabel=""/>1M - 2M :          0       0       0       |       11      13      100
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293908" xreflabel=""/> 
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290622" xreflabel=""/>The file can be cleared by issuing the following command:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290623" xreflabel=""/>$ echo &gt; cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ee5af200/extents_stats
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290624" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Per-Process Client I/O Statistics</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290625" xreflabel=""/>The extents_stats_per_process file maintains the I/O extent size statistics on a per-process basis. So you can track the per-process statistics for the last MAX_PER_PROCESS_HIST processes.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293971" xreflabel=""/>Example:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293972" xreflabel=""/>$ cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ee5af200/extents_stats_per_process
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293973" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time:                     1213828762.204440 (secs.usecs)
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293974" xreflabel=""/>                           read            |               write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293975" xreflabel=""/>extents                    calls   %       cum%    |       calls   %       \
-cum%
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293976" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293998" xreflabel=""/>PID: 11488
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293999" xreflabel=""/>   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293977" xreflabel=""/>   4K - 8K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293978" xreflabel=""/>   8K - 16K :      0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293979" xreflabel=""/>   16K - 32K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293980" xreflabel=""/>   32K - 64K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293981" xreflabel=""/>   64K - 128K :    0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293982" xreflabel=""/>   128K - 256K :   0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1293983" xreflabel=""/>   256K - 512K :   0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294019" xreflabel=""/>   512K - 1024K :  0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294017" xreflabel=""/>   1M - 2M :       0       0        0      |       10      100     100
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294028" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294031" xreflabel=""/>PID: 11491
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294032" xreflabel=""/>   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294033" xreflabel=""/>   4K - 8K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294034" xreflabel=""/>   8K - 16K :      0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294035" xreflabel=""/>   16K - 32K :     0       0        0      |       20      100     100
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294036" xreflabel=""/>   
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294052" xreflabel=""/>PID: 11424
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294053" xreflabel=""/>   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294054" xreflabel=""/>   4K - 8K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294055" xreflabel=""/>   8K - 16K :      0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294056" xreflabel=""/>   16K - 32K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294070" xreflabel=""/>   32K - 64K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294086" xreflabel=""/>   64K - 128K :    0       0        0      |       16      100     100
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294087" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294060" xreflabel=""/>PID: 11426
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294061" xreflabel=""/>   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       1       100     100
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294096" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294099" xreflabel=""/>PID: 11429
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294100" xreflabel=""/>   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       1       100     100
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294097" xreflabel=""/> 
-</screen>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290632" xreflabel=""/>31.2.5 <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_55057" xreflabel=""/> Watching the <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290631" xreflabel=""/>OST Block I/O Stream</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290633" xreflabel=""/>Similarly, there is a brw_stats histogram in the obdfilter directory which shows you the statistics for number of I/O requests sent to the disk, their size and whether they are contiguous on the disk or not.</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290634" xreflabel=""/>cat /proc/fs/lustre/obdfilter/lustre-OST0000/brw_stats 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290635" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time:                     1174875636.764630 (secs:usecs)
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290636" xreflabel=""/>                           read                            write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290637" xreflabel=""/>pages per brw              brws    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       \
-cum %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290638" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290639" xreflabel=""/>                           read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290640" xreflabel=""/>discont pages              rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       \
-cum %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290641" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290642" xreflabel=""/>                           read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290643" xreflabel=""/>discont blocks             rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       \
-cum %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290644" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290645" xreflabel=""/>                           read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290646" xreflabel=""/>dio frags          rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290647" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290648" xreflabel=""/>                           read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290649" xreflabel=""/>disk ios in flight rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290650" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290651" xreflabel=""/>                           read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290652" xreflabel=""/>io time (1/1000s)  rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290653" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290654" xreflabel=""/>                           read                                    write
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290655" xreflabel=""/>disk io size               rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       \
-cum %
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290656" xreflabel=""/>1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290657" xreflabel=""/>                           read                                    write
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294291" xreflabel=""/>The fields are explained below:</para>
-        <informaltable frame="all">
-          <tgroup cols="2">
-            <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <thead>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294276" xreflabel=""/>Field</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294278" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </thead>
-            <tbody>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294280" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">pages per brw</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294282" xreflabel=""/>Number of pages per RPC request, which should match aggregate client rpc_stats.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294284" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">discont pages</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294286" xreflabel=""/>Number of discontinuities in the logical file offset of each page in a single RPC.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294288" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">discont blocks</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294290" xreflabel=""/>Number of discontinuities in the physical block allocation in the file system for a single RPC.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </tbody>
-          </tgroup>
-        </informaltable>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299070" xreflabel=""/>For each Lustre service, the following information is provided:</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299055" xreflabel=""/> Number of requests</para>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.1.5 Free Space Distribution</title>
+      <para>Free-space stripe weighting, as set, gives a priority of &quot;0&quot; to free space (versus trying to place the stripes &quot;widely&quot; -- nicely distributed across OSSs and OSTs to maximize network balancing). To adjust this priority (as a percentage), use the <literal>qos_prio_free</literal> proc tunable:</para>
+      <screen>$ cat /proc/fs/lustre/lov/&lt;fsname&gt;-mdtlov/qos_prio_free</screen>
+      <para>Currently, the default is 90%. You can permanently set this value by running this command on the MGS:</para>
+      <screen>$ lctl conf_param &lt;fsname&gt;-MDT0000.lov.qos_prio_free=90</screen>
+      <para>Setting the priority to 100% means that OSS distribution does not count in the weighting, but the stripe assignment is still done via weighting. If OST 2 has twice as much free space as OST 1, it is twice as likely to be used, but it is NOT guaranteed to be used.</para>
+      <para>Also note that free-space stripe weighting does not activate until two OSTs are imbalanced by more than 20%. Until then, a faster round-robin stripe allocator is used. (The new round-robin order also maximizes network balancing.)</para>
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.1.5.1 Managing Stripe Allocation</title>
+        <para>The MDS uses two methods to manage stripe allocation and determine which OSTs to use for file object storage:</para>
+        <itemizedlist>
+          <listitem>
+            <para><emphasis role="bold">QOS</emphasis></para>
+            <para>Quality of Service (QOS) considers an OST&apos;s available blocks, speed, and the number of existing objects, etc. Using these criteria, the MDS selects OSTs with more free space more often than OSTs with less free space.</para>
           </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299083" xreflabel=""/> Request wait time (avg, min, max and std dev)</para>
+        </itemizedlist>
+        <itemizedlist>
+          <listitem>
+            <para><emphasis role="bold">RR</emphasis></para>
+            <para>Round-Robin (RR) allocates objects evenly across all OSTs. The RR stripe allocator is faster than QOS, and used often because it distributes space usage/load best in most situations, maximizing network balancing and improving performance.</para>
           </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299086" xreflabel=""/> Service idle time (% of elapsed time)</para>
+        </itemizedlist>
+        <para>Whether QOS or RR is used depends on the setting of the <literal>qos_threshold_rr</literal> proc tunable. The <literal>qos_threshold_rr</literal> variable specifies a percentage threshold where the use of QOS or RR becomes more/less likely. The <literal>qos_threshold_rr</literal> tunable can be set as an integer, from 0 to 100, and results in this stripe allocation behavior:</para>
+        <itemizedlist>
+          <listitem>
+            <para> If <literal>qos_threshold_rr</literal> is set to 0, then QOS is always used</para>
           </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299058" xreflabel=""/>Additionally, data on each Lustre service is provided by service type:</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299059" xreflabel=""/> Number of requests of this type</para>
+          <listitem>
+            <para> If <literal>qos_threshold_rr</literal> is set to 100, then RR is always used</para>
           </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299092" xreflabel=""/> Request service time (avg, min, max and std dev)</para>
+          <listitem>
+            <para> The larger the <literal>qos_threshold_rr</literal> setting, the greater the possibility that RR is used instead of QOS</para>
           </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
+        </itemizedlist>
       </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294293" xreflabel=""/>31.2.6 Using File <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1294292" xreflabel=""/>Readahead and Directory Statahead</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295106" xreflabel=""/>Lustre 1.6.5.1 introduced file readahead and directory statahead functionality that read data into memory in anticipation of a process actually requesting the data. File readahead functionality reads file content data into memory. Directory statahead functionality reads metadata into memory. When readahead and/or statahead work well, a data-consuming process finds that the information it needs is available when requested, and it is unnecessary to wait for network I/O.</para>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295107" xreflabel=""/>31.2.6.1 Tuning <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1295183" xreflabel=""/>File Readahead</title>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290680" xreflabel=""/>File readahead is triggered when two or more sequential reads by an application fail to be satisfied by the Linux buffer cache. The size of the initial readahead is 1 MB. Additional readaheads grow linearly, and increment until the readahead cache on the client is full at 40 MB.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290681" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/llite/&lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;uid&gt;/max_read_ahead_mb</emphasis></para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290682" xreflabel=""/>This tunable controls the maximum amount of data readahead on a file. Files are read ahead in RPC-sized chunks (1 MB or the size of read() call, if larger) after the second sequential read on a file descriptor. Random reads are done at the size of the read() call only (no readahead). Reads to non-contiguous regions of the file reset the readahead algorithm, and readahead is not triggered again until there are sequential reads again. To disable readahead, set this tunable to 0. The default value is 40 MB.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290683" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/llite/&lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;uid&gt;/max_read_ahead_whole_mb</emphasis></para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290684" xreflabel=""/>This tunable controls the maximum size of a file that is read in its entirety, regardless of the size of the read().</para>
-        </section>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295046" xreflabel=""/>31.2.6.2 Tuning Directory <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1295184" xreflabel=""/>Statahead</title>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295049" xreflabel=""/>When the ls -l process opens a directory, its process ID is recorded. When the first directory entry is &apos;&apos;stated&apos;&apos; with this recorded process ID, a statahead thread is triggered which stats ahead all of the directory entries, in order. The ls -l process can use the stated directory entries directly, improving performance.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295060" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_max</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295152" xreflabel=""/>This tunable controls whether directory statahead is enabled and the maximum statahead count. By default, statahead is active.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295168" xreflabel=""/>To disable statahead, set this tunable to:</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295061" xreflabel=""/>echo 0 &gt; /proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_max</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295063" xreflabel=""/>To set the maximum statahead count (n), set this tunable to:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295280" xreflabel=""/>echo n &gt; /proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_max
+    </section>
+  </section>
+  <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_78950">
+    <title>31.2 Lustre I/O Tunables</title>
+    <para>The section describes I/O tunables.</para>
+    <para><literal>
+        <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/llite/&lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;uid&gt;/max_cache_mb</emphasis>
+      </literal></para>
+    <screen># cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ce63ca00/max_cached_mb 128</screen>
+    <para>This tunable is the maximum amount of inactive data cached by the client (default is 3/4 of RAM).</para>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.1 Client I/O RPC Stream Tunables</title>
+      <para>The Lustre engine always attempts to pack an optimal amount of data into each I/O RPC and attempts to keep a consistent number of issued RPCs in progress at a time. Lustre exposes several tuning variables to adjust behavior according to network conditions and cluster size. Each OSC has its own tree of these tunables. For example:</para>
+      <screen>$ ls -d /proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_client_ost1_MNT_client_2 /localhost
+/proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost1_MNT_localhost
+/proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost2_MNT_localhost
+/proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost3_MNT_localhost
+$ ls /proc/fs/lustre/osc/OSC_uml0_ost1_MNT_localhost
+blocksizefilesfree max_dirty_mb ost_server_uuid stats</screen>
+      <para>... and so on.</para>
+      <para>RPC stream tunables are described below.</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/max_dirty_mb</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This tunable controls how many MBs of dirty data can be written and queued up in the OSC. POSIX file writes that are cached contribute to this count. When the limit is reached, additional writes stall until previously-cached writes are written to the server. This may be changed by writing a single ASCII integer to the file. Only values between 0 and 512 are allowable. If 0 is given, no writes are cached. Performance suffers noticeably unless you use large writes (1 MB or more).</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/cur_dirty_bytes</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This tunable is a read-only value that returns the current amount of bytes written and cached on this OSC.</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/max_pages_per_rpc</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This tunable is the maximum number of pages that will undergo I/O in a single RPC to the OST. The minimum is a single page and the maximum for this setting is platform dependent (256 for i386/x86_64, possibly less for ia64/PPC with larger <literal>PAGE_SIZE</literal>), though generally amounts to a total of 1 MB in the RPC.</para>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/osc/&lt;object name&gt;/max_rpcs_in_flight</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>This tunable is the maximum number of concurrent RPCs in flight from an OSC to its OST. If the OSC tries to initiate an RPC but finds that it already has the same number of RPCs outstanding, it will wait to issue further RPCs until some complete. The minimum setting is 1 and maximum setting is 32. If you are looking to improve small file I/O performance, increase the <literal>max_rpcs_in_flight</literal> value.</para>
+      <para>To maximize performance, the value for <literal>max_dirty_mb</literal> is recommended to be 4 * <literal>max_pages_per_rpc</literal> * <literal>max_rpcs_in_flight</literal>.</para>
+      <note>
+        <para>The <emphasis role="italic">
+            <literal>&lt;object name&gt;</literal>
+          </emphasis> varies depending on the specific Lustre configuration. For <literal>&lt;object name&gt;</literal> examples, refer to the sample command output.</para>
+      </note>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.2 Watching the Client RPC Stream</title>
+      <para>The same directory contains a <literal>rpc_stats</literal> file with a histogram showing the composition of previous RPCs. The histogram can be cleared by writing any value into the <literal>rpc_stats</literal> file.</para>
+      <screen># cat /proc/fs/lustre/osc/spfs-OST0000-osc-c45f9c00/rpc_stats
+snapshot_time:                                     1174867307.156604 (secs.usecs)
+read RPCs in flight:                               0
+write RPCs in flight:                              0
+pending write pages:                               0
+pending read pages:                                0
+                   read                                    write
+pages per rpc              rpcs    %       cum     %       |       rpcs    %       cum     %
+1:                 0       0       0               |       0               0       0
+                   read                                    write
+rpcs in flight             rpcs    %       cum     %       |       rpcs    %       cum     %
+0:                 0       0       0               |       0               0       0
+                   read                                    write
+offset                     rpcs    %       cum     %       |       rpcs    %       cum     %
+0:                 0       0       0               |       0               0       0
 </screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295281" xreflabel=""/>The maximum value of n is 8192.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295282" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_status</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295067" xreflabel=""/>This is a read-only interface that indicates the current statahead status.</para>
-        </section>
+      <para>Where:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Field</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">{read,write} RPCs in flight</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of read/write RPCs issued by the OSC, but not complete at the time of the snapshot. This value should always be less than or equal to max_rpcs_in_flight.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">pending {read,write} pages</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of pending read/write pages that have been queued for I/O in the OSC.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">pages per RPC</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>When an RPC is sent, the number of pages it consists of is recorded (in order). A single page RPC increments the 0: row.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">RPCs in flight</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>When an RPC is sent, the number of other RPCs that are pending is recorded. When the first RPC is sent, the 0: row is incremented. If the first RPC is sent while another is pending, the 1: row is incremented and so on. As each RPC *completes*, the number of pending RPCs is not tabulated.</para>
+                <para>This table is a good way to visualize the concurrency of the RPC stream. Ideally, you will see a large clump around the max_rpcs_in_flight value, which shows that the network is being kept busy.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">offset</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para> </para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.3 Client Read-Write Offset Survey</title>
+      <para>The offset_stats parameter maintains statistics for occurrences where a series of read or write calls from a process did not access the next sequential location. The offset field is reset to 0 (zero) whenever a different file is read/written.</para>
+      <para>Read/write offset statistics are off, by default. The statistics can be activated by writing anything into the <literal>offset_stats</literal> file.</para>
+      <para>Example:</para>
+      <screen># cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-f57dee00/rw_offset_stats
+snapshot_time: 1155748884.591028 (secs.usecs)
+R/W                PID             RANGE START             RANGE END               SMALLEST EXTENT         LARGEST EXTENT                          OFFSET
+R          8385            0                       128                     128                     128                             0
+R          8385            0                       224                     224                     224                             -128
+W          8385            0                       250                     50                      100                             0
+W          8385            100                     1110                    10                      500                             -150
+W          8384            0                       5233                    5233                    5233                            0
+R          8385            500                     600                     100                     100                             -610</screen>
+      <para>Where:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Field</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">R/W</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Whether the non-sequential call was a read or write</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>PID</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Process ID which made the read/write call.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">Range Start/Range End</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Range in which the read/write calls were sequential.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">Smallest Extent</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Smallest extent (single read/write) in the corresponding range.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">Largest Extent</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Largest extent (single read/write) in the corresponding range.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">Offset</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Difference from the previous range end to the current range start.</para>
+                <para>For example, Smallest-Extent indicates that the writes in the range 100 to 1110 were sequential, with a minimum write of 10 and a maximum write of 500. This range was started with an offset of -150. That means this is the difference between the last entry&apos;s range-end and this entry&apos;s range-start for the same file.</para>
+                <para>The <literal>rw_offset_stats</literal> file can be cleared by writing to it:</para>
+                <screen>echo &gt; /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-f57dee00/rw_offset_stats</screen>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.4 Client Read-Write Extents Survey</title>
+      <para><emphasis role="bold">Client-Based I/O Extent Size Survey</emphasis></para>
+      <para>The <literal>rw_extent_stats</literal> histogram in the <literal>llite</literal> directory shows you the statistics for the sizes of the read-write I/O extents. This file does not maintain the per-process statistics.</para>
+      <para>Example:</para>
+      <screen>$ cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ee5af200/extents_stats
+snapshot_time:                     1213828728.348516 (secs.usecs)
+                           read            |               write
+extents                    calls   %       cum%    |       calls   %       cum%
+0K - 4K :          0       0       0       |       2       2       2
+4K - 8K :          0       0       0       |       0       0       2
+8K - 16K :         0       0       0       |       0       0       2
+16K - 32K :                0       0       0       |       20      23      26
+32K - 64K :                0       0       0       |       0       0       26
+64K - 128K :               0       0       0       |       51      60      86
+128K - 256K :              0       0       0       |       0       0       86
+256K - 512K :              0       0       0       |       0       0       86
+512K - 1024K :             0       0       0       |       0       0       86
+1M - 2M :          0       0       0       |       11      13      100</screen>
+      <para>The file can be cleared by issuing the following command:</para>
+      <screen>$ echo &gt; cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ee5af200/extents_stats</screen>
+      <para><emphasis role="bold">Per-Process Client I/O Statistics</emphasis></para>
+      <para>The <literal>extents_stats_per_process</literal> file maintains the I/O extent size statistics on a per-process basis. So you can track the per-process statistics for the last <literal>MAX_PER_PROCESS_HIST</literal> processes.</para>
+      <para>Example:</para>
+      <screen>$ cat /proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ee5af200/extents_stats_per_process
+snapshot_time:                     1213828762.204440 (secs.usecs)
+                           read            |               write
+extents                    calls   %       cum%    |       calls   %       cum%
+PID: 11488
+   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   4K - 8K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   8K - 16K :      0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   16K - 32K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   32K - 64K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   64K - 128K :    0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   128K - 256K :   0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   256K - 512K :   0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   512K - 1024K :  0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   1M - 2M :       0       0        0      |       10      100     100
+PID: 11491
+   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   4K - 8K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   8K - 16K :      0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   16K - 32K :     0       0        0      |       20      100     100
+   
+PID: 11424
+   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   4K - 8K :       0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   8K - 16K :      0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   16K - 32K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   32K - 64K :     0       0        0      |       0       0       0
+   64K - 128K :    0       0        0      |       16      100     100
+PID: 11426
+   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       1       100     100
+PID: 11429
+   0K - 4K :       0       0        0      |       1       100     100
+</screen>
+    </section>
+    <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_55057">
+      <title>31.2.5 Watching the OST Block I/O Stream</title>
+      <para>Similarly, there is a <literal>brw_stats</literal> histogram in the obdfilter directory which shows you the statistics for number of I/O requests sent to the disk, their size and whether they are contiguous on the disk or not.</para>
+      <screen>cat /proc/fs/lustre/obdfilter/lustre-OST0000/brw_stats 
+snapshot_time:                     1174875636.764630 (secs:usecs)
+                           read                            write
+pages per brw              brws    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
+1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
+                           read                                    write
+discont pages              rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
+1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
+                           read                                    write
+discont blocks             rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
+1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
+                           read                                    write
+dio frags          rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
+1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
+                           read                                    write
+disk ios in flight rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
+1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
+                           read                                    write
+io time (1/1000s)  rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
+1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
+                           read                                    write
+disk io size               rpcs    %       cum %   |       rpcs    %       cum %
+1:                 0       0       0       |       0       0       0
+                           read                                    write
+</screen>
+      <para>The fields are explained below:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Field</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">pages per brw</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of pages per RPC request, which should match aggregate client <literal>rpc_stats</literal>.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">discont pages</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of discontinuities in the logical file offset of each page in a single RPC.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">discont blocks</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of discontinuities in the physical block allocation in the file system for a single RPC.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+      <para>For each Lustre service, the following information is provided:</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Number of requests</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Request wait time (avg, min, max and std dev)</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Service idle time (% of elapsed time)</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>Additionally, data on each Lustre service is provided by service type:</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Number of requests of this type</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Request service time (avg, min, max and std dev)</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.6 Using File Readahead and Directory Statahead</title>
+      <para>Lustre 1.6.5.1 introduced file readahead and directory statahead functionality that read data into memory in anticipation of a process actually requesting the data. File readahead functionality reads file content data into memory. Directory statahead functionality reads metadata into memory. When readahead and/or statahead work well, a data-consuming process finds that the information it needs is available when requested, and it is unnecessary to wait for network I/O.</para>
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.2.6.1 Tuning File Readahead</title>
+        <para>File readahead is triggered when two or more sequential reads by an application fail to be satisfied by the Linux buffer cache. The size of the initial readahead is 1 MB. Additional readaheads grow linearly, and increment until the readahead cache on the client is full at 40 MB.</para>
+        <para><literal>
+            <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/llite/&lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;uid&gt;/max_read_ahead_mb</emphasis>
+          </literal></para>
+        <para>This tunable controls the maximum amount of data readahead on a file. Files are read ahead in RPC-sized chunks (1 MB or the size of read() call, if larger) after the second sequential read on a file descriptor. Random reads are done at the size of the read() call only (no readahead). Reads to non-contiguous regions of the file reset the readahead algorithm, and readahead is not triggered again until there are sequential reads again. To disable readahead, set this tunable to 0. The default value is 40 MB.</para>
+        <para><literal>
+            <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/llite/&lt;fsname&gt;-&lt;uid&gt;/max_read_ahead_whole_mb</emphasis>
+          </literal></para>
+        <para>This tunable controls the maximum size of a file that is read in its entirety, regardless of the size of the <literal>read()</literal>.</para>
       </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290686" xreflabel=""/>31.2.7 OSS <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1296183" xreflabel=""/>Read Cache</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295320" xreflabel=""/>The OSS read cache feature provides read-only caching of data on an OSS. This functionality uses the regular Linux page cache to store the data. Just like caching from a regular filesytem in Linux, OSS read cache uses as much physical memory as is allocated.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295462" xreflabel=""/>OSS read cache improves Lustre performance in these situations:</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295517" xreflabel=""/> Many clients are accessing the same data set (as in HPC applications and when diskless clients boot from Lustre)</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295521" xreflabel=""/>  One client is storing data while another client is reading it (essentially exchanging data via the OST)</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295528" xreflabel=""/> A client has very limited caching of its own</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295515" xreflabel=""/>OSS read cache offers these benefits:</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295469" xreflabel=""/> Allows OSTs to cache read data more frequently</para>
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.2.6.2 Tuning Directory Statahead</title>
+        <para>When the <literal>ls -l</literal> process opens a directory, its process ID is recorded. When the first directory entry is &apos;&apos;stated&apos;&apos; with this recorded process ID, a statahead thread is triggered which stats ahead all of the directory entries, in order. The <literal>ls -l</literal> process can use the stated directory entries directly, improving performance.</para>
+        <para><literal>
+            <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_max</emphasis>
+          </literal></para>
+        <para>This tunable controls whether directory <literal>statahead</literal> is enabled and the maximum statahead count. By default, statahead is active.</para>
+        <para>To disable statahead, set this tunable to:</para>
+        <screen>echo 0 &gt; /proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_max</screen>
+        <para>To set the maximum statahead count (n), set this tunable to:</para>
+        <screen>echo n &gt; /proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_max</screen>
+        <para>The maximum value of n is 8192.</para>
+        <emphasis role="bold">
+          <literal>
+            <para>/proc/fs/lustre/llite/*/statahead_status</para>
+          </literal>
+        </emphasis>
+        <para>This is a read-only interface that indicates the current statahead status.</para>
+      </section>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.7 OSS Read Cache</title>
+      <para>The OSS read cache feature provides read-only caching of data on an OSS. This functionality uses the regular Linux page cache to store the data. Just like caching from a regular filesytem in Linux, OSS read cache uses as much physical memory as is allocated.</para>
+      <para>OSS read cache improves Lustre performance in these situations:</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Many clients are accessing the same data set (as in HPC applications and when diskless clients boot from Lustre)</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>One client is storing data while another client is reading it (essentially exchanging data via the OST)</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>A client has very limited caching of its own</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>OSS read cache offers these benefits:</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Allows OSTs to cache read data more frequently</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Improves repeated reads to match network speeds instead of disk speeds</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>Provides the building blocks for OST write cache (small-write aggregation)</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.2.7.1 Using OSS Read Cache</title>
+        <para>OSS read cache is implemented on the OSS, and does not require any special support on the client side. Since OSS read cache uses the memory available in the Linux page cache, you should use I/O patterns to determine the appropriate amount of memory for the cache; if the data is mostly reads, then more cache is required than for writes.</para>
+        <para>OSS read cache is enabled, by default, and managed by the following tunables:</para>
+        <itemizedlist>
+          <listitem>
+            <para><literal>read_cache_enable</literal>  controls whether data read from disk during a read request is kept in memory and available for later read requests for the same data, without having to re-read it from disk. By default, read cache is enabled (<literal>read_cache_enable = 1</literal>).</para>
           </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295485" xreflabel=""/> Improves repeated reads to match network speeds instead of disk speeds</para>
+        </itemizedlist>
+        <para>When the OSS receives a read request from a client, it reads data from disk into its memory and sends the data as a reply to the requests. If read cache is enabled, this data stays in memory after the client&apos;s request is finished, and the OSS skips reading data from disk when subsequent read requests for the same are received. The read cache is managed by the Linux kernel globally across all OSTs on that OSS, and the least recently used cache pages will be dropped from memory when the amount of free memory is running low.</para>
+        <para>If read cache is disabled (<literal>read_cache_enable = 0</literal>), then the OSS will discard the data after the client&apos;s read requests are serviced and, for subsequent read requests, the OSS must read the data from disk.</para>
+        <para>To disable read cache on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.read_cache_enable=0</screen>
+        <para>To re-enable read cache on one OST, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.{OST_name}.read_cache_enable=1</screen>
+        <para>To check if read cache is enabled on all OSTs on an OSS, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl get_param obdfilter.*.read_cache_enable</screen>
+        <itemizedlist>
+          <listitem>
+            <para><literal>writethrough_cache_enable</literal>  controls whether data sent to the OSS as a write request is kept in the read cache and available for later reads, or if it is discarded from cache when the write is completed. By default, writethrough cache is enabled (<literal>writethrough_cache_enable = 1</literal>).</para>
           </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295488" xreflabel=""/> Provides the building blocks for OST write cache (small-write aggregation)</para>
+        </itemizedlist>
+        <para>When the OSS receives write requests from a client, it receives data from the client into its memory and writes the data to disk. If writethrough cache is enabled, this data stays in memory after the write request is completed, allowing the OSS to skip reading this data from disk if a later read request, or partial-page write request, for the same data is received.</para>
+        <para>If writethrough cache is disabled (<literal>writethrough_cache_enabled = 0</literal>), then the OSS discards the data after the client&apos;s write request is completed, and for subsequent read request, or partial-page write request, the OSS must re-read the data from disk.</para>
+        <para>Enabling writethrough cache is advisable if clients are doing small or unaligned writes that would cause partial-page updates, or if the files written by one node are immediately being accessed by other nodes. Some examples where this might be useful include producer-consumer I/O models or shared-file writes with a different node doing I/O not aligned on 4096-byte boundaries. Disabling writethrough cache is advisable in the case where files are mostly written to the file system but are not re-read within a short time period, or files are only written and re-read by the same node, regardless of whether the I/O is aligned or not.</para>
+        <para>To disable writethrough cache on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.writethrough_cache_enable=0</screen>
+        <para>To re-enable writethrough cache on one OST, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl set_param \
+obdfilter.{OST_name}.writethrough_cache_enable=1</screen>
+        <para>To check if writethrough cache is</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.writethrough_cache_enable=1</screen>
+        <itemizedlist>
+          <listitem>
+            <para><literal>readcache_max_filesize</literal>  controls the maximum size of a file that both the read cache and writethrough cache will try to keep in memory. Files larger than <literal>readcache_max_filesize</literal> will not be kept in cache for either reads or writes.</para>
           </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295497" xreflabel=""/>31.2.7.1 Using OSS Read Cache</title>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295566" xreflabel=""/>OSS read cache is implemented on the OSS, and does not require any special support on the client side. Since OSS read cache uses the memory available in the Linux page cache, you should use I/O patterns to determine the appropriate amount of memory for the cache; if the data is mostly reads, then more cache is required than for writes.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295331" xreflabel=""/>OSS read cache is enabled, by default, and managed by the following tunables:</para>
-          <itemizedlist><listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296609" xreflabel=""/>read_cache_enable  controls whether data read from disk during a read request is kept in memory and available for later read requests for the same data, without having to re-read it from disk. By default, read cache is enabled (read_cache_enable = 1).</para>
-            </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296624" xreflabel=""/>When the OSS receives a read request from a client, it reads data from disk into its memory and sends the data as a reply to the requests. If read cache is enabled, this data stays in memory after the client's request is finished, and the OSS skips reading data from disk when subsequent read requests for the same are received. The read cache is managed by the Linux kernel globally across all OSTs on that OSS, and the least recently used cache pages will be dropped from memory when the amount of free memory is running low.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295918" xreflabel=""/>If read cache is disabled (read_cache_enable = 0), then the OSS will discard the data after the client's read requests are serviced and, for subsequent read requests, the OSS must read the data from disk.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296677" xreflabel=""/>To disable read cache on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296709" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.read_cache_enable=0
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296681" xreflabel=""/>To re-enable read cache on one OST, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296722" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.{OST_name}.read_cache_enable=1
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296685" xreflabel=""/>To check if read cache is enabled on all OSTs on an OSS, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296687" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl get_param obdfilter.*.read_cache_enable
-</screen>
-          <itemizedlist><listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296775" xreflabel=""/>writethrough_cache_enable  controls whether data sent to the OSS as a write request is kept in the read cache and available for later reads, or if it is discarded from cache when the write is completed. By default, writethrough cache is enabled (writethrough_cache_enable = 1).</para>
-            </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296844" xreflabel=""/>When the OSS receives write requests from a client, it receives data from the client into its memory and writes the data to disk. If writethrough cache is enabled, this data stays in memory after the write request is completed, allowing the OSS to skip reading this data from disk if a later read request, or partial-page write request, for the same data is received.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296871" xreflabel=""/>If writethrough cache is disabled (writethrough_cache_enabled = 0), then the OSS discards the data after the client's write request is completed, and for subsequent read request, or partial-page write request, the OSS must re-read the data from disk.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296892" xreflabel=""/>Enabling writethrough cache is advisable if clients are doing small or unaligned writes that would cause partial-page updates, or if the files written by one node are immediately being accessed by other nodes. Some examples where this might be useful include producer-consumer I/O models or shared-file writes with a different node doing I/O not aligned on 4096-byte boundaries. Disabling writethrough cache is advisable in the case where files are mostly written to the file system but are not re-read within a short time period, or files are only written and re-read by the same node, regardless of whether the I/O is aligned or not.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296922" xreflabel=""/>To disable writethrough cache on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296924" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.writethrough_cache_enable=0
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296926" xreflabel=""/>To re-enable writethrough cache on one OST, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296928" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl set_param \obdfilter.{OST_name}.writethrough_cache_enable=1
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296930" xreflabel=""/>To check if writethrough cache is</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297043" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.writethrough_cache_enable=1
-</screen>
-          <itemizedlist><listitem>
-              <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297052" xreflabel=""/>readcache_max_filesize  controls the maximum size of a file that both the read cache and writethrough cache will try to keep in memory. Files larger than readcache_max_filesize will not be kept in cache for either reads or writes.</para>
-            </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297105" xreflabel=""/>This can be very useful for workloads where relatively small files are repeatedly accessed by many clients, such as job startup files, executables, log files, etc., but large files are read or written only once. By not putting the larger files into the cache, it is much more likely that more of the smaller files will remain in cache for a longer time.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297126" xreflabel=""/>When setting readcache_max_filesize, the input value can be specified in bytes, or can have a suffix to indicate other binary units such as <emphasis role="bold">K</emphasis>ilobytes, <emphasis role="bold">M</emphasis>egabytes, <emphasis role="bold">G</emphasis>igabytes, <emphasis role="bold">T</emphasis>erabytes, or <emphasis role="bold">P</emphasis>etabytes.</para>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297068" xreflabel=""/>To limit the maximum cached file size to 32MB on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297070" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.readcache_max_filesize=32M
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297072" xreflabel=""/>To disable the maximum cached file size on an OST, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297074" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl set_param \obdfilter.{OST_name}.readcache_max_filesize=-1
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297076" xreflabel=""/>To check the current maximum cached file size on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297049" xreflabel=""/>root@oss1# lctl get_param obdfilter.*.readcache_max_filesize
-</screen>
-        </section>
+        </itemizedlist>
+        <para>This can be very useful for workloads where relatively small files are repeatedly accessed by many clients, such as job startup files, executables, log files, etc., but large files are read or written only once. By not putting the larger files into the cache, it is much more likely that more of the smaller files will remain in cache for a longer time.</para>
+        <para>When setting <literal>readcache_max_filesize</literal>, the input value can be specified in bytes, or can have a suffix to indicate other binary units such as <emphasis role="bold">K</emphasis>ilobytes, <emphasis role="bold">M</emphasis>egabytes, <emphasis role="bold">G</emphasis>igabytes, <emphasis role="bold">T</emphasis>erabytes, or <emphasis role="bold">P</emphasis>etabytes.</para>
+        <para>To limit the maximum cached file size to 32MB on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl set_param obdfilter.*.readcache_max_filesize=32M</screen>
+        <para>To disable the maximum cached file size on an OST, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl set_param \
+obdfilter.{OST_name}.readcache_max_filesize=-1</screen>
+        <para>To check the current maximum cached file size on all OSTs of an OSS, run:</para>
+        <screen>root@oss1# lctl get_param obdfilter.*.readcache_max_filesize</screen>
       </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300258" xreflabel=""/>31.2.8 OSS Asynchronous Journal Commit</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300265" xreflabel=""/>The OSS asynchronous journal commit feature synchronously writes data to disk without forcing a journal flush. This reduces the number of seeks and significantly improves performance on some hardware.</para>
-                <note><para>Asynchronous journal commit cannot work with O_DIRECT writes, a journal flush is still forced.</para></note>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300718" xreflabel=""/>When asynchronous journal commit is enabled, client nodes keep data in the page cache (a page reference). Lustre clients monitor the last committed transaction number (transno) in messages sent from the OSS to the clients. When a client sees that the last committed transno reported by the OSS is &gt;=bulk write transno, it releases the reference on the corresponding pages. To avoid page references being held for too long on clients after a bulk write, a 7 second ping request is scheduled (jbd commit time is 5 seconds) after the bulk write reply is received, so the OSS has an opportunity to report the last committed transno.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300661" xreflabel=""/>If the OSS crashes before the journal commit occurs, then the intermediate data is lost. However, new OSS recovery functionality (introduced in the asynchronous journal commit feature), causes clients to replay their write requests and compensate for the missing disk updates by restoring the state of the file system.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300287" xreflabel=""/>To enable asynchronous journal commit, set the sync_journal parameter to zero (sync_journal=0):</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300289" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl set_param obdfilter.*.sync_journal=0 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300410" xreflabel=""/>obdfilter.lol-OST0001.sync_journal=0
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300292" xreflabel=""/>By default, sync_journal is disabled (sync_journal=1), which forces a journal flush after every bulk write.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300727" xreflabel=""/>When asynchronous journal commit is used, clients keep a page reference until the journal transaction commits. This can cause problems when a client receives a blocking callback, because pages need to be removed from the page cache, but they cannot be removed because of the extra page reference.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300728" xreflabel=""/>This problem is solved by forcing a journal flush on lock cancellation. When this happens, the client is granted the metadata blocks that have hit the disk, and it can safely release the page reference before processing the blocking callback. The parameter which controls this action is sync_on_lock_cancel, which can be set to the following values:</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300441" xreflabel=""/>always: Always force a journal flush on lock cancellation</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300530" xreflabel=""/>blocking: Force a journal flush only when the local cancellation is due to a blocking callback</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300533" xreflabel=""/>never: Do not force any journal flush</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300297" xreflabel=""/>Here is an example of sync_on_lock_cancel being set not to force a journal flush:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300298" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl get_param obdfilter.*.sync_on_lock_cancel
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300299" xreflabel=""/>obdfilter.lol-OST0001.sync_on_lock_cancel=never
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.8 OSS Asynchronous Journal Commit</title>
+      <para>The OSS asynchronous journal commit feature synchronously writes data to disk without forcing a journal flush. This reduces the number of seeks and significantly improves performance on some hardware.</para>
+      <note>
+        <para>Asynchronous journal commit cannot work with O_DIRECT writes, a journal flush is still forced.</para>
+      </note>
+      <para>When asynchronous journal commit is enabled, client nodes keep data in the page cache (a page reference). Lustre clients monitor the last committed transaction number (transno) in messages sent from the OSS to the clients. When a client sees that the last committed transno reported by the OSS is &gt;=bulk write transno, it releases the reference on the corresponding pages. To avoid page references being held for too long on clients after a bulk write, a 7 second ping request is scheduled (jbd commit time is 5 seconds) after the bulk write reply is received, so the OSS has an opportunity to report the last committed transno.</para>
+      <para>If the OSS crashes before the journal commit occurs, then the intermediate data is lost. However, new OSS recovery functionality (introduced in the asynchronous journal commit feature), causes clients to replay their write requests and compensate for the missing disk updates by restoring the state of the file system.</para>
+      <para>To enable asynchronous journal commit, set the <literal>sync_journal parameter</literal> to zero (<literal>sync_journal=0</literal>):</para>
+      <screen>$ lctl set_param obdfilter.*.sync_journal=0 
+obdfilter.lol-OST0001.sync_journal=0</screen>
+      <para>By default, <literal>sync_journal</literal> is disabled (<literal>sync_journal=1</literal>), which forces a journal flush after every bulk write.</para>
+      <para>When asynchronous journal commit is used, clients keep a page reference until the journal transaction commits. This can cause problems when a client receives a blocking callback, because pages need to be removed from the page cache, but they cannot be removed because of the extra page reference.</para>
+      <para>This problem is solved by forcing a journal flush on lock cancellation. When this happens, the client is granted the metadata blocks that have hit the disk, and it can safely release the page reference before processing the blocking callback. The parameter which controls this action is <literal>sync_on_lock_cancel</literal>, which can be set to the following values:</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para><literal>always</literal>: Always force a journal flush on lock cancellation</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para><literal>blocking</literal>: Force a journal flush only when the local cancellation is due to a blocking callback</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para><literal>never</literal>: Do not force any journal flush</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>Here is an example of <literal>sync_on_lock_cancel</literal> being set not to force a journal flush:</para>
+      <screen>$ lctl get_param obdfilter.*.sync_on_lock_cancel
+obdfilter.lol-OST0001.sync_on_lock_cancel=never</screen>
+      <para>By default, <literal>sync_on_lock_cancel</literal> is set to never, because asynchronous journal commit is disabled by default.</para>
+      <para>When asynchronous journal commit is enabled (<literal>sync_journal=0</literal>), <literal>sync_on_lock_cancel</literal> is automatically set to always, if it was previously set to never.</para>
+      <para>Similarly, when asynchronous journal commit is disabled, (<literal>sync_journal=1</literal>), <literal>sync_on_lock_cancel</literal> is enforced to never.</para>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.9 <literal>mballoc</literal> History</title>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/ldiskfs/sda/mb_history</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>Multi-Block-Allocate (<literal>mballoc</literal>), enables Lustre to ask <literal>ldiskfs</literal> to allocate multiple blocks with a single request to the block allocator. Typically, an <literal>ldiskfs</literal> file system allocates only one block per time. Each <literal>mballoc</literal>-enabled partition has this file. This is sample output:</para>
+      <screen>pid  inode   goal            result          found   grps    cr      \   merge   tail    broken
+2838       139267  17/12288/1      17/12288/1      1       0       0       \   M       1       8192
+2838       139267  17/12289/1      17/12289/1      1       0       0       \   M       0       0
+2838       139267  17/12290/1      17/12290/1      1       0       0       \   M       1       2
+2838       24577   3/12288/1       3/12288/1       1       0       0       \   M       1       8192
+2838       24578   3/12288/1       3/771/1         1       1       1       \           0       0
+2838       32769   4/12288/1       4/12288/1       1       0       0       \   M       1       8192
+2838       32770   4/12288/1       4/12289/1       13      1       1       \           0       0
+2838       32771   4/12288/1       5/771/1         26      2       1       \           0       0
+2838       32772   4/12288/1       5/896/1         31      2       1       \           1       128
+2838       32773   4/12288/1       5/897/1         31      2       1       \           0       0
+2828       32774   4/12288/1       5/898/1         31      2       1       \           1       2
+2838       32775   4/12288/1       5/899/1         31      2       1       \           0       0
+2838       32776   4/12288/1       5/900/1         31      2       1       \           1       4
+2838       32777   4/12288/1       5/901/1         31      2       1       \           0       0
+2838       32778   4/12288/1       5/902/1         31      2       1       \           1       2</screen>
+      <para>The parameters are described below:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Parameter</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>pid</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Process that made the allocation.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>inode</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>inode number allocated blocks</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>goal</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Initial request that came to <literal>mballoc</literal> (group/block-in-group/number-of-blocks)</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>result</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>What <literal>mballoc</literal> actually found for this request.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>found</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of free chunks <literal>mballoc</literal> found and measured before the final decision.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>grps</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of groups <literal>mballoc</literal> scanned to satisfy the request.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>cr</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Stage at which <literal>mballoc</literal> found the result:</para>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">0</emphasis> - best in terms of resource allocation. The request was 1MB or larger and was satisfied directly via the kernel buddy allocator.</para>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">1</emphasis> - regular stage (good at resource consumption)</para>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">2</emphasis> - fs is quite fragmented (not that bad at resource consumption)</para>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">3</emphasis> - fs is very fragmented (worst at resource consumption)</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>queue</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Total bytes in active/queued sends.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>merge</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Whether the request hit the goal. This is good as extents code can now merge new blocks to existing extent, eliminating the need for extents tree growth.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>tail</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Number of blocks left free after the allocation breaks large free chunks.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>broken</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>How large the broken chunk was.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+      <para>Most customers are probably interested in found/cr. If cr is 0 1 and found is less than 100, then <literal>mballoc</literal> is doing quite well.</para>
+      <para>Also, number-of-blocks-in-request (third number in the goal triple) can tell the number of blocks requested by the <literal>obdfilter</literal>. If the <literal>obdfilter</literal> is doing a lot of small requests (just few blocks), then either the client is processing input/output to a lot of small files, or something may be wrong with the client (because it is better if client sends large input/output requests). This can be investigated with the OSC <literal>rpc_stats</literal> or OST <literal>brw_stats</literal> mentioned above.</para>
+      <para>Number of groups scanned (<literal>grps</literal> column) should be small. If it reaches a few dozen often, then either your disk file system is pretty fragmented or <literal>mballoc</literal> is doing something wrong in the group selection part.</para>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.10 <literal>mballoc3</literal> Tunables</title>
+      <para>Lustre version 1.6.1 and later includes <literal>mballoc3</literal>, which was built on top of <literal>mballoc2</literal>. By default, mballoc3 is enabled, and adds these features:</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para> Pre-allocation for single files (helps to resist fragmentation)</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para> Pre-allocation for a group of files (helps to pack small files into large, contiguous chunks)</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para> Stream allocation (helps to decrease the seek rate)</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>The following <literal>mballoc3</literal> tunables are available:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Field</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>stats</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Enables/disables the collection of statistics. Collected statistics can be found</para>
+                <para>in <literal>/proc/fs/ldiskfs2/&lt;dev&gt;/mb_history</literal>.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">max_to_scan</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Maximum number of free chunks that <literal>mballoc</literal> finds before a final decision to avoid livelock.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">min_to_scan</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Minimum number of free chunks that <literal>mballoc</literal> finds before a final decision. This is useful for a very small request, to resist fragmentation of big free chunks.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">order2_req</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>For requests equal to 2^N (where N &gt;= <literal>order2_req</literal>), a very fast search via buddy structures is used.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">stream_req</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Requests smaller or equal to this value are packed together to form large write I/Os.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+      <para>The following tunables, providing more control over allocation policy, will be available in the next version:</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <thead>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Field</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </thead>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                    <literal>stats</literal>
+                  </emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Enables/disables the collection of statistics. Collected statistics can be found in <literal>/proc/fs/ldiskfs2/&lt;dev&gt;/mb_history</literal>.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">max_to_scan</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Maximum number of free chunks that <literal>mballoc</literal> finds before a final decision to avoid livelock.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">min_to_scan</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>Minimum number of free chunks that <literal>mballoc</literal> finds before a final decision. This is useful for a very small request, to resist fragmentation of big free chunks.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">order2_req</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>For requests equal to 2^N (where N &gt;= <literal>order2_req</literal>), a very fast search via buddy structures is used.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">small_req</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry morerows="1">
+                <para>All requests are divided into 3 categories:</para>
+                <para>&lt; small_req (packed together to form large, aggregated requests)</para>
+                <para>&lt; large_req (allocated mostly in linearly)</para>
+                <para>&gt; large_req (very large requests so the arm seek does not matter)</para>
+                <para>The idea is that we try to pack small requests to form large requests, and then place all large requests (including compound from the small ones) close to one another, causing as few arm seeks as possible.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">large_req</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">prealloc_table</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>The amount of space to preallocate depends on the current file size. The idea is that for small files we do not need 1 MB preallocations and for large files, 1 MB preallocations are not large enough; it is better to preallocate 4 MB.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <literal>
+                    <emphasis role="bold">group_prealloc</emphasis>
+                  </literal></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>The amount of space preallocated for small requests to be grouped.</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+    </section>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.2.11 Locking</title>
+      <para><literal>
+          <emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/ldlm/ldlm/namespaces/&lt;OSC name|MDC name&gt;/lru_size</emphasis>
+        </literal></para>
+      <para>The <literal>lru_size</literal> parameter is used to control the number of client-side locks in an LRU queue. LRU size is dynamic, based on load. This optimizes the number of locks available to nodes that have different workloads (e.g., login/build nodes vs. compute nodes vs. backup nodes).</para>
+      <para>The total number of locks available is a function of the server&apos;s RAM. The default limit is 50 locks/1 MB of RAM. If there is too much memory pressure, then the LRU size is shrunk. The number of locks on the server is limited to {number of OST/MDT on node} * {number of clients} * {client lru_size}.</para>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>To enable automatic LRU sizing, set the <literal>lru_size</literal> parameter to 0. In this case, the <literal>lru_size</literal> parameter shows the current number of locks being used on the export. (In Lustre 1.6.5.1 and later, LRU sizing is enabled, by default.)</para>
+        </listitem>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>To specify a maximum number of locks, set the lru_size parameter to a value &gt; 0 (former numbers are okay, 100 * CPU_NR). We recommend that you only increase the LRU size on a few login nodes where users access the file system interactively.</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <para>To clear the LRU on a single client, and as a result flush client cache, without changing the <literal>lru_size</literal> value:</para>
+      <screen>$ lctl set_param ldlm.namespaces.&lt;osc_name|mdc_name&gt;.lru_size=clear</screen>
+      <para>If you shrink the LRU size below the number of existing unused locks, then the unused locks are canceled immediately. Use echo clear to cancel all locks without changing the value.</para>
+      <note>
+        <para>Currently, the lru_size parameter can only be set temporarily with <literal>lctl set_param</literal>; it cannot be set permanently.</para>
+      </note>
+      <para>To disable LRU sizing, run this command on the Lustre clients:</para>
+      <screen>$ lctl set_param ldlm.namespaces.*osc*.lru_size=$((NR_CPU*100))</screen>
+      <para>Replace <literal>NR_CPU</literal> value with the number of CPUs on the node.</para>
+      <para>To determine the number of locks being granted:</para>
+      <screen>$ lctl get_param ldlm.namespaces.*.pool.limit</screen>
+    </section>
+    <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_87260">
+      <title>31.2.12 Setting MDS and OSS Thread Counts</title>
+      <para>MDS and OSS thread counts (minimum and maximum) can be set via the <literal>{min,max}_thread_count tunable</literal>. For each service, a new <literal>/proc/fs/lustre/{service}/*/thread_{min,max,started}</literal> entry is created. The tunable, <literal>{service}.thread_{min,max,started}</literal>, can be used to set the minimum and maximum thread counts or get the current number of running threads for the following services.</para>
+      <informaltable frame="all">
+        <tgroup cols="2">
+          <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
+          <tbody>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">Service</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para> <emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> mdt.MDS.mds</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>normal metadata ops</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> mdt.MDS.mds_readpage</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>metadata readdir</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> mdt.MDS.mds_setattr</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>metadata setattr</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> ost.OSS.ost</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>normal data</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> ost.OSS.ost_io</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>bulk data IO</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> ost.OSS.ost_create</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>OST object pre-creation service</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> ldlm.services.ldlm_canceld</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>DLM lock cancel</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+            <row>
+              <entry>
+                <literal>
+                  <para> ldlm.services.ldlm_cbd</para>
+                </literal>
+              </entry>
+              <entry>
+                <para>DLM lock grant</para>
+              </entry>
+            </row>
+          </tbody>
+        </tgroup>
+      </informaltable>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>To temporarily set this tunable, run:</para>
+          <screen># lctl {get,set}_param {service}.thread_{min,max,started} </screen>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>To permanently set this tunable, run:</para>
+          <screen># lctl conf_param {service}.thread_{min,max,started} </screen>
+          <para>The following examples show how to set thread counts and get the number of running threads for the ost_io service.</para>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>To get the number of running threads, run:</para>
+          <screen># lctl get_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_started</screen>
+          <para>The command output will be similar to this:</para>
+          <screen>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_started=128</screen>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para>To set the maximum number of threads (512), run:</para>
+          <screen># lctl get_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max</screen>
+          <para>The command output will be:</para>
+          <screen>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=512</screen>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para> To set the maximum thread count to 256 instead of 512 (to avoid overloading the storage or for an array with requests), run:</para>
+          <screen># lctl set_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=256</screen>
+          <para>The command output will be:</para>
+          <screen>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=256</screen>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <itemizedlist>
+        <listitem>
+          <para> To check if the new <literal>threads_max</literal> setting is active, run:</para>
+          <screen># lctl get_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max</screen>
+          <para>The command output will be similar to this:</para>
+          <screen>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=256</screen>
+        </listitem>
+      </itemizedlist>
+      <note>
+        <para>Currently, the maximum thread count setting is advisory because Lustre does not reduce the number of service threads in use, even if that number exceeds the <literal>threads_max</literal> value. Lustre does not stop service threads once they are started.</para>
+      </note>
+    </section>
+  </section>
+  <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_83523">
+    <title>31.3 Debug</title>
+    <para><literal>
+        <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/debug</emphasis>
+      </literal></para>
+    <para>By default, Lustre generates a detailed log of all operations to aid in debugging. The level of debugging can affect the performance or speed you achieve with Lustre. Therefore, it is useful to reduce this overhead by turning down the debug level<footnote>
+        <para>This controls the level of Lustre debugging kept in the internal log buffer. It does not alter the level of debugging that goes to syslog.</para>
+      </footnote> to improve performance. Raise the debug level when you need to collect the logs for debugging problems. The debugging mask can be set with &quot;symbolic names&quot; instead of the numerical values that were used in prior releases. The new symbolic format is shown in the examples below.</para>
+    <note>
+      <para>All of the commands below must be run as root; note the <literal>#</literal> nomenclature.</para>
+    </note>
+    <para>To verify the debug level used by examining the <literal>sysctl</literal> that controls debugging, run:</para>
+    <screen># sysctl lnet.debug 
+lnet.debug = ioctl neterror warning error emerg ha config console</screen>
+    <para>To turn off debugging (except for network error debugging), run this command on all concerned nodes:</para>
+    <screen># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;neterror&quot; 
+lnet.debug = neterror</screen>
+    <para>To turn off debugging completely, run this command on all concerned nodes:</para>
+    <screen># sysctl -w lnet.debug=0 
+lnet.debug = 0</screen>
+    <para>To set an appropriate debug level for a production environment, run:</para>
+    <screen># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;warning dlmtrace error emerg ha rpctrace vfstrace&quot; 
+lnet.debug = warning dlmtrace error emerg ha rpctrace vfstrace</screen>
+    <para>The flags above collect enough high-level information to aid debugging, but they do not cause any serious performance impact.</para>
+    <para>To clear all flags and set new ones, run:</para>
+    <screen># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;warning&quot; 
+lnet.debug = warning</screen>
+    <para>To add new flags to existing ones, prefix them with a &quot;<literal>+</literal>&quot;:</para>
+    <screen># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;+neterror +ha&quot; 
+lnet.debug = +neterror +ha
+# sysctl lnet.debug 
+lnet.debug = neterror warning ha</screen>
+    <para>To remove flags, prefix them with a &quot;<literal>-</literal>&quot;:</para>
+    <screen># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;-ha&quot; 
+lnet.debug = -ha
+# sysctl lnet.debug 
+lnet.debug = neterror warning</screen>
+    <para>You can verify and change the debug level using the <literal>/proc</literal> interface in Lustre. To use the flags with <literal>/proc</literal>, run:</para>
+    <screen># cat /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
+neterror warning
+# echo &quot;+ha&quot; &gt; /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
+# cat /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
+neterror warning ha
+# echo &quot;-warning&quot; &gt; /proc/sys/lnet/debug
+# cat /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
+neterror ha</screen>
+    <para><literal>
+        <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/subsystem_debug</emphasis>
+      </literal></para>
+    <para>This controls the debug logs for subsystems (see <literal>S_*</literal> definitions).</para>
+    <para><literal>
+        <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/debug_path</emphasis>
+      </literal></para>
+    <para>This indicates the location where debugging symbols should be stored for <literal>gdb</literal>. The default is set to <literal>/r/tmp/lustre-log-localhost.localdomain</literal>.</para>
+    <para>These values can also be set via <literal>sysctl -w lnet.debug={value}</literal></para>
+    <note>
+      <para>The above entries only exist when Lustre has already been loaded.</para>
+    </note>
+    <para><literal>
+        <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/panic_on_lbug</emphasis>
+      </literal></para>
+    <para>This causes Lustre to call &apos;&apos;panic&apos;&apos; when it detects an internal problem (an <literal>LBUG</literal>); panic crashes the node. This is particularly useful when a kernel crash dump utility is configured. The crash dump is triggered when the internal inconsistency is detected by Lustre.</para>
+    <para><literal>
+        <emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/upcall</emphasis>
+      </literal></para>
+    <para>This allows you to specify the path to the binary which will be invoked when an <literal>LBUG</literal> is encountered. This binary is called with four parameters. The first one is the string &apos;&apos;<literal>LBUG</literal>&apos;&apos;. The second one is the file where the <literal>LBUG</literal> occurred. The third one is the function name. The fourth one is the line number in the file.</para>
+    <section remap="h3">
+      <title>31.3.1 RPC Information for Other OBD Devices</title>
+      <para>Some OBD devices maintain a count of the number of RPC events that they process. Sometimes these events are more specific to operations of the device, like llite, than actual raw RPC counts.</para>
+      <screen>$ find /proc/fs/lustre/ -name stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0001-osc-ce63ca00/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc-ce63ca00/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0001-osc/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/mdt/MDS/mds_readpage/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/mdt/MDS/mds_setattr/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/mdt/MDS/mds/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/mds/lustre-MDT0000/exports/ab206805-0630-6647-8543-d24265c91a3d/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/mds/lustre-MDT0000/exports/08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cbdaa0/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/mds/lustre-MDT0000/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/ldlm/services/ldlm_canceld/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/ldlm/services/ldlm_cbd/stats
+/proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ce63ca00/stats
 </screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300317" xreflabel=""/>By default, sync_on_lock_cancel is set to never, because asynchronous journal commit is disabled by default.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300592" xreflabel=""/>When asynchronous journal commit is enabled (sync_journal=0), sync_on_lock_cancel is automatically set to always, if it was previously set to never.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1300596" xreflabel=""/>Similarly, when asynchronous journal commit is disabled, (sync_journal=1), sync_on_lock_cancel is enforced to never.</para>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297046" xreflabel=""/>31.2.9 mballoc <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1297045" xreflabel=""/>History</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290687" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/ldiskfs/sda/mb_history</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290688" xreflabel=""/>Multi-Block-Allocate (mballoc), enables Lustre to ask ldiskfs to allocate multiple blocks with a single request to the block allocator. Typically, an ldiskfs file system allocates only one block per time. Each mballoc-enabled partition has this file. This is sample output:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290689" xreflabel=""/>pid  inode   goal            result          found   grps    cr      \   me\
-rge   tail    broken
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290690" xreflabel=""/>2838       139267  17/12288/1      17/12288/1      1       0       0       \
-\   M       1       8192
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290691" xreflabel=""/>2838       139267  17/12289/1      17/12289/1      1       0       0       \
-\   M       0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290692" xreflabel=""/>2838       139267  17/12290/1      17/12290/1      1       0       0       \
-\   M       1       2
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290693" xreflabel=""/>2838       24577   3/12288/1       3/12288/1       1       0       0       \
-\   M       1       8192
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290694" xreflabel=""/>2838       24578   3/12288/1       3/771/1         1       1       1       \
-\           0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290695" xreflabel=""/>2838       32769   4/12288/1       4/12288/1       1       0       0       \
-\   M       1       8192
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290696" xreflabel=""/>2838       32770   4/12288/1       4/12289/1       13      1       1       \
-\           0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290697" xreflabel=""/>2838       32771   4/12288/1       5/771/1         26      2       1       \
-\           0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290698" xreflabel=""/>2838       32772   4/12288/1       5/896/1         31      2       1       \
-\           1       128
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290699" xreflabel=""/>2838       32773   4/12288/1       5/897/1         31      2       1       \
-\           0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290700" xreflabel=""/>2828       32774   4/12288/1       5/898/1         31      2       1       \
-\           1       2
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290701" xreflabel=""/>2838       32775   4/12288/1       5/899/1         31      2       1       \
-\           0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290702" xreflabel=""/>2838       32776   4/12288/1       5/900/1         31      2       1       \
-\           1       4
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290703" xreflabel=""/>2838       32777   4/12288/1       5/901/1         31      2       1       \
-\           0       0
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290704" xreflabel=""/>2838       32778   4/12288/1       5/902/1         31      2       1       \
-\           1       2
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.3.1.1 Interpreting OST Statistics</title>
+        <note>
+          <para>See also <xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438219_84890"/> (llobdstat) and <xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438273_80593"/> (CollectL).</para>
+        </note>
+        <para>The OST .../stats files can be used to track client statistics (client activity) for each OST. It is possible to get a periodic dump of values from these file (for example, every 10 seconds), that show the RPC rates (similar to iostat) by using the <literal>llstat.pl</literal> tool:</para>
+        <screen># llstat /proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc/stats 
+/usr/bin/llstat: STATS on 09/14/07 /proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc/stats on 192.168.10.34@tcp
+snapshot_time                      1189732762.835363
+ost_create                 1
+ost_get_info                       1
+ost_connect                        1
+ost_set_info                       1
+obd_ping                   212</screen>
+        <para>To clear the statistics, give the <literal>-c</literal> option to <literal>llstat.pl</literal>. To specify how frequently the statistics should be cleared (in seconds), use an integer for the <literal>-i</literal> option. This is sample output with <literal>-c</literal> and <literal>-i10</literal> options used, providing statistics every 10s):</para>
+        <screen>$ llstat -c -i10 /proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats
+/usr/bin/llstat: STATS on 06/06/07 /proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/ stats on 192.168.16.35@tcp
+snapshot_time                              1181074093.276072
+/proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats @ 1181074103.284895
+Name               Cur.Count       Cur.Rate        #Events Unit            \last               min             avg             max             stddev
+req_waittime       8               0               8       [usec]          2078\               34              259.75          868             317.49
+req_qdepth 8               0               8       [reqs]          1\          0               0.12            1               0.35
+req_active 8               0               8       [reqs]          11\                 1               1.38            2               0.52
+reqbuf_avail       8               0               8       [bufs]          511\                63              63.88           64              0.35
+ost_write  8               0               8       [bytes]         1697677\    72914           212209.62       387579          91874.29
+/proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats @ 1181074113.290180
+Name               Cur.Count       Cur.Rate        #Events Unit            \last               min             avg             max             stddev
+req_waittime       31              3               39      [usec]          30011\              34              822.79          12245           2047.71
+req_qdepth 31              3               39      [reqs]          0\          0               0.03            1               0.16
+req_active 31              3               39      [reqs]          58\         1               1.77            3               0.74
+reqbuf_avail       31              3               39      [bufs]          1977\               63              63.79           64              0.41
+ost_write  30              3               38      [bytes]         10284679\   15019           315325.16       910694          197776.51
+/proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats @ 1181074123.325560
+Name               Cur.Count       Cur.Rate        #Events Unit            \last               min             avg             max             stddev
+req_waittime       21              2               60      [usec]          14970\              34              784.32          12245           1878.66
+req_qdepth 21              2               60      [reqs]          0\          0               0.02            1               0.13
+req_active 21              2               60      [reqs]          33\                 1               1.70            3               0.70
+reqbuf_avail       21              2               60      [bufs]          1341\               63              63.82           64              0.39
+ost_write  21              2               59      [bytes]         7648424\    15019           332725.08       910694          180397.87
 </screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290791" xreflabel=""/>The parameters are described below:</para>
+        <para>Where:</para>
         <informaltable frame="all">
           <tgroup cols="2">
             <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
             <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
             <thead>
               <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292192" xreflabel=""/>Parameter</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292194" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Parameter</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </thead>
             <tbody>
               <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292196" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">pid</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292198" xreflabel=""/>Process that made the allocation.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292200" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">inode</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292202" xreflabel=""/>inode number allocated blocks</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292204" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">goal</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292206" xreflabel=""/>Initial request that came to mballoc (group/block-in-group/number-of-blocks)</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292208" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">result</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292210" xreflabel=""/>What mballoc actually found for this request.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292212" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">found</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292214" xreflabel=""/>Number of free chunks mballoc found and measured before the final decision.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292216" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">grps</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292218" xreflabel=""/>Number of groups mballoc scanned to satisfy the request.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292220" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">cr</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292222" xreflabel=""/>Stage at which mballoc found the result:</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292223" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">0</emphasis> - best in terms of resource allocation. The request was 1MB or larger and was satisfied directly via the kernel buddy allocator.</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292224" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">1</emphasis> - regular stage (good at resource consumption)</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292225" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">2</emphasis> - fs is quite fragmented (not that bad at resource consumption)</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292226" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">3</emphasis> - fs is very fragmented (worst at resource consumption)</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292228" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">queue</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292230" xreflabel=""/>Total bytes in active/queued sends.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292232" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">merge</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292234" xreflabel=""/>Whether the request hit the goal. This is good as extents code can now merge new blocks to existing extent, eliminating the need for extents tree growth.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292236" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">tail</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292238" xreflabel=""/>Number of blocks left free after the allocation breaks large free chunks.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292240" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">broken</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292242" xreflabel=""/>How large the broken chunk was.</para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">Cur. Count</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Number of events of each type sent in the last interval (in this example, 10s)</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">Cur. Rate</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Number of events per second in the last interval</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">#Events</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Total number of such events since the system started</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                      <literal>Unit</literal>
+                    </emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Unit of measurement for that statistic (microseconds, requests, buffers)</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                      <literal>last</literal>
+                    </emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Average rate of these events (in units/event) for the last interval during which they arrived. For instance, in the above mentioned case of <literal>ost_destroy</literal> it took an average of 736 microseconds per destroy for the 400 object destroys in the previous 10 seconds.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                      <literal>min</literal>
+                    </emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Minimum rate (in units/events) since the service started</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                      <literal>avg</literal>
+                    </emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Average rate</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                      <literal>max</literal>
+                    </emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Maximum rate</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <emphasis role="bold">
+                      <literal>stddev</literal>
+                    </emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Standard deviation (not measured in all cases)</para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </tbody>
           </tgroup>
         </informaltable>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290792" xreflabel=""/>Most customers are probably interested in found/cr. If cr is 0 1 and found is less than 100, then mballoc is doing quite well.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290793" xreflabel=""/>Also, number-of-blocks-in-request (third number in the goal triple) can tell the number of blocks requested by the obdfilter. If the obdfilter is doing a lot of small requests (just few blocks), then either the client is processing input/output to a lot of small files, or something may be wrong with the client (because it is better if client sends large input/output requests). This can be investigated with the OSC rpc_stats or OST brw_stats mentioned above.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290794" xreflabel=""/>Number of groups scanned (grps column) should be small. If it reaches a few dozen often, then either your disk file system is pretty fragmented or mballoc is doing something wrong in the group selection part.</para>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290796" xreflabel=""/>31.2.10 mballoc3<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290795" xreflabel=""/> Tunables</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290800" xreflabel=""/>Lustre version 1.6.1 and later includes mballoc3, which was built on top of mballoc2. By default, mballoc3 is enabled, and adds these features:</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290801" xreflabel=""/> Pre-allocation for single files (helps to resist fragmentation)</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290802" xreflabel=""/> Pre-allocation for a group of files (helps to pack small files into large, contiguous chunks)</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290803" xreflabel=""/> Stream allocation (helps to decrease the seek rate)</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290830" xreflabel=""/>The following mballoc3 tunables are available:</para>
+        <para>The events common to all services are:</para>
         <informaltable frame="all">
           <tgroup cols="2">
             <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
             <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
             <thead>
               <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292250" xreflabel=""/>Field</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292252" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Parameter</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </thead>
             <tbody>
               <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292283" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">stats</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292285" xreflabel=""/>Enables/disables the collection of statistics. Collected statistics can be found</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292286" xreflabel=""/>in /proc/fs/ldiskfs2/&lt;dev&gt;/mb_history.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292288" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">max_to_scan</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292290" xreflabel=""/>Maximum number of free chunks that mballoc finds before a final decision to avoid livelock.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292292" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">min_to_scan</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292294" xreflabel=""/>Minimum number of free chunks that mballoc finds before a final decision. This is useful for a very small request, to resist fragmentation of big free chunks.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292296" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">order2_req</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292298" xreflabel=""/>For requests equal to 2^N (where N &gt;= order2_req), a very fast search via buddy structures is used.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292300" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">stream_req</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292302" xreflabel=""/>Requests smaller or equal to this value are packed together to form large write I/Os.</para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">req_waittime</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Amount of time a request waited in the queue before being handled by an available server thread.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">req<literal>_</literal>qdepth</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Number of requests waiting to be handled in the queue for this service.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">req_active</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Number of requests currently being handled.</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">reqbuf_avail</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Number of unsolicited lnet request buffers for this service.</para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </tbody>
           </tgroup>
         </informaltable>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290831" xreflabel=""/>The following tunables, providing more control over allocation policy, will be available in the next version:</para>
+        <para>Some service-specific events of interest are:</para>
         <informaltable frame="all">
           <tgroup cols="2">
             <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
             <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
             <thead>
               <row>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292371" xreflabel=""/>Field</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292373" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Parameter</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </thead>
             <tbody>
               <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292405" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">stats</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292407" xreflabel=""/>Enables/disables the collection of statistics. Collected statistics can be found in /proc/fs/ldiskfs2/&lt;dev&gt;/mb_history.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292409" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">max_to_scan</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292411" xreflabel=""/>Maximum number of free chunks that mballoc finds before a final decision to avoid livelock.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292413" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">min_to_scan</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292415" xreflabel=""/>Minimum number of free chunks that mballoc finds before a final decision. This is useful for a very small request, to resist fragmentation of big free chunks.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292417" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">order2_req</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292419" xreflabel=""/>For requests equal to 2^N (where N &gt;= order2_req), a very fast search via buddy structures is used.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292392" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">small_req</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry morerows="1"><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292427" xreflabel=""/>All requests are divided into 3 categories:</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292428" xreflabel=""/>&lt; small_req (packed together to form large, aggregated requests)</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292429" xreflabel=""/>&lt; large_req (allocated mostly in linearly)</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292430" xreflabel=""/>&gt; large_req (very large requests so the arm seek does not matter)</para><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292431" xreflabel=""/>The idea is that we try to pack small requests to form large requests, and then place all large requests (including compound from the small ones) close to one another, causing as few arm seeks as possible.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292437" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">large_req</emphasis></para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292449" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">prealloc_table</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292451" xreflabel=""/>The amount of space to preallocate depends on the current file size. The idea is that for small files we do not need 1 MB preallocations and for large files, 1 MB preallocations are not large enough; it is better to preallocate 4 MB.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292453" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">group_prealloc</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292455" xreflabel=""/>The amount of space preallocated for small requests to be grouped.</para></entry>
-              </row>
-            </tbody>
-          </tgroup>
-        </informaltable>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290875" xreflabel=""/>31.2.11 <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_13474" xreflabel=""/>Lo<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_marker-1290874" xreflabel=""/>cking</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290876" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/fs/lustre/ldlm/ldlm/namespaces/&lt;OSC name|MDC name&gt;/lru_size</emphasis></para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290877" xreflabel=""/>The lru_size parameter is used to control the number of client-side locks in an LRU queue. LRU size is dynamic, based on load. This optimizes the number of locks available to nodes that have different workloads (e.g., login/build nodes vs. compute nodes vs. backup nodes).</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297289" xreflabel=""/>The total number of locks available is a function of the server's RAM. The default limit is 50 locks/1 MB of RAM. If there is too much memory pressure, then the LRU size is shrunk. The number of locks on the server is limited to {number of OST/MDT on node} * {number of clients} * {client lru_size}.</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294671" xreflabel=""/> To enable automatic LRU sizing, set the lru_size parameter to 0. In this case, the lru_size parameter shows the current number of locks being used on the export. (In Lustre 1.6.5.1 and later, LRU sizing is enabled, by default.)</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294717" xreflabel=""/> To specify a maximum number of locks, set the lru_size parameter to a value &gt; 0 (former numbers are okay, 100 * CPU_NR). We recommend that you only increase the LRU size on a few login nodes where users access the file system interactively.</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290878" xreflabel=""/>To clear the LRU on a single client, and as a result flush client cache, without changing the lru_size value:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294737" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl set_param ldlm.namespaces.&lt;osc_name|mdc_name&gt;.lru_size=clear
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290880" xreflabel=""/>If you shrink the LRU size below the number of existing unused locks, then the unused locks are canceled immediately. Use echo clear to cancel all locks without changing the value.</para>
-                <note><para>Currently, the lru_size parameter can only be set temporarily with lctl set_param; it cannot be set permanently.</para></note>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294998" xreflabel=""/>To disable LRU sizing, run this command on the Lustre clients:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295001" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl set_param ldlm.namespaces.*osc*.lru_size=$((NR_CPU*100))
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1295002" xreflabel=""/>Replace NR_CPU value with the number of CPUs on the node.</para>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297273" xreflabel=""/>To determine the number of locks being granted:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297276" xreflabel=""/>$ lctl get_param ldlm.namespaces.*.pool.limit
-</screen>
-      </section>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1296246" xreflabel=""/>31.2.12 <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_87260" xreflabel=""/>Setting MDS and OSS Thread Counts</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298326" xreflabel=""/>MDS and OSS thread counts (minimum and maximum) can be set via the {min,max}_thread_count tunable. For each service, a new /proc/fs/lustre/{service}/*/thread_{min,max,started} entry is created. The tunable, {service}.thread_{min,max,started}, can be used to set the minimum and maximum thread counts or get the current number of running threads for the following services.</para>
-        <informaltable frame="all">
-          <tgroup cols="2">
-            <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-            <tbody>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298639" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Service</emphasis></para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298641" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298556" xreflabel=""/>mdt.MDS.mds</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298558" xreflabel=""/>normal metadata ops</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298560" xreflabel=""/>mdt.MDS.mds_readpage</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298562" xreflabel=""/>metadata readdir</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298564" xreflabel=""/>mdt.MDS.mds_setattr</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298566" xreflabel=""/>metadata setattr</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298581" xreflabel=""/>ost.OSS.ost</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298583" xreflabel=""/>normal data</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298585" xreflabel=""/>ost.OSS.ost_io</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298587" xreflabel=""/>bulk data IO</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298589" xreflabel=""/>ost.OSS.ost_create</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298591" xreflabel=""/>OST object pre-creation service</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298593" xreflabel=""/>ldlm.services.ldlm_canceld</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298595" xreflabel=""/>DLM lock cancel</para></entry>
-              </row>
-              <row>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298568" xreflabel=""/>ldlm.services.ldlm_cbd</para></entry>
-                <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298570" xreflabel=""/>DLM lock grant</para></entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">ldlm_enqueue</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Time it takes to enqueue a lock (this includes file open on the MDS)</para>
+                </entry>
+              </row>
+              <row>
+                <entry>
+                  <para> <literal>
+                      <emphasis role="bold">mds_reint</emphasis>
+                    </literal></para>
+                </entry>
+                <entry>
+                  <para>Time it takes to process an MDS modification record (includes create, <literal>mkdir</literal>, <literal>unlink</literal>, <literal>rename</literal> and <literal>setattr</literal>)</para>
+                </entry>
               </row>
             </tbody>
           </tgroup>
         </informaltable>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299411" xreflabel=""/> To temporarily set this tunable, run:</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299412" xreflabel=""/># lctl {get,set}_param {service}.thread_{min,max,started} 
-</screen>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299413" xreflabel=""/> To permanently set this tunable, run:</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299414" xreflabel=""/># lctl conf_param {service}.thread_{min,max,started} </screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299409" xreflabel=""/>The following examples show how to set thread counts and get the number of running threads for the ost_io service.</para>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299429" xreflabel=""/> To get the number of running threads, run:</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299270" xreflabel=""/># lctl get_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_started</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299276" xreflabel=""/>The command output will be similar to this:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299282" xreflabel=""/>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_started=128
-</screen>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299257" xreflabel=""/> To set the maximum number of threads (512), run:</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299294" xreflabel=""/># lctl get_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299330" xreflabel=""/>The command output will be:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299331" xreflabel=""/>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=512
-</screen>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299306" xreflabel=""/> To set the maximum thread count to 256 instead of 512 (to avoid overloading the storage or for an array with requests), run:</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299316" xreflabel=""/># lctl set_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=256
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299352" xreflabel=""/>The command output will be:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299353" xreflabel=""/>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=256
-</screen>
-        <itemizedlist><listitem>
-            <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299368" xreflabel=""/> To check if the new threads_max setting is active, run:</para>
-          </listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299375" xreflabel=""/># lctl get_param ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max
-</screen>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299381" xreflabel=""/>The command output will be similar to this:</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1299382" xreflabel=""/>ost.OSS.ost_io.threads_max=256
-</screen>
-                <note><para>Currently, the maximum thread count setting is advisory because Lustre does not reduce the number of service threads in use, even if that number exceeds the threads_max value. Lustre does not stop service threads once they are started.</para></note>
       </section>
-    </section>
-    <section xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_83523">
-      <title>31.3 Debug</title>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290884" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/debug</emphasis></para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298213" xreflabel=""/>By default, Lustre generates a detailed log of all operations to aid in debugging. The level of debugging can affect the performance or speed you achieve with Lustre. Therefore, it is useful to reduce this overhead by turning down the debug level<footnote><para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298216" xreflabel=""/>This controls the level of Lustre debugging kept in the internal log buffer. It does not alter the level of debugging that goes to syslog.</para></footnote> to improve performance. Raise the debug level when you need to collect the logs for debugging problems. The debugging mask can be set with &quot;symbolic names&quot; instead of the numerical values that were used in prior releases. The new symbolic format is shown in the examples below.</para>
-              <note><para>All of the commands below must be run as root; note the # nomenclature.</para></note>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298218" xreflabel=""/>To verify the debug level used by examining the sysctl that controls debugging, run:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297891" xreflabel=""/># sysctl lnet.debug 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297995" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = ioctl neterror warning error emerg ha config console
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297894" xreflabel=""/>To turn off debugging (except for network error debugging), run this command on all concerned nodes:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297895" xreflabel=""/># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;neterror&quot; 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297938" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = neterror
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298239" xreflabel=""/>To turn off debugging completely, run this command on all concerned nodes:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298240" xreflabel=""/># sysctl -w lnet.debug=0 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298657" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = 0
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298237" xreflabel=""/>To set an appropriate debug level for a production environment, run:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298260" xreflabel=""/># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;warning dlmtrace error emerg ha rpctrace vfstrace&quot; 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298658" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = warning dlmtrace error emerg ha rpctrace vfstrace
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298258" xreflabel=""/>The flags above collect enough high-level information to aid debugging, but they do not cause any serious performance impact.</para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298069" xreflabel=""/>To clear all flags and set new ones, run:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297899" xreflabel=""/># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;warning&quot; 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297944" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = warning
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297902" xreflabel=""/>To add new flags to existing ones, prefix them with a &quot;+&quot;:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297903" xreflabel=""/># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;+neterror +ha&quot; 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297950" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = +neterror +ha
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297905" xreflabel=""/># sysctl lnet.debug 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297953" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = neterror warning ha
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297908" xreflabel=""/>To remove flags, prefix them with a &quot;-&quot;:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297909" xreflabel=""/># sysctl -w lnet.debug=&quot;-ha&quot; 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297962" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = -ha
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297911" xreflabel=""/># sysctl lnet.debug 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297974" xreflabel=""/>lnet.debug = neterror warning
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297914" xreflabel=""/>You can verify and change the debug level using the /proc interface in Lustre. To use the flags with /proc, run:</para>
-      <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297916" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298027" xreflabel=""/>neterror warning
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298104" xreflabel=""/># echo &quot;+ha&quot; &gt; /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298108" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298037" xreflabel=""/>neterror warning ha
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297921" xreflabel=""/># echo &quot;-warning&quot; &gt; /proc/sys/lnet/debug
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297922" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/sys/lnet/debug 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1298040" xreflabel=""/>neterror ha
-</screen>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290897" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/subsystem_debug</emphasis></para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290898" xreflabel=""/>This controls the debug logs3 for subsystems (see S_* definitions).</para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290899" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/debug_path</emphasis></para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290900" xreflabel=""/>This indicates the location where debugging symbols should be stored for gdb. The default is set to /r/tmp/lustre-log-localhost.localdomain.</para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290901" xreflabel=""/>These values can also be set via sysctl -w lnet.debug={value}</para>
-              <note><para>The above entries only exist when Lustre has already been loaded.</para></note>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294968" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/panic_on_lbug</emphasis></para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294969" xreflabel=""/>This causes Lustre to call &apos;&apos;panic&apos;&apos; when it detects an internal problem (an LBUG); panic crashes the node. This is particularly useful when a kernel crash dump utility is configured. The crash dump is triggered when the internal inconsistency is detected by Lustre.</para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294977" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">/proc/sys/lnet/upcall</emphasis></para>
-      <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1294978" xreflabel=""/>This allows you to specify the path to the binary which will be invoked when an LBUG is encountered. This binary is called with four parameters. The first one is the string &apos;&apos;LBUG&apos;&apos;. The second one is the file where the LBUG occurred. The third one is the function name. The fourth one is the line number in the file.</para>
-      <section remap="h3">
-        <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290905" xreflabel=""/>31.3.1 RPC Information for Other OBD Devices</title>
-        <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290906" xreflabel=""/>Some OBD devices maintain a count of the number of RPC events that they process. Sometimes these events are more specific to operations of the device, like llite, than actual raw RPC counts.</para>
-        <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290907" xreflabel=""/>$ find /proc/fs/lustre/ -name stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290908" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0001-osc-ce63ca00/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290909" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc-ce63ca00/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290910" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0001-osc/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290911" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290912" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/mdt/MDS/mds_readpage/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290913" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/mdt/MDS/mds_setattr/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290914" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/mdt/MDS/mds/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290915" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/mds/lustre-MDT0000/exports/ab206805-0630-6647-8543-d24265c9\
-1a3d/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290916" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/mds/lustre-MDT0000/exports/08ac6584-6c4a-3536-2c6d-b36cf9cb\
-daa0/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290917" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/mds/lustre-MDT0000/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290918" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/ldlm/services/ldlm_canceld/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290919" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/ldlm/services/ldlm_cbd/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290920" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/llite/lustre-ce63ca00/stats
-</screen>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290921" xreflabel=""/>31.3.1.1 Interpreting OST Statistics</title>
-          <note><para>See also <xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438219_84890"/> (llobdstat) and <xref linend="dbdoclet.50438273_80593"/> (CollectL).</para></note>
-
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1301139" xreflabel=""/>The OST .../stats files can be used to track client statistics (client activity) for each OST. It is possible to get a periodic dump of values from these file (for example, every 10 seconds), that show the RPC rates (similar to iostat) by using the llstat.pl tool:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290922" xreflabel=""/># llstat /proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc/stats 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290923" xreflabel=""/>/usr/bin/llstat: STATS on 09/14/07 /proc/fs/lustre/osc/lustre-OST0000-osc/s\
-tats on 192.168.10.34@tcp
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290924" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time                      1189732762.835363
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290925" xreflabel=""/>ost_create                 1
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290926" xreflabel=""/>ost_get_info                       1
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290927" xreflabel=""/>ost_connect                        1
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290928" xreflabel=""/>ost_set_info                       1
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290929" xreflabel=""/>obd_ping                   212
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290930" xreflabel=""/>To clear the statistics, give the -c option to llstat.pl. To specify how frequently the statistics should be cleared (in seconds), use an integer for the -i option. This is sample output with -c and -i10 options used, providing statistics every 10s):</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290931" xreflabel=""/>$ llstat -c -i10 /proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290932" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290933" xreflabel=""/>/usr/bin/llstat: STATS on 06/06/07 /proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/ stats on\
- 192.168.16.35@tcp
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290934" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time                              1181074093.276072
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290935" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290936" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats @ 1181074103.284895
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290937" xreflabel=""/>Name               Cur.Count       Cur.Rate        #Events Unit            \
-\last               min             avg             max             stddev
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290938" xreflabel=""/>req_waittime       8               0               8       [usec]          \
-2078\               34              259.75          868             317.49
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290939" xreflabel=""/>req_qdepth 8               0               8       [reqs]          1\      \
-    0               0.12            1               0.35
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290940" xreflabel=""/>req_active 8               0               8       [reqs]          11\     \
-            1               1.38            2               0.52
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290941" xreflabel=""/>reqbuf_avail       8               0               8       [bufs]          \
-511\                63              63.88           64              0.35
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290942" xreflabel=""/>ost_write  8               0               8       [bytes]         1697677\\
-    72914           212209.62       387579          91874.29
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290943" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290944" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats @ 1181074113.290180
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290945" xreflabel=""/>Name               Cur.Count       Cur.Rate        #Events Unit            \
-\last               min             avg             max             stddev
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290946" xreflabel=""/>req_waittime       31              3               39      [usec]          \
-30011\              34              822.79          12245           2047.71
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290947" xreflabel=""/>req_qdepth 31              3               39      [reqs]          0\      \
-    0               0.03            1               0.16
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290948" xreflabel=""/>req_active 31              3               39      [reqs]          58\     \
-    1               1.77            3               0.74
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290949" xreflabel=""/>reqbuf_avail       31              3               39      [bufs]          \
-1977\               63              63.79           64              0.41
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290950" xreflabel=""/>ost_write  30              3               38      [bytes]         10284679\
-\   15019           315325.16       910694          197776.51
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290951" xreflabel=""/> 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290952" xreflabel=""/>/proc/fs/lustre/ost/OSS/ost_io/stats @ 1181074123.325560
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290953" xreflabel=""/>Name               Cur.Count       Cur.Rate        #Events Unit            \
-\last               min             avg             max             stddev
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290954" xreflabel=""/>req_waittime       21              2               60      [usec]          \
-14970\              34              784.32          12245           1878.66
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290955" xreflabel=""/>req_qdepth 21              2               60      [reqs]          0\      \
-    0               0.02            1               0.13
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290956" xreflabel=""/>req_active 21              2               60      [reqs]          33\     \
-            1               1.70            3               0.70
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290957" xreflabel=""/>reqbuf_avail       21              2               60      [bufs]          \
-1341\               63              63.82           64              0.39
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1290958" xreflabel=""/>ost_write  21              2               59      [bytes]         7648424\\
-    15019           332725.08       910694          180397.87
-</screen>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292572" xreflabel=""/>Where:</para>
-          <informaltable frame="all">
-            <tgroup cols="2">
-              <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <thead>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292580" xreflabel=""/>Parameter</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292582" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </thead>
-              <tbody>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292631" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Cur. Count</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292633" xreflabel=""/>Number of events of each type sent in the last interval (in this example, 10s)</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292635" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Cur. Rate</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292637" xreflabel=""/>Number of events per second in the last interval</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292639" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">#Events</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292641" xreflabel=""/>Total number of such events since the system started</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292643" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">Unit</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292645" xreflabel=""/>Unit of measurement for that statistic (microseconds, requests, buffers)</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292647" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">last</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292649" xreflabel=""/>Average rate of these events (in units/event) for the last interval during which they arrived. For instance, in the above mentioned case of ost_destroy it took an average of 736 microseconds per destroy for the 400 object destroys in the previous 10 seconds.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292651" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">min</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292653" xreflabel=""/>Minimum rate (in units/events) since the service started</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292655" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">avg</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292657" xreflabel=""/>Average rate</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292659" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">max</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292661" xreflabel=""/>Maximum rate</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292663" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">stddev</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292665" xreflabel=""/>Standard deviation (not measured in all cases)</para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </tbody>
-            </tgroup>
-          </informaltable>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292739" xreflabel=""/>The events common to all services are:</para>
-          <informaltable frame="all">
-            <tgroup cols="2">
-              <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <thead>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292673" xreflabel=""/>Parameter</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292675" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </thead>
-              <tbody>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292720" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">req_waittime</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292722" xreflabel=""/>Amount of time a request waited in the queue before being handled by an available server thread.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292724" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">req_qdepth</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292726" xreflabel=""/>Number of requests waiting to be handled in the queue for this service.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292728" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">req_active</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292730" xreflabel=""/>Number of requests currently being handled.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292732" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">reqbuf_avail</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292734" xreflabel=""/>Number of unsolicited lnet request buffers for this service.</para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </tbody>
-            </tgroup>
-          </informaltable>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291033" xreflabel=""/>Some service-specific events of interest are:</para>
-          <informaltable frame="all">
-            <tgroup cols="2">
-              <colspec colname="c1" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <colspec colname="c2" colwidth="50*"/>
-              <thead>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292473" xreflabel=""/>Parameter</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para><emphasis role="bold"><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292475" xreflabel=""/>Description</emphasis></para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </thead>
-              <tbody>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292507" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">ldlm_enqueue</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292509" xreflabel=""/>Time it takes to enqueue a lock (this includes file open on the MDS)</para></entry>
-                </row>
-                <row>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292511" xreflabel=""/><emphasis role="bold">mds_reint</emphasis></para></entry>
-                  <entry><para> <anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1292513" xreflabel=""/>Time it takes to process an MDS modification record (includes create, mkdir, unlink, rename and setattr)</para></entry>
-                </row>
-              </tbody>
-            </tgroup>
-          </informaltable>
-        </section>
-        <section remap="h4">
-          <title><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1291461" xreflabel=""/>31.3.1.2 Interpreting MDT Statistics</title>
-          <note><para>See also <xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438219_84890"/> (llobdstat) and <xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438273_80593"/> (CollectL).</para></note>
-          <para><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297382" xreflabel=""/>The MDT .../stats files can be used to track MDT statistics for the MDS. Here is sample output for an MDT stats file:</para>
-          <screen><anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297438" xreflabel=""/># cat /proc/fs/lustre/mds/*-MDT0000/stats 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297466" xreflabel=""/>snapshot_time                              1244832003.676892 secs.usecs 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297469" xreflabel=""/>open                                       2 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297472" xreflabel=""/>close                                      1 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297475" xreflabel=""/>getxattr                           3 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297478" xreflabel=""/>process_config                             1 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297481" xreflabel=""/>connect                                    2 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297484" xreflabel=""/>disconnect                         2 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297487" xreflabel=""/>statfs                                     3 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297490" xreflabel=""/>setattr                                    1 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297493" xreflabel=""/>getattr                                    3 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297496" xreflabel=""/>llog_init                          6 samples [reqs] 
-<anchor xml:id="dbdoclet.50438271_pgfId-1297499" xreflabel=""/>notify                                     16 samples [reqs]
+      <section remap="h4">
+        <title>31.3.1.2 Interpreting MDT Statistics</title>
+        <note>
+          <para>See also <xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438219_84890"/> (llobdstat) and <xref linkend="dbdoclet.50438273_80593"/> (CollectL).</para>
+        </note>
+        <para>The MDT .../stats files can be used to track MDT statistics for the MDS. Here is sample output for an MDT stats file:</para>
+        <screen># cat /proc/fs/lustre/mds/*-MDT0000/stats 
+snapshot_time                              1244832003.676892 secs.usecs 
+open                                       2 samples [reqs] 
+close                                      1 samples [reqs] 
+getxattr                           3 samples [reqs] 
+process_config                             1 samples [reqs] 
+connect                                    2 samples [reqs] 
+disconnect                         2 samples [reqs] 
+statfs                                     3 samples [reqs] 
+setattr                                    1 samples [reqs] 
+getattr                                    3 samples [reqs] 
+llog_init                          6 samples [reqs] 
+notify                                     16 samples [reqs]
 </screen>
-        </section>
       </section>
     </section>
+  </section>
 </chapter>