Provided by: intel-cmt-cat_4.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       pqos, pqos-msr, pqos-os - Intel(R) Resource Director Technology/AMD PQoS monitoring and control tool

SYNOPSIS

       pqos [OPTIONS]...

DESCRIPTION

       Intel(R)  Resource  Director  Technology/AMD  PQoS  is  designed  to monitor and manage cpu resources and
       improve performance of applications and virtual machines.

       Intel(R) Resource Director Technology/AMD PQoS includes monitoring and control  technologies.  Monitoring
       technologies include CMT (Cache Monitoring Technology), which monitors occupancy of last level cache, and
       MBM  (Memory  Bandwidth Monitoring).  Control technologies include CAT (Cache Allocation Technology), CDP
       (Code Data Prioritization) and MBA (Memory Bandwidth Allocation).

       pqos supports CMT and MBM on a per core or hardware thread  basis.  MBM  supports  two  types  of  events
       reporting local and remote memory bandwidth.
       pqos-msr  and  pqos-os  are  simple  pqos  wrapper scripts that automatically select the MSR or OS/Kernel
       library interface to program the technologies.
       Please see the -I option below for more information.

       For hardware information please refer  to  the  README  located  on:  https://github.com/intel/intel-cmt-
       cat/blob/master/README

OPTIONS

       pqos options are as follow:

       -h, --help
              show help

       -v, --verbose
              verbose mode

       -V, --super-verbose
              super-verbose mode

       -l FILE, --log-file=FILE
              log messages into selected log FILE

       -s, --show
              show the current allocation and monitoring configuration

       -d, --display
              display supported Intel(R) Resource Director Technology/AMD PQoS capabilities

       -D, --display-verbose
              display supported Intel(R) Resource Director Technology/AMD PQoS capabilities in verbose mode

       -f FILE, --config-file=FILE
              load commands from selected configuration FILE

       -e CLASSDEF, --alloc-class=CLASSDEF
              define the allocation classes on all CPU sockets. CLASSDEF format is "TYPE:ID=DEFINITION;...".
              define      classes      for      selected      CPU      resources.     CLASSDEF     format     is
              "TYPE[@RESOURCE_ID]:ID=DEFINITION;...".
              For CAT, TYPE is "llc" for the last level cache (aka l3) and "l2" for level 2 cache, ID is a  CLOS
              number and DEFINITION is a bitmask.
              For  MBA,  TYPE  is  "mba",  ID  is  a  CLOS  number  and  DEFINITION is a value between 1 and 100
              representing the percentage of available memory bandwidth.
              For MBA CTRL, TYPE is "mba_max", ID is a CLOS number and DEFINITION is a  value  representing  the
              requested memory bandwidth specified in MBps.
              RESOURCE_ID  is  a  unique  number  that  can  represent  a  socket or l2/l3 cache identifier. The
              RESOURCE_ID for each logical CPU can be found using "pqos -s"
              Note: When L2/L3 CDP is on, ID can be postfixed with 'D' for data or 'C' for code.
              Note: L2/L3 CDP is available on selected CPUs only.
              Note: MBA CTRL is supported only by the OS interface and requires Linux and kernel version 4.18 or
              newer.
              Some examples:
                     "-e llc:0=0xffff;llc:1=0x00ff"
                     "-e llc@0-1:2=0xff00;l2:2=0x3f;l2@2:1=0xf"
                     "-e llc:0d=0xfff;llc:0c=0xfff00"
                     "-e l2:0d=0xf;l2:0c=0xc"
                     "-e mba:1=30;mba@1:3=80"
                     "-e mba_max:1=6000;mba_max@1:3=10000"
              Note:
                     "-e l2:2=0x3f" means that COS2 for all L2 cache clusters is changed to 0x3f.
                     "-e l2@2:1=0xf" means that COS1 for L2 cache cluster 2 is changed to 0xf.
                     "-e mba:1=30" means that COS1, on all sockets, can utilize up to 30%  of  available  memory
                     bandwidth.
                     "-e  mba_max:1=6000" means that COS1, on all sockets, can utilize up to 6000 MBps of memory
                     bandwidth.

       -a CLASS2ID, --alloc-assoc=CLASS2ID
              associate allocation classes with cores or processes. CLASS2ID format  is  "TYPE:ID=CORE_LIST;..."
              or "TYPE:ID=TASK_LIST;...".
              For  COS  association  required  for  CAT  or  MBA,  TYPE  is  "cos",  "llc", "core" (for COS-core
              association) or "pid" (for COS-process association) and ID is a class number. CORE_LIST  is  comma
              or dash separated list of cores. TASK_LIST is comma or dash separated list of process/task ID's.
              For example:
                     "-a  cos:0=0,2,4,6-10;cos:1=1;"  associates  cores 0, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 with CAT class 0
                     and core 1 with class 1.
                     "-a llc:0=0,2,4,6-10;llc:1=1;" associates cores 0, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 with  CAT  class  0
                     and core 1 with class 1.
                     "-a  core:0=0,2,4,6-10;core:1=1;" associates cores 0, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 with CAT class 0
                     and core 1 with class 1.
                     "-I -a pid:0=3543,7643,4556;pid:1=7644;" associates process ID 3543, 7643,  4556  with  CAT
                     class 0 and process ID 7644 with class 1.
              Notes:
                     "llc" TYPE label is considered deprecated, please use "cos" or "core" instead.
                     The -I option must be used for PID association.

       -R [CONFIG[,CONFIG]], --alloc-reset[=CONFIG[,CONFIG]]
              reset  allocation  setting  (L3  CAT,  L2  CAT,  MBA) and reconfigure L3 CDP. CONFIG is one of the
              following options:
              l3cdp-on  sets L3 CDP on
              l3cdp-off sets L3 CDP off
              l3cdp-any keeps current L3 CDP setting (default)
              l2cdp-on  sets L2 CDP on
              l2cdp-off sets L2 CDP off
              l2cdp-any keeps current L2 CDP setting (default)
              mbaCtrl-on     sets MBA CTRL on
              mbaCtrl-off    sets MBA CTRL off
              mbaCtrl-any    keeps current MBA CTRL setting (default)

       -m EVTCORES, --mon-core=EVTCORES
              select the cores and events for monitoring, EVTCORES  format  is  "EVENT:CORE_LIST".  Valid  EVENT
              settings are:
              - "llc" for CMT (LLC occupancy)
              - "mbr" for MBR (remote memory bandwidth)
              - "mbl" for MBL (local memory bandwidth)
              - "mbt" for MBT (total memory bandwidth)
              - "all" or ""  for all detected event types (except MBT)
              CORE_LIST is comma or dash separated list of cores.
              Example "-m all:0,2,4-10;llc:1,3;mbr:11-12".
              Core statistics can be grouped by enclosing the core list in square brackets.
              Example "-m llc:[0-3];all:[4,5,6];mbr:[0-3],7,8".

       -p [EVTPIDS], --mon-pid[=EVTPIDS]
              select  top  10  most  active (CPU utilizing) process ids to monitor or select the process ids and
              events to monitor, EVTPIDS format is "EVENT:PID_LIST".
              See -m option for valid EVENT settings. PID_LIST is comma separated list of process ids.
              Examples:
                     "-p llc:22,25673"
                     "-p all:892,4588-4592"

              Process's IDs can be grouped by enclosing them in square brackets.
              Examples:
                     "-p llc:[22,25673]"
                     "-p all:892,[4588-4592]"

              Note:
                     Requires Linux and kernel versions 4.10 and newer.
                     The -I option must be used for PID monitoring.
                     It is not possible to track both processes and cores at the same time.

       -T, --mon-top
              enable top like monitoring output sorted by highest LLC occupancy

       -o FILE, --mon-file FILE
              select output FILE to store monitored data in, the default is 'stdout'

       -u TYPE, --mon-file-type=TYPE
              select the output format TYPE for monitored data. Supported TYPE settings are:  "text"  (default),
              "xml" and "csv".

       -i INTERVAL, --mon-interval=INTERVAL
              define monitoring sampling INTERVAL in 100ms units, 1=100ms, default 10=10x100ms=1s

       -t SECONDS, --mon-time=SECONDS
              define  monitoring time in seconds, use 'inf' or 'infinite' for infinite monitoring. Use CTRL+C to
              stop monitoring at any time.

       -r, --mon-reset
              reset monitoring and use all RMID's and cores in the system

       --disable-mon-ipc
              Disable IPC monitoring

       --disable-mon-llc_miss
              Disable LLC misses monitoring

       -H, --profile-list
              list supported allocation profiles

       -c PROFILE, --profile-set=PROFILE
              select a PROFILE from predefined allocation classes, use -H to list available profiles

       -I, --iface-os
              set the library interface to use the kernel implementation. If not set the default  implementation
              is to program the MSR's directly.

       --iface=INTERFACE
              set  the library interface to automatically detected one ('auto'), MSR ('msr') or kernel interface
              ('os').  INTERFACE can be set to either 'auto' (default), 'msr' or 'os'. If automatic detection is
              selected ('auto'), it:
              1) Takes RDT_IFACE environment variable into account if this variable is set
              2) Selects OS interface if the kernel interface is supported
              3) Selects MSR interface otherwise

NOTES

       CMT, MBM and CAT are configured using Model Specific Registers (MSRs). The pqos software executes in user
       space, and access to the MSRs is obtained through a standard Linux* interface. The msr file interface  is
       protected  and  requires  root  privileges.   The msr driver might not be auto-loaded and on some modular
       kernels the driver may need to be loaded manually:

       For Linux:
       sudo modprobe msr

       For FreeBSD:
       sudo kldload cpuctl

       Interface enforcement:
       If you require system wide interface enforcement you can do so by  setting  the  "RDT_IFACE"  environment
       variable.

SEE ALSO

       msr(4)

AUTHOR

       pqos was written by Tomasz Kantecki <tomasz.kantecki@intel.com>, Marcel Cornu <marcel.d.cornu@intel.com>,
       Aaron Hetherington <aaron.hetherington@intel.com>

       This  is  free  software;  see  the  source  for  copying conditions.  There is NO warranty; not even for
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

                                                  May 08, 2020                                           PQOS(8)