|  | pagemap, from the userspace perspective | 
|  | --------------------------------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | pagemap is a new (as of 2.6.25) set of interfaces in the kernel that allow | 
|  | userspace programs to examine the page tables and related information by | 
|  | reading files in /proc. | 
|  |  | 
|  | There are three components to pagemap: | 
|  |  | 
|  | * /proc/pid/pagemap.  This file lets a userspace process find out which | 
|  | physical frame each virtual page is mapped to.  It contains one 64-bit | 
|  | value for each virtual page, containing the following data (from | 
|  | fs/proc/task_mmu.c, above pagemap_read): | 
|  |  | 
|  | * Bits 0-54  page frame number (PFN) if present | 
|  | * Bits 0-4   swap type if swapped | 
|  | * Bits 5-54  swap offset if swapped | 
|  | * Bits 55-60 page shift (page size = 1<<page shift) | 
|  | * Bit  61    page is file-page or shared-anon | 
|  | * Bit  62    page swapped | 
|  | * Bit  63    page present | 
|  |  | 
|  | If the page is not present but in swap, then the PFN contains an | 
|  | encoding of the swap file number and the page's offset into the | 
|  | swap. Unmapped pages return a null PFN. This allows determining | 
|  | precisely which pages are mapped (or in swap) and comparing mapped | 
|  | pages between processes. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Efficient users of this interface will use /proc/pid/maps to | 
|  | determine which areas of memory are actually mapped and llseek to | 
|  | skip over unmapped regions. | 
|  |  | 
|  | * /proc/kpagecount.  This file contains a 64-bit count of the number of | 
|  | times each page is mapped, indexed by PFN. | 
|  |  | 
|  | * /proc/kpageflags.  This file contains a 64-bit set of flags for each | 
|  | page, indexed by PFN. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The flags are (from fs/proc/page.c, above kpageflags_read): | 
|  |  | 
|  | 0. LOCKED | 
|  | 1. ERROR | 
|  | 2. REFERENCED | 
|  | 3. UPTODATE | 
|  | 4. DIRTY | 
|  | 5. LRU | 
|  | 6. ACTIVE | 
|  | 7. SLAB | 
|  | 8. WRITEBACK | 
|  | 9. RECLAIM | 
|  | 10. BUDDY | 
|  | 11. MMAP | 
|  | 12. ANON | 
|  | 13. SWAPCACHE | 
|  | 14. SWAPBACKED | 
|  | 15. COMPOUND_HEAD | 
|  | 16. COMPOUND_TAIL | 
|  | 16. HUGE | 
|  | 18. UNEVICTABLE | 
|  | 19. HWPOISON | 
|  | 20. NOPAGE | 
|  | 21. KSM | 
|  | 22. THP | 
|  |  | 
|  | Short descriptions to the page flags: | 
|  |  | 
|  | 0. LOCKED | 
|  | page is being locked for exclusive access, eg. by undergoing read/write IO | 
|  |  | 
|  | 7. SLAB | 
|  | page is managed by the SLAB/SLOB/SLUB/SLQB kernel memory allocator | 
|  | When compound page is used, SLUB/SLQB will only set this flag on the head | 
|  | page; SLOB will not flag it at all. | 
|  |  | 
|  | 10. BUDDY | 
|  | a free memory block managed by the buddy system allocator | 
|  | The buddy system organizes free memory in blocks of various orders. | 
|  | An order N block has 2^N physically contiguous pages, with the BUDDY flag | 
|  | set for and _only_ for the first page. | 
|  |  | 
|  | 15. COMPOUND_HEAD | 
|  | 16. COMPOUND_TAIL | 
|  | A compound page with order N consists of 2^N physically contiguous pages. | 
|  | A compound page with order 2 takes the form of "HTTT", where H donates its | 
|  | head page and T donates its tail page(s).  The major consumers of compound | 
|  | pages are hugeTLB pages (Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt), the SLUB etc. | 
|  | memory allocators and various device drivers. However in this interface, | 
|  | only huge/giga pages are made visible to end users. | 
|  | 17. HUGE | 
|  | this is an integral part of a HugeTLB page | 
|  |  | 
|  | 19. HWPOISON | 
|  | hardware detected memory corruption on this page: don't touch the data! | 
|  |  | 
|  | 20. NOPAGE | 
|  | no page frame exists at the requested address | 
|  |  | 
|  | 21. KSM | 
|  | identical memory pages dynamically shared between one or more processes | 
|  |  | 
|  | 22. THP | 
|  | contiguous pages which construct transparent hugepages | 
|  |  | 
|  | [IO related page flags] | 
|  | 1. ERROR     IO error occurred | 
|  | 3. UPTODATE  page has up-to-date data | 
|  | ie. for file backed page: (in-memory data revision >= on-disk one) | 
|  | 4. DIRTY     page has been written to, hence contains new data | 
|  | ie. for file backed page: (in-memory data revision >  on-disk one) | 
|  | 8. WRITEBACK page is being synced to disk | 
|  |  | 
|  | [LRU related page flags] | 
|  | 5. LRU         page is in one of the LRU lists | 
|  | 6. ACTIVE      page is in the active LRU list | 
|  | 18. UNEVICTABLE page is in the unevictable (non-)LRU list | 
|  | It is somehow pinned and not a candidate for LRU page reclaims, | 
|  | eg. ramfs pages, shmctl(SHM_LOCK) and mlock() memory segments | 
|  | 2. REFERENCED  page has been referenced since last LRU list enqueue/requeue | 
|  | 9. RECLAIM     page will be reclaimed soon after its pageout IO completed | 
|  | 11. MMAP        a memory mapped page | 
|  | 12. ANON        a memory mapped page that is not part of a file | 
|  | 13. SWAPCACHE   page is mapped to swap space, ie. has an associated swap entry | 
|  | 14. SWAPBACKED  page is backed by swap/RAM | 
|  |  | 
|  | The page-types tool in this directory can be used to query the above flags. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Using pagemap to do something useful: | 
|  |  | 
|  | The general procedure for using pagemap to find out about a process' memory | 
|  | usage goes like this: | 
|  |  | 
|  | 1. Read /proc/pid/maps to determine which parts of the memory space are | 
|  | mapped to what. | 
|  | 2. Select the maps you are interested in -- all of them, or a particular | 
|  | library, or the stack or the heap, etc. | 
|  | 3. Open /proc/pid/pagemap and seek to the pages you would like to examine. | 
|  | 4. Read a u64 for each page from pagemap. | 
|  | 5. Open /proc/kpagecount and/or /proc/kpageflags.  For each PFN you just | 
|  | read, seek to that entry in the file, and read the data you want. | 
|  |  | 
|  | For example, to find the "unique set size" (USS), which is the amount of | 
|  | memory that a process is using that is not shared with any other process, | 
|  | you can go through every map in the process, find the PFNs, look those up | 
|  | in kpagecount, and tally up the number of pages that are only referenced | 
|  | once. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Other notes: | 
|  |  | 
|  | Reading from any of the files will return -EINVAL if you are not starting | 
|  | the read on an 8-byte boundary (e.g., if you seeked an odd number of bytes | 
|  | into the file), or if the size of the read is not a multiple of 8 bytes. |