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TURBOSTAT

NAME

turbostat − Report processor frequency and idle statistics

SYNOPSIS

turbostat [−v] [−M MSR#] command
turbostat
[−v] [−M MSR#] [−i interval_sec]

DESCRIPTION

turbostat reports processor topology, frequency and idle power state statistics on modern X86 processors. Either command is forked and statistics are printed upon its completion, or statistics are printed periodically.

turbostat requires that the processor supports an "invariant" TSC, plus the APERF and MPERF MSRs. turbostat will report idle cpu power state residency on processors that additionally support C-state residency counters.

Options
The -v option increases verbosity.

The -M MSR# option dumps the specified MSR, in addition to the usual frequency and idle statistics.

The -i interval_sec option prints statistics every interval_sec seconds. The default is 5 seconds.

The command parameter forks command and upon its exit, displays the statistics gathered since it was forked.

FIELD DESCRIPTIONS

pkg processor package number.
core
processor core number.
CPU
Linux CPU (logical processor) number.
%c0
percent of the interval that the CPU retired instructions.
GHz
average clock rate while the CPU was in c0 state.
TSC
average GHz that the TSC ran during the entire interval.
%c1, %c3, %c6
show the percentage residency in hardware core idle states.
%pc3, %pc6
percentage residency in hardware package idle states.

EXAMPLE

Without any parameters, turbostat prints out counters ever 5 seconds. (override interval with "-i sec" option, or specify a command for turbostat to fork).

The first row of statistics reflect the average for the entire system. Subsequent rows show per-CPU statistics.

[root@x980]# ./turbostat
core CPU %c0 GHz TSC %c1 %c3 %c6 %pc3 %pc6
0.04 1.62 3.38 0.11 0.00 99.85 0.00 95.07
0 0 0.04 1.62 3.38 0.06 0.00 99.90 0.00 95.07
0 6 0.02 1.62 3.38 0.08 0.00 99.90 0.00 95.07
1 2 0.10 1.62 3.38 0.29 0.00 99.61 0.00 95.07
1 8 0.11 1.62 3.38 0.28 0.00 99.61 0.00 95.07
2 4 0.01 1.62 3.38 0.01 0.00 99.98 0.00 95.07
2 10 0.01 1.61 3.38 0.02 0.00 99.98 0.00 95.07
8 1 0.07 1.62 3.38 0.15 0.00 99.78 0.00 95.07
8 7 0.03 1.62 3.38 0.19 0.00 99.78 0.00 95.07
9 3 0.01 1.62 3.38 0.02 0.00 99.98 0.00 95.07
9 9 0.01 1.62 3.38 0.02 0.00 99.98 0.00 95.07
10 5 0.01 1.62 3.38 0.13 0.00 99.86 0.00 95.07
10 11 0.08 1.62 3.38 0.05 0.00 99.86 0.00 95.07

VERBOSE EXAMPLE

The "-v" option adds verbosity to the output:

GenuineIntel 11 CPUID levels; family:model:stepping 0x6:2c:2 (6:44:2)
12 * 133 = 1600 MHz max efficiency
25 * 133 = 3333 MHz TSC frequency
26 * 133 = 3467 MHz max turbo 4 active cores
26 * 133 = 3467 MHz max turbo 3 active cores
27 * 133 = 3600 MHz max turbo 2 active cores
27 * 133 = 3600 MHz max turbo 1 active cores

The max efficiency frequency, a.k.a. Low Frequency Mode, is the frequency available at the minimum package voltage. The TSC frequency is the nominal maximum frequency of the processor if turbo-mode were not available. This frequency should be sustainable on all CPUs indefinitely, given nominal power and cooling. The remaining rows show what maximum turbo frequency is possible depending on the number of idle cores. Note that this information is not available on all processors.

FORK EXAMPLE

If turbostat is invoked with a command, it will fork that command and output the statistics gathered when the command exits. eg. Here a cycle soaker is run on 1 CPU (see %c0) for a few seconds until ^C while the other CPUs are mostly idle:

[root@x980 lenb]# ./turbostat cat /dev/zero > /dev/null

^Ccore CPU %c0 GHz TSC %c1 %c3 %c6 %pc3 %pc6
8.49 3.63 3.38 16.23 0.66 74.63 0.00 0.00
0 0 1.22 3.62 3.38 32.18 0.00 66.60 0.00 0.00
0 6 0.40 3.61 3.38 33.00 0.00 66.60 0.00 0.00
1 2 0.11 3.14 3.38 0.19 3.95 95.75 0.00 0.00
1 8 0.05 2.88 3.38 0.25 3.95 95.75 0.00 0.00
2 4 0.00 3.13 3.38 0.02 0.00 99.98 0.00 0.00
2 10 0.00 3.09 3.38 0.02 0.00 99.98 0.00 0.00
8 1 0.04 3.50 3.38 14.43 0.00 85.54 0.00 0.00
8 7 0.03 2.98 3.38 14.43 0.00 85.54 0.00 0.00
9 3 0.00 3.16 3.38 100.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
9 9 99.93 3.63 3.38 0.06 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
10 5 0.01 2.82 3.38 0.08 0.00 99.91 0.00 0.00
10 11 0.02 3.36 3.38 0.06 0.00 99.91 0.00 0.00
6.950866 sec

Above the cycle soaker drives cpu9 up 3.6 Ghz turbo limit while the other processors are generally in various states of idle.

Note that cpu3 is an HT sibling sharing core9 with cpu9, and thus it is unable to get to an idle state deeper than c1 while cpu9 is busy.

Note that turbostat reports average GHz of 3.61, while the arithmetic average of the GHz column above is 3.24. This is a weighted average, where the weight is %c0. ie. it is the total number of un-halted cycles elapsed per time divided by the number of CPUs.

NOTES

turbostat must be run as root.

turbostat reads hardware counters, but doesn’t write them. So it will not interfere with the OS or other programs, including multiple invocations of itself.

turbostat may work poorly on Linux-2.6.20 through 2.6.29, as acpi-cpufreq periodically cleared the APERF and MPERF in those kernels.

The APERF, MPERF MSRs are defined to count non-halted cycles. Although it is not guaranteed by the architecture, turbostat assumes that they count at TSC rate, which is true on all processors tested to date.

REFERENCES

"Intel® Turbo Boost Technology in Intel® Core™ Microarchitecture (Nehalem) Based Processors" http://download.intel.com/design/processor/applnots/320354.pdf

"Intel® 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer’s Manual Volume 3B: System Programming Guide" http://www.intel.com/products/processor/manuals/

FILES

/dev/cpu/*/msr

SEE ALSO

msr(4), vmstat(8)

AUTHORS

Written by Len Brown <len DOT brown AT intel DOT com>

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