proc — process information pseudo-filesystem
The proc
filesystem is a
pseudo-filesystem which provides an interface to kernel data
structures. It is commonly mounted at /proc
. Typically, it is mounted
automatically by the system, but it can also be mounted
manually using a command such as:
mount −t proc proc /proc
Most of the files in the proc
filesystem are read-only, but some files are writable,
allowing kernel variables to be changed.
The proc
filesystem
supports the following mount options:
hidepid
=n
(since Linux 3.3)This option controls who can access the
information in /proc/[pid]
directories. The
argument, n
, is one of
the following values:
0
Everybody may access all
/proc/[pid]
directories. This is the traditional behavior, and the default if this mount option is not specified.1
Users may not access files and subdirectories inside any
/proc/[pid]
directories but their own (the/proc/[pid]
directories themselves remain visible). Sensitive files such as/proc/[pid]/cmdline
and/proc/[pid]/status
are now protected against other users. This makes it impossible to learn whether any user is running a specific program (so long as the program doesn't otherwise reveal itself by its behavior).2
As for mode 1, but in addition the
/proc/[pid]
directories belonging to other users become invisible. This means that/proc/[pid]
entries can no longer be used to discover the PIDs on the system. This doesn't hide the fact that a process with a specific PID value exists (it can be learned by other means, for example, by "kill −0 $PID"), but it hides a process's UID and GID, which could otherwise be learned by employing stat(2) on a/proc/[pid]
directory. This greatly complicates an attacker's task of gathering information about running processes (e.g., discovering whether some daemon is running with elevated privileges, whether another user is running some sensitive program, whether other users are running any program at all, and so on).
gid
=gid
(since Linux 3.3)Specifies the ID of a group whose members are
authorized to learn process information otherwise
prohibited by hidepid
(i.e., users in this group behave as though
/proc
was mounted with
hidepid=0
).
This group should be used instead of approaches such
as putting nonroot users into the sudoers(5) file.
Underneath /proc
, there
are the following general groups of files and
subdirectories:
/proc/[pid]
subdirectories
Each one of these subdirectories contains files and subdirectories exposing information about the process with the corresponding process ID.
Underneath each of the /proc/[pid]
directories, a
task
subdirectory
contains subdirectories of the form task/[tid]
, which
contain corresponding information about each of the
threads in the process, where tid
is the kernel thread ID of the
thread.
The /proc/[pid]
subdirectories are visible when iterating through
/proc
with getdents(2) (and
thus are visible when one uses ls(1) to view the
contents of /proc
).
/proc/[tid]
subdirectories
Each one of these subdirectories contains files
and subdirectories exposing information about the
thread with the corresponding thread ID. The contents
of these directories are the same as the
corresponding /proc/[pid]/task/[tid]
directories.
The /proc/[tid]
subdirectories are not
visible when iterating through /proc
with getdents(2) (and
thus are not
visible
when one uses ls(1) to view the
contents of /proc
).
/proc/self
When a process accesses this magic symbolic link,
it resolves to the process's own /proc/[pid]
directory.
/proc/thread−self
When a thread accesses this magic symbolic link,
it resolves to the process's own /proc/self/task/[tid]
directory.
/proc/[a−z]*
Various other files and subdirectories under
/proc
expose
system-wide information.
All of the above are described in more detail below.
The following list provides details of many of the files
and directories under the /proc
hierarchy.
/proc/[pid]
There is a numerical subdirectory for each running
process; the subdirectory is named by the process ID.
Each /proc/[pid]
subdirectory contains the pseudo-files and
directories described below.
The files inside each /proc/[pid]
directory are normally
owned by the effective user and effective group ID of
the process. However, as a security measure, the
ownership is made root:root
if the
process's "dumpable" attribute is set to a value
other than 1.
Before Linux 4.11, root:root
meant the
"global" root user ID and group ID (i.e., UID 0 and
GID 0 in the initial user namespace). Since Linux
4.11, if the process is in a noninitial user
namespace that has a valid mapping for user (group)
ID 0 inside the namespace, then the user (group)
ownership of the files under /proc/[pid]
is instead made the
same as the root user (group) ID of the namespace.
This means that inside a container, things work as
expected for the container "root" user.
The process's "dumpable" attribute may change for the following reasons:
Resetting the "dumpable" attribute to 1 reverts
the ownership of the /proc/[pid]/*
files to the
process's effective UID and GID. Note, however, that
if the effective UID or GID is subsequently modified,
then the "dumpable" attribute may be reset, as
described in prctl(2).
Therefore, it may be desirable to reset the
"dumpable" attribute after
making any desired changes to
the process's effective UID or GID.
/proc/[pid]/attr
The files in this directory provide an API for security modules. The contents of this directory are files that can be read and written in order to set security-related attributes. This directory was added to support SELinux, but the intention was that the API be general enough to support other security modules. For the purpose of explanation, examples of how SELinux uses these files are provided below.
This directory is present only if the kernel was
configured with CONFIG_SECURITY
.
/proc/[pid]/attr/current
(since Linux
2.6.0)The contents of this file represent the current security attributes of the process.
In SELinux, this file is used to get the security
context of a process. Prior to Linux 2.6.11, this
file could not be used to set the security context (a
write was always denied), since SELinux limited
process security transitions to execve(2) (see the
description of /proc/[pid]/attr/exec
, below).
Since Linux 2.6.11, SELinux lifted this restriction
and began supporting "set" operations via writes to
this node if authorized by policy, although use of
this operation is only suitable for applications that
are trusted to maintain any desired separation
between the old and new security contexts.
Prior to Linux 2.6.28, SELinux did not allow threads within a multithreaded process to set their security context via this node as it would yield an inconsistency among the security contexts of the threads sharing the same memory space. Since Linux 2.6.28, SELinux lifted this restriction and began supporting "set" operations for threads within a multithreaded process if the new security context is bounded by the old security context, where the bounded relation is defined in policy and guarantees that the new security context has a subset of the permissions of the old security context.
Other security modules may choose to support "set" operations via writes to this node.
/proc/[pid]/attr/exec
(since Linux
2.6.0)This file represents the attributes to assign to the process upon a subsequent execve(2).
In SELinux, this is needed to support role/domain
transitions, and execve(2) is the
preferred point to make such transitions because it
offers better control over the initialization of the
process in the new security label and the inheritance
of state. In SELinux, this attribute is reset on
execve(2) so that
the new program reverts to the default behavior for
any execve(2) calls
that it may make. In SELinux, a process can set only
its own /proc/[pid]/attr/exec
attribute.
/proc/[pid]/attr/fscreate
(since
Linux 2.6.0)This file represents the attributes to assign to files created by subsequent calls to open(2), mkdir(2), symlink(2), and mknod(2)
SELinux employs this file to support creation of a
file (using the aforementioned system calls) in a
secure state, so that there is no risk of
inappropriate access being obtained between the time
of creation and the time that attributes are set. In
SELinux, this attribute is reset on execve(2), so that
the new program reverts to the default behavior for
any file creation calls it may make, but the
attribute will persist across multiple file creation
calls within a program unless it is explicitly reset.
In SELinux, a process can set only its own
/proc/[pid]/attr/fscreate
attribute.
/proc/[pid]/attr/keycreate
(since
Linux 2.6.18)If a process writes a security context into this
file, all subsequently created keys (add_key(2)) will be
labeled with this context. For further information,
see the kernel source file Documentation/security/keys/core.rst
(or file Documentation/security/keys.txt
on
Linux between 3.0 and 4.13, or Documentation/keys.txt
before Linux
3.0).
/proc/[pid]/attr/prev
(since Linux
2.6.0)This file contains the security context of the
process before the last execve(2); that is,
the previous value of /proc/[pid]/attr/current
.
/proc/[pid]/attr/socketcreate
(since
Linux 2.6.18)If a process writes a security context into this file, all subsequently created sockets will be labeled with this context.
/proc/[pid]/autogroup
(since Linux
2.6.38)See sched(7).
/proc/[pid]/auxv (since
2.6.0)
This contains the contents of the ELF interpreter information passed to the process at exec time. The format is one unsigned long ID plus one unsigned long value for each entry. The last entry contains two zeros. See also getauxval(3).
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/cgroup
(since Linux
2.6.24)See cgroups(7).
/proc/[pid]/clear_refs
(since Linux
2.6.22)This is a write-only file, writable only by owner of the process.
The following values may be written to the file:
- 1 (since Linux 2.6.22)
Reset the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG bits for all the pages associated with the process. (Before kernel 2.6.32, writing any nonzero value to this file had this effect.)
- 2 (since Linux 2.6.32)
Reset the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG bits for all anonymous pages associated with the process.
- 3 (since Linux 2.6.32)
Reset the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG bits for all file-mapped pages associated with the process.
Clearing the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG bits
provides a method to measure approximately how much
memory a process is using. One first inspects the
values in the "Referenced" fields for the VMAs shown
in /proc/[pid]/smaps
to
get an idea of the memory footprint of the process.
One then clears the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG
bits and, after some measured time interval, once
again inspects the values in the "Referenced" fields
to get an idea of the change in memory footprint of
the process during the measured interval. If one is
interested only in inspecting the selected mapping
types, then the value 2 or 3 can be used instead of
1.
Further values can be written to affect different properties:
- 4 (since Linux 3.11)
Clear the soft-dirty bit for all the pages associated with the process. This is used (in conjunction with
/proc/[pid]/pagemap
) by the check-point restore system to discover which pages of a process have been dirtied since the file/proc/[pid]/clear_refs
was written to.- 5 (since Linux 4.0)
Reset the peak resident set size ("high water mark") to the process's current resident set size value.
Writing any value to /proc/[pid]/clear_refs
other than
those listed above has no effect.
The /proc/[pid]/clear_refs
file is
present only if the CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
kernel
configuration option is enabled.
/proc/[pid]/cmdline
This read-only file holds the complete command line for the process, unless the process is a zombie. In the latter case, there is nothing in this file: that is, a read on this file will return 0 characters. The command-line arguments appear in this file as a set of strings separated by null bytes ('\0'), with a further null byte after the last string.
If, after an execve(2), the
process modifies its argv
strings, those changes will
show up here. This is not the same thing as modifying
the argv
array.
Furthermore, a process may change the memory
location that this file refers via prctl(2) operations
such as PR_SET_MM_ARG_START
.
Think of this file as the command line that the process wants you to see.
/proc/[pid]/comm
(since Linux
2.6.33)This file exposes the process's comm
value—that is, the
command name associated with the process. Different
threads in the same process may have different
comm
values, accessible
via /proc/[pid]/task/[tid]/comm
. A
thread may modify its comm
value, or that of any of other
thread in the same thread group (see the discussion
of CLONE_THREAD
in
clone(2)), by
writing to the file /proc/self/task/[tid]/comm
. Strings
longer than TASK_COMM_LEN
(16) characters
(including the terminating null byte) are silently
truncated.
This file provides a superset of the prctl(2)
PR_SET_NAME
and
PR_GET_NAME
operations,
and is employed by pthread_setname_np(3)
when used to rename threads other than the caller.
The value in this file is used for the %e
specifier in
/proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
; see
core(5).
/proc/[pid]/coredump_filter
(since
Linux 2.6.23)See core(5).
/proc/[pid]/cpuset
(since Linux
2.6.12)See cpuset(7).
/proc/[pid]/cwd
This is a symbolic link to the current working directory of the process. To find out the current working directory of process 20, for instance, you can do this:
$ cd /proc/20/cwd; pwd −P
In a multithreaded process, the contents of this symbolic link are not available if the main thread has already terminated (typically by calling pthread_exit(3)).
Permission to dereference or read (readlink(2)) this
symbolic link is governed by a ptrace access mode
PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/environ
This file contains the initial environment that was set when the currently executing program was started via execve(2). The entries are separated by null bytes ('\0'), and there may be a null byte at the end. Thus, to print out the environment of process 1, you would do:
$ cat /proc/1/environ | tr '\000' '\n'
If, after an execve(2), the
process modifies its environment (e.g., by calling
functions such as putenv(3) or
modifying the environ(7) variable
directly), this file will not
reflect those changes.
Furthermore, a process may change the memory
location that this file refers via prctl(2) operations
such as PR_SET_MM_ENV_START
.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/exe
Under Linux 2.2 and later, this file is a symbolic
link containing the actual pathname of the executed
command. This symbolic link can be dereferenced
normally; attempting to open it will open the
executable. You can even type /proc/[pid]/exe
to run another copy
of the same executable that is being run by process
[pid]. If the pathname has been unlinked, the
symbolic link will contain the string '(deleted)'
appended to the original pathname. In a multithreaded
process, the contents of this symbolic link are not
available if the main thread has already terminated
(typically by calling pthread_exit(3)).
Permission to dereference or read (readlink(2)) this
symbolic link is governed by a ptrace access mode
PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
Under Linux 2.0 and earlier, /proc/[pid]/exe
is a pointer to the
binary which was executed, and appears as a symbolic
link. A readlink(2) call on
this file under Linux 2.0 returns a string in the
format:
[device]:inode
For example, [0301]:1502 would be inode 1502 on device major 03 (IDE, MFM, etc. drives) minor 01 (first partition on the first drive).
find(1) with the
−inum
option can be
used to locate the file.
/proc/[pid]/fd/
This is a subdirectory containing one entry for each file which the process has open, named by its file descriptor, and which is a symbolic link to the actual file. Thus, 0 is standard input, 1 standard output, 2 standard error, and so on.
For file descriptors for pipes and sockets, the entries will be symbolic links whose content is the file type with the inode. A readlink(2) call on this file returns a string in the format:
type:[inode]
For example, socket:[2248868]
will
be a socket and its inode is 2248868. For sockets,
that inode can be used to find more information in
one of the files under /proc/net/
.
For file descriptors that have no corresponding inode (e.g., file descriptors produced by bpf(2), epoll_create(2), eventfd(2), inotify_init(2), perf_event_open(2), signalfd(2), timerfd_create(2), and userfaultfd(2)), the entry will be a symbolic link with contents of the form
anon_inode:<file-type>
In many cases (but not all), the file-type
is
surrounded by square brackets.
For example, an epoll file descriptor will have a
symbolic link whose content is the string anon_inode:[eventpoll]
.
In a multithreaded process, the contents of this directory are not available if the main thread has already terminated (typically by calling pthread_exit(3)).
Programs that take a filename as a command-line
argument, but don't take input from standard input if
no argument is supplied, and programs that write to a
file named as a command-line argument, but don't send
their output to standard output if no argument is
supplied, can nevertheless be made to use standard
input or standard output by using /proc/[pid]/fd
files as
command-line arguments. For example, assuming that
−i
is the flag
designating an input file and −o
is the flag designating an
output file:
$ foobar −i /proc/self/fd/0 −o /proc/self/fd/1 ...
and you have a working filter.
/proc/self/fd/N
is
approximately the same as /dev/fd/N
in some UNIX and
UNIX-like systems. Most Linux MAKEDEV scripts
symbolically link /dev/fd
to /proc/self/fd
, in fact.
Most systems provide symbolic links /dev/stdin
, /dev/stdout
, and /dev/stderr
, which respectively
link to the files 0
,
1
, and 2
in /proc/self/fd
. Thus the example
command above could be written as:
$ foobar −i /dev/stdin −o /dev/stdout ...
Permission to dereference or read (readlink(2)) the
symbolic links in this directory is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
Note that for file descriptors referring to inodes
(pipes and sockets, see above), those inodes still
have permission bits and ownership information
distinct from those of the /proc/[pid]/fd
entry, and that the
owner may differ from the user and group IDs of the
process. An unprivileged process may lack permissions
to open them, as in this example:
$ echo test | sudo −u nobody cat test $ echo test | sudo −u nobody cat /proc/self/fd/0 cat: /proc/self/fd/0: Permission denied
File descriptor 0 refers to the pipe created by
the shell and owned by that shell's user, which is
not nobody
, so
cat
does not have
permission to create a new file descriptor to read
from that inode, even though it can still read from
its existing file descriptor 0.
/proc/[pid]/fdinfo/
(since Linux
2.6.22)This is a subdirectory containing one entry for each file which the process has open, named by its file descriptor. The files in this directory are readable only by the owner of the process. The contents of each file can be read to obtain information about the corresponding file descriptor. The content depends on the type of file referred to by the corresponding file descriptor.
For regular files and directories, we see something like:
$ cat /proc/12015/fdinfo/4 pos: 1000 flags: 01002002 mnt_id: 21
The fields are as follows:
pos
This is a decimal number showing the file offset.
flags
This is an octal number that displays the file access mode and file status flags (see open(2)). If the close-on-exec file descriptor flag is set, then
flags
will also include the valueO_CLOEXEC
.Before Linux 3.1, this field incorrectly displayed the setting of
O_CLOEXEC
at the time the file was opened, rather than the current setting of the close-on-exec flag.
mnt_id
This field, present since Linux 3.15, is the ID of the mount point containing this file. See the description of/proc/[pid]/mountinfo
.
For eventfd file descriptors (see eventfd(2)), we see (since Linux 3.8) the following fields:
pos: 0 flags: 02 mnt_id: 10 eventfd−count: 40
eventfd−count
is the current value of the eventfd counter, in
hexadecimal.
For epoll file descriptors (see epoll(7)), we see (since Linux 3.8) the following fields:
pos: 0 flags: 02 mnt_id: 10 tfd: 9 events: 19 data: 74253d2500000009 tfd: 7 events: 19 data: 74253d2500000007
Each of the lines beginning tfd
describes one of the file
descriptors being monitored via the epoll file
descriptor (see epoll_ctl(2) for
some details). The tfd
field is the number of the file descriptor. The
events
field is a
hexadecimal mask of the events being monitored for
this file descriptor. The data
field is the data value
associated with this file descriptor.
For signalfd file descriptors (see signalfd(2)), we see (since Linux 3.8) the following fields:
pos: 0 flags: 02 mnt_id: 10 sigmask: 0000000000000006
sigmask
is the
hexadecimal mask of signals that are accepted via
this signalfd file descriptor. (In this example, bits
2 and 3 are set, corresponding to the signals
SIGINT
and SIGQUIT
; see signal(7).)
For inotify file descriptors (see inotify(7)), we see (since Linux 3.8) the following fields:
pos: 0 flags: 00 mnt_id: 11 inotify wd:2 ino:7ef82a sdev:800001 mask:800afff ignored_mask:0 fhandle−bytes:8 fhandle−type:1 f_handle:2af87e00220ffd73 inotify wd:1 ino:192627 sdev:800001 mask:800afff ignored_mask:0 fhandle−bytes:8 fhandle−type:1 f_handle:27261900802dfd73
Each of the lines beginning with "inotify" displays information about one file or directory that is being monitored. The fields in this line are as follows:
wd
A watch descriptor number (in decimal).
ino
The inode number of the target file (in hexadecimal).
sdev
The ID of the device where the target file resides (in hexadecimal).
mask
The mask of events being monitored for the target file (in hexadecimal).
If the kernel was built with exportfs support, the
path to the target file is exposed as a file handle,
via three hexadecimal fields: fhandle−bytes
,
fhandle−type
,
and f_handle
.
For fanotify file descriptors (see fanotify(7)), we see (since Linux 3.8) the following fields:
pos: 0 flags: 02 mnt_id: 11 fanotify flags:0 event−flags:88002 fanotify ino:19264f sdev:800001 mflags:0 mask:1 ignored_mask:0 fhandle−bytes:8 fhandle−type:1 f_handle:4f261900a82dfd73
The fourth line displays information defined when the fanotify group was created via fanotify_init(2):
flags
The
flags
argument given to fanotify_init(2) (expressed in hexadecimal).event−flags
The
event_f_flags
argument given to fanotify_init(2) (expressed in hexadecimal).
Each additional line shown in the file contains information about one of the marks in the fanotify group. Most of these fields are as for inotify, except:
mflags
The flags associated with the mark (expressed in hexadecimal).
mask
The events mask for this mark (expressed in hexadecimal).
ignored_mask
The mask of events that are ignored for this mark (expressed in hexadecimal).
For details on these fields, see fanotify_mark(2).
For timerfd file descriptors (see timerfd(2)), we see (since Linux 3.17) the following fields:
pos: 0 flags: 02004002 mnt_id: 13 clockid: 0 ticks: 0 settime flags: 03 it_value: (7695568592, 640020877) it_interval: (0, 0)
clockid
This is the numeric value of the clock ID (corresponding to one of the
CLOCK_*
constants defined via<
time.h
>
that is used to mark the progress of the timer (in this example, 0 isCLOCK_REALTIME
).ticks
This is the number of timer expirations that have occurred, (i.e., the value that read(2) on it would return).
settimeflags
This field lists the flags with which the timerfd was last armed (see timerfd_settime(2)), in octal (in this example, both
TFD_TIMER_ABSTIME
andTFD_TIMER_CANCEL_ON_SET
are set).it_value
This field contains the amount of time until the timer will next expire, expressed in seconds and nanoseconds. This is always expressed as a relative value, regardless of whether the timer was created using the
TFD_TIMER_ABSTIME
flag.it_interval
This field contains the interval of the timer, in seconds and nanoseconds. (The
it_value
andit_interval
fields contain the values that timerfd_gettime(2) on this file descriptor would return.)
/proc/[pid]/gid_map
(since Linux
3.5)See user_namespaces(7).
/proc/[pid]/io (since kernel
2.6.20)
This file contains I/O statistics for the process, for example:
# cat /proc/3828/io rchar: 323934931 wchar: 323929600 syscr: 632687 syscw: 632675 read_bytes: 0 write_bytes: 323932160 cancelled_write_bytes: 0
The fields are as follows:
rchar
: characters readThe number of bytes which this task has caused to be read from storage. This is simply the sum of bytes which this process passed to read(2) and similar system calls. It includes things such as terminal I/O and is unaffected by whether or not actual physical disk I/O was required (the read might have been satisfied from pagecache).
wchar
: characters writtenThe number of bytes which this task has caused, or shall cause to be written to disk. Similar caveats apply here as with
rchar
.syscr
: read syscallsAttempt to count the number of read I/O operations—that is, system calls such as read(2) and pread(2).
syscw
: write syscallsAttempt to count the number of write I/O operations—that is, system calls such as write(2) and pwrite(2).
read_bytes
: bytes readAttempt to count the number of bytes which this process really did cause to be fetched from the storage layer. This is accurate for block-backed filesystems.
write_bytes
: bytes writtenAttempt to count the number of bytes which this process caused to be sent to the storage layer.
cancelled_write_bytes
:The big inaccuracy here is truncate. If a process writes 1 MB to a file and then deletes the file, it will in fact perform no writeout. But it will have been accounted as having caused 1 MB of write. In other words: this field represents the number of bytes which this process caused to not happen, by truncating pagecache. A task can cause "negative" I/O too. If this task truncates some dirty pagecache, some I/O which another task has been accounted for (in its
write_bytes
) will not be happening.
Note
: In the current
implementation, things are a bit racy on 32-bit
systems: if process A reads process B's /proc/[pid]/io
while process B is
updating one of these 64-bit counters, process A
could see an intermediate result.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/limits
(since Linux
2.6.24)This file displays the soft limit, hard limit, and units of measurement for each of the process's resource limits (see getrlimit(2)). Up to and including Linux 2.6.35, this file is protected to allow reading only by the real UID of the process. Since Linux 2.6.36, this file is readable by all users on the system.
/proc/[pid]/map_files/ (since kernel
3.3)
This subdirectory contains entries corresponding to memory-mapped files (see mmap(2)). Entries are named by memory region start and end address pair (expressed as hexadecimal numbers), and are symbolic links to the mapped files themselves. Here is an example, with the output wrapped and reformatted to fit on an 80-column display:
# ls −l /proc/self/map_files/ lr−−−−−−−−. 1 root root 64 Apr 16 21:31 3252e00000−3252e20000 −> /usr/lib64/ld−2.15.so ...
Although these entries are present for memory
regions that were mapped with the MAP_FILE
flag, the way anonymous
shared memory (regions created with the MAP_ANON | MAP_SHARED
flags) is implemented in Linux means that such
regions also appear on this directory. Here is an
example where the target file is the deleted
/dev/zero
one:
lrw−−−−−−−. 1 root root 64 Apr 16 21:33 7fc075d2f000−7fc075e6f000 −> /dev/zero (deleted)
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
Until kernel version 4.3, this directory appeared
only if the CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
kernel
configuration option was enabled.
Capabilities are required to read the contents of
the symbolic links in this directory: before Linux
5.9, the reading process requires CAP_SYS_ADMIN
in the initial user
namespace; since Linux 5.9, the reading process must
have either CAP_SYS_ADMIN
or CAP_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
in the user
namespace where it resides.
/proc/[pid]/maps
A file containing the currently mapped memory regions and their access permissions. See mmap(2) for some further information about memory mappings.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
The format of the file is:
address perms offset dev inode pathname 00400000−00452000 r−xp 00000000 08:02 173521 /usr/bin/dbus−daemon 00651000−00652000 r−−p 00051000 08:02 173521 /usr/bin/dbus−daemon 00652000−00655000 rw−p 00052000 08:02 173521 /usr/bin/dbus−daemon 00e03000−00e24000 rw−p 00000000 00:00 0 [heap] 00e24000−011f7000 rw−p 00000000 00:00 0 [heap] ... 35b1800000−35b1820000 r−xp 00000000 08:02 135522 /usr/lib64/ld−2.15.so 35b1a1f000−35b1a20000 r−−p 0001f000 08:02 135522 /usr/lib64/ld−2.15.so 35b1a20000−35b1a21000 rw−p 00020000 08:02 135522 /usr/lib64/ld−2.15.so 35b1a21000−35b1a22000 rw−p 00000000 00:00 0 35b1c00000−35b1dac000 r−xp 00000000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc−2.15.so 35b1dac000−35b1fac000 −−−p 001ac000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc−2.15.so 35b1fac000−35b1fb0000 r−−p 001ac000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc−2.15.so 35b1fb0000−35b1fb2000 rw−p 001b0000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc−2.15.so ... f2c6ff8c000−7f2c7078c000 rw−p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack:986] ... 7fffb2c0d000−7fffb2c2e000 rw−p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack] 7fffb2d48000−7fffb2d49000 r−xp 00000000 00:00 0 [vdso]
The address
field is
the address space in the process that the mapping
occupies. The perms
field is a set of permissions:
r = read w = write x = execute s = shared p = private (copy on write)
The offset
field is
the offset into the file/whatever; dev
is the device (major:minor);
inode
is the inode on
that device. 0 indicates that no inode is associated
with the memory region, as would be the case with BSS
(uninitialized data).
The pathname
field
will usually be the file that is backing the mapping.
For ELF files, you can easily coordinate with the
offset
field by looking
at the Offset field in the ELF program headers
(readelf
−l).
There are additional helpful pseudo-paths:
[stack]
The initial process's (also known as the main thread's) stack.
[stack:<tid>]
(from Linux 3.4 to 4.4
)A thread's stack (where the
<tid>
is a thread ID). It corresponds to the/proc/[pid]/task/[tid]/
path. This field was removed in Linux 4.5, since providing this information for a process with large numbers of threads is expensive.[vdso]
The virtual dynamically linked shared object. See vdso(7).
[heap]
The process's heap.
If the pathname
field
is blank, this is an anonymous mapping as obtained
via mmap(2). There is
no easy way to coordinate this back to a process's
source, short of running it through gdb(1), strace(1), or
similar.
pathname
is shown
unescaped except for newline characters, which are
replaced with an octal escape sequence. As a result,
it is not possible to determine whether the original
pathname contained a newline character or the literal
\012
character sequence.
If the mapping is file-backed and the file has been deleted, the string " (deleted)" is appended to the pathname. Note that this is ambiguous too.
Under Linux 2.0, there is no field giving pathname.
/proc/[pid]/mem
This file can be used to access the pages of a process's memory through open(2), read(2), and lseek(2).
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH_FSCREDS
check;
see ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/mountinfo
(since Linux
2.6.26)This file contains information about mount points
in the process's mount namespace (see mount_namespaces(7)).
It supplies various information (e.g., propagation
state, root of mount for bind mounts, identifier for
each mount and its parent) that is missing from the
(older) /proc/[pid]/mounts
file, and fixes
various other problems with that file (e.g.,
nonextensibility, failure to distinguish per-mount
versus per-superblock options).
The file contains lines of the form:
36 35 98:0 /mnt1 /mnt2 rw,noatime master:1 − ext3 /dev/root rw,errors=continue (1)(2)(3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)
The numbers in parentheses are labels for the descriptions below:
- (1)
mount ID: a unique ID for the mount (may be reused after umount(2)).
- (2)
parent ID: the ID of the parent mount (or of self for the root of this mount namespace's mount tree).
If a new mount is stacked on top of a previous existing mount (so that it hides the existing mount) at pathname P, then the parent of the new mount is the previous mount at that location. Thus, when looking at all the mounts stacked at a particular location, the top-most mount is the one that is not the parent of any other mount at the same location. (Note, however, that this top-most mount will be accessible only if the longest path subprefix of P that is a mount point is not itself hidden by a stacked mount.)
If the parent mount point lies outside the process's root directory (see chroot(2)), the ID shown here won't have a corresponding record in
mountinfo
whose mount ID (field 1) matches this parent mount ID (because mount points that lie outside the process's root directory are not shown inmountinfo
). As a special case of this point, the process's root mount point may have a parent mount (for the initramfs filesystem) that lies outside the process's root directory, and an entry for that mount point will not appear inmountinfo
.- (3)
major:minor: the value of
st_dev
for files on this filesystem (see stat(2)).- (4)
root: the pathname of the directory in the filesystem which forms the root of this mount.
- (5)
mount point: the pathname of the mount point relative to the process's root directory.
- (6)
mount options: per-mount options (see mount(2)).
- (7)
optional fields: zero or more fields of the form "tag[:value]"; see below.
- (8)
separator: the end of the optional fields is marked by a single hyphen.
- (9)
filesystem type: the filesystem type in the form "type[.subtype]".
- (10)
mount source: filesystem-specific information or "none".
- (11)
super options: per-superblock options (see mount(2)).
Currently, the possible optional fields are
shared
, master
, propagate_from
, and unbindable
. See mount_namespaces(7)
for a description of these fields. Parsers should
ignore all unrecognized optional fields.
For more information on mount propagation see:
Documentation/filesystems/sharedsubtree.txt
in the Linux kernel source tree.
/proc/[pid]/mounts
(since Linux
2.4.19)This file lists all the filesystems currently mounted in the process's mount namespace (see mount_namespaces(7)). The format of this file is documented in fstab(5).
Since kernel version 2.6.15, this file is
pollable: after opening the file for reading, a
change in this file (i.e., a filesystem mount or
unmount) causes select(2) to mark
the file descriptor as having an exceptional
condition, and poll(2) and
epoll_wait(2) mark
the file as having a priority event (POLLPRI
). (Before Linux 2.6.30, a
change in this file was indicated by the file
descriptor being marked as readable for select(2), and
being marked as having an error condition for
poll(2) and
epoll_wait(2).)
/proc/[pid]/mountstats
(since Linux
2.6.17)This file exports information (statistics, configuration information) about the mount points in the process's mount namespace (see mount_namespaces(7)). Lines in this file have the form:
device /dev/sda7 mounted on /home with fstype ext3 [stats] ( 1 ) ( 2 ) (3 ) ( 4 )
The fields in each line are:
- (1)
The name of the mounted device (or "nodevice" if there is no corresponding device).
- (2)
The mount point within the filesystem tree.
- (3)
The filesystem type.
- (4)
Optional statistics and configuration information. Currently (as at Linux 2.6.26), only NFS filesystems export information via this field.
This file is readable only by the owner of the process.
/proc/[pid]/net
(since Linux
2.6.25)See the description of /proc/net
.
/proc/[pid]/ns/
(since Linux
3.0)This is a subdirectory containing one entry for each namespace that supports being manipulated by setns(2). For more information, see namespaces(7).
/proc/[pid]/numa_maps
(since Linux
2.6.14)See numa(7).
/proc/[pid]/oom_adj
(since Linux
2.6.11)This file can be used to adjust the score used to
select which process should be killed in an
out-of-memory (OOM) situation. The kernel uses this
value for a bit-shift operation of the process's
oom_score
value: valid
values are in the range −16 to +15, plus the
special value −17, which disables OOM-killing
altogether for this process. A positive score
increases the likelihood of this process being killed
by the OOM-killer; a negative score decreases the
likelihood.
The default value for this file is 0; a new
process inherits its parent's oom_adj
setting. A process must be
privileged (CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
) to update this
file.
Since Linux 2.6.36, use of this file is deprecated
in favor of /proc/[pid]/oom_score_adj
.
/proc/[pid]/oom_score
(since Linux
2.6.11)This file displays the current score that the kernel gives to this process for the purpose of selecting a process for the OOM-killer. A higher score means that the process is more likely to be selected by the OOM-killer. The basis for this score is the amount of memory used by the process, with increases (+) or decreases (−) for factors including:
whether the process is privileged (−).
Before kernel 2.6.36 the following factors were also used in the calculation of oom_score:
whether the process creates a lot of children using fork(2) (+);
whether the process has been running a long time, or has used a lot of CPU time (−);
whether the process has a low nice value (i.e., > 0) (+); and
whether the process is making direct hardware access (−).
The oom_score
also
reflects the adjustment specified by the oom_score_adj
or oom_adj
setting for the process.
/proc/[pid]/oom_score_adj
(since
Linux 2.6.36)This file can be used to adjust the badness heuristic used to select which process gets killed in out-of-memory conditions.
The badness heuristic assigns a value to each candidate task ranging from 0 (never kill) to 1000 (always kill) to determine which process is targeted. The units are roughly a proportion along that range of allowed memory the process may allocate from, based on an estimation of its current memory and swap use. For example, if a task is using all allowed memory, its badness score will be 1000. If it is using half of its allowed memory, its score will be 500.
There is an additional factor included in the badness score: root processes are given 3% extra memory over other tasks.
The amount of "allowed" memory depends on the context in which the OOM-killer was called. If it is due to the memory assigned to the allocating task's cpuset being exhausted, the allowed memory represents the set of mems assigned to that cpuset (see cpuset(7)). If it is due to a mempolicy's node(s) being exhausted, the allowed memory represents the set of mempolicy nodes. If it is due to a memory limit (or swap limit) being reached, the allowed memory is that configured limit. Finally, if it is due to the entire system being out of memory, the allowed memory represents all allocatable resources.
The value of oom_score_adj
is added to the
badness score before it is used to determine which
task to kill. Acceptable values range from
−1000 (OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MIN) to +1000
(OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MAX). This allows user space to
control the preference for OOM-killing, ranging from
always preferring a certain task or completely
disabling it from OOM killing. The lowest possible
value, −1000, is equivalent to disabling
OOM-killing entirely for that task, since it will
always report a badness score of 0.
Consequently, it is very simple for user space to
define the amount of memory to consider for each
task. Setting an oom_score_adj
value of +500, for
example, is roughly equivalent to allowing the
remainder of tasks sharing the same system, cpuset,
mempolicy, or memory controller resources to use at
least 50% more memory. A value of −500, on the
other hand, would be roughly equivalent to
discounting 50% of the task's allowed memory from
being considered as scoring against the task.
For backward compatibility with previous kernels,
/proc/[pid]/oom_adj
can
still be used to tune the badness score. Its value is
scaled linearly with oom_score_adj
.
Writing to /proc/[pid]/oom_score_adj
or
/proc/[pid]/oom_adj
will change the other with its scaled value.
The choom(1) program
provides a command-line interface for adjusting the
oom_score_adj
value of a
running process or a newly executed command.
/proc/[pid]/pagemap
(since Linux
2.6.25)This file shows the mapping of each of the process's virtual pages into physical page frames or swap area. It contains one 64-bit value for each virtual page, with the bits set as follows:
63
If set, the page is present in RAM.
62
If set, the page is in swap space
- 61 (since Linux 3.5)
The page is a file-mapped page or a shared anonymous page.
- 60–57 (since Linux 3.11)
Zero
- 56 (since Linux 4.2)
The page is exclusively mapped.
- 55 (since Linux 3.11)
PTE is soft-dirty (see the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/soft−dirty.rst
).- 54–0
If the page is present in RAM (bit 63), then these bits provide the page frame number, which can be used to index
/proc/kpageflags
and/proc/kpagecount
. If the page is present in swap (bit 62), then bits 4–0 give the swap type, and bits 54–5 encode the swap offset.
Before Linux 3.11, bits 60–55 were used to encode the base-2 log of the page size.
To employ /proc/[pid]/pagemap
efficiently,
use /proc/[pid]/maps
to
determine which areas of memory are actually mapped
and seek to skip over unmapped regions.
The /proc/[pid]/pagemap
file is present
only if the CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
kernel
configuration option is enabled.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/personality
(since Linux
2.6.28)This read-only file exposes the process's execution domain, as set by personality(2). The value is displayed in hexadecimal notation.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH_FSCREDS
check;
see ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/root
UNIX and Linux support the idea of a per-process
root of the filesystem, set by the chroot(2) system
call. This file is a symbolic link that points to the
process's root directory, and behaves in the same way
as exe
, and fd/*
.
Note however that this file is not merely a symbolic link. It provides the same view of the filesystem (including namespaces and the set of per-process mounts) as the process itself. An example illustrates this point. In one terminal, we start a shell in new user and mount namespaces, and in that shell we create some new mount points:
$ PS1='sh1# ' unshare −Urnm sh1# mount −t tmpfs tmpfs /etc # Mount empty tmpfs at /etc sh1# mount −−bind /usr /dev # Mount /usr at /dev sh1# echo $$ 27123
In a second terminal window, in the initial mount namespace, we look at the contents of the corresponding mounts in the initial and new namespaces:
$ PS1='sh2# ' sudo sh sh2# ls /etc | wc −l # In initial NS 309 sh2# ls /proc/27123/root/etc | wc −l # /etc in other NS 0 # The empty tmpfs dir sh2# ls /dev | wc −l # In initial NS 205 sh2# ls /proc/27123/root/dev | wc −l # /dev in other NS 11 # Actually bind # mounted to /usr sh2# ls /usr | wc −l # /usr in initial NS 11
In a multithreaded process, the contents of the
/proc/[pid]/root
symbolic link are not available if the main thread
has already terminated (typically by calling
pthread_exit(3)).
Permission to dereference or read (readlink(2)) this
symbolic link is governed by a ptrace access mode
PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/seccomp (Linux 2.6.12 to
2.6.22)
This file can be used to read and change the process's secure computing (seccomp) mode setting. It contains the value 0 if the process is not in seccomp mode, and 1 if the process is in strict seccomp mode (see seccomp(2)). Writing 1 to this file places the process irreversibly in strict seccomp mode. (Further attempts to write to the file fail with the EPERM error.)
In Linux 2.6.23, this file went away, to be
replaced by the prctl(2)
PR_GET_SECCOMP
and
PR_SET_SECCOMP
operations (and later by seccomp(2) and the
Seccomp
field in
/proc/[pid]/status
).
/proc/[pid]/setgroups
(since Linux
3.19)See user_namespaces(7).
/proc/[pid]/smaps
(since Linux
2.6.14)This file shows memory consumption for each of the process's mappings. (The pmap(1) command displays similar information, in a form that may be easier for parsing.) For each mapping there is a series of lines such as the following:
00400000−0048a000 r−xp 00000000 fd:03 960637 /bin/bash Size: 552 kB Rss: 460 kB Pss: 100 kB Shared_Clean: 452 kB Shared_Dirty: 0 kB Private_Clean: 8 kB Private_Dirty: 0 kB Referenced: 460 kB Anonymous: 0 kB AnonHugePages: 0 kB ShmemHugePages: 0 kB ShmemPmdMapped: 0 kB Swap: 0 kB KernelPageSize: 4 kB MMUPageSize: 4 kB KernelPageSize: 4 kB MMUPageSize: 4 kB Locked: 0 kB ProtectionKey: 0 VmFlags: rd ex mr mw me dw
The first of these lines shows the same
information as is displayed for the mapping in
/proc/[pid]/maps
. The
following lines show the size of the mapping, the
amount of the mapping that is currently resident in
RAM ("Rss"), the process's proportional share of this
mapping ("Pss"), the number of clean and dirty shared
pages in the mapping, and the number of clean and
dirty private pages in the mapping. "Referenced"
indicates the amount of memory currently marked as
referenced or accessed. "Anonymous" shows the amount
of memory that does not belong to any file. "Swap"
shows how much would-be-anonymous memory is also
used, but out on swap.
The "KernelPageSize" line (available since Linux 2.6.29) is the page size used by the kernel to back the virtual memory area. This matches the size used by the MMU in the majority of cases. However, one counter-example occurs on PPC64 kernels whereby a kernel using 64 kB as a base page size may still use 4 kB pages for the MMU on older processors. To distinguish the two attributes, the "MMUPageSize" line (also available since Linux 2.6.29) reports the page size used by the MMU.
The "Locked" indicates whether the mapping is locked in memory or not.
The "ProtectionKey" line (available since Linux
4.9, on x86 only) contains the memory protection key
(see pkeys(7))
associated with the virtual memory area. This entry
is present only if the kernel was built with the
CONFIG_X86_INTEL_MEMORY_PROTECTION_KEYS
configuration option (since Linux 4.6).
The "VmFlags" line (available since Linux 3.8) represents the kernel flags associated with the virtual memory area, encoded using the following two-letter codes:
rd - readable wr - writable ex - executable sh - shared mr - may read mw - may write me - may execute ms - may share gd - stack segment grows down pf - pure PFN range dw - disabled write to the mapped file lo - pages are locked in memory io - memory mapped I/O area sr - sequential read advise provided rr - random read advise provided dc - do not copy area on fork de - do not expand area on remapping ac - area is accountable nr - swap space is not reserved for the area ht - area uses huge tlb pages sf - perform synchronous page faults (since Linux 4.15) nl - non-linear mapping (removed in Linux 4.0) ar - architecture specific flag wf - wipe on fork (since Linux 4.14) dd - do not include area into core dump sd - soft-dirty flag (since Linux 3.13) mm - mixed map area hg - huge page advise flag nh - no-huge page advise flag mg - mergeable advise flag um - userfaultfd missing pages tracking (since Linux 4.3) uw - userfaultfd wprotect pages tracking (since Linux 4.3)
The /proc/[pid]/smaps
file is present
only if the CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
kernel
configuration option is enabled.
/proc/[pid]/stack
(since Linux
2.6.29)This file provides a symbolic trace of the
function calls in this process's kernel stack. This
file is provided only if the kernel was built with
the CONFIG_STACKTRACE
configuration option.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH_FSCREDS
check;
see ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/stat
Status information about the process. This is used
by ps(1). It is defined in
the kernel source file fs/proc/array.c
.
The fields, in order, with their proper scanf(3) format
specifiers, are listed below. Whether or not certain
of these fields display valid information is governed
by a ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
|
PTRACE_MODE_NOAUDIT
check (refer to ptrace(2)). If the
check denies access, then the field value is
displayed as 0. The affected fields are indicated
with the marking [PT].
- (1)
pid
%dThe process ID.
- (2)
comm
%sThe filename of the executable, in parentheses. Strings longer than
TASK_COMM_LEN
(16) characters (including the terminating null byte) are silently truncated. This is visible whether or not the executable is swapped out.- (3)
state
%cOne of the following characters, indicating process state:
R
Running
S
Sleeping in an interruptible wait
D
Waiting in uninterruptible disk sleep
Z
Zombie
T
Stopped (on a signal) or (before Linux 2.6.33) trace stopped
t
Tracing stop (Linux 2.6.33 onward)
W
Paging (only before Linux 2.6.0)
X
Dead (from Linux 2.6.0 onward)
x
Dead (Linux 2.6.33 to 3.13 only)
K
Wakekill (Linux 2.6.33 to 3.13 only)
W
Waking (Linux 2.6.33 to 3.13 only)
P
Parked (Linux 3.9 to 3.13 only)
- (4)
ppid
%dThe PID of the parent of this process.
- (5)
pgrp
%dThe process group ID of the process.
- (6)
session
%dThe session ID of the process.
- (7)
tty_nr
%dThe controlling terminal of the process. (The minor device number is contained in the combination of bits 31 to 20 and 7 to 0; the major device number is in bits 15 to 8.)
- (8)
tpgid
%dThe ID of the foreground process group of the controlling terminal of the process.
- (9)
flags
%uThe kernel flags word of the process. For bit meanings, see the PF_* defines in the Linux kernel source file
include/linux/sched.h
. Details depend on the kernel version.The format for this field was %lu before Linux 2.6.
- (10)
minflt
%luThe number of minor faults the process has made which have not required loading a memory page from disk.
- (11)
cminflt
%luThe number of minor faults that the process's waited-for children have made.
- (12)
majflt
%luThe number of major faults the process has made which have required loading a memory page from disk.
- (13)
cmajflt
%luThe number of major faults that the process's waited-for children have made.
- (14)
utime
%luAmount of time that this process has been scheduled in user mode, measured in clock ticks (divide by
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
). This includes guest time,guest_time
(time spent running a virtual CPU, see below), so that applications that are not aware of the guest time field do not lose that time from their calculations.- (15)
stime
%luAmount of time that this process has been scheduled in kernel mode, measured in clock ticks (divide by
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
).- (16)
cutime
%ldAmount of time that this process's waited-for children have been scheduled in user mode, measured in clock ticks (divide by
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
). (See also times(2).) This includes guest time,cguest_time
(time spent running a virtual CPU, see below).- (17)
cstime
%ldAmount of time that this process's waited-for children have been scheduled in kernel mode, measured in clock ticks (divide by
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
).- (18)
priority
%ld(Explanation for Linux 2.6) For processes running a real-time scheduling policy (
policy
below; see sched_setscheduler(2)), this is the negated scheduling priority, minus one; that is, a number in the range −2 to −100, corresponding to real-time priorities 1 to 99. For processes running under a non-real-time scheduling policy, this is the raw nice value (setpriority(2)) as represented in the kernel. The kernel stores nice values as numbers in the range 0 (high) to 39 (low), corresponding to the user-visible nice range of −20 to 19.Before Linux 2.6, this was a scaled value based on the scheduler weighting given to this process.
- (19)
nice
%ldThe nice value (see setpriority(2)), a value in the range 19 (low priority) to −20 (high priority).
- (20)
num_threads
%ldNumber of threads in this process (since Linux 2.6). Before kernel 2.6, this field was hard coded to 0 as a placeholder for an earlier removed field.
- (21)
itrealvalue
%ldThe time in jiffies before the next
SIGALRM
is sent to the process due to an interval timer. Since kernel 2.6.17, this field is no longer maintained, and is hard coded as 0.- (22)
starttime
%lluThe time the process started after system boot. In kernels before Linux 2.6, this value was expressed in jiffies. Since Linux 2.6, the value is expressed in clock ticks (divide by
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
).The format for this field was %lu before Linux 2.6.
- (23)
vsize
%luVirtual memory size in bytes.
- (24)
rss
%ldResident Set Size: number of pages the process has in real memory. This is just the pages which count toward text, data, or stack space. This does not include pages which have not been demand-loaded in, or which are swapped out. This value is inaccurate; see
/proc/[pid]/statm
below.- (25)
rsslim
%luCurrent soft limit in bytes on the rss of the process; see the description of
RLIMIT_RSS
in getrlimit(2).- (26)
startcode
%lu [PT]The address above which program text can run.
- (27)
endcode
%lu [PT]The address below which program text can run.
- (28)
startstack
%lu [PT]The address of the start (i.e., bottom) of the stack.
- (29)
kstkesp
%lu [PT]The current value of ESP (stack pointer), as found in the kernel stack page for the process.
- (30)
kstkeip
%lu [PT]The current EIP (instruction pointer).
- (31)
signal
%luThe bitmap of pending signals, displayed as a decimal number. Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
/proc/[pid]/status
instead.- (32)
blocked
%luThe bitmap of blocked signals, displayed as a decimal number. Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
/proc/[pid]/status
instead.- (33)
sigignore
%luThe bitmap of ignored signals, displayed as a decimal number. Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
/proc/[pid]/status
instead.- (34)
sigcatch
%luThe bitmap of caught signals, displayed as a decimal number. Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
/proc/[pid]/status
instead.- (35)
wchan
%lu [PT]This is the "channel" in which the process is waiting. It is the address of a location in the kernel where the process is sleeping. The corresponding symbolic name can be found in
/proc/[pid]/wchan
.- (36)
nswap
%luNumber of pages swapped (not maintained).
- (37)
cnswap
%luCumulative
nswap
for child processes (not maintained).- (38)
exit_signal
%d (since Linux 2.1.22)Signal to be sent to parent when we die.
- (39)
processor
%d (since Linux 2.2.8)CPU number last executed on.
- (40)
rt_priority
%u (since Linux 2.5.19)Real-time scheduling priority, a number in the range 1 to 99 for processes scheduled under a real-time policy, or 0, for non-real-time processes (see sched_setscheduler(2)).
- (41)
policy
%u (since Linux 2.5.19)Scheduling policy (see sched_setscheduler(2)). Decode using the SCHED_* constants in
linux/sched.h
.The format for this field was %lu before Linux 2.6.22.
- (42)
delayacct_blkio_ticks
%llu (since Linux 2.6.18)Aggregated block I/O delays, measured in clock ticks (centiseconds).
- (43)
guest_time
%lu (since Linux 2.6.24)Guest time of the process (time spent running a virtual CPU for a guest operating system), measured in clock ticks (divide by
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
).- (44)
cguest_time
%ld (since Linux 2.6.24)Guest time of the process's children, measured in clock ticks (divide by
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
).- (45)
start_data
%lu (since Linux 3.3) [PT]Address above which program initialized and uninitialized (BSS) data are placed.
- (46)
end_data
%lu (since Linux 3.3) [PT]Address below which program initialized and uninitialized (BSS) data are placed.
- (47)
start_brk
%lu (since Linux 3.3) [PT]Address above which program heap can be expanded with brk(2).
- (48)
arg_start
%lu (since Linux 3.5) [PT]Address above which program command-line arguments (
argv
) are placed.- (49)
arg_end
%lu (since Linux 3.5) [PT]Address below program command-line arguments (
argv
) are placed.- (50)
env_start
%lu (since Linux 3.5) [PT]Address above which program environment is placed.
- (51)
env_end
%lu (since Linux 3.5) [PT]Address below which program environment is placed.
- (52)
exit_code
%d (since Linux 3.5) [PT]The thread's exit status in the form reported by waitpid(2).
/proc/[pid]/statm
Provides information about memory usage, measured in pages. The columns are:
size (1) total program size (same as VmSize in/proc/[pid]/status
) resident (2) resident set size (inaccurate; same as VmRSS in/proc/[pid]/status
) shared (3) number of resident shared pages (i.e., backed by a file) (inaccurate; same as RssFile+RssShmem in/proc/[pid]/status
) text (4) text (code) lib (5) library (unused since Linux 2.6; always 0) data (6) data + stack dt (7) dirty pages (unused since Linux 2.6; always 0)
Some of these values are inaccurate because of a
kernel-internal scalability optimization. If accurate
values are required, use /proc/[pid]/smaps
or /proc/[pid]/smaps_rollup
instead,
which are much slower but provide accurate, detailed
information.
/proc/[pid]/status
Provides much of the information in /proc/[pid]/stat
and /proc/[pid]/statm
in a format
that's easier for humans to parse. Here's an
example:
$ cat /proc/$$/status Name: bash Umask: 0022 State: S (sleeping) Tgid: 17248 Ngid: 0 Pid: 17248 PPid: 17200 TracerPid: 0 Uid: 1000 1000 1000 1000 Gid: 100 100 100 100 FDSize: 256 Groups: 16 33 100 NStgid: 17248 NSpid: 17248 NSpgid: 17248 NSsid: 17200 VmPeak: 131168 kB VmSize: 131168 kB VmLck: 0 kB VmPin: 0 kB VmHWM: 13484 kB VmRSS: 13484 kB RssAnon: 10264 kB RssFile: 3220 kB RssShmem: 0 kB VmData: 10332 kB VmStk: 136 kB VmExe: 992 kB VmLib: 2104 kB VmPTE: 76 kB VmPMD: 12 kB VmSwap: 0 kB HugetlbPages: 0 kB # 4.4 CoreDumping: 0 # 4.15 Threads: 1 SigQ: 0/3067 SigPnd: 0000000000000000 ShdPnd: 0000000000000000 SigBlk: 0000000000010000 SigIgn: 0000000000384004 SigCgt: 000000004b813efb CapInh: 0000000000000000 CapPrm: 0000000000000000 CapEff: 0000000000000000 CapBnd: ffffffffffffffff CapAmb: 0000000000000000 NoNewPrivs: 0 Seccomp: 0 Speculation_Store_Bypass: vulnerable Cpus_allowed: 00000001 Cpus_allowed_list: 0 Mems_allowed: 1 Mems_allowed_list: 0 voluntary_ctxt_switches: 150 nonvoluntary_ctxt_switches: 545
The fields are as follows:
Name
Command run by this process. Strings longer than
TASK_COMM_LEN
(16) characters (including the terminating null byte) are silently truncated.Umask
Process umask, expressed in octal with a leading zero; see umask(2). (Since Linux 4.7.)
State
Current state of the process. One of "R (running)", "S (sleeping)", "D (disk sleep)", "T (stopped)", "t (tracing stop)", "Z (zombie)", or "X (dead)".
Tgid
Thread group ID (i.e., Process ID).
Ngid
NUMA group ID (0 if none; since Linux 3.13).
Pid
Thread ID (see gettid(2)).
PPid
PID of parent process.
TracerPid
PID of process tracing this process (0 if not being traced).
Uid
,Gid
Real, effective, saved set, and filesystem UIDs (GIDs).
FDSize
Number of file descriptor slots currently allocated.
Groups
Supplementary group list.
NStgid
Thread group ID (i.e., PID) in each of the PID namespaces of which
[pid]
is a member. The leftmost entry shows the value with respect to the PID namespace of the process that mounted this procfs (or the root namespace if mounted by the kernel), followed by the value in successively nested inner namespaces. (Since Linux 4.1.)NSpid
Thread ID in each of the PID namespaces of which
[pid]
is a member. The fields are ordered as forNStgid
. (Since Linux 4.1.)NSpgid
Process group ID in each of the PID namespaces of which
[pid]
is a member. The fields are ordered as forNStgid
. (Since Linux 4.1.)NSsid
descendant namespace session ID hierarchy Session ID in each of the PID namespaces of which
[pid]
is a member. The fields are ordered as forNStgid
. (Since Linux 4.1.)VmPeak
Peak virtual memory size.
VmSize
Virtual memory size.
VmLck
Locked memory size (see mlock(2)).
VmPin
Pinned memory size (since Linux 3.2). These are pages that can't be moved because something needs to directly access physical memory.
VmHWM
Peak resident set size ("high water mark"). This value is inaccurate; see
/proc/[pid]/statm
above.VmRSS
Resident set size. Note that the value here is the sum of
RssAnon
,RssFile
, andRssShmem
. This value is inaccurate; see/proc/[pid]/statm
above.RssAnon
Size of resident anonymous memory. (since Linux 4.5). This value is inaccurate; see
/proc/[pid]/statm
above.RssFile
Size of resident file mappings. (since Linux 4.5). This value is inaccurate; see
/proc/[pid]/statm
above.RssShmem
Size of resident shared memory (includes System V shared memory, mappings from tmpfs(5), and shared anonymous mappings). (since Linux 4.5).
VmData
,VmStk
,VmExe
Size of data, stack, and text segments. This value is inaccurate; see
/proc/[pid]/statm
above.VmLib
Shared library code size.
VmPTE
Page table entries size (since Linux 2.6.10).
VmPMD
Size of second-level page tables (added in Linux 4.0; removed in Linux 4.15).
VmSwap
Swapped-out virtual memory size by anonymous private pages; shmem swap usage is not included (since Linux 2.6.34). This value is inaccurate; see
/proc/[pid]/statm
above.HugetlbPages
Size of hugetlb memory portions (since Linux 4.4).
CoreDumping
Contains the value 1 if the process is currently dumping core, and 0 if it is not (since Linux 4.15). This information can be used by a monitoring process to avoid killing a process that is currently dumping core, which could result in a corrupted core dump file.
Threads
Number of threads in process containing this thread.
SigQ
This field contains two slash-separated numbers that relate to queued signals for the real user ID of this process. The first of these is the number of currently queued signals for this real user ID, and the second is the resource limit on the number of queued signals for this process (see the description of
RLIMIT_SIGPENDING
in getrlimit(2)).SigPnd
,ShdPnd
Mask (expressed in hexadecimal) of signals pending for thread and for process as a whole (see pthreads(7) and signal(7)).
SigBlk
,SigIgn
,SigCgt
Masks (expressed in hexadecimal) indicating signals being blocked, ignored, and caught (see signal(7)).
CapInh
,CapPrm
,CapEff
Masks (expressed in hexadecimal) of capabilities enabled in inheritable, permitted, and effective sets (see capabilities(7)).
CapBnd
Capability bounding set, expressed in hexadecimal (since Linux 2.6.26, see capabilities(7)).
CapAmb
Ambient capability set, expressed in hexadecimal (since Linux 4.3, see capabilities(7)).
NoNewPrivs
Value of the
no_new_privs
bit (since Linux 4.10, see prctl(2)).Seccomp
Seccomp mode of the process (since Linux 3.8, see seccomp(2)). 0 means
SECCOMP_MODE_DISABLED
; 1 meansSECCOMP_MODE_STRICT
; 2 meansSECCOMP_MODE_FILTER
. This field is provided only if the kernel was built with theCONFIG_SECCOMP
kernel configuration option enabled.Speculation_Store_Bypass
Speculation flaw mitigation state (since Linux 4.17, see prctl(2)).
Cpus_allowed
Hexadecimal mask of CPUs on which this process may run (since Linux 2.6.24, see cpuset(7)).
Cpus_allowed_list
Same as previous, but in "list format" (since Linux 2.6.26, see cpuset(7)).
Mems_allowed
Mask of memory nodes allowed to this process (since Linux 2.6.24, see cpuset(7)).
Mems_allowed_list
Same as previous, but in "list format" (since Linux 2.6.26, see cpuset(7)).
voluntary_ctxt_switches
,nonvoluntary_ctxt_switches
Number of voluntary and involuntary context switches (since Linux 2.6.23).
/proc/[pid]/syscall
(since Linux
2.6.27)This file exposes the system call number and argument registers for the system call currently being executed by the process, followed by the values of the stack pointer and program counter registers. The values of all six argument registers are exposed, although most system calls use fewer registers.
If the process is blocked, but not in a system call, then the file displays −1 in place of the system call number, followed by just the values of the stack pointer and program counter. If process is not blocked, then the file contains just the string "running".
This file is present only if the kernel was
configured with CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_TRACEHOOK
.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH_FSCREDS
check;
see ptrace(2).
/proc/[pid]/task
(since Linux
2.6.0)This is a directory that contains one subdirectory
for each thread in the process. The name of each
subdirectory is the numerical thread ID ([tid]
) of the thread
(see gettid(2)).
Within each of these subdirectories, there is a
set of files with the same names and contents as
under the /proc/[pid]
directories. For attributes that are shared by all
threads, the contents for each of the files under the
task/[tid]
subdirectories will be the same as in the
corresponding file in the parent /proc/[pid]
directory (e.g., in a
multithreaded process, all of the task/[tid]/cwd
files
will have the same value as the /proc/[pid]/cwd
file in the parent
directory, since all of the threads in a process
share a working directory). For attributes that are
distinct for each thread, the corresponding files
under task/[tid]
may have
different values (e.g., various fields in each of the
task/[tid]/status
files may be different for each thread), or they
might not exist in /proc/[pid]
at all.
In a multithreaded process, the contents of the
/proc/[pid]/task
directory are not available if the main thread has
already terminated (typically by calling pthread_exit(3)).
/proc/[pid]/task/[tid]/children
(since Linux 3.5)A space-separated list of child tasks of this task. Each child task is represented by its TID.
This option is intended for use by the checkpoint-restore (CRIU) system, and reliably provides a list of children only if all of the child processes are stopped or frozen. It does not work properly if children of the target task exit while the file is being read! Exiting children may cause non-exiting children to be omitted from the list. This makes this interface even more unreliable than classic PID-based approaches if the inspected task and its children aren't frozen, and most code should probably not use this interface.
Until Linux 4.2, the presence of this file was
governed by the CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
kernel
configuration option. Since Linux 4.2, it is governed
by the CONFIG_PROC_CHILDREN
option.
/proc/[pid]/timers
(since Linux
3.10)A list of the POSIX timers for this process. Each timer is listed with a line that starts with the string "ID:". For example:
ID: 1 signal: 60/00007fff86e452a8 notify: signal/pid.2634 ClockID: 0 ID: 0 signal: 60/00007fff86e452a8 notify: signal/pid.2634 ClockID: 1
The lines shown for each timer have the following meanings:
ID
The ID for this timer. This is not the same as the timer ID returned by timer_create(2); rather, it is the same kernel-internal ID that is available via the
si_timerid
field of thesiginfo_t
structure (see sigaction(2)).signal
This is the signal number that this timer uses to deliver notifications followed by a slash, and then the
sigev_value
value supplied to the signal handler. Valid only for timers that notify via a signal.notify
The part before the slash specifies the mechanism that this timer uses to deliver notifications, and is one of "thread", "signal", or "none". Immediately following the slash is either the string "tid" for timers with
SIGEV_THREAD_ID
notification, or "pid" for timers that notify by other mechanisms. Following the "." is the PID of the process (or the kernel thread ID of the thread) that will be delivered a signal if the timer delivers notifications via a signal.ClockID
This field identifies the clock that the timer uses for measuring time. For most clocks, this is a number that matches one of the user-space
CLOCK_*
constants exposed via<
time.h
>
CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID
timers display with a value of −6 in this field.CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID
timers display with a value of −2 in this field.
This file is available only when the kernel was
configured with CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
.
/proc/[pid]/timerslack_ns
(since
Linux 4.6)This file exposes the process's "current" timer
slack value, expressed in nanoseconds. The file is
writable, allowing the process's timer slack value to
be changed. Writing 0 to this file resets the
"current" timer slack to the "default" timer slack
value. For further details, see the discussion of
PR_SET_TIMERSLACK
in
prctl(2).
Initially, permission to access this file was
governed by a ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH_FSCREDS
check
(see ptrace(2)).
However, this was subsequently deemed too strict a
requirement (and had the side effect that requiring a
process to have the CAP_SYS_PTRACE
capability would
also allow it to view and change any process's
memory). Therefore, since Linux 4.9, only the
(weaker) CAP_SYS_NICE
capability is required to access this file.
/proc/[pid]/uid_map,
/proc/[pid]/gid_map
(since Linux
3.5)See user_namespaces(7).
/proc/[pid]/wchan
(since Linux
2.6.0)The symbolic name corresponding to the location in the kernel where the process is sleeping.
Permission to access this file is governed by a
ptrace access mode PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCREDS
check; see
ptrace(2).
/proc/[tid]
There is a numerical subdirectory for each running
thread that is not a thread group leader (i.e., a
thread whose thread ID is not the same as its process
ID); the subdirectory is named by the thread ID. Each
one of these subdirectories contains files and
subdirectories exposing information about the thread
with the thread ID tid
.
The contents of these directories are the same as the
corresponding /proc/[pid]/task/[tid]
directories.
The /proc/[tid]
subdirectories are not
visible when iterating through /proc
with getdents(2) (and
thus are not
visible
when one uses ls(1) to view the
contents of /proc
).
However, the pathnames of these directories are
visible to (i.e., usable as arguments in) system
calls that operate on pathnames.
/proc/apm
Advanced power management version and battery
information when CONFIG_APM
is defined at kernel
compilation time.
/proc/buddyinfo
This file contains information which is used for diagnosing memory fragmentation issues. Each line starts with the identification of the node and the name of the zone which together identify a memory region. This is then followed by the count of available chunks of a certain order in which these zones are split. The size in bytes of a certain order is given by the formula:
(2^order) * PAGE_SIZE
The binary buddy allocator algorithm inside the kernel will split one chunk into two chunks of a smaller order (thus with half the size) or combine two contiguous chunks into one larger chunk of a higher order (thus with double the size) to satisfy allocation requests and to counter memory fragmentation. The order matches the column number, when starting to count at zero.
For example on an x86-64 system:
Node 0, zone DMA 1 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 1 1 3 Node 0, zone DMA32 65 47 4 81 52 28 13 10 5 1 404 Node 0, zone Normal 216 55 189 101 84 38 37 27 5 3 587
In this example, there is one node containing
three zones and there are 11 different chunk sizes.
If the page size is 4 kilobytes, then the first zone
called DMA
(on x86 the
first 16 megabyte of memory) has 1 chunk of 4
kilobytes (order 0) available and has 3 chunks of 4
megabytes (order 10) available.
If the memory is heavily fragmented, the counters for higher order chunks will be zero and allocation of large contiguous areas will fail.
Further information about the zones can be found
in /proc/zoneinfo
.
/proc/bus
Contains subdirectories for installed busses.
/proc/bus/pccard
Subdirectory for PCMCIA devices when CONFIG_PCMCIA
is set at kernel
compilation time.
/proc/bus/pccard/drivers
/proc/bus/pci
Contains various bus subdirectories and pseudo-files containing information about PCI busses, installed devices, and device drivers. Some of these files are not ASCII.
/proc/bus/pci/devices
Information about PCI devices. They may be accessed through lspci(8) and setpci(8).
/proc/cgroups
(since Linux
2.6.24)See cgroups(7).
/proc/cmdline
Arguments passed to the Linux kernel at boot time. Often done via a boot manager such as lilo(8) or grub(8).
/proc/config.gz
(since Linux
2.6)This file exposes the configuration options that
were used to build the currently running kernel, in
the same format as they would be shown in the
.config
file that resulted when configuring the kernel (using
make xconfig,
make config,
or similar). The file contents are compressed; view
or search them using zcat(1) and
zgrep(1). As long as no
changes have been made to the following file, the
contents of /proc/config.gz
are the same as
those provided by:
cat /lib/modules/$(uname −r)/build/.config
/proc/config.gz
is
provided only if the kernel is configured with
CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC
.
/proc/crypto
A list of the ciphers provided by the kernel
crypto API. For details, see the kernel Linux Kernel Crypto API
documentation available under the kernel source
directory Documentation/crypto/
(or
Documentation/DocBook
before 4.10; the documentation can be built using a
command such as make
htmldocs in the root directory of the
kernel source tree).
/proc/cpuinfo
This is a collection of CPU and system
architecture dependent items, for each supported
architecture a different list. Two common entries are
processor
which gives
CPU number and bogomips
;
a system constant that is calculated during kernel
initialization. SMP machines have information for
each CPU. The lscpu(1) command
gathers its information from this file.
/proc/devices
Text listing of major numbers and device groups. This can be used by MAKEDEV scripts for consistency with the kernel.
/proc/diskstats
(since Linux
2.5.69)This file contains disk I/O statistics for each
disk device. See the Linux kernel source file
Documentation/iostats.txt
for
further information.
/proc/dma
This is a list of the registered ISA
DMA (direct memory access)
channels in use.
/proc/driver
Empty subdirectory.
/proc/execdomains
List of the execution domains (ABI personalities).
/proc/fb
Frame buffer information when CONFIG_FB
is defined during kernel
compilation.
/proc/filesystems
A text listing of the filesystems which are supported by the kernel, namely filesystems which were compiled into the kernel or whose kernel modules are currently loaded. (See also filesystems(5).) If a filesystem is marked with "nodev", this means that it does not require a block device to be mounted (e.g., virtual filesystem, network filesystem).
Incidentally, this file may be used by mount(8) when no filesystem is specified and it didn't manage to determine the filesystem type. Then filesystems contained in this file are tried (excepted those that are marked with "nodev").
/proc/fs
Contains subdirectories that in turn contain files with information about (certain) mounted filesystems.
/proc/ide
This directory exists on systems with the IDE bus. There are directories for each IDE channel and attached device. Files include:
cache buffer size in KB capacity number of sectors driver driver version geometry physical and logical geometry identify in hexadecimal media media type model manufacturer's model number settings drive settings smart_thresholds IDE disk management thresholds (in hex) smart_values IDE disk management values (in hex)
The hdparm(8) utility provides access to this information in a friendly format.
/proc/interrupts
This is used to record the number of interrupts per CPU per IO device. Since Linux 2.6.24, for the i386 and x86-64 architectures, at least, this also includes interrupts internal to the system (that is, not associated with a device as such), such as NMI (nonmaskable interrupt), LOC (local timer interrupt), and for SMP systems, TLB (TLB flush interrupt), RES (rescheduling interrupt), CAL (remote function call interrupt), and possibly others. Very easy to read formatting, done in ASCII.
/proc/iomem
I/O memory map in Linux 2.4.
/proc/ioports
This is a list of currently registered Input-Output port regions that are in use.
/proc/kallsyms
(since Linux
2.5.71)This holds the kernel exported symbol definitions
used by the modules
(X)
tools to dynamically link and bind loadable modules.
In Linux 2.5.47 and earlier, a similar file with
slightly different syntax was named ksyms
.
/proc/kcore
This file represents the physical memory of the
system and is stored in the ELF core file format.
With this pseudo-file, and an unstripped kernel
(/usr/src/linux/vmlinux
) binary, GDB
can be used to examine the current state of any
kernel data structures.
The total length of the file is the size of physical memory (RAM) plus 4 KiB.
/proc/keys
(since Linux
2.6.10)See keyrings(7).
/proc/key−users
(since Linux
2.6.10)See keyrings(7).
/proc/kmsg
This file can be used instead of the syslog(2) system call to read kernel messages. A process must have superuser privileges to read this file, and only one process should read this file. This file should not be read if a syslog process is running which uses the syslog(2) system call facility to log kernel messages.
Information in this file is retrieved with the dmesg(1) program.
/proc/kpagecgroup
(since Linux
4.3)This file contains a 64-bit inode number of the
memory cgroup each page is charged to, indexed by
page frame number (see the discussion of /proc/[pid]/pagemap
).
The /proc/kpagecgroup
file is present
only if the CONFIG_MEMCG
kernel configuration
option is enabled.
/proc/kpagecount
(since Linux
2.6.25)This file contains a 64-bit count of the number of
times each physical page frame is mapped, indexed by
page frame number (see the discussion of /proc/[pid]/pagemap
).
The /proc/kpagecount
file is present only if the CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
kernel
configuration option is enabled.
/proc/kpageflags
(since Linux
2.6.25)This file contains 64-bit masks corresponding to
each physical page frame; it is indexed by page frame
number (see the discussion of /proc/[pid]/pagemap
). The bits are
as follows:
0 - KPF_LOCKED 1 - KPF_ERROR 2 - KPF_REFERENCED 3 - KPF_UPTODATE 4 - KPF_DIRTY 5 - KPF_LRU 6 - KPF_ACTIVE 7 - KPF_SLAB 8 - KPF_WRITEBACK 9 - KPF_RECLAIM 10 - KPF_BUDDY 11 - KPF_MMAP (since Linux 2.6.31) 12 - KPF_ANON (since Linux 2.6.31) 13 - KPF_SWAPCACHE (since Linux 2.6.31) 14 - KPF_SWAPBACKED (since Linux 2.6.31) 15 - KPF_COMPOUND_HEAD (since Linux 2.6.31) 16 - KPF_COMPOUND_TAIL (since Linux 2.6.31) 17 - KPF_HUGE (since Linux 2.6.31) 18 - KPF_UNEVICTABLE (since Linux 2.6.31) 19 - KPF_HWPOISON (since Linux 2.6.31) 20 - KPF_NOPAGE (since Linux 2.6.31) 21 - KPF_KSM (since Linux 2.6.32) 22 - KPF_THP (since Linux 3.4) 23 - KPF_BALLOON (since Linux 3.18) 24 - KPF_ZERO_PAGE (since Linux 4.0) 25 - KPF_IDLE (since Linux 4.3)
For further details on the meanings of these bits,
see the kernel source file Documentation/admin−guide/mm/pagemap.rst
.
Before kernel 2.6.29, KPF_WRITEBACK
, KPF_RECLAIM
, KPF_BUDDY
, and KPF_LOCKED
did not report
correctly.
The /proc/kpageflags
file is present only if the CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
kernel
configuration option is enabled.
/proc/ksyms (Linux
1.1.23–2.5.47)
See /proc/kallsyms
.
/proc/loadavg
The first three fields in this file are load average figures giving the number of jobs in the run queue (state R) or waiting for disk I/O (state D) averaged over 1, 5, and 15 minutes. They are the same as the load average numbers given by uptime(1) and other programs. The fourth field consists of two numbers separated by a slash (/). The first of these is the number of currently runnable kernel scheduling entities (processes, threads). The value after the slash is the number of kernel scheduling entities that currently exist on the system. The fifth field is the PID of the process that was most recently created on the system.
/proc/locks
This file shows current file locks (flock(2) and fcntl(2)) and leases (fcntl(2)).
An example of the content shown in this file is the following:
1: POSIX ADVISORY READ 5433 08:01:7864448 128 128 2: FLOCK ADVISORY WRITE 2001 08:01:7864554 0 EOF 3: FLOCK ADVISORY WRITE 1568 00:2f:32388 0 EOF 4: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 699 00:16:28457 0 EOF 5: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 764 00:16:21448 0 0 6: POSIX ADVISORY READ 3548 08:01:7867240 1 1 7: POSIX ADVISORY READ 3548 08:01:7865567 1826 2335 8: OFDLCK ADVISORY WRITE −1 08:01:8713209 128 191
The fields shown in each line are as follows:
(1)
The ordinal position of the lock in the list.
(2)
The lock type. Values that may appear here include:
(3)
Among the strings that can appear here are the following:
ADVISORY
This is an advisory lock.
MANDATORY
This is a mandatory lock.
(4)
The type of lock. Values that can appear here are:
READ
This is a POSIX or OFD read lock, or a BSD shared lock.
WRITE
This is a POSIX or OFD write lock, or a BSD exclusive lock.
(5)
The PID of the process that owns the lock.
Because OFD locks are not owned by a single process (since multiple processes may have file descriptors that refer to the same open file description), the value −1 is displayed in this field for OFD locks. (Before kernel 4.14, a bug meant that the PID of the process that initially acquired the lock was displayed instead of the value −1.)
(6)
Three colon-separated subfields that identify the major and minor device ID of the device containing the filesystem where the locked file resides, followed by the inode number of the locked file.
(7)
The byte offset of the first byte of the lock. For BSD locks, this value is always 0.
(8)
The byte offset of the last byte of the lock.
EOF
in this field means that the lock extends to the end of the file. For BSD locks, the value shown is alwaysEOF
.
Since Linux 4.9, the list of locks shown in
/proc/locks
is filtered
to show just the locks for the processes in the PID
namespace (see pid_namespaces(7))
for which the /proc
filesystem was mounted. (In the initial PID
namespace, there is no filtering of the records shown
in this file.)
The lslocks(8) command provides a bit more information about each lock.
/proc/malloc (only up to and including Linux
2.2)
This file is present only if CONFIG_DEBUG_MALLOC
was defined
during compilation.
/proc/meminfo
This file reports statistics about memory usage on the system. It is used by free(1) to report the amount of free and used memory (both physical and swap) on the system as well as the shared memory and buffers used by the kernel. Each line of the file consists of a parameter name, followed by a colon, the value of the parameter, and an option unit of measurement (e.g., "kB"). The list below describes the parameter names and the format specifier required to read the field value. Except as noted below, all of the fields have been present since at least Linux 2.6.0. Some fields are displayed only if the kernel was configured with various options; those dependencies are noted in the list.
MemTotal
%luTotal usable RAM (i.e., physical RAM minus a few reserved bits and the kernel binary code).
MemFree
%luThe sum of
LowFree
+HighFree
.MemAvailable
%lu (since Linux 3.14)An estimate of how much memory is available for starting new applications, without swapping.
Buffers
%luRelatively temporary storage for raw disk blocks that shouldn't get tremendously large (20 MB or so).
Cached
%luIn-memory cache for files read from the disk (the page cache). Doesn't include
SwapCached
.SwapCached
%luMemory that once was swapped out, is swapped back in but still also is in the swap file. (If memory pressure is high, these pages don't need to be swapped out again because they are already in the swap file. This saves I/O.)
Active
%luMemory that has been used more recently and usually not reclaimed unless absolutely necessary.
Inactive
%luMemory which has been less recently used. It is more eligible to be reclaimed for other purposes.
Active(anon)
%lu (since Linux 2.6.28)[To be documented.]
Inactive(anon)
%lu (since Linux 2.6.28)[To be documented.]
Active(file)
%lu (since Linux 2.6.28)[To be documented.]
Inactive(file)
%lu (since Linux 2.6.28)[To be documented.]
Unevictable
%lu (since Linux 2.6.28)(From Linux 2.6.28 to 2.6.30,
CONFIG_UNEVICTABLE_LRU
was required.) [To be documented.]Mlocked
%lu (since Linux 2.6.28)(From Linux 2.6.28 to 2.6.30,
CONFIG_UNEVICTABLE_LRU
was required.) [To be documented.]HighTotal
%lu(Starting with Linux 2.6.19,
CONFIG_HIGHMEM
is required.) Total amount of highmem. Highmem is all memory above ~860 MB of physical memory. Highmem areas are for use by user-space programs, or for the page cache. The kernel must use tricks to access this memory, making it slower to access than lowmem.HighFree
%lu(Starting with Linux 2.6.19,
CONFIG_HIGHMEM
is required.) Amount of free highmem.LowTotal
%lu(Starting with Linux 2.6.19,
CONFIG_HIGHMEM
is required.) Total amount of lowmem. Lowmem is memory which can be used for everything that highmem can be used for, but it is also available for the kernel's use for its own data structures. Among many other things, it is where everything fromSlab
is allocated. Bad things happen when you're out of lowmem.LowFree
%lu(Starting with Linux 2.6.19,
CONFIG_HIGHMEM
is required.) Amount of free lowmem.MmapCopy
%lu (since Linux 2.6.29)(
CONFIG_MMU
is required.) [To be documented.]SwapTotal
%luTotal amount of swap space available.
SwapFree
%luAmount of swap space that is currently unused.
Dirty
%luMemory which is waiting to get written back to the disk.
Writeback
%luMemory which is actively being written back to the disk.
AnonPages
%lu (since Linux 2.6.18)Non-file backed pages mapped into user-space page tables.
Mapped
%luFiles which have been mapped into memory (with mmap(2)), such as libraries.
Shmem
%lu (since Linux 2.6.32)Amount of memory consumed in tmpfs(5) filesystems.
KReclaimable
%lu (since Linux 4.20)Kernel allocations that the kernel will attempt to reclaim under memory pressure. Includes
SReclaimable
(below), and other direct allocations with a shrinker.Slab
%luIn-kernel data structures cache. (See slabinfo(5).)
SReclaimable
%lu (since Linux 2.6.19)Part of
Slab
, that might be reclaimed, such as caches.SUnreclaim
%lu (since Linux 2.6.19)Part of
Slab
, that cannot be reclaimed on memory pressure.KernelStack
%lu (since Linux 2.6.32)Amount of memory allocated to kernel stacks.
PageTables
%lu (since Linux 2.6.18)Amount of memory dedicated to the lowest level of page tables.
Quicklists
%lu (since Linux 2.6.27)(
CONFIG_QUICKLIST
is required.) [To be documented.]NFS_Unstable
%lu (since Linux 2.6.18)NFS pages sent to the server, but not yet committed to stable storage.
Bounce
%lu (since Linux 2.6.18)Memory used for block device "bounce buffers".
WritebackTmp
%lu (since Linux 2.6.26)Memory used by FUSE for temporary writeback buffers.
CommitLimit
%lu (since Linux 2.6.10)This is the total amount of memory currently available to be allocated on the system, expressed in kilobytes. This limit is adhered to only if strict overcommit accounting is enabled (mode 2 in
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
). The limit is calculated according to the formula described under/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
. For further details, see the kernel source fileDocumentation/vm/overcommit−accounting.rst
.Committed_AS
%luThe amount of memory presently allocated on the system. The committed memory is a sum of all of the memory which has been allocated by processes, even if it has not been "used" by them as of yet. A process which allocates 1 GB of memory (using malloc(3) or similar), but touches only 300 MB of that memory will show up as using only 300 MB of memory even if it has the address space allocated for the entire 1 GB.
This 1 GB is memory which has been "committed" to by the VM and can be used at any time by the allocating application. With strict overcommit enabled on the system (mode 2 in
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
), allocations which would exceed theCommitLimit
will not be permitted. This is useful if one needs to guarantee that processes will not fail due to lack of memory once that memory has been successfully allocated.VmallocTotal
%luTotal size of vmalloc memory area.
VmallocUsed
%luAmount of vmalloc area which is used. Since Linux 4.4, this field is no longer calculated, and is hard coded as 0. See
/proc/vmallocinfo
.VmallocChunk
%luLargest contiguous block of vmalloc area which is free. Since Linux 4.4, this field is no longer calculated and is hard coded as 0. See
/proc/vmallocinfo
.HardwareCorrupted
%lu (since Linux 2.6.32)(
CONFIG_MEMORY_FAILURE
is required.) [To be documented.]LazyFree
%lu (since Linux 4.12)Shows the amount of memory marked by madvise(2)
MADV_FREE
.AnonHugePages
%lu (since Linux 2.6.38)(
CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE
is required.) Non-file backed huge pages mapped into user-space page tables.ShmemHugePages
%lu (since Linux 4.8)(
CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE
is required.) Memory used by shared memory (shmem) and tmpfs(5) allocated with huge pages.ShmemPmdMapped
%lu (since Linux 4.8)(
CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE
is required.) Shared memory mapped into user space with huge pages.CmaTotal
%lu (since Linux 3.1)Total CMA (Contiguous Memory Allocator) pages. (
CONFIG_CMA
is required.)CmaFree
%lu (since Linux 3.1)Free CMA (Contiguous Memory Allocator) pages. (
CONFIG_CMA
is required.)HugePages_Total
%lu(
CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE
is required.) The size of the pool of huge pages.HugePages_Free
%lu(
CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE
is required.) The number of huge pages in the pool that are not yet allocated.HugePages_Rsvd
%lu (since Linux 2.6.17)(
CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE
is required.) This is the number of huge pages for which a commitment to allocate from the pool has been made, but no allocation has yet been made. These reserved huge pages guarantee that an application will be able to allocate a huge page from the pool of huge pages at fault time.HugePages_Surp
%lu (since Linux 2.6.24)(
CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE
is required.) This is the number of huge pages in the pool above the value in/proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages
. The maximum number of surplus huge pages is controlled by/proc/sys/vm/nr_overcommit_hugepages
.Hugepagesize
%lu(
CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE
is required.) The size of huge pages.DirectMap4k
%lu (since Linux 2.6.27)Number of bytes of RAM linearly mapped by kernel in 4 kB pages. (x86.)
DirectMap4M
%lu (since Linux 2.6.27)Number of bytes of RAM linearly mapped by kernel in 4 MB pages. (x86 with
CONFIG_X86_64
orCONFIG_X86_PAE
enabled.)DirectMap2M
%lu (since Linux 2.6.27)Number of bytes of RAM linearly mapped by kernel in 2 MB pages. (x86 with neither
CONFIG_X86_64
norCONFIG_X86_PAE
enabled.)DirectMap1G
%lu (since Linux 2.6.27)(x86 with
CONFIG_X86_64
andCONFIG_X86_DIRECT_GBPAGES
enabled.)
/proc/modules
A text list of the modules that have been loaded by the system. See also lsmod(8).
/proc/mounts
Before kernel 2.4.19, this file was a list of all
the filesystems currently mounted on the system. With
the introduction of per-process mount namespaces in
Linux 2.4.19 (see mount_namespaces(7)),
this file became a link to /proc/self/mounts
, which lists the
mount points of the process's own mount namespace.
The format of this file is documented in fstab(5).
/proc/mtrr
Memory Type Range Registers. See the Linux kernel
source file Documentation/x86/mtrr.txt
(or
Documentation/mtrr.txt
before Linux 2.6.28) for details.
/proc/net
This directory contains various files and subdirectories containing information about the networking layer. The files contain ASCII structures and are, therefore, readable with cat(1). However, the standard netstat(8) suite provides much cleaner access to these files.
With the advent of network namespaces, various
information relating to the network stack is
virtualized (see network_namespaces(7)).
Thus, since Linux 2.6.25, /proc/net
is a symbolic link to the
directory /proc/self/net
, which contains the
same files and directories as listed below. However,
these files and directories now expose information
for the network namespace of which the process is a
member.
/proc/net/arp
This holds an ASCII readable dump of the kernel ARP table used for address resolutions. It will show both dynamically learned and preprogrammed ARP entries. The format is:
IP address
HW type
Flags
HW address
Mask
Device
192.168.0.50
0x1
0x2
00:50:BF:25:68:F3
*
eth0
192.168.0.250
0x1
0xc
00:00:00:00:00:00
*
eth0
Here "IP address" is the IPv4 address of the
machine and the "HW type" is the hardware type of the
address from RFC 826. The flags are the internal
flags of the ARP structure (as defined in
/usr/include/linux/if_arp.h
)
and the "HW address" is the data link layer mapping
for that IP address if it is known.
/proc/net/dev
The dev pseudo-file contains network device status information. This gives the number of received and sent packets, the number of errors and collisions and other basic statistics. These are used by the ifconfig(8) program to report device status. The format is:
Inter−| Receive | Transmit face |bytes packets errs drop fifo frame compressed multicast|bytes packets errs drop fifo colls carrier compressed lo: 2776770 11307 0 0 0 0 0 0 2776770 11307 0 0 0 0 0 0 eth0: 1215645 2751 0 0 0 0 0 0 1782404 4324 0 0 0 427 0 0 ppp0: 1622270 5552 1 0 0 0 0 0 354130 5669 0 0 0 0 0 0 tap0: 7714 81 0 0 0 0 0 0 7714 81 0 0 0 0 0 0
/proc/net/dev_mcast
Defined in /usr/src/linux/net/core/dev_mcast.c
:
indx
interface_name
dmi_u
dmi_g
dmi_address
2
eth0
1
0
01005e000001
3
eth1
1
0
01005e000001
4
eth2
1
0
01005e000001
/proc/net/igmp
Internet Group Management Protocol. Defined in
/usr/src/linux/net/core/igmp.c
.
/proc/net/rarp
This file uses the same format as the arp
file and contains the current
reverse mapping database used to provide rarp(8) reverse address
lookup services. If RARP is not configured into the
kernel, this file will not be present.
/proc/net/raw
Holds a dump of the RAW socket table. Much of the information is not of use apart from debugging. The "sl" value is the kernel hash slot for the socket, the "local_address" is the local address and protocol number pair. "St" is the internal status of the socket. The "tx_queue" and "rx_queue" are the outgoing and incoming data queue in terms of kernel memory usage. The "tr", "tm−>when", and "rexmits" fields are not used by RAW. The "uid" field holds the effective UID of the creator of the socket.
/proc/net/snmp
This file holds the ASCII data needed for the IP, ICMP, TCP, and UDP management information bases for an SNMP agent.
/proc/net/tcp
Holds a dump of the TCP socket table. Much of the information is not of use apart from debugging. The "sl" value is the kernel hash slot for the socket, the "local_address" is the local address and port number pair. The "rem_address" is the remote address and port number pair (if connected). "St" is the internal status of the socket. The "tx_queue" and "rx_queue" are the outgoing and incoming data queue in terms of kernel memory usage. The "tr", "tm−>when", and "rexmits" fields hold internal information of the kernel socket state and are useful only for debugging. The "uid" field holds the effective UID of the creator of the socket.
/proc/net/udp
Holds a dump of the UDP socket table. Much of the information is not of use apart from debugging. The "sl" value is the kernel hash slot for the socket, the "local_address" is the local address and port number pair. The "rem_address" is the remote address and port number pair (if connected). "St" is the internal status of the socket. The "tx_queue" and "rx_queue" are the outgoing and incoming data queue in terms of kernel memory usage. The "tr", "tm−>when", and "rexmits" fields are not used by UDP. The "uid" field holds the effective UID of the creator of the socket. The format is:
sl |
local_address |
rem_address |
st |
tx_queue rx_queue |
tr rexmits |
tm−>when |
uid |
1: |
01642C89:0201 |
0C642C89:03FF |
01 |
00000000:00000001 |
01:000071BA |
00000000 |
0 |
1: |
00000000:0801 |
00000000:0000 |
0A |
00000000:00000000 |
00:00000000 |
6F000100 |
0 |
1: |
00000000:0201 |
00000000:0000 |
0A |
00000000:00000000 |
00:00000000 |
00000000 |
0 |
/proc/net/unix
Lists the UNIX domain sockets present within the system and their status. The format is:
Num RefCount Protocol Flags Type St Inode Path 0: 00000002 00000000 00000000 0001 03 42 1: 00000001 00000000 00010000 0001 01 1948 /dev/printer
The fields are as follows:
Num
:the kernel table slot number.
RefCount
:the number of users of the socket.
Protocol
:currently always 0.
Flags
:the internal kernel flags holding the status of the socket.
Type
:the socket type. For
SOCK_STREAM
sockets, this is 0001; forSOCK_DGRAM
sockets, it is 0002; and forSOCK_SEQPACKET
sockets, it is 0005.St
:the internal state of the socket.
Inode
:the inode number of the socket.
Path
:the bound pathname (if any) of the socket. Sockets in the abstract namespace are included in the list, and are shown with a
Path
that commences with the character '@'.
/proc/net/netfilter/nfnetlink_queue
This file contains information about netfilter user-space queueing, if used. Each line represents a queue. Queues that have not been subscribed to by user space are not shown.
1 4207 0 2 65535 0 0 0 1 (1) (2) (3)(4) (5) (6) (7) (8)
The fields in each line are:
- (1)
The ID of the queue. This matches what is specified in the
−−queue−num
or−−queue−balance
options to the iptables(8) NFQUEUE target. See iptables-extensions(8) for more information.- (2)
The netlink port ID subscribed to the queue.
- (3)
The number of packets currently queued and waiting to be processed by the application.
- (4)
The copy mode of the queue. It is either 1 (metadata only) or 2 (also copy payload data to user space).
- (5)
Copy range; that is, how many bytes of packet payload should be copied to user space at most.
- (6)
queue dropped. Number of packets that had to be dropped by the kernel because too many packets are already waiting for user space to send back the mandatory accept/drop verdicts.
- (7)
queue user dropped. Number of packets that were dropped within the netlink subsystem. Such drops usually happen when the corresponding socket buffer is full; that is, user space is not able to read messages fast enough.
- (8)
sequence number. Every queued packet is associated with a (32-bit) monotonically increasing sequence number. This shows the ID of the most recent packet queued.
The last number exists only for compatibility reasons and is always 1.
/proc/partitions
Contains the major and minor numbers of each partition as well as the number of 1024-byte blocks and the partition name.
/proc/pci
This is a listing of all PCI devices found during kernel initialization and their configuration.
This file has been deprecated in favor of a new
/proc
interface for PCI
(/proc/bus/pci
). It
became optional in Linux 2.2 (available with
CONFIG_PCI_OLD_PROC
set
at kernel compilation). It became once more
nonoptionally enabled in Linux 2.4. Next, it was
deprecated in Linux 2.6 (still available with
CONFIG_PCI_LEGACY_PROC
set), and finally removed altogether since Linux
2.6.17.
/proc/profile
(since Linux
2.4)This file is present only if the kernel was booted
with the profile=1
command-line option. It exposes kernel profiling
information in a binary format for use by
readprofile(1). Writing
(e.g., an empty string) to this file resets the
profiling counters; on some architectures, writing a
binary integer "profiling multiplier" of size
sizeof(int)
sets the profiling interrupt frequency.
/proc/scsi
A directory with the scsi
mid-level pseudo-file and
various SCSI low-level driver directories, which
contain a file for each SCSI host in this system, all
of which give the status of some part of the SCSI IO
subsystem. These files contain ASCII structures and
are, therefore, readable with cat(1).
You can also write to some of the files to reconfigure the subsystem or switch certain features on or off.
/proc/scsi/scsi
This is a listing of all SCSI devices known to the
kernel. The listing is similar to the one seen during
bootup. scsi currently supports only the add−single−device
command which allows root to add a hotplugged device
to the list of known devices.
The command
echo 'scsi add−single−device 1 0 5 0' > /proc/scsi/scsi
will cause host scsi1 to scan on SCSI channel 0 for a device on ID 5 LUN 0. If there is already a device known on this address or the address is invalid, an error will be returned.
/proc/scsi/[drivername]
[drivername]
can
currently be NCR53c7xx, aha152x, aha1542, aha1740,
aic7xxx, buslogic, eata_dma, eata_pio, fdomain,
in2000, pas16, qlogic, scsi_debug, seagate, t128,
u15−24f, ultrastore, or wd7000. These
directories show up for all drivers that registered
at least one SCSI HBA. Every directory contains one
file per registered host. Every host-file is named
after the number the host was assigned during
initialization.
Reading these files will usually show driver and host configuration, statistics, and so on.
Writing to these files allows different things on
different hosts. For example, with the latency
and nolatency
commands, root can switch
on and off command latency measurement code in the
eata_dma driver. With the lockup
and unlock
commands, root can control
bus lockups simulated by the scsi_debug driver.
/proc/self
This directory refers to the process accessing the
/proc
filesystem, and
is identical to the /proc
directory named by the
process ID of the same process.
/proc/slabinfo
Information about kernel caches. See slabinfo(5) for details.
/proc/stat
kernel/system statistics. Varies with architecture. Common entries include:
cpu101321532906963084719468284831668302519501756280
,cpu01393280329665720561334329261300178750239330
The amount of time, measured in units of USER_HZ (1/100ths of a second on most architectures, use
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
to obtain the right value), that the system ("cpu" line) or the specific CPU ("cpuN
" line) spent in various states:
user
(1) Time spent in user mode.
nice
(2) Time spent in user mode with low priority (nice).
system
(3) Time spent in system mode.
idle
(4) Time spent in the idle task. This value should be USER_HZ times the second entry in the
/proc/uptime
pseudo-file.iowait
(since Linux 2.5.41)(5) Time waiting for I/O to complete. This value is not reliable, for the following reasons:
The CPU will not wait for I/O to complete; iowait is the time that a task is waiting for I/O to complete. When a CPU goes into idle state for outstanding task I/O, another task will be scheduled on this CPU.
On a multi-core CPU, the task waiting for I/O to complete is not running on any CPU, so the iowait of each CPU is difficult to calculate.
The value in this field may
decrease
in certain conditions.irq
(since Linux 2.6.0)(6) Time servicing interrupts.
softirq
(since Linux 2.6.0)(7) Time servicing softirqs.
steal
(since Linux 2.6.11)(8) Stolen time, which is the time spent in other operating systems when running in a virtualized environment
guest
(since Linux 2.6.24)(9) Time spent running a virtual CPU for guest operating systems under the control of the Linux kernel.
guest_nice
(since Linux 2.6.33)(10) Time spent running a niced guest (virtual CPU for guest operating systems under the control of the Linux kernel).
- page 5741 1808
The number of pages the system paged in and the number that were paged out (from disk).
- swap 1 0
The number of swap pages that have been brought in and out.
- intr 1462898
This line shows counts of interrupts serviced since boot time, for each of the possible system interrupts. The first column is the total of all interrupts serviced including unnumbered architecture specific interrupts; each subsequent column is the total for that particular numbered interrupt. Unnumbered interrupts are not shown, only summed into the total.
- disk_io: (2,0):(31,30,5764,1,2) (3,0):...
(major,disk_idx):(noinfo, read_io_ops, blks_read, write_io_ops, blks_written)
(Linux 2.4 only)
- ctxt 115315
The number of context switches that the system underwent.
- btime 769041601
boot time, in seconds since the Epoch, 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 (UTC).
- processes 86031
Number of forks since boot.
- procs_running 6
Number of processes in runnable state. (Linux 2.5.45 onward.)
- procs_blocked 2
Number of processes blocked waiting for I/O to complete. (Linux 2.5.45 onward.)
softirq22924588994600015841361951757042471304285121274159130143051240672
This line shows the number of softirq for all CPUs. The first column is the total of all softirqs and each subsequent column is the total for particular softirq. (Linux 2.6.31 onward.)
/proc/swaps
Swap areas in use. See also swapon(8).
/proc/sys
This directory (present since 1.3.57) contains a
number of files and subdirectories corresponding to
kernel variables. These variables can be read and in
some cases modified using the /proc
filesystem, and the
(deprecated) sysctl(2) system
call.
String values may be terminated by either '\0' or '\n'.
Integer and long values may be written either in decimal or in hexadecimal notation (e.g., 0x3FFF). When writing multiple integer or long values, these may be separated by any of the following whitespace characters: ' ', '\t', or '\n'. Using other separators leads to the error EINVAL.
/proc/sys/abi
(since Linux
2.4.10)This directory may contain files with application
binary information. See the Linux kernel source file
Documentation/sysctl/abi.txt
for
more information.
/proc/sys/debug
This directory may be empty.
/proc/sys/dev
This directory contains device-specific
information (e.g., dev/cdrom/info
). On some systems, it
may be empty.
/proc/sys/fs
This directory contains the files and subdirectories for kernel variables related to filesystems.
/proc/sys/fs/aio−max−nr and
/proc/sys/fs/aio−nr
(since Linux
2.6.4)aio−nr
is the
running total of the number of events specified by
io_setup(2) calls
for all currently active AIO contexts. If aio−nr
reaches
aio−max−nr
,
then io_setup(2) will
fail with the error EAGAIN. Raising aio−max−nr
does not result in the preallocation or resizing of
any kernel data structures.
/proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc
Documentation for files in this directory can be
found in the Linux kernel source in the file
Documentation/admin−guide/binfmt−misc.rst
(or in Documentation/binfmt_misc.txt
on
older kernels).
/proc/sys/fs/dentry−state
(since Linux 2.2)This file contains information about the status of
the directory cache (dcache). The file contains six
numbers, nr_dentry
,
nr_unused
, age_limit
(age in seconds),
want_pages
(pages
requested by system) and two dummy values.
nr_dentry
is the number of allocated dentries (dcache entries). This field is unused in Linux 2.2.
nr_unused
is the number of unused dentries.
age_limit
is the age in seconds after which dcache entries can be reclaimed when memory is short.
want_pages
is nonzero when the kernel has called shrink_dcache_pages() and the dcache isn't pruned yet.
/proc/sys/fs/dir−notify−enable
This file can be used to disable or enable the
dnotify
interface
described in fcntl(2) on a
system-wide basis. A value of 0 in this file disables
the interface, and a value of 1 enables it.
/proc/sys/fs/dquot−max
This file shows the maximum number of cached disk quota entries. On some (2.4) systems, it is not present. If the number of free cached disk quota entries is very low and you have some awesome number of simultaneous system users, you might want to raise the limit.
/proc/sys/fs/dquot−nr
This file shows the number of allocated disk quota entries and the number of free disk quota entries.
/proc/sys/fs/epoll
(since Linux
2.6.28)This directory contains the file max_user_watches
, which can be used
to limit the amount of kernel memory consumed by the
epoll
interface. For
further details, see epoll(7).
/proc/sys/fs/file−max
This file defines a system-wide limit on the
number of open files for all processes. System calls
that fail when encountering this limit fail with the
error ENFILE. (See
also setrlimit(2), which
can be used by a process to set the per-process
limit, RLIMIT_NOFILE
,
on the number of files it may open.) If you get lots
of error messages in the kernel log about running out
of file handles (open file descriptions) (look for
"VFS: file−max limit <number> reached"),
try increasing this value:
echo 100000 > /proc/sys/fs/file−max
Privileged processes (CAP_SYS_ADMIN
) can override the
file−max
limit.
/proc/sys/fs/file−nr
This (read-only) file contains three numbers: the
number of allocated file handles (i.e., the number of
open file descriptions; see open(2)); the
number of free file handles; and the maximum number
of file handles (i.e., the same value as /proc/sys/fs/file−max
). If
the number of allocated file handles is close to the
maximum, you should consider increasing the maximum.
Before Linux 2.6, the kernel allocated file handles
dynamically, but it didn't free them again. Instead
the free file handles were kept in a list for
reallocation; the "free file handles" value indicates
the size of that list. A large number of free file
handles indicates that there was a past peak in the
usage of open file handles. Since Linux 2.6, the
kernel does deallocate freed file handles, and the
"free file handles" value is always zero.
/proc/sys/fs/inode−max (only present
until Linux 2.2)
This file contains the maximum number of in-memory
inodes. This value should be 3–4 times larger
than the value in file−max
, since
stdin
, stdout
and network sockets also need
an inode to handle them. When you regularly run out
of inodes, you need to increase this value.
Starting with Linux 2.4, there is no longer a static limit on the number of inodes, and this file is removed.
/proc/sys/fs/inode−nr
This file contains the first two values from
inode−state
.
/proc/sys/fs/inode−state
This file contains seven numbers: nr_inodes
, nr_free_inodes
, preshrink
, and four dummy values
(always zero).
nr_inodes
is the
number of inodes the system has allocated.
nr_free_inodes
represents the number of free inodes.
preshrink
is nonzero
when the nr_inodes
>
inode−max
and
the system needs to prune the inode list instead of
allocating more; since Linux 2.4, this field is a
dummy value (always zero).
/proc/sys/fs/inotify
(since Linux
2.6.13)This directory contains files max_queued_events
, max_user_instances
, and max_user_watches
, that can be used
to limit the amount of kernel memory consumed by the
inotify
interface. For
further details, see inotify(7).
/proc/sys/fs/lease−break−time
This file specifies the grace period that the kernel grants to a process holding a file lease (fcntl(2)) after it has sent a signal to that process notifying it that another process is waiting to open the file. If the lease holder does not remove or downgrade the lease within this grace period, the kernel forcibly breaks the lease.
/proc/sys/fs/leases−enable
This file can be used to enable or disable file leases (fcntl(2)) on a system-wide basis. If this file contains the value 0, leases are disabled. A nonzero value enables leases.
/proc/sys/fs/mount−max
(since
Linux 4.9)The value in this file specifies the maximum number of mounts that may exist in a mount namespace. The default value in this file is 100,000.
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue
(since Linux
2.6.6)This directory contains files msg_max
, msgsize_max
, and queues_max
, controlling the
resources used by POSIX message queues. See mq_overview(7) for
details.
/proc/sys/fs/nr_open
(since Linux
2.6.25)This file imposes a ceiling on the value to which
the RLIMIT_NOFILE
resource limit can be raised (see getrlimit(2)). This
ceiling is enforced for both unprivileged and
privileged process. The default value in this file is
1048576. (Before Linux 2.6.25, the ceiling for
RLIMIT_NOFILE
was
hard-coded to the same value.)
/proc/sys/fs/overflowgid and
/proc/sys/fs/overflowuid
These files allow you to change the value of the fixed UID and GID. The default is 65534. Some filesystems support only 16-bit UIDs and GIDs, although in Linux UIDs and GIDs are 32 bits. When one of these filesystems is mounted with writes enabled, any UID or GID that would exceed 65535 is translated to the overflow value before being written to disk.
/proc/sys/fs/pipe−max−size
(since Linux 2.6.35)See pipe(7).
/proc/sys/fs/pipe−user−pages−hard
(since Linux 4.5)See pipe(7).
/proc/sys/fs/pipe−user−pages−soft
(since Linux 4.5)See pipe(7).
/proc/sys/fs/protected_fifos
(since
Linux 4.19)The value in this file is/can be set to one of the following:
0
Writing to FIFOs is unrestricted.
1
Don't allow
O_CREAT
open(2) on FIFOs that the caller doesn't own in world-writable sticky directories, unless the FIFO is owned by the owner of the directory.2
As for the value 1, but the restriction also applies to group-writable sticky directories.
The intent of the above protections is to avoid unintentional writes to an attacker-controlled FIFO when a program expected to create a regular file.
/proc/sys/fs/protected_hardlinks
(since Linux 3.6)When the value in this file is 0, no restrictions are placed on the creation of hard links (i.e., this is the historical behavior before Linux 3.6). When the value in this file is 1, a hard link can be created to a target file only if one of the following conditions is true:
The calling process has the
CAP_FOWNER
capability in its user namespace and the file UID has a mapping in the namespace.The filesystem UID of the process creating the link matches the owner (UID) of the target file (as described in credentials(7), a process's filesystem UID is normally the same as its effective UID).
All of the following conditions are true:
the target is a regular file;
the target file does not have its set-user-ID mode bit enabled;
the target file does not have both its set-group-ID and group-executable mode bits enabled; and
the caller has permission to read and write the target file (either via the file's permissions mask or because it has suitable capabilities).
The default value in this file is 0. Setting the
value to 1 prevents a longstanding class of security
issues caused by hard-link-based time-of-check,
time-of-use races, most commonly seen in
world-writable directories such as /tmp
. The common method of
exploiting this flaw is to cross privilege boundaries
when following a given hard link (i.e., a root
process follows a hard link created by another user).
Additionally, on systems without separated
partitions, this stops unauthorized users from
"pinning" vulnerable set-user-ID and set-group-ID
files against being upgraded by the administrator, or
linking to special files.
/proc/sys/fs/protected_regular
(since
Linux 4.19)The value in this file is/can be set to one of the following:
0
Writing to regular files is unrestricted.
1
Don't allow
O_CREAT
open(2) on regular files that the caller doesn't own in world-writable sticky directories, unless the regular file is owned by the owner of the directory.2
As for the value 1, but the restriction also applies to group-writable sticky directories.
The intent of the above protections is similar to
protected_fifos
, but
allows an application to avoid writes to an
attacker-controlled regular file, where the
application expected to create one.
/proc/sys/fs/protected_symlinks
(since Linux 3.6)When the value in this file is 0, no restrictions are placed on following symbolic links (i.e., this is the historical behavior before Linux 3.6). When the value in this file is 1, symbolic links are followed only in the following circumstances:
the filesystem UID of the process following the link matches the owner (UID) of the symbolic link (as described in credentials(7), a process's filesystem UID is normally the same as its effective UID);
the link is not in a sticky world-writable directory; or
the symbolic link and its parent directory have the same owner (UID)
A system call that fails to follow a symbolic link
because of the above restrictions returns the error
EACCES in errno
.
The default value in this file is 0. Setting the value to 1 avoids a longstanding class of security issues based on time-of-check, time-of-use races when accessing symbolic links.
/proc/sys/fs/suid_dumpable
(since
Linux 2.6.13)The value in this file is assigned to a process's
"dumpable" flag in the circumstances described in
prctl(2). In
effect, the value in this file determines whether
core dump files are produced for set-user-ID or
otherwise protected/tainted binaries. The "dumpable"
setting also affects the ownership of files in a
process's /proc/[pid]
directory, as described above.
Three different integer values can be specified:
- 0 (default)
This provides the traditional (pre-Linux 2.6.13) behavior. A core dump will not be produced for a process which has changed credentials (by calling seteuid(2), setgid(2), or similar, or by executing a set-user-ID or set-group-ID program) or whose binary does not have read permission enabled.
- 1 ("debug")
All processes dump core when possible. (Reasons why a process might nevertheless not dump core are described in core(5).) The core dump is owned by the filesystem user ID of the dumping process and no security is applied. This is intended for system debugging situations only: this mode is insecure because it allows unprivileged users to examine the memory contents of privileged processes.
- 2 ("suidsafe")
Any binary which normally would not be dumped (see "0" above) is dumped readable by root only. This allows the user to remove the core dump file but not to read it. For security reasons core dumps in this mode will not overwrite one another or other files. This mode is appropriate when administrators are attempting to debug problems in a normal environment.
Additionally, since Linux 3.6,
/proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
must either be an absolute pathname or a pipe command, as detailed in core(5). Warnings will be written to the kernel log ifcore_pattern
does not follow these rules, and no core dump will be produced.
For details of the effect of a process's "dumpable" setting on ptrace access mode checking, see ptrace(2).
/proc/sys/fs/super−max
This file controls the maximum number of
superblocks, and thus the maximum number of mounted
filesystems the kernel can have. You need increase
only super−max
if
you need to mount more filesystems than the current
value in super−max
allows you to.
/proc/sys/fs/super−nr
This file contains the number of filesystems currently mounted.
/proc/sys/kernel
This directory contains files controlling a range of kernel parameters, as described below.
/proc/sys/kernel/acct
This file contains three numbers: highwater
, lowwater
, and frequency
. If BSD-style process
accounting is enabled, these values control its
behavior. If free space on filesystem where the log
lives goes below lowwater
percent, accounting
suspends. If free space gets above highwater
percent, accounting
resumes. frequency
determines how often the kernel checks the amount of
free space (value is in seconds). Default values are
4, 2, and 30. That is, suspend accounting if 2% or
less space is free; resume it if 4% or more space is
free; consider information about amount of free space
valid for 30 seconds.
/proc/sys/kernel/auto_msgmni (Linux 2.6.27
to 3.18)
From Linux 2.6.27 to 3.18, this file was used to
control recomputing of the value in /proc/sys/kernel/msgmni
upon the
addition or removal of memory or upon IPC namespace
creation/removal. Echoing "1" into this file enabled
msgmni
automatic
recomputing (and triggered a recomputation of
msgmni
based on the
current amount of available memory and number of IPC
namespaces). Echoing "0" disabled automatic
recomputing. (Automatic recomputing was also disabled
if a value was explicitly assigned to /proc/sys/kernel/msgmni
.) The
default value in auto_msgmni
was 1.
Since Linux 3.19, the content of this file has no
effect (because msgmni
defaults to near the maximum value possible), and
reads from this file always return the value "0".
/proc/sys/kernel/cap_last_cap
(since
Linux 3.2)See capabilities(7).
/proc/sys/kernel/cap−bound (from Linux
2.2 to 2.6.24)
This file holds the value of the kernel capability bounding set (expressed as a signed decimal number). This set is ANDed against the capabilities permitted to a process during execve(2). Starting with Linux 2.6.25, the system-wide capability bounding set disappeared, and was replaced by a per-thread bounding set; see capabilities(7).
/proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
See core(5).
/proc/sys/kernel/core_pipe_limit
See core(5).
/proc/sys/kernel/core_uses_pid
See core(5).
/proc/sys/kernel/ctrl−alt−del
This file controls the handling of Ctrl-Alt-Del from the keyboard. When the value in this file is 0, Ctrl-Alt-Del is trapped and sent to the init(1) program to handle a graceful restart. When the value is greater than zero, Linux's reaction to a Vulcan Nerve Pinch (tm) will be an immediate reboot, without even syncing its dirty buffers. Note: when a program (like dosemu) has the keyboard in "raw" mode, the ctrl-alt-del is intercepted by the program before it ever reaches the kernel tty layer, and it's up to the program to decide what to do with it.
/proc/sys/kernel/dmesg_restrict
(since Linux 2.6.37)The value in this file determines who can see
kernel syslog contents. A value of 0 in this file
imposes no restrictions. If the value is 1, only
privileged users can read the kernel syslog. (See
syslog(2) for more
details.) Since Linux 3.4, only users with the
CAP_SYS_ADMIN
capability may change the value in this file.
/proc/sys/kernel/domainname and
/proc/sys/kernel/hostname
can be used to set the NIS/YP domainname and the hostname of your box in exactly the same way as the commands domainname(1) and hostname(1), that is:
# echo 'darkstar' > /proc/sys/kernel/hostname # echo 'mydomain' > /proc/sys/kernel/domainname
has the same effect as
# hostname 'darkstar' # domainname 'mydomain'
Note, however, that the classic darkstar.frop.org has the hostname "darkstar" and DNS (Internet Domain Name Server) domainname "frop.org", not to be confused with the NIS (Network Information Service) or YP (Yellow Pages) domainname. These two domain names are in general different. For a detailed discussion see the hostname(1) man page.
/proc/sys/kernel/hotplug
This file contains the pathname for the hotplug
policy agent. The default value in this file is
/sbin/hotplug
.
/proc/sys/kernel/htab−reclaim (before
Linux 2.4.9.2)
(PowerPC only) If this file is set to a nonzero
value, the PowerPC htab (see kernel file Documentation/powerpc/ppc_htab.txt
)
is pruned each time the system hits the idle
loop.
/proc/sys/kernel/keys/*
This directory contains various files that define parameters and limits for the key-management facility. These files are described in keyrings(7).
/proc/sys/kernel/kptr_restrict
(since
Linux 2.6.38)The value in this file determines whether kernel
addresses are exposed via /proc
files and other interfaces. A
value of 0 in this file imposes no restrictions. If
the value is 1, kernel pointers printed using the
%pK
format
specifier will be replaced with zeros unless the user
has the CAP_SYSLOG
capability. If the value is 2, kernel pointers
printed using the %pK
format specifier
will be replaced with zeros regardless of the user's
capabilities. The initial default value for this file
was 1, but the default was changed to 0 in Linux
2.6.39. Since Linux 3.4, only users with the
CAP_SYS_ADMIN
capability can change the value in this file.
/proc/sys/kernel/l2cr
(PowerPC only) This file contains a flag that controls the L2 cache of G3 processor boards. If 0, the cache is disabled. Enabled if nonzero.
/proc/sys/kernel/modprobe
This file contains the pathname for the kernel
module loader. The default value is /sbin/modprobe
. The file is present
only if the kernel is built with the CONFIG_MODULES
(CONFIG_KMOD
in Linux 2.6.26 and
earlier) option enabled. It is described by the Linux
kernel source file Documentation/kmod.txt
(present
only in kernel 2.4 and earlier).
/proc/sys/kernel/modules_disabled
(since Linux 2.6.31)A toggle value indicating if modules are allowed
to be loaded in an otherwise modular kernel. This
toggle defaults to off (0), but can be set true (1).
Once true, modules can be neither loaded nor
unloaded, and the toggle cannot be set back to false.
The file is present only if the kernel is built with
the CONFIG_MODULES
option enabled.
/proc/sys/kernel/msgmax
(since Linux
2.2)This file defines a system-wide limit specifying the maximum number of bytes in a single message written on a System V message queue.
/proc/sys/kernel/msgmni
(since Linux
2.4)This file defines the system-wide limit on the
number of message queue identifiers. See also
/proc/sys/kernel/auto_msgmni
.
/proc/sys/kernel/msgmnb
(since Linux
2.2)This file defines a system-wide parameter used to
initialize the msg_qbytes
setting for subsequently
created message queues. The msg_qbytes
setting specifies the
maximum number of bytes that may be written to the
message queue.
/proc/sys/kernel/ngroups_max
(since
Linux 2.6.4)This is a read-only file that displays the upper limit on the number of a process's group memberships.
/proc/sys/kernel/ns_last_pid
(since
Linux 3.3)See pid_namespaces(7).
/proc/sys/kernel/ostype and
/proc/sys/kernel/osrelease
These files give substrings of /proc/version
.
/proc/sys/kernel/overflowgid and
/proc/sys/kernel/overflowuid
These files duplicate the files /proc/sys/fs/overflowgid
and
/proc/sys/fs/overflowuid
.
/proc/sys/kernel/panic
This file gives read/write access to the kernel
variable panic_timeout
.
If this is zero, the kernel will loop on a panic; if
nonzero, it indicates that the kernel should
autoreboot after this number of seconds. When you use
the software watchdog device driver, the recommended
setting is 60.
/proc/sys/kernel/panic_on_oops
(since
Linux 2.5.68)This file controls the kernel's behavior when an
oops or BUG is encountered. If this file contains 0,
then the system tries to continue operation. If it
contains 1, then the system delays a few seconds (to
give klogd time to record the oops output) and then
panics. If the /proc/sys/kernel/panic
file is also
nonzero, then the machine will be rebooted.
/proc/sys/kernel/pid_max
(since Linux
2.5.34)This file specifies the value at which PIDs wrap
around (i.e., the value in this file is one greater
than the maximum PID). PIDs greater than this value
are not allocated; thus, the value in this file also
acts as a system-wide limit on the total number of
processes and threads. The default value for this
file, 32768, results in the same range of PIDs as on
earlier kernels. On 32-bit platforms, 32768 is the
maximum value for pid_max
. On 64-bit systems,
pid_max
can be set to
any value up to 2^22 (PID_MAX_LIMIT
, approximately 4
million).
/proc/sys/kernel/powersave−nap
(PowerPC only)
This file contains a flag. If set, Linux-PPC will use the "nap" mode of powersaving, otherwise the "doze" mode will be used.
/proc/sys/kernel/printk
See syslog(2).
/proc/sys/kernel/pty
(since Linux
2.6.4)This directory contains two files relating to the number of UNIX 98 pseudoterminals (see pts(4)) on the system.
/proc/sys/kernel/pty/max
This file defines the maximum number of pseudoterminals.
/proc/sys/kernel/pty/nr
This read-only file indicates how many pseudoterminals are currently in use.
/proc/sys/kernel/random
This directory contains various parameters
controlling the operation of the file /dev/random
. See random(4) for
further information.
/proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid
(since
Linux 2.4)Each read from this read-only file returns a randomly generated 128-bit UUID, as a string in the standard UUID format.
/proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space
(since Linux 2.6.12)Select the address space layout randomization (ASLR) policy for the system (on architectures that support ASLR). Three values are supported for this file:
0
Turn ASLR off. This is the default for architectures that don't support ASLR, and when the kernel is booted with the
norandmaps
parameter.1
Make the addresses of mmap(2) allocations, the stack, and the VDSO page randomized. Among other things, this means that shared libraries will be loaded at randomized addresses. The text segment of PIE-linked binaries will also be loaded at a randomized address. This value is the default if the kernel was configured with
CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK
.2
(Since Linux 2.6.25) Also support heap randomization. This value is the default if the kernel was not configured with
CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK
.
/proc/sys/kernel/real−root−dev
This file is documented in the Linux kernel source
file Documentation/admin−guide/initrd.rst
(or Documentation/initrd.txt
before
Linux 4.10).
/proc/sys/kernel/reboot−cmd (Sparc
only)
This file seems to be a way to give an argument to the SPARC ROM/Flash boot loader. Maybe to tell it what to do after rebooting?
/proc/sys/kernel/rtsig−max
(Only in kernels up to and including 2.6.7; see setrlimit(2)) This file can be used to tune the maximum number of POSIX real-time (queued) signals that can be outstanding in the system.
/proc/sys/kernel/rtsig−nr
(Only in kernels up to and including 2.6.7.) This file shows the number of POSIX real-time signals currently queued.
/proc/[pid]/sched_autogroup_enabled
(since Linux 2.6.38)See sched(7).
/proc/sys/kernel/sched_child_runs_first
(since Linux 2.6.23)If this file contains the value zero, then, after a fork(2), the parent is first scheduled on the CPU. If the file contains a nonzero value, then the child is scheduled first on the CPU. (Of course, on a multiprocessor system, the parent and the child might both immediately be scheduled on a CPU.)
/proc/sys/kernel/sched_rr_timeslice_ms
(since Linux 3.9)/proc/sys/kernel/sched_rt_period_us
(since Linux 2.6.25)See sched(7).
/proc/sys/kernel/sched_rt_runtime_us
(since Linux 2.6.25)See sched(7).
/proc/sys/kernel/seccomp
(since Linux
4.14)This directory provides additional seccomp information and configuration. See seccomp(2) for further details.
/proc/sys/kernel/sem
(since Linux
2.4)This file contains 4 numbers defining limits for System V IPC semaphores. These fields are, in order:
SEMMSL
The maximum semaphores per semaphore set.
SEMMNS
A system-wide limit on the number of semaphores in all semaphore sets.
SEMOPM
The maximum number of operations that may be specified in a semop(2) call.
SEMMNI
A system-wide limit on the maximum number of semaphore identifiers.
/proc/sys/kernel/sg−big−buff
This file shows the size of the generic SCSI
device (sg) buffer. You can't tune it just yet, but
you could change it at compile time by editing
include/scsi/sg.h
and
changing the value of SG_BIG_BUFF
. However, there
shouldn't be any reason to change this value.
/proc/sys/kernel/shm_rmid_forced
(since Linux 3.1)If this file is set to 1, all System V shared memory segments will be marked for destruction as soon as the number of attached processes falls to zero; in other words, it is no longer possible to create shared memory segments that exist independently of any attached process.
The effect is as though a shmctl(2)
IPC_RMID
is performed
on all existing segments as well as all segments
created in the future (until this file is reset to
0). Note that existing segments that are attached to
no process will be immediately destroyed when this
file is set to 1. Setting this option will also
destroy segments that were created, but never
attached, upon termination of the process that
created the segment with shmget(2).
Setting this file to 1 provides a way of ensuring
that all System V shared memory segments are counted
against the resource usage and resource limits (see
the description of RLIMIT_AS
in getrlimit(2)) of at
least one process.
Because setting this file to 1 produces behavior that is nonstandard and could also break existing applications, the default value in this file is 0. Set this file to 1 only if you have a good understanding of the semantics of the applications using System V shared memory on your system.
/proc/sys/kernel/shmall
(since Linux
2.2)This file contains the system-wide limit on the total number of pages of System V shared memory.
/proc/sys/kernel/shmmax
(since Linux
2.2)This file can be used to query and set the
run-time limit on the maximum (System V IPC) shared
memory segment size that can be created. Shared
memory segments up to 1 GB are now supported in the
kernel. This value defaults to SHMMAX
.
/proc/sys/kernel/shmmni
(since Linux
2.4)This file specifies the system-wide maximum number of System V shared memory segments that can be created.
/proc/sys/kernel/sysctl_writes_strict
(since Linux 3.16)The value in this file determines how the file
offset affects the behavior of updating entries in
files under /proc/sys
.
The file has three possible values:
- −1
This provides legacy handling, with no printk warnings. Each write(2) must fully contain the value to be written, and multiple writes on the same file descriptor will overwrite the entire value, regardless of the file position.
0
(default) This provides the same behavior as for −1, but printk warnings are written for processes that perform writes when the file offset is not 0.
1
Respect the file offset when writing strings into
/proc/sys
files. Multiple writes willappend
to the value buffer. Anything written beyond the maximum length of the value buffer will be ignored. Writes to numeric/proc/sys
entries must always be at file offset 0 and the value must be fully contained in the buffer provided to write(2).
/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
This file controls the functions allowed to be invoked by the SysRq key. By default, the file contains 1 meaning that every possible SysRq request is allowed (in older kernel versions, SysRq was disabled by default, and you were required to specifically enable it at run-time, but this is not the case any more). Possible values in this file are:
0
Disable sysrq completely
1
Enable all functions of sysrq
- > 1
Bit mask of allowed sysrq functions, as follows:
- 2
Enable control of console logging level
- 4
Enable control of keyboard (SAK, unraw)
- 8
Enable debugging dumps of processes etc.
- 16
Enable sync command
- 32
Enable remount read-only
- 64
Enable signaling of processes (term, kill, oom-kill)
128
Allow reboot/poweroff
256
Allow nicing of all real-time tasks
This file is present only if the CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ
kernel
configuration option is enabled. For further details
see the Linux kernel source file Documentation/admin−guide/sysrq.rst
(or Documentation/sysrq.txt
before
Linux 4.10).
/proc/sys/kernel/version
This file contains a string such as:
#5 Wed Feb 25 21:49:24 MET 1998
The "#5" means that this is the fifth kernel built from this source base and the date following it indicates the time the kernel was built.
/proc/sys/kernel/threads−max
(since Linux 2.3.11)This file specifies the system-wide limit on the number of threads (tasks) that can be created on the system.
Since Linux 4.1, the value that can be written to
threads−max
is
bounded. The minimum value that can be written is 20.
The maximum value that can be written is given by the
constant FUTEX_TID_MASK
(0x3fffffff). If a value outside of this range is
written to threads−max
,
the error EINVAL
occurs.
The value written is checked against the available
RAM pages. If the thread structures would occupy too
much (more than 1/8th) of the available RAM pages,
threads−max
is
reduced accordingly.
/proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope
(since Linux 3.5)See ptrace(2).
/proc/sys/kernel/zero−paged (PowerPC
only)
This file contains a flag. When enabled (nonzero), Linux-PPC will pre-zero pages in the idle loop, possibly speeding up get_free_pages.
/proc/sys/net
This directory contains networking stuff. Explanations for some of the files under this directory can be found in tcp(7) and ip(7).
/proc/sys/net/core/bpf_jit_enable
See bpf(2).
/proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn
This file defines a ceiling value for the
backlog
argument of
listen(2); see the
listen(2) manual
page for details.
/proc/sys/proc
This directory may be empty.
/proc/sys/sunrpc
This directory supports Sun remote procedure call for network filesystem (NFS). On some systems, it is not present.
/proc/sys/user
(since Linux
4.9)See namespaces(7).
/proc/sys/vm
This directory contains files for memory management tuning, buffer, and cache management.
/proc/sys/vm/admin_reserve_kbytes
(since Linux 3.10)This file defines the amount of free memory (in
KiB) on the system that should be reserved for users
with the capability CAP_SYS_ADMIN
.
The default value in this file is the minimum of
[3% of free pages, 8MiB] expressed as KiB. The
default is intended to provide enough for the
superuser to log in and kill a process, if necessary,
under the default overcommit 'guess' mode (i.e., 0 in
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
).
Systems running in "overcommit never" mode (i.e.,
2 in /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
)
should increase the value in this file to account for
the full virtual memory size of the programs used to
recover (e.g., login(1)
ssh(1), and
top(1)) Otherwise, the
superuser may not be able to log in to recover the
system. For example, on x86-64 a suitable value is
131072 (128MiB reserved).
Changing the value in this file takes effect whenever an application requests memory.
/proc/sys/vm/compact_memory
(since
Linux 2.6.35)When 1 is written to this file, all zones are
compacted such that free memory is available in
contiguous blocks where possible. The effect of this
action can be seen by examining /proc/buddyinfo
.
Present only if the kernel was configured with
CONFIG_COMPACTION
.
/proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
(since Linux
2.6.16)Writing to this file causes the kernel to drop clean caches, dentries, and inodes from memory, causing that memory to become free. This can be useful for memory management testing and performing reproducible filesystem benchmarks. Because writing to this file causes the benefits of caching to be lost, it can degrade overall system performance.
To free pagecache, use:
echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
To free dentries and inodes, use:
echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
To free pagecache, dentries, and inodes, use:
echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
Because writing to this file is a nondestructive operation and dirty objects are not freeable, the user should run sync(1) first.
/proc/sys/vm/legacy_va_layout
(since
Linux 2.6.9)If nonzero, this disables the new 32-bit memory-mapping layout; the kernel will use the legacy (2.4) layout for all processes.
/proc/sys/vm/memory_failure_early_kill
(since Linux 2.6.32)Control how to kill processes when an uncorrected memory error (typically a 2-bit error in a memory module) that cannot be handled by the kernel is detected in the background by hardware. In some cases (like the page still having a valid copy on disk), the kernel will handle the failure transparently without affecting any applications. But if there is no other up-to-date copy of the data, it will kill processes to prevent any data corruptions from propagating.
The file has one of the following values:
1:
Kill all processes that have the corrupted-and-not-reloadable page mapped as soon as the corruption is detected. Note that this is not supported for a few types of pages, such as kernel internally allocated data or the swap cache, but works for the majority of user pages.
0:
Unmap the corrupted page from all processes and kill a process only if it tries to access the page.
The kill is performed using a SIGBUS
signal with si_code
set to BUS_MCEERR_AO
. Processes can handle
this if they want to; see sigaction(2) for
more details.
This feature is active only on architectures/platforms with advanced machine check handling and depends on the hardware capabilities.
Applications can override the memory_failure_early_kill
setting
individually with the prctl(2)
PR_MCE_KILL
operation.
Present only if the kernel was configured with
CONFIG_MEMORY_FAILURE
.
/proc/sys/vm/memory_failure_recovery
(since Linux 2.6.32)Enable memory failure recovery (when supported by the platform).
1:
Attempt recovery.
0:
Always panic on a memory failure.
Present only if the kernel was configured with
CONFIG_MEMORY_FAILURE
.
/proc/sys/vm/oom_dump_tasks
(since
Linux 2.6.25)Enables a system-wide task dump (excluding kernel
threads) to be produced when the kernel performs an
OOM-killing. The dump includes the following
information for each task (thread, process): thread
ID, real user ID, thread group ID (process ID),
virtual memory size, resident set size, the CPU that
the task is scheduled on, oom_adj score (see the
description of /proc/[pid]/oom_adj
), and command
name. This is helpful to determine why the OOM-killer
was invoked and to identify the rogue task that
caused it.
If this contains the value zero, this information is suppressed. On very large systems with thousands of tasks, it may not be feasible to dump the memory state information for each one. Such systems should not be forced to incur a performance penalty in OOM situations when the information may not be desired.
If this is set to nonzero, this information is shown whenever the OOM-killer actually kills a memory-hogging task.
The default value is 0.
/proc/sys/vm/oom_kill_allocating_task
(since Linux 2.6.24)This enables or disables killing the OOM-triggering task in out-of-memory situations.
If this is set to zero, the OOM-killer will scan through the entire tasklist and select a task based on heuristics to kill. This normally selects a rogue memory-hogging task that frees up a large amount of memory when killed.
If this is set to nonzero, the OOM-killer simply kills the task that triggered the out-of-memory condition. This avoids a possibly expensive tasklist scan.
If /proc/sys/vm/panic_on_oom
is
nonzero, it takes precedence over whatever value is
used in /proc/sys/vm/oom_kill_allocating_task
.
The default value is 0.
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_kbytes
(since
Linux 3.14)This writable file provides an alternative to
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_ratio
for
controlling the CommitLimit
when /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
has
the value 2. It allows the amount of memory
overcommitting to be specified as an absolute value
(in kB), rather than as a percentage, as is done with
overcommit_ratio
. This
allows for finer-grained control of CommitLimit
on systems with
extremely large memory sizes.
Only one of overcommit_kbytes
or overcommit_ratio
can have an effect:
if overcommit_kbytes
has
a nonzero value, then it is used to calculate
CommitLimit
, otherwise
overcommit_ratio
is
used. Writing a value to either of these files causes
the value in the other file to be set to zero.
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
This file contains the kernel virtual memory accounting mode. Values are:
0: heuristic overcommit (this is the default)
1: always overcommit, never check
2: always check, never overcommit
In mode 0, calls of mmap(2) with
MAP_NORESERVE
are not
checked, and the default check is very weak, leading
to the risk of getting a process "OOM-killed".
In mode 1, the kernel pretends there is always enough memory, until memory actually runs out. One use case for this mode is scientific computing applications that employ large sparse arrays. In Linux kernel versions before 2.6.0, any nonzero value implies mode 1.
In mode 2 (available since Linux 2.6), the total
virtual address space that can be allocated
(CommitLimit
in
/proc/meminfo
) is
calculated as
CommitLimit = (total_RAM − total_huge_TLB) * overcommit_ratio / 100 + total_swap
where:
total_RAM
is the total amount of RAM on the system;
total_huge_TLB
is the amount of memory set aside for huge pages;
overcommit_ratio
is the value in/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_ratio
; and
total_swap
is the amount of swap space.
For example, on a system with 16 GB of physical
RAM, 16 GB of swap, no space dedicated to huge pages,
and an overcommit_ratio
of 50, this formula yields a CommitLimit
of 24 GB.
Since Linux 3.14, if the value in /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_kbytes
is
nonzero, then CommitLimit
is instead calculated
as:
CommitLimit = overcommit_kbytes + total_swap
See also the description of /proc/sys/vm/admin_reserve_kbytes
and /proc/sys/vm/user_reserve_kbytes
.
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_ratio
(since
Linux 2.6.0)This writable file defines a percentage by which
memory can be overcommitted. The default value in the
file is 50. See the description of /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
.
/proc/sys/vm/panic_on_oom
(since
Linux 2.6.18)This enables or disables a kernel panic in an out-of-memory situation.
If this file is set to the value 0, the kernel's OOM-killer will kill some rogue process. Usually, the OOM-killer is able to kill a rogue process and the system will survive.
If this file is set to the value 1, then the
kernel normally panics when out-of-memory happens.
However, if a process limits allocations to certain
nodes using memory policies (mbind(2)
MPOL_BIND
) or cpusets
(cpuset(7)) and
those nodes reach memory exhaustion status, one
process may be killed by the OOM-killer. No panic
occurs in this case: because other nodes' memory may
be free, this means the system as a whole may not
have reached an out-of-memory situation yet.
If this file is set to the value 2, the kernel always panics when an out-of-memory condition occurs.
The default value is 0. 1 and 2 are for failover of clustering. Select either according to your policy of failover.
/proc/sys/vm/swappiness
The value in this file controls how aggressively the kernel will swap memory pages. Higher values increase aggressiveness, lower values decrease aggressiveness. The default value is 60.
/proc/sys/vm/user_reserve_kbytes
(since Linux 3.10)Specifies an amount of memory (in KiB) to reserve
for user processes. This is intended to prevent a
user from starting a single memory hogging process,
such that they cannot recover (kill the hog). The
value in this file has an effect only when
/proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
is
set to 2 ("overcommit never" mode). In this case, the
system reserves an amount of memory that is the
minimum of [3% of current process size, user_reserve_kbytes
].
The default value in this file is the minimum of [3% of free pages, 128MiB] expressed as KiB.
If the value in this file is set to zero, then a
user will be allowed to allocate all free memory with
a single process (minus the amount reserved by
/proc/sys/vm/admin_reserve_kbytes
).
Any subsequent attempts to execute a command will
result in "fork: Cannot allocate memory".
Changing the value in this file takes effect whenever an application requests memory.
/proc/sys/vm/unprivileged_userfaultfd
(since Linux 5.2)This (writable) file exposes a flag that controls
whether unprivileged processes are allowed to employ
userfaultfd(2). If
this file has the value 1, then unprivileged
processes may use userfaultfd(2). If
this file has the value 0, then only processes that
have the CAP_SYS_PTRACE
capability may employ userfaultfd(2). The
default value in this file is 1.
/proc/sysrq−trigger
(since
Linux 2.4.21)Writing a character to this file triggers the same
SysRq function as typing ALT-SysRq-<character>
(see the description of /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
). This file
is normally writable only by root
. For further details see the
Linux kernel source file Documentation/admin−guide/sysrq.rst
(or Documentation/sysrq.txt
before
Linux 4.10).
/proc/sysvipc
Subdirectory containing the pseudo-files
msg
, sem
and shm
. These files list the System V
Interprocess Communication (IPC) objects
(respectively: message queues, semaphores, and shared
memory) that currently exist on the system, providing
similar information to that available via ipcs(1). These
files have headers and are formatted (one IPC object
per line) for easy understanding. sysvipc(7) provides
further background on the information shown by these
files.
/proc/thread−self
(since Linux
3.17)This directory refers to the thread accessing the
/proc
filesystem, and
is identical to the /proc/self/task/[tid]
directory
named by the process thread ID ([tid]
) of the same
thread.
/proc/timer_list
(since Linux
2.6.21)This read-only file exposes a list of all currently pending (high-resolution) timers, all clock-event sources, and their parameters in a human-readable form.
/proc/timer_stats (from Linux 2.6.21 until
Linux 4.10)
This is a debugging facility to make timer (ab)use in a Linux system visible to kernel and user-space developers. It can be used by kernel and user-space developers to verify that their code does not make undue use of timers. The goal is to avoid unnecessary wakeups, thereby optimizing power consumption.
If enabled in the kernel (CONFIG_TIMER_STATS
), but not used,
it has almost zero run-time overhead and a relatively
small data-structure overhead. Even if collection is
enabled at run time, overhead is low: all the locking
is per-CPU and lookup is hashed.
The /proc/timer_stats
file is used both
to control sampling facility and to read out the
sampled information.
The timer_stats
functionality is inactive on bootup. A sampling
period can be started using the following
command:
# echo 1 > /proc/timer_stats
The following command stops a sampling period:
# echo 0 > /proc/timer_stats
The statistics can be retrieved by:
$ cat /proc/timer_stats
While sampling is enabled, each readout from
/proc/timer_stats
will
see newly updated statistics. Once sampling is
disabled, the sampled information is kept until a new
sample period is started. This allows multiple
readouts.
Sample output from /proc/timer_stats
:
$ cat /proc/timer_stats Timer Stats Version: v0.3 Sample period: 1.764 s Collection: active 255, 0 swapper/3 hrtimer_start_range_ns (tick_sched_timer) 71, 0 swapper/1 hrtimer_start_range_ns (tick_sched_timer) 58, 0 swapper/0 hrtimer_start_range_ns (tick_sched_timer) 4, 1694 gnome−shell mod_delayed_work_on (delayed_work_timer_fn) 17, 7 rcu_sched rcu_gp_kthread (process_timeout) ... 1, 4911 kworker/u16:0 mod_delayed_work_on (delayed_work_timer_fn) 1D, 2522 kworker/0:0 queue_delayed_work_on (delayed_work_timer_fn) 1029 total events, 583.333 events/sec
The output columns are:
a count of the number of events, optionally (since Linux 2.6.23) followed by the letter 'D' if this is a deferrable timer;
the PID of the process that initialized the timer;
the name of the process that initialized the timer;
the function where the timer was initialized; and
(in parentheses) the callback function that is associated with the timer.
During the Linux 4.11 development cycle, this file was removed because of security concerns, as it exposes information across namespaces. Furthermore, it is possible to obtain the same information via in-kernel tracing facilities such as ftrace.
/proc/tty
Subdirectory containing the pseudo-files and subdirectories for tty drivers and line disciplines.
/proc/uptime
This file contains two numbers (values in seconds): the uptime of the system (including time spent in suspend) and the amount of time spent in the idle process.
/proc/version
This string identifies the kernel version that is
currently running. It includes the contents of
/proc/sys/kernel/ostype
,
/proc/sys/kernel/osrelease
, and
/proc/sys/kernel/version
. For
example:
Linux version 1.0.9 (quinlan@phaze) #1 Sat May 14 01:51:54 EDT 1994
/proc/vmstat
(since Linux
2.6.0)This file displays various virtual memory statistics. Each line of this file contains a single name-value pair, delimited by white space. Some lines are present only if the kernel was configured with suitable options. (In some cases, the options required for particular files have changed across kernel versions, so they are not listed here. Details can be found by consulting the kernel source code.) The following fields may be present:
nr_free_pages
(since Linux 2.6.31)nr_alloc_batch
(since Linux 3.12)nr_inactive_anon
(since Linux 2.6.28)nr_active_anon
(since Linux 2.6.28)nr_inactive_file
(since Linux 2.6.28)nr_active_file
(since Linux 2.6.28)nr_unevictable
(since Linux 2.6.28)nr_mlock
(since Linux 2.6.28)nr_anon_pages
(since Linux 2.6.18)nr_mapped
(since Linux 2.6.0)nr_file_pages
(since Linux 2.6.18)nr_dirty
(since Linux 2.6.0)nr_writeback
(since Linux 2.6.0)nr_slab_reclaimable
(since Linux 2.6.19)nr_slab_unreclaimable
(since Linux 2.6.19)nr_page_table_pages
(since Linux 2.6.0)nr_kernel_stack
(since Linux 2.6.32)Amount of memory allocated to kernel stacks.
nr_unstable
(since Linux 2.6.0)nr_bounce
(since Linux 2.6.12)nr_vmscan_write
(since Linux 2.6.19)nr_vmscan_immediate_reclaim
(since Linux 3.2)nr_writeback_temp
(since Linux 2.6.26)nr_isolated_anon
(since Linux 2.6.32)nr_isolated_file
(since Linux 2.6.32)nr_shmem
(since Linux 2.6.32)Pages used by shmem and tmpfs(5).
nr_dirtied
(since Linux 2.6.37)nr_written
(since Linux 2.6.37)nr_pages_scanned
(since Linux 3.17)numa_hit
(since Linux 2.6.18)numa_miss
(since Linux 2.6.18)numa_foreign
(since Linux 2.6.18)numa_interleave
(since Linux 2.6.18)numa_local
(since Linux 2.6.18)numa_other
(since Linux 2.6.18)workingset_refault
(since Linux 3.15)workingset_activate
(since Linux 3.15)workingset_nodereclaim
(since Linux 3.15)nr_anon_transparent_hugepages
(since Linux 2.6.38)nr_free_cma
(since Linux 3.7)Number of free CMA (Contiguous Memory Allocator) pages.
nr_dirty_threshold
(since Linux 2.6.37)nr_dirty_background_threshold
(since Linux 2.6.37)pgpgin
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgpgout
(since Linux 2.6.0)pswpin
(since Linux 2.6.0)pswpout
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgalloc_dma
(since Linux 2.6.5)pgalloc_dma32
(since Linux 2.6.16)pgalloc_normal
(since Linux 2.6.5)pgalloc_high
(since Linux 2.6.5)pgalloc_movable
(since Linux 2.6.23)pgfree
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgactivate
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgdeactivate
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgfault
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgmajfault
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgrefill_dma
(since Linux 2.6.5)pgrefill_dma32
(since Linux 2.6.16)pgrefill_normal
(since Linux 2.6.5)pgrefill_high
(since Linux 2.6.5)pgrefill_movable
(since Linux 2.6.23)pgsteal_kswapd_dma
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_kswapd_dma32
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_kswapd_normal
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_kswapd_high
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_kswapd_movable
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_direct_dma
pgsteal_direct_dma32
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_direct_normal
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_direct_high
(since Linux 3.4)pgsteal_direct_movable
(since Linux 2.6.23)pgscan_kswapd_dma
pgscan_kswapd_dma32
(since Linux 2.6.16)pgscan_kswapd_normal
(since Linux 2.6.5)pgscan_kswapd_high
pgscan_kswapd_movable
(since Linux 2.6.23)pgscan_direct_dma
pgscan_direct_dma32
(since Linux 2.6.16)pgscan_direct_normal
pgscan_direct_high
pgscan_direct_movable
(since Linux 2.6.23)pgscan_direct_throttle
(since Linux 3.6)zone_reclaim_failed
(since linux 2.6.31)pginodesteal
(since linux 2.6.0)slabs_scanned
(since linux 2.6.5)kswapd_inodesteal
(since linux 2.6.0)kswapd_low_wmark_hit_quickly
(since 2.6.33)kswapd_high_wmark_hit_quickly
(since 2.6.33)pageoutrun
(since Linux 2.6.0)allocstall
(since Linux 2.6.0)pgrotated
(since Linux 2.6.0)drop_pagecache
(since Linux 3.15)drop_slab
(since Linux 3.15)numa_pte_updates
(since Linux 3.8)numa_huge_pte_updates
(since Linux 3.13)numa_hint_faults
(since Linux 3.8)numa_hint_faults_local
(since Linux 3.8)numa_pages_migrated
(since Linux 3.8)pgmigrate_success
(since Linux 3.8)pgmigrate_fail
(since Linux 3.8)compact_migrate_scanned
(since Linux 3.8)compact_free_scanned
(since Linux 3.8)compact_isolated
(since Linux 3.8)compact_stall
(since Linux 2.6.35)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.compact_fail
(since Linux 2.6.35)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.compact_success
(since Linux 2.6.35)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.htlb_buddy_alloc_success
(since Linux 2.6.26)htlb_buddy_alloc_fail
(since Linux 2.6.26)unevictable_pgs_culled
(since Linux 2.6.28)unevictable_pgs_scanned
(since Linux 2.6.28)unevictable_pgs_rescued
(since Linux 2.6.28)unevictable_pgs_mlocked
(since Linux 2.6.28)unevictable_pgs_munlocked
(since Linux 2.6.28)unevictable_pgs_cleared
(since Linux 2.6.28)unevictable_pgs_stranded
(since Linux 2.6.28)thp_fault_alloc
(since Linux 2.6.39)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.thp_fault_fallback
(since Linux 2.6.39)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.thp_collapse_alloc
(since Linux 2.6.39)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.thp_collapse_alloc_failed
(since Linux 2.6.39)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.thp_split
(since Linux 2.6.39)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.thp_zero_page_alloc
(since Linux 3.8)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.thp_zero_page_alloc_failed
(since Linux 3.8)See the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/transhuge.rst
.balloon_inflate
(since Linux 3.18)balloon_deflate
(since Linux 3.18)balloon_migrate
(since Linux 3.18)nr_tlb_remote_flush
(since Linux 3.12)nr_tlb_remote_flush_received
(since Linux 3.12)nr_tlb_local_flush_all
(since Linux 3.12)nr_tlb_local_flush_one
(since Linux 3.12)vmacache_find_calls
(since Linux 3.16)vmacache_find_hits
(since Linux 3.16)vmacache_full_flushes
(since Linux 3.19)
/proc/zoneinfo
(since Linux
2.6.13)This file displays information about memory zones. This is useful for analyzing virtual memory behavior.
Many files contain strings (e.g., the environment and command line) that are in the internal format, with subfields terminated by null bytes ('\0'). When inspecting such files, you may find that the results are more readable if you use a command of the following form to display them:
$ cat
file
| tr '\000' '\n'
This manual page is incomplete, possibly inaccurate, and is the kind of thing that needs to be updated very often.
cat(1), dmesg(1), find(1), free(1), htop(1), init(1), ps(1), pstree(1), tr(1), uptime(1), chroot(2), mmap(2), readlink(2), syslog(2), slabinfo(5), sysfs(5), hier(7), namespaces(7), time(7), arp(8), hdparm(8), ifconfig(8), lsmod(8), lspci(8), mount(8), netstat(8), procinfo(8), route(8), sysctl(8)
The Linux kernel source files: Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
,
Documentation/sysctl/fs.txt
,
Documentation/sysctl/kernel.txt
,
Documentation/sysctl/net.txt
,
and Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt
.
This page is part of release 5.11 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 by Daniel Quinlan (quinlanyggdrasil.com) and Copyright (C) 2002-2008,2017 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpagesgmail.com> with networking additions from Alan Cox (A.Coxswansea.ac.uk) and scsi additions from Michael Neuffer (neuffermail.uni-mainz.de) and sysctl additions from Andries Brouwer (aebcwi.nl) and System V IPC (as well as various other) additions from Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpagesgmail.com> %%%LICENSE_START(GPLv2+_DOC_FULL) This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The GNU General Public License's references to "object code" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any document formatting or typesetting system, including intermediate and printed output. This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this manual; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. %%%LICENSE_END Modified 1995-05-17 by faithcs.unc.edu Minor changes by aeb and Marty Leisner (leisnersdsp.mc.xerox.com). Modified 1996-04-13, 1996-07-22 by aebcwi.nl Modified 2001-12-16 by rwhronearthlink.net Modified 2002-07-13 by jbeltonshaw.ca Modified 2002-07-22, 2003-05-27, 2004-04-06, 2004-05-25 by Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpagesgmail.com> 2004-11-17, mtk -- updated notes on /proc/loadavg 2004-12-01, mtk, rtsig-max and rtsig-nr went away in 2.6.8 2004-12-14, mtk, updated 'statm', and fixed error in order of list 2005-05-12, mtk, updated 'stat' 2005-07-13, mtk, added /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/* 2005-09-16, mtk, Added /proc/sys/fs/suid_dumpable 2005-09-19, mtk, added /proc/zoneinfo 2005-03-01, mtk, moved /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/* material to mq_overview.7. 2008-06-05, mtk, Added /proc/[pid]/oom_score, /proc/[pid]/oom_adj, /proc/[pid]/limits, /proc/[pid]/mountinfo, /proc/[pid]/mountstats, and /proc/[pid]/fdinfo/*. 2008-06-19, mtk, Documented /proc/[pid]/status. 2008-07-15, mtk, added /proc/config.gz FIXME cross check against Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt to see what information could be imported from that file into this file. |