[patch 6/10] s390: monreader docu.

From: Martin Schwidefsky
Date: Thu Nov 11 2004 - 12:28:24 EST


[patch 6/10] s390: monreader docu.

From: Gerald Schaefer <geraldsc@xxxxxxxxxx>

Docu for the z/VM monitor record read access feature.

Signed-off-by: Martin Schwidefsky <schwidefsky@xxxxxxxxxx>

diffstat:
Documentation/s390/monreader.txt | 175 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 files changed, 175 insertions(+)

diff -urN linux-2.6/Documentation/s390/monreader.txt linux-2.6-patched/Documentation/s390/monreader.txt
--- linux-2.6/Documentation/s390/monreader.txt 1970-01-01 01:00:00.000000000 +0100
+++ linux-2.6-patched/Documentation/s390/monreader.txt 2004-11-11 15:06:57.000000000 +0100
@@ -0,0 +1,175 @@
+
+Date : 2004-Nov-04
+Author: Gerald Schaefer (geraldsc@xxxxxxxxxx)
+
+
+ Linux API for read access to z/VM Monitor Records
+ =================================================
+
+
+Description
+===========
+This item delivers a new Linux API in the form of a misc char device that is
+useable from user space and allows read access to the z/VM Monitor Records
+collected by the *MONITOR System Service of z/VM.
+
+
+User Requirements
+=================
+The z/VM guest on which you want to access this API needs to be configured in
+order to allow IUCV connections to the *MONITOR service, i.e. it needs the
+IUCV *MONITOR statement in its user entry. If the monitor DCSS to be used is
+restricted (likely), you also need the NAMESAVE <DCSS NAME> statement.
+This item will use the IUCV device driver to access the z/VM services, so you
+need a kernel with IUCV support. You also need z/VM version 4.4 or 5.1.
+
+There are two options for being able to load the monitor DCSS (examples assume
+that the monitor DCSS begins at 144 MB and ends at 152 MB). You can query the
+location of the monitor DCSS with the Class E privileged CP command Q NSS MAP
+(the values BEGPAG and ENDPAG are given in units of 4K pages).
+
+See also "CP Command and Utility Reference" (SC24-6081-00) for more information
+on the DEF STOR and Q NSS MAP commands, as well as "Saved Segments Planning
+and Administration" (SC24-6116-00) for more information on DCSSes.
+
+1st option:
+-----------
+You can use the CP command DEF STOR CONFIG to define a "memory hole" in your
+guest virtual storage around the address range of the DCSS.
+
+Example: DEF STOR CONFIG 0.140M 200M.200M
+
+This defines two blocks of storage, the first is 140MB in size an begins at
+address 0MB, the second is 200MB in size and begins at address 200MB,
+resulting in a total storage of 340MB. Note that the first block should
+always start at 0 and be at least 64MB in size.
+
+2nd option:
+-----------
+Your guest virtual storage has to end below the starting address of the DCSS
+and you have to specify the "mem=" kernel parameter in your parmfile with a
+value greater than the ending address of the DCSS.
+
+Example: DEF STOR 140M
+
+This defines 140MB storage size for your guest, the parameter "mem=160M" is
+added to the parmfile.
+
+
+User Interface
+==============
+The char device is implemented as a kernel module named "monreader",
+which can be loaded via the modprobe command, or it can be compiled into the
+kernel instead. There is one optional module (or kernel) parameter, "mondcss",
+to specify the name of the monitor DCSS. If the module is compiled into the
+kernel, the kernel parameter "monreader.mondcss=<DCSS NAME>" can be specified
+in the parmfile.
+
+The default name for the DCSS is "MONDCSS" if none is specified. In case that
+there are other users already connected to the *MONITOR service (e.g.
+Performance Toolkit), the monitor DCSS is already defined and you have to use
+the same DCSS. The CP command Q MONITOR (Class E privileged) shows the name
+of the monitor DCSS, if already defined, and the users connected to the
+*MONITOR service.
+Refer to the "z/VM Performance" book (SC24-6109-00) on how to create a monitor
+DCSS, you need Class E privileges to define and save a DCSS.
+
+Example:
+--------
+modprobe monreader mondcss=MYDCSS
+
+This loads the module and sets the DCSS name to "MYDCSS".
+
+NOTE:
+-----
+This API provides no interface to control the *MONITOR service, e.g. specifiy
+which data should be collected. This can be done by the CP command MONITOR
+(Class E privileged), see "CP Command and Utility Reference".
+
+Device nodes with udev:
+-----------------------
+After loading the module, a char device will be created along with the device
+node /<udev directory>/monreader.
+
+Device nodes without udev:
+--------------------------
+If your distribution does not support udev, a device node will not be created
+automatically and you have to create it manually after loading the module.
+Therefore you need to know the major and minor numbers of the device. These
+numbers can be found in /sys/class/misc/monreader/dev.
+Typing cat /sys/class/misc/monreader/dev will give an output of the form
+<major>:<minor>. The device node can be created via the mknod command, enter
+mknod <name> c <major> <minor>, where <name> is the name of the device node
+to be created.
+
+Example:
+--------
+# modprobe monreader
+# cat /sys/class/misc/monreader/dev
+10:63
+# mknod /dev/monreader c 10 63
+
+This loads the module with the default monitor DCSS (MONDCSS) and creates a
+device node.
+
+File operations:
+----------------
+The following file operations are supported: open, release, read, poll.
+There are two alternative methods for reading: either non-blocking read in
+conjunction with polling, or blocking read without polling. IOCTLs are not
+supported.
+
+Read:
+-----
+Reading from the device provides a set of one or more contiguous monitor
+records, there is no control data (unlike the CMS MONWRITE utility output).
+The monitor record layout can be found here (z/VM 5.1):
+http://www.vm.ibm.com/pubs/mon510/index.html
+
+Each set of records is exclusively composed of either event records or sample
+records. The end of such a set of records is indicated by a successful read
+with a return value of 0 (0-Byte read).
+Any received data must be considered invalid until a complete record set was
+read successfully, including the closing 0-Byte read. Therefore you should
+always read the complete set into a buffer before processing the data.
+
+The maximum size of a set of records can be as large as the size of the
+monitor DCSS, so design the buffer adequately or use dynamic memory allocation
+The size of the monitor DCSS will be printed into syslog after loading the
+module. You can also use the (Class E privileged) CP command Q NSS MAP to
+list all available segments and information about them.
+
+As with most char devices, error conditions are indicated by returning a
+negative value for the number of bytes read. In this case, the errno variable
+indicates the error condition:
+
+EIO: reply failed, read data is invalid and the application
+ should discard the data read since the last successful read with 0 size.
+EFAULT: copy_to_user failed, read data is invalid and the application should
+ discard the data read since the last successful read with 0 size.
+EAGAIN: occurs on a non-blocking read if there is no data available at the
+ moment. There is no data missing or corrupted, just try again or rather
+ use polling for non-blocking reads.
+EOVERFLOW: message limit reached, the data read since the last successful
+ read with 0 size is valid but subsequent records may be missing.
+
+In the last case (EOVERFLOW) there may be missing data, in the first two cases
+(EIO, EFAULT) there will be missing data. It's up to the application if it will
+continue reading subsequent records or rather exit.
+
+Open:
+-----
+Only one user is allowed to open the char device. If it is already in use, the
+open function will fail (return a negative value) and set errno to EBUSY.
+The open function may also fail if an IUCV connection to the *MONITOR service
+cannot be established. In this case errno will be set to EIO and an error
+message with an IPUSER SEVER code will be printed into syslog.
+The IPUSER SEVER codes are described in the "z/VM Performance" book.
+
+NOTE:
+-----
+As soon as the device is opened, incoming messages will be accepted and they
+will account for the message limit, i.e. opening the device without reading
+from it will provoke the "message limit reached" error (EOVERFLOW error code)
+eventually.
+
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