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      1 Cyclictest is a program to test the performance of high-resolution timers on Linux systems.
      2 
      3 Installation
      4 
      5 Get the latest source tarball, untar into a directory of your choice and run make in the source directory.
      6 
      7 You can run the resulting binary from there or install it.
      8 
      9 Run it
     10 
     11 Make sure to be root or use sudo to run cyclictest.
     12 
     13 Without parameters cyclictest creates one thread with a 1ms interval timer.
     14 
     15 cyclictest -h provides help text for the various options
     16 	-b USEC	--breaktrace=USEC	send break trace command when latency > USEC
     17 	-c CLOCK	--clock=CLOCK	select clock
     18 
     19 		0 = CLOCK_MONOTONIC (default)
     20 		1 = CLOCK_REALTIME
     21 
     22 	-d DIST	--distance=DIST	distance of thread intervals in us default=500
     23 	-i INTV	--interval=INTV	base interval of thread in us default=1000
     24 	-l LOOPS	--loops=LOOPS	number of loops: default=0(endless)
     25 	-n	--nanosleep	use clock_nanosleep
     26 	-p PRIO	--prio=PRIO	priority of highest prio thread
     27 	-q	--quiet	print only a summary on exit
     28 	-r	--relative	use relative timer instead of absolute
     29 	-s	--system	use sys_nanosleep and sys_setitimer
     30 	-t NUM	--threads=NUM	number of threads: default=1
     31 	-v	--verbose	output values on stdout for statistics
     32 
     33 format: n:c:v n=tasknum c=count v=value in us
     34 
     35 The -b optionis a debugging option to control the latency tracer in the realtime 
     36 preemption patch.  It is useful to track down unexpected large latencies on a system. 
     37 This option only works with:
     38 
     39     * CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT=y
     40     * CONFIG_LATENCY_TIMING=y
     41     * CONFIG_LATENCY_TRACE=y 
     42 
     43 kernel configuration options enabled. The USEC parameter to the -b option defines
     44 a maximum latency value, which is compared against the actual latencies of the test.
     45 Once the measured latency is higher than the given maximum, the kernel tracer and 
     46 cyclictest is stopped. The trace can be read from /proc/latency_trace:
     47 
     48 	mybox# cat /proc/latency_trace >trace.log
     49 
     50 Please be aware that the tracer adds significant overhead to the kernel, so the
     51 latencies will be much higher than on a kernel with latency tracing disabled.
     52 
     53 	Using -c CLOCK selects the clock, which is used
     54 
     55     * 0 selects CLOCK_MONOTONIC, which is the monotonic increasing system time. 
     56 	This is the default selection
     57     * 1 selects CLOCK_REALTIME, which is the time of day time. 
     58 
     59 CLOCK_REALTIME can be set by settimeofday, while CLOCK_MONOTONIC can not be 
     60 modified by the user.
     61 
     62 This option has no influence when the -s option is given.
     63 
     64 -d DIST set the distance of thread intervals in microseconds (default is 500us)
     65 
     66 When cylictest is called with the -t option and more than one thread is created, then this distance value is added to the interval of the threads.
     67 
     68 Interval(thread N) = Interval(thread N-1) + DIST
     69 
     70 -i INTV set the base interval of the thread(s) in microseconds (default is 1000us)
     71 
     72 This sets the interval of the first thread. See also -d.
     73 
     74 -l LOOPS set the number of loops (default = 0(endless))
     75 
     76 This option is useful for automated tests with a given number of test cycles. cyclictest is stopped once the number of timer intervals has been reached.
     77 
     78 -n use clock_nanosleep instead of posix interval timers
     79 
     80 Setting this option runs the tests with clock_nanosleep instead of posix interval timers.
     81 
     82 -p PRIO set the priority of the first thread
     83 
     84 The given priority is set to the first test thread. Each further thread gets a lower priority:
     85 
     86 Priority(Thread N) = Priority(Thread N-1)
     87 
     88 -q run the tests quiet and print only a summary on exit
     89 
     90 Useful for automated tests, where only the summary output needs to be captured
     91 
     92 -r use relative timers instead of absolute
     93 
     94 The default behaviour of the tests is to use absolute timers. This option is there for completeness and should not be used for reproducible tests.
     95 
     96 -s use sys_nanosleep and sys_setitimer instead of posix timers
     97 
     98 Note, that -s can only be used with one thread because itimers are per process and not per thread. -s in combination with -n uses the nanosleep syscall and is not restricted to one thread
     99 
    100 -t NUM set the number of test threads (default is 1)
    101 
    102 Create NUM test threads. See -d, -i and -p for further information.
    103 
    104 -v output values on stdout for statistics
    105 
    106 This option is used to gather statistical information about the latency distribution. The output is sent to stdout. The output format is
    107 
    108 n:c:v
    109 
    110 where n=task number c=count v=latency value in us
    111 
    112 Use this option in combination with -l
    113 
    114 The OSADL Realtime LiveCD project (http://www.osadl.org/projects-live-cd.0.html) provides a script to plot the latency distribution. 
    115