NAME
iostat
—
report I/O statistics
SYNOPSIS
iostat |
[-CUdKIoT? ] [-c
count] [-n
devs] [-w
wait] [drives] |
DESCRIPTION
The iostat
utility displays kernel I/O
statistics on terminal, device and cpu operations. The first statistics that
are printed are averaged over the system uptime. To get information about
the current activity, a suitable wait time should be specified, so that the
subsequent sets of printed statistics will be averaged over that time.
The options are as follows:
-?
- Display a usage statement and exit.
-c
- Repeat the display count times. If no wait interval is specified, the default is 1 second.
-C
- Display CPU statistics. This is on by default, unless
-d
is specified. -d
- Display only device statistics. If this flag is turned on, only device
statistics will be displayed, unless
-C
or-U
or-T
is also specified to enable the display of CPU, load average or TTY statistics. -I
- Display total statistics for a given time period, rather than average statistics for each second during that time period.
-K
- In the blocks transferred display (-o), display block count in kilobytes rather then the device native block size.
-n
- Display up to devs number of devices. The
iostat
utility will display fewer devices if there are not devs devices present. -o
- Display old-style
iostat
device statistics. Sectors per second, transfers per second, and milliseconds per seek are displayed. If-I
is specified, total blocks/sectors, total transfers, and milliseconds per seek are displayed. -T
- Display TTY statistics. This is on by default, unless
-d
is specified. -U
- Display system load averages. This is on by default, unless
-d
is specified. -w
- Pause wait seconds between each display. If no repeat count is specified, the default is infinity.
The iostat
utility displays its
information in the following format:
- tty
-
- tin
- characters read from terminals
- tout
- characters written to terminals
- devices
- Device operations. The header of the field is the device name and unit
number. The
iostat
utility will display as many devices as will fit in a standard 80 column screen, or the maximum number of devices in the system, whichever is smaller. If-n
is specified on the command line,iostat
will display the smaller of the requested number of devices, and the maximum number of devices in the system. To forceiostat
to display specific drives, their names may be supplied on the command line. Theiostat
utility will not display more devices than will fit in an 80 column screen, unless the-n
argument is given on the command line to specify a maximum number of devices to display, or the list of specified devices exceeds 80 columns. If fewer devices are specified on the command line than will fit in an 80 column screen,iostat
will show only the specified devices.The standard
iostat
device display shows the following statistics:- KB/t
- kilobytes per transfer
- tps
- transfers per second
- MB/s
- megabytes per second
The standard
iostat
device display, with the-I
flag specified, shows the following statistics:- KB/t
- kilobytes per transfer
- xfrs
- total number of transfers
- MB
- total number of megabytes transferred
The old-style
iostat
display (using-o
) shows the following statistics:- sps
- sectors transferred per second
- tps
- transfers per second
- msps
- average milliseconds per transaction
The old-style
iostat
display, with the-I
flag specified, shows the following statistics:- blk
- total blocks/sectors transferred
- xfr
- total transfers
- msps
- average milliseconds per transaction
- cpu
-
- us
- % of cpu time in user mode
- sy
- % of cpu time in system mode
- id
- % of cpu time in idle mode
EXAMPLES
iostat -w 1 disk0 disk2
Display statistics for the first and third disk devices device every second ad infinitum.
iostat -c 2
Display the statistics for the first four devices in the system twice, with a one second display interval.
iostat -Iw 3
Display total statistics every three seconds ad infinitum.
iostat -odICTw 2 -c 9
Display total statistics using the old-style output format 9
times, with a two second interval between each measurement/display. The
-d
flag generally disables the TTY and CPU displays,
but since the -T
and -C
flags are given, the TTY and CPU displays will be displayed.
SEE ALSO
netstat(1), nfsstat(1), ps(1), top(1), vm_stat(1)
The sections starting with ``Interpreting system activity'' in Installing and Operating 4.3BSD.
HISTORY
This version of iostat
first appeared in
FreeBSD 3.0.