NAME

Linux::Smaps::Tiny - A minimal and fast alternative to Linux::Smaps

SYNOPSIS

use Linux::Smaps::Tiny qw(get_smaps_summary);

my $summary = get_smaps_summary();
my $size = $summary->{Size};
my $shared_clean = $summary->{Shared_Clean};
my $shared_dirty = $summary->{Shared_Dirty};

warn "Size / Clean / Dirty = $size / $shared_clean/ $shared_dirty";

DESCRIPTION

This module is a tiny interface to /proc/PID/smaps files. It was written because when we rolled out Linux::Smaps in some critical code at a Big Internet Company we experienced slowdowns that were solved by writing a more minimal version.

This module will try to use XS code to parse the smaps file, and if that doesn't work it'll fall back on a pure-Perl version.

If something like that isn't your use case you should probably use Linux::Smaps instead. Also note that Linux::Smaps itself has been optimized since this module was initially written.

SPEED

The distribution comes with a contrib/benchmark.pl script. As of writing this is the speed of Linux::Smaps v.s. Linux::Smaps::Tiny, both the XS and PP versions:

                         Rate Linux::Smaps Linux::Smaps::Tiny::PP Linux::Smaps::Tiny
Linux::Smaps            810/s           --                   -22%               -61%
Linux::Smaps::Tiny::PP 1033/s          28%                     --               -51%
Linux::Smaps::Tiny     2101/s         159%                   103%                 --

FUNCTIONS

get_smaps_summary

Takes an optional process id (defaults to self) returns a summary of the smaps data for the given process. Dies if the process does not exist.

Returns a hashref like this:

{
  'MMUPageSize' => '184',
  'Private_Clean' => '976',
  'Swap' => '0',
  'KernelPageSize' => '184',
  'Pss' => '1755',
  'Private_Dirty' => '772',
  'Referenced' => '2492',
  'Size' => '5456',
  'Shared_Clean' => '744',
  'Shared_Dirty' => '0',
  'Rss' => '2492'
};

Values are in kB.

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2011 Yves Orton <yves@cpan.org> and Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avar@cpan.org>

This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.