384 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
384 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Systems
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group: Distribution
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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type: reference
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---
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# Linux cheat sheet **(FREE SELF)**
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This is the GitLab Support Team's collection of information regarding Linux, that they
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sometimes use while troubleshooting. It is listed here for transparency,
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and for users with experience with Linux. If you are currently
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having an issue with GitLab, you may want to check your [support options](https://about.gitlab.com/support/)
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first, before attempting to use this information.
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WARNING:
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It is [beyond the scope of GitLab Support to assist in systems administration](https://about.gitlab.com/support/statement-of-support/#training). GitLab administrators are expected to know these commands for their distribution
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of choice. If you are a GitLab Support Engineer, consider this a cross-reference to
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translate `yum` -> `apt-get` and the like.
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Most of the commands below have not been labeled as to which distribution they work
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on. Contributions are welcome to help add them.
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## System Commands
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### Distribution Information
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```shell
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# Debian/Ubuntu
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uname -a
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lsb_release -a
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# CentOS/RedHat
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cat /etc/centos-release
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cat /etc/redhat-release
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# This will provide a lot more information
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cat /etc/os-release
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```
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### Shut down or Reboot
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```shell
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shutdown -h now
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reboot
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```
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### Permissions
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```shell
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# change the user:group ownership of a file/dir
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chown root:git <file_or_dir>
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# make a file executable
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chmod u+x <file>
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```
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### Files and directories
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```shell
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# create a new directory and all subdirectories
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mkdir -p dir/dir2/dir3
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# Send a command's output to file.txt, no STDOUT
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ls > file.txt
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# Send a command's output to file.txt AND see it in STDOUT
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ls | tee /tmp/file.txt
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# Search and Replace within a file
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sed -i 's/original-text/new-text/g' <filename>
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```
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### See all set environment variables
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```shell
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env
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```
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## Searching
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### File names
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```shell
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# search for a file in a filesystem
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find . -name 'filename.rb' -print
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# locate a file
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locate <filename>
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# see command history
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history
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# search CLI history
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<ctrl>-R
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```
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### File contents
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```shell
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# -B/A = show 2 lines before/after search_term
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grep -B 2 -A 2 search_term <filename>
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# -<number> shows both before and after
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grep -2 search_term <filename>
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# Search on all files in directory (recursively)
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grep -r search_term <directory>
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# Grep namespace/project/name of a GitLab repository
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grep 'fullpath' /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/@hashed/<repo hash>/.git/config
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# search through *.gz files is the same except with zgrep
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zgrep search_term <filename>
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# Fast grep printing lines containing a string pattern
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fgrep -R string_pattern <filename or directory>
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```
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### CLI
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```shell
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# View command history
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history
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# Run last command that started with 'his' (3 letters min)
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!his
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# Search through command history
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<ctrl>-R
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# Execute last command with sudo
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sudo !!
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```
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## Managing resources
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### Memory, Disk, & CPU usage
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```shell
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# disk space info. The '-h' gives the data in human-readable values
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df -h
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# size of each file/dir and its contents in the current dir
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du -hd 1
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# or alternative
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du -h --max-depth=1
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# find files greater than certain size(k, M, G) and list them in order
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# get rid of the + for exact, - for less than
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find / -type f -size +100M -print0 | xargs -0 du -hs | sort -h
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# Find free memory on a system
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free -m
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# Find what processes are using memory/CPU and organize by it
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# Load average is 1/CPU for 1, 5, and 15 minutes
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top -o %MEM
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top -o %CPU
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```
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### Strace
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```shell
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# strace a process
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strace -tt -T -f -y -yy -s 1024 -p <pid>
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# -tt print timestamps with microsecond accuracy
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# -T print the time spent in each syscall
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# -f also trace any child processes that forked
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# -y print the path associated with file handles
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# -yy print socket and device file handle details
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# -s max string length to print for an event
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# -o output file
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# run strace on all puma processes
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ps auwx | grep puma | awk '{ print " -p " $2}' | xargs strace -tt -T -f -y -yy -s 1024 -o /tmp/puma.txt
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```
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Be aware that strace can have major impacts to system performance when it is running.
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#### Strace Resources
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- See the [strace zine](https://wizardzines.com/zines/strace/) for a quick walkthrough.
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- Brendan Gregg has a more detailed explanation of [how to use strace](http://www.brendangregg.com/blog/2014-05-11/strace-wow-much-syscall.html).
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- We have a [series of GitLab Unfiltered videos](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL05JrBw4t0KoC7cIkoAFcRhr4gsVesekg) on using strace to understand GitLab.
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### The Strace Parser tool
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Our [strace-parser tool](https://gitlab.com/wchandler/strace-parser) can be used to
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provide a high level summary of the `strace` output. It is similar to `strace -C`,
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but provides much more detailed statistics.
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MacOS and Linux binaries [are available](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/support/toolbox/strace-parser/-/tags),
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or you can build it from source if you have the Rust compiler.
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#### How to use the tool
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First run the tool with `summary` flag to get a summary of the top processes sorted by time spent actively performing tasks.
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You can also sort based on total time, # of system calls made, PID #, and # of child processes
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using the `-s` or `--sort` flag. The number of results defaults to 25 processes, but
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can be changed using the `-c`/`--count` option. See `--help` for full details.
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```shell
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$ ./strace-parser sidekiq_trace.txt summary -c15 -s=pid
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Top 15 PIDs by PID #
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-----------
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pid actv (ms) wait (ms) user (ms) total (ms) % of actv syscalls children
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------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
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16706 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16708 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16716 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16717 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16718 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16719 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16720 0.389 9796.434 1.090 9797.912 0.02% 16 0
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16721 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16722 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16723 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16804 0.218 11099.535 1.881 11101.634 0.01% 36 0
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16813 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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16814 1.740 11825.640 4.616 11831.996 0.10% 57 0
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16815 2.364 12039.993 7.669 12050.026 0.14% 80 0
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16816 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.00% 0 0
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PIDs 93
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real 0m12.287s
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user 0m1.474s
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sys 0m1.686s
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```
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Based on the summary, you can then view the details of system calls made by one or more
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processes using the `-p`/`--pid` for a specific process, or `-s`/`--stats` flags for
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a sorted list. `--stats` takes the same sorting and count options as summary.
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```shell
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./strace-parser sidekiq_trace.txt p 16815
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PID 16815
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80 syscalls, active time: 2.364ms, user time: 7.669ms, total time: 12050.026ms
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start time: 22:46:14.830267 end time: 22:46:26.880293
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syscall count total (ms) max (ms) avg (ms) min (ms) errors
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----------------- -------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- --------
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futex 5 10100.229 5400.106 2020.046 0.022 ETIMEDOUT: 2
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restart_syscall 1 1939.764 1939.764 1939.764 1939.764 ETIMEDOUT: 1
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getpid 33 1.020 0.046 0.031 0.018
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clock_gettime 14 0.420 0.038 0.030 0.021
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stat 6 0.277 0.072 0.046 0.031
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read 6 0.170 0.036 0.028 0.020
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openat 3 0.126 0.045 0.042 0.038
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close 3 0.099 0.034 0.033 0.031
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lseek 3 0.089 0.035 0.030 0.021
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ioctl 3 0.082 0.033 0.027 0.023 ENOTTY: 3
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fstat 3 0.081 0.034 0.027 0.022
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---------------
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Slowest file open times for PID 16815:
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dur (ms) timestamp error file name
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---------- --------------- --------------- ---------
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0.045 22:46:16.771318 - /opt/gitlab/embedded/service/gitlab-rails/config/database.yml
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0.043 22:46:26.877954 - /opt/gitlab/embedded/service/gitlab-rails/config/database.yml
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0.038 22:46:22.174610 - /opt/gitlab/embedded/service/gitlab-rails/config/database.yml
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```
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In the example above, we can see which files took longer to open for `PID 16815`.
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When nothing stands out in the results, a good way to get more context is to run `strace`
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on your own GitLab instance while performing the action performed by the customer,
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then compare summaries of both results and dive into the differences.
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#### Stats for the open syscall
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Rough numbers for calls to `open` and `openat` (used to access files) on various configurations.
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Slow storage can cause the dreaded `DeadlineExceeded` error in Gitaly.
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Also [see this entry](../operations/filesystem_benchmarking.md)
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in the handbook for quick tests customers can perform to check their file system performance.
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Keep in mind that timing information from `strace` is often somewhat inaccurate, so
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small differences should not be considered significant.
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|Setup | access times |
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|:--------------|:--------------|
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| EFS | 10 - 30 ms |
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| Local Storage | 0.01 - 1 ms |
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## Networking
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### Ports
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```shell
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# Find the programs that are listening on ports
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netstat -plnt
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ss -plnt
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lsof -i -P | grep <port>
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```
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### Internet/DNS
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```shell
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# Show domain IP address
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dig +short example.com
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nslookup example.com
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# Check DNS using specific nameserver
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# 8.8.8.8 = google, 1.1.1.1 = cloudflare, 208.67.222.222 = opendns
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dig @8.8.8.8 example.com
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nslookup example.com 1.1.1.1
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# Find host provider
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whois <ip_address> | grep -i "orgname\|netname"
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# Curl headers with redirect
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curl --head --location "https://example.com"
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# Test if a host is reachable on the network. `ping6` works on IPv6 networks.
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ping example.com
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# Show the route taken to a host. `traceroute6` works on IPv6 networks.
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traceroute example.com
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mtr example.com
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# List details of network interfaces
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ip address
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# Check local DNS settings
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cat /etc/hosts
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cat /etc/resolv.conf
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systemd-resolve --status
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# Capture traffic to/from a host
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sudo tcpdump host www.example.com
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```
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## Package Management
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```shell
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# Debian/Ubuntu
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# List packages
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dpkg -l
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apt list --installed
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# Find an installed package
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dpkg -l | grep <package>
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apt list --installed | grep <package>
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# Install a package
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dpkg -i <package_name>.deb
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apt-get install <package>
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apt install <package>
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# CentOS/RedHat
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# Install a package
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yum install <package>
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dnf install <package> # RHEL/CentOS 8+
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rpm -ivh <package_name>.rpm
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# Find an installed package
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rpm -qa | grep <package>
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```
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## Logs
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```shell
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# Print last lines in log file where 'n'
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# is the number of lines to print
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tail -n /path/to/log/file
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```
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