| .TH THERMOMETER 8 |
| # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| .SH NAME |
| \fBthermometer\fP - A thermal profiling tool |
| |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .ft B |
| .B thermometer |
| .RB [ options ] |
| .RB [ command ] |
| .br |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| \fBthermometer \fP captures the thermal zones temperature at a |
| specified sampling period. It is optimized to reduce as much as |
| possible the overhead while doing the temperature acquisition in order |
| to prevent disrupting the running application we may want to profile. |
| |
| This low overhead also allows a high rate sampling for the temperature |
| which could be necessary to spot overshots and undershots. |
| |
| If no configuration file is specified, then all the thermal zones will |
| be monitored at 4Hz, so every 250ms. A configuration file specifies |
| the thermal zone names and the desired sampling period. A thermal zone |
| name can be a regular expression to specify a group of thermal zone. |
| |
| The sampling of the different thermal zones will be written into |
| separate files with the thermal zone name. It is possible to specify a |
| postfix to identify them for example for a specific scenario. The |
| output directory can be specified in addition. |
| |
| Without any parameters, \fBthermometer \fP captures all the thermal |
| zone temperatures every 250ms and write to the current directory the |
| captured files postfixed with the current date. |
| |
| If a running \fBduration\fP is specified or a \fBcommand\fP, the |
| capture ends at the end of the duration if the command did not |
| finished before. The \fBduration\fP can be specified alone as well as |
| the \fBcommand\fP. If none is specified, the capture will continue |
| indefinitively until interrupted by \fBSIGINT\fP or \fBSIGQUIT\fP. |
| .PP |
| |
| .SS Options |
| .PP |
| The \fB-h, --help\fP option shows a short usage help |
| .PP |
| The \fB-o <dir>, --output <dir>\fP option defines the output directory to put the |
| sampling files |
| .PP |
| The \fB-c <config>, --config <config>\fP option specifies the configuration file to use |
| .PP |
| The \fB-d <seconds>, --duration <seconds>\fP option specifies the duration of the capture |
| .PP |
| The \fB-l <loglevel>, --loglevel <loglevel>\fP option sets the loglevel [DEBUG,INFO,NOTICE,WARN,ERROR] |
| .PP |
| The \fB-p <string>, --postfix <string>\fP option appends \fBstring\fP at the end of the capture filenames |
| .PP |
| The \fB-s, --syslog\fP option sets the output to syslog, default is \fBstdout\fP |
| .PP |
| The \fB-w, --overwrite\fP overwrites the output files if they exist |
| .PP |
| |
| .PP |
| |
| .SS "Exit status:" |
| .TP |
| 0 |
| if OK, |
| .TP |
| 1 |
| Error with the options specified as parameters |
| .TP |
| 2 |
| Error when configuring the logging facility |
| .TP |
| 3 |
| Error when configuring the time |
| .TP |
| 4 |
| Error in the initialization routine |
| .TP |
| 5 |
| Error during the runtime |
| |
| .SH Capture file format |
| |
| Every file contains two columns. The first one is the uptime timestamp |
| in order to find a point in time since the system started up if there |
| is any thermal event. The second one is the temperature in milli |
| degree. The first line contains the label of each column. |
| |
| .SH AUTHOR |
| Daniel Lezcano <daniel.lezcano@kernel.org> |