p Note that the result can already be stale when being output due to other activities in the system. Thus it should be used only for advisory purposes.
p
The
.Nm
utility accepts the following options.
l -tag -width hogehoge t Fl q The quiet mode.
Outputs nothing unless the file has in-core pages.
t Fl s The summary mode.
Only shows number of pages.
.El
------------------------------------------------------------
.Sh EXAMPLES
The following example shows that
a /bin/cp
are fully cached in-core
while the other executables are not in-core.
numbers shown in the default output are page indexes in the file of
each in-core pages.
d -literal % fincore /bin/c*
/bin/cat: 0 1 2 3
/bin/chio:
/bin/chmod:
/bin/cp: 0 1 2 3 4 5
/bin/cpio:
/bin/csh:
% fincore -s /bin/c*
/bin/cat: 4 / 4 in-core pages (100.00%)
/bin/chio: 0 / 5 in-core pages (0.00%)
/bin/chmod: 0 / 3 in-core pages (0.00%)
/bin/cp: 6 / 6 in-core pages (100.00%)
/bin/cpio: 0 / 36 in-core pages (0.00%)
/bin/csh: 0 / 41 in-core pages (0.00%)
.Ed
------------------------------------------------------------
.Sh HISTORY
The
.Nm
utility first appeared in
.Nx XXX .
------------------------------------------------------------
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr mincore 2
------------------------------------------------------------
.Sh AUTHORS
The
.Nm
utility is written by
.An YAMAMOTO Takashi .
------------------------------------------------------------
.Sh CAVEATS
The concept of page cache is an implementation detail of the kernel.
The
.Nm
utility works using some assumptions on the current implementation.
Thus it might stop working in a future version of
.Nx .
------------------------------------------------------------
.Sh BUGS
The amount of CPU time the current implementation of
.Nm
utility would take is roughly proportional to the file sizes.
Ideally it should be proportional to the number of in-core pages.