diff mbox series

tools/drgn: Add script to display page state for a given PID and VADDR

Message ID 20250415075024.248232-1-ye.liu@linux.dev (mailing list archive)
State New
Headers show
Series tools/drgn: Add script to display page state for a given PID and VADDR | expand

Commit Message

Ye Liu April 15, 2025, 7:50 a.m. UTC
From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>

Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.

The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.

Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
tools mailing lists for review.

Output example:
sudo ./show_page_info.py 1 0x7f2c7de4c000
PID : 1 Comm : systemd mm : 0xffff888116b6d440
User Virtual Address : 0x7f2c7de4c000
Page Address    : 0xffffea000b3a4000
raw: 0017ffffc000416c ffffea00045d1b08 ffffea000456d408 ffff888104521970
raw: 0000000000000000 ffff8881083fdb60 0000006900000018 ffff888107a41000
Page Flags      : PG_referenced|PG_uptodate|PG_lru|PG_head|PG_active|
                  PG_private|PG_reported
Page Size       : 16384
Page PFN        : 0x2ce900
Page Physical   : 0x2ce900000
Page Virtual    : 0xffff8882ce900000
Page Refcount   : 105
Page Mapcount   : 24
Page Index      : 0x0
Page Memcg Data : 0xffff888107a41000
Memcg Name      : init.scope
Memcg Path      : /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/init.scope
Page Mapping    : 0xffff888104521970
Page Anon/File  : File
Page VMA        : 0xffff888109e135e8
VMA Start       : 0x7f2c7de4c000
VMA End         : 0x7f2c7de58000
This page is part of a compound page.
This page is the head page of a compound page.
Head Page       : 0xffffea000b3a4000
Compound Order  : 2
Number of Pages : 4

Signed-off-by: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
---
 tools/drgn/show_page_info.py | 120 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 120 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 tools/drgn/show_page_info.py

Comments

Andrew Morton April 16, 2025, 2:14 a.m. UTC | #1
On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 15:50:24 +0800 Ye Liu <ye.liu@linux.dev> wrote:

> From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
> 
> Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
> to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
> address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
> inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.
> 
> The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
> other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.
> 
> Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
> MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
> tools mailing lists for review.

Help.  My copy of linux has no tools/drgn/
Ye Liu April 16, 2025, 2:46 a.m. UTC | #2
在 2025/4/16 10:14, Andrew Morton 写道:
> On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 15:50:24 +0800 Ye Liu <ye.liu@linux.dev> wrote:
>
>> From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
>>
>> Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
>> to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
>> address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
>> inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.
>>
>> The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
>> other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.
>>
>> Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
>> MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
>> tools mailing lists for review.
> Help.  My copy of linux has no tools/drgn/
I noticed that the current upstream Linux tree doesn't contain a
`tools/drgn/` directory.

I'm interested in contributing a drgn script tool as well.
Given that this directory does not yet exist in mainline, where would
be the appropriate place to add new drgn scripts? Would it make sense
to create a new `tools/drgn/` directory, or is there a preferred
location for such debugging scripts?

Thanks,
Ye
Sweet Tea Dorminy April 16, 2025, 3:28 a.m. UTC | #3
On 4/15/25 10:46 PM, Ye Liu wrote:
> 
> 在 2025/4/16 10:14, Andrew Morton 写道:
>> On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 15:50:24 +0800 Ye Liu <ye.liu@linux.dev> wrote:
>>
>>> From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
>>>
>>> Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
>>> to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
>>> address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
>>> inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.
>>>
>>> The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
>>> other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.
>>>
>>> Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
>>> MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
>>> tools mailing lists for review.
>> Help.  My copy of linux has no tools/drgn/
> I noticed that the current upstream Linux tree doesn't contain a
> `tools/drgn/` directory.
> 
> I'm interested in contributing a drgn script tool as well.
> Given that this directory does not yet exist in mainline, where would
> be the appropriate place to add new drgn scripts? Would it make sense
> to create a new `tools/drgn/` directory, or is there a preferred
> location for such debugging scripts?
> 
> Thanks,
> Ye

I believe the traditional thing to do with new drgn scripts is to add 
them to the contrib directory in drgn via pull request:
https://github.com/osandov/drgn/blob/main/contrib/README.rst
Paul E. McKenney April 16, 2025, 4:02 a.m. UTC | #4
On Tue, Apr 15, 2025 at 11:28:41PM -0400, Sweet Tea Dorminy wrote:
> 
> 
> On 4/15/25 10:46 PM, Ye Liu wrote:
> > 
> > 在 2025/4/16 10:14, Andrew Morton 写道:
> > > On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 15:50:24 +0800 Ye Liu <ye.liu@linux.dev> wrote:
> > > 
> > > > From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
> > > > 
> > > > Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
> > > > to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
> > > > address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
> > > > inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.
> > > > 
> > > > The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
> > > > other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.
> > > > 
> > > > Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
> > > > MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
> > > > tools mailing lists for review.
> > > Help.  My copy of linux has no tools/drgn/
> > I noticed that the current upstream Linux tree doesn't contain a
> > `tools/drgn/` directory.
> > 
> > I'm interested in contributing a drgn script tool as well.
> > Given that this directory does not yet exist in mainline, where would
> > be the appropriate place to add new drgn scripts? Would it make sense
> > to create a new `tools/drgn/` directory, or is there a preferred
> > location for such debugging scripts?
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > Ye
> 
> I believe the traditional thing to do with new drgn scripts is to add them
> to the contrib directory in drgn via pull request:
> https://github.com/osandov/drgn/blob/main/contrib/README.rst

I have an RCU-related drgn script in tools/rcu, so maybe this one should
go in tools/mm.

							Thanx, Paul
Ye Liu April 17, 2025, 1:29 a.m. UTC | #5
在 2025/4/16 12:02, Paul E. McKenney 写道:
> On Tue, Apr 15, 2025 at 11:28:41PM -0400, Sweet Tea Dorminy wrote:
>>
>> On 4/15/25 10:46 PM, Ye Liu wrote:
>>> 在 2025/4/16 10:14, Andrew Morton 写道:
>>>> On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 15:50:24 +0800 Ye Liu <ye.liu@linux.dev> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
>>>>>
>>>>> Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
>>>>> to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
>>>>> address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
>>>>> inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.
>>>>>
>>>>> The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
>>>>> other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.
>>>>>
>>>>> Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
>>>>> MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
>>>>> tools mailing lists for review.
>>>> Help.  My copy of linux has no tools/drgn/
>>> I noticed that the current upstream Linux tree doesn't contain a
>>> `tools/drgn/` directory.
>>>
>>> I'm interested in contributing a drgn script tool as well.
>>> Given that this directory does not yet exist in mainline, where would
>>> be the appropriate place to add new drgn scripts? Would it make sense
>>> to create a new `tools/drgn/` directory, or is there a preferred
>>> location for such debugging scripts?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Ye
>> I believe the traditional thing to do with new drgn scripts is to add them
>> to the contrib directory in drgn via pull request:
>> https://github.com/osandov/drgn/blob/main/contrib/README.rst
> I have an RCU-related drgn script in tools/rcu, so maybe this one should
> go in tools/mm.


To determine the most appropriate place to submit this script, I looked

into existing drgn-based tooling in the kernel tree. Several drgn scripts
have already been added under `tools/`, such as:

- `tools/sched_ext/scx_show_state.py`
- `tools/cgroup/iocost_monitor.py`
- `tools/cgroup/memcg_slabinfo.py`
- `tools/writeback/wb_monitor.py`
- `tools/rcu/rcu-cbs.py`
- `tools/workqueue/wq_dump.py`
- `tools/workqueue/wq_monitor.py`

Given this precedent, I believe it would be reasonable to place
`show_page_info.py` under `tools/mm/`, since it's focused on memory
subsystem internals and would follow a similar organizational pattern
to the above.

I'd appreciate any input on whether this is a suitable direction.
I'm happy to send the script for review once the location is agreed upon.

Thanks,  

Ye Liu
Omar Sandoval April 17, 2025, 6:06 a.m. UTC | #6
On Thu, Apr 17, 2025 at 09:29:23AM +0800, Ye Liu wrote:
> 
> 在 2025/4/16 12:02, Paul E. McKenney 写道:
> > On Tue, Apr 15, 2025 at 11:28:41PM -0400, Sweet Tea Dorminy wrote:
> >>
> >> On 4/15/25 10:46 PM, Ye Liu wrote:
> >>> 在 2025/4/16 10:14, Andrew Morton 写道:
> >>>> On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 15:50:24 +0800 Ye Liu <ye.liu@linux.dev> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>> From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
> >>>>> to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
> >>>>> address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
> >>>>> inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
> >>>>> other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
> >>>>> MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
> >>>>> tools mailing lists for review.
> >>>> Help.  My copy of linux has no tools/drgn/
> >>> I noticed that the current upstream Linux tree doesn't contain a
> >>> `tools/drgn/` directory.
> >>>
> >>> I'm interested in contributing a drgn script tool as well.
> >>> Given that this directory does not yet exist in mainline, where would
> >>> be the appropriate place to add new drgn scripts? Would it make sense
> >>> to create a new `tools/drgn/` directory, or is there a preferred
> >>> location for such debugging scripts?
> >>>
> >>> Thanks,
> >>> Ye
> >> I believe the traditional thing to do with new drgn scripts is to add them
> >> to the contrib directory in drgn via pull request:
> >> https://github.com/osandov/drgn/blob/main/contrib/README.rst
> > I have an RCU-related drgn script in tools/rcu, so maybe this one should
> > go in tools/mm.
> 
> 
> To determine the most appropriate place to submit this script, I looked
> 
> into existing drgn-based tooling in the kernel tree. Several drgn scripts
> have already been added under `tools/`, such as:
> 
> - `tools/sched_ext/scx_show_state.py`
> - `tools/cgroup/iocost_monitor.py`
> - `tools/cgroup/memcg_slabinfo.py`
> - `tools/writeback/wb_monitor.py`
> - `tools/rcu/rcu-cbs.py`
> - `tools/workqueue/wq_dump.py`
> - `tools/workqueue/wq_monitor.py`
> 
> Given this precedent, I believe it would be reasonable to place
> `show_page_info.py` under `tools/mm/`, since it's focused on memory
> subsystem internals and would follow a similar organizational pattern
> to the above.
> 
> I'd appreciate any input on whether this is a suitable direction.
> I'm happy to send the script for review once the location is agreed upon.
> 
> Thanks,  
> 
> Ye Liu

Hi,

The drgn repository and the kernel tools directory are both valid places
to put drgn scripts, and it's ultimately up to you where you'd prefer to
put it. Here are some factors to consider, though:

1. Reusability: if your script is very generic and would be widely
   useful, the ideal is to add it as a helper to drgn upstream. For
   scripts that are less generic but could still be useful to many
   people, I'd personally prefer for them to go into the drgn
   repository's tools or contrib directories. At the other extreme, if
   your script is only useful to a handful of developers of a specific
   subsystem, the kernel tools directory makes more sense.
2. Kernel version coupling: there are a couple of options for dealing
   with kernel changes that require drgn scripts to be updated (e.g.,
   struct member renames, data structure changes).  Scripts in the
   kernel tools directory tend to only handle the current version. This
   is simpler, but it also means that sometimes you can't use features
   from a new version of the script on old kernels. On the other hand,
   the drgn repository supports every kernel version that's still
   meaningfully deployed. This can complicate scripts with
   version-dependent logic, but it means you can always use the latest
   and greatest features on any kernel version. I prefer the latter
   approach, but the choice is yours (except for drgn helpers upstream,
   which are required to support all kernel versions).
3. Maintainership: who wants to own the script? A lot of the current
   drgn scripts in the kernel tools directory are written and maintained
   by the relevant subsystem maintainers, so it's a no-brainer for them
   to own it without any involvement from the drgn project. It's not as
   obvious for other contributors. If the subsystem maintainer is
   willing to own a drgn script in the kernel repo, then I won't
   complain. I'm willing to take just about anything for the drgn
   repository's contrib directory, and I'm slightly more selective for
   helpers and tools.

All that being said, your script looks pretty widely useful, so I think
it'd make sense in the drgn repository's contrib directory (or even the
tools directory if you want to make it a full-fledged tool with test
cases, support for all kernel versions, documentation, etc., but contrib
is fine).

Thanks,
Omar
Ye Liu April 17, 2025, 8:18 a.m. UTC | #7
在 2025/4/17 14:06, Omar Sandoval 写道:
> On Thu, Apr 17, 2025 at 09:29:23AM +0800, Ye Liu wrote:
>> 在 2025/4/16 12:02, Paul E. McKenney 写道:
>>> On Tue, Apr 15, 2025 at 11:28:41PM -0400, Sweet Tea Dorminy wrote:
>>>> On 4/15/25 10:46 PM, Ye Liu wrote:
>>>>> 在 2025/4/16 10:14, Andrew Morton 写道:
>>>>>> On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 15:50:24 +0800 Ye Liu <ye.liu@linux.dev> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> From: Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Introduces a new drgn script, `show_page_info.py`, which allows users
>>>>>>> to analyze the state of a page given a process ID (PID) and a virtual
>>>>>>> address (VADDR). This can help kernel developers or debuggers easily
>>>>>>> inspect page-related information in a live kernel or vmcore.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The script extracts information such as the page flags, mapping, and
>>>>>>> other metadata relevant to diagnosing memory issues.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Currently, there is no specific maintainer entry for `tools/drgn/` in the
>>>>>>> MAINTAINERS file. Therefore, this patch is sent to the general kernel and
>>>>>>> tools mailing lists for review.
>>>>>> Help.  My copy of linux has no tools/drgn/
>>>>> I noticed that the current upstream Linux tree doesn't contain a
>>>>> `tools/drgn/` directory.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm interested in contributing a drgn script tool as well.
>>>>> Given that this directory does not yet exist in mainline, where would
>>>>> be the appropriate place to add new drgn scripts? Would it make sense
>>>>> to create a new `tools/drgn/` directory, or is there a preferred
>>>>> location for such debugging scripts?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>> Ye
>>>> I believe the traditional thing to do with new drgn scripts is to add them
>>>> to the contrib directory in drgn via pull request:
>>>> https://github.com/osandov/drgn/blob/main/contrib/README.rst
>>> I have an RCU-related drgn script in tools/rcu, so maybe this one should
>>> go in tools/mm.
>>
>> To determine the most appropriate place to submit this script, I looked
>>
>> into existing drgn-based tooling in the kernel tree. Several drgn scripts
>> have already been added under `tools/`, such as:
>>
>> - `tools/sched_ext/scx_show_state.py`
>> - `tools/cgroup/iocost_monitor.py`
>> - `tools/cgroup/memcg_slabinfo.py`
>> - `tools/writeback/wb_monitor.py`
>> - `tools/rcu/rcu-cbs.py`
>> - `tools/workqueue/wq_dump.py`
>> - `tools/workqueue/wq_monitor.py`
>>
>> Given this precedent, I believe it would be reasonable to place
>> `show_page_info.py` under `tools/mm/`, since it's focused on memory
>> subsystem internals and would follow a similar organizational pattern
>> to the above.
>>
>> I'd appreciate any input on whether this is a suitable direction.
>> I'm happy to send the script for review once the location is agreed upon.
>>
>> Thanks,  
>>
>> Ye Liu
> Hi,
>
> The drgn repository and the kernel tools directory are both valid places
> to put drgn scripts, and it's ultimately up to you where you'd prefer to
> put it. Here are some factors to consider, though:
>
> 1. Reusability: if your script is very generic and would be widely
>    useful, the ideal is to add it as a helper to drgn upstream. For
>    scripts that are less generic but could still be useful to many
>    people, I'd personally prefer for them to go into the drgn
>    repository's tools or contrib directories. At the other extreme, if
>    your script is only useful to a handful of developers of a specific
>    subsystem, the kernel tools directory makes more sense.
> 2. Kernel version coupling: there are a couple of options for dealing
>    with kernel changes that require drgn scripts to be updated (e.g.,
>    struct member renames, data structure changes).  Scripts in the
>    kernel tools directory tend to only handle the current version. This
>    is simpler, but it also means that sometimes you can't use features
>    from a new version of the script on old kernels. On the other hand,
>    the drgn repository supports every kernel version that's still
>    meaningfully deployed. This can complicate scripts with
>    version-dependent logic, but it means you can always use the latest
>    and greatest features on any kernel version. I prefer the latter
>    approach, but the choice is yours (except for drgn helpers upstream,
>    which are required to support all kernel versions).
> 3. Maintainership: who wants to own the script? A lot of the current
>    drgn scripts in the kernel tools directory are written and maintained
>    by the relevant subsystem maintainers, so it's a no-brainer for them
>    to own it without any involvement from the drgn project. It's not as
>    obvious for other contributors. If the subsystem maintainer is
>    willing to own a drgn script in the kernel repo, then I won't
>    complain. I'm willing to take just about anything for the drgn
>    repository's contrib directory, and I'm slightly more selective for
>    helpers and tools.
>
> All that being said, your script looks pretty widely useful, so I think
> it'd make sense in the drgn repository's contrib directory (or even the
> tools directory if you want to make it a full-fledged tool with test
> cases, support for all kernel versions, documentation, etc., but contrib
> is fine).
>
Hi Omar,

Thank you so much for the detailed guidance and thoughtful suggestions.
I really appreciate your insights on maintainership, version compatibility,      
and the organization of drgn scripts — that context is super helpful.

Given the nature of this script, which is fairly tightly coupled to the current
kernel’s memory subsystem and primarily intended to assist mm subsystem
developers, I’m leaning toward submitting it under `tools/mm/` in the kernel tree
for now. I believe it aligns with similar precedents like
`tools/rcu/rcu-cbs.py` and `tools/cgroup/memcg_slabinfo.py`.

That said, I’d absolutely be happy to contribute future scripts to the drgn
`contrib/` directory — especially those that are more generic or extended
to support multiple kernel versions. Your feedback has been very helpful
in shaping how I think about future tooling work in this space.

Thanks again for your support and for maintaining drgn!

Thanks,
Ye Liu
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/tools/drgn/show_page_info.py b/tools/drgn/show_page_info.py
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..70d0cd97c7f0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tools/drgn/show_page_info.py
@@ -0,0 +1,120 @@ 
+#!/usr/bin/env drgn
+# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
+# Copyright (C) 2025 Ye Liu <liuye@kylinos.cn>
+
+import argparse
+from drgn import Object
+from drgn.helpers.linux import find_task, follow_page, page_size
+from drgn.helpers.linux.mm import (
+    decode_page_flags, page_to_pfn, page_to_phys, page_to_virt, vma_find,
+    PageSlab, PageCompound, PageHead, PageTail, compound_head, compound_order, compound_nr
+)
+from drgn.helpers.linux.cgroup import cgroup_name, cgroup_path
+
+DESC = """
+This is a drgn script to show the page state.
+For more info on drgn, visit https://github.com/osandov/drgn.
+"""
+
+MEMCG_DATA_OBJEXTS = 1 << 0
+MEMCG_DATA_KMEM = 1 << 1
+__NR_MEMCG_DATA_FLAGS = 1 << 2
+
+def format_page_data(data):
+    """Format raw page data into a readable hex dump."""
+    chunks = [data[i:i+8] for i in range(0, len(data), 8)]
+    hex_chunks = ["".join(f"{b:02x}" for b in chunk[::-1]) for chunk in chunks]
+    lines = [" ".join(hex_chunks[i:i+4]) for i in range(0, len(hex_chunks), 4)]
+    return "\n".join(f"raw: {line}" for line in lines)
+
+def get_memcg_info(page):
+    """Retrieve memory cgroup information for a page."""
+    memcg_data = page.memcg_data.value_()
+    if memcg_data & MEMCG_DATA_OBJEXTS:
+        memcg_value = 0
+    elif memcg_data & MEMCG_DATA_KMEM:
+        objcg = Object(prog, "struct obj_cgroup *", address=memcg_data & ~__NR_MEMCG_DATA_FLAGS)
+        memcg_value = objcg.memcg.value_()
+    else:
+        memcg_value = memcg_data & ~__NR_MEMCG_DATA_FLAGS
+
+    memcg = Object(prog, "struct mem_cgroup *", address=memcg_value)
+    cgrp = memcg.css.cgroup
+    return cgroup_name(cgrp).decode(), f"/sys/fs/cgroup/memory{cgroup_path(cgrp).decode()}"
+
+def show_page_state(page, addr, mm, pid, task):
+    """Display detailed information about a page."""
+    print(f'==============================================================')
+    print(f'PID : {pid} Comm : {task.comm.string_().decode()} mm : {hex(mm)}')
+    print(f'User Virtual Address : {hex(addr)}')
+    print(f'Page Address    : {hex(page.value_())}')
+    print(f'--------------------------------------------------------------')
+
+    print(format_page_data(prog.read(page.value_(), 64)))
+    print(f'--------------------------------------------------------------')
+
+    print(f'Page Flags      : {decode_page_flags(page)}')
+    print(f'Page Size       : {page_size(page).value_()}')
+    print(f'Page PFN        : {hex(page_to_pfn(page).value_())}')
+    print(f'Page Physical   : {hex(page_to_phys(page).value_())}')
+    print(f'Page Virtual    : {hex(page_to_virt(page).value_())}')
+    print(f'Page Refcount   : {page._refcount.counter.value_()}')
+    print(f'Page Mapcount   : {page._mapcount.counter.value_()}')
+    print(f'Page Index      : {hex(page.index.value_())}')
+    print(f'Page Memcg Data : {hex(page.memcg_data.value_())}')
+
+    memcg_name, memcg_path = get_memcg_info(page)
+    print(f'Memcg Name      : {memcg_name}')
+    print(f'Memcg Path      : {memcg_path}')
+    print(f'--------------------------------------------------------------')
+
+    print(f'Page Mapping    : {hex(page.mapping.value_())}')
+    print(f'Page Anon/File  : {"Anon" if page.mapping.value_() & 0x1 else "File"}')
+
+    vma = vma_find(mm, addr)
+    print(f'Page VMA        : {hex(vma.value_())}')
+    print(f'VMA Start       : {hex(vma.vm_start.value_())}')
+    print(f'VMA End         : {hex(vma.vm_end.value_())}')
+    print(f'--------------------------------------------------------------')
+
+    if PageSlab(page):
+        print("This page belongs to the slab allocator.")
+
+    if PageCompound(page):
+        print("This page is part of a compound page.")
+        if PageHead(page):
+            print("This page is the head page of a compound page.")
+        if PageTail(page):
+            print("This page is the tail page of a compound page.")
+        print(f'Head Page       : {hex(compound_head(page).value_())}')
+        print(f'Compound Order  : {compound_order(page).value_()}')
+        print(f'Number of Pages : {compound_nr(page).value_()}')
+    else:
+        print("This page is not part of a compound page.")
+    print(f'==============================================================')
+
+def main():
+    """Main function to parse arguments and display page state."""
+    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description=DESC, formatter_class=argparse.RawTextHelpFormatter)
+    parser.add_argument('pid', metavar='PID', type=int, help='Target process ID (PID)')
+    parser.add_argument('vaddr', metavar='VADDR', type=str, help='Target virtual address in hexadecimal format (e.g., 0x7fff1234abcd)')
+    args = parser.parse_args()
+
+    try:
+        vaddr = int(args.vaddr, 16)
+    except ValueError:
+        print(f"Error: Invalid virtual address format: {args.vaddr}")
+        return
+
+    task = find_task(args.pid)
+    mm = task.mm
+    page = follow_page(mm, vaddr)
+
+    if page:
+        show_page_state(page, vaddr, mm, args.pid, task)
+    else:
+        print(f"Address {hex(vaddr)} is not mapped.")
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+    main()
+