02-07-2007
Very good.
It works fine !
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello,
The last line of prstat shows load average.
I am unable to figure out what actually it is.
I have read the man pages and also googled, all for no use.
Can somebody help me, as to what should be the avg. load of the system for best performance and how is this load of prstat calculated. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: vibhor_agarwali
6 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
How to stop the Prstat using shell script ?
because after i run the below script the thing seems to be always in loop and cannot get out till i ctrl + c, is there anything that i can add in the script to make it terminate ?
<code>
#!/bin/sh
prstat -Tc -u testing > testing.txt
</code>
... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: filthymonk
19 Replies
3. Solaris
Hi All,
But the prstat logs of my system shows:-
NPROC USERNAME SWAP RSS MEMORY TIME CPU
77 oracle 17G 10G 65% 4:24:47 0.8%
Total: 486 processes, 3850 lwps, load averages: 3.77, 4.45, 4.94
What does the MEMORY denotes?
Is it the %memory used from RAM?
Or is the %memory used by... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: dipashre
10 Replies
4. Solaris
Good Evening everyone,
I am confused about prstat O/P as it shows memory values which are different from actual value.Below is the O/P of prstat command and swap commands.
NPROC USERNAME SIZE RSS MEMORY TIME CPU
48 root 2113M 1590M 1.2% 45:09.39 32%
31 daemon ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: vvpotugunta
7 Replies
5. Solaris
Can someone please explain me the "TIME" field of the output of "prstat -p<pid>" command ? The man page says it is "The cumulative execution time for the process". Does it mean how many hrs:min:sec the process is running ? If so then I'm not getting the desired output.
Can someone pls help me in... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: senabhi
5 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi all,
am writing a ksh script on solaris 9 to get the number of threads taken by a process. am using the prstat -p command to do this.
output i get is :
:"/export/home/user" > prstat -p 25528 | cut -f2 -d/
NLWP
203
Total: 1 processes, 203 lwps, load averages: 2.58, 3.24, 3.62... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cesarNZ
2 Replies
7. Solaris
hi all,
was trying to figure out how busy my app was by looking at the performance of the app server. did a 'prstat -s rss' command to find the app servers using most memory.
Found a command 'prstat -m' which is meant to show more details on each pid but the output of this command... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cesarNZ
1 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi all,
have a ksh script where i am doing a prstat -m -u osuser 1 1 >> $FILE_NAME but for some reason it only writes 15 lines wheres when i run the same command manually from command prompt it prints out 60 lines.
why is it not writing the full 60 lines to the file ??
ta. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cesarNZ
1 Replies
9. Solaris
On Solaris 8, when I try to run prstat 30 5 as a background process, the command exits 1-2 seconds after it's initiated instead of the 30 seconds I specified.
It runs fine in interactive mode.
Is there a workaround to this I could use? (Upgrading the package is not an option)
A link to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Devyn
1 Replies
10. Solaris
Hello
We have a SPARC box running Solaris 10. We have 32 GB of physical memory, 32 GB of swap. Now i want to monitor memory usage for performance tuning. The box is running Sybase database. When I type prstat i get the following
PID USERNAME SIZE RSS STATE PRI NICE TIME CPU... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: abohmeed
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
mkmanifest
MKMANIFEST(1) General Commands Manual MKMANIFEST(1)
NAME
mkmanifest - create a shell script to restore Unix filenames
SYNOPSIS
mkmanifest [ files ]
DESCRIPTION
Mkmanifest creates a shell script that will aid in the restoration of Unix filenames that got clobbered by the MSDOS filename restrictions.
MSDOS filenames are restricted to 8 character names, 3 character extensions, upper case only, no device names, and no illegal characters.
The mkmanifest program is compatible with the methods used in pcomm, arc, and mtools to change perfectly good Unix filenames to fit the
MSDOS restrictions.
EXAMPLE
I want to copy the following Unix files to a MSDOS diskette (using the mcopy command).
very_long_name
2.many.dots
illegal:
good.c
prn.dev
Capital
Mcopy will convert the names to:
very_lon
2xmany.dot
illegalx
good.c
xprn.dev
capital
The command:
mkmanifest very_long_name 2.many.dots illegal: good.c prn.dev Capital > manifest
would produce the following:
mv very_lon very_long_name
mv 2xmany.dot 2.many.dots
mv illegalx illegal:
mv xprn.dev prn.dev
mv capital Capital
Notice that "good.c" did not require any conversion, so it did not appear in the output.
Suppose I've copied these files from the diskette to another Unix system, and I now want the files back to their original names. If the
file "manifest" (the output captured above) was sent along with those files, it could be used to convert the filenames.
SEE ALSO
arc(1), pcomm(1), mtools(1)
local MKMANIFEST(1)