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Full Discussion: Wait process holding CPU
Operating Systems AIX Wait process holding CPU Post 302772662 by gopeezere on Tuesday 26th of February 2013 10:58:34 AM
Old 02-26-2013
[SOLVED] Wait process holding CPU

Hi all,

Have this performance Issue,

[
Code:
srvbd1]root]/]>ps vg | head -1 ; ps vg | grep -w wait
    PID    TTY STAT  TIME PGIN  SIZE   RSS   LIM  TSIZ   TRS %CPU %MEM COMMAND
   8196      - A    4448:23    0   384   384    xx     0     0 12.8  0.0 wait
  53274      - A    4179:28    0   384   384    xx     0     0 12.1  0.0 wait
  57372      - A    4436:05    0   384   384    xx     0     0 12.8  0.0 wait
  61470      - A    4173:05    0   384   384    xx     0     0 12.0  0.0 wait
[srvbd1]root]/]>ps -ef | grep 8196| grep -v grep
[srvbd1]root]/]>

There are 4 "wait" commands and it occupies like 50 % of CPU, as showed by ps aux

Code:
[srvbd1]root]/]>ps aux | head -1; ps aux | sort -rn +2 | head -5
USER        PID %CPU %MEM   SZ  RSS    TTY STAT    STIME  TIME COMMAND
root      57372 12.8  0.0  384  384      - A      Feb 20 4437:22 wait
root       8196 12.8  0.0  384  384      - A      Feb 20 4449:41 wait
root      53274 12.1  0.0  384  384      - A      Feb 20 4180:41 wait
root      61470 12.0  0.0  384  384      - A      Feb 20 4174:17 wait
fin102   299090  0.2  0.0 1992 1976      - A    09:19:01  0:42 /u02/F10204/UBS/
[srvbd1]root]/]>

Please help me killing these wait process, as they are not real processes. Help would be greatly appreciated. Server performance is very poor, even login takes hell lotta time.

Moderator's Comments:
Mod Comment edit by bakunin: which part of "please use CODE-tags" was so hard to understand?

Last edited by bakunin; 02-26-2013 at 12:38 PM..
 

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re(7)							 Miscellaneous Information Manual						     re(7)

NAME
re - SWXCR RAID interface SYNOPSIS
2100 Server Model A500MP DEC SWXCR controller xcrn at * vector xcintr device disk renn at xcrn drive nn DESCRIPTION
The re driver is for the SWXCR RAID Array controller. The following rules are used to determine the major and minor numbers that are associated with an re type disk. There are two major num- bers used to represent re disks. The major numbers are 11 for block devices and 44 for character (raw) devices. The minor number is used to represent both the unit number and partition. A disk partition refers to a designated portion of the physical disk. To accomplish this reference, the 20-bit minor number is divided into three parts. The lowest six bits of the minor number specify a disk partition. The partitions use a letter, a through h, for their name. The next three bits of the minor number specify the RE unit number for a unit attached to an SWXCR controller. The final 11 bits specify the controller number. The device special file names associated with re disks are based on conventions that are closely associated with the minor number assigned to the disk. The standard device names begin with re for block special files and rre for character (raw) special files. Following the re is the unit number and then a letter, a through h, that represents the partition. Throughout this reference page, the question mark (?) character represents the unit number in the name of the device special file. For example, re?b could represent re0b, re1b, and so on. The unit number can be calculated if the major and minor numbers of an re disk are provided. For example, suppose you have a device spe- cial file rre6a, with a major number of 44 and a minor number of 384. The partition is represented by the lower six bits of the number 384. These lower six bits of the number 384 are 0, which specifies the a partition. The next three bits of the minor number 384 specify the unit number, which is 6. The next eleven bits specify the controller number, which is zero. Putting these three pieces together reveals that the major/minor number pair 44/384 refers to the a partition of unit 6 attached to controller number 0. A disk can be accessed through either the block special file or the character special file. The block special file accesses the disk using the file system's normal buffering mechanism. Reads and writes to the block special file can specify any size. This capability avoids the need to limit data transfers to the size of physical disk records and to calculate offsets within disk records. The file system can break up large read and write requests into smaller fixed size transfers to the disk. The character special file provides a raw interface that allows for direct transmission between the disk and the user's read or write buf- fer. A single read or write to the raw interface results in exactly one I/O operation. Consequently, raw I/O may be considerably more efficient for large transfers. For systems with RE disks, the first software boot after the system is powered on may take longer than expected. This delay is normal and is caused by the software spinning up the RE disks. Disk Support The RE driver handles all disk drives that can be connected to the SWXCR controller. To determine which drives are supported for specific CPU types and hardware configurations, see the Installation and Configuration Guide for the StorageWorks RAID Array 200 Subsystem Family. SWXCR RAID Controllers are viewed in all cases as RE type disks. There are some notable differences that should be taken into considera- tion when configuring a RAID device: Currently only sector sizes of 512 bytes are supported. Logical Volume sizes are not fixed sizes as compared to other disk devices. The size of the Logical Volume is configurable based on needs. The dynamic nature of Logical Volume sizes is dealt with by defining RAID devices as DYNAMIC. Only partitions a, b, c, and g are defined. If necessary, the disklabel(8) command can be run to change and define partitions for RAID devices. Usually, the re?a partition is used for the root file system and the re?b partition as a paging area. The re?c partition can be used for disk-to-disk copying because it maps the entire disk. The starting location and length (in 512 byte sectors) of the disk partitions of each drive are shown in the following table. Partition sizes can be changed by using the disklabel(8) command. SWXCR (RAID) partitions for systems based on the Alpha AXP architecture disk start length re?a 0 131072 re?b 131072 262144 re?c 0 end of media re?d 0 0 re?e 0 0 re?f 0 0 re?g 393216 end of media re?h 0 0 FILES
/dev/re??? /dev/rre??? /etc/disktab RELATED INFORMATION
disklabel(8), MAKEDEV(8), uerf(8) delim off re(7)
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