As I posted earlier here - a better "svmon -G" command looks something like this:
If you have additional questions about svmon and/or analyzing AIX memory please ask general questions there.
Hi All,
I have a question, can you guys please help me by giving your valuable suggestons:
I am using AIX 5L, running oracle 7 version. I need to increase the oracle memory to 40 MB more. Currently Oracle occupies 260M. I wanted to know whether I can increase the memory without any problem.... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a question, can you guys please help me by giving your valuable suggestons:
I am using AIX 5L, running oracle 7 version. I need to increase the oracle memory to 40 MB more. Currently Oracle occupies 260M. I wanted to know whether I can increase the memory without any problem.... (3 Replies)
Hi,
We have AIX 5.1 machine of RAM 8 GB and paging space is 8GB. we are getting high memory usage of almost 99%.Can anybody please help in this ?
Partial vmstat o/p
kthr memory
----- -----------
r b avm fre
2 1 278727 1143
There is no paging issue.Becoz in... (5 Replies)
How to find the memory utilization of AIX server using svmon -G output.
Sample output for svmon -G command from my AIX test server,
size inuse free pin virtual
memory 4014080 3995443 18637 575916 1876393
pg space 1179648 ... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have some questions regarding the performance, MEMORY/ Virtual Memory (paging /swap space)
Please see the nmon-MEMORY stats from my AIX LPAR.
24 GB --> RAM
3456 MB --> Paging Space
│ Memory ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
│... (8 Replies)
Hi, i have 2 identical web servers using AIX. I use nmon analyser to check their performance.
The server A exceeds 20% memory usage for system, 5% for cache and the rest 75% for processes. While, it uses 4% of Paging Space.
The server B exceeds 20% for system, 45% for cache and 35% for processes.... (24 Replies)
Discussion started by: dim
24 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
plan9-getflags
GETFLAGS(8) System Manager's Manual GETFLAGS(8)NAME
getflags, usage - command-line parsing for shell scripts
SYNOPSIS
getflags $*
usage [ progname ]
DESCRIPTION
Getflags parses the options in its command-line arguments according to the environment variable $flagfmt. This variable should be a list
of comma-separated options. Each option can be a single letter, indicating that it does not take arguments, or a letter followed by the
space-separated names of its arguments. Getflags prints an rc(1) script on standard output which initializes the environment variable
$flagx for every option mentioned in $flagfmt. If the option is not present on the command-line, the script sets that option's flag vari-
able to an empty list. Otherwise, the script sets that option's flag variable with a list containing the option's arguments or, if the
option takes no arguments, with the string 1. The script also sets the variable $* to the list of arguments following the options. The
final line in the script sets the $status variable, to the empty string on success and to the string usage when there is an error parsing
the command line.
Usage prints a usage message to standard error. It creates the message using $flagfmt, as described above, $args, which should contain the
string to be printed explaining non-option arguments, and $0, the program name (see rc(1)). If run under sh(1), which does not set $0, the
program name must be given explicitly on the command line.
EXAMPLE
Parse the arguments for leak(1):
flagfmt='b,s,f binary,r res,x width'
args='name | pid list'
if(! ifs=() eval `{getflags $*} || ~ $#* 0){
usage
exit usage
}
SOURCE
/src/cmd/getflags.c
/src/cmd/usage.c
SEE ALSO arg(3)GETFLAGS(8)