10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Noticed that asvc_t values in iostat command outputs are mostly more than 100 in our previous iostat analysis.
Also found the following detail from an alternate site IO Bottleneck - Disk performance issue - UnixArena
----
1. asvc_t average service time of active transactions, in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: saraperu
2 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Dear All,
Please help me, I have file input like this,
1 2142
215 2162
217 2842
285 2862
287 4002
401 4022
403 4822
1 2142
215 2162
217 2842
285 2862
287 4002
401 4022
403 4882
1 4801 (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: attila
8 Replies
3. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Hi Guys,
I've been having some arguments with my colleagues about one thing. Always my thought was that as as far as disk performance is concern by looking at the output of the iostat command (AIX) you would be able to identify if you have a hot disk and then by moving some files out that disk... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: arizah
3 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I have a file with two fields. The first field repeats itself for quite a while but the second field changes. What I want to do is to go through the first column until its value changes (and while it doesn't, verify that the second field is in a sequence from 0-15).
Example input:
... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: acsg
13 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys,
Please help me out in my situation of writing a shell script
Exampl:I have a output like
asnapply 1 2 3 apply_server=1 apply_schema=ASN
asnapply 1 2 3 apply_server=2 apply_schema=ASN
Now i need output like
asnacmd applysever=1 applyschema=ASN stop
asnacmd applysever=2... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: mallak
16 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Friends,
Need some help.
On linux i have to run iostat command and in each iteration have to print the greatest value in each column.
e.g
iostat -dt -kx 2 2 | awk ' !/sd/ &&!/%util/ && !/Time/ && !/Linux/ {print $12}'
4.38
0.00
0.00
0.00
WHhat i would like to... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: achak01
15 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
So I use Cacti for monitoring IO statistics on my servers, now originally I couldnt monitor Multipath deviced servers as they have alot of /dev/sdxx and /dev/emcpowerxx, I have devised a method of trimming them down to just the actual devices but the issue is the output looks like so.
# iostat... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: RiSk
0 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Here is my file name countries
USSR 8650 262 Asia
Canada 3852 24 North America
China 3692 866 Asia
USA 3615 219 North America
Brazil 3286 116 South America
India 1269 637 Asia
Argentina 1072 ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: ironhead3fan
8 Replies
9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi all,
i have run iostat -em, and get below result. Can i know what is this output meaning, and how to fix that problem.
iostat -em
---- errors ---
device s/w h/w trn tot
sd7 0 1 0 1
sd8 1 1 0 2
sd9 0 1 0 1
sd10 0 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: foongkt5220
2 Replies
10. Solaris
Hi all, hope you are having a nice day, its nice and warm today in Canberra Australia.
iostat -e / -E reports soft and hard errors. Any idea what these are exactly? All I hear are I/O's failing and needing to retry, but no cause as to why they fail.
My SUN guru tells me its our EMC SAN... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: scottman
1 Replies
IOSTAT(8) BSD System Manager's Manual IOSTAT(8)
NAME
iostat -- report I/O statistics
SYNOPSIS
iostat [-CdhIKoTxz?] [-c count] [-M core] [-n devs] [-N system] [-t type,if,pass] [-w wait] [drives]
DESCRIPTION
The iostat utility displays kernel I/O statistics on terminal, device and cpu operations. The first statistics that are printed are averaged
over the system uptime. To get information about the current activity, a suitable wait time should be specified, so that the subsequent sets
of printed statistics will be averaged over that time.
The options are as follows:
-c Repeat the display count times. If no repeat count is specified, the default depends on whether -w is specified. With -w the default
repeat count is infinity, otherwise it is 1.
-C Display CPU statistics. This is on by default, unless -d or -x is specified.
-d Display only device statistics. If this flag is turned on, only device statistics will be displayed, unless -C or -T is also specified
to enable the display of CPU or TTY statistics.
-h Put iostat in 'top' mode. In this mode, iostat will show devices in order from highest to lowest bytes per measurement cycle.
-I Display total statistics for a given time period, rather than average statistics for each second during that time period.
-K In the blocks transferred display (-o), display block count in kilobytes rather then the device native block size.
-M Extract values associated with the name list from the specified core instead of the default ``/dev/kmem''.
-n Display up to devs number of devices. The iostat utility will display fewer devices if there are not devs devices present.
-N Extract the name list from the specified system instead of the default ``/boot/kernel/kernel''.
-o Display old-style iostat device statistics. Sectors per second, transfers per second, and milliseconds per seek are displayed. If -I
is specified, total blocks/sectors, total transfers, and milliseconds per seek are displayed.
-t Specify which types of devices to display. There are three different categories of devices:
device type:
da Direct Access devices
sa Sequential Access devices
printer Printers
proc Processor devices
worm Write Once Read Multiple devices
cd CD devices
scanner Scanner devices
optical Optical Memory devices
changer Medium Changer devices
comm Communication devices
array Storage Array devices
enclosure Enclosure Services devices
floppy Floppy devices
interface:
IDE Integrated Drive Electronics devices
SCSI Small Computer System Interface devices
other Any other device interface
passthrough:
pass Passthrough devices
The user must specify at least one device type, and may specify at most one device type from each category. Multiple device types in a
single device type statement must be separated by commas.
Any number of -t arguments may be specified on the command line. All -t arguments are ORed together to form a matching expression
against which all devices in the system are compared. Any device that fully matches any -t argument will be included in the iostat
output, up to the number of devices that can be displayed in 80 columns, or the maximum number of devices specified by the user.
-T Display TTY statistics. This is on by default, unless -d or -x is specified.
-w Pause wait seconds between each display. If no wait interval is specified, the default is 1 second.
The iostat command will accept and honor a non-integer number of seconds. Note that the interval only has millisecond granularity.
Finer values will be truncated. E.g., ``-w1.0001'' is the same as ``-w1.000''. The interval will also suffer from modifications to
kern.hz so your mileage may vary.
-x Show extended disk statistics. Each disk is displayed on a line of its own with all available statistics. If this flag is turned on,
only disk statistics will be displayed, unless -C or -T is also specified to enable the display of CPU or TTY statistics.
-z If -x is specified, omit lines for devices with no activity.
-? Display a usage statement and exit.
The iostat utility displays its information in the following format:
tty
tin characters read from terminals
tout characters written to terminals
devices
Device operations. The header of the field is the device name and unit number. The iostat utility will display as many devices as
will fit in a standard 80 column screen, or the maximum number of devices in the system, whichever is smaller. If -n is specified on
the command line, iostat will display the smaller of the requested number of devices, and the maximum number of devices in the system.
To force iostat to display specific drives, their names may be supplied on the command line. The iostat utility will not display more
devices than will fit in an 80 column screen, unless the -n argument is given on the command line to specify a maximum number of
devices to display. If fewer devices are specified on the command line than will fit in an 80 column screen, iostat will show only the
specified devices.
The standard iostat device display shows the following statistics:
KB/t kilobytes per transfer
tps transfers per second
MB/s megabytes per second
The standard iostat device display, with the -I flag specified, shows the following statistics:
KB/t kilobytes per transfer
xfrs total number of transfers
MB total number of megabytes transferred
The extended iostat device display, with the -x flag specified, shows the following statistics:
r/s read operations per second
w/s write operations per second
kr/s kilobytes read per second
kw/s kilobytes write per second
qlen transactions queue length
svc_t average duration of transactions, in milliseconds
%b % of time the device had one or more outstanding transactions
The extended iostat device display, with the -x and -I flags specified, shows the following statistics:
r/i read operations per time period
w/i write operations per time period
kr/i kilobytes read per time period
kw/i kilobytes write per time period
qlen transactions queue length
tsvc_t/i
total duration of transactions per time period, in seconds
sb/i total time the device had one or more outstanding transactions per time period, in seconds
The old-style iostat display (using -o) shows the following statistics:
sps sectors transferred per second
tps transfers per second
msps average milliseconds per transaction
The old-style iostat display, with the -I flag specified, shows the following statistics:
blk total blocks/sectors transferred
xfr total transfers
msps average milliseconds per transaction
cpu
us % of cpu time in user mode
ni % of cpu time in user mode running niced processes
sy % of cpu time in system mode
in % of cpu time in interrupt mode
id % of cpu time in idle mode
FILES
/boot/kernel/kernel Default kernel namelist.
/dev/kmem Default memory file.
EXAMPLES
iostat -w 1 da0 da1 cd0
Display statistics for the first two Direct Access devices and the first CDROM device every second ad infinitum.
iostat -c 2
Display the statistics for the first four devices in the system twice, with a one second display interval.
iostat -t da -t cd -w 1
Display statistics for all CDROM and Direct Access devices every second ad infinitum.
iostat -t da,scsi,pass -t cd,scsi,pass
Display statistics once for all SCSI passthrough devices that provide access to either Direct Access or CDROM devices.
iostat -h -n 8 -w 1
Display up to 8 devices with the most I/O every second ad infinitum.
iostat -dh -t da -w 1
Omit the TTY and CPU displays, show devices in order of performance and show only Direct Access devices every second ad infinitum.
iostat -Iw 3
Display total statistics every three seconds ad infinitum.
iostat -odICTw 2 -c 9
Display total statistics using the old-style output format 9 times, with a two second interval between each measurement/display. The -d flag
generally disables the TTY and CPU displays, but since the -T and -C flags are given, the TTY and CPU displays will be displayed.
SEE ALSO
fstat(1), netstat(1), nfsstat(1), ps(1), systat(1), devstat(3), gstat(8), pstat(8), vmstat(8)
The sections starting with ``Interpreting system activity'' in Installing and Operating 4.3BSD.
HISTORY
This version of iostat first appeared in FreeBSD 3.0.
AUTHORS
Kenneth Merry <ken@FreeBSD.org>
BUGS
The use of iostat as a debugging tool for crash dumps is probably limited because there is currently no way to get statistics that only cover
the time immediately before the crash.
BSD
December 15, 2012 BSD