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Full Discussion: Simple advanced question
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Simple advanced question Post 13130 by Neo on Friday 11th of January 2002 05:09:12 PM
Old 01-11-2002
Quote:
8 Gig of RAM - 99% is used
27 Gig of swap space - 35% is used
Sounds like you need (at minimum) an additional of 4 Gigs of RAM and 8 Gigs would be better (if you plan to keep the same processes running on the platform!!)

I like Perderabo's suggestion of getting your vendor to let you use the memory and record the performance results. Present this to management...... if you find that it helps (it should).

Your next choice is to move processes (TBD) to another platform... and this might be much more expensive and have less desirable performance (can't say much since we don't know all the details of what's running.... just Oracle? different applications? same application? etc.??)

RAM ...... or distribute to another platform!!!!
 

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SEXP-CONV(1)							   Nettle tools 						      SEXP-CONV(1)

NAME
sexp-conv - convert s-expression to a different encoding SYNOPSIS
Conversion: sexp-conv [OPTION]... < INPUT-SEXP Fingerprinting: sexp-conv --hash[=algorithm] [OPTION]... < INPUT-SEXP DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the sexp-conv command. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the original program does not have a manual page. Instead, it has documentation in the GNU Info format; see below. sexp-conv is a program that converts S-expressions. It automatically detects the s-expression syntax variant of the input. It is primarily used by the `lsh' packages, which stores keys and most other objects on disk in that format, but may be of other use as well. OPTIONS
This program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is included below. For a complete description, see the Info files. --hash=algorithm Output only the hash of the s-expression, using algorithm (default: sha1). --raw-hash Alias for --hash, for compatibility with lsh 1.x. --once Process exactly one s-expression. --spki-hash Output an SPKI hash for the object. Not yet implemented. -s, --syntax=format Variant of S-expression to output. Valid S-expression formats are: transport, canonical (binary), advanced, and hex (same as advanced, but numbers in hex instead of base64). -w, --width=width Limit output to lines of width characters (has no effect on canonical syntax). Zero means no limit. -?, --help Show summary of options. -V, --version Show version of program. SEE ALSO
ssh-conv(1), lsh(1), lshd(8), http://theworld.com/~cme/spki.txt. The programs are documented fully by the sexp section under the Getting Started header of the lsh info page, available via the Info system. BUGS
This program should be documented in the nettle manual, not in the lsh manual. AUTHOR
This manual page was originally written by Timshel Knoll <timshel@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). Edited by Magnus Holmgren <magnus@kibibyte.se>. nettle 1.15 June 2007 SEXP-CONV(1)
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