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Operating Systems Solaris This application is eating up the CPU Post 302083705 by System Shock on Monday 7th of August 2006 10:55:26 PM
Old 08-07-2006
Java apps are notorious for using up CPU. The specs you mention don't show what CPU you have or how many.
What's IDM? There's no IDM software mentioned in Sun's site. Did you mean to say it is a commercial application FOR Sun? If that's the case, may want to check the CPU requirements for it, or it may be a badly written app.
 

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dxsysinfo(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      dxsysinfo(8)

NAME
dxsysinfo - Monitors system information such as CPU activity, memory, swap space, and file system usage SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/X11/dxsysinfo [options] OPTIONS
Displays the CPU Activity meter. Shrinks the window so that only the General Information area is visible. The -dashview option is ignored when it conflicts with other options or when all of the components in the General Information area were deselected in a previous invocation of the System Information application. This option is incompatible with the -fs option. If -dashview is specified with -fs, -dashview is ignored. Displays the File System area. Displays warning lights for file systems and swap space that have exceeded the recommended threshold. Displays the In-Use Memory meter. Displays the Available Swap meter. When these options are used on the command line, only the specified parts of the application are displayed. A user preferences file is created in the user's home directory the first time the application runs. It records user-specified options and any customizations made while running the application. If any of the command line options other than the -dashview option are used, the System Information application does not read the View state settings in the user preferences file. If the -dashview option is used on the command line without any other options, the application reads the View state settings in the user preferences file, $HOME/.sysman/Dxsys- info. System Information accepts all of the standard X Toolkit command line options, which are documented in the X(1X) reference page. DESCRIPTION
Use the System Information application, dxsysinfo, to: Obtain general information about the operating system and version, amount of RAM, and number of CPUs Monitor CPU activity, in-use memory, available swap space, and file system usage Set and modify file system thresholds To start dxsysinfo from the CDE desktop: Click on the Application Manager icon on the CDE front panel. Double click on the System_Admin application group icon. Double click on the DailyAdmin application group icon. Double click on the System Information application icon. EXAMPLES
To start System Information from the command line, enter: /usr/bin/X11/dxsysinfo Online Help For additional information about the graphical user interface, see the online help volume. To open the online help volume from within Sys- tem Information, run the application and choose Overview from the Help menu in the main window. You can view the System Information online help volume without running the application. To open the System Information help volume from the command line, enter the following command: /usr/dt/bin/dthelpview -helpVolume /usr/dt/appconfig/help/C/Dxsysinfo.sdl FILES
Contains user preferences that control the appearance of the application, file system information, and device information Contains the Sys- tem Information executable Contains the System Information help volume Contains the default values for the application's X resources SEE ALSO
Commands: df(1), ps(1), showmount(8), swapon(8), sysman_intro(8), uname(1), vmstat(1), X(1X) dxsysinfo(8)
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