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Full Discussion: Server running slow
Operating Systems SCO Server running slow Post 302110537 by Perderabo on Tuesday 13th of March 2007 01:32:02 PM
Old 03-13-2007
Do you have a sample of this output when things were all right? You need to check performance tools enough that you can recognize changes. I don't use SCO so I can't give very specific advice but the very high wio stands out like a sore thumb and the first thing I would suspect is disk. That mpsar thing seems very close to sar and so there probably is a -d option which you could try. How about iostat, is that available?

And check any error logs very carefully looking for disk soft errors. Disk drives can slow to a crawl when they recover from soft errors. If the disk is recovering from soft errors now it may soon fail completely. This is especially true of ATA (aka IDE) disks which I'm guessing you have.
 

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VOLDUMP(8)						       AFS Command Reference							VOLDUMP(8)

NAME
voldump - Dump an AFS volume without using the Volume Server SYNOPSIS
voldump -part <partition> -volumeid <volume id> [-file <dump file>] [-verbose] [-help] voldump -p <partition> -vo <volume id> [-f <dump file>] [-ve] [-h] DESCRIPTION
voldump dumps an AFS volume in the format used by vos dump without using the Volume Server. It must be run on the file server machine and usually must be run as the superuser "root" to have permissions to read the file server data. It's primary use is to recover data from a file server machine where the Volume Server cannot be started for some reason. The dump output will go to standard output, or to a file if -file is specified. vos restore can be used to load the resulting dump into a new AFS volume. voldump always does a full dump. CAUTIONS
Normally, use vos dump instead of this command. voldump is a tool of last resort to try to extract data from the raw data structures stored on the file server machine and is not as regularly tested or used as the normal vos dump implementation. If the AFS volume being dumped changes while voldump is running, the results may be inconsistent. If the File Server and Volume Server are running, stop them with bos shutdown or a similar method before running this command. OPTIONS
-part <partition> Names the partition on which the volume to be dumped is located. voldump does not take the normal full range of ways of specifying a partition. Instead, partition must be either a single letter between "a" and "z", corresponding to /vicepa through /vicepz, or the full path to the file server partition. "aa" is not recognized; use /vicepaa instead. -volumeid <volume id> Specifies the ID of the volume to dump. The volume must be specified by numeric ID, not by name. -file <dump file> Specifies the output file for the dump. If this option is not given, the volume will be dumped to standard output. -verbose Asks for a verbose trace of the dump process. This trace information will be sent to standard error. EXAMPLES
The following command dumps the volume 1936964939 on the /vicepb partition to the file /tmp/volume.dump: % voldump -part /vicepb -volumeid 1936964939 -file /tmp/volume.dump PRIVILEGE REQUIRED
The issuer must have read access to the file server data stored in the specified partition. Usually, this means that the issuer must be the local superuser "root" on the file server machine. SEE ALSO
bos_shutdown(8), restorevol(1), volserver(8), vos_dump(1), vos_restore(1) COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2005 Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu> This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. This man page was written by Russ Allbery for OpenAFS. OpenAFS 2012-03-26 VOLDUMP(8)
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