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Full Discussion: system disks on aix 5.3
Operating Systems AIX system disks on aix 5.3 Post 302174876 by bakunin on Wednesday 12th of March 2008 11:36:57 AM
Old 03-12-2008
A Zombie (a "defunct" process) is not the fault of the OS it is the fault of sloppy application programming. Without further analysis of what the 1700 users are doing on the machine your problem cannot be solved.

Anyways, 1700 users are an awful lot, if they are all connected via regular login sessions. I would *expect* problems with such a heavy load. UNIX systems are midrange systems historically and when it comes to sheer user numbers this is showing. A host system (s/390, z/OS, etc.) would handle such amounts of user sessions with ease, but a UNIX system is simply not built to cope with such numbers. I'd suggest splitting the load between several login servers (create several smaller LPARs instead of the single big one) and use an application server behind these.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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drv_usecwait(9F)					   Kernel Functions for Drivers 					  drv_usecwait(9F)

NAME
drv_usecwait - busy-wait for specified interval SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/ddi.h> void drv_usecwait(clock_t microsecs); INTERFACE LEVEL
Architecture independent level 1 (DDI/DKI). PARAMETERS
microsecs The number of microseconds to busy-wait. DESCRIPTION
The drv_usecwait() function gives drivers a means of busy-waiting for a specified microsecond count. The amount of time spent busy-waiting may be greater than the microsecond count but will minimally be the number of microseconds specified. delay(9F) can be used by a driver to delay for a specified number of system ticks, but it has two limitations. First, the granularity of the wait time is limited to one clock tick, which may be more time than is needed for the delay. Second, delay(9F) can be invoked from user or kernel context and hence cannot be used at interrupt time or system initialization. Often, drivers need to delay for only a few microseconds, waiting for a write to a device register to be picked up by the device. In this case, even in user context, delay(9F) produces too long a wait period. CONTEXT
The drv_usecwait() function can be called from user, interrupt, or kernel context. SEE ALSO
delay(9F), timeout(9F), untimeout(9F) Writing Device Drivers NOTES
The driver wastes processor time by making this call since drv_usecwait() does not block but simply busy-waits. The driver should only make calls to drv_usecwait() as needed, and only for as much time as needed. The drv_usecwait() function does not mask out interrupts. SunOS 5.11 16 Jan 2006 drv_usecwait(9F)
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