03-18-2008
As far as I can tell you have a cron job /usr/lib/sa/sa1 1 1 which produced this output. It seems unrelated to your question.
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SA1(8) Linux User's Manual SA1(8)
NAME
sa1 - Collect and store binary data in the system activity daily data file.
SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/sysstat/sa1 [ --boot | interval count ]
DESCRIPTION
The sa1 command is a shell procedure variant of the sadc command and handles all of the flags and parameters of that command. The sa1 com-
mand collects and stores binary data in the /var/log/sysstat/sadd file, where the dd parameter indicates the current day. The interval and
count parameters specify that the record should be written count times at interval seconds. If no arguments are given to sa1 then a single
record is written.
The sa1 command is designed to be started automatically by the cron command.
OPTIONS
--boot This option tells sa1 that the sadc command should be called without specifying the interval and count parameters in order to insert
a dummy record, marking the time when the counters restarts from 0.
EXAMPLE
To collect data (including those from disks) every 10 minutes, place the following entry in your root crontab file:
0,10,20,30,40,50 * * * * /usr/lib/sysstat/sa1 1 1 -S DISK
Debian note
The Debian sysstat package has already placed such an entry in your system crontab. Please refer to the /usr/share/doc/sys-
stat/README.Debian file for details.
FILES
/var/log/sysstat/sadd
Indicate the daily data file, where the dd parameter is a number representing the day of the month.
AUTHOR
Sebastien Godard (sysstat <at> orange.fr)
SEE ALSO
sar(1), sadc(8), sa2(8), sadf(1), sysstat(5)
http://pagesperso-orange.fr/sebastien.godard/
Linux FEBRUARY 2012 SA1(8)