Thank you all once again for all of your advice. It is very helpful. In response to shockneck, here is the requested information. This was taken during another busy period.
Please let me know what other information I should post that will help to diagnose this issue.
Hiya all,
I am a newbie sysadmin to AIX, i have worked on HPUX for 3 years.
I have started a new role with in an IBM house and because there is me and one other there are a couple of issues I cannot work out:
We havehad a production server slowing down processing batch jbs over the past... (6 Replies)
I'm doing performance testing for one application which works on AIX.
But I don't know which performance parameters of memory need to be collected. Now, I just know very few:
1. page in
2. page out
3. fre
They are all collected by "vmstat" command.
I want to know, except for above... (2 Replies)
Gurus, i have process that runs 5 times a day.
it runs normally (takes about 1 hour) to complete in 3 runs
but it is takes about ( 3 hrs to complete) two times
So i need to figure out why it takes significanlty high time during
those 2 runs.
The process is a shell script that connect to... (2 Replies)
Hi Guys,
This is the situation I am in. Provide your views and input where should I start?
I have one P7 test server and a p520 production server. the job is taking pretty long on the P7 test server when compared to the P5 production server. below is the full detail.
Informix... (5 Replies)
Hello
I am new user of AIX; I have only basic knowledge of the UNIX commands, and I want to create script that will monitor the performance and resources usage on AIX 6.1 machine.
Basically I wan to start a loop that will grab, every 10 seconds, the CPU usage, the memory usage, the disk usage,... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I would like to hear your thoughts about this. We are running our Data warehouse on DB2 DPF (partition environment) and I have notice that sometimes we hit the Asynchronous-I/O-Processes peak. DB2 relies heavily on Asynchronous I/O so I would believe this has an negative impact.We are... (10 Replies)
Hello,
I encounter some performance issues on my AIX 5.3 server running in a LPAR on a P520. How do I investigate performance issues in AIX. Is there any kind of procedure that takes me to the steps to investigate my server and find the sub systems that is causing the issues?
The performance... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I'm supposed to capture many performance stats on AIX 6 and stuck up with below:
Priority queue
Disk cache hit%
Page out rate
Swap out rate
Memory queue
I see vmstatis helpful for "page out" but not sure how to get the "rate".
Could anyone please let me know how to get these... (4 Replies)
I have a IBM Power9 server coupled with a NVMe StorWize V7000 GEN3 storage, doing some benchmarks and noticing that single thread I/O (80% Read / 20% Write, common OLTP I/O profile) seems slow.
./xdisk -R0 -r80 -b 8k -M 1 -f /usr1/testing -t60 -OD -V
BS Proc AIO read% IO Flag IO/s ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: c3rb3rus
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
loratune
loratune(1M)loratune(1M)NAME
loratune - initiate LORA tuneup to improve alignment of processing resources
SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION
The command improves the performance of an HP-UX system in LORA (Locality-Optimizated Resource Alignment) mode, by triggering the kernel to
do optimization tuning of the system and application memory.
The command may return before the tuning is complete. This tuning can continue in the background for several minutes after the command
returns. If the command is interrupted, or the command process is otherwise terminated, no subsequent tuning operations will be initiated,
but those in progress will continue until completion.
When no options are specified, all locality domains are tuned.
Options
This option limits the tuning to the locality domain specified by
lid.
Application Usage
In Locality-Optimized Resource Alignment (LORA) mode, performance of applications may improve when their processors and the memory that
they use are aligned in the same locality. The HP-UX kernel attempts to maintain such alignment at all times, but it is possible for mis-
alignment to occur when the system workload transitions significantly. If that happens, the command can be used to reestablish alignment
and improve application performance.
Here are some examples of workload transition events that may cause misalignment of processing resources:
o Starting or terminating an application that consumes a large amount of processor or memory resources.
o The workload demand surges far above the normal level and then recedes.
o Dynamic platform operations that add or subtract processor or memory resources from the operating system's control.
If one of those events has occurred, and application performance is not as high as it can be, then it is appropriate to invoke the command.
RETURN VALUES
The command returns a 0 when successful, and a non-zero value when unsuccessful.
ERRORS
The command will not initiate any tuning and will return a non-zero value if the user does not have appropriate privilege.
WARNINGS
The command can consume a significant amount of system processing resources to restore optimal alignment. Ideally, the command should be
invoked prior to the time when performance is critical, not during the time when performance is critical. The command should be invoked
after the workload transition is complete, not during workload transition. Although tuning can continue in the background for several min-
utes, it is not necessary to wait any more than five minutes between invoking the command and launching new applications.
EXAMPLES
If eight instances of SAP were running in localities with locality domain identifiers 4 and 5, and four of those instances were shut down,
then it would be appropriate to tuneup the remaining four instances. An example command would be:
If an HP-UX system in LORA mode had one of its cells deactivated, then it would be appropriate to tuneup the entire system. An example
command would be:
AUTHOR
was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO mpsched(1), numa_policy(5), lora(7).
Itanium(R)-based Systems Only loratune(1M)