Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris How to predict system performance? Post 302320715 by aixlover on Thursday 28th of May 2009 05:27:41 PM
Old 05-28-2009
Neo,

Thanks a lot for your reply. You use concise words to draw a big picture of "system performance prediction". It's very helpful.

Sorry I don't know what type of visualization tools we are using. I am still new here.

Regards,Smilie
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

System Performance Tool

Could someone point me in the correct direction or web link containing instructions for installing the System Performance Tool (aka STP) software on an IBM-AIX version 4.? machine. My client has the software (that came from their original server) on a 3" floppy. Thanks! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Pam
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

/client_local/ and system performance

I'm running Solaris 8 on a Sun ULTRA 5(SPARC II CPU, 270 MHz) with 64 Mb of RAM. The machine is very, very slow even doing normal tasks such as reading mail....... I'm nearly afraid to ask it to do some real work....... On checking out the machine(which I only received last week from our IT... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Kanu77
1 Replies

3. Programming

predict the output

Predict output of the following program: void func() { int a; a+=17; } int main(void) { char s = "hello\n"; func(); printf("%s",s); return 0; } run program in linux : (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: hareesh
8 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script for system performance

I need to prepare script which will run as background process ever 30 mins to collect the following information 1. Memory usage. 2. CPU usage. 3. Number processors running. 4. System resource (CPU and Memory) used by each process. 5. Number of sessions logged PLEASE HELP ME OUT FROM THIS ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vastare
2 Replies

5. Linux

system performance

Anyone know how to fetch the system performance information by the function except the system command? These information includes CPU load,memory usage,network load,disk capacity,etc. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Frank2004
5 Replies

6. Solaris

How I can get System Performance on Solaris

Hi All, Can someone help me out knowing all commands for getting system performance on Solaris machines. Thanks in advance, Yagami Light. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Yagami
5 Replies

7. HP-UX

system performance

hi every body i want to check system performance i usually use glance,top,sar and swapinfo but i confused in something so i need explanation about memory issue first i want check the memory usage i used glance i found this parameter so i need one shows me the differences between these... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: maxim42
2 Replies

8. Solaris

System performance

Hi I need to know the system performance : # echo "::memstat" | mdb -k Page Summary Pages MB %Tot ------------ ---------------- ---------------- ---- Kernel 358022 2797 9% ZFS File Data 2427072 18961 59% Anon 1096938 8569 27% Exec and libs 12020 93 0% Page cache 73859 577 2% Free... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: dimitris
4 Replies
LIBLINEAR-TRAIN(1)					      General Commands Manual						LIBLINEAR-TRAIN(1)

NAME
liblinear-train - train a linear classifier and produce a model SYNOPSIS
liblinear-train [options] training_set_file [model_file] DESCRIPTION
liblinear-train trains a linear classifier using liblinear and produces a model suitable for use with liblinear-predict(1). training_set_file is the file containing the data used for training. model_file is the file to which the model will be saved. If model_file is not provided, it defaults to training_set_file.model. To obtain good performances, sometimes one needs to scale the data. This can be done with svm-scale(1). OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. -s type Set the type of the solver: 0 ... L2-regularized logistic regression 1 ... L2-regularized L2-loss support vector classification (dual) (default) 2 ... L2-regularized L2-loss support vector classification (primal) 3 ... L2-regularized L1-loss support vector classification (dual) 4 ... multi-class support vector classification 5 ... L1-regularized L2-loss support vector classification 6 ... L1-regularized logistic regression 7 ... L2-regularized logistic regression (dual) -c cost Set the parameter C (default: 1) -e epsilon Set the tolerance of the termination criterion For -s 0 and 2: |f'(w)|_2 <= epsilon*min(pos,neg)/l*|f'(w0)_2, where f is the primal function and pos/neg are the number of positive/negative data (default: 0.01) For -s 1, 3, 4 and 7: Dual maximal violation <= epsilon; similar to libsvm (default: 0.1) For -s 5 and 6: |f'(w)|_inf <= epsilon*min(pos,neg)/l*|f'(w0)|_inf, where f is the primal function (default: 0.01) -B bias If bias >= 0, then instance x becomes [x; bias]; if bias < 0, then no bias term is added (default: -1) -wi weight Weight-adjusts the parameter C of class i by the value weight -v n n-fold cross validation mode -q Quiet mode (no outputs). EXAMPLES
Train a linear SVM using L2-loss function: liblinear-train data_file Train a logistic regression model: liblinear-train -s 0 data_file Do five-fold cross-validation using L2-loss SVM, using a smaller stopping tolerance 0.001 instead of the default 0.1 for more accurate solutions: liblinear-train -v 5 -e 0.001 data_file Train four classifiers: positive negative Cp Cn class 1 class 2,3,4 20 10 class 2 class 1,3,4 50 10 class 3 class 1,2,4 20 10 class 4 class 1,2,3 10 10 liblinear-train -c 10 -w1 2 -w2 5 -w3 2 four_class_data_file If there are only two classes, we train ONE model. The C values for the two classes are 10 and 50: liblinear-train -c 10 -w3 1 -w2 5 two_class_data_file Output probability estimates (for logistic regression only) using liblinear-predict(1): liblinear-predict -b 1 test_file data_file.model output_file SEE ALSO
liblinear-predict(1), svm-predict(1), svm-train(1) AUTHORS
liblinear-train was written by the LIBLINEAR authors at National Taiwan university for the LIBLINEAR Project. This manual page was written by Christian Kastner <debian@kvr.at>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others). March 08, 2011 LIBLINEAR-TRAIN(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:53 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy