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Operating Systems AIX Daily checks for AIX business critical boxes. Post 302367015 by deepm on Saturday 31st of October 2009 10:56:01 AM
Old 10-31-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by bakunin
Sorry, but your question is too general to be answered.

For some systems looking at it every month is enough, for others it is vital to monitor it hourly, yet many systems are somewhere between these extremes.

Specify your question a bit and we might be able to help you better.

bakunin
Ok as you said some systems have to be monitored hourly, so i want to know what are the things to be monitored hourly is it just restricted to FileSystem, Memory.....?

as i dont have a real time experience so this question Smilie

---------- Post updated at 08:26 PM ---------- Previous update was at 08:13 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by zxmaus
is 'none' a valid answer?

If you have sufficient monitoring in place, there is no good reason to look directly after them on a daily basis at all - because I get a ticket or am called out in case of any issues. I do monthly capacity checks across my boxes and compare them with previous months - but basically this is all ...

Kind regards
zxmaus
can you please explain what are the things covered in the sufficient monitoring..?

i think there is difference between a ticket being issued and checks on business critical boxes.
 

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CRITICAL_ENTER(9)					   BSD Kernel Developer's Manual					 CRITICAL_ENTER(9)

NAME
critical_enter, critical_exit -- enter and exit a critical region SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/param.h> #include <sys/systm.h> void critical_enter(void); void critical_exit(void); DESCRIPTION
These functions are used to prevent preemption in a critical region of code. All that is guaranteed is that the thread currently executing on a CPU will not be preempted. Specifically, a thread in a critical region will not migrate to another CPU while it is in a critical region. The current CPU may still trigger faults and exceptions during a critical section; however, these faults are usually fatal. The critical_enter() and critical_exit() functions manage a per-thread counter to handle nested critical sections. If a thread is made runnable that would normally preempt the current thread while the current thread is in a critical section, then the preemption will be deferred until the current thread exits the outermost critical section. Note that these functions are not required to provide any inter-CPU synchronization, data protection, or memory ordering guarantees and thus should not be used to protect shared data structures. These functions should be used with care as an infinite loop within a critical region will deadlock the CPU. Also, they should not be inter- locked with operations on mutexes, sx locks, semaphores, or other synchronization primitives. One exception to this is that spin mutexes include a critical section, so in certain cases critical sections may be interlocked with spin mutexes. HISTORY
These functions were introduced in FreeBSD 5.0. BSD
October 5, 2005 BSD
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