Normally, you set-up a cron that collects data with sa1, and performs daily a report with sa2. Something along the lines:
The activity reports are then located at /var/log/sadd (assuming the default location) where dd ist the current day of the month. Then you can read a particular report using sar -f.
Eventually, a similar cron job might already be active on your system. In this case, check your manpage for the default report location, and use sar to read the activity at a given day.
Hi All,
Can anyone help me..
I want to know the command to check the overall CPU usage of the server.
Note:
I don't want the CPU usge of each and every process.
I just want to know thw aggregate CPU utilization of the server. (2 Replies)
how can I find cpu usage memory usage swap usage and
I want to know CPU usage above X% and contiue Y times and memory usage above X % and contiue Y times
my final destination is monitor process
logical volume usage above X % and number of Logical voluage above
can I not to... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to monitor the current cpu usage, monitor usage , disk I/o and network utlization for solaris using SNMP.
I want the oids for above tasks.
can you please tell me that
Thank you (2 Replies)
Hello Friends,
On one of my Solaris 10 box, CPU usage shows 100% using "sar", "vmstat". However, it has 4 CPUs and prstat and glance are not showing enough processes to justify high CPU utilization.
=========================================================================
$ prstat -a
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
If anyone know Please answer me the following question :
How to find the usage of individual core cpu usage in FreeBsd server?
What command is used for that?
Thanks,
Maruthu (2 Replies)
We are using linux server. We have below script running on the crontab and it send the alert if the cpu usage is above 90%.
My question is, the below script tells the CPU usage for one CPU or all CPU in the server?
sar 1 1 | sed '$!d' | awk '{printf("%d", $8)}' > $SAR_LOG
Please let me... (4 Replies)
hi, i am using solaris server. I want to find the total CPU usage on a server. Top command will give that result, but here that command is not working. So anyone can help me to find the total CPU usage. (2 Replies)
Hi Fellas,
Not sure how I can dig in even further but we notice that one of our DB servers is showing high Sys% CPU usage even though when I execute the following command :
I can see that postgres is the only one using the CPU. So if anyone can advise me what would be the best way to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: arizah
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
taskset
TASKSET(1) User Commands TASKSET(1)NAME
taskset - retrieve or set a process's CPU affinity
SYNOPSIS
taskset [options] mask command [arg]...
taskset [options] -p [mask] pid
DESCRIPTION
taskset is used to set or retrieve the CPU affinity of a running process given its PID or to launch a new COMMAND with a given CPU affin-
ity. CPU affinity is a scheduler property that "bonds" a process to a given set of CPUs on the system. The Linux scheduler will honor the
given CPU affinity and the process will not run on any other CPUs. Note that the Linux scheduler also supports natural CPU affinity: the
scheduler attempts to keep processes on the same CPU as long as practical for performance reasons. Therefore, forcing a specific CPU
affinity is useful only in certain applications.
The CPU affinity is represented as a bitmask, with the lowest order bit corresponding to the first logical CPU and the highest order bit
corresponding to the last logical CPU. Not all CPUs may exist on a given system but a mask may specify more CPUs than are present. A
retrieved mask will reflect only the bits that correspond to CPUs physically on the system. If an invalid mask is given (i.e., one that
corresponds to no valid CPUs on the current system) an error is returned. The masks are typically given in hexadecimal. For example,
0x00000001
is processor #0
0x00000003
is processors #0 and #1
0xFFFFFFFF
is all processors (#0 through #31).
When taskset returns, it is guaranteed that the given program has been scheduled to a legal CPU.
OPTIONS -a, --all-tasks
Set or retrieve the CPU affinity of all the tasks (threads) for a given PID.
-p, --pid
Operate on an existing PID and do not launch a new task.
-c, --cpu-list
Specify a numerical list of processors instead of a bitmask. The numbers are separated by commas and may include ranges. For exam-
ple: 0,5,7,9-11.
-h, --help
Display usage information and exit.
-V, --version
Display version information and exit.
USAGE
The default behavior is to run a new command with a given affinity mask:
taskset mask command [arguments]
You can also retrieve the CPU affinity of an existing task:
taskset -p pid
Or set it:
taskset -p mask pid
PERMISSIONS
A user can change the CPU affinity of a process belonging to the same user. A user must possess CAP_SYS_NICE to change the CPU affinity of
a process belonging to another user. A user can retrieve the affinity mask of any process.
AUTHOR
Written by Robert M. Love.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2004 Robert M. Love
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU-
LAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO chrt(1), nice(1), renice(1), sched_setaffinity(2), sched_getaffinity(2)
See sched_setscheduler(2) for a description of the Linux scheduling scheme.
AVAILABILITY
The taskset command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
util-linux April 2003 TASKSET(1)