Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting finding greatest value in a column using awk from iostat output in linux Post 302400009 by achak01 on Tuesday 2nd of March 2010 04:45:16 AM
Old 03-02-2010
Code:
iostat -dt -kx 2 2 | awk ' !/sd[a-z][0-9]/ &&!/%util/ && !/Time/ && !/Linux/ {print $12}' | 
awk 'BEGIN {max = 0.00} {if ($0>max) max=$0} END {print max}'

6.05


Last edited by Scott; 03-02-2010 at 11:51 AM.. Reason: Code tags
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

iostat -e / -E output explanation

Hi all, hope you are having a nice day, its nice and warm today in Canberra Australia. iostat -e / -E reports soft and hard errors. Any idea what these are exactly? All I hear are I/O's failing and needing to retry, but no cause as to why they fail. My SUN guru tells me its our EMC SAN... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: scottman
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

iostat output what is that mean

Hi all, i have run iostat -em, and get below result. Can i know what is this output meaning, and how to fix that problem. iostat -em ---- errors --- device s/w h/w trn tot sd7 0 1 0 1 sd8 1 1 0 2 sd9 0 1 0 1 sd10 0 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: foongkt5220
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Finding the total of a column using awk

Here is my file name countries USSR 8650 262 Asia Canada 3852 24 North America China 3692 866 Asia USA 3615 219 North America Brazil 3286 116 South America India 1269 637 Asia Argentina 1072 ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: ironhead3fan
8 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Formatting output from iostat

So I use Cacti for monitoring IO statistics on my servers, now originally I couldnt monitor Multipath deviced servers as they have alot of /dev/sdxx and /dev/emcpowerxx, I have devised a method of trimming them down to just the actual devices but the issue is the output looks like so. # iostat... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: RiSk
0 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

finding greatest value in a column using awk from iostat output in linux

Friends, . On linux i have to run iostat command and in each iteration have to print the greatest value in each column. e.g iostat -dt -kx 2 2 | awk ' !/sd/ &&!/%util/ && !/Time/ && !/Linux/ {print $12}' 4.38 0.00 0.00 0.00 What i would like to print is only the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: achak01
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Question on awk for finding the column number using a match word

Hi Guys, Please help me out in my situation of writing a shell script Exampl:I have a output like asnapply 1 2 3 apply_server=1 apply_schema=ASN asnapply 1 2 3 apply_server=2 apply_schema=ASN Now i need output like asnacmd applysever=1 applyschema=ASN stop asnacmd applysever=2... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: mallak
16 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk- comparing fields from the same column, finding discontinuities.

Hello, I have a file with two fields. The first field repeats itself for quite a while but the second field changes. What I want to do is to go through the first column until its value changes (and while it doesn't, verify that the second field is in a sequence from 0-15). Example input: ... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: acsg
13 Replies

8. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

iostat output vs TPC output (array layer)

Hi Guys, I've been having some arguments with my colleagues about one thing. Always my thought was that as as far as disk performance is concern by looking at the output of the iostat command (AIX) you would be able to identify if you have a hot disk and then by moving some files out that disk... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: arizah
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Take greatest value from second column

Dear All, Please help me, I have file input like this, 1 2142 215 2162 217 2842 285 2862 287 4002 401 4022 403 4822 1 2142 215 2162 217 2842 285 2862 287 4002 401 4022 403 4882 1 4801 (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: attila
8 Replies

10. Solaris

Asvc_t values in iostat output

Noticed that asvc_t values in iostat command outputs are mostly more than 100 in our previous iostat analysis. Also found the following detail from an alternate site IO Bottleneck - Disk performance issue - UnixArena ---- 1. asvc_t average service time of active transactions, in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: saraperu
2 Replies
dxdw(8) 						      System Manager's Manual							   dxdw(8)

NAME
dxdw - Runs and repeats command line commands SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/X11/dxdw [-c initial_command] OPTIONS
Specifies the command to run. The command string must be enclosed in double quotes if it contains any spaces or special characters inter- preted by the shell. Display Window accepts all of the standard X Toolkit command line options, which are documented in the OPTIONS section of the X(1X) refer- ence page. DESCRIPTION
The Display Window application, dxdw, can be used to run commands at specified time intervals. You can use Display Window to: Run a command and display a transcript of the output Repeat a command at regular intervals Print the output to the default printer Save the output to a file You can use Display Window to run common commands without starting up a full xterm. The optional -c option specifies an initial command. The Display Window application presents a transcript containing the current command, its output, and its command-line error messages. You can change the command after the application starts. The transcript area is output-only, so you cannot use Display Window to run commands that require user interaction on the command line. The Display Window application can be invoked from the CDE Application Manager from the following categories: Application Group: System_Admin System Admin Subgroup: Daily Admin When the Display Window main window invoked, the transcript is empty because there is no command running. Enter a command to run in the Command input text field. Because Display Window can be started with a default initial command, several launchpoints have been created in the Application Manager to run specific command-line applications. These applications include I/O Statistics (iostat), Network Statistics (netstat), Virtual Memory Statistics (vmstat), and Who? (who). To start one of the preceding applications within Display Window from the CDE desktop: Click on the Application Manager icon on the CDE front panel. Double click on the System_Admin application group icon. Double click on the Tools application group icon. Double click on the icon for the command you want to run in the Display Window application. The Display Window application invokes the command once. The output from the command is displayed in the transcript area. You can also start Display Window from the command line. To start Display Window from the command line, enter the following: /usr/bin/X11/dxdw [-c initial_command] The -c option specifies the command string to run when Display Window is started. On the command line, the command string must be enclosed in double quotes if it contains any spaces or special characters interpreted by the shell. The command string can be any of the following: A single command A series of commands in a pipeline (|) A series of commands separated by semicolons After Display Window starts, a new command string can be entered in the Command input text field. In the graphical user interface, it is not necessary to enclose the command string in double quotes. To enter a new command string: Clear the Command input text field if a command is already present. Enter a new command string in the Com- mand input text field. Press the Return key in the Command input text field to run the command. EXAMPLES
The following example runs the iostat command one time in the Display Window application. You can use the Repeat Every dialog box to repeat the command at regular intervals. dxdw -c iostat The following examples show how to use Display Window from the command line. dxdw -c df dxdw -c "ps -aef" dxdw -c "ps -aef | grep dxdw" dxdw -c "mount; showmount" You can view the Display Window online help volume without run- ning the application. To open the Display Window help volume from the command line, enter the following command: /usr/dt/bin/dthelpview -h /usr/dt/appconfig/help/C/Dxdw.sdl FILES
Contains the Display Window application executable Contains the Display Window help volume Contains the default values for the applica- tion's X resources SEE ALSO
Commands: iostat(1), netstat(1), vmstat(1), who(1), X(1X) dxdw(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:27 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy