Another useful tool for that is:
As a note, both in ps and in svmon you have to be careful with numbers since you can't just sum them up. Some parts are only onc ein memory but used by several processes. They will be listed with complete mem usage for each process though.
I am fairly new to Unix (Sun OS) scripting with Ksh, and I could use a little help troubleshooting my script. When I run it, I get the error "if unexpected" on the function setYear. If I comment out the setYear function, I get the error "for unexpected" on the function sendEmails. This leads me... (8 Replies)
Hi
I am trying to do a network install of Solaris 10 08_07 onto a Sunfire T2000. I have configured all my network-boot-arguments on the client server (named sundb1). I have installed my image of Solaris on my install server (sun1).
But when I try to install using
# boot net -s
I get the... (0 Replies)
Hi.
I have a Solaris 10 server that's taking about 20secs to respond to telnet or ftp commands. Has anyone ever seen something like that? Can you tell me where to start troubleshooting please? I logged in and did a prtstat, but nothing is jumping out as an issue. (8 Replies)
I am running Oracle databases and recently have been facing slow IO response. I know in 11g one can run calibrate_IO from within DB and it would have given me some data for IO, but DB is 10g. Is there any tool available which can give me max MBPS, max IO requests per second system can handle and... (1 Reply)
I have an Equallogic SAN that I connect to from AIX (as well as Windows)
I had configured the connection and created the volumes and filesystems and all was working great.
Then one day, no communication between the SAN and the AIX (I can ping though) Anything I do on the AIX box at this time... (2 Replies)
selected lines from the output of the "prtdiag -v" command on a T5240 SUN server running Solaris 10.
Are the following known as FRU names and what do they mean?
MB/CMP0/BR0/CH0/D0
MB/CMP0/BR0/CH1/D0
SYS/FANBD0/FM0/F0
SYS/FANBD0/FM0/F1
SYS/MB/CMP0/BR1/CH0/D1 ... (1 Reply)
Hello all,
Can somebody please tell what is the best book out there that can help me learn TCP troubleshooting and understaning the TCP options like window scaling, large receive offload? I would like to understand how all the TCP tuning parameters function. Is there a book out there that can... (4 Replies)
*SOLVED. please see edit at bottom*
Hello,
I have a freshly installed AIX 7.1 that I would like to enable SSH on. I believe I need OpenSSH and OpenSSL to do this. OpenSSL was already installed, so I moved onto installing OpenSSH.
I downloaded OpenSSH 6.2 from this site that claims support... (0 Replies)
Here is a code snippet using whiptail , it fails to complete giving me long list of options available for whiptail .
That is great, but how do I determine which of the current opinions is wrong?
I did tried inserting comment (#) into options and it just did not work.
Deleting the option... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: annacreek
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
memstat
MEMSTAT(1) Linux Programmer's Manual MEMSTAT(1)NAME
memstat - Identify what's using up virtual memory.
SYNOPSIS
memstat [-w][-p PID]
DESCRIPTION
memstat lists all accessible processes, executables, and shared libraries that are using up virtual memory. To get a complete list memstat
has to be run as root to be able to access the data of all running processes.
First, the processes are listed. An amount of memory is shown along with a process ID and the name of the executable which the process is
running. The amount of memory shown does not include shared memory: it only includes memory which is private to that process. So, if a
process is using a shared library like libc, the memory used to hold that library is not included. The memory used to hold the exe-
cutable's text-segment is also not included, since that too is shareable.
After the processes, the shared objects are listed. The amount of memory is shown along with the filename of the shared object, followed
by a list of the processes using the shared object. The memory is listed as the total amount of memory allocated to this object throughout
the whole namespace. In brackets also the amount that is really shared is listed.
Finally, a grand total is shown. Note that this program shows the amount of virtual (not real) memory used by the various items.
memstat gets its input from the /proc filesystem. This must be compiled into your kernel and mounted for memstat to work. The pathnames
shown next to the shared objects are determined by scanning the disk. memstat uses a configuration file, /etc/memstat.conf, to determine
which directories to scan. This file should include all the major bin and lib directories in your system, as well as the /dev directory.
If you run an executable which is not in one of these directories, it will be listed by memstat as ``[0dev]:<inode>''.
Options
The -w switch causes a wide printout: lines are not truncated at 80 columns.
The -p switch causes memstat to only print data gathered from looking at the process with the gicen PID.
NOTES
These reports are intended to help identify programs that are using an excessive amount of memory, and to reduce overall memory waste.
FILES
/etc/memstat.conf
/proc/*/maps
SEE ALSO ps(1), top(1), free(1), vmstat(8), lsof(8), /usr/share/doc/memstat/memstat-tutorial.txt.gz
BUGS
memstat ignores all devices that just map main memory, though this may cause memstat to ignore some memory usage.
Memory used by the kernel itself is not listed.
AUTHOR
Originally written by Joshua Yelon <jyelon@uiuc.edu> and patched by Bernd Eckenfels <ecki@debian.org>. Taken over and rewritten by Michael
Meskes <meskes@debian.org>.
Debian 01 November 1998 MEMSTAT(1)