How can I measure CPU loading (like performance monitor in Windows OS). I use Solaris but I would like to write portable code.
Besides, I have to write programm to load CPU with known percent. How can I use CPU in 30% for example.
Thanks for any ideas. (6 Replies)
Hi All,
Can you please help me in resolving the following problem?
My requirement is like this:
1) I have two files YESTERDAY_FILE and TODAY_FILE. Each one is having nearly two million data.
2) I need to check each record of TODAY_FILE in YESTERDAY_FILE. If exists we can skip that by... (5 Replies)
Hello guys!
I'm n00b in AIX and I'm sticked in a problem. (my English is poor enough, but I hope you can understand me :P). So.. I'm trying to connect to an AIX machine with putty, and .. 'using username xxx' appears after 2 sec (OK), but 'xxx@ip's password' appears after 1:15 min. After... (6 Replies)
Hi to all,
i have an app on solaris 5.8 writed in C++ (3.2.1) that use multi threading.
Hardware has 8 cpu. When i run my app i note that the average of cpu go at least at 40%, and the performance are not so higher..
There is a cpu limitation on solaris, that dedicate only a part of cpu... (3 Replies)
Hello All.
I have Sun T1000 server with Solaris 10.
On T1000 installed EMC smarts, application for monitoring network devices via SNMP + SNMP.
So, Smarts has own DB (contains object - devices and relationships), file takes 30 mb, now, all queries to DB works very slow, so Smarts works too slow,... (5 Replies)
Hi folks.
By disk cloning on Solaris x86, I used a command dd.
I pulled out the source and inserted the new disk.
By loading I have received the following issue: BAD PBR SIGN. :( (5 Replies)
I have written a virtual HBA driver named "xmp_vhba". A scsi disk is attached on it. as shown below:
xmp_vhba, instance #0
disk, instance #11
But the performance became very bad when we read/write the scsi disk using the vdbench(a read/write io tool).
What is the reason? ... (7 Replies)
Hello All
I have a system running AIX 61 shared uncapped partition (with 11 physical processors, 24 Virtual 72GB of Memory) .
The output from NMON, vmstat show a high run queue (60+) for continous periods of time intervals, but NO paging, relatively low I/o (6000) , CPU % is 40, Low network.... (9 Replies)
Hi,
We have a Solaris server that has about 43 Oracle databases on it and we also have the Oracle Enterprise Manager - emagent that is used to monitor these databases
When running top, the emagent is showing as one of the top process. Excerpts from running top shows something as below:
... (3 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I have fresh new installed VIO 2.2.3.70 on a p710, 3 physical SAS disks, rootvg on hdisk0
and 3 VIO clients through vscsi, AIX7.1tl4 AIX6.1tl9 RHEL6.5ppc, each lpar has its rootvg installed on a LV on datavg (hdisk2) mapped to vhost0,1,2
There is no vg on hdisk1, I use it for my... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: frenchy59
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
rake
RAKE(1) Ruby Programmers Reference Guide RAKE(1)NAME
rake -- Ruby Make
SYNOPSIS
rake [--f Rakefile] [--version] [-CGNPgnqstv] [-D [PATTERN]] [-E CODE] [-I LIBDIR] [-R RAKELIBDIR] [-T [PATTERN]] [-e CODE] [-p CODE]
[-r MODULE] [--rules] [variable=value] target ...
DESCRIPTION
Rake is a simple ruby(1) build program with capabilities similar to the regular make(1) command.
Rake has the following features:
o Rakefiles (Rake's version of Makefiles) are completely defined in standard Ruby syntax. No XML files to edit. No quirky Makefile syntax
to worry about (is that a tab or a space?).
o Users can specify tasks with prerequisites.
o Rake supports rule patterns to synthesize implicit tasks.
o Flexible FileLists that act like arrays but know about manipulating file names and paths.
o A library of prepackaged tasks to make building rakefiles easier.
OPTIONS --version Display the program version.
-C
--classic-namespace
Put Task and FileTask in the top level namespace
-D [PATTERN]
--describe [PATTERN]
Describe the tasks (matching optional PATTERN), then exit.
-E CODE
--execute-continue CODE
Execute some Ruby code, then continue with normal task processing.
-G
--no-system
--nosystem Use standard project Rakefile search paths, ignore system wide rakefiles.
-I LIBDIR
--libdir LIBDIR Include LIBDIR in the search path for required modules.
-N
--no-search
--nosearch Do not search parent directories for the Rakefile.
-P
--prereqs Display the tasks and dependencies, then exit.
-R RAKELIBDIR
--rakelib RAKELIBDIR
--rakelibdir RAKELIBDIR
Auto-import any .rake files in RAKELIBDIR. (default is rakelib )
-T [PATTERN]
--tasks [PATTERN] Display the tasks (matching optional PATTERN) with descriptions, then exit.
-e CODE
--execute CODE Execute some Ruby code and exit.
-f FILE
--rakefile FILE Use FILE as the rakefile.
-h
--help Prints a summary of options.
-g
--system Using system wide (global) rakefiles (usually ~/.rake/*.rake ).
-n
--dry-run Do a dry run without executing actions.
-p CODE
--execute-print CODE
Execute some Ruby code, print the result, then exit.
-q
--quiet Do not log messages to standard output.
-r MODULE
--require MODULE Require MODULE before executing rakefile.
-s
--silent Like --quiet, but also suppresses the 'in directory' announcement.
-t
--trace Turn on invoke/execute tracing, enable full backtrace.
-v
--verbose Log message to standard output (default).
--rules Trace the rules resolution.
SEE ALSO ruby(1)make(1)
http://rake.rubyforge.org/
REPORTING BUGS
Bugs, features requests and other issues can be logged at <http://onestepback.org/redmine/projects/show/rake>.
You will need an account to before you can post issues. Register at <http://onestepback.org/redmine/account/register>. Or you can send an
email to the author.
AUTHOR
Rake is written by Jim Weirich <jim@weirichhouse.org>
UNIX November 7, 2012 UNIX