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Full Discussion: Unix system monitoring
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Infrastructure Monitoring Unix system monitoring Post 302414323 by krdblc on Monday 19th of April 2010 10:41:27 PM
Old 04-19-2010
Network Unix system monitoring

Hi,
I am relatively new to Unix. Today I have attended an interview and they asked me below questions
(a)How do you monitor Unix system?
(b)How do you know every thing is working fine?
(c)How do you know if there are any bottle necks?
(d)How do you know if any process is hanging and draining the resources?
(e)If the application is driven by exchange feeds, how do you know if the feeds are all set up correctly?
(f)Are you aware of any performance monitoring tools?

This is with respect to their application which is a trade processing application.

Please help me improve my knowledge.

Regards
 

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COL(1)							      General Commands Manual							    COL(1)

NAME
col - filter reverse line feeds SYNOPSIS
col [ -bfh ] DESCRIPTION
Col reads the standard input and writes the standard output. It performs the line overlays implied by reverse line feeds (ESC-7 in ASCII) and by forward and reverse half line feeds (ESC-9 and ESC-8). Col is particularly useful for filtering multicolumn output made with the `.rt' command of nroff and output resulting from use of the tbl(1) preprocessor. Although col accepts half line motions in its input, it normally does not emit them on output. Instead, text that would appear between lines is moved to the next lower full line boundary. This treatment can be suppressed by the -f (fine) option; in this case the output from col may contain forward half line feeds (ESC-9), but will still never contain either kind of reverse line motion. If the -b option is given, col assumes that the output device in use is not capable of backspacing. In this case, if several characters are to appear in the same place, only the last one read will be taken. The control characters SO (ASCII code 017), and SI (016) are assumed to start and end text in an alternate character set. The character set (primary or alternate) associated with each printing character read is remembered; on output, SO and SI characters are generated where necessary to maintain the correct treatment of each character. If the -h option is given, col converts white space to tabs to shorten printing time. All control characters are removed from the input except space, backspace, tab, return, newline, ESC (033) followed by one of 7, 8, 9, SI, SO, and VT (013). This last character is an alternate form of full reverse line feed, for compatibility with some other hardware conven- tions. All other non-printing characters are ignored. SEE ALSO
troff(1), tbl(1) BUGS
Can't back up more than 128 lines. No more than 800 characters, including backspaces, on a line. 7th Edition May 16, 1986 COL(1)
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