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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Please Help Me... Post 302414742 by thillai_selvan on Wednesday 21st of April 2010 12:05:21 AM
Old 04-21-2010
What data you want to count?
 
iopending(1m)							   USER COMMANDS						     iopending(1m)

NAME
iopending - plot number of pending disk events. Uses DTrace. SYNOPSIS
iopending [-c] [-d device] [-f filename] [-m mount_point] [interval [count]] DESCRIPTION
This samples the number of disk events that are pending and plots a distribution graph. By doing this the "serialness" or "parallelness" of disk behaviour can be distinguished. A high occurance of a pending value of more than 1 is an indication of saturation. Since this uses DTrace, only users with root privileges can run this command. OPTIONS
-c clear screen -d device instance name to snoop (eg, dad0) -f filename full pathname of file to snoop -m mount_point mountpoint for filesystem to snoop EXAMPLES
Default output, print I/O summary every 1 second, # iopending Print 10 second samples, # iopending 10 Print 12 x 5 second samples, # iopending 5 12 Snoop events on the root filesystem only, # iopending -m / FIELDS
value number of pending events, 0 == idle count number of samples @ 1000 Hz load 1 min load average disk_r total disk read Kb for sample disk_w total disk write Kb for sample IDEA
Dr Rex di Bona DOCUMENTATION
See the DTraceToolkit for further documentation under the Docs directory. The DTraceToolkit docs may include full worked examples with ver- bose descriptions explaining the output. EXIT
iopending will run forever until Ctrl-C is hit, or the specified count is reached. AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg [Sydney, Australia] SEE ALSO
iosnoop(1M), iotop(1M), dtrace(1M) version 0.60 Nov 01, 2005 iopending(1m)
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