trying to have prstat into a file on a Solaris machine.
Would like to have the prstat run from a cron every 30 min.
print 300 lines+ date.
Date is not printed, only the prstat, and ksh does not end, it stays running...
Last edited by radoulov; 06-20-2010 at 11:37 AM..
Reason: Please use code tags!
Hello,
The last line of prstat shows load average.
I am unable to figure out what actually it is.
I have read the man pages and also googled, all for no use.
Can somebody help me, as to what should be the avg. load of the system for best performance and how is this load of prstat calculated. (6 Replies)
Hi All,
Operating System and Version: SunOS,Solaris 10 sparc(64 bit)
RDBMS Version: 10.2.0.4.0
But the prstat logs of my system shows:-
NPROC USERNAME SWAP RSS MEMORY TIME CPU
83 cemsbin 5204M 3604M 22% 53:46:00 6.7%
2 adm 244M 240M 1.5% 15:13:53 3.5%
77 oracle 17G 10G 65% 4:24:47... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
But the prstat logs of my system shows:-
NPROC USERNAME SWAP RSS MEMORY TIME CPU
77 oracle 17G 10G 65% 4:24:47 0.8%
Total: 486 processes, 3850 lwps, load averages: 3.77, 4.45, 4.94
What does the MEMORY denotes?
Is it the %memory used from RAM?
Or is the %memory used by... (10 Replies)
Good Evening everyone,
I am confused about prstat O/P as it shows memory values which are different from actual value.Below is the O/P of prstat command and swap commands.
NPROC USERNAME SIZE RSS MEMORY TIME CPU
48 root 2113M 1590M 1.2% 45:09.39 32%
31 daemon ... (7 Replies)
hi all,
am writing a ksh script on solaris 9 to get the number of threads taken by a process. am using the prstat -p command to do this.
output i get is :
:"/export/home/user" > prstat -p 25528 | cut -f2 -d/
NLWP
203
Total: 1 processes, 203 lwps, load averages: 2.58, 3.24, 3.62... (2 Replies)
hi all,
was trying to figure out how busy my app was by looking at the performance of the app server. did a 'prstat -s rss' command to find the app servers using most memory.
Found a command 'prstat -m' which is meant to show more details on each pid but the output of this command... (1 Reply)
Hello
We have a SPARC box running Solaris 10. We have 32 GB of physical memory, 32 GB of swap. Now i want to monitor memory usage for performance tuning. The box is running Sybase database. When I type prstat i get the following
PID USERNAME SIZE RSS STATE PRI NICE TIME CPU... (4 Replies)
Is there any scripts to capture the process which use more than 5% CPU from prstat output? (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: tharmendran
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
grablogs.conf
grablogs.conf(4) File Formats grablogs.conf(4)NAME
grablogs.conf - grablogs configuration for libgrablogs.so of the plugins of
gnome-system-log file
SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/gnome-system-log/plugins/grablogs.conf
DESCRIPTION
The libgrablogs.so is a plugin for gnome-system-log(1), it colloct the log files from the system as many as possible. grablogs.conf is a
configuration file that contains a set of lines mixed with sh(1) syntax codes and individual
log files. libgrablogs.so will read the file try to get a log files list for
gnome-system-log(1). Users can copy the file into $HOME/.gnome2/gnome-system-log/plugins/`uname -p` to overwrite the system default one.
The grablogs.conf file contains the following configuration categories:
[configs]
Each line under this category is interpreted as a config file of System. The plugin will open the config file and try to find
all system paths of the logs.
[commands]
Each line under this category is interpreted as a shell command and will be execute through a pipe. And each line of the out-
put of the command will be interpreted as a log path.
[logs] Each line under this category is interpreted as a log path.
FILES
/usr/lib/gnome-system-log/plugins/grablogs.conf
The system default configuration file for the plugin libgrablogs.so
$HOME/.gnome2/gnome-system-log/plugins/`uname -p`/grablogs.conf
The user specific configuration file for the plugin libgrablogs.so
EMAMPLE
[configs]
/etc/syslog.conf
[commands]
for i in `svcs -aH -o FMRI | grep -v lrc `; do svcprop -p restarter/logfile $i 2>/dev/null || svcprop -q-p restarter/alt_logfile $i
2>/dev/null ; done
[logs]
/var/log/messages
/var/log/secure
/var/log/maillog
/var/log/cron
/var/log/Xorg.0.log
/var/log/XFree86.0.log
/var/log/auth.log
/var/log/cups/error_log
SEE ALSO gnome-system-log(1), pipelog.conf(1)gnome-utils 2.16.0 13 Oct 2006 grablogs.conf(4)