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Operating Systems Solaris iostat as a tool for generating disk IO Post 302433246 by SmartAntz on Tuesday 29th of June 2010 04:39:44 AM
Old 06-29-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by jlliagre
You are not using ksh or bash but still the legacy sh.

Run
Code:
ksh iostat.sh

or better
Code:
chmod +x iostat.sh
./iostat.sh


yes, work nice ! but how i know which one is refer to EMC storage ?
** u01 and u02 is the storage from EMC

Code:
root@mercury # ./iostat.sh
Usage: nawk [-f programfile | 'program'] [-Ffieldsep] [-v var=value] [files]
./iostat.sh[4]: {print $11}:  not found
md0
md1
md3
md10
md11
md13
md20
md21
md23
sd0
sd2
sd4
ssd0
ssd1
ssd4
ssd5
st2
nfs1
nfs2
nfs3
nfs4
nfs5
root@mercury #

Code:
root@mercury # df -h
Filesystem             size   used  avail capacity  Mounted on
/dev/md/dsk/d0          20G   6.4G    13G    33%    /
/devices                 0K     0K     0K     0%    /devices
ctfs                     0K     0K     0K     0%    /system/contract
proc                     0K     0K     0K     0%    /proc
mnttab                   0K     0K     0K     0%    /etc/mnttab
swap                   9.9G   1.6M   9.9G     1%    /etc/svc/volatile
objfs                    0K     0K     0K     0%    /system/object
fd                       0K     0K     0K     0%    /dev/fd
/dev/md/dsk/d3          24G   2.9G    21G    13%    /var
swap                   9.9G   1.0M   9.9G     1%    /tmp
swap                   9.9G    88K   9.9G     1%    /var/run
swap                   9.9G     0K   9.9G     0%    /dev/vx/dmp
swap                   9.9G     0K   9.9G     0%    /dev/vx/rdmp
/dev/vx/dsk/smsdg/vol02
                       300G   140G   150G    49%    /u02
/dev/vx/dsk/smsdg/vol01
                       300G   216G    79G    74%    /u01
centaurus:/u01/oracle/sms5
                       404G   380G    20G    96%    /u07
centaurus:/u02/oracle/dss5
                       404G   398G   1.4G   100%    /u08
gemini:/u09            492G    39G   449G     8%    /u09
gemini:/u10            492G   132G   356G    27%    /u10
root@mercury #

 

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SWAPON(8)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 SWAPON(8)

NAME
swapon, swapoff - enable/disable devices and files for paging and swapping SYNOPSIS
/sbin/swapon [-h -V] /sbin/swapon -a [-v] [-e] /sbin/swapon [-v] [-p priority] specialfile ... /sbin/swapon [-s] /sbin/swapoff [-h -V] /sbin/swapoff -a /sbin/swapoff specialfile ... DESCRIPTION
Swapon is used to specify devices on which paging and swapping are to take place. Calls to swapon normally occur in the system multi-user initialization file /etc/rc making all swap devices available, so that the paging and swapping activity is interleaved across several devices and files. Normally, the first form is used: -h Provide help -V Display version -s Display swap usage summary by device. Equivalent to "cat /proc/swaps". Not available before Linux 2.1.25. -a All devices marked as ``swap'' swap devices in /etc/fstab are made available. Devices that are already running as swap are silently skipped. -e When -a is used with swapon, -e makes swapon silently skip devices that do not exist. -p priority Specify priority for swapon. This option is only available if swapon was compiled under and is used under a 1.3.2 or later kernel. priority is a value between 0 and 32767. See swapon(2) for a full description of swap priorities. Add pri=value to the option field of /etc/fstab for use with swapon -a. Swapoff disables swapping on the specified devices and files. When the -a flag is given, swapping is disabled on all known swap devices and files (as found in /proc/swaps or /etc/fstab). NOTE
You should not use swapon on a file with holes. Swap over NFS may not work. SEE ALSO
swapon(2), swapoff(2), fstab(5), init(8), mkswap(8), rc(8), mount(8) FILES
/dev/hd?? standard paging devices /dev/sd?? standard (SCSI) paging devices /etc/fstab ascii filesystem description table HISTORY
The swapon command appeared in 4.0BSD. Linux 1.x 25 September 1995 SWAPON(8)
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