Hello everybody.
I have a problem with my AIX 5.3. Recently my unix shows a high cpu utilization with sar or topas.
I need to find what I have to do to solve this problem, in fact, I don't know what is my problem.
I had the same problem with another AIX 5.3 running the same... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
While creating zone we will mention min and max cpu cores, like
add dedicated-cpu
set ncpus=NUM_CPUS_MIN-NUM_CPUS_MAX
end
Ques1:
Suppose thing that non global zone uses only minimum cores at particular time What the other cores will do, Will it shared to global zone?
Ques:2... (1 Reply)
There might be some problem with my server,
because every morning at 7, it's performance become bad with no DB extra deadlock.
But I just couldn't figure it out.
Please give me some advise, thanks a lot...
According to the CPU performace chart, Daily CPU loading Maximum: 42 %, Average:36%.
... (8 Replies)
i need help, i will always accord mine if my scope allows me, help me in this one..
am running vmware 7.0 in winserver 2008 on a cq61-425el, my network driver is installed correctly. and my vmware network drivers have added as well (in the device manager section).
During installation i wasnt... (0 Replies)
We have a DB server which is constantly utilised above 95% above.
This is becoming nuisance when the monitoring team frequently calls to check on it. Frankly I do not know what to tweak or even interpret the outputs.
I noticed constant 30 to 60% in wio column of the cpu utilisation.
There... (1 Reply)
I want to write a shell script which will print AIX
CPU utilization
memory utilization
every 5 mins redirect to file. How do i do it? Please advise.
Which commands I should use? (3 Replies)
I've moved a physical server over to VMWare ESXi 5.1 using SCO 6.0 with MP4. For whatever reason, people are occasionally getting kicked out or are closing out their telnet session and it is leaving their processes running. When this happens, the sar %idle drops from 98-95% down to 25-20%. ... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
Been reading a lot of the cpu load and its "analogy of it to car traffic path of expressway"
From wiki
Most UNIX systems count only processes in the running (on CPU) or runnable (waiting for CPU) states. However, Linux also includes processes in uninterruptible sleep states... (13 Replies)
In my oracle db server we have 15 cores (power8). The output of the vmstat is as below.
System configuration: lcpu=128 mem=208800MB ent=16.00
kthr memory page faults cpu time
-----------... (18 Replies)
Just restarted MySQL a few times.
There seems to be a problem with MySQL performance because one table (our man page table) is too large and I need to move that table to a new database and out of the main forums DB.
That table is over 7 GB, bigger than the rest of the DB combined:
... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
thailpof
thailpof(8) System Manager's Manual thailpof(8)NAME
thailpof - Generic filter for printing Thai text files
SYNOPSIS
/usr/lbin/thailpof [-c] [-h host] [-H] [-i indent] [-l length] [-n login] [-P printer_id] [-S] [-w width] [accounting_file]
OPTIONS
Prints control characters. Specifies the host name of the job owner. This name can contain Thai characters. Enables half-height printing
mode. In printers without a one-pass printing mode, Thai characters are printed on 3 levels, or 3 lines. When half-height printing mode
is enabled, the 3 levels are printed in 1.5 lines, which improves the appearance of output. The cost of this improvement is slower print-
ing speed. Specifies the amount of indentation. The default value is no (no indentation). Specifies the page length in lines. The default
value is 22. Specifies the login name of the job owner. This name can contain Thai characters. Specifies the printer ID in the format
that conforms to the Wototo Specification. This format is [bb][mm][nn] where: Is the brand ID, representing the brand of the printer. Is
the model ID, representing the model of the printer. Is the code ID, specifying the character code used by the printer. Enables space-
compensation mode. Many of the existing tools for text alignment cannot handle nonspacing characters properly. When printing output from
such tools, enabling space-compensation mode improves alignment of output text. Specifies the page width in columns. The default value is
80.
OPERANDS
Specifies the file to record accounting information.
DESCRIPTION
The thailpof filter is a generic print filter for Thai text files. The filter handles the device dependencies of printers and performs
accounting functions. At print job completion times, accounting records are written to the file specified by the af field in /etc/print-
cap.
The filter can handle plain text files and files that have been preprocessed by nroff. Either kind of file can contain Thai characters.
The thailpof filter translates nroff control sequences for underlining, superscripting, and subscripting into the proper control sequences
for the printer.
The thailpof filter can be the specified filter in both the of and the if fields in the /etc/printcap file. For a description of these
fields, see printcap(4).
To print Thai characters on the flag page using 3-pass mode, you must specify /usr/lbin/thailpof in the of field of the /etc/printcap file.
In 3-pass mode, however, the flag page is not printed on one page. Therefore, if you do not plan to print Thai characters on the flag
page, or if you are using one-pass mode, do not specify /usr/lbin/thailpof in the of field.
NOTES
The lpr command supports a number of options and associated arguments to enable localization features supported by various printers. The
following can be used with the thailpof filter: To specify one-and-a-half line printing To enable space-compensation mode. To specify the
pathname of the character code table
For a complete description of this option and its associated arguments or values, refer to lpr(1).
ERRORS
The lf field (default value is /dev/null) in the /etc/printcap file specifies the name of the error log.
SEE ALSO
Commands: lpr(1), pr(1), lpd(8), pac(8)
Files: printcap(4)
Others: i18n_printing(5)thailpof(8)