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Operating Systems AIX Script to identify high CPU usage processes Post 302468815 by zxmaus on Wednesday 3rd of November 2010 10:43:04 PM
Old 11-03-2010
ok ok I might be a bit stupid here but what would I possibly need such a script for. Nmon percentage shows cpu% of a cpu thread - not absolute cpu. And how big such a thread is depends highly on how you did setup your virtuals ... if you have 1 virtual = one physical cpu - and only one virtual cpu in your box - than 87% might be high ... if you have 30 virtuals together worth one physical cpu, than 87% is rather low. What I would look after is rather indeed what is consuming high amounts of cpu for longer periods of time (ps aux is helpful), and do I exhaust my box regarding cpus (i.e. going constantly over my entitlement / virtual limits). Again - when I have 1 virtual cpu and 1 cpu entitled than 100% cpu is the max I can go to - if you have 30 virtuals than 30 cpus (aka 3000% is the limit). When that happens once a day for 30 sec - not a reason for concern if I am the rest of the day below 100% (aka my entitlement) Smilie What I would probably frequently look after is rather how my cpu is used ... high usr cpu = good, high sys cpu = bad - there are applications like sybase which are spinning cpus so the system appears to be incredibly busy - but in fact it is very busy doing nothing - and root cause is underutilization ...
Other root causes for high cpu utilization might be a bottleneck in IO or memory ... not necessarily a particular process at all.
To say it with the words of IBM : in a virtualized environment on big frames cpu is these days not your problem ... There might be at times runaway processes hogging cpu - but you will more likely capture them running nmon a few times a day interactively and just look into what is under the top cpu consumers though not expected to be.

Kind regards
zxmaus
 

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platform(n)						       Tcl Bundled Packages						       platform(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
platform - System identification support code and utilities SYNOPSIS
package require platform ?1.0.4? platform::generic platform::identify platform::patterns identifier _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The platform package provides several utility commands useful for the identification of the architecture of a machine running Tcl. Whilst Tcl provides the tcl_platform array for identifying the current architecture (in particular, the platform and machine elements) this is not always sufficient. This is because (on Unix machines) tcl_platform reflects the values returned by the uname command and these are not standardized across platforms and architectures. In addition, on at least one platform (AIX) the tcl_platform(machine) contains the CPU serial number. Consequently, individual applications need to manipulate the values in tcl_platform (along with the output of system specific utilities) - which is both inconvenient for developers, and introduces the potential for inconsistencies in identifying architectures and in naming con- ventions. The platform package prevents such fragmentation - i.e., it establishes a standard naming convention for architectures running Tcl and makes it more convenient for developers to identify the current architecture a Tcl program is running on. COMMANDS
platform::identify This command returns an identifier describing the platform the Tcl core is running on. The returned identifier has the general for- mat OS-CPU. The OS part of the identifier may contain details like kernel version, libc version, etc., and this information may con- tain dashes as well. The CPU part will not contain dashes, making the preceding dash the last dash in the result. platform::generic This command returns a simplified identifier describing the platform the Tcl core is running on. In contrast to platform::identify it leaves out details like kernel version, libc version, etc. The returned identifier has the general format OS-CPU. platform::patterns identifier This command takes an identifier as returned by platform::identify and returns a list of identifiers describing compatible architec- tures. KEYWORDS
operating system, cpu architecture, platform, architecture platform 1.0.4 platform(n)
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