12-28-2010
"iostat" and/or "zpool iostat" if you are on a zpool. also you can use dtrace if you are on solaris 10.
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
I have some questions regarding disk perfomance, and what I can do to make it just a little (or much :)) more faster.
From what I've heard the first partitions will be faster than the later ones because tracks at the outer edges of a hard drive platter simply moves faster. But I've also read in... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: J.P
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2. AIX
Hello,
I have a aix 570 system with san disk. I do write test of performance
in a lv with four disk. While the test I run filemon tools for trace
the disk activity. The outputs of filemon are at the en of this message. I
see my lV(logical volume) throughput at 100 meg by second. 2 of 4
disk... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hugues
0 Replies
3. AIX
I'm search for a disk exerciser / load tool like iometer, iozone, diskx for IBM AIX 5.2 and 5.3
Because of a very bad disk performance on several AIX systems, I need to have a tool which is able to generate a disk load on my local and SAN disks.
Does somebody knows a kind of tool which is... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: funsje
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4. Red Hat
I am getting absolutely dreadful iowait stats on my disks when I am trying to install some applications.
I have 2 physical disks on which I have created 2 separate logical volume groups and a logical volume in each. I have dumped some stats as below
My dual core CPU is not being over utilised... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimthompson
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5. Red Hat
Running CentOS 5.5:
I've come across a relatively recent problem, where in the last 2 months or so, the root disk goes to 99% utilization for about 20 seconds when a user logs in. This occurs whether a user logs in locally or via ssh. I have tried using lsof to track down the process that is... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dangral
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6. Solaris
Dear All,
I have a hard disk in solaris on which the write performanc is too slow.
The CPU , RAM memory are absolutely fine.
What might be reason.
Kindly explain.
Rj (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: jegaraman
9 Replies
7. Solaris
Hello,
we have a machine with Solaris Express 11, 2 LSI 9211 8i SAS 2 controllers (multipath to disks), multiport backplane, 16 Seagate Cheetah 15K RPM disks.
Each disk has a sequential performance of 220/230 MB/s and in fact if I do a
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/rdsk/<diskID_1> bs=1024k... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: golemico
1 Replies
8. Solaris
Hello guys,
I have two servers performing the same disk operations. I believe one server is having a disk's impending failure however I have no hard evidence to prove it. This is a pair of Netra 210's with 2 drives in a hardware raid mirror (LSI raid controller). While performing intensive... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: s ladd
4 Replies
9. Linux
I have a freshly installed Oracle Linux 7.1 ( akin to RHEL ) server.
However after installing some Oracle software, I have noticed that my hard disk light is continually on and the system performance is slow.
So I check out SAR and IOSTAT
lab3:/root>iostat
Linux... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimthompson
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LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
zfsloader
ZFSLOADER(8) BSD System Manager's Manual ZFSLOADER(8)
NAME
zfsloader -- kernel bootstrapping final stage
DESCRIPTION
zfsloader is an extended variant of loader(8) with added support for booting from ZFS. This document describes only differences from
loader(8).
ZFS FEATURES
zfsloader supports the following format for specifying ZFS filesystems which can be used wherever loader(8) refers to a device specification:
zfs:pool/filesystem:
where pool/filesystem is a ZFS filesystem name as described in zfs(8).
If /etc/fstab does not have an entry for the root filesystem and vfs.root.mountfrom is not set, but currdev refers to a ZFS filesystem, then
zfsloader will instruct kernel to use that filesystem as the root filesystem.
ZFS COMMAND EXTENSIONS
lsdev [-v]
Lists ZFS pools in addition to disks and partitions. Adding -v shows more ZFS pool details in a format that resembles zpool status
output.
lszfs filesystem
A ZFS extended command that can be used to explore the ZFS filesystem hierarchy in a pool. Lists the immediate children of the
filesystem. The filesystem hierarchy is rooted at a filesystem with the same name as the pool.
FILES
/boot/zfsloader zfsloader itself.
EXAMPLES
Set the default device used for loading a kernel from a ZFS filesystem:
set currdev=zfs:tank/ROOT/knowngood:
SEE ALSO
gptzfsboot(8), loader(8), zfs(8), zfsboot(8), zfsloader(8), zpool(8)
HISTORY
The zfsloader first appeared in FreeBSD 7.3.
AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org>.
BSD
September 15, 2014 BSD