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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Load average spikes once an hour Post 302497162 by Corona688 on Wednesday 16th of February 2011 01:36:57 PM
Old 02-16-2011
There's all the user crontabs of course, also check for filenames under /etc/cron.hourly, these will as the name implies get run hourly. This doesn't rule out some script somewhere that does this of its own volition either, just a "while true ; do sleep 3600 ; hog_system ; done"

Depending on your system your version of ps may be able to print a tree of what created what process (or at least what process belongs to what process), potentially helpful for tracking down what's spawning the monster. Try ps -ejH

I wouldn't expect a high load average to lag the system, Linux is pretty good at keeping responsive despite high CPU load, but if something's hogging disk access -- like many instances of md5sum could -- that'd definitely slow things down by turfing useful things out of cache.
 

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FAKE-HWCLOCK(8) 					      System Manager's Manual						   FAKE-HWCLOCK(8)

NAME
fake-hwclock - Control fake hardware clock SYNOPSIS
fake-hwclock [ command ] [ force ] BACKGROUND
Many embedded Linux systems do not have a functional hardware clock. Either they simply don't have a hardware clock at all or they have a hardware clock but it is not usable (e.g. because Linux doesn't know how to use it or because no battery is present). This can lead to time moving backwards to some default value (often 1970) when the system is rebooted. Since lots of software assumes that time only moves forward this is a bad thing. NTP can (and should where practical) be used to sync with an external timeserver but it is not available early in the boot process and may be unavailable for other reasons. DESCRIPTION
fake-hwclock sets and queries a fake "hardware clock" which stores the time in a file. This program may be run by the system administrator directly but is typically run by init (to load the time on startup and save it on shutdown) and cron (to save the time hourly). If no command is given then fake-hwclock acts as if the save command was used. COMMANDS
save Save the time to the file. load Load the time from the file. If force is specified fake-hwclock will move the clock either backwards or forwards. Otherwise it will only move it forwards. FILES
/etc/fake-hwclock.data The file used to store the time /etc/init.d/fake-hwclock The init script used to run fake-hwclock on startup and shutdown /etc/default/fake-hwclock Settings file for the init script. /etc/cron.hourly/fake-hwclock Cron job used to save the time hourly ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
FILE set the file used by fake-hwclock RETURN VALUES
1 is returned for invalid commands. 0 is returned in all other cases. BUGS
This approach can only provide a crude approximation of what a real hardware clock provides. Use of NTP or another method to keep the time in sync is strongly advised. Debian 5 April 2012 FAKE-HWCLOCK(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:18 PM.
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