08-05-2011
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. HP-UX
Hi,
would like to know the server status from the following 'top' out put. Because, the application is giving a bad performance. would like to know whether the load is within the acceptable limit.
Murali...
System: shpu28 Tue Feb 3 10:03:31... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manduva
4 Replies
2. UNIX and Linux Applications
Ello group,
I have general question about how the performance of server/client should be?
My server is able to answer about 650times per second. Is it good performance?
the apache on the same machine makes 1600/sec BUT there is nine instances of httpd daemon what makes 180/ sec /instance.
of... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tomjan
1 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I am supposed to run few jobs based on the usage of unix server. How to find out if the server is too busy. what are the commands we can use to find out that.
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dnat
1 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi,
i would like to ask if it is possible to get the server load on a solaris machine, but i don't want something like uptime (load average), iostat and vmstat. I would like to get something in percentage like CPU load in %, Disk usage in %, Ram usage in %.
I want to collect this data and to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tafil
3 Replies
5. Infrastructure Monitoring
There is a big problem with the server (VPS based on OpenVZ, CentOS 5, 3GB RAM). The problem is the following. The first 15-20 minutes after starting the server is operating normally, the load average is less than or about 1.0, but then begins to increase sharply% wa, then hovers around 95-99%.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: draiphod
2 Replies
6. Solaris
hi all,
My server box is slow running. I have provide some statistics below:
Where is the bottleneck on the server?
I guess the bottleneck is disk I/O?
bash-3.00# prstat -Z
PID USERNAME SIZE RSS STATE PRI NICE TIME CPU PROCESS/NLWP
29206 mobi1 334M 264M sleep ... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: buyantugs
8 Replies
7. AIX
Hi,
I am new registered user here in this UNIX forums.
I am a new system administrator for AIX 6.1. One of our servers performs poorly every time our application (FINACLE) runs many processes/instances. (see below for topas snapshot)
I use NMON or Topas to monitor the server utilization. I... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: guzzelle
9 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
how can we define performance of a server (Windows or Unix or Linux) ?
If processes waiting for CPU (on queue) are usually more than 3 or 5 can we conclude that CPU is not enough for that usage ?
Thank you. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: big123456
1 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hi Guys,
I am running Oracle database on RHEL 2.6.18-164.el5, now I want to check and make sure that my server is performing optimally.
I check top:
top - 09:45:03 up 2 days, 15:22, 3 users, load average: 2.57, 2.85, 2.77
Tasks: 433 total, 3 running, 430 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Phuti
1 Replies
10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
We are wondering if we are facing performance issue in our server when running Informatica jobs. Two things to suspect:
cache memory never comes down even when Top shows > 99% used.
There is some contention io or network related or Cache is clogged
top - 20:58:20 up 16 days, ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: smart_guy471
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT X11R4
perl-after-upgrade
PERL-AFTER-UPGRADE(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation PERL-AFTER-UPGRADE(1)
NAME
perl-after-upgrade -- fixup FreeBSD packages that depend on perl
SYNOPSIS
perl-after-upgrade
perl-after-upgrade -f
perl-after-upgrade -v
DESCRIPTION
The standard procedure after a perl port (either lang/perl5.6 or lang/perl5.8) upgrade is to basically reinstall all other packages that
depend on perl. This is always a painful exercise. The perl-after-upgrade utility makes this process mostly unnecessary.
The tool goes through the list of installed packages, looks for those that depend on perl, moves files around, modifies shebang lines in
those scripts in which it is necessary to do so, tries its best to adjust dynamically linked binaries that link with libperl.so in the old
path, and updates the package database.
After installation of the new perl is complete, either by hand from the ports collection, or from a package, or via portupgrade, do the
following:
o go root;
o run perl-after-upgrade utility.
Do not specify any arguments at first, so it does nothing destructive. Pay attention to the produced output and especially to
errorlist at the end, if any;
o run the utility again, with -f command line option.
This will actually do the work. Again, pay attention to the output produced;
o fix any reported errors;
o reinstall required packages:
The utility will tell you what packages that depend on perl it could not handle. It will also tell you why it happened (for example,
they were compiled against a binary incompatible perl). If you want such packages to remain operational, you will have to reinstall
then by hand or via portupgrade.
o review the files left in the older perl installation.
This is typically /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.X.Y/. There should be very little, if any, files in that directory and its subdi-
rectories, excepting a number of .ph files;
o check that things work as they should;
o remove backup files from the package database.
Those will be /var/db/pkg/*/+CONTENTS.bak;
o that's all.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2005 by Anton Berezin
"THE BEER-WARE LICENSE" (Revision 42)
<tobez@FreeBSD.org> wrote this module. As long as you retain this
notice you can do whatever you want with this stuff. If we meet some
day, and you think this stuff is worth it, you can buy me a beer in
return.
Anton Berezin
NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
HISTORY
The first version of this utility was not bundled with perl package on FreeBSD. It was dumber than the current version in several impor-
tant areas. It was faster.
CREDITS
Thanks to Mathieu Arnold for discussion.
SEE ALSO
perl(1).
perl v5.8.9 2009-04-13 PERL-AFTER-UPGRADE(1)