09-05-2011
Well, for all processes, add -e ! The ps man also describes how to customize the output. I/O loading is a per process sort of thing. Now, page faults are an I/O cost, too, but their cost may be imposed by other processes!
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
I am seeing very high kernel usage and very high load averages on my system (Although we are not loading much data to our database). Here is the output of top...does anyone know what i should be looking at?
Thanks,
Lorraine
last pid: 13144; load averages: 22.32, 19.81, 16.78 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: lorrainenineill
4 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
I would like to write shell/perl script which identifies the top unix processes that are performing high disk I/O's or/and writes
If any one knows the solution please help me?
-Swamy (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: avsswamy
0 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Guys,
Is there any UNIX command that captures the 'Unix process which is performing high disk I/O reads and writes'.
can you help me in this?
-Swamy (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: avsswamy
6 Replies
4. AIX
Hi Guys,
I need to write a script capable of identifying when a high cpu utilitzation process. It sounds simple but we are on a AIX 5.3 environment with Virtual CPU's (VP's) and logical CPU's. Please any ideas or tips would be highly appreciated. Thanks.
Harby. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: arizah
6 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Have a script that I'm trying to adapt for something else, but I do not understand the following lines. Can anyone help?
I know what expr does, `expr 8 + 2`, but:
FILENAME=`expr //$FILE : '.*/\(.*\)'`
UNPACKDIR=`echo $FILE | sed -e s/$FILENAME//g`
Thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: bound4h
6 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have high values (such as ÿÿÿÿ) in a text file contained in an Unix AIX server. I need to identify all the records
which are having these high values and also get the position/column number in the record structure if possible. Is there
any Unix command by which this can be done to :
1.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: devina
5 Replies
7. Red Hat
i have a Intel Quad Core Xeon X3440 (4 x 2.53GHz, 8MB Cache, Hyper Threaded) with 16gig and 1tb harddrive with a 1gb port and my apache is causing my cpu to go up to 100% on all four cores heres my http.config
<IfModule prefork.c>
StartServers 10
MinSpareServers 10
MaxSpareServers 15... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: awww
4 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi ,
I am trying to :wall: my head while scripting ..I am really new to this stuff , never did it before :( .
how to find cpu's system high time and user time high in a script??
thanks , help would be appreciated !
:) (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: sushwey
9 Replies
9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
hello all,
on linux servers sometimes any of these resources (cpu,memory,disk) get a spike when you are not in front of the server.
the duration of these spikes might be 5 mins or even whole weekend.
my question is there a good way of capturing the events that caused these issues ( cpu or... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: coolatt
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
iostat
iostat(1) General Commands Manual iostat(1)
Name
iostat - report I/O statistics
Syntax
iostat [ -c ] [ -t ] [ disknames ] [ interval ] [ count ]
Description
The command reports I/O statistics for terminals, disks and cpus. For terminals the number of input and output characters are counted.
For disks the number of 512 byte blocks per second and number of transfers per second are displayed. For cpus, it provides the percentage
of time the system has spent in user mode, in user mode running low priority (niced) processes, in system mode, and idling. On multipro-
cessor systems these cpu statistics represent a cumulative summary of all the cpus.
The optional disknames argument causes disk statistics to be displayed for the specified disks. If this argument is not specified then
disk statistics will be displayed for the first 3 disks only.
The optional interval argument causes to report once each interval seconds. The first report is for all time since a reboot and each sub-
sequent report is for the last interval only.
The optional count argument restricts the number of reports.
Options
-c Displays the percentage of time each cpu spent in user mode, running low priority (nice'd) processes, in system mode, and idling.
-t Displays the number of characters read from and written to terminals.
Examples
This example will cause cpu and disk statistics for the 5 disks ra0, ra1, ra2, ra3, and ra4.
iostat ra0 ra1 ra2 ra3 ra4
This example will cause cpu, terminal, and disk statistics for ra0 to be displayed and updated every 2 seconds.
iostat -t ra0 2
Files
See Also
vmstat(1), cpustat(1)
iostat(1)