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Full Discussion: Lost CPU CORES
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Lost CPU CORES Post 302554971 by fpmurphy on Tuesday 13th of September 2011 01:53:35 PM
Old 09-13-2011
As far as I recall there is no /proc/config.gz in RHEL. I am not in front of a RHEL 6.1 box at the moment but looking at a CentOS 5.6 and a Fedora 15 box, I do not find a /proc/config.gz.
 

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SYSTUNEDUMP(8)							 Debian GNU/Linux						    SYSTUNEDUMP(8)

NAME
systunedump - Dumps /proc files for kernel tuning. SYNOPSIS
systunedump [ -c,--config configfile ] [ -h, --help ] [ -p, --path dumppath ] [ -v, --verbose ] DESCRIPTION
This program dumps elements of the /proc filesystem to standard output in a format which, if redirected to a file, can be used by the sys- tune(8) utility. Common usage: systunedump > /etc/systune.conf systunedump --config /etc/systune.kernel20.dump > /etc/systune.kernel20.conf systunedump --config /dev/null --path /proc/sys/vm > /etc/systune.conf OPTIONS
-c, --config configfile Specify an alternative configuration file. The default is /etc/systune.dump -h, --help Print a short explanation of the command syntax. -p, --path dumppath Add the specified path to any items already listed in the configuration file. Items in the path must be separated by whitespace. All items in the path must begin /proc/sys/. -v, --verbose Verbose mode: allow non-existent items in the path and configuration file to produce errors to standard error. Without this option, erroneous paths are discarded silently. FILES
/etc/systune.dump A file containing a list of paths to dump. Each pathname must begin with /proc/sys/. Comments, introduced by #, can be included; the whole line from the comment character onwards is discarded, together with any whitespace immediately preceding it. The configuration file can be a file, such as /etc/systune.conf, that contains previously dumped data; the definition part of each line, after and including the colon, is discarded. SEE ALSO
systune (8). AUTHOR
Piotr Roszatycki <dexter@debian.org>. THANKS
Daniel Podlejski, Oliver Elphick. Debian Project 20 Apr 1999 SYSTUNEDUMP(8)
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