10-07-2011
I have 4 procs on an HP/UX box, generally CPU idle is how top is displayed
If the CPU idle goes below 10% you are in trouble, if it hit 0% expect to deal with system dump
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Hi All,
I have a pair of sun ultra 5_10 with SunOS 5.5.1.
Both are almost equally patched and set up with simillar applications.
host# uname -a
SunOS host 5.5.1 Generic_103640-24 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-5_10
Even though both have
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Actually, I have 2 questions. At this moment I am running a site which has a lot of visitors. The current server has some problems with running, and I'dd like to see if I can optimize the code to prevent having to upgrade the server.
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a... (5 Replies)
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3. Shell Programming and Scripting
i have some 1000 files in my dir and i want to find top 100 files and move them to some other location:
below the 2 commands i used, but it is not working
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4. AIX
Is there a 'top' command equivalent in AIX 4.2 ?
I already checked and I do not see the following ones anywhere:
top
nmon
topas (1 Reply)
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Okay, I am trying to come up with a multi-platform script to report top ten CPU and memory hog processes, which will be run by our enterprise monitoring application as an auto-action item when the CPU and Memory utilization gets reported as higher than a certain threshold
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HI,
When i use the top command in Linux I get the below values.
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
What is the maximum MEM% that will occur. I got once 303% . Is it possible to get such a high value.
Regards,
Ahamed. (2 Replies)
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<A href="mailto:root@sssdpmds01$">
root@sssdpmds01$ prstat -a
PID USERNAME SIZE RSS STATE PRI NICE TIME CPU PROCESS/NLWP
13831 ogw 2613M 2108M cpu12 0 0 277:43:27 3.9% java/1201
4312 ogw 2641M 2092M sleep 59 0 562:45:51 2.1% java/1235
4469 ogw ... (2 Replies)
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8. Solaris
Hi,
When I run the free command on solaris, I get the following:
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Amit (3 Replies)
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I am middle of writing health check scripts, can you pls share commands on how I can get cpu and Mem of top consuming process info at the moment?
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LEARN ABOUT OSF1
sys_attrs_pwrmgr
sys_attrs_pwrmgr(5) File Formats Manual sys_attrs_pwrmgr(5)
NAME
sys_attrs_pwrmgr - pwrmgr subsystem attributes
DESCRIPTION
This reference page lists and describes attributes for the Power Manager (pwrmgr) kernel subsystem. To change these attributes so that they
take effect each time you boot the system, you create a stanza file with the attribute settings you want and then use the sysconfigdb com-
mand to update the system configuration database with the information in this file. See the EXAMPLES section for more information about
this process. Refer to the sys_attrs(5) reference page for an general introduction to the topic of kernel subsystem attributes.
A value that enables (1) or disables (0) CPU slowdown after the CPU becomes idle.
A value that enables (1) or disables (0) all power management functions (for CPU, disks, and graphics hardware). The number of min-
utes to wait before powering down registered disks after they become idle.
A value that enables (1) or disables (0) disk spindown after registered disks become idle.
The number of minutes before entering DPMS off mode after display hardware has become idle. If you specify 0 for this attribute,
DPMS off mode is disabled.
A value that enables (1) or disables (0) Display Power Management Signaling (DPMS) modes for graphics display hardware.
The number of minutes before entering DPMS standby mode after display hardware has become idle. If you specify 0 for this attribute,
DPMS standby mode is disabled.
The number of minutes before entering DPMS suspend mode after display hardware has become idle. If you specify 0 for this attribute,
DPMS suspend mode is disabled.
EXAMPLES
The following example shows a sample stanza file named power_mgr.stanza:
pwrmgr:
default_pwrmgr_state=1
cpu_slowdown=1
disk_spindown=1
disk_dwell_time=20
graphics_powerdown=1
graphics_standby_dwell=5
graphics_suspend_dwell=10
graphics_off_dwell=15
This file: Enables power management in general, plus all three of the power management options for idle hardware (CPU slowdown, disk spin-
down, and DPMS modes for graphics displays) Specifies a wait of 20 minutes before spinning down a disk after it has become idle Specifies a
wait of 5, 10, and 15 minutes before entering DPMS standby, suspend, and off modes, respectively, after graphics display hardware has
become idle
See stanza(4) for more information about stanza files.
The following command updates the /etc/sysconfigtab database with the information in the stanza file: # sysconfigdb -a -f power_mgr.stanza
pwrmgr
See sysconfigdb(8) for more information about using this command to update the system configuration database.
SEE ALSO
Commands: sysconfigdb(8)
Files: stanza(4)
Others: sys_attrs(5)
System Administration
sys_attrs_pwrmgr(5)