Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX How to measure waiting time in run queue? Post 302802367 by GiiGii on Friday 3rd of May 2013 10:35:26 AM
Old 05-03-2013
How to measure waiting time in run queue?

Hello guys,

I am doing a performance analysis on one of our psystem. Most of time I am using Nmon analyser to do my trend graph. But I can't find any help with it. We are interesting in the time spend by tasks in Aix run queue.

After looking the Aix documentation, I am pessimist to find any straight metric in order to measure that time.

So I need your help Smilie

Regards

Tech infos : Aix 6.1.6 on Power7
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. HP-UX

Run Queue Thresholds

Gurus, Having a GS1280 box with OSF1 v5.1 installed (16 processors), the run queue value from the vmstat command reports a very high value (about 25 to 30). Does this reflect a CPU bound system. Note that the average CPU utilization is about 60 % which means that the CPU is not that loaded. Can... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Negm
0 Replies

2. AIX

Waiting time of Process

Hi all, I am trying to find out the process wait time on Unix(AIX/SOLARIS) machine( only sh/ksh/csh): Like EXAMPLE 1 : $ vmstat 2 System configuration: lcpu=16 mem=32000MB kthr memory page faults cpu ----- -----------... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: chandrakala.sg
4 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Display just CPU run queue number (Nothing Else)

Im using the vmstat command to display the CPU run queue, but i want to put that into a program so is there a way to just display the number under the r? Thanks, (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: RAFC_99
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to measure g++ performance?

I am working on an application with some rather interesting build performance issues. If we build on Solaris/Linux x86/AMD64 the build is rather fast, but it takes more than five times as long on our Solaris Sparc servers (single-threaded builds on the workstations, but multi-threaded on the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Elric of Grans
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Run from waiting mode

I have no idea why this job has been put into waiting state by server. Can anyone help me to run this job from waiting state. ps -elf | grep 'usr_script' 4 S usr_script 3929 3926 0 77 0 - 2976 wait Oct21 ? 00:00:00 /bin/ksh /application_folder/script/report 0 S usr_script ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zooby
2 Replies

6. Linux

How to Calculate Disk Queue length and Disk Busy Time

Hi, Am doing an enhancements related to monitoring a Linux disk I/O statistics. The /proc/diskstats file is used to get the each disk I/O statistics. But, It returns the raw value. How to calculate the Disk Queue Length and Disk Busy time from the raw values. Guide me. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: maruthu
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

waiting on jobs in bash, allowing limited parallel jobs at one time, and then for all to finish

Hello, I am running GNU bash, version 3.2.39(1)-release (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu). I have a specific question pertaining to waiting on jobs run in sub-shells, based on the max number of parallel processes I want to allow, and then wait... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: srao
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

idle% cpu and run queue

Hi Everybody, Can anybody explain how CPU idle% is about 50%, but runq-sz more than 1? sar from Solaris 10: 00:00:05 %usr %sys %wio %idle 17:00:08 27 12 0 61 17:20:05 40 15 0 45 17:40:05 27 12 0 61 18:00:05 23... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sant
2 Replies

9. Solaris

How to measure IOPS?

Hi I have a system running solaris 10, and I intend to use a NetApp as its storage system. The application requires a throughput between the server and the storage 7000 disk IOPS (random IO sustained throughput with response time of 20 mili second and 16k block size). How to make sure that I... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: fretagi
6 Replies
PMWTF(1)						      General Commands Manual							  PMWTF(1)

NAME
pmwtf - compares archives and report significant differences SYNOPSIS
pmwtf [-dz] [-p precision] [-q thres] [-S starttime] [-T endtime] [-B starttime] [-E endtime] [-x metric] [-X file] [-Z timezone] archive1 [archive2] DESCRIPTION
pmwtf compares the average values for every metric in either one or two archives, in a given time window, for changes that are likely to be of interest when searching for performance regressions. The archive log has the base name archive and must have been previously created using pmlogger(1). The pmlogsummary(1) utility is used to obtain the average values used for comparison. There are two sorts of invocation of the tool: with either one or two archives. In the first case, the only sensible command line requires use of all four time window arguments. These are specified using the same time window format described in PCPIntro(1), and are -S and -T for the start and end times of the first time window of interest in the archive, and -B and -E for the start and end times of the second time window of interest. In the second case, with two archives, the -B and -E options might be unnecessary. This might be the case, for example, when comparing the same time window of two consecutive days (usually two separate archives), or a time window on the same day of different weeks. In either case, pmwtf produces a sorted summary of those metrics in the specified window whose values have deviated the most from a minimal threshold. The level of deviation is calculated by dividing the average value of each metric in both logs, and then calculating whether the ratio falls outside of a range considered normal. This ratio can be adjusted using the -q option, and by default it is 2 (i.e. report all metrics with average values that have more than doubled in the two time windows or more than halved in the two time windows). Should any metrics be present in one window but missing from the other, a diagnostic will be displayed listing each missing metric and the archive from which it was missing. The remaining options control the specific information to be reported. Metrics with counter semantics are converted to rates before being evaluated. -p Print all floating point numbers with precision digits after the decimal place. -x Compare each metric in each archive in the time windows specified to a given egrep(1) pattern, excluding those that match from the report output. -X Allows a file to be specified which containing egrep(1) patterns which are applied to the metric names to optionally exclude some from the report. -z Use the local timezone from the given archives. -Z Changes the timezone in the archive labels to timezone in the format of the environment variable TZ as described in environ(5). FILES
$PCP_LOG_DIR/pmlogger/hostname Default directory for PCP archives containing performance metric values collected from the host hostname. PCP ENVIRONMENT
Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the file and directory names used by PCP. On each installation, the file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables. The $PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative configura- tion file, as described in pcp.conf(5). SEE ALSO
PCPIntro(1), pmlogger(1), pmlogsummary(1), egrep(1), pcp.conf(5) and pcp.env(5). Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMWTF(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:35 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy