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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers CPU with long hours in top, is this bad? Post 302814669 by newbie_01 on Thursday 30th of May 2013 03:37:39 AM
Old 05-30-2013
CPU with long hours in top, is this bad?

Hi,

We have a Solaris server that has about 43 Oracle databases on it and we also have the Oracle Enterprise Manager - emagent that is used to monitor these databases

When running top, the emagent is showing as one of the top process. Excerpts from running top shows something as below:

Code:
 
load averages:  2.34,  2.48,  2.60                                                                                                                        19:27:50
2197 processes:2195 sleeping, 2 on cpu
CPU states: 86.8% idle,  4.4% user,  8.7% kernel,  0.0% iowait,  0.0% swap
Memory: 128G real, 39G free, 96G swap free
  PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE  SIZE   RES STATE   TIME    CPU COMMAND
29230 oracle    45  59    0    0K    0K sleep  73.8H  0.38% emagent
28396 oracle     1   1    0    0K    0K sleep   0:00  0.13% perl
16834 oracle     1  46    0    0K    0K sleep  31:38  0.09% oracle
14364 oracle     1  12    0    0K    0K sleep 164:26  0.07% oracle
25177 oracle     1  28    0    0K    0K sleep 152:25  0.07% oracle
19822 oracle     1   1    0    0K    0K sleep 182:10  0.07% oracle
 
$: ps -eafl | grep emagent
 0 S   oracle 28653 16712   0  40 20        ?    212        ? 19:28:46 pts/11      0:00 grep emagent
 0 O   oracle 29230 22667   0  48 20        ?  48687            May 17 ?        4430:37 /opt/oracle/agent11g/bin/emagent
 
$: prstat -T
   PID USERNAME  SIZE   RSS STATE  PRI NICE      TIME  CPU PROCESS/NLWP
  5147 oracle     10M 9272K cpu2    55    0   0:00:03 0.7% prstat/1
 29230 oracle    380M  373M cpu20   51    0  73:51:26 0.4% emagent/45
     4 root        0K    0K sleep    0  -20  29:55:55 0.4% vmtasks/16
  4368 root       45M   25M sleep   18    0  20:00:42 0.1% nscd/110
 16834 oracle   2781M 2148M sleep   55    0   0:31:43 0.1% oracle/1
 17621 oracle   1069M 1041M sleep   27    0   2:53:57 0.1% oracle/1
 13057 oracle   3421M 1086M sleep   44    0   3:29:45 0.1% oracle/1
 18015 oracle    721M  526M sleep    1    0   3:02:31 0.1% oracle/1
  8979 oracle   2781M  829M sleep   58    0   3:02:56 0.1% oracle/1
  4757 oracle   1724M  606M sleep    1    0   1:11:26 0.1% oracle/1
 13041 oracle   3422M 1071M sleep   59    0   4:57:26 0.1% oracle/1
 17435 oracle   2781M  873M sleep   50    0   3:05:52 0.0% oracle/1
 19822 oracle    721M  526M sleep    1    0   3:02:12 0.0% oracle/1
  9220 oracle   2269M  769M sleep    1    0   3:00:23 0.0% oracle/1
  6636 oracle   3037M  846M sleep    1    0   2:46:36 0.0% oracle/1
 15778 oracle   1757M  677M sleep    1    0   2:45:13 0.0% oracle/1
 10156 oracle   2789M 2184M cpu5     1    0   0:08:18 0.0% oracle/1
 19567 oracle    733M  697M sleep    1    0   2:27:16 0.0% oracle/1

Please advise if this is something to worry about or not? If the monitoring agent is a problem then that seems to suggest it is not doing what it is supposed to be doing and is actually causing a problem itself Smilie

Any advise/feedback much appreciated. Thanks in advance.
 

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CHING(6)							   Games Manual 							  CHING(6)

NAME
ching - the book of changes and other cookies SYNOPSIS
/usr/games/ching [ hexagram ] DESCRIPTION
The I Ching or Book of Changes is an ancient Chinese oracle that has been in use for centuries as a source of wisdom and advice. The text of the oracle (as it is sometimes known) consists of sixty-four hexagrams, each symbolized by a particular arrangement of six straight (---) and broken (- -) lines. These lines have values ranging from six through nine, with the even values indicating the broken lines. Each hexagram consists of two major sections. The Judgement relates specifically to the matter at hand (E.g., "It furthers one to have somewhere to go.") while the Image describes the general attributes of the hexagram and how they apply to one's own life ("Thus the supe- rior man makes himself strong and untiring."). When any of the lines have the values six or nine, they are moving lines; for each there is an appended judgement which becomes signifi- cant. Furthermore, the moving lines are inherently unstable and change into their opposites; a second hexagram (and thus an additional judgement) is formed. Normally, one consults the oracle by fixing the desired question firmly in mind and then casting a set of changes (lines) using yarrow-stalks or tossed coins. The resulting hexagram will be the answer to the question. Using an algorithm suggested by S. C. Johnson, the UNIX oracle simply reads a question from the standard input (up to an EOF) and hashes the individual characters in combination with the time of day, process id and any other magic numbers which happen to be lying around the system. The resulting value is used as the seed of a random number generator which drives a simulated coin-toss divination. The answer is then piped through nroff for formatting and will appear on the standard output. For those who wish to remain steadfast in the old traditions, the oracle will also accept the results of a personal divination using, for example, coins. To do this, cast the change and then type the resulting line values as an argument. The impatient modern may prefer to settle for Chinese cookies; try fortune(6). SEE ALSO
It furthers one to see the great man. DIAGNOSTICS
The great prince issues commands, Founds states, vests families with fiefs. Inferior people should not be employed. BUGS
Waiting in the mud Brings about the arrival of the enemy. If one is not extremely careful, Somebody may come up from behind and strike him. Misfortune. 7th Edition May 20, 1985 CHING(6)
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