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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Infrastructure Monitoring Event processing & machine learning in monitoring system Post 302821333 by DGPickett on Friday 14th of June 2013 11:44:01 AM
Old 06-14-2013
There is some of this sort of event predition in network protocols, to detect defective or slow paths to avoid, but servers are just supposed to run, not fail, predictable or not. The two flavors of handling this are parallel redundant concurrent load division where a dead server is detected and not sent any more load until it can respond to periodic tests. Recovery from services sent to a dying server is mostly left to client retry, but some systems of transactional middleware do requeue services that do not run to final commit, so they are run on alternative servers. Of course, query services are easier to handle than churn, where you need to rollback all when there is failure, before you requeue. Some systems do not use transactions, but structure churn so it can be applied any number of times and not have duplicate side effects (history filtering or believe the last of that seq. #).
 

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SYSMON(4)						   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						 SYSMON(4)

NAME
sysmon -- system monitoring and power management interface DESCRIPTION
The machine-independent sysmon is a general purpose framework for system monitoring and power management. The main components of sysmon include: o An ioctl(2) interface available via /dev/sysmon. The userland counterparts include utilities such as envstat(8) and daemons such as powerd(8). o An interface for the purpose of delivering different system and power events to userspace; sysmon_pswitch(9). o A general purpose sensor framework, sysmon_envsys(9). o A general purpose task queue, sysmon_taskq(9). o An interface for watchdog timers. FILES
/dev/sysmon SEE ALSO
envsys(4), swsensor(4), envstat(8), powerd(8), wdogctl(8), pmf(9) AUTHORS
Jason R. Thorpe <thorpej@NetBSD.org> BSD
June 22, 2011 BSD
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