Hello everyone,
Can you please explain me what kind of information do IOSTAT show ?
iostat -xnz 3 show me those informations:
The I/O of the c0t0d0 disk is normal ?
extended device statistics
r/s w/s kr/s kw/s wait actv wsvc_t asvc_t %w %b device
0.0 ... (3 Replies)
Environment
Solaris 9
I have configured the Solaris9 as NTP client in which Solaris9 is syncing the time with a windows2008 R2 Server which is runing fine. Now I want that the xntpd service should start at startup. I did this via a script. Kindly correct if I did any thing wrong:
1.)Made... (9 Replies)
I am trying to create a file (epilepsy70_average.txt) and then pipe that file into a sort and save a new file. The new file is sort.txt but as of know it is blank. I can create the file in one command and then sort it in another. Is the pipe not correct? Thank you :).
awk... (2 Replies)
In the below awk to add a sort by smallest to largest should it be added after the END? Thank you :).
BEGIN {
FS="*"
}
# Read search terms from file1 into 's'
FNR==NR {
s
next
}
{
# Check if $5 matches one of the search terms
for(i in s) {
if($5 ~ i) {
... (4 Replies)
I am facing strange behaviour of iostat command and top command. where initially it is showing high utilization and after it is showing low utilization.
iostat command
avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle
73.60 0.01 23.93 0.92 0.00 1.54
Device: rrqm/s wrqm/s r/s w/s... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
iostat
IOSTAT(1M)IOSTAT(1M)NAME
iostat - report I/O statistics
SYNOPSIS
iostat [ option ] ... [ interval [ count ] ]
DESCRIPTION
Iostat delves into the system and reports certain statistics kept about input-output activity. Information is kept about up to three dif-
ferent disks (RF, RK, RP) and about typewriters. For each disk, IO completions and number of words transferred are counted; for typewrit-
ers collectively, the number of input and output characters are counted. Also, each sixtieth of a second, the state of each disk is exam-
ined and a tally is made if the disk is active. The tally goes into one of four categories, depending on whether the system is executing
in user mode, in `nice' (background) user mode, in system mode, or idle. From all these numbers and from the known transfer rates of the
devices it is possible to determine information such as the degree of IO overlap and average seek times for each device.
The optional interval argument causes iostat to report once each interval seconds. The first report is for all time since a reboot and
each subsequent report is for the last interval only.
The optional count argument restricts the number of reports.
With no option argument iostat reports for each disk the number of transfers per minute, the milliseconds per average seek, and the mil-
liseconds per data transfer exclusive of seek time. It also gives the percentage of time the system has spend in each of the four cate-
gories mentioned above.
The following options are available:
-t Report the number of characters of terminal IO per second as well.
-i Report the percentage of time spend in each of the four categories mentioned above, the percentage of time each disk was active
(seeking or transferring), the percentage of time any disk was active, and the percentage of time spent in `IO wait:' idle, but with
a disk active.
-s Report the raw timing information: 32 numbers indicating the percentage of time spent in each of the possible configurations of 4
system states and 8 IO states (3 disks each active or not).
-b Report on the usage of IO buffers.
FILES
/dev/mem, /unix
IOSTAT(1M)