Recently our FreeBSD 7.1 i386 system became very sluggish.
Nothing much is happening over there & whatever is running takes eternity to complete.
All the troubleshooting hinted towards a very high nice percentage.
Can that be the culprit?
Pasting snippets of top command, please advice whether it's a cause of concern & what are the possible remedies. Idle percentage mentions 0.
Thanks for the support.
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 04-07-2014 at 03:17 AM..
Reason: code tags
Hi,
I've got some CPU bottleneck on a HP-UX 11 server : i didn't
understand it until i discover i've got an unusual high percentage
of NICE% CPU regarding my DBRMS process (Sybase 12.x).
How do i have to understand it and how to resolve it ?
Thx. (0 Replies)
Hi I want to implement the nice command in the shell that I am building. I came to know that there is a corresponding nice() system call for the same. But since I will be forking different processes to run different commands typed on the command prompt, is there any way I can make a command... (2 Replies)
hello everybody:
I have some job running on tru64 system and Im the root, due to limited resources I end up with my job ( vdump) for example taking the lowest share, I researched the nice command on the net, but couldnt get enough info, can I use it to already running process or I only use it... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have two identical 12 CPU HPUX machines, and I run the same processes on each that load the boxes fully.
top on one reports activity under the NICE (19%) and SYS (18%) columns, while top on the other reports 0% NICE and 16% SYS. What would cause NICE to be zero on one machine and not... (5 Replies)
Hi, new here and need some help. Sometimes my site is extremely slow, if when there aren't too many people on, whereas when there are over 300 online members the site may be very fast. We use CentOS, PHP 5.26. The server has 4GB and Plesk usually shows about 2 or 3 GB free.
I believe I can see... (4 Replies)
Hello,
Some guy said to me that using the nice command to decrease the priority of a process is a myth, that the operating system corrects the priorities as the processes need cpu. Is this true? (4 Replies)
Hello folks,
I am searching for pattern, after that i want its presenece on top to bottom basis, like
cat abcd.txt |grep "123"|awk {'print $3'} |sort|uniq -c
it show result like
10 1.1.1.1
1 1.1.1.1
15 1.1.1.1
100 1.1.1.1
but i want to see this like
100 1.1.1.1
15 1.1.1.44
10... (3 Replies)
Running 2 VM Guests on an HPUX Integrity Server. One Guest runs great, the other is always at a high NICE value and 0% idle as shown in TOP:
What do you think should be tuned to bring down the NICE and increase IDLE %? Thanks in advance
-hpuxadmin
slow VM GUEST
Load averages: 2.56,... (5 Replies)
Dear Friends,
I have a directory when i take du of that directory it takes alot of memory and cpu and I/O, i want to use nice to run my script that have du command slowly so it won't take I/O and cpu, please suggest. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: learnbash
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
mpstat
MPSTAT(1) Linux User's Manual MPSTAT(1)NAME
mpstat - Report processors related statistics.
SYNOPSIS
mpstat [ -P { cpu | ALL } ] [ -V ] [ interval [ count ] ]
DESCRIPTION
The mpstat command writes to standard output activities for each available processor, processor 0 being the first one. Global average
activities among all processors are also reported. The mpstat command can be used both on SMP and UP machines, but in the latter, only
global average activities will be printed.
The interval parameter specifies the amount of time in seconds between each report. A value of 0 indicates that processors statistics are
to be reported for the time since system startup (boot). The count parameter can be specified in conjunction with the interval parameter
if this one is not set to zero. The value of count determines the number of reports generated at interval seconds apart. If the interval
parameter is specified without the count parameter, the mpstat command generates reports continuously.
REPORTS
The report generated by the mpstat command has the following format:
CPU
Processor number. The keyword all indicates that statistics are calculated as averages among all processors.
%user
Show the percentage of CPU utilization that occurred while executing at the user level (application).
%nice
Show the percentage of CPU utilization that occurred while executing at the user level with nice priority.
%system
Show the percentage of CPU utilization that occurred while executing at the system level (kernel).
%idle
Show the percentage of time that the CPU or CPUs were idle.
intr/s
Show the total number of interrupts received per second by the CPU or CPUs.
OPTIONS -P cpu | ALL
Indicate the processor number for which statistics are to be reported. cpu is the processor number. Note that processor 0 is the
first processor. The ALL keyword indicates that statistics are to be reported for all processors.
-V Print version number and usage then exit.
ENVIRONMENT
The mpstat command takes into account the following environment variable:
S_TIME_FORMAT
If this variable exists and its value is ISO then the current locale will be ignored when printing the date in the report header.
The mpstat command will use the ISO format (YYYY-MM-DD) instead.
EXAMPLES
mpstat 2 5
Display five reports of global statistics among all processors at two second intervals.
mpstat -P ALL 2 5
Display five reports of statistics for all processors at two second intervals.
BUGS
/proc filesystem must be mounted for the mpstat command to work.
Only a few activities are supplied by the Linux kernel for each processor.
FILES
/proc contains various files with system statistics.
AUTHOR
Sebastien Godard <sebastien.godard@wanadoo.fr>
SEE ALSO sar(1), sadc(8), sa1(8), sa2(8), iostat(1), vmstat(8)
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/sebastien.godard/
Linux MAY 2000 MPSTAT(1)