Jim is correct, most probably the size of the SGA is wrong for the amount of memory the system has.
Furthermore, depending on the OS version, you might look at the vmo parameters. Issue a
and check "minperm", "maxperm" and "maxclient". The "revolutions of the clock hand" (see vmstat -vs) being 0 suggest that even though a lot of paging goes on there is no real shortage on memory. The value counts how often the lrud (last recently used-daemon) has gone throught the complete memory to find pages it needs for applications.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
Since this is AIX I do not know the command analogous to ipcs found every where else.
The command is "ipcs", like everywhere else. "ipcs -m" will show the shared-memory-segments.
Hello,
I need explanations about physical disks and physical volumes. What is the difference between these 2 things?
In fact, i am trying to understand what the AIX lspv2command does.
Thank you in advance. (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a pair of sun ultra 5_10 with SunOS 5.5.1.
Both are almost equally patched and set up with simillar applications.
host# uname -a
SunOS host 5.5.1 Generic_103640-24 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-5_10
Even though both have
same amount of RAM ( 512 Mb ) ,
... (1 Reply)
I was in smit, checking on disc space, etc. and it appears that one of our physical volumes that is part of a large volume group, has no free physical partitions. The server is running AIX 5.1. What would be the advisable step to take in this instance? (9 Replies)
What is amount of free RAM i have now?
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 1010 963 46 0 215 256
-/+ buffers/cache: 491 518
Swap: 1983 0 1983
Above is the output of... (1 Reply)
We have Sun OS running on spark :
SunOS ciniwnpr67 5.10 Generic_118833-24 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V440
Having Physical RAM :
Sol10box # prtconf | grep Mem
Memory size: 8192 Megabytes
My Top Output is :
130 processes: 129 sleeping, 1 on cpu
CPU states: 98.8% idle, 0.2% user, 1.0%... (27 Replies)
Hello All,
Can anybody please tell me what is the maximum limit of Physical IBM Power Machine which can be handled by single HMC at a single point of time?
Thanks,
Jenish (1 Reply)
After a memory upgrade all network interfaces are misconfigued. How do i resolve this issue. Below are some out puts.thanks.
ifconfig: plumb: SIOCLIFADDIF: eg000g0:2: no such interface
# ifconfig eg1000g0:2 plumb
ifconfig: plumb: SIOCLIFADDIF: eg1000g0:2: no such interface
# ifconfig... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to unix. I am working on Red Hat Linux and side by side on AIX also. After reading the concepts of Storage, I am now really confused regarding the terminologies
1)Physical Volume
2)Volume Group
3)Logical Volume
4)Physical Partition
Please help me to understand these concepts. (6 Replies)
Hi,
When I run the free command on solaris, I get the following:
"Memory: 60G phys mem, 69G free mem"
Q: how cna the free mem be higher then the physical mem?:confused:
Amit (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: amitlib
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
vmstat
vmstat(1) General Commands Manual vmstat(1)Name
vmstat - report virtual memory statistics
Syntax
vmstat [ interval [ count ] ]
vmstat -v [ interval [ count ] ]
vmstat -fKSsz
vmstat -Kks namelist [ corefile ]
Description
The command reports statistics on processes, virtual memory, disk, trap, and cpu activity.
If is specified without arguments, this command summarizes the virtual memory activity since the system was last booted. If the interval
argument is specified, then successive lines are summaries of activity over the last interval seconds. Because many statistics are sampled
in the system every five seconds, five is a good specification for interval; other statistics vary every second. If the count argument is
provided, the statistics are repeated count times.
When you run the format fields are as follows:
Procs: information about numbers of processes in various states.
r in run queue
b blocked for resources (i/o, paging, and so on.)
w runnable or short sleeper (< 20 seconds) but swapped
faults: trap/interrupt rate averages per second over the last 5 seconds.
in (non clock) device interrupts per second
sy system calls per second
cs cpu context switch rate (switches/second)
cpu: breakdown of percentage usage of cpu time
us user time for normal and low priority processes
sy system time
id cpu idle time
Memory: information about the use of virtual and real memory. Virtual pages are considered active if they belong to processes which are
running or have run in the last 20 seconds.
avm active virtual pages
fre size of the free list
Pages are reported in units of 1024 bytes.
If the number of pages exceeds 9999, it is shown in a scaled representation. The suffix k indicates multiplication by 1000 and the suffix
m indicates multiplication by 1000000. For example, the value 12345 appears as 12k.
page: information about page faults and paging activity. These are averaged every five seconds, and given in units per second. The size
of a unit is always 1024 bytes and is independent of the actual page size on a machine.
re page reclaims (simulating reference bits)
at pages attached (found in free list not swapdev or filesystem)
pi pages paged in
po pages paged out
fr pages freed per second
de anticipated short term memory shortfall
sr pages scanned by clock algorithm, per-second
disk: s0, s1 ...sn: Paging/swapping disk sector transfers per second (this field is system dependent). Typically paging is split across
several of the available drives. This will print for each paging/swapping device configured into the kernel.
Options-f Provides reports on the number of forks and vforks since system startup and the number of pages of virtual memory involved in each
kind of fork.
-K Displays usage statistics of the kernel memory allocator.
-k Allows a dump to be interrogated to print the contents of the sum structure when specified with a namelist and corefile. This is
the default.
-S Replaces the page reclaim (re) and pages attached (at) fields with processes swapped in (si) and processes swapped out (so).
-s Prints the contents of the sum structure, giving the total number of several kinds of paging related events that have occurred since
boot.
-v Prints an expanded form of the virtual memory statistics.
-z Zeroes out the sum structure if the UID indicates root privilege.
Examples
The following command prints what the system is doing every five seconds:
vmstat 5
To find the status after a core dump use the following:
cd /usr/adm/crash
vmstat -k vmunix.? vmcore.?
Files
Kernel memory
System namelist
vmstat(1)