asvc_t above 25 ms for a disk is high: consider a faster disk,
or (better) try to optimize your application!
Or add RAM in case there is paging activity with
For nfs devices an asvc_t above 100ms is still okay.
Hi all, hope you are having a nice day, its nice and warm today in Canberra Australia.
iostat -e / -E reports soft and hard errors. Any idea what these are exactly? All I hear are I/O's failing and needing to retry, but no cause as to why they fail.
My SUN guru tells me its our EMC SAN... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
i have run iostat -em, and get below result. Can i know what is this output meaning, and how to fix that problem.
iostat -em
---- errors ---
device s/w h/w trn tot
sd7 0 1 0 1
sd8 1 1 0 2
sd9 0 1 0 1
sd10 0 ... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I got a request from a client to check on their server's cpu, memory and disk utilization. Am planning to use the sar and iostat commands to achieve this. The server is used for sending and receiving messages between the stockbrokers, so I was thinking to run the commands during the market... (9 Replies)
So I use Cacti for monitoring IO statistics on my servers, now originally I couldnt monitor Multipath deviced servers as they have alot of /dev/sdxx and /dev/emcpowerxx, I have devised a method of trimming them down to just the actual devices but the issue is the output looks like so.
# iostat... (0 Replies)
Friends,
I have to run iostat -d on my AIX machine and print the sum of the output in tps column per iteration. can any one pls guide me how to do this using awk. here is the sample output
iostat -d 2 2 | awk '!/System/ && !/Disks/ && !/cd/ && !/^$/ {print $4}'
2.0
3.0
1.0
3.0... (1 Reply)
Friends,
.
On linux i have to run iostat command and in each iteration have to print the greatest value in each column.
e.g
iostat -dt -kx 2 2 | awk ' !/sd/ &&!/%util/ && !/Time/ && !/Linux/ {print $12}'
4.38
0.00
0.00
0.00
What i would like to print is only the... (3 Replies)
Friends,
Need some help.
On linux i have to run iostat command and in each iteration have to print the greatest value in each column.
e.g
iostat -dt -kx 2 2 | awk ' !/sd/ &&!/%util/ && !/Time/ && !/Linux/ {print $12}'
4.38
0.00
0.00
0.00
WHhat i would like to... (15 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I've been having some arguments with my colleagues about one thing. Always my thought was that as as far as disk performance is concern by looking at the output of the iostat command (AIX) you would be able to identify if you have a hot disk and then by moving some files out that disk... (3 Replies)
My scheduled collection of statistics is giving very large output because of an high number of ssd device not associated to any disk
The iostat -x command is collecting statistics from them and the output is very large.
I.g.
if a run
iostat -x|tail +3|awk '{print $1}'>f0.txt.$$
iostat... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I got the code below is one of the threads from this forum.
lineCount=$(iostat | wc -l)
numDevices=$(expr $lineCount - 7);
iostat $interval -x -t |
awk -v awkCpuFile=$cpuFile -v awkDeviceFile=$deviceFile -v awkNumDevices=$numDevices '
BEGIN {
print... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gopivallabha
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
iostat
iostat(1) General Commands Manual iostat(1)NAME
iostat - Reports I/O statistics
SYNOPSIS
iostat [drive...] [interval] [count]
OPERANDS
Forces iostat to display specific drives. If drive is not specified (or the specified drive does not exist on the system or cluster,
iostat displays the first two drives (even if more than two disk drives are configured in the system). Causes iostat to report once each
interval seconds. The first report is for all time since the system was last booted, and each subsequent report is for the last interval
only.The value must not be 0. Specifies the number of reports. For example, iostat 1 10 would produce 10 reports at 1-second intervals.
You cannot specify count without interval because the first numeric argument to iostat is assumed to be interval.
DESCRIPTION
The iostat command reports the following information: For terminals (collectively), the number of characters read and written per second.
For each disk, the number of transfers per second and bytes transferred per second (in kilobytes). For the system, the percentage of time
the system has spent in user mode, in user mode running low priority (nice) processes, in system mode, and idling.
To compute this information, iostat counts data transfer completions, the number of words transferred for each disk, and the collective
number of input and output characters for terminals. Also, each sixtieth of a second, iostat examines the state of each disk and makes a
tally if the disk is active.
When you issue an iostat command on a cluster member, it displays statistics only for those disks that are local to the member and that
member's usage of those shared disks that it has mounted. It displays 0 for other disks in the cluster (those it doesn't have mounted),
regardless of whether they are on the shared bus or are local to some other member.
EXAMPLES
The output from this example displays cpu, terminal, and disk statistics for the first two disks on the system providing 5 reports at 1
second intervals:
# iostat 1 5
tty floppy1 dsk9 cpu
tin tout bps tps bps tps us ni sy id
0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 95
4 58 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 97
1 53 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 98
5 59 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 98
6 60 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 97
The second example specifies device names in the command:
# iostat dsk2 dsk3 cdrom2
tty dsk2 cdrom2 dsk3 cpu
tin tout bps tps bps tps bps tps us ni sy id
0 13 11 5 5 2 2427 1213 0 1 1 98
SEE ALSO Commands:vmstat(1)iostat(1)