Quote:
Originally Posted by
agent.kgb
if you want to see them dead, try to change some parameters in the system ;-)
While this is very true - in fact, the "aio" stands for "Asynchronous I/O" and the processes are controlled by tuning parameters - it is most probably a bad idea to do so on a database system. If memory serves correctly Oracle always requested to have asynchronous I/o switched on during the installation and the performance of the db-writer process greatly suffered when it was switched off.
Anyways, the "aioserver" processes are definitely not reponsible for preventing the unmount of the filesystems, so it won't have any positive effect even if it succeeds (although this, given that they are kernel processes is highly unlikely).
The number, btw., of the main processes is dependent on the number of LCPUs the system has. I suppose your system has 8 CPUs configured and this is why you always see a minimum of 8 processes running.
I hope this helps understanding these processes.
bakunin