Hi All,
i tried sar command the output appears to be for several days
I would like to just see today's SAR output: Please advice me.
$sar
Linux 2.6.9-67.ELsmp (lrtp50) 02/28/09
00:00:01 CPU %user %nice %system %iowait %idle
00:05:02 all 3.10... (4 Replies)
Hi,
We have 2 scripts below for reporting sar output which are pretty same.
In first script i want to add to the program whatever is given in the comments.
In second script I want to use while true to run this program every hour and everything that is in comment.
Finally I want to club... (0 Replies)
Hi,
Anyone knows how to extract sar command output to excel or Is there any free grapical tools to extract this sar log file. thanks, regards (2 Replies)
I was reviewing yesterday's sar file and came across this strange output! What in the world? Any reason why there's output like that?
SunOS unixbox 5.10 Generic_144488-07 sun4v sparc SUNW,T5240 Solaris
00:00:58 device %busy avque r+w/s blks/s avwait avserv
11:20:01 ... (4 Replies)
Can someone explain the correlation between how sar names the disk drives and how the rest of the OS names the disk drives?
sar lists my disk drives as sd0, sd1, sd2, etc.....
while format lists my disk drives as c1t0d0, c1t1d0, c1t2d0,etc...
And also why sar shows 8 disks but format... (2 Replies)
We're experiencing some intermittent freezes on one of our systems and I'm trying to figure out what is happening.
We're running Solaris 10 zones mounting shares from netapp through nfs.
On the zone that freezes we have sar running and are getting this output:
SunOS prodserver 5.10... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jyda
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
kbdrate
KBDRATE(8) Linux Programmer's Manual KBDRATE(8)NAME
kbdrate - reset the keyboard repeat rate and delay time
SYNOPSIS
kbdrate [ -s ] [ -r rate ] [ -d delay ]
DESCRIPTION
kbdrate is used to change the keyboard repeat rate and delay time. The delay is the amount of time that a key must be depressed before it
will start to repeat.
Using kbdrate without any options will reset the repeat rate to 10.9 characters per second (cps) and the delay to 250 milliseconds (ms) for
Intel- and M68K-based systems. These are the IBM defaults. On SPARC-based systems it will reset the repeat rate to 20 cps and the delay to
200 ms.
OPTIONS -s Silent. No messages are printed.
-r rate
Change the keyboard repeat rate to rate cps. For Intel-based systems, the allowable range is from 2.0 to 30.0 cps. Only certain,
specific values are possible, and the program will select the nearest possible value to the one specified. The possible values are
given, in characters per second, as follows: 2.0, 2.1, 2.3, 2.5, 2.7, 3.0, 3.3, 3.7, 4.0, 4.3, 4.6, 5.0, 5.5, 6.0, 6.7, 7.5, 8.0,
8.6, 9.2, 10.0, 10.9, 12.0, 13.3, 15.0, 16.0, 17.1, 18.5, 20.0, 21.8, 24.0, 26.7, 30.0. For SPARC-based systems, the allowable
range is from 0 (no repeat) to 50 cps.
-d delay
Change the delay to delay milliseconds. For Intel-based systems, the allowable range is from 250 to 1000 ms, in 250 ms steps. For
SPARC systems, possible values are between 10 ms and 1440 ms, in 10 ms steps.
-V Display a version number and exit.
BUGS
Not all keyboards support all rates.
Not all keyboards have the rates mapped in the same way.
Setting the repeat rate on the Gateway AnyKey keyboard does not work. If someone with a Gateway figures out how to program the keyboard,
please send mail to util-linux@math.uio.no.
All this is very architecture dependent. Nowadays kbdrate first tries the KDKBDREP and KIOCSRATE ioctls. (The former usually works on an
m68k machine, the latter for SPARC.) When these ioctls fail an ioport interface as on i386 is assumed.
FILES
/etc/rc.local
/dev/port
/dev/kbd
Linux 1.1.19 22 June 1994 KBDRATE(8)