I understand the numbers displayed in variable "load average". My question: what are the correct/ideal numbers?
Sometimes, I got less than 1. Others, above 6.
Also, what HW/SW should I tune in order to have the ideal numbers?
Thank you ... (1 Reply)
hi guys,
i am having a dual cpu xeon machine.
i came to know that i can view the performance by giving top command.
but top command shows only the usage of one cpu in percentage
while the process are using more than 100% usage in the list .
can i know separately the usage of cpus.
can you... (5 Replies)
Is there a command in SCO Unix that does the same as the top command in HPUX. The command displays the jobs using the most system resources.
Thanks You (0 Replies)
Hey,
Using one single line of command i am trying to show the CPU usage for 4 processors and then filter it out and write it to a text file. Everything seams ok except that i am not able to switch from having the top command show me all CPU processes seperate opposed to showing me the average of... (0 Replies)
Hey,
Using one single line of command i am trying to show the CPU usage for 4 processors and then filter it out and write it to a text file. Everything seams ok except that i am not able to switch from having the top command show me all CPU processes seperate opposed to showing me the average of... (8 Replies)
Hi ,
can some one please assist me in using top command
im facing following after using top:
# top -hv
UX:sh (top): ERROR: top: syntax error at line 1: `(' unexpected
# top -p
UX:sh (top): ERROR: top: syntax error at line 1: `(' unexpected
thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I found like top command could be used to find the Memory and CPU utilization. But i want to know how to find the Memory and CPU utilization for a particular user using top command.
Thanks in advance.
Thanks,
Ananthi.U (2 Replies)
Currently when i run top command i get the following columns .
CPU TTY PID USERNAME PRI NI SIZE RES STATE TIME %WCPU %CPU COMMAND
In this how to remove '%WCPU' column ?
Thanks very much in advance . (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: kpravinraj
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
vtysh
VTYSH(1) Version 0.96.5 VTYSH(1)NAME
vtysh - a integrated shell for Quagga routing software
SYNOPSIS
vtysh [ -b ]
vtysh [ -E ] [ -d daemon ] ] [ -c command ]
DESCRIPTION
vtysh is a integrated shell for Quagga routing engine.
OPTIONS
Options available for the vtysh command:
-b, --boot
Execute boot startup configuration. It makes sense only if integrated config file is in use (not default in Quagga). See Info file
Quagga for more info.
-c, --command command
Specify command to be executed under batch mode. It behaves like -c option in any other shell - command is executed and vtysh exits.
It's useful for gathering info from Quagga routing software or reconfiguring daemons from inside shell scripts, etc. Note that mul-
tiple commands may be executed by using more than one -c option and/or embedding linefeed characters inside the command string.
-d, --daemon daemon_name
Specify which daemon to connect to. By default, vtysh attempts to connect to all Quagga daemons running on the system. With this
flag, one can specify a single daemon to connect to instead. For example, specifying '-d ospfd' will connect only to ospfd. This
can be particularly useful inside scripts with -c where the command is targeted for a single daemon.
-e, --execute command
Alias for -c. It's here only for compatibility with Zebra routing software and older Quagga versions. This will be removed in
future.
-E, --echo
When the -c option is being used, this flag will cause the standard vtysh prompt and command to be echoed prior to displaying the
results. This is particularly useful to separate the results when executing multiple commands.
-h, --help
Display a usage message on standard output and exit.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
VTYSH_PAGER
This should be the name of the pager to use. Default is more.
FILES
/usr/local/etc/vtysh.conf
The default location of the vtysh config file.
/usr/local/etc/Quagga.conf
The default location of the integrated Quagga routing engine config file if integrated config file is in use (not default).
WARNING
This man page is intended to be a quick reference for command line options. The definitive document is the Info file Quagga.
SEE ALSO bgpd(8), ripd(8), ripngd(8), ospfd(8), ospf6d(8), isisd(8), zebra(8)BUGS
vtysh eats bugs for breakfast. If you have food for the maintainers try http://bugzilla.quagga.net
AUTHORS
See http://www.zebra.org and http://www.quagga.net or the Info file for an accurate list of authors.
Quagga VTY shell 27 July 2006 VTYSH(1)