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Full Discussion: Svhptdaemon
Operating Systems HP-UX Svhptdaemon Post 302989019 by bbbngowc on Friday 6th of January 2017 10:04:24 AM
Old 01-06-2017
Thanks "jim mcnamara" and "MadeInGermany" for the responses.

The service PID is 28 and the PPID is 0.

I had checked syslog but nothing related to that specific process was in the log file.

both SAR and vmstat shows about 50% usage for sys:

Code:
10:11:27    %usr    %sys    %wio   %idle
10:11:28       0      50       0      50
10:11:29       0      50       0      50
10:11:30       0      50       0      50
10:11:31       0      51       2      47

Code:
         procs           memory                   page                              faults       cpu
    r     b     w      avm    free   re   at    pi   po    fr   de    sr     in     sy    cs  us sy id
    2     1     0   127867  5713748    0    0     4    0     0    0     0    394    849    51   0 50 50
    2     1     0   127867  5713663    0    0     1    0     0    0     0    457    850    49   0 50 50
    2     1     0   127867  5713663    0    0     0    0     0    0     0    449    697    49   0 50 50

 
GETDELAYS(1)						      General Commands Manual						      GETDELAYS(1)

NAME
getdelays -- Display delay statistics SYNOPSIS
getdelays -c command getdelays -p pid getdelays -t tid DESCRIPTION
The getdelays utility helps pin-point possible resource shortages when running an application. The SLES10 kernel includes patches to imple- ment delay accounting, which measures the time a process spends waiting for disk I/O, swap I/O and CPU time slices. For example, if an application is running rather slowly, delay accounting can tell you where it spends all its time. For instance, when the CPU delay is high, this means the application is competing with other proces for run time, but is losing quite often. High memory delays mean that the sum of applications running on this system need more physical memory than is available, and are swapping quite a lot. In order to enable delay accounting, you need to specify delayacct on the kernel command line when booting the system. Getdelays has three modes of operation: getdelays -c command This will invoke command and print a summary of delay statistics when the command finishes. getdelays -p pid This will print the current delay statistics of the process identified pid. getdelays -t tid This will print the current delay statistics of the thread group identified tid. AUTHOR
Balbir Singh, IBM Corp. Shailabh Nagar, IBM Corp. Manpage contributed by Olaf Kirch <okir@suse.de> April 13, 2006 GETDELAYS(1)
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