Sponsored Content
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

 
FORK(2) 							System Calls Manual							   FORK(2)

NAME
fork - spawn new process SYNOPSIS
fork( ) DESCRIPTION
Fork is the only way new processes are created. The new process's core image is a copy of that of the caller of fork. The only distinc- tion is the fact that the value returned in the old (parent) process contains the process ID of the new (child) process, while the value returned in the child is 0. Process ID's range from 1 to 30,000. This process ID is used by wait(2). Files open before the fork are shared, and have a common read-write pointer. In particular, this is the way that standard input and output files are passed and also how pipes are set up. SEE ALSO
wait(2), exec(2) DIAGNOSTICS
Returns -1 and fails to create a process if: there is inadequate swap space, the user is not super-user and has too many processes, or the system's process table is full. Only the super-user can take the last process-table slot. ASSEMBLER
(fork = 2.) sys fork (new process return) (old process return, new process ID in r0) The return locations in the old and new process differ by one word. The C-bit is set in the old process if a new process could not be cre- ated. FORK(2)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:47 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy