how would I list the high end of CPU utilization for the previous hours of the day. I don't need to know the averages. I'm wanting to know the high and low, etc. for what ever time interval that is avaliable?
Thank you. (2 Replies)
I wrote a very simple script that matches combinations of alphabetic characters (1-5). I want to use it to test CPU speeds of different hardware/platforms. The problem is that on multi-core/processor systems, only one CPU is being utilized to execute the script. Is there a way to change that?... (16 Replies)
Hey all,
dmidecode | grep -i CPU
Socket Designation: CPU 0
Version: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5530 @ 2.40GHz
Socket Designation: CPU 1
Version: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5530 @ 2.40GHz
cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep -i cpu
cpu family : 6... (24 Replies)
Hi folks,
I want to know how to run two unix programs on two different cpu cores on a 2-core or 4-core or 8-core CPU machine? Extending this how would i run four and eight unix programs on 4-core and 8-core machine respectively?
If this can be done, how to know which program is assigned to... (1 Reply)
Hi Gurus
Can someone help me in explaining the below outputs .
psrinfo -p
4
/usr/sbin/psrinfo -pv
The physical processor has 4 virtual processors (0-3)
SPARC64-VI (portid 1024 impl 0x6 ver 0x93 clock 2150 MHz)
The physical processor has 4 virtual processors (8-11)
SPARC64-VI... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to gather cpu core details and used this script - Solaris & Scripting: Script - Find cpu - model / type / count / core / thread / speed - Solaris Sparc
For auuditing purpose, we want to know how many cores are being used by Oracle, because oracle license will be charged on... (2 Replies)
hi unix expert
is there any program in terminal to show cpu and ram information? and usage of this?
Many thanks
samad (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: abdossamad2003
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
dappprof
dappprof(1m) USER COMMANDS dappprof(1m)NAME
dappprof - profile user and lib function usage. Uses DTrace.
SYNOPSIS
dappprof [-acehoTU] [-u lib] { -p PID | command }
DESCRIPTION
dappprof prints details on user and library call times for processes as a summary style aggragation. By default the user fuctions are
traced, options can be used to trace library activity. Output can include function counts, elapsed times and on cpu times.
The elapsed times are interesting, to help identify functions that take some time to complete (during which the process may have slept).
CPU time helps us identify syscalls that are consuming CPU cycles to run.
Since this uses DTrace, only users with root privileges can run this command.
OPTIONS -a print all data
-c print function counts
-e print elapsed times, ns
-o print CPU times, ns
-T print totals
-p PID examine this PID
-u lib trace this library instead
-U trace all library and user functions
EXAMPLES
run and examine the "df -h" command,
# dappprof df -h
print elapsed times, on-cpu times and counts for "df -h",
# dappprof -ceo df -h
print elapsed times for PID 1871,
# dappprof -p 1871
print all data for PID 1871,
# dappprof -ap 1871
FIELDS
CALL Function call name
ELAPSED
Total elapsed time, nanoseconds
CPU Total on-cpu time, nanoseconds
COUNT Number of occurrences
DOCUMENTATION
See the DTraceToolkit for further documentation under the Docs directory. The DTraceToolkit docs may include full worked examples with ver-
bose descriptions explaining the output.
EXIT
dappprof will sample until Ctrl-C is hit.
AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg [Sydney, Australia]
SEE ALSO dapptrace(1M), dtrace(1M), apptrace(1)version 1.10 May 14, 2005 dappprof(1m)