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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Performance Monitoring - RHEL 7.4 Post 303021902 by Overcast451 on Monday 20th of August 2018 09:41:00 AM
Old 08-20-2018
Performance Monitoring - RHEL 7.4

Have a question about doing some performance monitoring - how to approach it.

This is on RHEL 7.4

We are moving a rather large application to new hardware in the future. I would like to find a way to compared performance on the new hardware at different stages and at different times.

I'm familiar with the basic tools, such as top - and I've found an app called 'stress' that can be used to put various loads on the system.

But I am wanting to make a comparison on how the performance varies or does not vary after things like: Firmware upgrades, App installs, etc.

Any suggestions on a method/process or tool maybe that can assist with this? I can cap out the loads with 'stress' but I'm not sure what that will tell me. My first thought was to run the app with a certain set of parameters and then compare future runs using the same set of parameters. I would need or like it to be able to log results at set intervals via cron or something similar.

But looking for suggestions Smilie

Thanks!

Last edited by Overcast451; 08-20-2018 at 10:42 AM.. Reason: Updating Subject with more detail
 

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Plack::App::CGIBin(3pm) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Plack::App::CGIBin(3pm)

NAME
Plack::App::CGIBin - cgi-bin replacement for Plack servers SYNOPSIS
use Plack::App::CGIBin; use Plack::Builder; my $app = Plack::App::CGIBin->new(root => "/path/to/cgi-bin")->to_app; builder { mount "/cgi-bin" => $app; }; # Or from the command line plackup -MPlack::App::CGIBin -e 'Plack::App::CGIBin->new(root => "/path/to/cgi-bin")->to_app' DESCRIPTION
Plack::App::CGIBin allows you to load CGI scripts from a directory and convert them into a PSGI application. This would give you the extreme easiness when you have bunch of old CGI scripts that is loaded using cgi-bin of Apache web server. HOW IT WORKS
This application checks if a given file path is a perl script and if so, uses CGI::Compile to compile a CGI script into a sub (like ModPerl::Registry) and then run it as a persistent application using CGI::Emulate::PSGI. If the given file is not a perl script, it executes the script just like a normal CGI script with fork & exec. This is like a normal web server mode and no performance benefit is achieved. The default mechanism to determine if a given file is a Perl script is as follows: o Check if the filename ends with ".pl". If yes, it is a Perl script. o Open the file and see if the shebang (first line of the file) contains the word "perl" (like "#!/usr/bin/perl"). If yes, it is a Perl script. You can customize this behavior by passing "exec_cb" callback, which takes a file path to its first argument. For example, if your perl-based CGI script uses lots of global variables and such and are not ready to run on a persistent environment, you can do: my $app = Plack::App::CGIBin->new( root => "/path/to/cgi-bin", exec_cb => sub { 1 }, )->to_app; to always force the execute option for any files. AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa SEE ALSO
Plack::App::File CGI::Emulate::PSGI CGI::Compile Plack::App::WrapCGI See also Plack::App::WrapCGI if you compile one CGI script into a PSGI application without serving CGI scripts from a directory, to remove overhead of filesystem lookups, etc. perl v5.14.2 2011-11-02 Plack::App::CGIBin(3pm)
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