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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Performance Monitoring - RHEL 7.4 Post 303021905 by stomp on Monday 20th of August 2018 10:20:10 AM
Old 08-20-2018
Hi,


I suggest you to get some monitoring tool which collects alle the performance data you need. There are several out there, commercial and open source alike:

  • check_mk (easy to set up with most features available in the free version)
  • icinga 2 (fully open source, can handle large infrastructures very good, designed to be able to integrated with any other open source component, needs its time to set it up)
  • Munin (OSS single host multi data performance monitoring)
I'm a check_mk(Infrastructure & Application Monitoring | Check_MK) user(i use the free version for about 8000 single services) and I like it very much, because there's some magic already built-in: Discover several basic performance values automatically and if additional tools are installed, it automatically uses them. (Temperature sensors, cpu load, cpu usage, memory usage, hard disk i/o, network i/o, network errors, hard disk smart data(needs to be enabled)).

In default mode it creates graphs which are configured for highest granularity for the last minutes and shows overall performance development over long time ranges.

Here is a standard graph for filesystem usage trend, growth/shrink and inodes usage:

https://webmail.megabert.de//data/ha...row_inodes.png

The webinterface has a pleasant user experience.


Look here for a live demo:

Demoserver | Check_MK

Last edited by stomp; 08-20-2018 at 11:31 AM..
 

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PMCCONTROL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     PMCCONTROL(8)

NAME
pmccontrol -- control hardware performance monitoring counters SYNOPSIS
pmccontrol [-c cpu | -d pmc | -e pmc] ... pmccontrol -l pmccontrol -L pmccontrol -s DESCRIPTION
The pmccontrol utility controls the operation of the system's hardware performance monitoring counters. OPTIONS
The pmccontrol utility processes options in command line order, so later options modify the effect of earlier ones. The following options are available: -c cpu Subsequent enable and disable options affect the CPU denoted by argument cpu. The argument cpu is a number denoting a CPU in the system, or ``*'', denoting all unhalted CPUs in the system. -d pmc Disable PMC number pmc on the CPU specified by -c, preventing it from being used till subsequently re-enabled. The argument pmc is a number denoting a specific PMC, or ``*'' denoting all the PMCs on the specified CPU. Only idle PMCs may be disabled. -e pmc Enable PMC number pmc, on the CPU specified by -c, allowing it to be used in the future. The argument pmc is a number denoting a specific PMC, or ``*'' denoting all the PMCs on the specified CPU. If PMC pmc is already enabled, this option has no effect. -l List available hardware performance counters and their current disposition. -L List available hardware performance counter classes and their supported event names. -s Print driver statistics maintained by hwpmc(4). EXAMPLES
To disable all PMCs on all CPUs, use the command: pmccontrol -d* To enable all PMCs on all CPUs, use: pmccontrol -e* To disable PMCs 0 and 1 on CPU 2, use: pmccontrol -c2 -d0 -d1 To disable PMC 0 of CPU 0 only, and enable all other PMCS on all other CPUs, use: pmccontrol -c* -e* -c0 -d0 DIAGNOSTICS
The pmccontrol utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
pmc(3), pmclog(3), hwpmc(4), pmcstat(8), sysctl(8) HISTORY
The pmccontrol utility first appeared in FreeBSD 6.0. AUTHORS
Joseph Koshy <jkoshy@FreeBSD.org> BSD
November 9, 2008 BSD
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