09-14-2018
It looks to me that you want to be able to measure performance, probably by transaction request/return times. Documentum originally worked on files of almost any kind. So your asking for "file" times is confusing everyone. They think you mean UNIX file access times. I am guessing this is sort of a communication breakdown here
Documentum seemed like Ingres (or Oracle) for any kind of digital object - files, metafiles, metadata. To me anyway. If this helps people to answer the question.
I do not know anything much about Documentum now. What performance monitoring tools come with the product? Use them to generate data. We can help you organize and use that data to answer the requirements.
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PMC(1) BSD General Commands Manual PMC(1)
NAME
pmc -- performance-monitoring counter interface for command execution
SYNOPSIS
pmc -h
pmc -C
pmc -c event command [options ...]
DESCRIPTION
pmc is a means of using a processor's performance-monitoring counter (PMC) facility to measure various aspects of a program's execution. It
is meant to be used in a fashion similar to time(1).
The arguments are as follows:
-h Display a list of performance counter events available on the system.
-C Cancel any performance counters that are currently running.
-c event
Count the event specified by event while running the command.
DIAGNOSTICS
PMC support is not compiled into the kernel Performance-monitoring counter support has not been compiled into the kernel. It may be
included using the PERFCTRS option. See options(4) for details.
PMC counters are not supported by CPU Performance-monitoring counters are not available for the CPU.
SEE ALSO
time(1), options(4)
HISTORY
The pmc command first appeared in NetBSD 1.6.
AUTHORS
The pmc command was written by Frank van der Linden <fvdl@wasabisystems.com>. The kernel support for reading performance counters on the
i386 architecture was written by
Jason R. Thorpe <thorpej@zembu.com>.
BUGS
The pmc command currently only supports performance-monitoring counters on the i386 architecture.
BSD
October 24, 2000 BSD