05-22-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by
MadeInGermany
Of course your usage text is better.
The original script is named "check_user_threads.sh" and that's what it did from the beginning. The procs measurement was added later, in a hurry, as Solaris servers with a proc limit (in /etc/system) showed up.
The usage message is sent to stdout on purpose, because stdout *must* go to the Nagios console. Not so with stderr. But maybe it works meanwhile.?
Hi MadeInGermany,
Thanks for the information. I'm just used to writing utilities that work directly on BSD, Linux, and UNX platforms where we all know what is supposed to happen and users know how to separate diagnostics from normal output. I hate using things like Nagios that think that diagnostic messages should be hidden from users (making it hard or impossible for those users to find out what went wrong when underlying utilities report problems)
Oh, well.
Cheers,
Don
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
hwloc-ps
HWLOC-PS(1) hwloc HWLOC-PS(1)
NAME
hwloc-ps - List currently-running processes that are bound.
SYNOPSIS
hwloc-ps [options]
OPTIONS
-a list all processes, even those that are not bound to any specific part of the machine.
-p --physical
report OS/physical indexes instead of logical indexes
-l --logical
report logical indexes instead of physical/OS indexes (default)
-c --cpuset
show process bindings as cpusets instead of objects.
--whole-system
Do not consider administration limitations.
DESCRIPTION
By default, hwloc-ps lists only those currently-running processes that are bound; it displays their their identifier, command-line and
binding. The binding may be reported as objects or cpusets. By default, process bindings are restricted to the currently available topol-
ogy. If some processes are bound to processors that are not available to the current process, they are ignored unless --whole-system is
given. The output is a plain list. If you wish to annotate the hierarchical topology with processes so as to see how they are actual dis-
tributed on the machine, you might want to use lstopo --ps instead (which also only shows processes that are bound).
The -a switch can be used to show all processes, if desired.
SEE ALSO
hwloc(7), lstopo(1), hwloc-calc(1), hwloc-distrib(1)
1.4.1 Feb 27, 2012 HWLOC-PS(1)