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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Nearly Random, Uncorrelated Server Load Average Spikes Post 303044124 by vbe on Friday 14th of February 2020 09:13:14 AM
Old 02-14-2020
This reminds me a strange issue we had going for months before I managed to prove it was Patrol related...
I never liked BMC Patrol as for me expensive and big CPU Hog... compared to much better vendors such as sysload...
What happened is that periodically something that should not happen does: all the Patrol system, Oracle etc requests fall at the same time... Could be the same here 2-3 bots with requests you see you believe innocent so dont bother when fall together can put high load... I would not make a fuss if it does not last long, but remember it can happen it could fall on a moment when the box is running at 100% and then its not quite the same
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vwait(n)						       Tcl Built-In Commands							  vwait(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
vwait - Process events until a variable is written SYNOPSIS
vwait varName _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
This command enters the Tcl event loop to process events, blocking the application if no events are ready. It continues processing events until some event handler sets the value of variable varName. Once varName has been set, the vwait command will return as soon as the event handler that modified varName completes. varName must be globally scoped (either with a call to global for the varName, or with the full namespace path specification). In some cases the vwait command may not return immediately after varName is set. This can happen if the event handler that sets varName does not complete immediately. For example, if an event handler sets varName and then itself calls vwait to wait for a different variable, then it may not return for a long time. During this time the top-level vwait is blocked waiting for the event handler to complete, so it cannot return either. EXAMPLES
Run the event-loop continually until some event calls exit. (You can use any variable not mentioned elsewhere, but the name forever reminds you at a glance of the intent.) vwait forever Wait five seconds for a connection to a server socket, otherwise close the socket and continue running the script: # Initialise the state after 5000 set state timeout set server [socket -server accept 12345] proc accept {args} { global state connectionInfo set state accepted set connectionInfo $args } # Wait for something to happen vwait state # Clean up events that could have happened close $server after cancel set state timeout # Do something based on how the vwait finished... switch $state { timeout { puts "no connection on port 12345" } accepted { puts "connection: $connectionInfo" puts [lindex $connectionInfo 0] "Hello there!" } } SEE ALSO
global(n), update(n) KEYWORDS
event, variable, wait Tcl 8.0 vwait(n)
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