I have some old "cyberspace situational awareness" PHP code I used for a visualization project a few years ago, which captures and stores details information on web session activity; this code has proven handy identifying rouge bots in the past.
So, I have modified that code to capture and store detailed session information, including the number of hits per IP address, the user agent string, country code, etc. when the 1 minute load average is above 20 and less than 50.
So, let's see what happens the next time we get a spike... this should be interesting.
we have an unix system which has
load average normally about 20.
but while i am running a particular unix batch which performs heavy
operations on filesystem and database average load
reduces to 15.
how can we explain this situation?
while running that batch idle cpu time is about %60-65... (0 Replies)
Hello all, I have a question about load averages.
I've read the man pages for the uptime and w command for two or three different flavors of Unix (Red Hat, Tru64, Solaris). All of them agree that in the output of the 2 aforementioned commands, you are given the load average for the box, but... (3 Replies)
Hello, Here is the output of top command. My understanding here is,
the load average 0.03 in last 1 min, 0.02 is in last 5 min, 0.00 is in last 15 min.
By seeing this load average, When can we say that, the system load averge is too high?
When can we say that, load average is medium/low??... (8 Replies)
Hi,
i have installed solaris 10 on t-5120 sparc enterprise.
I am little surprised to see load average of 2 or around on this OS.
when checked with ps command following process is using highest CPU. looks like it is running for long time and does not want to stop, but I do not know... (5 Replies)
Hello AlL,..
I want from experts to help me as my load average is increased and i dont know where is the problem !!
this is my top result :
root@a4s # top
top - 11:30:38 up 40 min, 1 user, load average: 3.06, 2.49, 4.66
Mem: 8168788k total, 2889596k used, 5279192k free, 47792k... (3 Replies)
Hi ,
I am using 48 CPU sunOS server at my work.
The application has facility to check the current load average before starting a new process to control the load.
Right now it is configured as 48. So it does mean that each CPU can take maximum one proces and no processe is waiting.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am getting a high load average, around 7, once an hour. It last for about 4 minutes and makes things fairly unusable for this time.
How do I find out what is using this. Looking at top the only thing running at the time is md5sum.
I have looked at the crontab and there is nothing... (10 Replies)
Here we go....
Preface:
..... so in a galaxy far, far, far away from commercial, data sharing corporations.....
For this project, I used the ESP-WROOM-32 as an MQTT (publish / subscribe) client which receives Linux server "load averages" as messages published as MQTT pub/sub messages.... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
create_foreign_table
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE(7) PostgreSQL 9.2.7 Documentation CREATE FOREIGN TABLE(7)NAME
CREATE_FOREIGN_TABLE - define a new foreign table
SYNOPSIS
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] table_name ( [
{ column_name data_type [ OPTIONS ( option 'value' [, ... ] ) ] [ NULL | NOT NULL ] }
[, ... ]
] )
SERVER server_name
[ OPTIONS ( option 'value' [, ... ] ) ]
DESCRIPTION
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE will create a new foreign table in the current database. The table will be owned by the user issuing the command.
If a schema name is given (for example, CREATE FOREIGN TABLE myschema.mytable ...) then the table is created in the specified schema.
Otherwise it is created in the current schema. The name of the foreign table must be distinct from the name of any other foreign table,
table, sequence, index, or view in the same schema.
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE also automatically creates a data type that represents the composite type corresponding to one row of the foreign
table. Therefore, foreign tables cannot have the same name as any existing data type in the same schema.
To be able to create a table, you must have USAGE privilege on all column types.
PARAMETERS
IF NOT EXISTS
Do not throw an error if a relation with the same name already exists. A notice is issued in this case. Note that there is no guarantee
that the existing relation is anything like the one that would have been created.
table_name
The name (optionally schema-qualified) of the table to be created.
column_name
The name of a column to be created in the new table.
data_type
The data type of the column. This can include array specifiers. For more information on the data types supported by PostgreSQL, refer
to Chapter 8, Data Types, in the documentation.
NOT NULL
The column is not allowed to contain null values.
NULL
The column is allowed to contain null values. This is the default.
This clause is only provided for compatibility with non-standard SQL databases. Its use is discouraged in new applications.
server_name
The name of an existing server for the foreign table.
OPTIONS ( option 'value' [, ...] )
Options to be associated with the new foreign table or one of its columns. The allowed option names and values are specific to each
foreign data wrapper and are validated using the foreign-data wrapper's validator function. Duplicate option names are not allowed
(although it's OK for a table option and a column option to have the same name).
EXAMPLES
Create foreign table films with film_server:
CREATE FOREIGN TABLE films (
code char(5) NOT NULL,
title varchar(40) NOT NULL,
did integer NOT NULL,
date_prod date,
kind varchar(10),
len interval hour to minute
)
SERVER film_server;
COMPATIBILITY
The CREATE FOREIGN TABLE command largely conforms to the SQL standard; however, much as with CREATE TABLE, NULL constraints and zero-column
foreign tables are permitted.
SEE ALSO
ALTER FOREIGN TABLE (ALTER_FOREIGN_TABLE(7)), DROP FOREIGN TABLE (DROP_FOREIGN_TABLE(7)), CREATE TABLE (CREATE_TABLE(7)), CREATE SERVER
(CREATE_SERVER(7))
PostgreSQL 9.2.7 2014-02-17 CREATE FOREIGN TABLE(7)