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Full Discussion: HP-UX and 'top'
Operating Systems HP-UX HP-UX and 'top' Post 78704 by vigsgb on Thursday 21st of July 2005 03:40:49 PM
Old 07-21-2005
I would say there doesn't have to be a cushion. We have boxes that run all day at 100% CPU and if the boxes can meet the performance requirements set forth by the buisness, then it just means we are not wasting any funds on hardware that is just sitting idle.

Here is a good senario, lets say I add one cpu to the machine that is running at 100% all day thus effectively doubling the cpu resources. Now I see 50% idle vs 100% idle CPU. This may be bad, because this may mean that I just wasted money on a CPU. Now other resources such as memory or I/O are now to slow for that much CPU.

It can also go the other way, you might still see 100% CPU, but that means that you never had enough CPU to utilize the memory and I/O anyhow. See there is a balance.

You do have alot of processes running and even sleeping processes use resources so I would not be too worried about this unless there are performance issues, than I would make sure that when adding more CPU I have suffecient memory and I/O to utilize the CPU.

Obviously there is alot more to it than this, such as what the processes running are doing etc. and might not apply to you, but it is something to think about.
 

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Plack::Middleware(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				    Plack::Middleware(3pm)

NAME
Plack::Middleware - Base class for easy-to-use PSGI middleware SYNOPSIS
package Plack::Middleware::Foo; use parent qw( Plack::Middleware ); sub call { my($self, $env) = @_; # Do something with $env # $self->app is the original app my $res = $self->app->($env); # Do something with $res return $res; } # then in app.psgi use Plack::Builder; my $app = sub { ... } # as usual builder { enable "Plack::Middleware::Foo"; enable "Plack::Middleware::Bar", %options; $app; }; DESCRIPTION
Plack::Middleware is a utility base class to write PSGI middleware. All you have to do is to inherit from Plack::Middleware and then implement the callback "call" method (or "to_app" method that would return the PSGI code reference) to do the actual work. You can use "$self->app" to call the original (wrapped) application. Your middleware object is created at a PSGI application compile time and is persistent during the web server life cycle (unless it is a non-persistent environment such as CGI), so you should never set or cache per-request data like $env in your middleware object. See also "OBJECT LIFECYCLE" in Plack::Component. See Plack::Builder how to actually enable middleware in your .psgi application file using the DSL. If you do not like our builder DSL, you can also use "wrap" method to wrap your application with a middleware: use Plack::Middleware::Foo; my $app = sub { ... }; $app = Plack::Middleware::Foo->wrap($app, %options); $app = Plack::Middleware::Bar->wrap($app, %options); RESPONSE CALLBACK
The typical middleware is written like this: package Plack::Middleware::Something; use parent qw(Plack::Middleware); sub call { my($self, $env) = @_; # pre-processing $env my $res = $self->app->($env); # post-processing $res return $res; } The tricky thing about post processing the response is that it could either be an immediate 3 element array ref, or a code reference that implements the delayed (streaming) interface. Dealing with these two types of response in each piece of middleware is pointless, so you're recommended to use the "response_cb" wrapper function in Plack::Util when implementing a post processing middleware. my $res = $app->($env); Plack::Util::response_cb($res, sub { my $res = shift; # do something with $res; }); The callback function gets a PSGI response as a 3 element array reference, and you can update the reference to implement the post processing. package Plack::Middleware::Always500; use parent qw(Plack::Middleware); use Plack::Util; sub call { my($self, $env) = @_; my $res = $self->app->($env); Plack::Util::response_cb($res, sub { my $res = shift; $res->[0] = 500; return; }); } In this example, the callback gets the $res and updates its first element (status code) to 500. Using "response_cb" makes sure that this works with the delayed response too. You're not required (and not recommended either) to return a new array reference - they will be simply ignored. You're suggested to explicitly return, unless you fiddle with the content filter callback (see below). Similarly, note that you have to keep the $res reference when you swap the entire response. Plack::Util::response_cb($res, sub { my $res = shift; $res = [ $new_status, $new_headers, $new_body ]; # THIS DOES NOT WORK return; }); This does not work, since assigning a new anonymous array to $res doesn't update the original PSGI response value. You should instead do: Plack::Util::response_cb($res, sub { my $res = shift; @$res = ($new_status, $new_headers, $new_body); # THIS WORKS return; }); The third element of PSGI response array ref is a body, and it could be either array ref or IO::Handle-ish object. The application could also make use of $writer object if "psgi.streaming" is in effect. Dealing with these variants is again really painful, and "response_cb" can take care of that too, by allowing you to return a content filter as a code reference. # replace all "Foo" in content body with "Bar" Plack::Util::response_cb($res, sub { my $res = shift; return sub { my $chunk = shift; return unless defined $chunk; $chunk =~ s/Foo/Bar/g; return $chunk; } }); The callback takes one argument $chunk and your callback is expected to return the updated chunk. If the given $chunk is undef, it means the stream has reached the end, so your callback should also return undef, or return the final chunk and return undef when called next time. SEE ALSO
Plack Plack::Builder Plack::Component perl v5.14.2 2011-06-22 Plack::Middleware(3pm)
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