01-08-2006
If you are running sar, then you can graph most of the items you are looking for - see
itworld's article on gnuplot.
Or, you can try
sarcheck .
I am not recommending either product as I have never used them. Use at your own risk or search the Internet for others.
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
What do others use for measuring I/O statistics? I'd like something versatile, as in being able to watch (like iostat, but easier to trend), generate load (like iozone, but more realistic), and perform somewhat generalized benchmarks (like bonnie, but more current.) It would scale from a few... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: LivinFree
0 Replies
2. Red Hat
Open sourcing code is more than sticking an OSI approved license on it and putting it up on a public repository. Discussing this is getting to be a bit of a theme at Dev Fu, as many of our experienced open source developers are watching companies and projects swing wildly trying to hit the ball.
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Linux Bot
0 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all,
I am looking for some open source comparator or metrics generator kind of tool. I am sure this is not something new that am asking and probably some of you would have already made use of that in your daily work.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: matrixmadhan
2 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am looking for a way to measure performance metrics of streaming audio/video from a contecnt server, e.g. YouTube for example. Im keen to see if I can look at duration it took for contecnt to download.
I know from the output of wget's log file you can see duration a url is downloaded in.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rob171171
5 Replies
5. AIX
Greetings!
We ordered a bunch of P7s as part of a hardware upgrade and I was made aware of the Dual Storage IOA configuration. This is something we hadn't fully considered and I was wondering if anyone had done any performance tests using this setup. All our IBM rep told us was "it's slower" and... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mike Brendan
1 Replies
6. AIX
Hi Guys,
I need some help analyzing the attached metrics. System context is 2 LPAR's in a P795 running WebSphere App Server across 4 nodes (2 on each LPAR).
Over the weekend both LPAR's lost power and upon re-start the application server response times have degraded by 25-30% for no obvious... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mgburns
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
httppower
httppower(8) powerman httppower(8)
NAME
httppower - communicate with HTTP based power distribution units
SYNOPSIS
httppower [--url URL]
DESCRIPTION
httppower is a helper program for powerman which enables it to communicate with HTTP based power distribution units. It is run interac-
tively by the powerman daemon.
OPTIONS
-u, --url URL
Set the base URL.
INTERACTIVE COMMANDS
The following commands are accepted at the httppower> prompt:
auth user:pass
Authenticate to the base URL with specified user and password, using ``basic'' HTTP authentication which sends the user and password
over the network in plain text.
seturl URL
Set the base URL. Overrides the command line option.
get [URL-suffix]
Send an HTTP GET to the base URL with the optional URL-suffix appended.
post [URL-suffix] key=val[&key=val]...
Send an HTTP POST to the base URL with the optional URL-suffix appended, and key-value pairs as argument.
FILES
/usr/sbin/httppower
/etc/powerman/powerman.conf
ORIGIN
PowerMan was originally developed by Andrew Uselton on LLNL's Linux clusters. This software is open source and distributed under the terms
of the GNU GPL.
SEE ALSO
powerman(1), powermand(8), httppower(8), plmpower(8), vpcd(8), powerman.conf(5), powerman.dev(5), powerman-devices(7).
http://sourceforge.net/projects/powerman
powerman-2.3.5 2009-02-09 httppower(8)