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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Sun: High kernel usage & very high load averages Post 98101 by lorrainenineill on Monday 6th of February 2006 06:29:18 AM
Old 02-06-2006
Sun: High kernel usage & very high load averages

Hi,

I am seeing very high kernel usage and very high load averages on my system (Although we are not loading much data to our database). Here is the output of top...does anyone know what i should be looking at?

Thanks,

Lorraine

last pid: 13144; load averages: 22.32, 19.81, 16.78 09:23:50
165 processes: 148 sleeping, 12 running, 1 zombie, 4 on cpu
CPU states: 0.2% idle, 75.5% user, 24.2% kernel, 0.1% iowait, 0.0% swap
Memory: 12G real, 185M free, 17G swap in use, 603M swap free

PID USERNAME LWP PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE TIME CPU COMMAND
6653 informix 2 51 -10 5758M 4835M cpu/6 513:14 8.35% oninit
6652 informix 2 51 -10 5759M 4841M run 556:36 8.25% oninit
6654 informix 2 50 -10 5758M 4830M run 487:37 8.21% oninit
6655 informix 2 50 -10 5758M 4824M run 470:20 8.07% oninit
6633 informix 2 51 -10 5759M 4841M run 913:09 7.28% oninit
15233 metrica 1 44 2 16M 15M run 35:23 5.66% perl
12897 metrica 1 36 2 9968K 9080K cpu/2 0:57 5.14% perl
12496 metrica 1 30 0 1136K 880K run 1:52 4.93% tar
12913 metrica 1 36 2 11M 10M run 0:56 4.74% perl
6647 informix 2 59 -20 5757M 5088M sleep 43.4H 4.64% oninit
6648 informix 2 59 -20 5757M 5084M sleep 35.6H 3.71% oninit
11260 metrica 4 40 0 3946M 557M run 268:29 3.04% metrica_load
12922 metrica 1 60 2 11M 11M sleep 0:49 2.71% perl
6649 informix 2 59 -20 5757M 5090M sleep 27.4H 2.68% oninit
6650 informix 2 59 -20 5757M 5057M sleep 16.9H 2.08% oninit
 

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CFETOOLCHECK(8) 					User Contributed Perl Documentation					   CFETOOLCHECK(8)

NAME
cfetoolcheck - Check a new value against the averages currently in the database SYNOPSIS
cfetool check name --value|-V value [--path|-p directory name] [--time|-t seconds] [--daily|-d] [--weekly|-w] [--yearly|-y] [--his- tograms|-H] [--verbose|-v] [--help|-h] DESCRIPTION
Takes a new value and checks it against the averages currently in the database specified by name, located at the path specified by the -p argument, or the current working directory if the -p argument is omitted. The value will be associated with the current time, unless the -t option is given. The output indicates how much higher or lower the new value is compared to the averages in the database, in terms of the number of standard deviations. The -d, -w and -y options specify the databases to check the new value against. If all three options are omitted, only the weekly database will be accessed. OPTIONS
--value|-v value Specifies the new value to check against the database averages. --path|-p directory name The directory in which the database specified by name can be found. --time|-t The time the value was collected, in seconds since epoch (January 1st, 1970). If this argument is omitted, the current time will be used. --daily|-d Check the new value against the daily averages database. --weekly|-w Check the new value against the weekly averages database. --yearly|-y Check the new value against the yearly averages database. --histograms|-H Check which histogram bucket the new value would fall into. The histogram is divided into 64 buckets, which represent distances from the mean value. Bucket 64 represents two standard deviations above the expected value, and bucket 0 represents two standard deviations below the expected value. --verbose|-v Print details of the command's execution to the standard output stream. --help|-h Print a short help message and then exit. OUTPUT
Before exiting, "cfetool check" will print one line to the standard output stream, in the following format: yrly=ynum,bkt=ybkt;wkly=wnum,bkt=wbkt;dly=dnum,bkt=dbkt ybkt, wbkt and dbkt represent the histogram bucket the given value falls into, and will be 0 for databases that are not being checked against, and if there is no histogram file or the -H option was not specified. ynum, wnum and dnum will be either the number 0 if the corresponding database was not updated, or a code indicating the state of the given statistic, as compared to an average of equivalent earlier times, as specified below: code high|low|normal meaning ------------------------------------------------------------- -2 - no sigma variation ------------------------------------------------------------- -4 low within noise threshold, and within -5 normal 2 standard deviations from -6 high expected value ------------------------------------------------------------- -14 low microanomaly: within noise -15 normal threshold, but 2 or more standard -16 high deviations from expected value ------------------------------------------------------------- -24 low normal; within 1 standard deviation -25 normal from the expected value -26 high ------------------------------------------------------------- -34 low dev1; more than 1 standard -35 normal deviation from the expected -36 high value ------------------------------------------------------------ -44 low dev2; more than 2 standard -45 normal deviations from the expected -46 high value ------------------------------------------------------------- -54 low anomaly; more than 3 standard -55 normal deviations from the expected -56 high value Where "low" indicates that the current value is below both the expected value for the current time position, and the global average value. "high" indicates that the current value is above those values. "normal" indicates that the current value is within the range of expected values. "cfetool check" also exits with a code corresponding to the above table. If more than one database is being checked against, the most nega- tive result from all checks is returned, and the individual results must be obtained from the standard output stream, as described above. EXAMPLE
% cfetool check temperature --path /my/path --value 20 --histograms yrly=0,bkt=0;wkly=-6,bkt=51;dly=0,bkt=0 Checks the value 20 against the weekly temperature database and histogram files located in /my/path/ using the current time. The output indicates that the new value given was within cfetool's noise threshold, and also within 2 standard deviations of the previous average stored in the weekly database. AUTHORS
The code and documentation were contributed by Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, a department of Stanford University. This documentation was written by Elizabeth Cassell <e_a_c@mailsnare.net> and Alf Wachsmann <alfw@slac.stanford.edu> COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMER
Copyright 2004 Alf Wachsmann <alfw@slac.stanford.edu> and Elizabeth Cassell <e_a_c@mailsnare.net> All rights reserved. perl v5.8.4 2004-09-21 CFETOOLCHECK(8)
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