10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. HP-UX
Hi Experts,
We encountered problem in one of the production system where some processes were taking higher CPU and after some time it came back to normal..
From system prespective, is there any way to check why processes took more cpu during that particular period. (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: sai_2507
16 Replies
2. AIX
Hi Guys,
I am a newbie on the forum. This is my first post, so first of all I would like to introduce myself.
I am a SAS Analyst programmer working for an Health Insurance client. SAS is installed on a 16 CPU AIX Server with partitions running with shared processor. I have couple of... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: saurabhiim2003
2 Replies
3. Programming
Hi all,
I'm using python and psutil a library to get system informations like cpu usage (percent) for a given process.
My question is if I have the value in % of the cpu usage how I could get the cpu usage in cycle number I mean not in percent?
Thanks a lot
D. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dedalus
5 Replies
4. AIX
How to monitor the IBM AIX server for I/O usage, memory usage, CPU usage, network usage, storage usage? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: laknar
3 Replies
5. Solaris
Hello Friends,
On one of my Solaris 10 box, CPU usage shows 100% using "sar", "vmstat". However, it has 4 CPUs and prstat and glance are not showing enough processes to justify high CPU utilization.
=========================================================================
$ prstat -a
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mahive
4 Replies
6. Solaris
Hi,
I want to monitor the current cpu usage, monitor usage , disk I/o and network utlization for solaris using SNMP.
I want the oids for above tasks.
can you please tell me that
Thank you (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: S_venkatesh
2 Replies
7. HP-UX
how can I find cpu usage memory usage swap usage and
I want to know CPU usage above X% and contiue Y times and memory usage above X % and contiue Y times
my final destination is monitor process
logical volume usage above X % and number of Logical voluage above
can I not to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: alert0919
3 Replies
8. Programming
Hi all,
When I have a below while loop in my code (This observation is same for C and Perl)
i= 0;
while(1)
{
i++;
}
for above the CPU uses goes beyond 49% on hp-ux machine, why cpu usage increase at this level for just a simple while loop?
and if I have a single print statement... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zing_foru
2 Replies
9. Programming
Please tell me solaris functions/api for getting following information
1- Function that tells how much memory used by current process
2- Function that tells how much memory used by all running processes
3- Function that tells how much CPU is used by current process
4- Function that tells how... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mansoorulhaq
1 Replies
10. Programming
how can i monitor usages of CPU, Memory, Hard disk etc. under SUN Solaries
through a c program or java program
i want to store that data into database so i can show it graphically
thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Gajanad Bihani
2 Replies
sa(8) System Manager's Manual sa(8)
Name
sa, accton - print process accounting statistics
Syntax
/etc/sa [ options ] [ file ]
/etc/accton [ file ]
Arguments
file With an argument naming an existing file, causes system accounting information for every process executed to be placed at the end
of the file. If no argument is given, accounting is turned off.
Description
The command reports on, cleans up, and generally maintains accounting files.
The is able to condense the information in into a summary file which contains a count of the number of times each command was called and
the time resources consumed. This condensation is desirable because on a large system can grow by 100 blocks per day. The summary file is
normally read before the accounting file, so the reports include all available information.
If a file name is given as the last argument, that file will be treated as the accounting file. The file is the default.
Output fields are labeled: "cpu" for the sum of user+system time (in cpu seconds), "re" for real time (also in cpu seconds), "k" for cpu-
time averaged core usage (in 1k units), "avio" for average number of I/O operations per execution. With options fields labeled "tio" for
total I/O operations, "k*sec" for cpu storage integral (kilo-core seconds), "u" and "s" for user and system cpu time alone (both in cpu
seconds) will sometimes appear.
Options
-a List all command names including those containing unprintable characters and those used only once. By default, places all command
names containing unprintable characters and those used only once under the name `***other.'
-b Sort output by sum of user and system time divided by number of calls. Default sort is by sum of user and system times.
-c Besides total user, system, and real time for each command, print percentage of total time over all commands.
-d Sort by average number of disk I/O operations.
-D Print and sort by total number of disk I/O operations.
-f Force no interactive threshold compression with option.
-i Do not read in summary file.
-j Instead of total minutes for each category, give seconds per call.
-k Sort by cpu-time average memory usage.
-K Print and sort by cpu-storage integral.
-l Separate system and user time; normally they are combined.
-m Print number of processes and number of CPU minutes for each user.
-n Sort by number of calls.
-r Reverse order of sort.
-s Merge accounting file into summary file when done.
-t For each command, report ratio of real time to the sum of user and system times. If the sum of user and system times is too small
to report, `*ignore*' appears in this field.
-u Superseding all other flags, print for each command in the accounting file the user ID and command name.
-v Followed by a number n, types the name of each command used n times or fewer. Await a reply from the terminal; if it begins with
`y', add the command to the category `**junk**.' This is used to strip out garbage.
Restrictions
Accounting is suspended when there is less than 2% free space on disk. Accounting resumes when free space rises above 4%.
Files
Raw accounting
Summary
Per-user summary
See Also
acct(2), ac(8)
sa(8)