10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Infrastructure Monitoring
Sorry if this is the wrong forum
Searching for Saas Monitor service which monitor my servers which are sitting in different providers .
This monitor tool will take as less CPU as possible , and will send info about the server to main Dashboard.
The info I need is CPU / RAM / my servers status (... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: umen
1 Replies
2. Linux
Hi Guys,
Monitoring 'Total Processes' on Linux servers has been always something you 'should' do.
My question is - why? Is it relevant anymore?
If you monitor memory and cpu params, you have a pretty good idea about what's going on.
Is the number of processes really matter?
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: DjDeaf
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3. HP-UX
Need to note the list of critical / important services and process need to monitor on unix server always with one line explanation for severity.
Thanks in advance. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: marunmeera
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4. AIX
Hello,
Looking for some help. I am trying to gather data at each server showing when the physical CPU is being used the most based on a weekly timeframe.
I know this data can be seen through NMON but with multiple servers in our environment it could take a real long time. is there a easier... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: audis$
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5. Ubuntu
Hi Team,
I have over 100 users,working on LINUX machine & all they use firefox. I want to monitor traffic from every IP and mainly CPU USAGE TAKEN BY FIREFOX PROCESSES ON EACH MACHINE. Is there any tool which runs on lunux and will help me to monitor firefox processes of our entire LAN?
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: paragnehete
2 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
ok, so i'm trying to write a shell script (not perl) that monitors memory usage on a server. but i'm confused as to what fields exactly determines that yes, memory is low on a particular server.
it sounds simple enough, but it really isn't. what do I look for in the field below?
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
1 Replies
7. Infrastructure Monitoring
snmpget -v 1 -c COMMUNITYSTR hostname OID
what OIDs would I use to get information on all the processes and disk space information that are on a particular host.
where can i find out information on all of this?
thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Dears,
need help on developing a script to monitor sun server temperature , I'm using the below command to check the servers one by one
/usr/platform/`uname -i`/sbin/prtdiag -v
Servers Models are :
2 x Sun SPARC Enterprise M9000 Server
4 x Sun Fire V490
2 x Sun Blade T6300 Server... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bejo4ever
1 Replies
9. AIX
we have several deamon processes which were killed for some unknown reasons. we have to bring the deamon back manually everytime. Deamons running on 2 identical instances. It is ok on one instance but be killed 3 or 4 times a day on another. Any idea how to monitor it? like who/how the processes be... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hamiltonhall
3 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have two processes that I need to keep running. The first process is a server, the second is basically a canvas for creating images which get saved to a directory. So I plan on using launchd (Mac OS 10.5) on a server to check every minute or so to make sure two things are true:
1) Both apps... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Solerous
3 Replies
sacadm(1M) System Administration Commands sacadm(1M)
NAME
sacadm - service access controller administration
SYNOPSIS
sacadm -a -p pmtag -t type -c cmd -v ver [ -f dx] [-n count] [-y comment] [-z script]
sacadm -r -p pmtag
sacadm -s -p pmtag
sacadm -k -p pmtag
sacadm -e -p pmtag
sacadm -d -p pmtag
sacadm -l [-p pmtag | -t type]
sacadm -L [-p pmtag | -t type]
sacadm -g -p pmtag [-z script]
sacadm -G [-z script]
sacadm -x [-p pmtag]
DESCRIPTION
sacadm is the administrative command for the upper level of the Service Access Facility hierarchy (port monitor administration). sacadm
performs the following functions:
o adds or removes a port monitor
o starts or stops a port monitor
o enables or disables a port monitor
o installs or replaces a per-system configuration script
o installs or replaces a per-port monitor configuration script
o prints requested port monitor information
Requests about the status of port monitors (-l and -L) and requests to print per-port monitor and per-system configuration scripts (-g and
-G without the -z option) may be executed by any user on the system. Other sacadm commands may be executed only by the super-user.
OPTIONS
-a Add a port monitor. When adding a port monitor, sacadm creates the supporting directory structure in /etc/saf and /var/saf
and adds an entry for the new port monitor to /etc/saf/_sactab. The file _sactab already exists on the delivered system.
Initially, it is empty except for a single line, which contains the version number of the Service Access Controller. Unless
the command line that adds the new port monitor includes the -f option with the -x argument, the new port monitor will be
started. Because of the complexity of the options and arguments that follow the - a option, it may be convenient to use a
command script or the menu system to add port monitors.
-c cmd Execute the command string cmd to start a port monitor. The -c option may be used only with a -a. A -a option requires a
-c.
-d Disable the port monitor pmtag.
-e Enable the port monitor pmtag.
-f dx The -f option specifies one or both of the following two flags which are then included in the flags field of the _sactab
entry for the new port monitor. If the -f option is not included on the command line, no flags are set and the default con-
ditions prevail. By default, a port monitor is started. A -f option with no following argument is illegal.
d Do not enable the new port monitor.
x Do not start the new port monitor.
-g The -g option is used to request output or to install or replace the per-port monitor configuration script
/etc/saf/pmtag/_config. -g requires a -p option. The -g option with only a -p option prints the per-port monitor configura-
tion script for port monitor pmtag. The -g option with a -p option and a -z option installs the file script as the per-
port monitor configuration script for port monitor pmtag. Other combinations of options with -g are invalid.
-G The -G option is used to request output or to install or replace the per-system configuration script /etc/saf/_sysconfig.
The -G option by itself prints the per-system configuration script. The -G option in combination with a -z option installs
the file script as the per-system configuration script. Other combinations of options with a -G option are invalid.
-k Stop port monitor pmtag.
-l The -l option is used to request port monitor information. The -l by itself lists all port monitors on the system. The -l
option in combination with the -p option lists only the port monitor specified by pmtag. A -l in combination with the -t
option lists all port monitors of type type. Any other combination of options with the -l option is invalid.
-L The -L option is identical to the -l option except that the output appears in a condensed format.
-n count Set the restart count to count. If a restart count is not specified, count is set to 0. A count of 0 indicates that the
port monitor is not to be restarted if it fails.
-p pmtag Specifies the tag associated with a port monitor.
-r Remove port monitor pmtag. sacadm removes the port monitor entry from /etc/saf/_sactab. If the removed port monitor is not
running, then no further action is taken. If the removed port monitor is running, the Service Access Controller (SAC) sends
it SIGTERM to indicate that it should shut down. Note that the port monitor's directory structure remains intact.
-s Start a port monitor. The SAC starts the port monitor pmtag.
-t type Specifies the port monitor type.
-v ver Specifies the version number of the port monitor. This version number may be given as
-v `pmspec -V`
where pmspec is the special administrative command for port monitor pmtag. This special command is ttyadm for ttymon and
nlsadmin for listen. The version stamp of the port monitor is known by the command and is returned when pmspec is invoked
with a -V option.
-x The -x option by itself tells the SAC to read its database file (_sactab). The -x option with the -p option tells port
monitor pmtag to read its administrative file.
-y comment Include comment in the _sactab entry for port monitor pmtag.
-z script Used with the -g and -G options to specify the name of a file that contains a configuration script. With the -g option,
script is a per-port monitor configuration script; with -G it is a per-system configuration script. Modifying a configura-
tion script is a three-step procedure. First a copy of the existing script is made (-g or -G). Then the copy is edited.
Finally, the copy is put in place over the existing script (-g or -G with -z).
OUTPUT
If successful, sacadm will exit with a status of 0. If sacadm fails for any reason, it will exit with a nonzero status. Options that
request information will write the information on the standard output. In the condensed format (-L), port monitor information is printed as
a sequence of colon-separated fields; empty fields are indicated by two successive colons. The standard format (-l) prints a header identi-
fying the columns, and port monitor information is aligned under the appropriate headings. In this format, an empty field is indicated by a
hyphen. The comment character is #.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample output of the sacadm command.
The following command line adds a port monitor. The port monitor tag is npack; its type is listen; if necessary, it will restart three
times before failing; its administrative command is nlsadmin; and the configuration script to be read is in the file script:
sacadm -a -p npack -t listen -c /usr/lib/saf/listen npack
-v `nlsadmin -V` -n 3 -z script
Remove a port monitor whose tag is pmtag:
sacadm -r -p pmtag
Start the port monitor whose tag is pmtag:
sacadm -s -p pmtag
Stop the port monitor whose tag is pmtag:
sacadm -k -p pmtag
Enable the port monitor whose tag is pmtag:
sacadm -e -p pmtag
Disable the port monitor whose tag is pmtag:
sacadm -d -p pmtag
List status information for all port monitors:
sacadm -l
List status information for the port monitor whose tag is pmtag:
sacadm -l -p pmtag
List the same information in condensed format:
sacadm -L -p pmtag
List status information for all port monitors whose type is listen:
sacadm -l -t listen
Replace the per-port monitor configuration script associated with the port monitor whose tag is pmtag with the contents of the file
file.config:
sacadm -g -p pmtag -z file.config
FILES
/etc/saf/_sactab
/etc/saf/_sysconfig
/etc/saf/pmtag/_config
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO
pmadm(1M), sac(1M), doconfig(3NSL), attributes(5)
SunOS 5.10 14 Sep 1992 sacadm(1M)