6. Troubleshooting Ingres : Resource and Maintenance Problems : Tools for Identifying Operating System Problems
 
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Tools for Identifying Operating System Problems
The following tools can help you identify operating system resource problems:
Review the minimum requirements for a basic Ingres installation given in the Readme file. If your particular environment requires more resources, use the Ingres utilities to verify that there are enough resources.
System resources can be monitored by some operating system utilities. Syntax details are described in Unix Operating System Utilities (see page UNIX Operating System Utilities).
UNIX:
BSD:
pstat utility—to display the status of UNIX system tables and system swap space
vmstat utility—to display virtual memory status
System V:
sar utility—to display activity of various system resources such as CPU utilization, swapping activity, and disk activity.
show memory—displays the system memory resources and the amount of non-paged dynamic memory (total, free and in use).
show process/id=pid/continuous—displays the amount of page faulting, working set, buffered I/O, and direct I/O the server is doing.
show device—indicates if a particular disk drive is out of disk space.
show device /files—if there is a problem starting an installation, this command can be used to make sure that an Ingres process is not holding on to a mailbox.
The installation utility allows the examination of all Ingres installed images, showing the amount of global pages and sections available and used.
VMS:
The following VMS tools are very useful for tracing script problems:
set verify—allows you to see the commands used in the installation script or any other VMS command procedure.
set watch file/class=major (requires CMEXEC VMS privilege)—allows all the files that are being accessed to be displayed. This assists in diagnosing if a location of a file or library is being incorrectly referenced. Use this command when debugging Ingres processes interactively.
The displays can be turned off with the following command entered at the operating system prompt:
Important!  This is an unsupported VMS command. Use at your own risk.
set watch file/class=none.
Syntax details are described in VMS Operating System Utilities (see page VMS Operating System Utilities).