UNIX Operating System Utilities
You can use the following UNIX operating system utilities to monitor Ingres:
• ps
• iostat
• vmstat
For a full description of the UNIX options, see your UNIX documentation (or online help). A detailed description of the utilities can be found in the Command Reference Guide.
Note: Not all of the utilities are present on every UNIX system. Some are present only in a BSD or System V environment but not both.
ps
This command provides virtual memory and cpu information on each active process submitted from your account. Here is a sample ps output:
PID TT STAT TIME SL RE PAGEIN SIZE RSS LIM %CPU %MEM COMMAND
xx06 p3 s 28:50 13 99 45886 3696 2856 xx 0.0 39.3 iidbms
xx94 p3 s 4:24 0 99 2899 720 344 xx 0.0 4.7 dmfrcp
xx09 p3 I 0.51 99 99 4488 4 184 xx 0.0 2.5 iislave
xx19 p3 I 0.57 99 99 5764 64 17 xx 0.0 2.4 iislave
xx96 p3 I 0.04 99 99 1852 696 160 xx 0.0 2.2 dmfacp
The display fields are as follows:
iostat
The iostat command returns information about I/O status. It lists statistics on current I/O activity for each disk device and system CPU utilization percentages. Here is a sample iostat output:
tty cpu
tin tout us ni sy id
1 18 19 0 3 78
/dev/*dsk/c0d*s*/dev/*dsk/cld*s*/dev/*dsk/c2d*s*/dev/*dsk/c4d*s*
bps sps msps bps sps msps bps sps msps bps sps msps
2 0.1 61.7 1 0.0 95.5 1 0.0 60.4 2 0.2 44.3
• The tin and tout display fields show the number of characters written to and from terminal devices.
• CPU information includes the % time spent in user mode (us), “niced” user mode (ni), system mode (sy), and idle (id).
• The disk I/O for each disk device shows the average number of blocks transferred per second (bps), average number of seeks per second (sps), and average time per seek in ms (msps).
vmstat
The vmstat (Virtual Memory Statistics) command returns virtual memory status information, including process states and paging activity. Here is a sample vmstat output:
procs memory page disk faults cpu
r b w avm fre di re rd pi po de z0 z1 z2 z3 in sy cs us sy id
1 0 0 2536 456 24 2 1 4 0 0 1 1 0 1 24 475 23 4 6 91
0 0 0 2748 356 24 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 26 323 29 1 5 95
0 0 0 1044 344 24 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 216 18 0 3 97
0 0 0 2288 344 24 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 334 27 1 4 95
1 0 0 2372 332 24 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 28 552 40 1 6 93
The procs columns define the process states: in run queue (r), blocked for resources (b), and runnable or short sleeper (w).
The memory columns show virtual and real memory status: avm is active virtual pages (belonging to processes active in approximately the last 20 seconds), fre is size of the free list, and di is the number of dirty pages.
The page columns show page faults and paging activity. These are expressed in units per second, averaged over 5 seconds: re are page reclaims, rd are page reclaims from the dirty list, and pi, po are pages paged in/out. The de field is anticipated short-term memory shortfall.
The disk columns list disk activity, showing the device name and operations per second.
Last modified date: 08/29/2024