Solaris Monitoring: различия между версиями
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+ | <PRE> |
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+ | Solaris Performance and Tracing Tools |
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+ | Process control |
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+ | System Stats |
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+ | Process Tracing/ |
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+ | debugging |
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+ | ● abitrace – trace ABI interfaces |
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+ | ● dtrace – trace the world |
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+ | ● mdb – debug/control processes |
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+ | ● truss – trace functions and system |
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+ | calls |
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+ | ●pgrep – grep for processes |
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+ | ●pkill – kill processes list |
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+ | ●pstop – stop processes |
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+ | ●prun – start processes |
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+ | ●prctl – view/set process |
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+ | resources |
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+ | ●pwait – wait for process |
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+ | ●preap* – reap a zombie process |
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+ | Process stats |
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+ | ● acctcom – process accounting |
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+ | ● busstat – Bus hardware counters |
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+ | ● cpustat – CPU hardware counters |
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+ | ● iostat – IO & NFS statistics |
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+ | ● kstat – display kernel statistics |
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+ | ● mpstat – processor statistics |
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+ | ● netstat – network statistics |
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+ | ● nfsstat – nfs server stats |
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+ | ● sar – kitchen sink utility |
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+ | ● vmstat – virtual memory stats |
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+ | ● cputrack / cpustat - processor hw counters |
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+ | ● plockstat – process locks |
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+ | ● pargs – process arguments |
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+ | ● pflags – process flags |
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+ | ● pcred – process credentials |
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+ | ● pldd – process's library dependencies |
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+ | ● psig – process signal disposition |
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+ | ● pstack – process stack dump |
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+ | ● pmap – process memory map |
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+ | ● pfiles – open files and names |
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+ | ● prstat – process statistics |
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+ | ● ptree – process tree |
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+ | ● ptime – process microstate times |
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+ | ● pwdx – process working directory |
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+ | Kernel Tracing/ |
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+ | debugging |
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+ | ● dtrace – trace and monitor kernel |
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+ | ● lockstat – monitor locking statistics |
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+ | ● lockstat -k – profile kernel |
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+ | ● mdb – debug live and kernel cores |
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pargs |
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Версия 16:33, 1 марта 2011
Solaris Performance and Tracing Tools Process control System Stats Process Tracing/ debugging ● abitrace – trace ABI interfaces ● dtrace – trace the world ● mdb – debug/control processes ● truss – trace functions and system calls ●pgrep – grep for processes ●pkill – kill processes list ●pstop – stop processes ●prun – start processes ●prctl – view/set process resources ●pwait – wait for process ●preap* – reap a zombie process Process stats ● acctcom – process accounting ● busstat – Bus hardware counters ● cpustat – CPU hardware counters ● iostat – IO & NFS statistics ● kstat – display kernel statistics ● mpstat – processor statistics ● netstat – network statistics ● nfsstat – nfs server stats ● sar – kitchen sink utility ● vmstat – virtual memory stats ● cputrack / cpustat - processor hw counters ● plockstat – process locks ● pargs – process arguments ● pflags – process flags ● pcred – process credentials ● pldd – process's library dependencies ● psig – process signal disposition ● pstack – process stack dump ● pmap – process memory map ● pfiles – open files and names ● prstat – process statistics ● ptree – process tree ● ptime – process microstate times ● pwdx – process working directory Kernel Tracing/ debugging ● dtrace – trace and monitor kernel ● lockstat – monitor locking statistics ● lockstat -k – profile kernel ● mdb – debug live and kernel cores
pargs pflags pcred pldd psig pstack pmap pfiles
pwdx pstop prun
pwait ptree ptime preap pkill
trapstat
mpstat vmstat netstat sar
cputrack cpustat
fsstat
Microstates
- Fine-grained state tracking for processes/threads
- Off by default in Solaris 8 and Solaris 9
- On by default in Solaris 10
- Can be enabled per-process via /proc
- prstat -m reports microstates
- As a percentage of time for the sampling period
- USR – user mode
- SYS - kernel mode
- TRP – trap handling
- TFL – text page faults
- DFL – data page faults
- LCK – user lock wait
- SLP - sleep
- LAT – waiting for a processor (sitting on a run queue)
prstat -m
Use prstat -m LAT category, in conjunction with utilization measurements, delivered workload throughput and run queue depth (vmstat “r” column) to determine for CPU capacity planning
prstat – user summary
# prstat -t NPROC USERNAME SIZE RSS MEMORY TIME CPU 128 root 446M 333M 1.4% 47:14:23 11% 2 measter 6600K 5016K 0.0% 0:00:07 0.2% 1 clamb 9152K 8344K 0.0% 0:02:14 0.1% 2 rmc 7192K 6440K 0.0% 0:00:00 0.1% 1 bricker 5776K 4952K 0.0% 0:00:20 0.1% 2 asd 10M 8696K 0.0% 0:00:01 0.1% 1 fredz 7760K 6944K 0.0% 0:00:05 0.1% 2 jenks 8576K 6904K 0.0% 0:00:01 0.1% 1 muffin 15M 14M 0.1% 0:01:26 0.1% 1 dte 3800K 3016K 0.0% 0:00:04 0.0% 2 adjg 8672K 7040K 0.0% 0:00:03 0.0% 3 msw 14M 10M 0.0% 0:00:00 0.0% 1 welza 4032K 3248K 0.0% 0:00:29 0.0% 2 kimc 7848K 6344K 0.0% 0:00:25 0.0% 4 jcmartin 13M 9904K 0.0% 0:00:03 0.0% 1 rascal 17M 16M 0.1% 0:02:11 0.0% 1 rab 3288K 2632K 0.0% 0:02:11 0.0% 1 gjmurphy 3232K 2392K 0.0% 0:00:00 0.0% 1 ktheisen 15M 14M 0.1% 0:01:16 0.0% 1 nagendra 3232K 2400K 0.0% 0:00:00 0.0% 2 ayong 8320K 6832K 0.0% 0:00:02 0.0% Total: 711 processes, 902 lwps, load averages: 3.84, 4.30, 4.37
Solaris iostat
● Wait: number of threads queued for I/O ● Actv: number of threads performing I/O ● wsvc_t: Average time spend waiting on queue ● asvc_t: Average time performing I/O ● %w: Only useful if one thread is running on the entire machine – time spent waiting for I/O ● %b: Device utilization – only useful if device can do just 1 I/ O at a time (invalid for arrays etc...)
# iostat -xnz extended device statistics r/s w/s kr/s kw/s wait actv wsvc_t asvc_t %w %b device 687.8 0.0 38015.3 0.0 0.0 1.9 0.0 2.7 0 100 c0d0 Queue Performing I/O wait svc
New Formatting flags -C, -l, -m, -r, -s, -z, -T ● -C: report disk statistics by controller ● -l n: Limit the number of disks to n ● -m: Display mount points (most useful with -p) ● -r: Display data n comma separated format ● -s: Suppress state change messages ● -z: Suppress entries with all zero values ● -T d|u Display a timestamp in date (d) or unix time_t (u)