Vmstat, Ibm aix – IBM TotalStorage DS6000 Series User Manual

Page 327

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Appendix A. Operating systems specifics

303

Example: A-3 SAR Sample Output

# sar -u 2 5
AIX aixtest 3 4 001750154C00 2/5/03
17:58:15

%usr

%sys

%wio %idle

17:58:17

43

9

1

46

17:58:19

35

17

3

45

17:58:21

36

22

20

23

17:58:23

21

17

0

63

17:58:25

85

12

3

0

Average

44

15

5

35

As a general rule of thumb, a server with over 40 percent waiting on I/O is spending too much
time waiting for I/O. However, you also have to take the type of workload into account. If you
are running a video file server, serving I/O will be the primary activity of the machine and you
will expect high %wio values.

A system with very busy CPUs can mask I/O wait. The definition of %wio is: Idle with some
processes waiting for I/O (only block I/O, raw I/O, or VM pageins/swapins indicated). If the
system is CPU busy and also is waiting for I/O, the accounting will increment the CPU busy
values, but not the %wio column.

The other column headings in the example indicate:

%usr: Time system spent executing application code

%sys: Time system spent executing operating system calls

%idle: Time the system was idle with no outstanding I/O requests

The implementation of the

sar

command is different for the various UNIX variants. However,

the output of

sar -u

is the same for all.

There are other modes to use sar, which we will not discuss further:

Ongoing system activity accounting via cron

Display previously captured data

sar

offers many different options and parameters. Refer to your system documentation and

the

sar

man page for more information.

VMSTAT

The

vmstat

utility is a useful tool for taking a quick snapshot or overview of the system

performance. It is easy to see what is happening with regard to the CPUs, paging, swapping,
interrupts, I/O wait, and much more. There are several reports that

vmstat

can provide. They

vary slightly between the different versions of UNIX. Refer to your system documentation and
the

vmstat

man page for more information.

IBM AIX

This section covers items specific to the IBM AIX operating system. It is not intended to
repeat the information that is contained in other publications. We focus on topics that are not
covered in the well known literature or are important enough to be repeated here.

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