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Date:      Wed, 9 Feb 2005 02:40:47 -0800
From:      "Loren M. Lang" <lorenl@alzatex.com>
To:        "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@hub.org>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: vinum in 4.x poor performer?
Message-ID:  <20050209104047.GN8619@alzatex.com>
In-Reply-To: <20050209022929.D94338@ganymede.hub.org>
References:  <20050208231208.B94338@ganymede.hub.org> <20050209002232.B94338@ganymede.hub.org> <20050209011528.X94338@ganymede.hub.org> <20050209022929.D94338@ganymede.hub.org>

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On Wed, Feb 09, 2005 at 02:32:30AM -0400, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
> 
> Is there a command that I can run that provide me the syscall/sec value, 
> that I could use in a script?  I know vmstat reports it, but is there an 
> easier way the having to parse the output? a perl module maybe, that 
> already does it?

vmstat shouldn't be too hard to parse, try the following:

vmstat|tail -1|awk '{print $15;}'

To print out the 15th field of vmstat.  Now if you want vmstat to keep
running every five seconds or something, it's a little more complicated:

vmstat 5|grep -v 'procs\|avm'|awk '{print $15;}'

> 
> Thanks ...
> 
> On Wed, 9 Feb 2005, Marc G. Fournier wrote:
> 
> >On Tue, 8 Feb 2005, Dan Nelson wrote:
> >
> >>Details on the array's performance, I think.  Software RAID5 will
> >>definitely have poor write performance (logging disks solve that
> >>problem but vinum doesn't do that), but should have excellent read
> >>rates.  From this output, however:
> >>
> >>>systat -v output help:
> >>>    4 users    Load  4.64  5.58  5.77
> >>
> >>>Proc:r  p  d  s  w    Csw  Trp  Sys  Int  Sof  Flt
> >>>    24     9282       949 8414*****  678  349 8198
> >>
> >>>54.6%Sys   0.2%Intr 45.2%User  0.0%Nice  0.0%Idl
> >>
> >>>Disks   da0   da1   da2   da3   da4 pass0 pass1
> >>>KB/t   5.32  9.50 12.52 16.00  9.00  0.00  0.00
> >>>tps      23     2     4     3     1     0     0
> >>>MB/s   0.12  0.01  0.05  0.04  0.01  0.00  0.00
> >>>% busy    3     1     1     1     0     0     0
> >>
> >>, it looks like your disks aren't being touched at all.  You are doing
> >>over 99999 syscalls/second, though, which is mighty high.  The 50% Sys
> >>doesn't look good either.  You may have a runaway process doing some
> >>syscall over and over.  If this is not an MPSAFE syscall (see
> >>/sys/kern/syscalls.master ), it will also prevent other processes from
> >>making non-MPSAFE syscalls, and in 4.x that's most of them.
> >
> >Wow, that actually pointed me in the right direction, I think ... I just 
> >killed an http process that was using alot of CPU, and syscalls drop'd 
> >down to a numeric value again ... I'm still curious as to why this only 
> >seem sto affect my Dual-Xeon box though :(
> >
> >Thanks ...
> >
> >----
> >Marc G. Fournier           Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
> >Email: scrappy@hub.org           Yahoo!: yscrappy              ICQ: 7615664
> >_______________________________________________
> >freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
> >http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
> >To unsubscribe, send any mail to 
> >"freebsd-questions-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
> >
> 
> ----
> Marc G. Fournier           Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
> Email: scrappy@hub.org           Yahoo!: yscrappy              ICQ: 7615664
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-- 
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Bluescreen leads to downtime.
Downtime leads to suffering.
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