Actually I do provide data to the PROCS test but I would like to provide it in a more 'STANDARD' format so that we don't have different columns for essentially the same data. What I would really like is to have the user count and proc count plotted properly, so I need to find the 'STANDARD' test parsing.
/Thomas Kern
/301-903-2211
Thu Oct 19 11:43:43 EDT 2006 There are 38 users logged on.
&green VMUTIL Ctime=3 09:28:53 Vtime=0 00:00:01 Ttime=0 00:00:01 IO=9295
&green PERFSVM Ctime=152 02:03:05 Vtime=0 02:03:50 Ttime=0 02:09:20 IO=1594094
&green TCPIP Ctime=12 16:51:29 Vtime=0 00:00:25 Ttime=0 00:00:36 IO=208
&green TCPHSF Ctime=199 21:03:23 Vtime=0 00:15:32 Ttime=0 00:29:51 IO=161
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-----Original Message-----
From: Rich Smrcina [mailto:rsmrcina (at) wi.rr.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 19, 2006 11:29 AM
To: hobbit (at) hswn.dk
Subject: Re: [hobbit] format for CPU data?
There is a native backend for z/VM, it was integrated into
Hobbit some
time ago. It appears that Thomas wants to consolidate the CPU, Users
and Procs into one column. I took a different approach, that since
there was already a procs column reported by other clients, that the
information that translated best to procs on z/VM was reported there.
The concept of users and procs is somewhat blurred on z/VM,
so I didn't
differentiate the two. Some shops (it appears that his is
one of them)
have a clear demarkation of who a user is, based on their userid.
Charles Goyard wrote:
Not at all.
Here I have something like 5 or 6 Unix flavors, all are
reporting under
the same cpu/disk/procs/whatever.
>From the osname reported by the client, hobbitd can hand
the data to the
appropriate backend (it even has different backends for a few Linux
flavor, such as RHEL3 or Debian). The idea it to put
together a native
backend for your OS.
Kern, Thomas a écrit :
But then you get a column for VM-CPU, a column for
MVS-CPU, a column for
W2K-CPU, a column for WinXP-CPU, a column for Solaris-CPU
(not really a
linux), a column for AIX-CPU (another not really a linux)
and finally a
column for CPU (for the real linux systems). Now repeat
that for DISK,
MSGS, PROCS, FILES, MEMORY, PORTS, BACKUP, etc.
You need a very WIDE screen when management wants it ALL
on one page.
--
Rich Smrcina
VM Assist, Inc.
Phone: 414-491-6001
Ans Service: 360-715-2467
rich.smrcina at vmassist.com
Catch the WAVV! http://www.wavv.org
WAVV 2007 - Green Bay, WI - May 18-22, 2007
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