Rainer, Would you have a perl script similar to this?:
http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/travi?entry=ultrasparc_t1_utilization_explained The guy describes, it but doesn't offer it. Thanks, Jeff Rainer Jung wrote: > When preparing for the test, have a look at the very interesting > cpustat/cputrack. Without this you won't really be able to judge on the > cpu usage. Classical tools like sar/vmstat/prstat easily lead to wrong > results (the amount of work a single strand [hardware thread] is able to > do is not fixed. It really shares the core with the other strands. If > they stall, it will execute on every cycle, if all 4 strands are busy > each one will only execute on every 4th cycle. So the cpu power > available to a strand is dynamic, but tools like prstat are not able to > show that. > > For memory bus usage busstat is the way to go. > > If you need more info, you could start an off topic thread or mail me > directly. > > Rainer > > Jeff Genender wrote: >> Yep...each core will handle 4 hardware threads. It was built for >> multiple threads and a JVM (multithreaded of course) is made for this >> box. For an appserver under load, I think the numbers should be >> impressive on this box. >> >> The cool thing about this machine is, each core is viewed as 4 cpus. >> That means this box looks like it has 16 CPUs running (4 cores x 4 >> hardware threads)! >> >> I can't wait to pound on this and see what it can do. I am going to >> have T2000->T2000 trials going on to maximize the throughput for CPU. >> They come with 4 1 Ghz Ethernet ports each, so I am going to pipe these >> up and hopefully there will be zero bottleneck on IO.