Tom,
Thanks for the quick reply. I just did a double check on the binaries and
the source code. It is 5.3 and not 5.3.0.1. I have also run truss on the
trap daemon and here are the results. The parent snmptrapd does not account
for any time on the cpu but the one it forks runs up a lot of time.
As you can see from the following (in 90 seconds):
root 4238 4235 38 09:21:17 pts/4 1:29 truss -f -o /tmp/truss.out
/opt/net-snmp/sbin/snmptrapd -C -c /opt/net-snmp/sha
root 4235 3339 0 09:21:17 pts/4 0:00 truss -f -o /tmp/truss.out
/opt/net-snmp/sbin/snmptrapd -C -c /opt/net-snmp/sha
The output from a tail -f on the truss.out file that truss created shows the
following (the full truss output was huge at this point but I think you can
see whats happening with this snippet when compared to the snmptrapd with
the -f option:
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
4237: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 3
That output is repeating very fast and in 2 minutes worth of operaiton we
have generated 5185153 lines in that file. That file is growing by
approximately 1.5 million lines per minute now. I have been watching the
file and there is nothing else coming through the output.
Now when I truss the output including the -f option to not fork the
snmptrapd process I get the following at a rate of 27 messages per minute -
(HUGE DIFFERENCE):
5065: bind(7, 0xFFBFF6E8, 16, 3) = 0
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) (sleeping...)
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 6, 5000) = 0
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 5000) (sleeping...)
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 5000) = 0
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 4986) (sleeping...)
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 4986) = 0
5065: so_socket(PF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0, "", 1) = 9
5065: connect(9, 0xFFBFEF50, 110, 1) Err#2 ENOENT
5065: close(9) = 0
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 5000) (sleeping...)
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 5000) = 0
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 5000) (sleeping...)
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 5000) = 0
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 4980) (sleeping...)
5065: poll(0xFFBFF730, 3, 4980) = 0
5065: so_socket(PF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0, "", 1) = 9
5065: connect(9, 0xFFBFEF50, 110, 1) Err#2 ENOENT
5065: close(9) = 0
and that just repeats over and over again like I would expect a daemon to.
Anyone got any idea on this?
Jayson Robinson
From: Thomas Anders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: snmptrapd cpu usage on solaris when disconnected from pty.
Date: Tue, 11 Apr 2006 22:37:44 +0200
Jayson Robinson wrote:
I'm running snmptrapd 5.3.01 on a solaris 9 box. When I run from the
command line and use the -f option I see less then 1% cpu usage. Whenever
I call the snmptrapd from the startup script (and it's using the same
exact options) cpu goes way up
To see where it spends the cycles, can you run it either under truss (with
the appropriate option(s) to output time deltas) or build a profiled binary
for use with gprof?
NET-SNMP version 5.3
Didn't you say you're running 5.3.0.1, not 5.3?
+Thomas
--
Thomas Anders (thomas.anders at blue-cable.de)
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