On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 08:45:58AM +0100, Javier wrote:
I think that vmstat 5 2 and getting the last line could give you a
good result.
BTW: I started to keep a
vmstat 5 | logger -t vmstat:
while true; do ps faxu|logger -t ps: ; sleep 15; done
running and log the output with
On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 07:08:29AM +0100, Russell Coker wrote:
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 20:15, Javier wrote:
Perhaps you can try with vmstat. It gives you the CPU idle time, so you
can easily program an script that returns (100 - idle time). Use
netsaint_statd plugin to return to netsaint server
Hi,
Perhaps you can try with vmstat. It gives you the CPU idle time, so you
can easily program an script that returns (100 - idle time). Use
netsaint_statd plugin to return to netsaint server what your script
returns.
I hope this helps.
Un saludo.
Javier.
-Mensaje original-
De:
On Tue, 2003-01-07 at 17:49, Russell Coker wrote:
Any suggestions?
Monitoring vmstat output? I feel vmstat gives you all relevant data in
one place: memory, disk, cpu.
Sorry, no advise on how to collect this from the network.
cheers
-- vbi
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On Tuesday 07 January 2003 8:28 pm, Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder
Monitoring vmstat output? I feel vmstat gives you all relevant data in
one place: memory, disk, cpu.
Sorry, no advise on how to collect this from the network.
inetd?
inetd.conf:
vmstat stream tcp nowait root
vmstat is great, but just one word of advice... I had some machines
running AOLserver (damn good, but i found better and faster than him),
and it had about 1024+ threads, and everything - ps, top, vmstat , which
read the processes information in /proc , skewed a lot the information,
because it
Sorry, no advise on how to collect this from the network.
The check_by_ssh plugin works well for me.
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On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 20:15, Javier wrote:
Perhaps you can try with vmstat. It gives you the CPU idle time, so you
can easily program an script that returns (100 - idle time). Use
netsaint_statd plugin to return to netsaint server what your script
returns.
Thanks for the suggestion. However I
; 'Debian ISP'
Asunto: Re: monitoring load average
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 20:15, Javier wrote:
Perhaps you can try with vmstat. It gives you the CPU idle time, so
you
can easily program an script that returns (100 - idle time). Use
netsaint_statd plugin to return to netsaint server what your script
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