Re: top for apache? [OT]

2002-09-23 Thread darren chamberlain
* Nigel Hamilton [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2002-09-21 04:31]: I just found a really cool tool (mentioned in SysAdmin journal). It shows a dynamic picture of MySQL processes just like 'top' [-- snip --] It would be great to have a similar tool for mod_perl/apache. You could see the memory

Re: top for apache? [OT]

2002-09-23 Thread Eric Cholet
--On Sunday, September 22, 2002 09:54:02 -0400 Perrin Harkins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Nigel Hamilton wrote: It would be great to have a similar tool for mod_perl/apache. The closest thing available is a combination of mod_status and Apache::Status. If you haven't tried these yet,

Re: top for apache? [OT]

2002-09-22 Thread Perrin Harkins
Nigel Hamilton wrote: It would be great to have a similar tool for mod_perl/apache. The closest thing available is a combination of mod_status and Apache::Status. If you haven't tried these yet, give them a shot. They provide a good deal of information. - Perrin

Re: top for apache? [OT]

2002-09-22 Thread Kyle Oppenheim
On Sat, 21 Sep 2002, Nigel Hamilton wrote: to see the number of children and then make guestimates of average per child memory consumption. I'm not sure what the equivalent for other operating systems is, but here's a Solaris tip for the archives... we use /usr/proc/bin/pmap to

top for apache? [OT]

2002-09-21 Thread Nigel Hamilton
Hi, I just found a really cool tool (mentioned in SysAdmin journal). It shows a dynamic picture of MySQL processes just like 'top' (see below). MySQL on localhost (3.23.37) up 2+20:24:55 [09:12:03] Queries Total: 543,555Avg/Sec: 2.21 Slow: 1 Threads Total: 13