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    <title>topic Disk Utilization at 100% in Operating System - HP-UX</title>
    <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280090#M474206</link>
    <description>Hi All&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;My setup is 2 node McSG cluster running 11.31 and the storage is NetApp. I found that I am having disk utilization (in glance) 100% most of the time. File system usage is average of 87%. we are using VxVM which I am not familiar with it. The storage admin says his netapp is fine. Can somebody help me to check this problem.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;F.R.</description>
    <pubDate>Wed, 20 Apr 2011 08:40:34 GMT</pubDate>
    <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2011-04-20T08:40:34Z</dc:date>
    <item>
      <title>Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280090#M474206</link>
      <description>Hi All&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;My setup is 2 node McSG cluster running 11.31 and the storage is NetApp. I found that I am having disk utilization (in glance) 100% most of the time. File system usage is average of 87%. we are using VxVM which I am not familiar with it. The storage admin says his netapp is fine. Can somebody help me to check this problem.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;F.R.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Apr 2011 08:40:34 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280090#M474206</guid>
      <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-20T08:40:34Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280091#M474207</link>
      <description>disk utilization of 100% simply means that during the measurement interval the disk was doing some sort of IO operation 100% of the time... that's not necessarily a bad thing... the more important measurement is the average service time for the disk(s) - values below 10ms are good, below 20ms may be "acceptable" and values over 20ms could be a problem... use "sar -d" to look at this... e.g. "sar -d 10 10" to look at disk performance 10 times with 10 seconds between each measurement.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;HTH&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Duncan</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Apr 2011 09:27:36 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280091#M474207</guid>
      <dc:creator>Duncan Edmonstone</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-20T09:27:36Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280092#M474208</link>
      <description>Hi!&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Ok, when I do sar -d 10 10, "avwait" is always less (close to 0) than avserv, so I assume that everything is fine, but I have got some 100% busy disks from %busy column:&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Average     disk5    0.77    0.50       2      19    0.00    7.64&lt;BR /&gt;Average     disk7    0.76    0.50       2      19    0.00    8.00&lt;BR /&gt;Average     disk9    0.90    0.50       2      70    0.00    7.39&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk10    0.52    0.50       1       9    0.00    7.90&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk37   53.19    0.50      89   15008    0.00    6.14&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk38  100.00    0.50     205   16983    0.00    6.62&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk39  100.00    0.50     171   15536    0.00    6.28&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk40    0.22    0.50       0      22    0.00   21.75&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk41    0.02    0.50       0       0    0.00    9.79&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk42   16.88    0.50      23    7421    0.00    7.31&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk43    0.19    0.50       3      99    0.00    0.58&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk45   14.40    0.50      21    6479    0.00    6.97&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk46   14.90    0.50      21    6586    0.00    7.26&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk44    0.06    0.50       1      18    0.00    0.68&lt;BR /&gt;Average    disk81    0.11    0.50       1      11    0.00    0.77&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;F.R.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Apr 2011 09:39:38 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280092#M474208</guid>
      <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-20T09:39:38Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280093#M474209</link>
      <description>Your applications require 100% of your disk time. If you stop your applications, then the usage will go down. Now if the applications are not designed to use 100% of the disk bandwidth, then they need to be reconfigured or  redesigned. You can't reduce the percentage of disk usage unless you increase the transfer rate (change fibre, HBAs, switch and controllers to 8Gbit) and reduce latency with a much larger disk cache with wide striping. All of these fixes fairly expensive and may not improve performance if you have a small and/or slow machine. If possible, maximize your system (64GB RAM, 32 processors or larger), especially if you have large databases running.&lt;BR /&gt; &lt;BR /&gt;But these are very broad recommendations. You need to examine performance with Glance and Measureware logs to better understand what is normal.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Apr 2011 11:38:01 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280093#M474209</guid>
      <dc:creator>Bill Hassell</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-20T11:38:01Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280094#M474210</link>
      <description>Hi&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;I have 2 rx7640 with 4CPUÂ´s and 32Gb of RAM. the HBAÂ´s that connect with netapp are 4gb.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;I have used measuware to give this output every 5 minutes. this is just an extract:&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;OVPA Export 04/01/11 08:06    Logfile: /var/opt/perf/datafiles/logglob SCOPE/UX C.04.73.410(3) dbnode0&lt;BR /&gt;                    Active           Phys       Phys       Free    Memory  User           Pg Out      Pg Out   Pg Out   Swap     VM Pg    &lt;BR /&gt;   Date      Time    CPUs  CPU %    IO Rt        IOs        Mem      %    Mem %  Swap %     KB        KB Rt     Rate   Out Rt   Scan Rt   &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:00:00      4  83.74      174.8       52422     11112  64.92  47.71  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:05:00      4  81.87      125.6       37730     11166  64.75  47.54  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:10:00      4  81.37      114.9       34458     11160  64.77  47.56  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:15:00      4  83.39      116.5       34973     11179  64.71  47.50  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:20:00      4  17.16       45.4       13610     11135  64.83  47.63  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:25:00      4   5.49       41.0       12300     11114  64.91  47.70  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:30:00      4   4.71       32.7        9826     11093  64.97  47.76  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:35:00      4   5.51       42.8       12827     11054  65.08  47.88  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:40:00      4   4.69       44.0       13186     11029  65.17  47.96  44.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:45:00      4   5.84       47.6       14284     11044  65.08  47.88  45.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:50:00      4   4.83       37.0       11103     10989  65.25  48.05  45.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0 &lt;BR /&gt;03/01/2011 07:55:00      4   6.37       43.6       13084     10930  65.44  48.23  45.00           0        0.0     0.0     0.0        0.0&lt;BR /&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Apr 2011 14:14:01 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280094#M474210</guid>
      <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-20T14:14:01Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280095#M474211</link>
      <description>100% disk utilization is meaningless.  The definition of a disk bottleneck is just as you stated above, anywhere where 'avwait' &amp;gt; 'avserv'.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;And typically you never see a disk bottleneck anymore due to SAN technologies, except, on Local SCSI disks which are usually where the O/S is located.  &lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;So in general, you always see a disk bottleneck on the O/S disks, and never on a LUN.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;In fact, I would say that they've basically been obsoleted.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;And one comment about using OpenView and Measureware and those types of applications:&lt;BR /&gt;a) Analysis is often ojective, meaning what you see might not be what someone else see's, (* as opposed to an error in a syslog *)&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;b) Analysis is also heuristic meaning that you're usually taking your best guess at fixing the problem, (* again, as opposed to an error in syslog with a fix that matches up one to one *)&lt;BR /&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Apr 2011 15:45:43 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280095#M474211</guid>
      <dc:creator>Michael Steele_2</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-20T15:45:43Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280096#M474212</link>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;Hi,&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Always with disk IO performance problems, on HP-UX 11.31, "log" the complete, "sar -LdR 1 10 output", not "only" the average output.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;And for the rest, if the netapp guy says that everything is fine on the netapp, that means that the netapp diskarray isnt working enough.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Double up the max_q_depth for the affected disks and check if the number of IO/sec increases, like explained in the following thread.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;A href="http://h30499.www3.hp.com/t5/System-Administration/avwait-and-avserv-are-normal-but-Disk-is-100-busy-on-HP-UX-lance/m-p/4644647#M379752" target="_blank"&gt;http://h30499.www3.hp.com/t5/System-Administration/avwait-and-avserv-are-normal-but-Disk-is-100-busy-on-HP-UX-lance/m-p/4644647#M379752&lt;/A&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Greetz,&lt;BR /&gt;Chris&lt;/P&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2011 15:42:29 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280096#M474212</guid>
      <dc:creator>chris huys_4</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-08-17T15:42:29Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280097#M474213</link>
      <description>Hi!&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;I have seen from the "sar -d" output that some disks have avwait &amp;gt; avserv, and I have identify those disks as disk5, disk7 and disk10, the first two are vg00 disks, and disk10 is a vgora, I beleive where binaries for oracle reside (file system U01). I also did the following :&lt;BR /&gt;scsimgr get_attr -D /dev/rdisk/disk5 -a state -a max_q_depth&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;        SCSI ATTRIBUTES FOR LUN : /dev/rdisk/disk5&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;name = state&lt;BR /&gt;current = ONLINE&lt;BR /&gt;default =&lt;BR /&gt;saved =&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;name = max_q_depth&lt;BR /&gt;current = 8&lt;BR /&gt;default = 8&lt;BR /&gt;saved =&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;The o/p is the same for the other two disks.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;F.R.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 Apr 2011 05:26:53 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280097#M474213</guid>
      <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-21T05:26:53Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280098#M474214</link>
      <description>Hi&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Please HP experts, be nice and respond to this post&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;F.R.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Apr 2011 05:18:22 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280098#M474214</guid>
      <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-27T05:18:22Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280099#M474215</link>
      <description>Hi,&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;In glance, check the logical volume status.&lt;BR /&gt;Where, you will get a lvol, which is heavily used.&lt;BR /&gt;In glance, even if a single disk/lvol used 100%, then also it shows the total disk utilization at 100%.&lt;BR /&gt;Further more, you can drill down to %wio, if any thing serious, then you can check the &amp;amp; avwait time. &lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Also, at the same time, ask storage admin to run the perf analysis on storage for the required time &amp;amp; sampled rate &amp;amp; compared the report with OS data.&lt;BR /&gt;Note: the sampling period must be same for storage &amp;amp; os, so to know exact issue.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Hope, this helps you.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;Thanks,&lt;BR /&gt;Vivek</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Apr 2011 16:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280099#M474215</guid>
      <dc:creator>Vivek_Pendse</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-27T16:05:00Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280100#M474216</link>
      <description>Hi&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;&amp;gt;I have identify those disks as disk5, disk7 &amp;gt;and disk10, the first two are vg00 disks, &amp;gt;and disk10 is a vgora, I beleive where &amp;gt;binaries for oracle reside (file system &amp;gt;U01). &lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;This is where I get problems: for vg00 is lvol usr.&lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;F.R.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Apr 2011 08:30:38 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280100#M474216</guid>
      <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-04-28T08:30:38Z</dc:date>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Re: Disk Utilization at 100%</title>
      <link>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280101#M474217</link>
      <description>closing &lt;BR /&gt;&lt;BR /&gt;F.R.</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 03 May 2011 06:20:54 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://community.hpe.com/t5/operating-system-hp-ux/disk-utilization-at-100/m-p/5280101#M474217</guid>
      <dc:creator>NDO</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2011-05-03T06:20:54Z</dc:date>
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