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тАО10-23-2003 09:46 PM
тАО10-23-2003 09:46 PM
How I could know the number of RADs that I have in a system?.
I have a GS320.
Thanks!,
Carmen.
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО10-23-2003 11:00 PM
тАО10-23-2003 11:00 PM
Re: RADs
You can try with "sched_stat -R"
or you can write a C-program.
Look for an example in the manpage of rad_get_info
Hope this helps
Joris
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тАО10-24-2003 01:03 AM
тАО10-24-2003 01:03 AM
Re: RADs
I use "vmstat -R" which shows the number of RAD's and associated per RAD statistics.
Dave Bechtold
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тАО10-24-2003 01:18 AM
тАО10-24-2003 01:18 AM
Re: RADs
If I have this:
vmstat -R
Virtual Memory Statistics: (pagesize = 8192)
procs memory pages intr cpu
RAD r w u st sw act actv actu acti free wire wirv wiru fault cow zero react pin pout in sy cs us sy id
0 3 223 34 0 0 179K 73K 95K 11K 53K 22K 10K 0 944M 120M 469M 1193 120M 0 47 969 516 2 1 97
it's say me that I have only 1 RAD??
Thanks,
Carmen.
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тАО10-24-2003 04:23 AM
тАО10-24-2003 04:23 AM
SolutionYes, you have 1 RAD configured on your GS320.
RAD is the software version of a QBB (Quad Building Block) in a Wildfire system. Each QBB can contain 4 CPU's.
A GS320 system will generally have 8 QBB's, with each QBB potentially containing a maximum of 4 CPU's (8x4=32 i.e. GS320). Now that's the potential provided we built 1 system out of this hardware. You can hardware partition the GS320 on QBB boundaries in to some combination of systems not exceeding 8.
I would expect to find that your system has 4 CPU's knowing you have 1 RAD. To see this you can use "pinfo" command, or sched_stat referenced earlier.
NOTE: The "sched_stat -R" command I believe was introduced in V5.1B.
So, maybe your GS320 has been hardware partitioned in to more than 1 system.
If your findings differ that what I've layed out above, please provide teh "sched_stat" output and OS version (sizer -v").
Hope this helps,
Dave Bechtold