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03-22-2004 01:10 AM
03-22-2004 01:10 AM
Solved! Go to Solution.
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03-22-2004 01:39 AM
03-22-2004 01:39 AM
SolutionSay, vmstat 5,5
Are you getting a lot of pi's /po's?
Is the sr (scan rate) high? (above 0)
If it is, then you are swapping - and you probably need more memory...CPU will go up if the scanrate is high....
Also, what is output of swapinfo?
What is dbc_max_pct set to? if 50%, then you may want to tune your kernel...set it so that it equals between 400 and 800 MB (try 20%) - that will give you more memory for the application...
How the Buffer Cache Grows:
As the kernel reads in files from the file system, it will try to store data in the buffer cache. If memory is available, and the buffer cache has not reached its maximum size, the kernel will grow the buffer cache to make room for the new data. As long as there is memory available, the kernel will keep growing the buffer cache until it reaches its max size (50% by default).
For performance reasons, you want the buffer cache hit ratio on reads to be higher then 90%.
sar -b and watch %rcache
Maybe more memory will help - maybe not...
Rgds...Geoff
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03-22-2004 01:52 AM
03-22-2004 01:52 AM
Re: Large data file
when you have large tables in database, you must see the database configuration, besides UNIX configuration:
1. Size of tables
2. Number of access per table
3. Number of disk devices
4. Possibility of sharing access in more than one disk device
5. Possibility of table partitioning
6. Verify if you have contention in database memory
7. Verify if you have CPU contention
After this all verified, you can conclude if you have to upgrade your server.
In many cases, modifying database configuration is enough.
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03-22-2004 02:12 AM
03-22-2004 02:12 AM
Re: Large data file
Bill Hassell, sysadmin
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03-23-2004 01:53 AM
03-23-2004 01:53 AM
Re: Large data file
but pi never more than 1
The sr is 0
Universe open MFILE = 300
and MAX_OPEN_FILES = 320
This seems to be correct.
nfile 149984 (by formula)
dbc_max_pct 33
for the 4GB system dbc_max_pct 25
The data is on and EMC 3830 2 path SCSI on a striped filesystem to get the most through put.
No PowerPath or ONJFS
Thanks Bill, It nice to know someone else knows what Universe is.
Seems we have the best we can get. We are going to an 8530 with fiber and PowerPath.
Hopefully we can get some of the old data purged out of the system to speed things up.