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01-03-2007 09:00 AM
01-03-2007 09:00 AM
i was wondering whether the load average metrics, as shown by uptime or top does take the number of cpu's into account. So if average lenght of run queue is let's say 7, does that translate to the same level of (indicated) utilization (other things equal) on system with four and on system with just one cpu?
thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
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01-03-2007 09:44 AM
01-03-2007 09:44 AM
SolutionSo a 1 minute runqueue of 7 on a 4 CPU system means that there was an average of 1.75 jobs waiting on each processor. On a single CPU system, there were 7 jobs waiting on the processor.
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01-03-2007 10:39 AM
01-03-2007 10:39 AM
Re: load average/run queue metrics
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01-03-2007 11:46 AM
01-03-2007 11:46 AM
Re: load average/run queue metrics
For uptime and top, the run queue is global and is built by linking all runnable processes and threads together. Technically, there are two run queues: global and per-processor. Processor sets and other workload managers essentially adjust internal priorities but the run queue metric remains as defined.
Note that the run queue is all running and ready-to-run processes. A process is ready to run when it is waiting for nothing (like I/O or a system call). The run queue is a misleading metric because it is only measuring CPU cycles, not total workload. In general, an ideal run queue is approximately equal to the number of processors for simple compute-bound processes. But there are many circumstances where the run queue can be much larger than the processor count and yet the system runs fine. It is only one of many metrics needed to analyze system performance.
Bill Hassell, sysadmin
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01-11-2007 10:44 AM
01-11-2007 10:44 AM