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10-11-2000 06:01 AM
10-11-2000 06:01 AM
Solved! Go to Solution.
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10-11-2000 06:04 AM
10-11-2000 06:04 AM
Re: what does LOAD mean when using top?
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10-11-2000 06:12 AM
10-11-2000 06:12 AM
Re: what does LOAD mean when using top?
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10-11-2000 06:14 AM
10-11-2000 06:14 AM
SolutionIt is *not* a very good measure of how loaded a system is. You could easyly have a load avg. of 5 (high) but you CPU does not do anything. This happens when processes are waiting for I/O.
In order to determine how loaded a system is you would use output from a number of tools. I personally favour a combination of 'vmstat' and 'sar'
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10-11-2000 06:17 AM
10-11-2000 06:17 AM
Re: what does LOAD mean when using top?
You can also run uptime.
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10-11-2000 06:23 AM
10-11-2000 06:23 AM
Re: what does LOAD mean when using top?
http://my1.itrc.hp.com/cm/QuestionAnswer/1,1150,0xc7c1119c3420d411b66300108302854d,00.html
Also, look at Document ID: W3564348
Good Luck!
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10-11-2000 06:37 AM
10-11-2000 06:37 AM
Re: what does LOAD mean when using top?
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10-11-2000 08:06 AM
10-11-2000 08:06 AM
Re: what does LOAD mean when using top?
BTW, Glance (on the second screen) of CPU data gives load too. This metric is derived from a kernel variable (avenrun) which is calculated by summing the number of runnable processes or threads and averaging the samples over the last minute.
...JRF...