сборщик данных о деятельности системы (System activity data collector.)
Имя (Name)
sadc - System activity data collector.
Синопсис (Synopsis)
/usr/local/lib64/sa/sadc [ -C
comment ] [ -D ] [ -F ] [ -f ] [ -L
] [ -V ] [ -S {
keyword[,...] | ALL | XALL } ] [
interval [
count
] ] [
outfile ]
Описание (Description)
The sadc
command samples system data a specified number of times
(count) at a specified interval measured in seconds (interval).
It writes in binary format to the specified outfile or to
standard output. If outfile is set to -
, then sadc
uses the
standard system activity daily data file (see below). In this
case, if the file already exists, sadc
will overwrite it if it is
from a previous month. By default sadc
collects most of the data
available from the kernel. But there are also optional metrics,
for which the relevant options must be explicitly passed to sadc
to be collected (see option -S
below).
The standard system activity daily data file is named saDD unless
option -D
is used, in which case its name is saYYYYMMDD, where
YYYY stands for the current year, MM for the current month and DD
for the current day. By default it is located in the /var/log/sa
directory. Yet it is possible to specify an alternate location
for it: If outfile is a directory (instead of a plain file) then
it will be considered as the directory where the standard system
activity daily data file will be saved.
When the count parameter is not specified, sadc
writes its data
endlessly. When both interval and count are not specified, and
option -C
is not used, a dummy record, which is used at system
startup to mark the time when the counter restarts from 0, will
be written. For example, one of the system startup script may
write the restart mark to the daily data file by the command
entry:
/usr/local/lib64/sa/sadc -
The sadc
command is intended to be used as a backend to the sar
command.
Note: The sadc
command only reports on local activities.
Параметры (Options)
-C
comment
When neither the interval nor the count parameters are
specified, this option tells sadc
to write a dummy record
containing the specified comment string. This comment can
then be displayed with option -C
of sar
.
-D
Use saYYYYMMDD instead of saDD as the standard system
activity daily data file name.
-F
The creation of outfile will be forced. If the file
already exists and has a format unknown to sadc
then it
will be truncated. This may be useful for daily data files
created by an older version of sadc
and whose format is no
longer compatible with current one.
-f
fdatasync() will be used to ensure data is written to
disk. This differs from the normal operation in that a
sudden system reset is less likely to result in the saDD
datafiles being corrupted. However, this is at the expense
of performance within the sadc
process as forward progress
will be blocked while data is written to underlying disk
instead of just to cache.
-L sadc
will try to get an exclusive lock on the outfile
before writing to it or truncating it. Failure to get the
lock is fatal, except in the case of trying to write a
normal (i.e. not a dummy and not a header) record to an
existing file, in which case sadc
will try again at the
next interval. Usually, the only reason a lock would fail
would be if another sadc
process were also writing to the
file. This can happen when cron
is used to launch sadc
. If
the system is under heavy load, an old sadc
might still be
running when cron
starts a new one. Without locking, this
situation can result in a corrupted system activity file.
-S {
keyword[,...] | ALL | XALL }
Possible keywords are DISK
, INT
, IPV6
, POWER
, SNMP
, XDISK
,
ALL
and XALL
.
Specify which optional activities should be collected by
sadc
. Some activities are optional to prevent data files
from growing too large. The DISK
keyword indicates that
sadc
should collect data for block devices. The INT
keyword indicates that sadc
should collect data for system
interrupts. The IPV6
keyword indicates that IPv6
statistics should be collected by sadc
. The POWER
keyword
indicates that sadc
should collect power management
statistics. The SNMP
keyword indicates that SNMP
statistics should be collected by sadc
. The ALL
keyword is
equivalent to specifying all the keywords above and
therefore all previous activities are collected.
The XDISK
keyword is an extension to the DISK
one and
indicates that partitions and filesystems statistics
should be collected by sadc
in addition to disk
statistics. This option works only with kernels 2.6.25 and
later. The XALL
keyword is equivalent to specifying all
the keywords above (including keyword extensions) and
therefore all possible activities are collected.
Important note: The activities (including optional ones)
saved in an existing data file prevail over those selected
with option -S
. As a consequence, appending data to an
existing data file will result in option -S
being ignored.
-V
Print version number then exit.
Окружение (Environment)
The sadc
command takes into account the following environment
variable:
S_TIME_DEF_TIME
If this variable exists and its value is UTC
then sadc
will save its data in UTC time. sadc
will also use UTC
time instead of local time to determine the current daily
data file located in the /var/log/sa directory.
Примеры (Examples)
/usr/local/lib64/sa/sadc 1 10 /tmp/datafile
Write 10 records of one second intervals to the
/tmp/datafile binary file.
/usr/local/lib64/sa/sadc -C "Backup Start" /tmp/datafile
Insert the comment "Backup Start" into the file
/tmp/datafile.
Ошибки (баги) (Bugs)
The /proc filesystem must be mounted for the sadc
command to
work.
All the statistics are not necessarily available, depending on
the kernel version used. sadc
assumes that you are using at
least a 2.6 kernel.
Файлы (Files)
/var/log/sa/saDD
/var/log/sa/saYYYYMMDD
The standard system activity daily data files and their
default location. YYYY stands for the current year, MM
for the current month and DD for the current day.
/proc and /sys contain various files with system statistics.