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Diskussion:Nmon

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Hint for nmon version 16q

Full Help Info : nmon -h
On-screen Stats: nmon
Data Collection: nmon -f [-s <seconds>] [-c <count>] [-t|-T]
Capacity Plan  : nmon -x

Interactive-Mode:

Read the Welcome screen & at any time type: "h" for more help
Type "q" to exit nmon

For Data-Collect-Mode

-f            Must be the first option on the line (switches off interactive mode)
              Saves data to a CSV Spreadsheet format .nmon file in then local directory
              Note: -f sets a defaults -s300 -c288    which you can then modify
Further Data Collection Options:
-s <seconds>  time between data snapshots
-c <count>    of snapshots before exiting
-t            Includes Top Processes stats (-T also collects command arguments)
-x            Capacity Planning=15 min snapshots for 1 day. (nmon -ft -s 900 -c 96)

End of Hints


Full Help Information for nmon 16q

For Interactive and Data Collection Mode:

User Defined Disk Groups (DG) - This works in both modes
It is a work around Linux issues, where disks & partitions are mixed up in /proc files
& drive driver developers use bizarre device names, making it trick to separate them.
-g <filename> Use this file to define the groups
              - On each line: group-name <disks-list>   (space separated list)
              - Example line: database sdb sdc sdd sde
              - Up to 64 disk groups, 512 disks per line
              - Disks names can appear more than one group
-g auto       - Will generate a file called "auto" with just disks from "lsblk|grep disk" output
 For Interactive use define the groups then type: g or G
 For Data Capture defining the groups switches on data collection

Data-Collect-Mode = spreadsheet format (i.e. comma separated values)

Note: Use only one of f, F, R, x, X or z to switch on Data Collection mode
Note: Make it the first argument then use other options to modify the defaults
Note: Don't collect data that you don't want - it just makes the files too large
Note: Too many snapshots = too much data and crashes Analyser and other tools
Note: 500 to 800 snapshots make a good graph on a normal size screen
Recommended normal minimal options: snapshots every 2 minutes all day: 
	Simple capture:      nmon -f  -s 120 -c 720
	With Top Procs:      nmon -fT -s 120 -c 720
	Set the directory:   nmon -fT -s 120 -c 720 -m /home/nag/nmon
	Capture a busy hour: nmon -fT -s   5 -c 720 -m /home/nag/nmon

For Data-Collect-Mode Options

-f            spreadsheet output format [note: default -s300 -c288]
		 output file is <hostname>_YYYYMMDD_HHMM.nmon
-F <filename> same as -f but user supplied filename
		 Not recommended as the default file name is perfect
The other options in alphabetical order:
-a            Include Accelerator GPU stats
-b            Online only: for black and white mode (switch off colour)
-B            Online only: for no boxes mode (switch off boxes)
-c <number>   The number of snapshots before nmon stops
-d <disks>    To set the maximum number of disks [default 256]
              Ignores disks if the systems has 100's of disk or the config is odd!
-D            Use with -g to add the Disk Wait/Service Time & in-flight stats
-f and -F     See above
-g <filename> User Defined Disk Groups (see above) - Data Capture: Generates  BBBG & DG lines
-g auto       See above but makes the file "auto" for you of just the disks like sda etc.
-h            This help output
-I <percent>  Set the ignore process & disks busy threshold (default 0.1%)
              Don't save or show proc/disk using less than this percent
-J            Switch-off Journel Filesystem stats collection (can causes issues with automound NFS)
-l <dpl>      Disks per line in data capture to avoid spreadsheet width issues. Default 150. EMC=64.
-m <directory> nmon changes to this directory before saving to file
              Useful when starting nmon via cron
-M 		Adds MHz stats for each CPU thread. Some POWER8 model CPU cores can be different frequencies
-N            Include NFS Network File System for V2, V3 and V4
-p            nmon outputs the PID when it starts. Useful in scripts to capture the PID for a later safe stop.
-r <runname>  Use in a benchmark to record the run details for later analysis [default hostname]
-R  		Old rrdtool format used by some - may be removed in the future. If you use this email Nigel
-s <seconds>  Time between snap shots - with "-c count" decides duration of the data capture
-t            Include Top Processes in the output
-T            As -t plus it saves command line arguments in UARG section
-U            Include the Linux 10 CPU utilisation stats (CPUUTIL lines in the file)
-V            Print nmon version & exit immediately
-^            Online only: Disk stats KB/s changed to MB/s. A 2nd ^ defaults to GB/s
To manually load nmon files into a spreadsheet:
	sort -A *nmon >stats.csv
	Transfer the stats.csv file to your PC
	Start spreadsheet & then Open with type=comma-separated-value ASCII file
	This puts every datum in a different cell
	Now select the data of one type (same 1st column) and graph it
	The nmon Analyser & other tools do not need the file sorted.

Capacity Planning mode - use cron to run each day

-x            Sensible spreadsheet output for one day
              Every 15 mins for 1 day ( i.e. -ft -s 900 -c 96)
-X            Sensible spreadsheet output for busy hour
              Every 30 secs for 1 hour ( i.e. -ft -s 30 -c 120)
-z            Like -x but the output saved in /var/perf/tmp assuming root user

Interactive Mode Keys in Alphabetical Order

   Start nmon then type the letters below to switch on & off particular stats
   The stats are always in the same order on-screen
   To see more stats: make the font smaller or use two windows
Key --- Toggles on off to control what is displayed ---
b   = Black and white mode (or use -b command line option)
B   = Switch on/off on-screen boxes (or use -B command line option)
c   = CPU Utilisation stats with bar graphs (CPU core threads)
C   = CPU Utilisation as above but concise wide view (up to 192 CPUs)
d   = Disk I/O Busy% & Graphs of Read and Write KB/s
D   = Disk I/O Numbers including Transfers, Average Block Size & Peaks (type: 0 to reset)
g   = User Defined Disk Groups            (assumes -g <file> when starting nmon)
G   = Change Disk stats (d) to just disks (assumes -g auto   when starting nmon)
h   = This help information
j   = File Systems including Journal File Systems
J   =  Reduces "j" output by removing unreal File Systems
k   = Kernel stats Run Queue, context-switch, fork, Load Average & Uptime
l   = Long term Total CPU (over 75 snapshots) via bar graphs
L   = Large and =Huge memory page stats
m   = Memory & Swap stats
M   = MHz for machines with variable frequency 1st=Threads 2nd=Cores 3=Graphs
n   = Network stats & errors (if no errors it disappears)
N   = NFS - Network File System
      1st NFS V2 & V3, 2nd=NFS4-Client & 3rd=NFS4-Server
o   = Disk I/O Map (one character per disk pixels showing how busy it is)
      Particularly good if you have 100's of disks 
q   = Quit
r   = Resources: Machine type, name, cache details & OS version & Distro + LPAR
t   = Top Processes: select the data & order 1=Basic, 3=Perf 4=Size 5=I/O=root only
u   = Top Process with command line details
U   = CPU utilisation stats - all 10 Linux stats:
      user, user_nice, system, idle, iowait, irq, softirq, steal, guest, guest_nice
v   = Experimental Verbose mode - tries to make recommendations
V   = Virtual Memory stats
Key --- Other Interactive Controls ---
+   = Double the screen refresh time
-   = Halves the screen refresh time
0   = Reset peak counts to zero (peak highlight with ">")
1   = Top Processes mode 1 Nice, Priority, Status
3   = Top Processes mode 3 CPU, Memory, Faults
4   = Top Processes mode 4 as 3 but order by memory
5   = Top Processes mode 5 as 3 but order by I/O (if root user)
6   = Highlights 60% row on Long Term CPU view
7   = Highlights 70% row on Long Term CPU view
8   = Highlights 80% row on Long Term CPU view
9   = Highlights 90% row on Long Term CPU view
.   = Minimum mode i.e. only busy disks and processes shown
^   = Disk stats KB/s changed to MB/s. A 2nd ^ to GB/s then back to KB/s
space = Refresh screen now

Interactive Start-up Control

If you find you always type the same toggles every time you start
then place them in the NMON shell variable. For example:
 export NMON=cmdrtn

Other items for Interactive and Data Collection mode:

a) To limit the processes nmon lists (online and to a file)
    either set NMONCMD0 to NMONCMD63 to the program names
    or use -C cmd:cmd:cmd etc. example: -C ksh:vi:syncd

Other items for Data Collection mode:

b) To you want to stop nmon use: kill -USR2 <nmon-pid>
c) Use -p and nmon outputs the background process pid
d) If you want to pipe nmon output to other commands use a FIFO:
    mkfifo /tmp/mypipe
    nmon -F /tmp/mypipe &
    tail -f /tmp/mypipe
e) If nmon fails please report it with:
   1) nmon version like: 16q
   2) the output of: cd /proc; cat cpuinfo meminfo partitions stat vmstat
   3) some clue of what you were doing
   4) I may ask you to run the debug version or collect data files
f) If box & line characters are letters then check: terminal emulator & $TERM
g) External Data Collectors - nmon will execute a command or script at each snapshot time
   They must output to a different file which is merge afterwards with the nmon output
   Set the following shell variables:
    NMON_START  = script to generate CVS Header test line explaining the columns
         Generate: TabName,DataDescription,Column_name_and_units,Column_name_and_units ... 
    NMON_SNAP   = script for each snapshots data, the parameter is the T0000 snapshot number
         Generate: TabName,T00NN,Data,Data,Data ...
    NMON_END    = script to clean up or finalise the data
    NMON_ONE_IN = call NMON_START less often (if it is heavy in CPU terms)
    Once capture done: cat nmon-file data-file >merged-file ; ready for Analyser or other tools
    The nmon Analyser will automatically do its best to graph the data on a new Tab sheet
Developer: Nigel Griffiths      See http://nmon.sourceforge.net
Feedback welcome - On the current release only
No warranty given or implied. (C) Copyright 2009 Nigel Griffiths GPLv3