Finding OS Version and
Bit

OS Version

uname -a
AIX <ServerName> 3 5
00C8E96B4C00

uname
AIX

oslevel
-r
5300-06

OS Bit

lsconf|grep
-i kernel
Kernel
Type: 64-bit

prtconf

/usr/bin/isainfo
–kv

getconf
LONG_BIT 

getconf
-a | grep KERN
uname
-m


1024
bytes =  1KB  (4 letters)
1024
*1024 = 1048576 = 1MB (7 letters)
1024
*1024 * 1024 = 1073741824 = 1GB (10 letters)



lssrc
-a |grep sendmail

ps
–ef|grep sendmail



ps
-ef|awk ‘{print $1}’|sort -n|uniq -c

Process count

ps
-ef|awk ‘{print $1 }’|sort|uniq -c |sort -n

ps
-ef|wc -l

ps
-ef|grep oracle|wc -l

ps
-x|wc –l


                   
!!!CAUTION!!!

  1. ALL ARE
    EXAMPLES ONLY
  1. The Use of rm
    –f command must be thoroughly checked before including it in the find
    command syntax.
  1. The Use of
    gzip –f command must be thoroughly checked before including it in the find
    command syntax.
  1. Please understand
    the use of below commands before executing them in production.
  1. Always edit
    the below find commands as per requirement.
  1. We will not own the responsibility incase if the below commands
    are used wrongly by the buyer causing severe damage to the files.
  1. These commands
    can cause severe damage to the files if used Wrongly in wrong situation.
  1. These commands
    are examples only and should be used with Caution and buddy check.
  1. Understand/Test
    & Edit the commands appropriately and use.

Unix commands


To find files from day a
week ago
find
./ -name “*” ( -mtime -7 -a -mtime +5 )  -type f -exec ls -l {} ;

To specify displayed
information
find
. -type f -name “*.trc” -printf “%f   %c  %a
%t  n”

To find files owned by
specified user on desired mountpoint ( /var in this exam.)
find
/var -xdev -user oracle -type f -exec ls -l {} ;

Files bigger than specified
size in [k for kilobytes | c for bytes ]
find
. -type f -size +1024k -exec ls -l {} ;

To compute size of files
ls
-ltr * | awk ‘{ sum += $5 } { print “Size in GB ” sum/1024/1024/1024
}’ | tail -1

Other commands syntax
uname
-a                                               —
To find the OS of the box

df
-h                                                        —
To check total, used, avialable free space of all Filesystems
df
-k

pwd                                                        —
Print name of current/working directory
                                                                    To check u r in the correct folder or not ,
else use cd command and change the directory

df
-h .       
                                              —
To check total, used, avialable free space of the current path FS
df
-k .                                                          (59419872 = around 59GB)
df
-g .

df
-g /opt/oracle/apps/admin/UKPROD  

df
-hP | grep /SID/oracle   –To check total, used, avialable free space of
the given path FS
df
-kP | grep /SID/oracle                    (59419872 = around 59GB)

du
-sh .                                                   –to
check total size of current directory
du
-sk .                                                    (output interms of KB)(23695680 = 23GB)

du
-sh *                                                  –to
list sizes of all files , folders
du
-sk *

du
-sh * | sort -n                                  –to list sizes of
all files , folders
du
-sk * | sort -n

du
-sk *|sort -n|tail                             –to list sizes of
all files , folders (bigger 10 files)
du
-sh *|sort -n|tail

du
-sk * | sort -n | egrep
‘tblsp_SID.txt|tmproot|REFRESH|clone_base|oradata|xxonline’

du
-ch PROD_df_LEVEL0_04-02-2007*     –in
the last line can find string* files total size

ls
-l l779750[7-9].req

ls
-lrt *LEVEL0*
ls
-ltr *failed*

ls
-ltr SID_arch* | head ; ls -ltr SID_arch* | tail

ls
-ltrh

ls
-lS                                                        ->
list of files/folder SIZEwise sorting (to c bigger files, need to scroll)

ls
-lSr                                                      ->list
of files/folder SIZEwise reverse sorting (can c bigger files immediately)

ls
-lt                                                         ->
last accessed date wise sort (old files u can c immediately)

ls
-ltr                                                       ->
last accessed date wise reverse sort  (to
c old files, u need to scroll)
                                                                —
file/directory, owner of file, size, last accessed date, file name

ls
-lSrh | tail -30                    -> size wise list of 30 bigger files

ls
-lSr |tail

ls
-lt *TMP| grep  ” May  5″

fuser
<filename>                                 — to find any process is accessing
the file
lsof
<filename>                                     — to find any process is accessing the file


Command to check size for a
particular string for all platform

ls
-ltr *LEVEL0* | awk ‘{ sum += $5 } { print “Size in GB ”
sum/1024/1024/1024 }’ |tail -1  

ls
-ltr SID_df_LEVEL0_18-10-2006* | awk ‘{ sum += $5 } { print “Size in GB
” sum/1024/1024/1024 }’ |tail -1



find
./ -name “*.zip*” -mtime +60 -exec ls -ltr {} ;  – searching for old patches

find
./ -name “*log*” -mtime +60 -exec ls -ltr {} ;   – searching for old log files

find
. -size +100000000c -xdev -exec ls -l {} ;       – searching for morethan 100MB size
files

find
./ -name “*” -size +30000k -exec ls -ltr {} ;

BECAREFUL OF USING THIS
COMMANDS
===         ———————————–                                                                                                 ===
===
find /opt/oracle/apps/admin/SID/log -mtime +60 -type f -exec ls -l {} ; | wc
-l                                                                                                                                                                                              ===
===
find ./ -name “*.trc” -mtime +60 -exec ls -ltr {} ; – listing 20 days old .trc files===
===
find ./ -name “error_log*” -mtime +10 -exec ls -ltr {} ; |wc -l                                                   ===
===
find ./ -name “*.trc” -mtime +10 -exec gzip -f {} ;                – zipping 20 days old .trc
files===
===
find ./ -name “*.trc*” -mtime +60 -exec ls -l {} ;                   – Purging 20 days old .trc
files===
===
gzip -f `ls -lt *.trc | grep  ” Apr
” | awk ‘{print $9}’`                -zipping
Apr month .trc files              ===
===
gzip -f `ls -ltr | grep  ” Sep 29
10″ | awk ‘{print $9}’` – zipiing sep 29th 10AM files(all)===
===
ls -l `ls -lt *.trc | grep  ” Jan
” | awk ‘{print $9}’`   -Purging Jan
month .trc files     ===
===
ls -l *trc `ls -l  |grep ” Aug
“|awk ‘{print $9}’`                                                                                         ===        
===                                                                                
                        ===
===
ls -ltr *LEVEL0* | awk ‘{ sum += $5 } { print “Size in GB ”
sum/1024/1024/1024}’ |tail -1  
–Calculate size
===
ls -ltr PROD_df_LEVEL1_27-09-2007* | awk ‘{ sum += $5 } { print “Size in
GB ” sum/1024/1024/1024 }’ |tail -1
===
===
find ./ -name “*trc” -size +300k 
-mtime +3 -exec ls -ltr {} ;                                                               ===
===
find ./ -name “*trc” -size +300k 
-mtime +3 -exec gzip {} ;                                                 ===
===
gzip -f `ls -l |grep ” Sep ” | awk ‘{print $9}’`                                                                                            ===                                                                                        
===
gzip -f `ls -l| grep  ” Sep 1″|
awk ‘{print $9}’`                                                                                          ===
===
gzip <file name>                                                                                                                                                           ===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
rm <file name>   Ex: rm ias.tar                                   — to remove
single file                        ===
===
ls -l SID_df_LEVEL0_30-09-2006*                                            —
to remove multiple files                  ===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
find ./ -name “*.*” -mtime +60 -exec ls -ltr {} ;   – searching for old files                         ===                                                                                        
===
find . -mtime +15 -exec gzip -f {} ;              — zipping 15 days old files                               ===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
find . -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;                        — purge/delete 30 days old file                ===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
ls -lt *log* | grep  ” Mar ” |
awk ‘{print $9}’                                                                                            ===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
ls -l `ls -lt *log* | grep  ” Feb
” | awk ‘{print $9}’`                                                                   ===
===
ls -l `ls -lt |grep ” Jul ” | awk ‘{print $9}’`                                                                                  ===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
find ./ -name “*.out” -mtime +60 -exec ls -ltr {} ;  – searching for old files of extn .out===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
find . -size +100000000c -xdev -exec ls -l {} ;  – searching for morethan 100MB size files ===
===
find ./ -name “*” -size +30000k -exec ls -ltr {} ;                                                                                    ===
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===
===
ls -ltr SID_df_LEVEL0_28-10-2006* | awk ‘{ sum += $5 } { print “Size in GB
” sum/1024/1024/1024 }’ |tail -1   –
total size of this failed LEVEL0 backup
===                                                                                                                                                                                         ===        
===================================================================================================
to
purge files with directories inside use : ls -l 
ls
-lr oradata_beforePMP – DANGEROUS command 
– to purge along with folder forcefully 
===================================================================================================
find
. -size +50000000c -print|xargs ls -l

Finding Archivelogs applied
lastly

select
min(COMPLETION_TIME) last_appl from v$archived_log
where
(THREAD#=1 and SEQUENCE#=28040)
or
(THREAD#=2 and SEQUENCE#=24386)
or
(THREAD#=3 and SEQUENCE#=24259)

LAST_APPL
—————
08-jun-07
19:12

Removing Old Archivelog
files of a date (Replace ls with rm command)

alter session set
nls_date_format=’dd-mon-rr hh24:mi’;
set
lines 180
set
pagesize 9999
select
‘ls -l ‘ || name
from
v$archived_log
where
applied = ‘YES’
and
to_char(COMPLETION_TIME,’rrrrmmdd’) between ‘20070602’ and ‘20070604’;

‘RM-F’||NAME
—————————————————
ls
-l /SID/arch/SID1/SID_2_23688.arc
ls
-l /SID/arch/SID1/SID_1_27359.arc
ls
-l /SID/arch/SID1/SID_3_23578.arc
ls
-l /SID/arch/SID1/SID_2_23992.arc
ls
-l /SID/arch/SID1/SID_2_23993.arc
ls
-l /SID/arch/SID1/SID_3_23883.arc
ls
-l /SID/arch/SID1/SID_1_27663.arc

917
rows selected.





RMAN Sofar done

SELECT
sid, serial#, context, sofar, totalwork,
round(sofar/totalwork*100,2)
“% Complete”
FROM
v$session_longops
WHERE
opname LIKE ‘RMAN%’
AND
opname NOT LIKE ‘%aggregate%’
AND
totalwork != 0
AND
sofar <> totalwork
/

find
/backup/sid -name “SID_arch_*” -mmin +6000 -exec ls -l {} ; | awk
‘{sum += $5} {print
“Size
GB:” sum/1024/1024/1024 }’ | tail -1

Size
GB:10.8984

find
/backup/sid -name “SID_arch_*” -mmin +6030 -exec ls -l {} ;
Examples (Throughly test
yourself and understand before use)
df
-hP|grep <codetree>
du
-sh *
ls -ltr|tail
ls -lSr|tail
ls
-ltr|head
find
. -iname *out -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;
find
. -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ;
find
. -mtime +60 -exec ls -l {} ;
find
. -size +100000000c -xdev -exec ls -lrth {} ;

du
-sj —>to sum up sizes
nohup
find /SID/oracle/product/102/admin/SID_Host/bdump -size +100000000c -name
“*.trc*” -mtime +15 -xdev -exec ls -l {} ; &

find
. -size +100000000c -name “*log*” -mtime +1 -xdev -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
. -size +100000000c -xdev -exec ls -ltr {} ;

find
/ -size +100000000c -xdev -type f -exec ls -lh {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -size +100000000c -xdev -exec ls -lrth {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -size +100000000c -xdev -exec du -sh {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “core-*” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
/tmp ! -name . -prune -name “*.t” -mtime +15 -exec ls -ltrh {} ;

find
/tmp ! -name . -prune -name “*.t” -mtime +15 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
/tmp -name “*.tmp.gz” -mtime +15 -exec ls -ltrh {} ;

find
/tmp -name “*.t” -mtime +1 -exec gzip 
-f {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.t” -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.tmp” -mtime +15 -exec ls -ltrh {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.tmp” -mtime +15 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.tmp” -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
/ -xdev -size ‘+5000k’|xargs ls -lh | grep -v dev |grep aptrvrbi

find
. -xdev -size ‘+5000k’|xargs ls -lh | grep -v dev |grep iasrvrbi

find
/tmp -xdev -size ‘+5000k’|xargs ls -l | grep -v dev|head -500

find
. -xdev -size ‘+50000k’|xargs ls -ltr | grep -v dev

find
. -xdev -size ‘+5000k’|xargs ls -ltrh | grep -v dev

find
. ! -name . -prune -xdev -size ‘+5000k’|xargs ls -lh | grep -v dev

find
. ! -name . -prune -xdev -size ‘+5000k’|xargs ls -ltrh | grep -v dev

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.tmp” -mtime +30 -exec ls -ltr {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.tmp” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.tmp” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
. -mtime +30 -size +100000000c -xdev -exec ls -ltrh {} ;

find
. -size +100000000c -xdev -exec ls -ltr {} ;

find
. -size +10000000c -xdev -exec ls -ltrh {} ;

find
. -size +10000000c -xdev -exec ls -ltr {} ;

find
. -size +10000000c -xdev -exec du -sk {} ;

find
/ -xdev -size ‘+10000k’|xargs ls -ld | grep -v dev |grep SID —>10000k
files

find
./ -name “o1*.out” -size +3000k 
-mtime +10 -exec gzip {} ;

du -sk *|sort -n|tail -15

*applcsf
log/out/tmp

*product
*iAS/Apache/Apache *806 network/admin/log

*APPLMGR
*common/admin log/out

find
/SID/applmgr/common/admin/log/SID_oradev -mtime +60 -type f -exec ls -l {} ;

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/log/SID_ERP01 -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ; &


nohup
find /SID/applcsf/tmp -mtime +7 -exec gzip -f{} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/log -mtime +7 -exec gzip -f {} ; &


nohup
find /SID/applcsf/out -mtime +7 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/tmp -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/log -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/ -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/out -mtime +7 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/out/SID_Host -mtime +7 -exec gzip -f {} ; &
find
. -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ; –> purging files more than 30days old

find
. -mtime +10 -exec gzip -f {} ; –> zipping files more than 7days old

find
/tmp -name “*.t” -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
./ -name “*.tmp” -mtime +15 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
./ -name “*.trc” -mtime +1 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
. -name ‘*trw’ -mmin +240 -exec gzip  {}
find
/SID/3rdparty/apps/jboss-4.0.4.GA/server/default/log -name “*.log.*”
-mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
. -mtime +7 -exec ls -lrt {} ;

find
./ -name “*core*” -mtime +1 -exec ls -ltr {} ;

df
-k | sort -n | tail

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/log/SID_Host -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ; &

find
. -name “*.t” -exec ls -l {} ;

find
/tmp -name “*.t” -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
/tmp -name “*.t” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
/tmp -name “*.t” -mtime +15 -exec ls -ltrh {} ;

find
/tmp -name “*.TMP” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
/tmp -name “O*.t” -mtime +30 -user USER -maxdepth 1 -exec ls -l {} ;
   
find
/tmp -name “O*.t” -mtime +7 -user USER -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
. -name “*.t.Z” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
. -name “*.t” -exec gzip -f {} ;

nohup
find . -name “*log*” -mtime +60 -exec ls -l {} ; &

nohup
find . -name “*log*” -mtime +7 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

nohup
find . -name “*log*” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ; &

find
. -name “*log*” -mtime +10 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
./ -name “Events*” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
./ -name “Events*” -mtime +30 -exec ls -ltrh {} ;

find
./ -name “Events*” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
. -name “*default-web-access.log.txt*” -mtime +30 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
./ -name “XWII_BASE_APPS_*” -exec ls -l {} ;

***
find . ! -name . -prune -name “*.t” -mtime +30 -exec ls -ltr {} ;
—>To find “.t” files without descending sub directories…

find
. ! -name . -prune -name “*.t” -mtime +7 -exec gzip -f {} ;

find
. -name “Exaaa*” -mtime +10 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
./ -name “*.trw” -mtime +60 -exec ls -l {} ;

nohup
find ./ -name “*.trc*” -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

nohup
find ./ -name “*.trw” -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

find
./ -name “*.out*” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
./ -name “*.out” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
./ -name “*.trc” -mtime +0 -exec ls -l {} ;

nohup
find ./ -name “*.trc” -mtime +0 -exec gzip -f {} ;

nohup
find ./ -name “*.trc*” -mtime +60 -exec ls -l {} ; &

nohup
find ./ -name “*trc” -mtime +3 -exec gzip -f {} ; &

find
./ -name “*trc” -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ;

find
. ! -name . -prune -size +100000000c -xdev -mtime +3 -exec ls -lrth {} ;

ls
-l *.trc  |grep ” Dec  7″ | awk ‘{print $9}’

gzip
-f `ls -l *.trc  |grep ” Dec  7″ | awk ‘{print $9}`

find
/SID/backup/RMAN -name “data_full_*” -mtime +0 -type f -exec ls -l {}
;

zip error_log_pls.zip error_log_pls;
>error_log_pls

zip stuck_rec.dbg.zip stuck_rec.dbg;
>stuck_rec.dbg

zip stuck_rec.dbg.zip stuck_rec.dbg
>/SID/backup/stuck_rec.dbg.zip

zip apps_pbgd1i.log.zip
apps_pbgd1i.log; >apps_pbgd1i.log

zip SID.zip SID
>/SID/applcsf/mailtmp/appclo1i.zip

zip mod_jserv.log_25sep2008.zip
mod_jserv.log; >mod_jserv.log

zip Events148.log.zip Events148.log;
>Events148.log

ls -l `ls -ltr *.dbf | grep  “Apr 
3” | awk ‘{print $9}’`

ls -ltrh *.dbf | grep  “Apr 
3”

ls -ltr *p*.zip* | awk ‘{ sum += $5
} { print “Size in GB ” sum/1024/1024/1024}’ |tail -1

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/log -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/out -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ; &

nohup
find /SID/applcsf/tmp -mtime +30 -exec ls -l {} ; &
find
/tmp  ( -name ‘*.t’ ) -mtime +3 -size
+1000  -exec ls -l  {} ;

find
./ -name “*.trc” -mtime +1 -exec gzip -f {} ;
find
./ -name “tmp_*” -mtime +30 -exec ls -ltr {} ;

Finding directory sizes

du -k |sort  -nr |head -20
du -g |sort  -nr |head -20

find
./ -name “*.trc” -mtime +7 -exec ls -ltr {} ;

find
. -size +100000000c -xdev -exec gzip {} ;
find
. -size +100000000c -xdev -type f -exec ls -lh {} ;

find
/appl/oracle/admin/SID/udump -name “*.trc*” -mtime +90 -exec ls -ltrh
{} ;

find
<path> -type f -print|xargs ls –l

Eg:

find
/appl/formsA/oracle/product/dev6.0/reports60/server/cache -type f -print|xargs
ls -l

find
/data/a01/SID -name “*.arc” -mtime +5 -exec rm {} ;

find
. -mtime +730 -type f –print  -exec tar
-cvf /tempspace/repservr_cache_2years.tar . ;

find
/tempspace -mtime +730 -type f –print 
-exec tar -cvf /tempspace/repservr_cache_2years.tar {} ;

find
/data/a01/SID -name “*.arc*” -mtime +5 -exec rm {} ;

find
/data2/prod_export -name “comp_export_SID *.log” -mtime +30 -exec rm
{} ;


Linux

ps
-eo pid,user,vsz,rss,s,comm | sort -n -k 3,4
ps
-eo pid,user,vsz,rss,args | sort -n -k 3,4 | tail -20

prstat
-s rss
sar
-W
swapon
-s

SunOS

prstat
-s rss
swap
-l

returns dev(vice)/low/blocks/free in 512-bytes blocks

ps
-eo pid,user,vsz,rss,s,comm | sort -n -k 3,4 
| tail -20
AIX

ps -efl | sort -n -k 10,10 | tail
-50

ps -eo pid,user,vsz,rss,s,cmd | sort
-n -k 3,4  | tail -20

ps -eo pid,user,vsz,comm | sort -n
-k 3,3  | tail -20

SIZE

ps
-eo pid,user,vsz,rss,s,comm | sort -n -k 3,4

vmstat
swapon
-s

swap
usr/sbin/lsps
-a

Real memory
usr/sbin/lsattr
-HE -l sys0 -a realmem

HP-UX

ps -efl | sort -n -k 10,10 | tail
-50
swapinfo

PCH

V
linuxu:
pridat
sloupec swap, dat do souboru a seradit:

top
-b -n 1 >top.txt
cat
top.txt | egrep “M|G” | sort -r -k 5,5 | more


V SUNu

ps
-efl|sort -rk 10,10| head
Desaty sloupec je pouzita pamet ve
strankach.
Prikaz pagesize vypise velikost stranky, vynasobit a je
to.

prstat
-s rss

top
-o size

swapinfo
-t

swap
-s

vmstat
4 6

HP-UX

swapinfo

swapinfo
-m   —>Memory information (interms
of MB)

vmstat
-S

vmstat
-s

sar
-w 5 5

show
parameter sga_max_size

free
-m

ps
-ef  |wc -l

No of processors

cat
/proc/cpuinfo| grep processor| wc -l

cat
/proc/cpuinfo | grep processor

Linux

free
-m

Sun

prstat
-t

prstat
-s rss

/usr/sbin/prtconf
| grep “Memory size”

df
-k|grep swap

sar
-w 5 5

prstat
-t             prstat -u pdb2i25 -s size
top
-o size
swap
-s
free
swapon
-s
vmstat
4 4
ps
auxw |tail -10–hpunix

lsattr
-E -l sys0 -a realmem  — ram on aix
lsps
-s  — swap space on aix

vmstat
swap
-l
prtconf
| grep Mem
swap
SUNOS:16106834.6

vmstat
-p 3
mpstat

ps
-eo pid,pcpu,args | sort +1n                         %cpu
ps
-eo pid,vsz,args | sort +1n                             kilobytes
of virtual memory

/usr/ucb/ps
aux |more                                       Output
is sorted with highest users (processes) of CPU and memory at the top

free
—>swap information in kbytes
free
-m –>swap information in mbytes
free
-g –>swap information in gbytes

Solaris

$
/usr/sbin/prtconf grep -i “Memory size”
$
swap -s
$
df -k
$
/usr/local/bin/top
$
vmstat 5 100
$
sar -u 2 100
$
iostat -D 2 100
$
mpstat 5 100

For example:

$
man vmstat

Here is some sample output
from these commands:

$
prtconf grep -i “Memory size”

Memory
size: 4096 Megabytes

$
swap -s
total:
7443040k bytes allocated + 997240k reserved = 8440280k used, 2777096k available

$
df -k
Filesystem
kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s0
4034392 2171569 1822480 55% /
/proc
0 0 0 0% /proc
fd
0 0 0 0% /dev/fd
mnttab 0 0 0 0% /etc/mnttab
/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s3 493688 231339
212981 53% /var
swap
2798624 24 2798600 1% /var/run
swap
6164848 3366248 2798600 55% /tmp
/dev/vx/dsk/dcdg01/vol01
25165824 23188748 1970032 93% /u01
/dev/vx/dsk/dcdg01/vol02
33554432
30988976 2565456 93% /u02

$
top

last
pid: 29570; load averages: 1.00, 0.99, 0.95 10:19:19
514
processes: 503 sleeping, 4 zombie, 6 stopped, 1 on cpu
CPU states: 16.5% idle, 17.9% user,
9.8% kernel, 55.8% iowait, 0.0% swap
Memory:
4096M real, 46M free, 4632M swap in use, 3563M swap free

PID
USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZE
RES STATE
TIME CPU COMMAND
29543
usupport 1 35 0 2240K 1480K cpu2 0:00 0.64% top-3.5b8-sun4u
13638
usupport 11 48 0 346M 291M sleep 14:00 0.28% oracle
13432
usupport 1 58 0 387M 9352K sleep 3:56 0.17% oracle
29285
usupport 10 59 0 144M 5088K sleep 0:04 0.15% java
13422
usupport 11 58 0 391M 3968K sleep 1:10 0.07% oracle
6532
usupport 1 58 0 105M 4600K sleep 0:33 0.06% oracle

$
vmstat 5 100
procs
memory page disk faults cpu
r
b w swap free re mf pi po fr de sr f0 s1 s1 s1 in sy cs us sy id
0
1 72 5746176 222400 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 9 9 4294967196 0 0 -19 -6 -103
0
0 58 2750504 55120 346 1391 491 1171 3137 0 36770 0 37 39 5 1485 4150 2061 18 8
74
0
0 58 2765520 61208 170 272 827 523 1283 0 3904 0 36 40 2 1445 2132 1880 1 3 96
0
0 58 2751440 58232 450 1576 424 1027 3073 0 12989 0 22 26 3 1458 4372 2035 17 7
76
0
3 58 2752312 51272 770 1842 1248 1566 4556 0 19121 0 67 66 12 2390 4408 2533 13
11 75

$
iostat -c 2 100
cpu
us
sy wt id
15
5 13 67
19
11 52 18
19
8 44 29
12
10 48 30
19
7 40 34

$
iostat -D 2 100
sd15
sd16 sd17 sd18
rps
wps util rps wps util rps wps util rps wps util
7
4 9.0 6 3 8.6 5 3 8.1 0 0 0.0
4
22 16.5 8 41 37.9 0 0 0.7 0 0 0.0
19
34 37.0 20 24 37.0 12 2 10.8 0 0 0.0
20
20 29.4 24 37 51.3 3 2 5.3 0 0 0.0
28
20 40.8 24 20 42.3 1 0 1.7 0 0 0.0
$
mpstat 2 100
CPU
minf mjf xcal intr ithr csw icsw migr smtx srw syscl usr sys wt idl
0 115 3 255 310 182 403 38 72 82 0
632 16 6 12 66
1 135 4 687 132 100 569 40 102 68 0
677 14 5 13 68
2 130 4 34 320 283 552 43 94 63 0 34
15 5 13 67
3 129 4 64 137 101 582 44 103 66 0
51 15 5 13 67
HP-UX 11.0:

top
Glance/GlancePlus
sam
/etc/swapinfo -t
/usr/sbin/swapinfo -t
ipcs -mop

Would it be safe to say that
to view memory usage by user, execute the
following:

UNIX95=
ps -e -o ruser,pid,vsz=Kbytes

…and to view shared memory
usage, such as for Oracle processes, using the
following:

ipcs
-bmop

$
grep Physical /var/adm/syslog/syslog.log
$ df -k
$ sar -w 2 100
$ sar -u 2 100
$
/bin/top
$
vmstat -n 5 100
$
iostat 2 100
$
top

For example:

$
grep Physical /var/adm/syslog/syslog.log
Nov
13 17:43:28 rmtdchp5 vmunix: Physical: 16777216 Kbytes, lockable: 13405388
Kbytes, available: 15381944 Kbytes

$
sar -w 1 100

HP-UX
rmtdchp5 B.11.00 A 9000/800 12/20/02

14:47:20
swpin/s bswin/s swpot/s bswot/s pswch/s
14:47:21
0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 1724
14:47:22
0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 1458
14:47:23
0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 1999
14:47:24
0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 1846

$
sar -u 2 100 # This command generates CPU % usage information.

HP-UX
rmtdchp5 B.11.00 A 9000/800 12/20/02

14:48:02
%usr %sys %wio %idle
14:48:04
20 2 1 77
14:48:06
1 1 0 98
$
iostat 2 100

device bps sps msps

c1t2d0 36 7.4 1.0
c2t2d0 32 5.6 1.0
c1t0d0 0 0.0 1.0
c2t0d0 0 0.0 1.0

AIX:

$ /usr/sbin/lsattr -E -l sys0 -a
realmem
$ /usr/sbin/lsps -s
$
vmstat 5 100
$
iostat 2 100
$
/usr/local/bin/top # May not be installed by default in the server

For example:

$
/usr/sbin/lsattr -E -l sys0 -a realmem

realmem
33554432 Amount of usable physical memory in Kbytes False

NOTE:
This is the total Physical + Swap memory in the system.
Use
top or monitor command to get better breakup of the memory.

$
/usr/sbin/lsps -s

Total
Paging Space Percent Used
30528MB
1%

Linux [RedHat 7.1 and RedHat
AS 2.1]:

$
dmesg grep Memory
$
vmstat 5 100
$
/usr/bin/top

For example:

$
dmesg grep Memory
Memory:
1027812k/1048568k available (1500k kernel code, 20372k reserved, 103k d)$
/sbin/swapon -s

Tru64

$
vmstat -P grep -i “Total Physical Memory =”
$
/sbin/swapon -s
$
vmstat 5 100


For example

$
vmstat -P grep -i “Total Physical Memory =”
Total
Physical Memory = 8192.00 M

$
/sbin/swapon -s

Swap
partition /dev/disk/dsk1g (default swap):
Allocated
space: 2072049 pages (15.81GB)
In-use
space: 1 pages ( 0%)
Free
space: 2072048 pages ( 99%)
Total
swap allocation:
Allocated
space: 2072049 pages (15.81GB)
Reserved
space: 864624 pages ( 41%)
In-use
space: 1 pages ( 0%)
Available
space: 1207425 pages ( 58%)

Please take at least 10
snapshots of the “top” command to get an idea
aboud most OS resource comsuming
processes in the server and the different
snapshot might contain a few
different other processes and that will indicate
that the use of resouces are
varying pretty quickly amound many processes.

AIX:
/usr/sbin/lsattr -E -l sys0 -a
realmem
/usr/sbin/lsps
-s

HP-UX:
grep
Physical /var/adm/syslog/syslog.log
/usr/sbin/swapinfo -t

Linux:
cat
/proc/meminfo | grep MemTotal
/sbin/swapon
-s

Solaris:
/usr/sbin/prtconf
| grep “Memory size”
/usr/sbin/swap
-s

Tru64:
vmstat
-P| grep -i “Total Physical Memory =”
/sbin/swapon
-s

LONG BIT

getconf
LONG_BIT

Huge Pages

grep
-i huge /etc/sysctl.conf
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