[ale] System Load Summary Script?

Jim Kinney jim.kinney at gmail.com
Wed Jun 26 18:42:54 EDT 2019


The threat of "all your access and code will vanish" is a good deterrent for my grad students.

On June 26, 2019 6:06:11 PM EDT, Todor Fassl via Ale <ale at ale.org> wrote:
>I would not recommend ignoring high loads on a server these days. That 
>could be a sign someone is mining bitcoins on your server.
>
>
>
>On 6/26/19 2:29 PM, Jeff Hubbs via Ale wrote:
>> On 6/26/19 1:58 PM, Todor Fassl via Ale wrote:
>>> Right, but that is my point. If I run uptime and I see the load on a
>
>>> system is high, I still have to manually figure out if it is cpu 
>>> bound, memory bound, or disk IO bound, or network IO bound. If you 
>>> google for tutorials on diagnosing load problems, they all say 
>>> something like "First run top and look at column 10. Then run iotop 
>>> and look at column 23. Then run netstat and ..." I don't think I 
>>> should have to do that in 2019.
>> 
>> Maybe just go to lunch?
>> 
>> I'm only half-joking. Well, not even half.
>> 
>> At A Previous Employer (tm) the network operations group forced the 
>> issue of running Nagios to monitor everything. I complied and put a 
>> Nagios client on the Gentoo Linux file server I'd designed, built,
>and 
>> managed for the entire company's use. Every night this machine made 
>> Nagios absolutely explode with warnings. Of course it would, I told 
>> them, it's running mksquashfs on all the Samba share volumes to make 
>> backups and it lights up every core in the box in so doing because
>the 
>> RAID1+0 is insanely fast in read and it's writing to a completely 
>> different set of spindles on a completely different controller. 
>> Moreover, it would do the same thing whenever ClamAV ran because
>ClamAV 
>> was nicely multithreaded and would read at over 200MiB/s. It was 
>> expected, normal, and intended. The "problem," plainly speaking, was 
>> Nagios.
>> 
>> The point of this graybeard parable is that machines turning into 
>> hairdryers is not a bad thing on its face. It's different if e.g. a)
>it 
>> can't complete something in the amount of time it has to do it per 
>> line-of-business requirements b) you're limited on electrical or
>cooling 
>> plant power c) your computers are doing something with no utility or 
>> value. Just let the things glow red and go to lunch.
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> Ale mailing list
>> Ale at ale.org
>> https://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
>> See JOBS, ANNOUNCE and SCHOOLS lists at
>> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo
>
>-- 
>Todd
>_______________________________________________
>Ale mailing list
>Ale at ale.org
>https://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
>See JOBS, ANNOUNCE and SCHOOLS lists at
>http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo

-- 
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. All tyopes are thumb related and reflect authenticity.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://mail.ale.org/pipermail/ale/attachments/20190626/fde01487/attachment.html>


More information about the Ale mailing list