This alarm becomes active when a process is suffering a potential memory leak.
A memory leak occurs when a program continues requesting memory over a period without releasing any memory.
For some programs (such as Spotlight) this behaviour is expected as the program stores information over an extended period for dynamic near-history analysis.
This alarm becomes active when a process is sustaining a high CPU load.
When this alarm is active, you may need to:
This alarm becomes active when the length of the processor thread queue reaches a threshold for sustained activity.
A long sustained queue length indicates a processor bottleneck - leading to overall system degradation.
To rectify this, you should look at:
This alarm is activated when the proportion of file read requests that can be sourced from memory cache rather than disk drops below a threshold.
When this alarm is current you should:
Look at the NBT page of the Network drilldown.
If there is a large number of read requests coming from the network clients, the cache can be inundated and temporarily of little use.
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