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Spotlight on Oracle 10.10 - Release Notes

Spotlight on Unix Alarms

Spotlight on Unix Alarms

Spotlight alerts you to problems with your system by issuing an alarm.

Alarm Alarm Description
Blocked Processes alarm

Blocked Process Alarm

Blocked processes are processes that are waiting on information to become available in memory, or that are waiting for a shared resource, or for the completion of disk I/O or network I/O. A high level of blocked processes may indicate an under-configured machine.
Input Error Packets Flow alarm

Input Error Packets Flow Alarm

The Input Error flow represents the number of erroneous network packets coming into the machine per second. The Input Error Packets Flow alarm may warrant investigation as even a low error rate can indicate network problems.
Output Error Packets Flow alarm

Output Error Packets Flow Alarm

The Output Error flow represents the number of erroneous network packets sent by the machine per second. The Output Error Packets Flow alarm may warrant investigation as even a low error rate can indicate network problems.
Page In alarm

Page In Alarm

A large number of page-ins may be a symptom of a large number of recent page-outs (see Page Out alarm below). To find out what process is reading these pages in, check the resident size of the processes you are running, and see which ones are increasing in size. Alternatively, a large number of page-ins may occur when a large process has just stopped, and the kernel decides to fill that space with memory pages owned by other processes. Check if an important process has ended unexpectedly.
Page Out alarm

Page Out Alarm

If an active process asks the kernel for more memory than there is immediately available, the kernel will write old memory pages out to swap space. This is known as paging. To stop paging, make sure that there is enough RAM available to support the size of the processes you want to run.
Percentage Busy alarm

Percentage Busy Alarm (Most Active Disk)

The Most Active Disk gauge shows the disk with the highest read/write rates. The Percentage Busy alarm is triggered when the read/write rate of the most active disk exceeds a specified threshold. The type of alarm that is activated is determined by the percentage of read/write activity experienced by the disk.
Disk I/O Wait Time alarm

Disk I/O wait time

The Disk I/O wait time alarm is triggered when one of the disks' I/O wait time exceeds a specified threshold.
Disk I/O Service Time alarm

Disk I/O service time

The Disk I/O Service Time alarm is triggered when one of the disks' I/O service time exceeds a specified threshold.
Swap Space alarm

Swap Space Alarm

If the total amount of swap space allocated to a Unix host becomes full, the machine may halt all processes, or critical actions may be prevented from occurring. The Swap Space alarm may indicate a runaway process or an under-configured machine.

Swap In Flow alarm

Swap In Flow Alarm

The Swap In flow represents the number of processes swapped from disk per second. The Swap In Flow alarm may indicate a machine that is under-configured for its workload.
Swap Out Flow alarm

Swap Out Flow Alarm

The Swap Out flow represents the number of processes swapped to disk per second. The Swap Out Flow alarm may indicate a machine that is under-configured for its workload.
Unix Status alarm

Unix Status Alarm

Spotlight is re-establishing its connection to the Unix system.

Used Percentage alarm

Used Percentage Alarm

The Least Space / Disk Space container displays the percentage of used disk space for a specified filesystem. The Used Percentage alarm indicates that the specified filesystem is full or filling up. If the filesystem fills up completely, no more data can be written to it.
Zombie Processes alarm

Zombie Processes Alarm

The Zombie button in the CPU panel shows the number of terminated child processes that have not been acknowledged by their parent process. The Zombie Processes alarm may indicate the presence of an inferior program, or an entry in /etc/inittab (or equivalent) that prevents init from completing its startup sequence.

 

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