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Spotlight on Oracle 10.10 - Release Notes

Activity Page

The Activity page contains several charts.

To open the Activity page

  1. Select the Spotlight on Unix connection in the Spotlight Browser.
  2. Click Activity Summary | Activity.

Charts on the Activity page

Notes:

  • Every chart has a legend (list of symbols) to its right that describes the various series (line graphs) on the chart.
  • Click an item in the legend to highlight its series (line) in the chart. Click a second time to return the series to its normal appearance.
  • Move the mouse pointer over an item in the legend to view the current value for that series within the chart.
Chart Description
CPU Utilization The CPU Utilization chart shows the CPU activity of the host machine. If the current activity reaches levels of greater than 100 or less than 0, run vmstat(1) to determine the reason for the erroneous values.
Run Queue

The Run Queue chart shows the amount of CPU time that will be spent performing tasks. The value is expressed as a fraction.

Divide the value by the number of processors running. If the result of the calculation is greater than 1, you may need more processors.

The lines on the chart show the run queue averaged over 1, 5, and 15 minutes. If the value of the 1 minute line divided by the number of processors exceeds the value 1, there is merely a spike in activity. However, if the value of the 15 minute line divided by the number of processors exceeds 1, you may need more processors.

Total Disk I/O The Total Disk I/O chart shows the total number of I/O operations for each disk and NFS server.
Network Utilization The Network Utilization chart represents the current network activity for the machine you are diagnosing. It shows the rate at which packets are being received by the machine and are being sent by the machine.
Paging

The Paging chart shows the rate of data pages read from, and written out to, disk over time. Typically, high paging rates indicate insufficient system memory, a large number of processes, or a number of very large processes.

The unit of measure on the Y-axis is dependent on the Operating System.

Operating System Unit of Measure
Oracle Solaris Kilobytes per second
HP-UX Pages per second
IBM AIX Pages per second
Linux Kilobytes per second. Old versions of the kernel may measure in blocks per second. Refer to your Linux documentation.
Free Memory The Free Memory chart shows the amount of available physical memory in the machine. For Solaris, this is typically a low number. If necessary, the page-stealing daemon will seek out memory pages to re-claim them.

 

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