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Spotlight on Oracle 10.5 - Getting Started Guide

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CPU Panel

 

The CPU panel shows processor and load information for the Unix system:

Processors

Processors The number of CPUs in the machine.
CPU Spinner The CPU load (as a percentage) across all CPUs on the machine.
User % The percentage of time the CPU is in the User state, across all CPUs.
System % The percentage of time the CPU is in the System state, across all CPUs.
Wait % The percentage of time the CPU is in the Wait state, across all CPUs. Wait is where the machine can only wait for I/O, or something similar, to complete.

Queue Length

The length of the queue in which processes are waiting to be executed. Processes in this queue will be run when the CPU becomes available.

Processes

Total The total number of processes that are running on the machine.
Zombies The number of child processes whose termination has not been acknowledged by their parent process.
Blocked The number of processes waiting for some event or condition before they can continue execution.

Data flows between the Network panel and CPU panel

Network (Network to CPU)

Rate of incoming network data

The incoming rate of data to the server. Note: Spotlight contributes to the data traffic as part of its diagnostic activities.

Network (CPU to Network)

Rate of outgoing network data

The outgoing rate of data from the server. Note: Spotlight contributes to the data traffic as part of its diagnostic activities.

Network Errors (Network to CPU)

Rate of incoming network errors

The rate at which errors are received from the network.

Network Errors (CPU to Network)

Rate of outgoing network errors

The rate at which errors are sent from the machine to the network.

Data flows between the CPU panel and the Memory panel

The flows indicate the rate data is written out of and read in to memory. The unit of measure 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.

 

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