Managers, Thanks for the responses to my original query, which is included below. The consensus was, and I have known this but not quite grasped it apparently, that a single thread cannot take more that 100/N where N is the number of CPUs, but a single multi-threaded process can. Thanks to: Darren Dunham <ddunham@taos.com> Dave Mitchell <davem@fdgroup.com> Kevin Buterbaugh <Kevin.Buterbaugh@lifeway.com> Wanke Matthias <Matthias.Wanke@itellium.com> Original question: Managers, I am not sure if I am misinterpreting data, or what I see is evidence of an imminent hardware failure. Let me explain: Recently I had an E220R (2x450 2GB RAM with attached A1000) panic and reboot itself for no apparent reason. When speaking with Sun support they informed me that unless I had a logging terminal connected to the console I would not be able to capture the output of any associated error messages (anyone know if a Cisco 2511 acting as a term server has this capability?). The day before this reboot occured I had noticed strange behavior on the system, and now that I see the same behavior, I wonder if the machine will be rebooting itself anytime soon. The behavior I saw was an increase in load from a normal 1-2 at idle to 3-4 at idle. Also, during peak load the average load would spike to around 14. What was most odd however was that the percentage of the java process running on this sytem (the only application running on the server) would take upwards of 90% in top. Prior to this odd behavior the most java would consume was 45%. My understanding of CPU usage in an SMP environment is that the most CPU a single process could consume was 100/N percent, where N is the number of processors. Java topping out around 50% would empirically verify this rule. Am I correct in the 100/N rule of CPU usage? It seems that when top suddenly reports that java is consuming twice as much resources that a CPU has been taken offline. psrinfo reports that both processors are online and there are no error messages in dmesg. Is this evidence of an upcoming hardware problem, or am I mistaken in my understanding of CPU usage in an SMP system? _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Tue Aug 6 12:32:09 2002
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