Tools for monitoring system performance [SUMMARY]

From: Systems Administrator (eason@evergreen.com)
Date: Fri Aug 27 1999 - 11:48:43 CDT


Hi all ,

I apologize for the late summary , things are kinda crazy around here.

Thank you to all who responded (Far too many for one mail message, and I
didn't want to forget anyone).

The obvious answer is to use the ugly and encryptic iostat, vmstat and
sar. Although to us tech-heads these make perfect sense, I needed
something that manager types would be able to analyze, without having to
jump through hoops (Gnu-plot or excell spreadsheets).

The overwhelming responses were for 3 different things that would
accomplish this.
1) SymbEL (by Adrian Cockroft). This is a scripting language that allows
you to easily access information from the kernel. There are sample
scripts available to get you started. It is available free at
http://sunsolve.sun.com

2) Running sar and using sarcheck to pretty up the output. The cost of
SAR is 199.00 per OS (You need a different sarcheck for 2.5.x 2.6 and
2.7) (See http://www.sarcheck.com)

3) This is the one we decided to use for now. MRTG along with the snmp
daemon. It seems to work pretty good. MRTG also monitors network
performance , and outputs in a decent line graph. And the best part, is
that it is free (and simple to implement).

Other mentions were sysmon and proctool.

Thank you again for the help.

--
Daren L. Eason Sr.
Systems Administrator
Evergreen Internet, Inc
(480) 926-4500 x. 211
http://www.evergreen.com



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