HP OpenVMS Availability Manager User's Guide


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2.8.3 Using the Event Pane

The event pane occupies the bottom part of the System Overview window (Figure 2-25). In this pane, the Data Analyzer displays events that occur on all the nodes being monitored on your system, including nodes that might not be displayed currently in the Group/Node pane.

Events signal potential problems that might require further investigation. An event must reach a certain level of severity to be displayed. You can customize the severity levels at which events are displayed (see Chapter 7). For more information about displaying events, see Chapter 5.

The events that are signalled depend on the types of data collection that are performed (see Section 2.8.2.5).

In the System Overview window, you can change the size of the panes as well as the width of specific fields. You can also change the borders between the fields by placing the mouse on the border, displaying a double-headed arrow, and dragging the border to the right or left.

Scroll bars indicate whether you are displaying all or part of a pane. For example, clicking a right arrow on a scroll bar allows you to view the rightmost portion of a screen.

2.8.4 Other System Overview Window Components

In addition to panes, the System Overview window (Figure 2-25) also includes features such as a title bar, menu bar, and status bar:

Title bar

The title bar runs across the top of the window and contains the product name and version.

Menu bar

The menu bar, immediately below the title bar, contains the following menu options:

Status bar

The status bar, which runs across the bottom of the window, displays the following:

Displaying More Information at Any Time

In the initial System Overview window (Figure 2-25), which is displayed by default, you can perform the following actions at any time during the display:

2.9 Getting Help

To obtain online help, click on the Help menu on the System Overview window menu bar. Then choose one of the following options, which are displayed at the top of the page.
Menu Option Description
Availability Manager User Manual Information about using the Availability Manager.
Getting Started A special online version of help for getting started using this tool.
Availability Manager Release Notes Last-minute information about the software and how it works.
About Availability Manager... Information about this Availability Manager Data Analyzer release (such as the copyright date).

2.10 Printing a Display

The Data Analyzer does not provide a printscreen capability. However, you can capture Data Analyzer displays and print them by following these steps:

  1. Click on the selected Data Analyzer display to make it your active window.
  2. Press the key combination Alt + PrintScreen .
    This action copies the image of the display into your copy buffer. (To capture the entire screen, press Ctrl + PrintScreen .)
  3. Run the Windows Paint program:


        Start --> Programs --> Accessories --> Paint 
    

  4. Do one of the following:
  5. Then do one of the following:


Chapter 3
Getting Information About Nodes

Note

Before you start this chapter, be sure to read the explanation of data collection, events, thresholds, and occurrences as well as background and foreground data collection in Chapter 1. HP also recommends completing the getting-started steps described in Chapter 2.

Node summary data is the only data that is collected by default. The Data Analyzer looks for events only in data that is being collected.

You can collect additional data in either of the following ways:

For additional information about how to change these settings, see Chapter 7.

This chapter describes the node data that the Data Analyzer displays by default and more detailed data that you can choose to display. Differences are noted whenever information displayed for OpenVMS nodes differs from that displayed for Windows nodes.

Although Cluster Summary is one of the tabs displayed on the OpenVMS Node Summary page (Figure 3-4), see Chapter 4 for a detailed discussion of OpenVMS Cluster data.

Note

On many node displays, you can hold the cursor over a data field or column header to display an explanation of that field or header in a small rectangle, called a tooltip. Figure 3-2 contains an example.

Some tooltips can be rather large. To ensure that the tooltip stays up as long as you need to read it, move the mouse slightly over the field to keep the tooltip visible.

3.1 Group/Node Pane

The Data Analyzer automatically displays data for each node within the groups displayed in the Group/Node pane of the Application window (Figure 3-1).

Figure 3-1 OpenVMS Group/Node Pane


Recall that the colors of the icons represent the following states:
Color Description
Brown Attempts to configure the node have failed---for example, because the nodes are in a connection failed state.
Yellow Node security check is in progress.
Black Network path to node has been lost, or the node is not running.
Red Security check was successful. However, a threshold has been exceeded, and an event has been posted.
Green Security check was successful; data is being collected.

If you hold the cursor over a node name, the Data Analyzer displays a tooltip explaining the specific reason for the color that precedes the node name. By holding the cursor over many column headers and some data items on Data Analyzer screens, you can display tooltips. Figure 3-2 is an example of a tooltip that explains the BIO column header in the Group/Node pane.

Figure 3-2 Sample Tooltip


The colors and their meanings are in Table 3-1.

Table 3-1 Explanation of Tooltip Colors in the Group/Node Pane
Color Meaning
Brown Indicates why the configuration of the node failed.
Yellow Shows number of RM Driver multicast "Hello" messages and the number of attempts to configure the node ("Configuration packets sent"). Nodes that remain in this state more than a few seconds indicate network connectivity problems with the Data Analyzer.
Black Shows one of the following:
  If the node was successfully configured and then lost,
-- When the connection to the node was lost ("Path lost at time").
-- When that node was booted ("Boot time: time").
-- What the uptime of the node was ("Uptime: time").
  If the node was never configured,
-- When the connection to the node was lost ("Path lost at time").
-- The reason the node was not configured.
Red If an event causes the output of any message besides an informational one, a node is displayed in red.
Green Nodes are in the data collection state.

The following sections describe the data displayed for OpenVMS and Windows Group/Node panes.

3.1.1 OpenVMS Node Data

Node data with a graph displayed in red indicates that the amount is above the threshold set for the field. For each OpenVMS node and group it recognizes, the Data Analyzer displays the data described in Table 3-2. This table also lists the abbreviation of the event that is related to each type of data, where applicable. See Section 7.8 for information about setting event thresholds. Appendix B describes OpenVMS and Windows events.

Note that you can sort the order in which data is displayed in the Node Pane by clicking a column header. To reverse the sort order of a column of data, click the column header again.

Table 3-2 OpenVMS Node Data
Data Description of Data Related Event
Node Name Name of the node being monitored. n/a
CPU 1 Percentage of CPU usage of all processes on the node. HICOMQ
HIMTTO
PRCCUR
PRCPUL
Active CPUs The number of active CPUs over the number of CPUs in the potential set. The potential set is the maximum number of CPUs available to the node. n/a
MEM Percentage of space in memory that all processes on the node use. LOMEMY
PFLTS Total page faults and hard page faults per second for all processes on the node. HITTLP
HIHRDP
PFW/COM Number of processes in page fault wait (PFW) and compute (COM) states. HICOMQ
HIPFWQ
BIO Buffered I/O rate of processes on the node. HIBIOR
DIO Direct I/O usage of processes on the node. HIDIOR
CPU Qs Number of processes in one of the following states: COMO, MWAIT, COLPG, FPG. HICMOQ
HIMWTQ
HIPWTQ
Events Number of triggered events that are associated with this node. List of relevant events
Proc Ct Actual count of processes over the maximum number of processes. Percentage of actual to maximum processes. HIPRCT
OS Version Version of the operating system on the node. NOPLIB
UNSUPP
HW Model Hardware model of the node. NOPLIB
UNSUPP
HW Arch Hardware architecture: Alpha or VAX n/a
DC The Data Collector capability level and Managed Object registration retrieval status.

Each version of the Data Collector has a capability level associated with it. This value tells the Data Analyzer what capabilities the Data Collector has (e.g. ability to execute disk volume fixes). If the capability value is below what the Data Analyzer will support, a MINCAP event will be signaled, and puts the node in the connection failed state, and not collect data from the node.

The Managed Object registration retrieval status indicates whether or not the Data Analyzer could get the data indicating what Managed Objects have registered with the Data Collector. Managed Objects are described more fully in Chapter 4.

The values for the Managed Object registration status are as follows:
Status Description
D Done. Managed Objects are not supported by the Data Collector. The Data Analyzer will adjust collect data that the Data Collector supports.
NS Not Sent. The Data Collector supports Managed Objects. The request for the registration data has not been sent.
S Sent. The request for the registration data has been sent, and the Data Analyzer is waiting for the response.
V Valid. The registration has been received and processed by the Data Analyzer.
E Error. There was an error in getting the registration data from the Data Collector.
MINCAP


1By default, the CPU heading follows Node Name on a line of Node pane data. You can use the cursor to move a column heading to another location on the line, if you like.

3.1.2 Windows Node Pane

Figure 3-3 is an example of a Windows Node pane. From the group you select, the Data Analyzer displays all the nodes with which it can communicate.

Figure 3-3 Windows Node Pane


For each Windows node in the group, the Data Analyzer displays the data described in Table 3-3.

Table 3-3 Windows Node Data
Data Description
Node Name Name of the node being monitored.
CPU Percentage of CPU usage of all the processes on the node.
MEM Percentage of memory that is in use.
DIO Direct I/O usage of processes on the node.
Processes Number of processes on the node.
Threads Number of threads on the node. A thread is a basic executable entity that can execute instructions in a processor.
Events The number of events on the node. An event is used when two or more threads want to synchronize execution.
Semaphores The number of semaphores on the node. Threads use semaphores to control access to data structures that they share with other threads.
Mutexes The number of mutexes on the node. Threads use mutexes to ensure that only one thread executes a section of code at a time.
Sections The number of sections on the node. A section is a portion of virtual memory created by a process for storing data. A process can share sections with other processes.
OS Version Version of the operating system on the node.
HW Model Hardware model of the node.

3.2 Node Data Pages

The following sections describe node data pages, which you can display in any of the following ways:

The menu bar on each node data page contains the options described in Table 3-4.

Table 3-4 Node Data Page Menu Bar
Menu Option Description For More Information
File Contains the Close option, which you can choose to exit from the pages. n/a
View Contains options that allow you to view data from another perspective. See specific pages.
Fix Contains options that allow you to resolve various resource availability problems and improve system performance. Chapter 6
Customize Contains options that allow you to organize data collection and analysis and to display data by filtering and customizing data collected from Data Collectors. Chapter 7

The following sections describe individual node data pages.

3.2.1 Node Summary

When you double-click a node name, operating system (OS) version, or hardware model in an OpenVMS Group/Node pane (Figure 2-25) or a Windows Node pane (Figure 3-3), the Data Analyzer displays the Node Summary page (Figure 3-4).

Figure 3-4 Node Summary


On this page, the following information is displayed for the selected node:
Data Description
Model System hardware model name.
OS Version Name and version of the operating system.
Uptime Time (in days, hours, minutes, and seconds) since the last reboot.
Memory Total amount of physical memory (in MBs or GBs) found on the system.
Active CPUs Number of CPUs running on the node.
Configured CPUs Number of CPUs that are configured to run on the node.
Max RADs Maximum number of resource affinity domains (RADs) for this node.
Serial Number The system's hardware serial number retrieved from the Hardware Restart Parameter Block (HWRPB).
Galaxy ID The Galaxy ID uniquely identifies a Galaxy. Instances in the same Galaxy have the same Galaxy ID.

3.2.2 CPU Modes and Process Summaries

By clicking the CPU tab, you can display CPU panes that contain more detailed statistics about CPU mode usage and process summaries than the Node Summary does. You can use the CPU panes to diagnose issues that CPU-intensive users or CPU bottlenecks might cause. For OpenVMS nodes, you can also display information about specific CPU processes.

When you double-click a value under the CPU or CPU Qs heading on either an OpenVMS Group/Node or a Windows Node pane, or when you click the CPU tab, the Data Analyzer displays the CPU Mode Summary in the top pane (Figure 3-6) and, by default, CPU Mode Details (Figure 3-7) in the lower pane. You can use the View menu to select the CPU Process Summary in the lower pane ( Section 3.2.2.4).

CPU mode summaries and process summary panes are described in the following sections. Note that there are differences between the pages displayed for OpenVMS and Windows nodes.

3.2.2.1 Windows CPU Modes

Figure 3-5 provides an example of a Windows CPU Modes page. The sample page contains values for the three CPU modes---user, privileged, and null.

Figure 3-5 Windows CPU Modes


The top pane of the Windows CPU Modes page is a summary of Windows CPU usage, listed by type of mode.

On the left, the following CPU modes are listed:

On the graph, values that exceed thresholds are displayed in red. To the right of the graph are current and extreme amounts for each mode.

Current and extreme amounts are also displayed for the following values:

The lower pane of the Windows CPU Modes contains modes details. The following data is displayed:
Data Description
CPU ID Decimal value representing the identity of a processor in a multiprocessing system. On a uniprocessor, this value is always CPU #00.
Mode % Graphical representation of the percentage of active modes on that CPU. The color displayed matches the mode color on the graph on the top pane.
DPCs Queued Rate that deferred procedure call (DPC) objects are queued to this processor's DPC queue.
DPC Rate Average rate that DPC objects are queued to this processor's DPC queue per clock tick.
DPC Bypasses Rate that dispatch interrupts were short-circuited.
APC Bypasses Rate that kernel asynchronous procedure call (APC) interrupts were short-circuited.

3.2.2.2 OpenVMS CPU Mode Summary and Process States

Figure 3-6 shows sample OpenVMS CPU Mode Summary and CPU Process States, which are the left and right top panes of the CPU Modes page.

Figure 3-6 OpenVMS CPU Mode Summary and Process States


CPU Mode Summary

In the CPU Mode Summary section of the pane, percentages are averaged across all the CPUs and are displayed as a single value on symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) nodes.

To the left of the graph is a list of CPU modes. The bars in the graph represent the percentage of CPU cycles used for each mode. To the right of the graph are current and extreme percentages of time spent in each mode.

Below the graph, the Data Analyzer displays the COM and WAIT process queues:

CPU Process States

The right side of Figure 3-6 shows a sample CPU Process States display. Note that the value for MWAIT, in the left column, is the sum of all values for the states in the two right columns.

This display shows the number of processes in each process state. This number is tallied from the data in CPU Process view of the CPU page (Figure 3-6). For systems with many processes, the data in the CPU Process view is collected in segments over a short period of time because the amount of data a network packet can contain is limited. Because of this, the number of processes in the Process States pane might differ slightly from what is reported in $MONITOR STATES.

Appendix A contains explanations of the CPU process states.

3.2.2.3 OpenVMS CPU Mode Details

The lower pane of the CPU Modes page contains CPU mode details, as shown in Figure 3-7.

Figure 3-7 OpenVMS CPU Mode Details Pane


In the OpenVMS CPU Mode Details pane, the following data is displayed:
Data Description
CPU ID Decimal value representing the identity of a processor in a multiprocessing system. On a uniprocessor, this value is always CPU #00.
State One of the following CPU states: Boot, Booted, Init, Rejected, Reserved, Run, Stopped, Stopping, or Timeout.
Mode % Graphical representation of the percentage of active modes on that CPU. The color displayed coincides with the mode color in the graph in the top pane.
PID Process identifier (PID) value of the process that is using the CPU. If the PID is unknown to the Data Analyzer application, the internal PID (IPID) is listed.
Process Name Name of the process active on the CPU. If no active process is found on the CPU, the name is listed as *** None ***.
Capabilities One or more of the following CPU capabilities or flags:
  • Capabilities: Primary, Quorum, Run, or Vector.
  • Flags: Idle, Lckmgr, Fastpath_CPU, Fastpath_Ports, Low_power, and Cothread_of_ nn.
RAD Number of the RAD where the CPU exists.

The status bar in the OpenVMS CPU Mode Details pane (see Figure 3-7) shows the potential number of physical CPUs on the node, the number that are listed, and the number that are filtered out. The status bar is updated with each data collection. The data collection rate is determined by the customization of CPU mode data collection intervals. See Section 7.5 for instructions on how to change data collection intervals.

3.2.2.4 OpenVMS CPU Process Summary

To display the OpenVMS CPU Process Summary pane at the bottom of the CPU page, select CPU Process Summary from the View menu (Figure 3-6). Figure 3-8 shows a sample OpenVMS CPU Process Summary pane.

Figure 3-8 OpenVMS CPU Process Summary Pane


The OpenVMS CPU Process Summary pane displays the following data:
Data Description
PID Process identifier, a 32-bit value that uniquely identifies a process.
Process Name Name of the process active on the CPU.
Priority Computable (xx) and base (yy) process priority in the format xx/yy.
State One of the process states listed in Appendix A.
Rate Percentage of CPU time used by this process. This is the ratio of CPU time to elapsed time. The CPU rate is also displayed in the bar graph.
Wait Percentage of time the process is in the COM or COMO state.
Time Amount of actual CPU time charged to the process.
Home RAD Where most of the resources of the process reside.

Displaying Single Process Information

When you double-click a PID on the lower part of an OpenVMS CPU Process Summary (Figure 3-8), Memory Summary (Figure 3-10), or I/O Summary (Figure 3-12) page, the Data Analyzer displays the first of several OpenVMS Single Process pages.

On these pages, you can click tabs to display specific data about one process. Alternatively, you can display all of the information on the pages on a single vertical or horizontal grid page.

This data includes a combination of data elements from the CPU Process, Memory, and I/O pages, as well as data for specific quota utilization, current image, and queue wait time. These pages are described in more detail in Section 3.3.

The status bar in the OpenVMS CPU Process Summary Pane (Figure 3-8) shows the total number of processes on the node, the number that are listed, and the number that are filtered out. The status bar is updated with each data collection. The data collection rate is determined by the customization of CPU process data collection intervals. See Section 7.5 for instructions on how to change data collection intervals.

3.2.3 Memory Summaries and Details

The Memory Summary and Memory Details pages contain statistics about memory usage on the node you select. The Memory Summary pages displayed for OpenVMS and Windows nodes are somewhat different, as described in the following sections. The Memory Details page exists only for OpenVMS systems.

3.2.3.1 Windows Memory Summary

To display the Windows Memory Summary page, you can use either of the following methods:

The Data Analyzer displays the Windows Memory page (Figure 3-9).

Figure 3-9 Windows Memory


The Current and Extreme amounts on the page display the data shown in the following table. The table also indicates what the graph amounts represent.
Data Description
Available Size (in bytes) of the virtual memory currently on the zeroed, free, and standby lists. Zeroed and free memory are ready for use, with zeroed memory cleared to zeros. Standby memory is removed from a process's working set but is still available. The graph shows the percentage of physical memory that is available for use.
Cache Number of bytes currently in use by the system cache. The system cache is used to buffer data retrieved from disk or LAN. The system cache uses memory not in use by active processes on the computer. The graph shows the percentage of physical memory devoted to the cache.
Paged Pool Number of bytes in paged pool, a system memory area where operating system components acquire space as they complete their tasks. Paged pool pages can be paged out to the paging file when the system does not access them for long periods of time. The graph shows the percentage of physical memory devoted to paged pool.
Nonpaged Pool Number of bytes in nonpaged pool, a system memory area where operating system components acquire space as they complete their tasks. Nonpaged pool pages cannot be paged out to the paging file; instead, they remain in memory as long as they are allocated. The graph shows the percentage of physical memory devoted to nonpaged pool.
Committed Bytes Amount of available virtual memory (the Commit Limit) that is in use. Note that the commit limit can change if the paging file is extended. The graph shows the percentage of the Commit Limit used by the Committed Bytes.
Commit Limit Size (in bytes) of virtual memory that can be committed without having to extend the paging files. If the paging files can be extended, this limit can be raised.

3.2.3.2 OpenVMS Memory Summary

When you double-click a value under the MEM heading in an OpenVMS Node pane, or if you click the Memory tab, the Data Analyzer displays the OpenVMS Memory Summary page (Figure 3-10).

Alternatively, if you click the View menu on the OpenVMS Memory Summary page, the following options are displayed in a shortcut menu:

You can click Memory Summary View to select the Memory Summary page, shown in Figure 3-10.

Figure 3-10 OpenVMS Memory Summary


The graph in the top pane of Figure 3-10 shows memory distribution (Free, Used, and Modified) as absolute values, in megabytes of memory. Current and extreme values are also listed for each type of memory distribution. (Free memory uses the lowest seen value as its extreme.) Bad Pages show the number of pages that the operating system has marked as bad.

The thresholds that you see in the graph are the ones set for the LOMEMY event. (The LOMEMY thresholds are also in the display of values for the MEM field in the OpenVMS Group/Node pane shown in Figure 2-25.)

The lower pane in Figure 3-10 displays the data shown in the following table, including an abbreviation of the event that is related to each type of data, where applicable.
Data Description Related Events
PID Process identifier. A 32-bit value that uniquely identifies a process. n/a
Process Name Name of the process. NOPROC,
PRCFND
Count Number of physical pages or pagelets of memory that the process is using for the working set count. LOWEXT
Size Number of pages or pagelets of memory the process is allowed to use for the working set size (also known as the working set list size). The operating system periodically adjusts this value based on an analysis of page faults relative to CPU time used. LOWSQU
Extent Number of pages or pagelets of memory in the process's working set extent (WSEXTENT) quota as defined in the user authorization file (UAF). Number of pages or pagelets cannot exceed the value of the system parameter WSMAX. LOWEXT
Rate Number of page faults per second for the process. LOWSQU,
LOWEXT,
PRPGFL
I/O Rate of I/O read attempts necessary to satisfy page faults (also known as page read I/O or the hard fault rate). PRPIOR

When you double-click a PID on the lower part of the Memory Summary page (Figure 3-10), the Data Analyzer displays an OpenVMS Single Process (Figure 3-23), where you can click tabs to display pages containing specific data about one process. This data includes a combination of data from the CPU Process, Memory, and I/O pages, as well as data for specific quota utilization, current image, and queue wait time. These pages are described in Section 3.3.

The status bar in the Memory Summary page (Figure 3-10) shows the total number of processes on the node, the number that are listed, and the number that are filtered out. The status bar is updated with each data collection. The data collection rate is determined by the customization of memory data collection intervals. See Section 7.5 for instructions on how to change data collection intervals.

3.2.3.3 OpenVMS Memory Details

When you click the View menu on the OpenVMS Memory Summary page (Figure 3-10), the following options are displayed in a shortcut menu. To display memory details, select that option.

The Data Analyzer displays the OpenVMS Memory Details page (Figure 3-11).

Figure 3-11 OpenVMS Memory Details


The following data items are in a box at the top left of the page:
Heading Description
Successful Expansions Number of successful nonpaged pool expansions.
Failed Expansions Number of failed attempts to expand nonpaged pool.
System space replication Whether system space replication is enabled or disabled.

To the right of the box is a list of system memory data that is displayed in the bar graphs at the bottom of the page. You can toggle these data items on or off (that is, to display them as bar graphs). You can also click a small box to choose between Linear and Logarithmic bar graph displays.

The system memory data items are described in Table 3-5.

Table 3-5 System Memory Data
Data Description
Total memory Total physical memory size, as seen by OpenVMS.
Available process memory Amount of total physical memory available to processes. This is the total memory minus memory allocated to OpenVMS.
Free list Size of the free page list.
Modified list Size of the modified page list.
Resident code region Size of the resident image code region.
Reserved page count Number of reserved memory pages.
Galactic shared used Galaxy shared memory pages currently in use.
Galactic shared unused Galaxy shared memory pages currently not in use.
Global read-only Read-only pages, which are installed as resident when system space replication is enabled, that will also be replicated for improved performance.
Total nonpaged pool Total size of system nonpaged pool.
Total free nonpaged pool Amount of nonpaged pool that is currently free.

To the right of the system memory data is a list of single RAD data items, which are described in Section 3.3.7. You can toggle these items to display them in bar graphs.

Table 3-6 Single RAD Data Items
Data Description
Free list Size of the free page list.
Modified list Size of the modified page list.
Nonpaged pool Total size of system nonpaged pool.
Free nonpaged pool Amount of nonpaged pool that is currently free.

Below the list of single RAD items is a box where you can toggle between Percentage and Raw Data to display Current and Extreme values to the right of the bar graphs.

3.2.4 OpenVMS I/O Summary and Page/Swap Files

By clicking the I/O tab on any OpenVMS node data page, you can display a page that contains summaries of accumulated I/O rates. In the top pane, the summary covers all processes; in the lower pane, the summary is for one process.

From the View menu, you can also choose to display (in the lower pane) a list of page and swap files.

3.2.4.1 OpenVMS I/O Summary

The OpenVMS I/O Summary page displays the rate, per second, at which I/O transfers take place, including paging write I/O (WIO), direct I/O (DIO), and buffered I/O (BIO). In the top pane, the summary is for all CPUs; in the lower pane, the summary is for one process.

When you double-click a data item under the DIO or BIO heading on the Node pane, or if you click the I/O tab, by default, the Data Analyzer displays the OpenVMS I/O Summary (Figure 3-12).

Figure 3-12 OpenVMS I/O Summary


The graph in the top pane represents the percentage of thresholds for the types of I/O shown in Table 3-7. The table also shows the event that is related to each data item. For information about setting event thresholds, see Section 7.8.

Table 3-7 I/O Data Displayed
Type of I/O I/O Description Related Event
Paging Write I/O Rate Rate of write I/Os to one or more paging files. HIPWIO
Direct I/O Rate Transfers are from the pages or pagelets containing the process buffer that the system locks in physical memory to the system devices. HIDIOR
Buffered I/O Rate Transfers are for the process buffer from an intermediate buffer from the system buffer pool. HIBIOR
Total Page Faults Total of hard and soft page faults on the system, as well as peak values seen during a Data Analyzer session. HITTLP
Hard Page Faults Total of hard page faults on the system. HIHRDP
System Page Faults Page faults generated by OpenVMS itself. HISYSP
Window Turn Rate Number of times that the file extent cache had to be refreshed. WINTRN

Current and peak values are listed for each type of I/O. Values that exceed thresholds set by the events indicated in the table are displayed in red on the screen. Appendix B describes OpenVMS and Windows events.

To the right of the graph, the following values are listed:
Value Description
Threshold Defined in Event Configuration Properties.
Current Current value or rate.
Peak Highest value or rate seen since start of data collection.

The lower pane displays summary accumulated I/O rates on a per-process basis. The following data is displayed:
Data Description
PID Process identifier. A 32-bit value that uniquely identifies a process.
Process Name Name of the current process.
DIO Rate Direct I/O rate. The rate at which I/O transfers occur between the system devices and the pages or pagelets that contain the process buffer that the system locks in physical memory.
BIO Rate Buffered I/O rate. The rate at which I/O transfers occur between the process buffer and an intermediate buffer from the system buffer pool.
PIO Rate Paging I/O rate. The rate of read attempts necessary to satisfy page faults (also known as page read I/O or the hard fault rate).
Open Files Number of open files.
DIO Avail Direct I/O limit remaining. The number of remaining direct I/O limit operations available before the process reaches its quota. DIOLM quota is the maximum number of direct I/O operations a process can have outstanding at one time.
BIO Avail Buffered I/O limit remaining. The number of remaining buffered I/O operations available before the process reaches its quota. BIOLM quota is the maximum number of buffered I/O operations a process can have outstanding at one time.
BYTLM The number of buffered I/O bytes available before the process reaches its quota. BYTLM is the maximum number of bytes of nonpaged system dynamic memory that a process can claim at one time.
Files Open file limit remaining. The number of additional files the process can open before reaching its quota. The FILLM quota is the maximum number of files that can be opened simultaneously by the process, including active network logical links.

When you double-click a PID on the lower part of the I/O Summary page, the Data Analyzer displays an OpenVMS Single Process, where you can click tabs to display specific data about one process. See Section 3.3 for more details.

The status bar in the OpenVMS I/O Summary page (Figure 3-12) shows the total number of processes on the node, the number that are listed, and the number that are filtered out. The status bar is updated with each data collection. The data collection rate is determined by the customization of I/O data collection intervals. See Section 7.5 for instructions on how to change data collection intervals.

3.2.4.2 OpenVMS I/O Page/Swap Files

Click I/O Page/Swap Files on the I/O page View menu to select this option. The Data Analyzer displays an OpenVMS I/O Page/Swap Files page. The top pane displays the same information as that in the OpenVMS I/O Summary page Figure 3-12. The lower pane contains the I/O Page/Swap Files pane shown in Figure 3-13.

Figure 3-13 OpenVMS I/O Page/Swap Files


The I/O Page/Swap Files pane displays the following data:
Data Description
Host Name Name of the node on which the page or swap file resides.
File Name Name of the page or swap file. For secondary page or swap files, the file name is obtained by a special AST to the job controller on the remote node. The Data Analyzer makes one attempt to retrieve the file name.
Used Number of used blocks in the file.
% Used Of the available blocks in each file, the percentage that has been used.
Total Total number of blocks in the file.
Reservable The number of reservable blocks in each page or swap file currently installed. Reservable blocks are blocks that might be logially claimed by a process for future physical allocation. A negative value indicates that the file might be overcommitted. Although a negative value is not an immediate concern, it indicates that the file might become overcommitted if physical memory becomes scarce.

Notes

OpenVMS Versions 7.3-1 and higher do not have a page or swap file "Reservable" field. The Data Analyzer displays N/A in the field for these versions of OpenVMS.

If events for secondary page and swap files are signaled before the Data Analyzer has resolved their file names from the file ID (FID), events such as LOPGSP display the FID instead of file name information. You can determine the file name for the FID by checking the File Name field in the I/O Page Swap Files page. The FID for the file name is displayed after the file name.

The status bar in the OpenVMS I/O Page/Swap Files pane (Figure 3-13) shows the total number of page and swap files on the node, the number that are listed, and the number that are filtered out. The status bar is updated with each data collection. The data collection rate is determined by the customization of page/swap data collection intervals. See Section 7.5 for instructions on how to change data collection intervals.

3.2.5 Disk Summaries

The Disk tab on the Node Summary page (Figure 3-4) allows you to display disk pages that contain data about availability, count, and errors of disk devices on the system. OpenVMS disk data displays differ from those for Windows nodes, as described in the following sections.

On OpenVMS pages, the View menu lets you choose the following disk summaries:

Also, on the Disk Status Summary, you can double-click a device name to display a Single Disk Summary page.

3.2.5.1 OpenVMS Disk Status Summary

To display the default disk page, the OpenVMS Disk Status Summary page (Figure 3-14), click the Disk tab on the OpenVMS Node Summary page (Figure 3-4). The Disk Status Summary page displays disk device data, including path, volume name, status, and mount, transaction, error, and resource wait counts.

Figure 3-14 OpenVMS Disk Status Summary


Note

Disk status data is accurate only if every node in an OpenVMS Cluster environment is in the same group. You might lose accuracy if you do not have all the nodes of a cluster in one group.

To ensure that the disk status data is accurate for an OpenVMS Cluster, it is recommended that you enable background data collection for the disk status data. See Section 7.5 on how to do this.

This summary displays the following data:
Heading Description
Device Name Standard OpenVMS device name that indicates where the device is located, as well as a controller or unit designation.
Host Path Primary path (node) from which the device receives commands.
Volume Name Name of the mounted media.
Status One or more of the following disk status values:
Alloc Disk is allocated to a specific user.
CluTran Disk status is uncertain because of a cluster state transition in progress.
Dismount Disk in process of dismounting; may be waiting for a file to close.
Foreign Disk is mounted with the /FOREIGN qualifier.
Invalid Disk is in an invalid state (most likely Mount Verify Timeout).
MntVerify Disk is waiting for a mount verification.
Mounted Disk is logically mounted by a MOUNT command.
Offline Disk is no longer physically mounted in device drive.
Online Disk is physically mounted in device drive.
Shadow Set Member Disk is a member of a shadow set.
Unavailable Disk is set to unavailable.
Wrong Volume Disk was mounted with the wrong volume name.
Wrtlck Disk is mounted and write locked.
Error Number of errors generated by the disk (a quick indicator of device problems).
Trans Number of in-progress file system operations for the disk.
Mount Number of nodes that have the specified disk mounted. (These nodes must have the Data Collector installed and running to be participate in the mount count.)
Rwait Indicator that a system I/O operation is stalled, usually during normal recovery from a connection failure or during volume processing of host-based shadowing.

The status bar in the OpenVMS Disk Status Summary (Figure 3-14) shows the total number of volumes on the node, the number that are listed, and the number that are filtered out. The status bar is updated with each data collection. The data collection rate is determined by the customization of disk status data collection intervals. See Section 7.5 for instructions on how to change data collection intervals.

3.2.5.2 OpenVMS Single Disk Summary

To collect single disk data and display the data on the Single Disk Summary, double-click a device name on the Disk Status Summary. Figure 3-15 is an example of a Single Disk Summary page. The display interval of the data collected is 5 seconds.

Note that you can sort the order in which data is displayed in the Single Disk Summary page by clicking a column header. To reverse the sort order of a column of data, click the column header again.

Figure 3-15 OpenVMS Single Disk Summary


This summary displays the following data:
Data Description
Node Name of the node.
Status Status of the disk: mounted, online, offline, and so on.
Errors Number of errors on the disk.
Trans Number of in-progress file system operations on the disk (number of open files on the volume).
Rwait Indication of an I/O stalled on the disk.
Free Number of free disk blocks on the volume.
QLen Average number of operations in the I/O queue for the volume.
OpRate Each node's contribution to the total operation rate (number of I/Os per second) for the disk.

3.2.5.3 OpenVMS Disk Volume Summary

By using the View option on the Disk Status Summary page (Figure 3-14), you can select the Volume Summary option to display the OpenVMS Disk Volume Summary (Figure 3-16). This page displays disk volume data, including path, volume name, disk block utilization, queue length, and operation rate.

Figure 3-16 OpenVMS Disk Volume Summary


Note

Disk volume data is accurate only if every node in an OpenVMS Cluster environment is in the same group. You might lose accuracy if you do not have all the nodes of a cluster in one group.

To ensure that the disk volume data is accurate for an OpenVMS Cluster, it is recommended that you enable background data collection for the disk volume data. See Section 7.5 on how to do this.

The Disk Volume Summary page displays the data described in the following table. (The last two columns, Volume Size and Volume Limit, are displayed only on OpenVMS Version 7.3-2 and later systems.)
Data Description
Device Name Standard OpenVMS device name that indicates where the device is located, as well as a controller or unit designation.
Host Path Primary path (node) from which the device receives commands.
Volume Name Name of the mounted media.
Used Number of blocks on the volume that are in use.
% Used Percentage of the number of volume blocks in use in relation to the total volume blocks available.
Free Number of blocks of volume space available for new data from the perspective of the node that is mounted.
Queue Average number of I/O operations pending for the volume (an indicator of performance; less than 1.00 is optimal).
OpRate Operation rate for the most recent sampling interval. The rate measures the amount of activity on a volume. The optimal load is device specific.
Physical Size Total number of blocks on the current physical disk device. This is the "Total Blocks" field of the $SHOW DEVICE/FULL display
Volume Size Current number of blocks available for file allocation. This is the "Logical Volume Size" field of the $SHOW DEVICE/FULL display. (For more information, see $SET VOLUME/SIZE.) This column is displayed only on OpenVMS Version 7.3-2 and later systems.
Volume Limit Maximum number of blocks the volume can reach using Dynamic Volume Expansion. This is the "Expansion Size Limit" of $SHOW DEVICE/FULL display. (For more information, see $SET VOLUME/LIMIT.) This column is displayed only on OpenVMS Version 7.3-2 and later systems.

If the Data Analyzer detects that a disk volume size has increased, an VLSZCH event is signalled:


 
 AFFS55 Volume size of device $8$DKA200 (OPAL-X9U6) has changed 
   ^                              ^          ^ 
  Node                          Device     Volume 
  name                           name       name 
 

The status bar in the OpenVMS Disk Volume Summary (Figure 3-16) shows the total number of volumes on the node, the number that are listed, and the number that are filtered out. The status bar is updated with each data collection. The data collection rate is determined by the customization of disk volume data collection intervals. See Section 7.5 for instructions on how to change data collection intervals.

3.2.5.4 Windows Logical and Physical Disk Summaries

On Windows nodes, the View menu lets you choose the following summaries:

Windows Logical Disk Summary

A logical disk is the user-definable set of partitions under a drive letter. The Windows Logical Disk Summary displays logical disk device data, including path, label, percentage used, free space, and queue statistics.

To display the Logical Disk Summary page, follow these steps:

  1. Double-click a node name in the Node pane to display the Windows Node Summary.
  2. Click the Disk tab on the Windows Node Summary.

The Data Analyzer displays the Windows Logical Disk Summary page (Figure 3-17).

Figure 3-17 Windows Logical Disk Summary


This summary displays the following data:
Data Description
Disk Drive letter, for example, c:, or Total, which is the summation of statistics for all the disks.
Path Primary path (node) from which the device receives commands.
Label Identifying label of a volume.
Type File system type; for example, FAT or NTFS.
% Used Percentage of disk space used.
Free Amount of free space available on the logical disk unit.
Current Queue Number of requests outstanding on the disk at the time the performance data is collected. It includes requests in progress at the time of data collection.
Average Queue Average number of both read and write requests that were queued for the selected disk during the sample interval.
Transfers/Sec Rate of read and write operations on the disk.
KBytes/Sec Rate data is transferred to or from the disk during write or read operations. The rate is displayed in kilobytes per second.
% Busy Percentage of elapsed time that the selected disk drive is busy servicing read and write requests.

Windows Physical Disk Summary

A physical disk is hardware used on your computer system. The Windows Physical Disk Summary displays disk volume data, including path, label, queue statistics, transfers, and bytes per second.

To display the Windows Physical Disk Summary, follow these steps:

  1. Click the View menu on the Windows Logical Disk Summary.
  2. Click the Physical Disk Summary menu option.

The Data Analyzer displays the Windows Physical Disk Summary page (Figure 3-18).

Figure 3-18 Windows Physical Disk Summary


This page displays the following data:
Data Description
Disk Drive number, for example, 0, 1, 2 or Total, which is the summation of statistics for all the disks.
Path Primary path (node) from which the device receives commands.
Current Queue Number of requests outstanding on the disk at the time the performance data is collected; it includes requests in service at the time of data collection.
Average Queue Average number of read and write requests that were queued for the selected disk during the sample interval.
Transfers/Sec Rate of read and write operations on the disk. The rate is displayed in kilobytes per second.
KBytes/Sec Rate bytes are transferred to or from the disk during read or write operations. The rate is displayed in kilobytes per second.
% Busy Percentage of elapsed time the selected disk drive is busy servicing read and write requests.
% Read Busy Percentage of elapsed time the selected disk drive is busy servicing read requests.
% Write Busy Percentage of elapsed time the selected disk drive is busy servicing write requests.

3.2.6 OpenVMS Lock Contention

To display the OpenVMS Lock Contention page, click the Lock Contention tab on the OpenVMS Node Summary page (Figure 3-4). For all the nodes in the group you have selected, the Lock Contention page displays each resource for which a lock contention problem might exist.

Note

Lock contention data is accurate only if every node in an OpenVMS Cluster environment is in the same group. You might lose accuracy if you do not have all the nodes of a cluster in one group.

To ensure that the lock contention data is accurate for an OpenVMS Cluster, it is recommended that you enable background data collection for the lock contention data. See Section 7.5 on how to do this.

3.2.6.1 Lock Contention Page in Decoded Format

Figure 3-19 shows a sample Lock Contention page containing resource names in decoded format, which is the default.

Figure 3-19 OpenVMS Lock Contention (Decoded Format)


(You can display a tooltip similar to the one shown in Figure 3-19 by holding the cursor on a resource line. See the Note in the introduction to this chapter for further details.)

By selecting the View menu (on the Lock Contention page), followed by the Resource names menu item, you can choose to display the resource name and parent resource name in either of two formats:

Figure 3-19 displays the resource names in decoded format. (The Data Analyzer decodes common resource names.)

The Lock Contention page displays the data described in Table 3-8. Numbered lines correspond to lines or items of data in the Lock Contention Log (Example 3-1).

Table 3-8 Data on the OpenVMS Lock Contention Page
Lock Log Reference Number Data Description
1 Resource Name Resource name associated with the $ENQ system service call.
2 Master Node Node on which the resource is mastered.
3 Parent Resource Name of the parent resource. No name is displayed when a parent resource does not exist.
4 Duration Time elapsed since the Data Analyzer first detected the contention situation.
5 Gr/Cv/Wt/St Total number of locks in each of four states. Numbers for these states appear only when you are collecting lock data. The states are:
  • Granted
  • Converting
  • Waiting
  • Stalled

Stalled indicates one of several states whenever a lock is waiting for a response from another node in the cluster.

6 Status Status of the lock. See the $ENQW description of flags in the HP OpenVMS System Services Reference Manual.

The tooltip that is displayed when you hold the cursor over a line of data in Figure 3-19 contains the data described in Table 3-8, as well as the information described in Table 3-9.

Table 3-9 Lock Contention Tooltip Data
Reference Number Data Description
7 RSB Address of the Resource Block
8 ValBlk dump Resource Value Block dump in standard OpenVMS dump format

3.2.6.2 Lock Contention Page in Raw Format

Figure 3-20 shows the Lock Contention page with resource name data displayed in raw format. It also shows the tooltip that is displayed when you hold the cursor over a line of data.

Figure 3-20 OpenVMS Lock Contention (Raw Format)


In Figure 3-20, notice that a period is substituted for each unprintable character in the Resource Name and Parent Resource Name fields.

3.2.6.3 Lock Block Data

When you click the handle that precedes any line of resource data, the Data Analyzer displays the lock block data that is shown in Figure 3-21 and Figure 3-22.

Figure 3-21 OpenVMS Lock Block Data


Figure 3-22 OpenVMS Lock Block Data (Retry Stalled State)


The lock block data in these two figures includes additional lock information under the headings shown in Table 3-10. Numbered lines correspond to lines or items of data in the Lock Contention Log (Example 3-1).

Table 3-10 Lock Block Data
Reference Number Data Description
9 Node Node name on which the lock is granted.
10 State One of the following:
Color Meaning
Green Granted
Yellow Converting
Pink Waiting
Pale grey Stalled states that are visible:

SCSWAIT: A transient state indicating that a lock message has been sent to the node with the master lock and a response is awaited.

RETRY: A transient state seen only under error conditions that require that a lock message be resent. This can occur if the node to which a lock message was sent goes down before a response from it is received or if resources for sending a message cannot be allocated.

11 Process Name Name of the process that owns the blocking lock.
12 LKID Lock ID value (which is useful with SDA).
13 Mode One of the following modes in which the lock is granted or requested: 1
CR Concurrent read Grants read access and allows resource sharing with other readers and writers.
CW Concurrent write Grants write access and allows resource sharing with other groups.
EX Exclusive Grants write access and prevents resource sharing with any other readers or writers.
NL Null Grants no access; used as an indicator of interest or a placeholder for future lock conversion.
PR Protected read Grants read access and allows resource sharing with other readers, but not writers.
PW Protected write Grants write access and prevents resource sharing with any other readers or writers.

If one mode is displayed, it is the Granted mode; if two modes are displayed, the first is the Granted mode and the second is the Converting mode.

14 Duration Length of time the lock has been in the current queue since the console application found the lock.
15 Flags Flags specified with the $ENQW request. See the $ENQW entry in HP OpenVMS System Services Reference Manual.


1Descriptions are from Goldenberg, Ruth, and Saravanan, Saro, OpenVMS AXP Internals and Data Structures, Version 1.5, Digital Press, 1994.

To interpret the information displayed on the OpenVMS Lock Contention page, you need to understand OpenVMS lock management services. For more information, see the HP OpenVMS System Services Reference Manual.

3.2.6.4 Lock Block Log File

Example 3-1 contains an excerpt of a lock block log file. You can find a lock block log file in either of the following locations:
System File Name Location
Windows AvailManLock.log Installation directory
OpenVMS AvailManLock.log, prefaced by AMDS$AM_LOG Directory to which AMDS$AM_LOG logical points

Numbers preceding lines or items of data in Example 3-1 correspond to numbered lines in Table 3-8, Table 3-9, and Section 3.2.6.3. Table 3-11 contains lines or items of data in a lock block log file that are not described in the other tables in this section.

Table 3-11 Additional Data in the Lock Block Log File
Lock Log Reference Number Data from Example Description
16 Reason for logging In the example, the reason for logging is "the number of locks has changed." Other reasons include the "initial discovery of resource contention" or "lock data collection has been turned on."
17 GGMODE/CGMODE Lock has been Granted/Lock is Converting.
18 Resource Name Dump OpenVMS style of Resource Name dump.
19 RDB global database name resource Decoded Resource Name.
20 Parent Resource Name Dump OpenVMS style of Parent Resource Name dump.
21 RDB global database name resource Decoded Parent Resource Name.
22 Lock data is being collected The handle preceding a line of lock data has been turned.
23 Master copy info. Remote Node Remote node that contains the master copy of the lock. If "Local Copy," only one node is interested in the lock.
24 Master copy info. Remote Lock ID Lock ID of remote node that contains the master copy of the lock.

Example 3-1 Lock Block Log File

************************************************** 
Time:  11-Nov-2003 14:54:13.656 
 
16)Reason for logging:    Number of locks has changed 
 
2) Master Lock Node:      ALTOS 
 
1) Resource Name:         I..... 
17)    GGMODE/CGMODE:     EX/EX 
6)     Status:            VALID 
7)     RSB Address:       FFFFFFFE.889F1580 
18)    Resource Name Dump (includes initial count byte): 
          0000:   000200 00004906  .I..... 
 
8)     Value Block Dump: 
          0000: 00000000 00000000  ........ 
          0008: 00000000 00000000  ........ 
                                            
19) Rdb Remote monitor resource 
          #:                 2 
 
3) Parent Resource Name:  Ý...D....VDEROOT     . 7.... 
7)     RSB Address:       FFFFFFFE.8847DB80 
20)    Resource Name Dump (includes initial count byte): 
          0000: 00004400 0000DD1C  .....D.. 
          0008: 4F4F5245 44560200  ..VDEROO 
          0010: A0002020 20202054  T     .. 
          0018:       00 00000237  7.... 
 
8)     Value Block Dump: 
          0000: 00000000 00000000  ........ 
          0008: 00000000 00000000  ........ 
 
21)    Rdb global database name resource 
          Disk volume name:  VDEROOT 
          FID for file:      (14240,2,0) 
 
22) Lock data is being collected 
 
5)     Granted lock count:       1 
5)     Conversion lock count:    0 
5)     Waiting lock count:       4 
5)     Stalled lock count:       0 
 
       10)      9)               11)           12)      13) Master copy info:   15) 
      Lock     Node   Process  Process         Lock    Gr/Cv Remote Remote   Flags 
      State           PID      Name            ID       Mode Node   Lock ID 
                                                              23)    24) 
      Granted  ALTOS  28E00441 RDMS_MONITOR70  04014B37 EX    (Local copy)      NQUE SYNC SYS 
      Waiting  ALTOS  2880023F RDMS_MONITOR70  4C0065B5 PR   TSAVO  32005001      SYNC SYS  NDLW 
      Waiting  ALTOS  00000000 (EPID=28A0023D) 4C0144C4 PR   ETOSHA 74005E36      SYNC SYS  NDLW 
      Waiting  ALTOS  28C00448 RDMS_MONITOR70  1D0144A3 PR   CHOBE  77005906      SYNC SYS  NDLW 
      Waiting  ALTOS  28E026C3 VDE$KEPT126A3   01014B2D PR    (Local copy)             SYS  NDLW 
 
************************************************** 

3.3 OpenVMS Single Process Data

When you double-click a row in the lower part of an OpenVMS Mode Details (Figure 3-7), OpenVMS CPU Process Summary (Figure 3-8), Memory (Figure 3-10), or I/O (Figure 3-12) pages, the Data Analyzer displays the first of several OpenVMS Single Process pages.

Alternatively, you can right-click a row and select "Display...". The View menu item contains three display options, shown in Figure 3-23.

Figure 3-23 Single Process Window


Explanations of the choices in the View menu are the following:

The following sections describe the individual tabs or sections of the vertical or horizontal grids.

Each section refers to the vertical grid display shown in Figure 3-24. The status bar displays the current image that the process is running.

Figure 3-24 Single Process Vertical Grid Display


3.3.1 Process Information

Table 3-12 describes the Process Information data shown in Figure 3-24.

The data on this page is displayed at the default intervals shown for Single Process Data on the Data Collection Customization page.

Table 3-12 Process Information
Data Description
Process name Name of the process.
Username User name of the user who owns the process.
Account Account string that the system manager assigns to the user.
UIC User identification code (UIC). A pair of numbers or character strings that designate the group and user.
PID Process identifier. A 32-bit value that uniquely identifies a process.
Owner ID Process identifier of the process that created the process displayed on the page. If the PID is 0, then the process is a parent process.
PC Program counter.

On OpenVMS Alpha systems, this value is displayed as 0 because the data is not readily available to the Data Collector node.

PS Processor status longword (PSL). This value is displayed on VAX systems only.
Priority Computable and base priority of the process. Priority is an integer between 0 and 31. Processes with higher priority are given more CPU time.
State One of the process states listed in Appendix A.
CPU Time CPU time used by the process.

3.3.2 Working Set

Table 3-13 describes the Working Set data shown in Figure 3-24.

Table 3-13 Working Set
Data Description
WS Global Pages Shared data or code between processes, listed in pages (measured in pagelets).
WS Private Pages Amount of accessible memory, listed in pages (measured in pagelets).
WS Total Pages Sum of global and private pages (measured in pagelets).
WS Size Working set size. The number of pages (measured in pagelets) of memory the process is allowed to use. This value is periodically adjusted by the operating system based on analysis of page faults relative to CPU time used. Increases in large units indicates that a process is taking many page faults, and its memory allocation is increasing.
WS Default Working set default. The initial limit of the number of physical pages (measured in pagelets) of memory the process can use. This parameter is listed in the user authorization file (UAF); discrepancies between the UAF value and the displayed value are due to page/longword boundary rounding or other adjustments made by the operating system.
WS Quota Working set quota. The maximum amount of physical pages (measured in pagelets) of memory the process can lock into its working set. This parameter is listed in the UAF; discrepancies between the UAF value and the displayed value are due to page/longword boundary rounding or other adjustments made by the operating system.
WS Extent Working set extent. The maximum number of physical pages (measured in pagelets) of memory the system will allocate for the process. The system provides memory to a process beyond its quota only when it has an excess of free pages and can be recalled if necessary. This parameter is listed in the UAF; any discrepancies between the UAF value and the displayed value are due to page/longword boundary rounding or other adjustments made by the operating system.
Images Activated Number of times an image is activated.
Mutexes Held Number of mutual exclusions (mutexes) held. Persistent values other than zero (0) require analysis. A mutex is similar to a lock but is restricted to one CPU. When a process holds a mutex, its priority is temporarily increased to 16.

3.3.3 Execution Rates

Table 3-14 describes the Execution Rates data shown in Figure 3-24.

Table 3-14 Execution Rates
Data Description
CPU Percent of CPU time used by this process. The ratio of CPU time to elapsed time.
Direct I/O Rate at which I/O transfers take place from the pages or pagelets containing the process buffer that the system locks in physical memory to the system devices.
Buffered I/O Rate at which I/O transfers take place for the process buffer from an intermediate buffer from the system buffer pool.
Paging I/O Rate of read attempts necessary to satisfy page faults. This is also known as page read I/O or the hard fault rate.
Page Faults Page faults per second for the process.

3.3.4 Process Quotas

Table 3-15 describes the Process Quotas data shown in Figure 3-24.

Note that when you display the SWAPPER process, no values are listed in this section. The SWAPPER process does not have quotas defined in the same way as other system and user processes do.

Table 3-15 Quotas
Data Description
Direct I/O The current number of direct I/Os used compared with the limit possible.
Buffered I/O The current number of buffered I/Os used compared with the possible limit.
ASTs Asynchronous system traps. The current number of ASTs used compared with the possible limit.
CPU Time Amount of time used compared with the possible limit. "No Limit" is displayed if the limit is zero.

3.3.5 Wait States

Table 3-16 describes the Wait States data shown in Figure 3-24.

In the graph, "Current" refers to the percentage of elapsed time each process spends in one of the computed wait states. If a process spends all its time waiting in one state, the total gradually reaches 100%.

How Wait States are Calculated

The wait state specifies why a process cannot execute, based on calculations made on collected data. Each value is calculated over an entire data collection period of approximately 2 minutes. The graph shows, over this period of time, the percentage of time a process spends in each wait state. Each value is an exponential average that approximates a moving average. A more detailed explanation follows.

When monitoring of a single process starts, all wait state values are zero. When the system periodically checks the process, the system first subtracts 10% from each value. It then adds a value of 10 to the wait state the process is currently in, if any.

For example, at the start, if a process is found to be in the Control wait state, the graph immediately registers 10 for Control. If the process is still in the Control wait state the next time it is checked, the graph shows Control at 19. This value is 90% of the original 10 (or 9), plus 10 (the value currently being added).

The next time the process is checked, if it is found to be in the Buffered I/O wait state, Buffered I/O is set to 10 and Control is set to 17 (approximately 90% of the previous value of 19).

The following time the process is checked, if it is not in a wait state at all, Buffered I/O is set to 9 (90% of 10), and Control is set to 15 (90% of 17).

Appendix A contains descriptions of wait states.

Table 3-16 Wait States
Data Description
Compute Average percentage of time that the process is waiting for CPU time. Possible states are COM, COMO, or RWCAP.
Memory Average percentage of time that the process is waiting for a page fault that requires data to be read from disk; this is common during image activation. Possible states are PFW, MWAIT, COLPG, FPG, RWPAG, RWNPG, RWMPE, or RWMPB.
Direct I/O Average percentage of time that the process waits for data to be read from or written to a disk or tape. The possible state is DIO.
Buffered I/O Average percentage of time that the process waits for data to be read from or written to a slower device such as a terminal, line printer, mailbox, or network traffic. The possible state is BIO.
Control Average percentage of time that the process is waiting for another process to release control of some resource. Possible states are CEF, MWAIT, LEF, LEFO, RWAST, RWMBX, RWSCS, RWCLU, RWCSV, RWUNK, or LEF waiting for an ENQ.
Quotas Average percentage of time that the process is waiting because the process has exceeded some quota. Possible states are QUOTA or RWAST_QUOTA.
Explicit Average percentage of time that the process is waiting because the process asked to wait, such as a hibernate system service. Possible states are HIB, HIBO, SUSP, SUSPO, or LEF waiting for a TQE.

3.3.6 Job Quotas

Table 3-17 describes the Job Quota data shown in Figure 3-24.

Table 3-17 Job Quotas
Data Description AUTHORIZE Quota
Open File Count Current number of open files compared with the possible limit. FILLM
Paging File Count Current number of disk blocks in the page file that the process can use compared with the possible limit. Note that this value is in pagelets (512 byte pages) for compatibility and consistency with VAX systems. PGFLQUOTA
Enqueue Count Current number of resources (lock blocks) queued compared with the possible limit. ENQLM
TQE Count Current number of timer queue entry (TQE) requests compared with the possible limit. TQELM
Subprocess Count Current number of subprocesses created compared with the possible limit. PRCLM
Byte Count Current number of bytes used for buffered I/O transfers compared with the possible limit. BYTLM

3.3.7 RAD Counters

Table 3-18 describes the RAD Counters data shown in Figure 3-24. The RAD (Resource Affinity Domain) Counters data page is displayed for Alpha and I64 systems.

Table 3-18 RAD Counters Data
Data Description
Private Number of process private pages on RAD 0.
Shared Number of process shared pages on RAD 0.
Global Number of global pages on RAD 0.


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