Scott Silva wrote: > on 6-4-2009 2:14 PM Les Mikesell spake the following: >> Scott Silva wrote: >>> on 6-4-2009 5:37 AM Theo Band spake the following: >>>> I have a quad core CPU running Centos5. >>>> >>>> When I use top, I see that running processes use 245% instead of 100%. >>>> If I use gkrellm, I just see one core being used 100%. >>>> >>> This one is easy. 4 cpu's, 100% total each, a maximum of 400%. >>> >>> Since one core is at 100%, the other 145% is spread across the other 3 cores. >> Is there any reasonable way to figure out the available CPU capacity >> from an SNMP monitoring tool? (You want to know if the reported >100% >> usage is a problem but you don't know anything else about the machine). >> > That can be difficult, because a machine in I/O wait can be slower than a > machine at full CPU utilization. There is nothing technically wrong with a > machine at 100% cpu. It is just means that the cpu is busy doing useful tasks, > instead of sitting idle doing nothing. > Where it is more critical is in a system that has occasional peaks of load. If > the system is already busy, then these tasks will wait. Unless your system > idles down and lowers the cpu freq. to save power, it isn't really saving > anything by being idle. As long as the system gets its work done in a timely > manner, then it isn't overloaded. SNMP does a reasonable job of reporting user/system/iowait. That's not so much the question as how to know how many CPU's some machine has so you can know whether 400% is all of your capacity. That is, how many CPUs it has, since it doesn't scale the percentage against the total for you. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos