You'll need to analyze this data with what you are seeing on this system. I suggest you get sar like tool. Look at http://www.googlebit.com/bsdsar/ or see this post too http://groups.google.com/group/sol.lists.freebsd.questions/browse_thread/thread/b999f095612e59bd/257ddbadf0c9ec71?hl=en&lnk=st&q=FreeBSD+sar#257ddbadf0c9ec71
Or ask you system admin. You need to look at it very closely. On Sat, Jun 14, 2008 at 10:23 AM, Stut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thanks Mohit. Shortly after you sent this last night I enabled system > accounting. There's now a fair amount of data in the output but I'm not > really sure where to find the disk wait times... > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# sa > 41065 44351.99re 428.71cp 11avio 823k > 8678 33375.24re 418.23cp 34avio 496k httpd* > 2469 51.19re 4.79cp 2avio 767k convert > 1513 1180.51re 2.69cp 48avio 4929k php > 2469 56.01re 2.59cp 2avio 1312k composite > 590 3945.74re 0.09cp 5avio 6182k smtp > 624 152.45re 0.09cp 0avio 196079k perl* > 46 468.10re 0.08cp 691avio 574k cleanup > 1170 10.05re 0.08cp 11avio 107305k rateup > 47 388.52re 0.03cp 190avio 1054k pickup > 743 240.80re 0.02cp 0avio 27976k > trivial-rewrite > 10443 1319.75re 0.00cp 0avio 26333351k sh > 154 305.90re 0.00cp 24avio 44750k bounce > 4454 101.21re 0.00cp 0avio 1753042k sendmail > 4454 52.77re 0.00cp 7avio 2748826k postdrop > 2 1.00re 0.00cp 0avio 3136k top > 9 1278.02re 0.00cp 2avio 32944k ***other > 389 13.73re 0.00cp 0avio 908587k ps > 2 0.01re 0.00cp 6avio 981k sa > 24 80.90re 0.00cp 0avio 60224k scache > 9 35.12re 0.00cp 0avio 12700k anvil > 78 0.28re 0.00cp 0avio 198900k atrun > 623 1043.23re 0.00cp 0avio 959100k cron* > 39 1.24re 0.00cp 2avio 112100k dd > 27 52.78re 0.00cp 0avio 109600k error > 65 114.24re 0.00cp 0avio 298000k flush > 1165 41.51re 0.00cp 0avio 4475200k grep > 40 0.14re 0.00cp 0avio 60000k jot > 279 1.16re 0.00cp 3avio 971600k mv > 7 0.31re 0.00cp 3avio 7200k newsyslog > 13 1.68re 0.00cp 0avio 42500k proxymap > 12 23.78re 0.00cp 0avio 78800k smtpd > 40 0.16re 0.00cp 2avio 194800k unlink > 388 14.47re 0.00cp 0avio 1219700k wc > > Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. > > -Stut > > > On 14 Jun 2008, at 00:43, Mohit Anchlia wrote: > > try "sa" >> >> On 6/13/08, Stut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On 13 Jun 2008, at 23:38, >> Mohit Anchlia wrote: >> look at "sar" output and see the wait times on the disk is more than the >> service time. >> >> That command doesn't seem to exist on FreeBSD. Do you know if there's an >> equivalent command? >> >> -Stut >> >> >> On 6/13/08, Stut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> On 13 Jun 2008, at 22:56, Dragon wrote: >> >> Stut wrote: >> On 13 Jun 2008, at 22:37, Dragon wrote: >> Stut wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I have a problem with one of the web servers I manage. It runs >> FreeBSD >> 6.2, Apache 2.2.8 and PHP 5.2.1. It runs a high-ish number of pre- fork >> processes (usually around 240). >> >> What basically happens is that during our peak hours in the evening >> the site becomes very slow as does everything on the server. The top >> output shows nearly all httpd processes in the state "devfs" and the >> load is jumping up over 10 but the CPU is 70% idle. There's plenty of >> free memory, over 4GB, and lots of available disk space. >> >> While it's in this state all disk access is painfully slow. I've >> checked all the drives and the RAID card status and everything >> appears >> to be fine. It also recovers itself after a few hours when the >> traffic >> dies down again. >> >> I've spent a lot of today Googling but can't find any reference to >> this particular combination of symptoms. Does anyone have any ideas? >> ---------------- End original message. --------------------- >> >> It sounds to me like your system is waiting on disk resources (I am >> assuming that is what the devfs state is), it is very likely trying >> to use swap space. >> >> Now much memory does this system have? >> >> If it has insufficient memory to keep most things in RAM, it is >> going to use a lot of swap and that will slow things down >> considerably. >> >> Oh how I wish it were that simple... >> >> Mem: 1629M Active, 770M Inact, 392M Wired, 68K Cache, 214M Buf, 4791M >> Free >> Swap: 8192M Total, 8192M Free >> >> No swap in use, plenty of free memory. >> ---------------- End original message. --------------------- >> >> Well, I took my best shot on the info presented. I still think there is >> something in the disk I/O path that is acting as a bottleneck. >> >> Sorry it isn't so easy, I have nothing else here. Wish I could help. >> >> No worries, thanks for trying. >> >> I agree that it's probably disk-related, but other than these symptoms I >> can't find anything wrong. >> >> I'll see if the FreeBSD list can help. >> >> -Stut >> >> -- >> http://stut.net/ >> >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project. >> See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info. >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> " from the digest: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> >> >> >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project. >> See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info. >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> " from the digest: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> >> >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project. > See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info. > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > " from the digest: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >