On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 10:58:53 -0800 Rick Stevens <ri...@alldigital.com> wrote:

> On 02/22/2016 10:50 AM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> > On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 10:38:30 -0800 Rick Stevens <ri...@alldigital.com> 
> > wrote:
> >
> >> On 02/22/2016 10:19 AM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> >>> Hi,
> >>>
> >>> I am running a fully updated F23 box but this question does not have much 
> >>> to do with Fedora itself, hence the designator and the disclaimer.
> >>>
> >>> I am wanting to run a script which will look at all the jobs that are 
> >>> running and renice all of them which have been on for more than five 
> >>> minutes. (Then I can run the script as a cron job as root and be done 
> >>> with automating the process.)
> >>>
> >>> Are there any suggestions as to how to go about this task efficiently? 
> >>> Actually, before I reinvent the wheel, are there any standard options 
> >>> that already exist and which would be more suitable for me than just to 
> >>> do everything from scratch.
> >>
> >> Use the "-o pid,etimes=" options of ps to get the elapsed time of
> >> tasks in seconds. To get a full list, for example, as root:
> >>
> >>    ps ax -o pid,uid,etimes=
> >>    ...
> >>    21412     0     833
> >>    21499     0  631433
> >>    21541     0     773
> >>    21597  1000     769
> >>    21604  1000     769
> >>    21605  1000     769
> >>    21608  1000     769
> >>    21610  1000     769
> >>    21613  1000     769
> >>    21681  1000     769
> >>    21686  1000     769
> >>    21697  1000     769
> >>    21751  1000     742
> >>    ...
> >>
> >> (run it as root so you can see ALL of the processes)
> >>
> >> As you can see, you get three columns: the first is the PID of the
> >> task, the second is the EUID of the user running it, and the third is
> >> the elapsed time.
> >>
> >> So, pull that data into a shell array, look for stuff that has the
> >> second column equal to the user ID you're interested in and the third
> >> column >= 300 seconds and renice the PID in the first column. Note that
> >> I'd avoid renicing any tasks with UIDs < your lowest normal user ID
> >> (typically 100) to keep from starving system tasks.
> >>
> >> Hope that helps!
> >
> > Yes, this absolutely helps, thanks!! But is there a 2-d array in bash (or 
> > do we do array of arrays)? (I am presuming that I need to store this in a 
> > 2-d array and then look at columns 2 and 3  and renice the PIDs in column 
> > 1.) Also, how does one assign the output of the ps to a 2-d array?
> 
> Uhm, no. You can simulate them using associative arrays, but it gets
> rather hairy. You may want to try something like awk or PHP or Perl to
> do this more easily.

OK, thanks! I guess i will have to figure out one of awk, etc then. Separately, 
I have realized that I should also output nice as part of the ps options 
because there is no point in renicing jobs that are already niced.

Best wishes,
Ranjan

____________________________________________________________
FREE 3D EARTH SCREENSAVER - Watch the Earth right on your desktop!
Check it out at http://www.inbox.com/earth


-- 
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users
Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to