16%
20.02.2012
.57, 0.00, 12.76, 85, 0
2012-01-09 21:09:21, 84, 4.84, 0, 0.29, 17.36, 0.00, 5.09, 90, 0
2012-01-09 21:09:47, 80, 4
16%
22.05.2012
:
Scientific Linux 6.2
2.6.32-220.4.1.el6.x86_64 kernel
GigaByte MAA78GM-US2H motherboard
AMD Phenom II X4 920 CPU (four cores)
8GB of memory (DDR2-800)
The OS and boot drive are on an IBM DTLA
16%
07.10.2014
by the process
12m
12MB
S
Status of process
R
S
= sleeping, R
= running, Z
= zombie
%CPU
Percent CPU being used by the process on a per-CPU basis
16%
19.11.2019
Jobs: 1 (f=1): [w(1)][100.0%][w=654MiB/s][w=167k IOPS][eta 00m:00s]
test: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=1225: Sat Oct 12 19:20:18 2019
write: IOPS=168k, BW=655MiB/s (687MB/s)(10.0GiB/15634msec); 0
16%
25.03.2020
---------------- -------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------- -------------------------- ---------------- --------
/dev/nvme0n1 152e778212a62015 Linux 1 21.00 TB / 21.00 TB 4 KiB + 0 B 5.4.12-0
You are now able to read and write from and to /dev
16%
21.01.2020
SN Model Namespace Usage Format FW Rev
---------------- -------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------- -------------------------- ---------------- --------
/dev/nvme0n1 152e778212a62015 Linux 1 21.00 TB / 21.00 TB 4 KiB + 0 B 5.4.12-0
You are now able to read and write from and to /dev/nvme0n1
16%
15.02.2012
of Figure 10. Figure 11 plots the Write IO function count for the KB range intervals. Figure 12 plots the Write IO function count for the MB range intervals. Figure 13 plots the Write IO function count
16%
26.01.2012
of Figure 10. Figure 11 plots the Write IO function count for the KB range intervals. Figure 12 plots the Write IO function count for the MB range intervals. Figure 13 plots the Write IO function count
16%
18.07.2013
buffered disk reads: 616 MB in
3.00 seconds = 205.03 MB/sec
$ hdparm -T /dev/sda
/dev/sda:
Timing cached reads: 6292 MB in
2.00 seconds = 3153.09 MB/sec
If this were a spinning disk, you would also
16%
21.08.2012
just two nodes: test1, which is the master node, and n0001, which is the first compute node):
[laytonjb@test1 ~]$ pdsh -w test1,n0001 uptime
test1: 18:57:17 up 2:40, 5 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00