$ dmesg | tail [1880957.563150] perl invoked oom-killer: gfp_mask=0x280da, order=0, oom_score_adj=0 [...] [1880957.563400] Out of memory: Kill process 18694 (perl) score 246 or sacrifice child [1880957.563408] Killed process 18694 (perl) total-vm:1972392kB, anon-rss:1953348kB, file-rss:0kB [2320864.954447] TCP: Possible SYN flooding on port 7001. Dropping request. Check SNMP counters.
查看系统消息
vmstat 1
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$ vmstat 1 procs ---------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- -system-- ------cpu----- r b swpd free buff cache si so bi bo in cs us sy id wa st 34 0 0 200889792 73708 591828 0 0 0 5 6 10 96 1 3 0 0 32 0 0 200889920 73708 591860 0 0 0 592 13284 4282 98 1 1 0 0 32 0 0 200890112 73708 591860 0 0 0 0 9501 2154 99 1 0 0 0 32 0 0 200889568 73712 591856 0 0 0 48 11900 2459 99 0 0 0 0 32 0 0 200890208 73712 591860 0 0 0 0 15898 4840 98 1 1 0 0
检查所有cpu的平均使用情况。
Columns to check:
r: Number of processes running on CPU and waiting for a turn. This provides a better signal than load averages for determining CPU saturation, as it does not include I/O. To interpret: an “r” value greater than the CPU count is saturation.
free: Free memory in kilobytes. If there are too many digits to count, you have enough free memory. The “free -m” command, included as command 7, better explains the state of free memory.
si, so: Swap-ins and swap-outs. If these are non-zero, you’re out of memory.
us, sy, id, wa, st: These are breakdowns of CPU time, on average across all CPUs. They are user time, system time (kernel), idle, wait I/O, and stolen time (by other guests, or with Xen, the guest’s own isolated driver domain).
mpstat -P ALL
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$ mpstat -P ALL 1 Linux 3.13.0-49-generic (titanclusters-xxxxx) 07/14/2015 _x86_64_ (32 CPU)
r/s, w/s, rkB/s, wkB/s: These are the delivered reads, writes, read Kbytes, and write Kbytes per second to the device. Use these for workload characterization. A performance problem may simply be due to an excessive load applied.
await: The average time for the I/O in milliseconds. This is the time that the application suffers, as it includes both time queued and time being serviced. Larger than expected average times can be an indicator of device saturation, or device problems.
avgqu-sz: The average number of requests issued to the device. Values greater than 1 can be evidence of saturation (although devices can typically operate on requests in parallel, especially virtual devices which front multiple back-end disks.)
%util: Device utilization. This is really a busy percent, showing the time each second that the device was doing work. Values greater than 60% typically lead to poor performance (which should be seen in await), although it depends on the device. Values close to 100% usually indicate saturation.