All-purpose admin tool

Peak Performance

Article from Issue 172/2015
Author(s):

Administrators often assume that if all nodes are functioning, the system is fine. However, a common problem is poor or unexpected application performance. In this case, you need a simple tool to help you understand what's happening on the nodes: nmon.

The most common user complaint I receive is poor or unexpected performance by a user application, so I've been spending some time looking at tools that can help me understand what is happening on a server. A good place to start is with simple command-line applications that watch overall system performance. I chose command-line tools because I don't always have a nice GUI to the node, and sometimes I am left with just a simple SSH connection or a crash cart (the nodes likely don't have graphics cards). In this article, I'm going to examine a comprehensive tool that provides a quick glance at node performance from many perspectives (i.e., CPU, network, disk). The tool is called nmon [1].

Nmon Overview

Nmon is short for "Nigel's Monitor" and is a command-line tool that presents performance information about the system to the user. It started in the AIX world but has migrated to other *nix systems, including Linux. Nmon has lots of options for monitoring different aspects of the system, including:

  • Machine (system) information
  • CPU stats
  • Memory stats
  • Virtual memory stats
  • Kernel internal stats
  • Network stats (and errors)
  • NFS information
  • Disk I/O stats (and graphs)
  • Disk busy information (Disk I/O map)
  • Partition disk I/O stats
  • Logical partition disk I/O stats

[...]

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