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SAR(1)			      Linux User's Manual			SAR(1)

NAME
       sar - Collect, report, or save system activity information.

SYNOPSIS
       sar  [ -A ] [ -b ] [ -B ] [ -c ] [ -d ] [ -i interval ] [ -p ] [ -q ] [
       -r ] [ -R ] [ -t ] [ -u ] [ -v ] [ -V ] [ -w ] [ -W ] [ -y ] [ -n { DEV
       | EDEV | NFS | NFSD | SOCK | ALL } ] [ -x { pid | SELF | ALL } ] [ -X {
       pid | SELF | ALL } ] [ -I { irq | SUM | ALL | XALL } ] [ -P { cpu | ALL
       }  ]  [	-o [ filename ] | -f [ filename ] ] [ -s [ hh:mm:ss ] ] [ -e [
       hh:mm:ss ] ] [ interval [ count ] ]

DESCRIPTION
       The sar command writes to standard  output  the	contents  of  selected
       cumulative  activity  counters  in the operating system. The accounting
       system, based on the values  in	the  count  and	 interval  parameters,
       writes  information  the specified number of times spaced at the speci‐
       fied intervals in seconds.  If the interval parameter is set  to	 zero,
       the  sar command displays the average statistics for the time since the
       system was started. The default value for the count parameter is 1.  If
       its value is set to zero, then reports are generated continuously.  The
       collected data can also be saved in the file specified by the -o	 file‐
       name  flag, in addition to being displayed onto the screen. If filename
       is omitted, sar uses the standard system activity daily data file,  the
       /var/log/sa/sadd	 file,	where  the  dd parameter indicates the current
       day.  By default all the data available from the kernel	are  saved  in
       the  data file. Exceptions are interrupts and disks data, for which the
       relevant options must be explicitly passed to sar (or  to  its  backend
       sadc ) when the data file is created (see options below).

       The  sar	 command extracts and writes to standard output records previ‐
       ously saved in a file. This file can be either the one specified by the
       -f flag or, by default, the standard system activity daily data file.

       Without	the -P flag, the sar command reports system-wide (global among
       all processors) statistics, which are calculated as averages for values
       expressed  as  percentages,  and	 as  sums otherwise. If the -P flag is
       given, the sar command reports activity which relates to the  specified
       processor  or  processors.  If -P ALL is given, the sar command reports
       statistics for each individual processor and  global  statistics	 among
       all processors.

       You  can	 select	 information  about  specific  system activities using
       flags. Not specifying any flags selects only CPU activity.   Specifying
       the -A flag is equivalent to specifying -bBcdqrRuvwWy -I SUM -I XALL -n
       ALL -P ALL.

       The default version of the sar command (CPU utilization	report)	 might
       be  one	of the first facilities the user runs to begin system activity
       investigation, because it monitors major system resources. If CPU  uti‐
       lization	 is near 100 percent (user + nice + system), the workload sam‐
       pled is CPU-bound.

       If multiple samples and multiple reports are desired, it is  convenient
       to  specify an output file for the sar command.	Run the sar command as
       a background process. The syntax for this is:

       sar -o datafile interval count >/dev/null 2>&1 &

       All data is captured in binary form and saved  to  a  file  (datafile).
       The  data  can then be selectively displayed with the sar command using
       the -f option. Set the interval and count parameters  to	 select	 count
       records	at  interval  second  intervals. If the count parameter is not
       set, all the records saved in the file will be selected.	 Collection of
       data  in	 this  manner  is  useful  to characterize system usage over a
       period of time and determine peak usage hours.

       Note:	 The sar command only reports on local activities.

OPTIONS
       -A     This is equivalent to specifying -bBcdqrRuvwWy -I SUM -I XALL -n
	      ALL -P ALL.

       -b     Report  I/O  and transfer rate statistics.  The following values
	      are displayed:

	      tps
		     Total number of transfers per second that were issued  to
		     physical  devices.	  A  transfer  is  an I/O request to a
		     physical device. Multiple logical requests	 can  be  com‐
		     bined  into a single I/O request to the device.  A trans‐
		     fer is of indeterminate size.

	      rtps
		     Total number of read requests per second issued to physi‐
		     cal devices.

	      wtps
		     Total number of write requests per second issued to phys‐
		     ical devices.

	      bread/s
		     Total amount of data read from the devices in blocks  per
		     second.   Blocks  are equivalent to sectors with 2.4 ker‐
		     nels and newer and therefore have a size  of  512	bytes.
		     With older kernels, a block is of indeterminate size.

	      bwrtn/s
		     Total  amount  of	data  written to devices in blocks per
		     second.

       -B     Report paging statistics. The following values are displayed:

	      pgpgin/s
		     Total number of kilobytes the system paged in  from  disk
		     per second.  Note: With old kernels (2.2.x) this value is
		     a number of blocks per second (and not kilobytes).

	      pgpgout/s
		     Total number of kilobytes the system paged	 out  to  disk
		     per second.  Note: With old kernels (2.2.x) this value is
		     a number of blocks per second (and not kilobytes).

	      fault/s
		     Number of page faults (major + minor) made by the	system
		     per  second (post 2.5 kernels only).  This is not a count
		     of page faults  that  generate  I/O,  because  some  page
		     faults can be resolved without I/O.

	      majflt/s
		     Number  of	 major	faults the system has made per second,
		     those which have required loading a memory page from disk
		     (post 2.5 kernels only).

       -c     Report process creation activity.

	      proc/s
		     Total number of processes created per second.

       -d     Report  activity	for  each  block device (kernels 2.4 and newer
	      only).  When data is displayed, the device specification dev m-n
	      is  generally  used ( DEV column).  m is the major number of the
	      device.  With recent kernels (post 2.5), n is the	 minor	number
	      of  the  device, but is only a sequence number with pre 2.5 ker‐
	      nels. Device names may also be pretty-printed if	option	-p  is
	      used  (see  below). Values for fields avgqu-sz, await, svctm and
	      %util may be unavailable and displayed as	 0.00  with  some  2.4
	      kernels.

	      tps
		     Indicate  the  number  of	transfers per second that were
		     issued to the device.  Multiple logical requests  can  be
		     combined  into  a	single	I/O  request  to the device. A
		     transfer is of indeterminate size.

	      rd_sec/s
		     Number of sectors read from the device.  The  size	 of  a
		     sector is 512 bytes.

	      wr_sec/s
		     Number  of	 sectors  written to the device. The size of a
		     sector is 512 bytes.

	      avgrq-sz
		     The average size (in sectors) of the requests  that  were
		     issued to the device.

	      avgqu-sz
		     The average queue length of the requests that were issued
		     to the device.

	      await
		     The average  time	(in  milliseconds)  for	 I/O  requests
		     issued to the device to be served. This includes the time
		     spent by the requests in queue and the time spent servic‐
		     ing them.

	      svctm
		     The  average  service  time  (in  milliseconds)  for  I/O
		     requests that were issued to the device.

	      %util
		     Percentage of CPU time during  which  I/O	requests  were
		     issued  to	 the  device  (bandwidth  utilization  for the
		     device). Device saturation	 occurs	 when  this  value  is
		     close to 100%.

       -e [ hh:mm:ss ]
	      Set  the	ending	time of the report. The default ending time is
	      18:00:00. Hours must be given in 24-hour	format.	  This	option
	      can  be  used  only when data are read from or written to a file
	      (options -f or -o ).

       -f [ filename ]
	      Extract records from filename (created by the -o filename flag).
	      The default value of the filename parameter is the current daily
	      data file, the /var/log/sa/sadd file. The -f option is exclusive
	      of the -o option.

       -i interval
	      Select  data records at seconds as close as possible to the num‐
	      ber specified by the interval parameter.

       -I { irq | SUM | ALL | XALL }
	      Report statistics for a given interrupt.	irq is	the  interrupt
	      number.  Specifying  multiple  -I	 irq parameters on the command
	      line will look at multiple independent interrupts.  The SUM key‐
	      word  indicates that the total number of interrupts received per
	      second is to be displayed. The ALL keyword indicates  that  sta‐
	      tistics from the first 16 interrupts are to be reported, whereas
	      the XALL keyword indicates that statistics from all  interrupts,
	      including potential APIC interrupt sources, are to be reported.

       -n { DEV | EDEV | NFS | NFSD | SOCK | ALL }
	      Report network statistics.

	      With  the	 DEV  keyword, statistics from the network devices are
	      reported.	 The following values are displayed:

	      IFACE
		     Name of the network interface for	which  statistics  are
		     reported.

	      rxpck/s
		     Total number of packets received per second.

	      txpck/s
		     Total number of packets transmitted per second.

	      rxbyt/s
		     Total number of bytes received per second.

	      txbyt/s
		     Total number of bytes transmitted per second.

	      rxcmp/s
		     Number  of	 compressed  packets  received per second (for
		     cslip etc.).

	      txcmp/s
		     Number of compressed packets transmitted per second.

	      rxmcst/s
		     Number of multicast packets received per second.

	      With the EDEV keyword, statistics on failures (errors) from  the
	      network  devices	are  reported.	 The following values are dis‐
	      played:

	      IFACE
		     Name of the network interface for	which  statistics  are
		     reported.

	      rxerr/s
		     Total number of bad packets received per second.

	      txerr/s
		     Total  number  of	errors	that happened per second while
		     transmitting packets.

	      coll/s
		     Number of	collisions  that  happened  per	 second	 while
		     transmitting packets.

	      rxdrop/s
		     Number  of received packets dropped per second because of
		     a lack of space in linux buffers.

	      txdrop/s
		     Number of transmitted packets dropped per second  because
		     of a lack of space in linux buffers.

	      txcarr/s
		     Number  of	 carrier-errors that happened per second while
		     transmitting packets.

	      rxfram/s
		     Number of frame alignment errors that happened per second
		     on received packets.

	      rxfifo/s
		     Number of FIFO overrun errors that happened per second on
		     received packets.

	      txfifo/s
		     Number of FIFO overrun errors that happened per second on
		     transmitted packets.

	      With  the	 NFS keyword, statistics about NFS client activity are
	      reported.	 The following values are displayed:

	      call/s
		     Number of RPC requests made per second.

	      retrans/s
		     Number of RPC requests per second, those which needed  to
		     be	 retransmitted	(for example because of a server time‐
		     out).

	      read/s
		     Number of 'read' RPC calls made per second.

	      write/s
		     Number of 'write' RPC calls made per second.

	      access/s
		     Number of 'access' RPC calls made per second.

	      getatt/s
		     Number of 'getattr' RPC calls made per second.

	      With the NFSD keyword, statistics about NFS server activity  are
	      reported.	 The following values are displayed:

	      scall/s
		     Number of RPC requests received per second.

	      badcall/s
		     Number  of	 bad  RPC  requests received per second, those
		     whose processing generated an error.

	      packet/s
		     Number of network packets received per second.

	      udp/s
		     Number of UDP packets received per second.

	      tcp/s
		     Number of TCP packets received per second.

	      hit/s
		     Number of reply cache hits per second.

	      miss/s
		     Number of reply cache misses per second.

	      sread/s
		     Number of 'read' RPC calls received per second.

	      swrite/s
		     Number of 'write' RPC calls received per second.

	      saccess/s
		     Number of 'access' RPC calls received per second.

	      sgetatt/s
		     Number of 'getattr' RPC calls received per second.

	      With  the	 SOCK  keyword,	 statistics  on	 sockets  in  use  are
	      reported.	 The following values are displayed:

	      totsck
		     Total number of used sockets.

	      tcpsck
		     Number of TCP sockets currently in use.

	      udpsck
		     Number of UDP sockets currently in use.

	      rawsck
		     Number of RAW sockets currently in use.

	      ip-frag
		     Number of IP fragments currently in use.

	      The  ALL	keyword	 is  equivalent to specifying all the keywords
	      above and therefore all the network activities are reported.

       -o [ filename ]
	      Save the readings in the file in binary form. Each reading is in
	      a	 separate  record. The default value of the filename parameter
	      is the current daily data file, the /var/log/sa/sadd  file.  The
	      -o option is exclusive of the -f option.

       -P { cpu | ALL }
	      Report  per-processor  statistics for the specified processor or
	      processors.  Specifying the ALL keyword reports  statistics  for
	      each  individual processor, and globally for all processors.  Of
	      the flags which specify the statistics to be reported, only  the
	      -u  and  -I SUM flags are meaningful with the -P flag. Note that
	      processor 0 is the first processor.

       -p     Pretty-print device names. Use this option in  conjunction  with
	      option  -d.  By default names are printed as dev m-n where m and
	      n are the major and minor numbers for the device.	 Use  of  this
	      option displays the names of the devices as they (should) appear
	      in /dev. Name mappings  are  controlled  by  /etc/sysconfig/sys‐
	      stat.ioconf.

       -q     Report  queue length and load averages. The following values are
	      displayed:

	      runq-sz
		     Run queue length (number of  processes  waiting  for  run
		     time).

	      plist-sz
		     Number of processes and threads in the process list.

	      ldavg-1
		     System load average for the last minute.

	      ldavg-5
		     System load average for the past 5 minutes.

	      ldavg-15
		     System load average for the past 15 minutes.

       -r     Report  memory  and swap space utilization statistics.  The fol‐
	      lowing values are displayed:

	      kbmemfree
		     Amount of free memory available in kilobytes.

	      kbmemused
		     Amount of used memory in kilobytes. This  does  not  take
		     into account memory used by the kernel itself.

	      %memused
		     Percentage of used memory.

	      kbbuffers
		     Amount  of	 memory used as buffers by the kernel in kilo‐
		     bytes.

	      kbcached
		     Amount of memory used to cache  data  by  the  kernel  in
		     kilobytes.

	      kbswpfree
		     Amount of free swap space in kilobytes.

	      kbswpused
		     Amount of used swap space in kilobytes.

	      %swpused
		     Percentage of used swap space.

	      kbswpcad
		     Amount  of cached swap memory in kilobytes.  This is mem‐
		     ory that once was swapped out, is	swapped	 back  in  but
		     still  also  is  in the swap area (if memory is needed it
		     doesn't need to  be  swapped  out	again  because	it  is
		     already in the swap area. This saves I/O).

       -R     Report memory statistics. The following values are displayed:

	      frmpg/s
		     Number of memory pages freed by the system per second.  A
		     negative value represents a number of pages allocated  by
		     the  system.  Note that a page has a size of 4 kB or 8 kB
		     according to the machine architecture.

	      bufpg/s
		     Number of additional memory pages used as buffers by  the
		     system  per  second.   A negative value means fewer pages
		     used as buffers by the system.

	      campg/s
		     Number of additional memory pages cached  by  the	system
		     per  second.   A  negative value means fewer pages in the
		     cache.

       -s [ hh:mm:ss ]
	      Set the starting time of the data, causing the  sar  command  to
	      extract  records	time-tagged  at, or following, the time speci‐
	      fied. The default starting time is 08:00.	 Hours must  be	 given
	      in  24-hour  format.  This option can be used only when data are
	      read from a file (option -f ).

       -t     When reading data from a daily  data  file,  indicate  that  sar
	      should display the timestamps in the original locale time of the
	      data file creator. Without this option, the sar command displays
	      the timestamps in the user's locale time.

       -u     Report CPU utilization. The following values are displayed:

	      %user
		     Percentage of CPU utilization that occurred while execut‐
		     ing at the user level (application).

	      %nice
		     Percentage of CPU utilization that occurred while execut‐
		     ing at the user level with nice priority.

	      %system
		     Percentage of CPU utilization that occurred while execut‐
		     ing at the system level (kernel).

	      %iowait
		     Percentage of time that the CPU or CPUs were idle	during
		     which the system had an outstanding disk I/O request.

	      %steal
		     Show  the percentage of time spent in involuntary wait by
		     the virtual CPU or CPUs while the hypervisor was  servic‐
		     ing another virtual processor.

	      %idle
		     Percentage of time that the CPU or CPUs were idle and the
		     system did not have an outstanding disk I/O request.

	      Note: On SMP machines a processor that does not have any	activ‐
	      ity  at  all (0.00 for every field) is a disabled (offline) pro‐
	      cessor.

       -v     Report status of inode, file and other kernel tables.  The  fol‐
	      lowing values are displayed:

	      dentunusd
		     Number of unused cache entries in the directory cache.

	      file-sz
		     Number of used file handles.

	      inode-sz
		     Number of used inode handlers.

	      super-sz
		     Number of super block handlers allocated by the kernel.

	      %super-sz
		     Percentage	 of allocated super block handlers with regard
		     to the maximum number of super block handlers that	 Linux
		     can allocate.

	      dquot-sz
		     Number of allocated disk quota entries.

	      %dquot-sz
		     Percentage of allocated disk quota entries with regard to
		     the maximum number of cached disk quota entries that  can
		     be allocated.

	      rtsig-sz
		     Number of queued RT signals.

	      %rtsig-sz
		     Percentage	 of queued RT signals with regard to the maxi‐
		     mum number of RT signals that can be queued.

       -V     Print version number then exit.

       -w     Report system switching activity.

	      cswch/s
		     Total number of context switches per second.

       -W     Report swapping statistics. The following values are displayed:

	      pswpin/s
		     Total number of swap pages the system brought in per sec‐
		     ond.

	      pswpout/s
		     Total  number  of	swap  pages the system brought out per
		     second.

       -x { pid | SELF | ALL }
	      Report statistics for a given process.  pid is the process iden‐
	      tification  number.  The	SELF keyword indicates that statistics
	      are to be reported for the sar process itself, whereas  the  ALL
	      keyword indicates that statistics are to be reported for all the
	      system processes.	 All these statistics cannot  be  saved	 to  a
	      file.   So  this	option	will  be ignored whenever -o option is
	      used.  Specifying multiple -x pid parameters on the command line
	      will  look  at  multiple	independent processes.	At the present
	      time, no more than 256 processes	can  be	 monitored  simultane‐
	      ously.

	      The following values are displayed:

	      minflt/s
		     Total  number  of	minor  faults the process has made per
		     second, those which have not required  loading  a	memory
		     page from disk.

	      majflt/s
		     Total  number  of	major  faults the process has made per
		     second, those which have required loading a  memory  page
		     from disk.

	      %user
		     Percentage	 of CPU used by the process while executing at
		     the user level (application), with or without nice prior‐
		     ity.

	      %system
		     Percentage	 of CPU used by the process while executing at
		     the system level (kernel).

	      nswap/s
		     Number of pages from the process address space the system
		     has  swapped  out	per second.  This value is always zero
		     with post 2.5 kernels.

	      CPU
		     Processor number to which the process is attached.

       -X { pid | SELF | ALL }
	      Report statistics for the child processes of the	process	 whose
	      PID  is pid .  The SELF keyword indicates that statistics are to
	      be reported for the child processes of the sar  process  itself,
	      whereas  the  ALL	 keyword  indicates  that statistics are to be
	      reported for all the child processes  of	all  the  system  pro‐
	      cesses.	All  these  statistics	cannot be saved to a file.  So
	      this option will be ignored whenever -o option is used.	Speci‐
	      fying  multiple  -X pid parameters on the command line will look
	      at multiple independent processes.  At the present time, no more
	      than 256 processes can be monitored simultaneously.  The follow‐
	      ing values are displayed:

	      cminflt/s
		     Total number of minor faults  the	child  processes  have
		     made  per second, those which have not required loading a
		     memory page from disk.

	      cmajflt/s
		     Total number of major faults  the	child  processes  have
		     made per second, those which have required loading a mem‐
		     ory page from disk.

	      %cuser
		     Percentage of CPU used by the child processes while  exe‐
		     cuting  at	 the user level (application), with or without
		     nice priority.

	      %csystem
		     Percentage of CPU used by the child processes while  exe‐
		     cuting at the system level (kernel).

	      cnswap/s
		     Number  of	 pages from the child processes address spaces
		     the system has swapped out per  second.   This  value  is
		     always zero with post 2.5 kernels.

       -y     Report TTY device activity. The following values are displayed:

	      rcvin/s
		     Number  of	 receive  interrupts  per  second  for current
		     serial line. Serial line number is given in the TTY  col‐
		     umn.

	      xmtin/s
		     Number  of	 transmit  interrupts  per  second for current
		     serial line.

	      framerr/s
		     Number of frame errors  per  second  for  current	serial
		     line.

	      prtyerr/s
		     Number  of	 parity	 errors	 per second for current serial
		     line.

	      brk/s
		     Number of breaks per second for current serial line.

	      ovrun/s
		     Number of overrun errors per second  for  current	serial
		     line.

	      Note  that  with	recent	2.6  kernels,  these statistics can be
	      retrieved only by root.

ENVIRONMENT
       The sar command takes into account the following environment variables:

       S_TIME_FORMAT
	      If this variable exists and its value is ISO  then  the  current
	      locale  will  be	ignored	 when  printing the date in the report
	      header.  The sar command will use the ISO 8601 format  (YYYY-MM-
	      DD) instead.

       S_TIME_DEF_TIME
	      If  this variable exists and its value is UTC then sar will save
	      its data in UTC time (data will  still  be  displayed  in	 local
	      time).   sar  will  also	use  UTC time instead of local time to
	      determine the current daily data file located in the /var/log/sa
	      directory.  This	variable  may be useful for servers with users
	      located across several timezones.

EXAMPLES
       sar -u 2 5
	      Report CPU utilization for each 2	 seconds.  5  lines  are  dis‐
	      played.

       sar -I 14 -o int14.file 2 10
	      Report  statistics  on  IRQ  14 for each 2 seconds. 10 lines are
	      displayed.  Data are stored in a file called int14.file.

       sar -r -n DEV -f /var/log/sa/sa16
	      Display memory, swap space and network statistics saved in daily
	      data file 'sa16'.

       sar -A
	      Display all the statistics saved in current daily data file.

BUGS
       /proc filesystem must be mounted for the sar command to work.

       On  SMP	machines sar assumes that CPU #0 is never disabled. Indeed sar
       uses it to calculate the time interval.

       All the statistics are not necessarily available, depending on the ker‐
       nel version used.

FILES
       /var/log/sa/sadd
	      Indicate the daily data file, where the dd parameter is a number
	      representing the day of the month.

       /proc contains various files with system statistics.

AUTHOR
       Sebastien Godard (sysstat <at> wanadoo.fr)

SEE ALSO
       sadc(8),	 sa1(8),  sa2(8),  sadf(1),  isag(1),  mpstat(1),   iostat(1),
       vmstat(8)

       http://perso.orange.fr/sebastien.godard/

Linux				 OCTOBER 2006				SAR(1)
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