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Performance Management Guide
In some installations, performance activity is monitored on a demand
basis. When a performance problem is reported, the performance analyst
runs one or more commands in an attempt to determine why the problem
occurred. In some cases, explicit recreation of the problem is needed
in order to collect analysis data. The result is that users experience
every performance problem twice.
It is usually more effective to monitor performance continuously,
preferably with automatic collection of additional data if performance
deteriorates. The costs of continuous monitoring are outweighed by the
advantages, such as:
- Monitoring can sometimes detect incipient problems before they have an
adverse effect.
- Monitoring can detect problems that happen to users who are reluctant to
complain, as well as problems that are not quite severe enough to complain
about, but are affecting productivity and morale.
- Monitoring can collect data when a problem occurs for the first
time.
Successful monitoring involves the following main activities:
- Periodically obtaining performance-related information from the operating
system
- Storing the information for future use in problem diagnosis
- Displaying the information for the benefit of the system administrator
- Detecting situations that require additional data collection or responding
to directions from the system administrator to collect such data, or both
- Collecting and storing the necessary detail data
The following sections discuss several approaches to continuous
monitoring. These approaches are not mutually exclusive, but use of
more than one may involve some redundancy.
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