sa
sa
summarizes information about previously executed commands as
recorded in the acct
file. In addition, it condenses this data
into the savacct
summary file, which contains the
number of times the command was called and the system resources used.
The information can also be summarized on a per-user basis; sa
will save this information into usracct
. Usage:
sa [opts] [file]
If no arguments are specified, sa
will print information about
all of the commands in the acct
file. If command
names have unprintable characters, or are only called once, sa
will sort them into a group called ***other
.
If called with a file name as the last argument, sa
will use that
file instead of acct
.
By default, sa
will sort the output by sum of user and system
time.
The output fields are labeled as follows:
cpu
re
k
avio
tio
k*sec
u
s
An asterisk will appear after the name of commands that forked but
didn't call exec
.
-a
--list-all-names
sa
not to sort those command names with unprintable
characters and those used only once into the `***other
' group.
-b
--sort-sys-user-div-calls
-c
--percentages
-d
--sort-avio
-D
--sort-tio
-f
--not-interactive
--threshold
option, assume that all answers to
interactive queries will be affirmative.
-i
--dont-read-summary-file
savacct
.
-j
--print-seconds
-k
--sort-cpu-avmem
-K
--sort-ksec
-l
--separate-times
cpu
.
-m
--user-summary
-n
--sort-num-calls
-r
--reverse-sort
-s
--merge
savacct
and usracct
.
-t
--print-ratio
*ignore*
will appear in this field.
-u
--print-users
-v num
--threshold num
y
, add the
command to the **junk**
group.
--separate-forks
sa
separates statistics for a particular executable depending on
whether or not that command forked. Therefore, GNU sa
lumps this
information together unless this option is specified.
--sort-real-time
--debug
-V
--version
sa
's version number.
-h
--help
sa
's usage string and default locations of system files to
standard output.
Note: if more than one sorting option is specified, the list will be sorted by the one specified last on the command line.
I haven't been able to test this on many different machines because the data files grow so big in a short time; our sysadmin would rather save the disk space.
Most versions of sa
that I've tested don't pay attention to flags
like --print-seconds
and --sort-num-calls
when printing
out commands when combined with the --user-summary
or
--print-users
flags. GNU sa
pays attention to these flags
if they are applicable.
The average memory use is stored as a short rather than a double, so we
suffer from round-off errors. GNU sa
uses double the whole way
through.
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