Sysstat
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The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. (February 2016) |
Developer(s) | Sébastien Godard |
---|---|
Stable release | 12.7.6[1]
/ July 3, 2024 |
Repository | github |
Written in | C |
Operating system | Linux |
Type | System reporting |
License | GPLv2 |
Website | sysstat |
sysstat (system statistics) is a collection of performance monitoring tools for Linux. It is available on Unix and Unix-like operating systems. [2]
Software included in sysstat package:
- Linux User Commands Manual : Collect, report, or save system activity information. –
- Linux Administration and Privileged Commands Manual : Collect and store binary data in the system activity daily data file. –
sar
, supporting the same flags assar
command which write a daily report in the /var/log/sa directory. – Linux Administration and Privileged Commands Manual
: shell variant of sar
but can write its data in different formats (CSV, XML, etc.). This is useful to load performance data into a database, or import them in a spreadsheet to make graphs.
: , similar to - reports basic CPU statistics and input/output statistics for devices, partitions and network filesystems. – Linux User Commands Manual :
- Linux User Commands Manual : reports individual or combined processor related statistics. –
- Linux User Commands Manual : reports statistics for Linux tasks (processes) : I/O, CPU, memory, etc. –
- Linux User Commands Manual : reports input/output statistics for network filesystems (NFS). –
- CIFS resources. – Linux User Commands Manual : reports I/O statistics for
References
[edit]- ^ "Sysstat: Tags". GitHub.
- ^ "SYSSTAT Howto: A Deployment and Configuration Guide for Linux Servers". Linux.com | The source for Linux information. 10 August 2009. Retrieved 4 September 2018.