On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, Jonathan Wilson spewed into the bitstream:

JW>Howdy,
JW>
JW>As I've said several times, my co is in the middle of shifting over to 
JW>Linux web and email servers.
JW>
JW>One of my jobs as the new Sys Admin is to find apps that accomplish certain 
JW>jobs, in similar fashtion to the apps we use on NT.
JW>
JW>One thing we use all the time on NT is a resource meter. Current page hits, 
JW>current CPU usages, memory usage, SQL querys in progress, etc.
JW>
JW>Probably the most important of these is the CPU, then the mem usage.
JW>
JW>Ok, so I need something that will tell me these types of things, but since 
JW>we're not running X on this server, it's got to be console-based.
JW>
JW>Any ideas?
JW>Yes, I'll look on freashmeat too :-) I just thought I'd ask.
JW>
JW>Also, would anyone care to explain the load average feature of  "uptime"?
JW>
JW>     12:07pm  up 14 days,  1:49, 10 users,  load average: 0.48, 0.43, 0.45

gkrellm works okay (though I cannot imagine running X on a server). To get
an idea what it looks like go here:

http://www.xfce.org/user-screenshots/Chuck-M-2-large.jpg

Look at the item on the extreme right hand side of the picture
(warning... this is a large pic at 1600x1200 so it could take time on a
slow link).

--
Chuck Mead, CTO, LinuxMall.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
GnuPG Public Key Available: http://www.pgp.net/wwwkeys.html



_______________________________________________
Redhat-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

Reply via email to