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Each Virtual Server is allocated its fair share of the resources of the physical server. This manner of resource allocation keeps one Virtual Server from abusing the performance of the physical host server or of another Virtual Server on the same physical server. In order to have consistent excellent performance on your Virtual Server, it is very important to manage the load you put on it. The term "load" refers to the usage of the following:
  • Memory
  • CPU
  • Files open
  • Processes

Each Virtual Server needs limits to keep one Virtual Server from abusing the performance of the physical host server.

Checking the Virtual Server's Load
From the command prompt type:

% top

The top command displays both cumulative totals of the host server and totals of your Virtual Server:

  • Load average
  • Number of processes
  • CPU use
  • Memory use
Sample "Top" Command
The following is a sample of the output from running top:

last pid: 89301;  load averages:  0.06,  0.02,  0.00   up 14+03:11:06  08:02:06
12 processes:  1 running, 11 sleeping
CPU states: 34.6% user,  0.0% nice, 15.2% system,  0.8% interrupt, 49.4% idle
Mem: 325M Active, 52M Inact, 94M Wired, 12M Cache, 59M Buf, 7720K Free
Swap: 512M Total, 69M Used, 443M Free, 13% InusePID USERNAME PRI NICE  SIZE    RES STATE    TIME   WCPU    CPU COMMAND
89218 trout    28   0  1396K  1000K RUN      0:01  0.89%  0.73% top
13863 trout    18   0  2156K   392K pause    0:01  0.00%  0.00% httpd
95617 trout     2   0  2212K   932K accept   0:00  0.00%  0.00% httpd
92567 trout     2   0  2212K   936K accept   0:00  0.00%  0.00% httpd
14464 trout     2   0  2212K   936K accept   0:00  0.00%  0.00% httpd
89179 trout    18   0  1312K   824K pause    0:00  0.00%  0.00% tcsh

Defining top Terminology

Term

Definition

PID

Process ID number. Each program has a unique PID associated with it.

USERNAME

The user that is running the process.

PRI

Priority. Some processes are more important than others or need to wait for information from other processes. The priority is the kernel's way of determining which process gets processor time first.

NICE

The "niceness" of a program. A number you can set from 0 to 20. For example, a program with NICE setting of 10 would allow many other programs to have CPU time before it. It basically modifies how the kernel allocates priorities.

SIZE

Total size of a process, including memory and actual program size.

RES

The actual amount of resources in use (typically memory). Normally this is less than the SIZE. This can reflect the current amount of memory actually in use.

STATE

What the process is doing. E.g. waiting for something (sleeping), running, or polling (checking to see if an input condition has been met).

TIME

The amount of processing time the process has used.

WCPU

Of the processes waiting for the CPU, this process has this percentage of them. (See the top man page for more technical details.)

CPU

Percentage of all available CPU time that the process is using.

COMMAND

The program running.

While running top, you can do a variety of other tasks, which are described below.

Increasing the Number of Processes Listed
While top is running, press "n"

Killing a Process

  1. While top is running press "k"
  2. Type the process ID (pid)

The left column stores the pid. You can kill multiple processes by entering multiple pid numbers on one kill line, separated by spaces.

Note: Take care when killing a process. The only time that you should kill a process is if a process is hung and using up your resources.

Memory and Processes
A process is a program that is running, sleeping, or waiting. For example, when your web receives a hit, HTTPD uses a process. If the programs you have running exceed your memory allocation, you will effectively shut down your own Virtual Server. For example, if you have a Virtual Server FreeBSD Standard with a RealAudio server running, you would only have half the allocated memory available for other processes, because the RealAudio server uses four megabytes of the available memory.Checking Processes

From the command prompt:

% ps

For example, if you want to check the processes that start with POP, you would type:

% ps –ax | grep pop

The following is an example of killing a process:

% ps -ax | grep pop
% kill pid_number

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