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We were on 6.5.4 prior to the migration. We are on 6.5.4FP2 now. New system was brought online, Domino was installed, PTFs were applied during the day. We couldn't do the save/restore until after hours that evening. Saved the files to save files (mail and applications in different savf) and FTP'd the files from old system to new system. Restored the files to the new server. We checked for QNOTES ownership on the files, but I will check again. Despite years working on this system, I'm still a neophyte, so please bear with me. To get the amount of memory installed in *BASE, I went to WRKSYSSTS and checked the Pool Size. If that's the correct place to look, the number is roughly 3000M - 3GB? There are no mapped drives on the server. If I need to access the folders on the system for some reason, I use OpsNav. I don't know how to check overnight CPU numbers. Thanks for the suggestions, they're giving me some direction. Patrick seanmurphy@xxxxxxxxxxx Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/30/2005 07:40 AM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? Patrick, You migrated from V5R2 to V5R3. What version of Domino are you running? How much memory is installed in the BASE Pool? You mentioned save/restore as the method for the Domino install. Can you provide more details as to the procedures you followed. IE: Did you install the folders and NSF files first then install the LIC for Domino? You should check the object authorities and folder authorities to make sure everything is as it should be with no mapped drives and all objects owned by QNOTES. What is the overnight CPU numbers? Call IBM open a ticket and have them dial in if you are unsure. Regards, Sean domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Sent by: domino400-bounces+seanmurphy=bedbath.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 07:09 PM Please respond to domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx cc Subject Domino400 Digest, Vol 3, Issue 269 Send Domino400 mailing list submissions to domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx You can reach the person managing the list at domino400-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxx When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Domino400 digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: Normal CPU? (Walter Scanlan) 2. Re: Normal CPU? (Patrick Trapp) 3. Re: Normal CPU? (Patrick Trapp) 4. Re: Normal CPU? (Walter Scanlan) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- message: 1 date: Thu, 29 Dec 2005 16:07:14 -0600 from: Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> subject: Re: Normal CPU? The 25ba is the i810-2467 The 2467 is a 1470 CPW system. The 522A is the i520 -8953 is the 2400 CPW system. (now you know how much growth you have) So I would say if CPU popped after the upgrade we do have a problem. Can you install PM400 and collect the data as I suggested? Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:44 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? The 520 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure (that's the number that looks familiar to me) and 522A for the System Processor Card The 810 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure, also, and 25BA-000 for the System Processor Card Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:36 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject Re: Normal CPU? If you issue a go hardware option 4 you will find something like this MP01 26F2 Operational System Processor Card you can't view performance at a thread level without PM400, so a multithread job like server would be hard to debug. PM400 ofters 30 day trials so you can use it to debug this without paying. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:26 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? Both systems are in another town. Short of looking at the label on the front, how can I tell which models they are? I'm relatively sure that it is a 520-9406, but haven't needed to know the 810's model for a while. I don't believe I have PM400 on this system. Should I? Is there another way to see that information? Thanks, Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:17 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject Re: Normal CPU? You don't say which 810 and which 520 but. start with wrksysact (you need pm400 for this). It will provide a task list of processes consuming CPU. Then issue set config debug_threadid=1 on the domino console. match the thread from wrksysact using cpu to the console message with the same thread, You now know WHAT is consuming CPU. Next, WHY? that will depend on the what.. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:03 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx cc Subject Normal CPU? I have a new 520 (V5R3) -- online less than a week -- that is running the exact same load as the 810 (V5R2) that it replaced. Same configuration, just saved and restored from server to server. Something is bringing the new server completely to its knees (97%+ CPU utilization) and I'm not seeing what it is, so I'm wondering if anyone can provide ideas where I should be looking. Originally, it appeared to be an SMTP issue and bouncing the SMTP task temporarily would resolve it, but I tried that a short time ago and never saw the CPU dip below 60% (the vast majority of it being the Server task). We are a small shop and a third of my users aren't even on the server, so I can't imagine that we have legitimate traffic hitting me this hard when the old box would handle everything we threw at it without a problem. Thanks in advance, Patrick _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. ------------------------------ message: 2 date: Thu, 29 Dec 2005 16:15:19 -0600 from: "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> subject: Re: Normal CPU? I think so, but I will have to ask. Am I correct in assuming I would have to order the software trial to proceed? (As opposed to downloading an image from somewhere.) Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 04:07 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? The 25ba is the i810-2467 The 2467 is a 1470 CPW system. The 522A is the i520 -8953 is the 2400 CPW system. (now you know how much growth you have) So I would say if CPU popped after the upgrade we do have a problem. Can you install PM400 and collect the data as I suggested? Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:44 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? The 520 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure (that's the number that looks familiar to me) and 522A for the System Processor Card The 810 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure, also, and 25BA-000 for the System Processor Card Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:36 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject Re: Normal CPU? If you issue a go hardware option 4 you will find something like this MP01 26F2 Operational System Processor Card you can't view performance at a thread level without PM400, so a multithread job like server would be hard to debug. PM400 ofters 30 day trials so you can use it to debug this without paying. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:26 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? Both systems are in another town. Short of looking at the label on the front, how can I tell which models they are? I'm relatively sure that it is a 520-9406, but haven't needed to know the 810's model for a while. I don't believe I have PM400 on this system. Should I? Is there another way to see that information? Thanks, Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:17 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject Re: Normal CPU? You don't say which 810 and which 520 but. start with wrksysact (you need pm400 for this). It will provide a task list of processes consuming CPU. Then issue set config debug_threadid=1 on the domino console. match the thread from wrksysact using cpu to the console message with the same thread, You now know WHAT is consuming CPU. Next, WHY? that will depend on the what.. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:03 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx cc Subject Normal CPU? I have a new 520 (V5R3) -- online less than a week -- that is running the exact same load as the 810 (V5R2) that it replaced. Same configuration, just saved and restored from server to server. Something is bringing the new server completely to its knees (97%+ CPU utilization) and I'm not seeing what it is, so I'm wondering if anyone can provide ideas where I should be looking. Originally, it appeared to be an SMTP issue and bouncing the SMTP task temporarily would resolve it, but I tried that a short time ago and never saw the CPU dip below 60% (the vast majority of it being the Server task). We are a small shop and a third of my users aren't even on the server, so I can't imagine that we have legitimate traffic hitting me this hard when the old box would handle everything we threw at it without a problem. Thanks in advance, Patrick _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. ------------------------------ message: 3 date: Thu, 29 Dec 2005 16:58:25 -0600 from: "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> subject: Re: Normal CPU? I think I need to rethink my question for you. The original symptom that I was seeing was a SMTP process running at outrageous levels (80%+). It was at the point that none of my users could connect (we are a one-system shop), so I took SMTP down and left it down for a while so they could catch up. I left it down for quite a while, and Server started to go through the roof. I turned SMTP back on and Server dropped down to what seems more reasonable levels, but SMTP ratcheted up to 95% after a while (sorry, not sure how long). My WRKACTJOB just showed me 100.2% utilization -- now that's efficiency! If only my users could connect... A user contacted me to let me know that he's getting repeat copies of a message, and it seems to be each time I have to kill SMTP, he gets another copy. There's nothing in mail.box for this message, but it has been delivered to his mailbox over twenty times. The server has restarted (for backup) since this all started yesterday. Any suggestions for where I can be looking to find and kill this ghost message? Everything else seems to be related to this one message. The secondary question, of course, would be what might make a message start doing this? Patrick PS It looks like I was wrong. I see PM400 on the system, but it doesn't appear to be started. "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 04:15 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? I think so, but I will have to ask. Am I correct in assuming I would have to order the software trial to proceed? (As opposed to downloading an image from somewhere.) Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 04:07 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? The 25ba is the i810-2467 The 2467 is a 1470 CPW system. The 522A is the i520 -8953 is the 2400 CPW system. (now you know how much growth you have) So I would say if CPU popped after the upgrade we do have a problem. Can you install PM400 and collect the data as I suggested? Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:44 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? The 520 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure (that's the number that looks familiar to me) and 522A for the System Processor Card The 810 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure, also, and 25BA-000 for the System Processor Card Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:36 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject Re: Normal CPU? If you issue a go hardware option 4 you will find something like this MP01 26F2 Operational System Processor Card you can't view performance at a thread level without PM400, so a multithread job like server would be hard to debug. PM400 ofters 30 day trials so you can use it to debug this without paying. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:26 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? Both systems are in another town. Short of looking at the label on the front, how can I tell which models they are? I'm relatively sure that it is a 520-9406, but haven't needed to know the 810's model for a while. I don't believe I have PM400 on this system. Should I? Is there another way to see that information? Thanks, Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:17 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject Re: Normal CPU? You don't say which 810 and which 520 but. start with wrksysact (you need pm400 for this). It will provide a task list of processes consuming CPU. Then issue set config debug_threadid=1 on the domino console. match the thread from wrksysact using cpu to the console message with the same thread, You now know WHAT is consuming CPU. Next, WHY? that will depend on the what.. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:03 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx cc Subject Normal CPU? I have a new 520 (V5R3) -- online less than a week -- that is running the exact same load as the 810 (V5R2) that it replaced. Same configuration, just saved and restored from server to server. Something is bringing the new server completely to its knees (97%+ CPU utilization) and I'm not seeing what it is, so I'm wondering if anyone can provide ideas where I should be looking. Originally, it appeared to be an SMTP issue and bouncing the SMTP task temporarily would resolve it, but I tried that a short time ago and never saw the CPU dip below 60% (the vast majority of it being the Server task). We are a small shop and a third of my users aren't even on the server, so I can't imagine that we have legitimate traffic hitting me this hard when the old box would handle everything we threw at it without a problem. Thanks in advance, Patrick _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. ------------------------------ message: 4 date: Thu, 29 Dec 2005 18:08:37 -0600 from: Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> subject: Re: Normal CPU? Well if it isn't in mail.box I would guess a remote system is sending (repeating) the message. If you add smtpdebug=1 to your notes.ini and restart SMTP the console will report all remote connections. will tell you where this message is comming from. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 04:58 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? I think I need to rethink my question for you. The original symptom that I was seeing was a SMTP process running at outrageous levels (80%+). It was at the point that none of my users could connect (we are a one-system shop), so I took SMTP down and left it down for a while so they could catch up. I left it down for quite a while, and Server started to go through the roof. I turned SMTP back on and Server dropped down to what seems more reasonable levels, but SMTP ratcheted up to 95% after a while (sorry, not sure how long). My WRKACTJOB just showed me 100.2% utilization -- now that's efficiency! If only my users could connect... A user contacted me to let me know that he's getting repeat copies of a message, and it seems to be each time I have to kill SMTP, he gets another copy. There's nothing in mail.box for this message, but it has been delivered to his mailbox over twenty times. The server has restarted (for backup) since this all started yesterday. Any suggestions for where I can be looking to find and kill this ghost message? Everything else seems to be related to this one message. The secondary question, of course, would be what might make a message start doing this? Patrick PS It looks like I was wrong. I see PM400 on the system, but it doesn't appear to be started. "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 04:15 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? I think so, but I will have to ask. Am I correct in assuming I would have to order the software trial to proceed? (As opposed to downloading an image from somewhere.) Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 04:07 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? The 25ba is the i810-2467 The 2467 is a 1470 CPW system. The 522A is the i520 -8953 is the 2400 CPW system. (now you know how much growth you have) So I would say if CPU popped after the upgrade we do have a problem. Can you install PM400 and collect the data as I suggested? Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:44 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? The 520 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure (that's the number that looks familiar to me) and 522A for the System Processor Card The 810 shows 9406 for the Main Card Enclosure, also, and 25BA-000 for the System Processor Card Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:36 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject Re: Normal CPU? If you issue a go hardware option 4 you will find something like this MP01 26F2 Operational System Processor Card you can't view performance at a thread level without PM400, so a multithread job like server would be hard to debug. PM400 ofters 30 day trials so you can use it to debug this without paying. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:26 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Normal CPU? Both systems are in another town. Short of looking at the label on the front, how can I tell which models they are? I'm relatively sure that it is a 520-9406, but haven't needed to know the 810's model for a while. I don't believe I have PM400 on this system. Should I? Is there another way to see that information? Thanks, Patrick Walter Scanlan <wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+ptrapp=nex-tech.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:17 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 <domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx, domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject Re: Normal CPU? You don't say which 810 and which 520 but. start with wrksysact (you need pm400 for this). It will provide a task list of processes consuming CPU. Then issue set config debug_threadid=1 on the domino console. match the thread from wrksysact using cpu to the console message with the same thread, You now know WHAT is consuming CPU. Next, WHY? that will depend on the what.. Walter Scanlan Senior Software Engineer Domino & Workplace for iSeries 507-286-6088 wscanlan@xxxxxxxxxx "Patrick Trapp" <ptrapp@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: domino400-bounces+wscanlan=us.ibm.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx 12/29/2005 03:03 PM Please respond to Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 To domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx cc Subject Normal CPU? I have a new 520 (V5R3) -- online less than a week -- that is running the exact same load as the 810 (V5R2) that it replaced. Same configuration, just saved and restored from server to server. Something is bringing the new server completely to its knees (97%+ CPU utilization) and I'm not seeing what it is, so I'm wondering if anyone can provide ideas where I should be looking. Originally, it appeared to be an SMTP issue and bouncing the SMTP task temporarily would resolve it, but I tried that a short time ago and never saw the CPU dip below 60% (the vast majority of it being the Server task). We are a small shop and a third of my users aren't even on the server, so I can't imagine that we have legitimate traffic hitting me this hard when the old box would handle everything we threw at it without a problem. Thanks in advance, Patrick _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) digest list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400. End of Domino400 Digest, Vol 3, Issue 269 ***************************************** _______________________________________________ This is the Lotus Domino on the iSeries / AS400 (Domino400) mailing list To post a message email: Domino400@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/domino400 or email: Domino400-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/domino400.
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