20 Linux System Monitoring Tools Every SysAdmin Should Know

Similar documents
About Forum Howtos & FAQs Low graphics Shell Scripts RSS/Feed. nixcraft - insight into linux admin work Home > CentOS. by Vivek Gite 134 comments

20 Command Line Tools to Monitor Linux Performance

Linux System Administration on Red Hat

System Resources. To keep your system in optimum shape, you need to be CHAPTER 16. System-Monitoring Tools IN THIS CHAPTER. Console-Based Monitoring

CIT 668: System Architecture. Performance Testing

CIT 470: Advanced Network and System Administration. Topics. Performance Monitoring. Performance Monitoring

Linux Tools for Monitoring and Performance. Khalid Baheyeldin November 2009 KWLUG

Linux Security Ideas and Tips

Advanced Linux System Administration on Red Hat

Facultat d'informàtica de Barcelona Univ. Politècnica de Catalunya. Administració de Sistemes Operatius. System monitoring

A SURVEY ON AUTOMATED SERVER MONITORING

Optimizing Linux Performance

GL254 - RED HAT ENTERPRISE LINUX SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATION III

Do it Yourself System Administration

Cisco Networking Academy Program Curriculum Scope & Sequence. Fundamentals of UNIX version 2.0 (July, 2002)

Linux: 20 Iptables Examples For New SysAdmins

Red Hat Linux Administration II Installation, Configuration, Software and Troubleshooting

The System Monitor Handbook. Chris Schlaeger John Tapsell Chris Schlaeger Tobias Koenig

Web Hosting: Pipeline Program Technical Self Study Guide

Host Hardening. OS Vulnerability test. CERT Report on systems vulnerabilities. (March 21, 2011)

RedHat (RHEL) System Administration Course Summary

Using New Relic to Monitor Your Servers

Tue Apr 19 11:03:19 PDT 2005 by Andrew Gristina thanks to Luca Deri and the ntop team

System Administration

Get quick control over your Linux server with server commands

How To Set Up A Network Map In Linux On A Ubuntu 2.5 (Amd64) On A Raspberry Mobi) On An Ubuntu (Amd66) On Ubuntu 4.5 On A Windows Box

Red Hat System Administration 1(RH124) is Designed for IT Professionals who are new to Linux.

Monitoring MySQL. Presented by, MySQL & O Reilly Media, Inc. A quick overview of available tools

Intrusion Detection and Prevention: Network and IDS Configuration and Monitoring using Snort

These sub-systems are all highly dependent on each other. Any one of them with high utilization can easily cause problems in the other.

PARALLELS SERVER BARE METAL 5.0 README

Security Correlation Server Quick Installation Guide

LSN 10 Linux Overview

Network Administration and Monitoring

System administration basics

Deployment - post Xserve

Track 2 Workshop PacNOG 7 American Samoa. Firewalling and NAT

Installing Booked scheduler on CentOS 6.5

How To Set Up An Ip Firewall On Linux With Iptables (For Ubuntu) And Iptable (For Windows)

Project 2: Penetration Testing (Phase II)

Managing your Red Hat Enterprise Linux guests with RHN Satellite

Performance Tuning and Optimization for high traffic Drupal sites. Khalid Baheyeldin Drupal Camp, Toronto May 11 12, 2007

Lesson 7 - Website Administration

Red Hat Linux Networking

Virtual Private Servers

Understanding MySQL storage and clustering in QueueMetrics. Loway

Project 2: Firewall Design (Phase I)

CS197U: A Hands on Introduction to Unix

ENTERPRISE LINUX SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION

A candidate following a programme of learning leading to this unit will be able to:

INASP: Effective Network Management Workshops

NetCrunch 6. AdRem. Network Monitoring Server. Document. Monitor. Manage

W3Perl A free logfile analyzer

CDH installation & Application Test Report

Security Correlation Server Quick Installation Guide

Network Traffic Analysis

Introduction To Computer Networking

PANDORA FMS NETWORK DEVICE MONITORING

Результат запроса: Cacti weathermap

CT LANforge-FIRE VoIP Call Generator

Introduction to Operating Systems

AT&T CLOUD SERVICES. AT&T Synaptic Compute as a Service SM : How to Get Started. Version 2.0 January 2012

Tutorial. Reference for more thorough Mininet walkthrough if desired

The current version installed on your server is el6.x86_64 and it's the latest available.

Lab 2. CS-335a. Fall 2012 Computer Science Department. Manolis Surligas

Oracle Linux 7: System Administration Ed 1 NEW

Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL 6) Courses

The Definitive Guide. Monitoring the Data Center, Virtual Environments, and the Cloud. Don Jones

Network Licensing. White Paper 0-15Apr014ks(WP02_Network) Network Licensing with the CRYPTO-BOX. White Paper

Information Security Training. Assignment 1 Networking

pt360 FREE Tool Suite Networks are complicated. Network management doesn t have to be.

GLS250 "Enterprise Linux Systems Administration"

GL-250: Red Hat Linux Systems Administration. Course Outline. Course Length: 5 days

Implementing, Managing, and Maintaining a Microsoft Windows Server 2003 Network Infrastructure

Getting Started Guide. Getting Started With Your Dedicated Server. Setting up and hosting a domain on your Linux Dedicated Server using Plesk 8.0.

Volume SYSLOG JUNCTION. User s Guide. User s Guide

Network Monitoring. Sebastian Büttrich, NSRC / IT University of Copenhagen Last edit: February 2012, ICTP Trieste

Syncplicity On-Premise Storage Connector

LOCKSS on LINUX. CentOS6 Installation Manual 08/22/2013

MEASURING WORKLOAD PERFORMANCE IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE A PROBLEM?

Network Terminology Review

Linux Boot Camp. Our Lady of the Lake University Computer Information Systems & Security Department Kevin Barton Artair Burnett

CS 377: Operating Systems. Outline. A review of what you ve learned, and how it applies to a real operating system. Lecture 25 - Linux Case Study

Getting Started With Your Virtual Dedicated Server. Getting Started Guide

Make a folder named Lab3. We will be using Unix redirection commands to create several output files in that folder.

Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS)

Q N X S O F T W A R E D E V E L O P M E N T P L A T F O R M v Steps to Developing a QNX Program Quickstart Guide

Preparing Your Computer for LFS101x. July 11, 2014 A Linux Foundation Training Publication

Simple. Control Panel. for your Linux Server. Getting Started Guide. Simple Control Panel // Linux Server

Operating System and Process Monitoring Tools

How To Monitor Mysql With Zabbix

SIMPLE NETWORK MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL (SNMP)

The Monitis Monitoring Agent ver. 1.2

.Trustwave.com Updated October 9, Secure Web Gateway Version 11.0 Setup Guide

Diploma in Computer Science

PARALLELS SERVER 4 BARE METAL README

Getting Started in Red Hat Linux An Overview of Red Hat Linux p. 3 Introducing Red Hat Linux p. 4 What Is Linux? p. 5 Linux's Roots in UNIX p.

PHP on IBM i: What s New with Zend Server 5 for IBM i

Project 4: IP over DNS Due: 11:59 PM, Dec 14, 2015

Transcription:

About Forum Howtos & FAQs Low graphics Shell Scripts RSS/Feed nixcraft - insight into linux admin work 20 Linux System Monitoring Tools Every SysAdmin Should Know by nixcraft on June 27, 2009 315 comments Last updated November 6, 2012 Need to monitor Linux server performance? Try these built-in commands and a few add-on tools. Most Linux distributions are equipped with tons of monitoring. These tools provide metrics which can be used to get information about system activities. You can use these tools to find the possible causes of a performance problem. The commands discussed below are some of the most basic commands when it comes to system analysis and debugging server issues such as: 1. 2. 3. 4. Finding out bottlenecks. Disk (storage) bottlenecks. CPU and memory bottlenecks. Network bottlenecks. #1: top - Process Activity Command The top program provides a dynamic real-time view of a running system i.e. actual process activity. By default, it displays the most CPU-intensive tasks running on the server and updates the list every five seconds. Fig.01: Linux top command Commonly Used Hot Keys The top command provides several useful hot keys:

t m A f o r k z Hot Key Displays summary information off and on. Displays memory information off and on. Usage Sorts the display by top consumers of various system resources. Useful for quick identification of performancehungry tasks on a system. Enters an interactive configuration screen for top. Helpful for setting up top for a specific task. Enables you to interactively select the ordering within top. Issues renice command. Issues kill command. Turn on or off color/mono => Related: How do I Find Out Linux CPU Utilization? #2: vmstat - System Activity, Hardware and System Information The command vmstat reports information about processes, memory, paging, block IO, traps, and cpu activity. # vmstat 3 Sample Outputs: procs -----------memory---------- ---swap-- -----io---- --system-- -----cpu------ r b swpd free buff cache si so bi bo in cs us sy id wa st 0 0 0 2540988 522188 5130400 0 0 2 32 4 2 4 1 96 0 0 1 0 0 2540988 522188 5130400 0 0 0 720 1199 665 1 0 99 0 0 0 0 0 2540956 522188 5130400 0 0 0 0 1151 1569 4 1 95 0 0 0 0 0 2540956 522188 5130500 0 0 0 6 1117 439 1 0 99 0 0 0 0 0 2540940 522188 5130512 0 0 0 536 1189 932 1 0 98 0 0 0 0 0 2538444 522188 5130588 0 0 0 0 1187 1417 4 1 96 0 0 0 0 0 2490060 522188 5130640 0 0 0 18 1253 1123 5 1 94 0 0 Display Memory Utilization Slabinfo # vmstat -m Get Information About Active / Inactive Memory Pages # vmstat -a => Related: How do I find out Linux Resource utilization to detect system bottlenecks? #3: w - Find Out Who Is Logged on And What They Are Doing w command displays information about the users currently on the machine, and their processes. # w username # w vivek Sample Outputs: 17:58:47 up 5 days, 20:28, 2 users, load average: 0.36, 0.26, 0.24 USER TTY FROM LOGIN@ IDLE JCPU PCPU WHAT root pts/0 10.1.3.145 14:55 5.00s 0.04s 0.02s vim /etc/resolv.conf root pts/1 10.1.3.145 17:43 0.00s 0.03s 0.00s w #4: uptime - Tell How Long The System Has Been Running The uptime command can be used to see how long the server has been running. The current time, how long the system has been running, how many users are currently logged on, and the system load averages for the past 1, 5, and 15

minutes. # uptime Output: 18:02:41 up 41 days, 23:42, 1 user, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 1 can be considered as optimal load value. The load can change from system to system. For a single CPU system 1-3 and SMP systems 6-10 load value might be acceptable. #5: ps - Displays The Processes ps command will report a snapshot of the current processes. To select all processes use the -A or -e option: # ps -A Sample Outputs: PID TTY TIME CMD 1? 00:00:02 init 2? 00:00:02 migration/0 3? 00:00:01 ksoftirqd/0 4? 00:00:00 watchdog/0 5? 00:00:00 migration/1 6? 00:00:15 ksoftirqd/1...... 4881? 00:53:28 java 4885 tty1 00:00:00 mingetty 4886 tty2 00:00:00 mingetty 4887 tty3 00:00:00 mingetty 4888 tty4 00:00:00 mingetty 4891 tty5 00:00:00 mingetty 4892 tty6 00:00:00 mingetty 4893 ttys1 00:00:00 agetty 12853? 00:00:00 cifsoplockd 12854? 00:00:00 cifsdnotifyd 14231? 00:10:34 lighttpd 14232? 00:00:00 php-cgi 54981 pts/0 00:00:00 vim 55465? 00:00:00 php-cgi 55546? 00:00:00 bind9-snmp-stat 55704 pts/1 00:00:00 ps ps is just like top but provides more information. Show Long Format Output # ps -Al To turn on extra full mode (it will show command line arguments passed to process): # ps -AlF To See Threads ( LWP and NLWP) # ps -AlFH To See Threads After Processes # ps -AlLm Print All Process On The Server # ps ax # ps axu

Print A Process Tree # ps -ejh # ps axjf # pstree Print Security Information # ps -eo euser,ruser,suser,fuser,f,comm,label # ps axz # ps -em See Every Process Running As User Vivek # ps -U vivek -u vivek u Set Output In a User-Defined Format # ps -eo pid,tid,class,rtprio,ni,pri,psr,pcpu,stat,wchan:14,comm # ps axo stat,euid,ruid,tty,tpgid,sess,pgrp,ppid,pid,pcpu,comm # ps -eopid,tt,user,fname,tmout,f,wchan Display Only The Process IDs of Lighttpd # ps -C lighttpd -o pid= OR # pgrep lighttpd OR # pgrep -u vivek php-cgi Display The Name of PID 55977 # ps -p 55977 -o comm= Find Out The Top 10 Memory Consuming Process # ps -auxf sort -nr -k 4 head -10 Find Out top 10 CPU Consuming Process # ps -auxf sort -nr -k 3 head -10 #6: free - Memory Usage The command free displays the total amount of free and used physical and swap memory in the system, as well as the buffers used by the kernel. # free Sample Output: total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 12302896 9739664 2563232 0 523124 5154740 -/+ buffers/cache: 4061800 8241096 Swap: 1052248 0 1052248 => Related: :

1. Linux Find Out Virtual Memory PAGESIZE 2. Linux Limit CPU Usage Per Process 3. How much RAM does my Ubuntu / Fedora Linux desktop PC have? #7: iostat - Average CPU Load, Disk Activity The command iostat report Central Processing Unit (CPU) statistics and input/output statistics for devices, partitions and network filesystems (NFS). # iostat Sample Outputs: Linux 2.6.18-128.1.14.el5 (www03.nixcraft.in) 06/26/2009 avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle 3.50 0.09 0.51 0.03 0.00 95.86 Device: tps Blk_read/s Blk_wrtn/s Blk_read Blk_wrtn sda 22.04 31.88 512.03 16193351 260102868 sda1 0.00 0.00 0.00 2166 180 sda2 22.04 31.87 512.03 16189010 260102688 sda3 0.00 0.00 0.00 1615 0 => Related: : Linux Track NFS Directory / Disk I/O Stats #8: sar - Collect and Report System Activity The sar command is used to collect, report, and save system activity information. To see network counter, enter: # sar -n DEV more To display the network counters from the 24th: # sar -n DEV -f /var/log/sa/sa24 more You can also display real time usage using sar: # sar 4 5 Sample Outputs: Linux 2.6.18-128.1.14.el5 (www03.nixcraft.in) 06/26/2009 06:45:12 PM CPU %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle 06:45:16 PM all 2.00 0.00 0.22 0.00 0.00 97.78 06:45:20 PM all 2.07 0.00 0.38 0.03 0.00 97.52 06:45:24 PM all 0.94 0.00 0.28 0.00 0.00 98.78 06:45:28 PM all 1.56 0.00 0.22 0.00 0.00 98.22 06:45:32 PM all 3.53 0.00 0.25 0.03 0.00 96.19 Average: all 2.02 0.00 0.27 0.01 0.00 97.70 => Related: : How to collect Linux system utilization data into a file #9: mpstat - Multiprocessor Usage The mpstat command displays activities for each available processor, processor 0 being the first one. mpstat -P ALL to display average CPU utilization per processor: # mpstat -P ALL Sample Output: Linux 2.6.18-128.1.14.el5 (www03.nixcraft.in) 06/26/2009 06:48:11 PM CPU %user %nice %sys %iowait %irq %soft %steal %idle intr/s 06:48:11 PM all 3.50 0.09 0.34 0.03 0.01 0.17 0.00 95.86 1218.04 06:48:11 PM 0 3.44 0.08 0.31 0.02 0.00 0.12 0.00 96.04 1000.31 06:48:11 PM 1 3.10 0.08 0.32 0.09 0.02 0.11 0.00 96.28 34.93 06:48:11 PM 2 4.16 0.11 0.36 0.02 0.00 0.11 0.00 95.25 0.00 06:48:11 PM 3 3.77 0.11 0.38 0.03 0.01 0.24 0.00 95.46 44.80 06:48:11 PM 4 2.96 0.07 0.29 0.04 0.02 0.10 0.00 96.52 25.91 06:48:11 PM 5 3.26 0.08 0.28 0.03 0.01 0.10 0.00 96.23 14.98 06:48:11 PM 6 4.00 0.10 0.34 0.01 0.00 0.13 0.00 95.42 3.75 06:48:11 PM 7 3.30 0.11 0.39 0.03 0.01 0.46 0.00 95.69 76.89

=> Related: : Linux display each multiple SMP CPU processors utilization individually. #10: pmap - Process Memory Usage The command pmap report memory map of a process. Use this command to find out causes of memory bottlenecks. # pmap -d PID To display process memory information for pid # 47394, enter: # pmap -d 47394 Sample Outputs: 47394: /usr/bin/php-cgi Address Kbytes Mode Offset Device Mapping 0000000000400000 2584 r-x-- 0000000000000000 008:00002 php-cgi 0000000000886000 140 rw--- 0000000000286000 008:00002 php-cgi 00000000008a9000 52 rw--- 00000000008a9000 000:00000 [ anon ] 0000000000aa8000 76 rw--- 00000000002a8000 008:00002 php-cgi 000000000f678000 1980 rw--- 000000000f678000 000:00000 [ anon ] 000000314a600000 112 r-x-- 0000000000000000 008:00002 ld-2.5.so 000000314a81b000 4 r---- 000000000001b000 008:00002 ld-2.5.so 000000314a81c000 4 rw--- 000000000001c000 008:00002 ld-2.5.so 000000314aa00000 1328 r-x-- 0000000000000000 008:00002 libc-2.5.so 000000314ab4c000 2048 ----- 000000000014c000 008:00002 libc-2.5.so........ 00002af8d48fd000 4 rw--- 0000000000006000 008:00002 xsl.so 00002af8d490c000 40 r-x-- 0000000000000000 008:00002 libnss_files-2.5.so 00002af8d4916000 2044 ----- 000000000000a000 008:00002 libnss_files-2.5.so 00002af8d4b15000 4 r---- 0000000000009000 008:00002 libnss_files-2.5.so 00002af8d4b16000 4 rw--- 000000000000a000 008:00002 libnss_files-2.5.so 00002af8d4b17000 768000 rw-s- 0000000000000000 000:00009 zero (deleted) 00007fffc95fe000 84 rw--- 00007ffffffea000 000:00000 [ stack ] ffffffffff600000 8192 ----- 0000000000000000 000:00000 [ anon ] mapped: 933712K writeable/private: 4304K shared: 768000K The last line is very important: mapped: 933712K total amount of memory mapped to files writeable/private: 4304K the amount of private address space shared: 768000K the amount of address space this process is sharing with others => Related: : Linux find the memory used by a program / process using pmap command #11 and #12: netstat and ss - Network Statistics The command netstat displays network connections, routing tables, interface statistics, masquerade connections, and multicast memberships. ss command is used to dump socket statistics. It allows showing information similar to netstat. See the following resources about ss and netstat commands: ss: Display Linux TCP / UDP Network and Socket Information Get Detailed Information About Particular IP address Connections Using netstat Command #13: iptraf - Real-time Network Statistics The iptraf command is interactive colorful IP LAN monitor. It is an ncurses-based IP LAN monitor that generates various network statistics including TCP info, UDP counts, ICMP and OSPF information, Ethernet load info, node stats, IP checksum errors, and others. It can provide the following info in easy to read format: Network traffic statistics by TCP connection IP traffic statistics by network interface Network traffic statistics by protocol

Network traffic statistics by TCP/UDP port and by packet size Network traffic statistics by Layer2 address Fig.02: General interface statistics: IP traffic statistics by network interface Fig.03 Network traffic statistics by TCP connection #14: tcpdump - Detailed Network Traffic Analysis The tcpdump is simple command that dump traffic on a network. However, you need good understanding of TCP/IP protocol to utilize this tool. For.e.g to display traffic info about DNS, enter: # tcpdump -i eth1 'udp port 53' To display all IPv4 HTTP packets to and from port 80, i.e. print only packets that contain data, not, for example, SYN and FIN packets and ACK-only packets, enter: # tcpdump 'tcp port 80 and (((ip[2:2] - ((ip[0]&0xf)<<2)) - ((tcp[12]&0xf0)>>2))!= 0)'

To display all FTP session to 202.54.1.5, enter: # tcpdump -i eth1 'dst 202.54.1.5 and (port 21 or 20' To display all HTTP session to 192.168.1.5: # tcpdump -ni eth0 'dst 192.168.1.5 and tcp and port http' Use wireshark to view detailed information about files, enter: # tcpdump -n -i eth1 -s 0 -w output.txt src or dst port 80 #15: strace - System Calls Trace system calls and signals. This is useful for debugging webserver and other server problems. See how to use to trace the process and see What it is doing. #16: /Proc file system - Various Kernel Statistics /proc file system provides detailed information about various hardware devices and other Linux kernel information. See Linux kernel /proc documentations for further details. Common /proc examples: # cat /proc/cpuinfo # cat /proc/meminfo # cat /proc/zoneinfo # cat /proc/mounts 17#: Nagios - Server And Network Monitoring Nagios is a popular open source computer system and network monitoring application software. You can easily monitor all your hosts, network equipment and services. It can send alert when things go wrong and again when they get better. FAN is "Fully Automated Nagios". FAN goals are to provide a Nagios installation including most tools provided by the Nagios Community. FAN provides a CDRom image in the standard ISO format, making it easy to easilly install a Nagios server. Added to this, a wide bunch of tools are including to the distribution, in order to improve the user experience around Nagios. 18#: Cacti - Web-based Monitoring Tool Cacti is a complete network graphing solution designed to harness the power of RRDTool's data storage and graphing functionality. Cacti provides a fast poller, advanced graph templating, multiple data acquisition methods, and user management features out of the box. All of this is wrapped in an intuitive, easy to use interface that makes sense for LAN-sized installations up to complex networks with hundreds of devices. It can provide data about network, CPU, memory, logged in users, Apache, DNS servers and much more. See how to install and configure Cacti network graphing tool under CentOS / RHEL. #19: KDE System Guard - Real-time Systems Reporting and Graphing KSysguard is a network enabled task and system monitor application for KDE desktop. This tool can be run over ssh session. It provides lots of features such as a client/server architecture that enables monitoring of local and remote hosts. The graphical front end uses so-called sensors to retrieve the information it displays. A sensor can return simple values or more complex information like tables. For each type of information, one or more displays are provided. Displays are organized in worksheets that can be saved and loaded independently from each other. So, KSysguard is not only a simple task manager but also a very powerful tool to control large server farms.

Fig.05 KDE System Guard {Image credit: Wikipedia} See the KSysguard handbook for detailed usage. #20: Gnome System Monitor - Real-time Systems Reporting and Graphing The System Monitor application enables you to display basic system information and monitor system processes, usage of system resources, and file systems. You can also use System Monitor to modify the behavior of your system. Although not as powerful as the KDE System Guard, it provides the basic information which may be useful for new users: Displays various basic information about the computer's hardware and software. Linux Kernel version GNOME version Hardware Installed memory Processors and speeds System Status Currently available disk space Processes Memory and swap space Network usage File Systems Lists all mounted filesystems along with basic information about each.

Fig.06 The Gnome System Monitor application Bonus: Additional Tools A few more tools: nmap - scan your server for open ports. lsof - list open files, network connections and much more. ntop web based tool - ntop is the best tool to see network usage in a way similar to what top command does for processes i.e. it is network traffic monitoring software. You can see network status, protocol wise distribution of traffic for UDP, TCP, DNS, HTTP and other protocols. Conky - Another good monitoring tool for the X Window System. It is highly configurable and is able to monitor many system variables including the status of the CPU, memory, swap space, disk storage, temperatures, processes, network interfaces, battery power, system messages, e-mail inboxes etc. GKrellM - It can be used to monitor the status of CPUs, main memory, hard disks, network interfaces, local and remote mailboxes, and many other things. vnstat - vnstat is a console-based network traffic monitor. It keeps a log of hourly, daily and monthly network traffic for the selected interface(s). htop - htop is an enhanced version of top, the interactive process viewer, which can display the list of processes in a tree form. mtr - mtr combines the functionality of the traceroute and ping programs in a single network diagnostic tool. Did I miss something? Please add your favorite system motoring tool in the comments. Tweet 701 267 Lubię to! 712 StumbleUpon

You should follow me on twitter here or grab rss feed to keep track of new changes. Featured Articles: 30 Handy Bash Shell Aliases For Linux / Unix / Mac OS X Top 30 Nmap Command Examples For Sys/Network Admins 25 PHP Security Best Practices For Sys Admins 20 Linux System Monitoring Tools Every SysAdmin Should Know 20 Linux Server Hardening Security Tips Linux: 20 Iptables Examples For New SysAdmins Top 20 OpenSSH Server Best Security Practices Top 20 Nginx WebServer Best Security Practices 20 Examples: Make Sure Unix / Linux Configuration Files Are Free From Syntax Errors 15 Greatest Open Source Terminal Applications Of 2012 My 10 UNIX Command Line Mistakes Top 10 Open Source Web-Based Project Management Software Top 5 Email Client For Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows Users The Novice Guide To Buying A Linux Laptop { 315 comments read them below or add one } 1 VonSkippy June 27, 2009 at 5:10 am Pretty much common knowledge (or should be) but handy to have listed all in one place. 2 Jim (JR) March 21, 2011 at 3:30 am (quote) Pretty much common knowledge.... (/quote) Yea, right! I ve been around the block two or three times and a number of these are familiar to me but some of the ways they re used here were not. Also a fair number of these were absolutely brand-new and they look damned useful! I am so going to book-mark this page it isn t funny! It s likely that I will want to spread this URL around like the Flu as well.... :-D @Vivek *GREAT* list for those of us who are mere mortals.... Jim (JR) 3 Steve August 3, 2011 at 7:28 am For someone with the common knowledge, why would this be handy? I mean, if you already know/use these, then why would you need a page detailing them?

4 Mike Williams August 15, 2011 at 10:35 pm Because a lot of us have to live with faulty memory modules, Steve. I do agree with you too.:this knowledge isn t that common outside the comic book fraternity. 5 farseas January 8, 2013 at 5:29 pm If you did a lot of sysadmin you would already know the answer to that question. 6 robb June 27, 2009 at 8:29 am yeap most of them are must-have tools. good job of collecting them in a post. 7 Chris June 27, 2009 at 8:37 am Nice list. For systems with just a few nodes I recommend Munin. It s easy to install and configure. My favorite tool for monitoring a linux cluster is Ganglia. P.S. I think you should change this #2: vmstat Network traffic statistics by TCP connection 8 ftaurino June 27, 2009 at 9:09 am another useful tool is dstat, which combines vmstat, iostat, ifstat, netstat information and more. but this is a very useful list with some interesting examples! 9 James June 27, 2009 at 9:23 am pocess or process. haha, i love typos 10 Sohrab Khan March 15, 2011 at 9:09 am Dear i am learning the Linux pl z help me, I you have any useful notes pl z sent it to my E-mail. Thanks 11 vasu March 21, 2011 at 5:43 am In my system booting time it showing error fsck is fails. plz login as root. how to repair or check linux os using fsck command plz help me 12 darkdragn May 31, 2011 at 7:14 am Most of the time that happens if the fsck operation requires human interaction, which the boot fsck doesn t have. Just restart it, if you don t normally get a grub delay the hold down the shift

key to get one, if you do then just select recovery mode, or single user mode, it depends on your distro. It s the same thing in all, just tripping single user mode with a kernel arg, but it will let you boot, and run fsck on unmounted partitions. If it is your root partition, you may need to boot from an external medium, unless you have a kick ass initrd, lol. 13 Artur June 27, 2009 at 9:40 am What about Munin? Lots easier and lighter than Cacti. 14 nig belamp December 7, 2010 at 4:21 pm How can you even compare munin to cacti stfu your a tool. 15 PC4N6 April 20, 2011 at 7:53 pm Uhm, geez, this isn t blogspot. Head over there if you have an uncontrollable need to flame people above your level of understanding 16 RB-211 May 13, 2011 at 12:57 pm Wow, that was a bit harsh. 17 grammer nazi July 24, 2011 at 1:54 pm it is you re you are a tool. Please when randomly slamming someones post to feel better about yourself, at least you proper grammer. Then at least you sound like an intelligent a55h0le. :P 18 Jeff August 9, 2011 at 6:07 pm Sarcastic pro s, N00bs, flaming, harsh language, grammar nazis. All we need now is a Hitler comparison and we have the full set. Who s up for a ban? Also: before stuff can become common knowledge you ll first have to encounter it at least once. Like here in this nice list. Thanks for sharing! 19 David August 25, 2011 at 3:05 pm A ban? Censorship! You Nazi! 20 Roberto September 9, 2011 at 6:08 pm That s grammar, unless you re talking about the actor who plays Frasier on Cheers. :P

21 Fireman October 17, 2011 at 11:39 pm Let me go ahead and re-write your comment, grammer nazi. It seems you have quite a few errors. It is you re you are a tool. Please, when randomly slamming someone s post to feel better about yourself, at least use proper grammar. Then, at least, you sound like an intelligent a55h0le. In the future, I would recommend proof-reading your own posts before you arrogantly correct others. I counted at least six mistakes in your correction. Have a nice day! :) 23 Raj June 27, 2009 at 10:13 am 22 flame on! December 4, 2011 at 8:05 pm Vivek does a great job, as usual. But, thanks for the laughs, guys! Nice list, worth bookmarking! 24 kaosmonk June 27, 2009 at 10:53 am Once again, great article!! 25 Amr El-Sharnoby June 27, 2009 at 11:07 am I can see that the best tool to monitor processes, CPU, memeory and disk bottleneck at once is atop But the tool itself can cause a lot of trouble in heavily loaded servers and it enables process accounting and has a service running all the time To use it efficiently on RHEL, CentOS; 1- install rpmforge repo 2- # yum install atop 3- # killalll atop 4- # chkconfig atop off 5- # rm -rf /tmp/atop.d/ /var/log/atop/ 6- then don t directly run atop command, but instead run it as follows; # ATOPACCT= atop This tool has saved me hundreds of hours really! and helped me to diagnose bottlenecks and solve them that couldn t otherwise be easily detected and would need many different tools 26 Vivek Gite June 27, 2009 at 1:01 pm @Chris / James Thanks for the heads-up!

27 Solaris June 27, 2009 at 1:26 pm Great post, also great reference. 28 quba June 27, 2009 at 1:46 pm Hi, We have just added your latest post 20 Linux System Monitoring Tools Every SysAdmin Should Know to our Directory of Technology. You can check the inclusion of the post here. We are delighted to invite you to submit all your future posts to the directory and get a huge base of visitors to your website. Warm Regards Techtrove.info Team http://www.techtrove.info 29 Cristiano June 27, 2009 at 1:57 pm You probably wanna add IFTOP tool, its really simple and light, very useful when u need to have a last moment remote access to a server to see hows the trific going. 30 Peko June 27, 2009 at 3:40 pm Yeah, well why a so good admin (I dig(g) your site) won t you use spelling checkers? Typo #2 Web-based Monitioring Tool 31 paul tergeist June 27, 2009 at 4:17 pm maybe it s a typo too, but the title should be :.. Tools Every SysAdmin MUST Know and still, this is advanced user knowledge, at most. I would not trust a sysadmin that knows so few. And.. 32 harrywwc June 27, 2009 at 10:56 pm Hi guys, good list and some great submitted pointers to other useful tools. to those carp-ing on about typo s give us all a break. you ve never made a typo? ever? Idea: How bout those who have never *ever* made an error in typing text be the first one(s) to give people grief about making a typo?

I _used_ to be a real PITA about this; then I grew up. The purpose of this blog, and other forms of communication, is to *communicate* concepts and ideas. *If* you have received those clearly in spite of the typos then the purpose has been fulfilled. /me gets down off his soapbox.h 33 StygianAgenda February 28, 2011 at 8:49 pm I totally second that! WTF is up with people making such a big deal about spelling? I could understand if the complaints were in regards to a misspelling of a code-example, but if the language is coherent enough to get the idea across, then that s all that really matters. 34 Lolcatz April 7, 2011 at 10:54 pm Typos* 35 roflcopter June 24, 2011 at 1:57 pm Typographical error* 36 PÃ draig Brady June 27, 2009 at 11:37 pm A script I use often to show the real memory usage of programs on linux, is ps_mem.py I also summarised a few linux monitoring tools here I d also mention the powertop utility 37 Saad June 27, 2009 at 11:54 pm This blog is more impressive and more useful than ever. I need more help regarding proper installation document on php-network weathermap on Cacti as plugins 38 Jack June 28, 2009 at 2:18 am No love for whowatch? Real time info on who s logged in, how their connected (SSH, TTY, etc) and what process thay have running. http://www.pttk.ae.krakow.pl/~mike/#whowatch 39 StygianAgenda February 28, 2011 at 9:50 pm I just became an instant fan of whowatch. Thanks!!! ;)

40 Ponzu June 28, 2009 at 2:28 am vi tool used to examine and modify almost any configuration file. 41 Manoj April 27, 2011 at 9:28 am It is not a tool. It is an Editor 42 su - July 28, 2011 at 9:30 pm An editor is a tool for text documents. 43 Eric schulman June 28, 2009 at 5:38 am dtrace is a notable mention for the picky hackers that wish to know more about the behavior of the operating system and it s programs internals. 44 Ashok kumar June 28, 2009 at 5:48 am hi gud information, keep it up ash 45 Enzo June 28, 2009 at 6:09 am You missed: iftop & nethogs 46 Adrian Fita June 28, 2009 at 7:09 am Excellent list. Like Amr El-Sharnoby above, I also find atop indispensable and think it must be installed on every system. In addition I would like to add iotop to monitor disk usage per process and jnettop to very easily monitor bandwidth allocation between connections on a Linux system. 47 Knightsream June 28, 2009 at 8:53 am Well, the one i use right now is Pandora FMS 3.0 and its making my work easy. 48 praveen k June 28, 2009 at 12:56 pm I would like to add whoami,who am i, finger, pinky, id commands

49 create own website June 28, 2009 at 3:32 pm i always love linux, great article 50 Mathieu Desnoyers June 28, 2009 at 9:14 pm One tool which seems to be missing from this list is LTTng. It is a system-wide tracing tool which helps understanding complex performance problems in multithreaded, multiprocess applications involving many userspace-kernel interactions. The project is available at http://www.lttng.org. Recent SuSE distributions, WindRiver, Monta Vista and STLinux offer the tracer as distribution packages. The standard way to use it is to install a patched kernel though. It comes with a trace analyzer, LTTV, which provides nice view of the overall system behavior. Mathieu 51 Andy Leo June 29, 2009 at 1:02 am Very useful, well done. Thanks! 52 Aveek Sen June 29, 2009 at 1:29 am Very informative. 53 The Hulk June 29, 2009 at 2:11 am I love this website. 54 kburger June 29, 2009 at 3:08 am If we re talking about a web server, apachetop is a nice tool to see Apache s activity. 55 Ram June 29, 2009 at 4:07 am Dude you forgot the most important of ALL! net-snmpd With it you can collect vast amounts of information. Then with snmpwalk and scripts you can create your own web NMS to collect simple information like ping, disk space, services down. 56 Kartik Mistry June 29, 2009 at 5:15 am `iotop` is nice one to be include in list. I used `vnstat` very much for keeping track of my download when I was on limited connection :)

57 Vivek Gite June 29, 2009 at 7:03 am @Everyone Thanks for sharing all your tools with us. 58 feilong June 29, 2009 at 10:01 am Very useful, thinks for sharing. Take a look to a great tools called nmon. I use it on AIX IBM system but works now on all GNU/linux system now. 59 boz June 29, 2009 at 10:21 am mtr 60 Scyldinga June 29, 2009 at 10:21 am I m with @paul tergeist, tools every linux user should know. The ps samples are nice, thanks. No reference to configuration management tools? cfengine/puppet/chef? 61 Ken McDonell June 29, 2009 at 9:19 pm Nice summary article. If your system is large and/or distributed, and the performance issues you re tackling are complex, you may wish to explore Performance Co-Pilot (PCP). It unifies all of the performance data from the tools you ve mentioned (and more), can be extended to include new applications and service layers, works across the network and for clusters and provides both real-time and retrospective analysis. See http://www.oss.sgi.com/projects/pcp PCP is included in the Debian-based and SUSE distributions and is likely to appear in the RH distributions in the future. As a bonus, PCP also works for monitoring non-linux platforms (Windows and some of the Unix derivatives). 62 Lance June 30, 2009 at 2:37 am I love your collection. I use about 25% of those regularly, and another 25% semi-regularly. I ll have to add another 25% of those to my list of regulars. Thanks for compiling this list.

63 bogo June 30, 2009 at 6:01 am Very nice collection of linux applications. I work with linux but I can t say that i know them all. 64 MEHTA GHANSHYAM June 30, 2009 at 9:28 am REALLY ITS VERY GOOD N USEFULL FOR ALL ADMIN. THANKS ONCE AGAIN 65 fasil June 30, 2009 at 12:06 pm Good post already bookmarked cheers 66 Aleksey Tsalolikhin June 30, 2009 at 7:30 pm I ll just mention ngrep network grep. Great list, thanks!! Aleksey 67 Abdul Kayyum July 1, 2009 at 3:40 pm Thanks for sharing this information.. 68 Aurelio July 1, 2009 at 8:20 pm feilong, I agree. I use nmon on my linux boxes from years. It s worth a look. 69 komradebob July 1, 2009 at 10:36 pm Great article, many great suggestions. Was surprised not to see these among the suggestions: bmon graphs/tracks network activity/bandwidth real time. etherape great visual indicator of what traffic is going where on the network wireshark tcpdump on steroids. multitail tail multiple files in a single terminal window swatch track your log files and fire off alerts 70 pradeep July 2, 2009 at 11:14 am how the hell i missed this site this many days :P thank god i found it :) i love it

71 Jay July 4, 2009 at 5:23 pm O personally much prefer htop to top. Displays everything very nicely. phpsysinfo is another nice light web-based monitoring tool. Very easy to setup and use. 72 Manuel Fraga July 5, 2009 at 4:55 pm Osmius: The Open Source Monitoring Tool is C++ and Java. Monitor everything connected to a network with incredible performance. Create and integrate Business Services, SLAs and ITIL processes such as availability management and capacity planning. 73 ar July 6, 2009 at 4:17 pm thanks for sharing all the helpful tools. 74 Shailesh Mishra July 7, 2009 at 7:13 pm Nice compilation. As usual, always very useful. It would be nice if some of you knowledgeable guys can shed some light on java heap monitoring thing, thread lock detection and analysis, heap analysis etc. 75 Bjarne Rasmussen July 7, 2009 at 8:00 pm nmon is a nice tool try google for it, it rocks 76 Balaji July 12, 2009 at 5:50 pm Very much Useful Information s, trafmon is one more useful tool 77 Stefan July 15, 2009 at 8:18 pm And for those which like lightweight and concise graphical metering: xosview +disk -ints -bat 78 Raja July 19, 2009 at 3:03 am Awesome. Especially love the ps tips. Very interesting 79 Rajat July 24, 2009 at 4:04 am

Thanks very good info!!! 80 nima0102 July 27, 2009 at 7:39 am It s really nice :) 81 David Thomas August 12, 2009 at 9:49 am Excellent list! 82 Vinidog August 29, 2009 at 4:53 am Nice very nice guy!!!! ;-) 83 Bob Marcan September 4, 2009 at 11:00 am From the guy who wrote the collect utility for Tru64: Name : collectl Relocations: (not relocatable) Version : 3.3.5 Vendor: Fedora Project Release : 1.fc10 Build Date: Fri Aug 21 13:22:42 2009 Install Date: Tue Sep 1 18:10:34 2009 Build Host: x86-5.fedora.phx.redhat.com Group : Applications/System Source RPM: collectl-3.3.5-1.fc10.src.rpm Size : 1138212 License: GPLv2+ or Artistic Signature : DSA/SHA1, Mon Aug 31 14:42:40 2009, Key ID bf226fcc4ebfc273 Packager : Fedora Project URL : http://collectl.sourceforge.net Summary : A utility to collect various linux performance data Description : A utility to collect linux performance data Best regards, Bob 84 Tman September 5, 2009 at 8:48 pm For professional network monitoring use Zenoss: Zenoss Core (open source): http://www.zenoss.com/product/network-monitoring 85 Somnath Pal September 14, 2009 at 9:02 am Hi, Thanks for the nice collection with useful samples. Consider adding tools to monitor SAN storage, multipath etc. also. Best Regards, Somnath

86 Eddy September 17, 2009 at 8:41 am I did not see ifconfig or iwconfig on the list 87 Kestev September 17, 2009 at 1:57 pm opennms 88 Sergiy September 25, 2009 at 12:39 pm Thanks for the article. I am not admin myself, but tools are very useful for me too. Thanks for the comments also :) 89 Mark Seger September 28, 2009 at 6:02 pm When I wrote collectl my goal was to replace as many utilities as possible for several reasons including: - not all write to log files - different output formats make correlation VERY difficult - sar is close but still too many things it doesn t collect - I wanted option to generate data that can be easily plotted or loaded into spreadsheet - I wanted sub-second monitoring - I want an API and I want to be able to send data over sockets to other tools - and a whole lot more I think I succeeded on many fronts, in particular not having to worry if the right data is being collected. Just install rpm and type /etc/init.d/collectl start and you re collecting everything such as slabs and processes every 60 seconds and everything else every 10 seconds AND using <0.1% of the CPU to do so. I personally believe if you're collecting performance counters at a minute or coarser you're not really seeing what your system is doing. As for the API, I worked with some folks at PNNL to monitor their 2300 node cluster, pass the data to ganglia and from there they pass it to their own real-time plotting tool that can display counters for the entire cluster in 3D. They also collectl counters from individual CPUs and pass that data to collectl as well. I put together a very simple mapping of 'standard' utilities like sar to the equivilent collectl commands just to get a feel for how they compare. But also keep in mind there are a lot of things collectl does for which there is no equivalent system command, such as Infiniband or Lustre monitoring. How about buddyinfo? And more http://collectl.sourceforge.net/matrix.html -mark 90 PeteG September 29, 2009 at 5:33 am Darn, I ve been using Linux since Windows 98 was the current MicroSnot FOPA. I know all this stuff. I do not make typoous. Why do you post this stuff? We all know it. Sure we do!

But do we remember it? I just read through it and found stuff that I used long ago and it was like I just learned it. I found stuff I didn t know either. Hummmm Imagine that! Thanks, particularly for the PDF. Saved me making one. Hey, where s the HTML to PDF howto? Thanks again. 91 Denilson October 26, 2009 at 11:55 pm Use: free -m To show memory usage in megabytes, which is much more useful. 92 AndrewW November 5, 2009 at 11:48 pm Is it possible to display hard drive temps from hddtemp in KSysGuard? They are available in Ksensors and GKrellM, without any configuration required. However I prefer the interface and flexibility of KSysGuard. Is there a way of configuring it? Andrew 93 Abhijit November 10, 2009 at 1:46 pm Zabbix open source monitoring tool http://www.zabbix.com 94 greg January 6, 2012 at 6:27 pm Zabbix is a great tool that it doesn t require a entirely separate project to make it easy to install and use (like Nagios and FAN). I ve been following it since its early days and its come a long way. Its sad that lists like this never give it its due, not even a foot note mention. while on that note.. really? your 17-20 makes the list, but nmap, mtr, and lsof get relegated to foot notes? 95 Kevin November 15, 2009 at 10:55 pm Thanks, good work 96 Stefano November 22, 2009 at 4:09 pm Just thanks! :)

97 GBonev November 25, 2009 at 2:13 pm Good Job on assembling the list If I may suggest trafshow as an alternative to iptraf when you need to see more detailed info on source/destination, proto and ports at once. 98 Gokul December 7, 2009 at 4:43 am How to install the Kickstart method in linux 99 Bilal Ahmad December 8, 2009 at 4:01 pm Very nice collection.. Worth a bookmark Bravo 100 Jalal Hajigholamali December 9, 2009 at 5:07 am Thanks a lot 101 mancai December 11, 2009 at 6:40 pm nice sharing, this is what i want looking for few day ago tq 102 aruinanjan December 14, 2009 at 7:41 am This is a nice document for new user, thaks to owner of this document. arun 103 myghty December 16, 2009 at 7:57 am Great post!! Thanks. 104 Rakib Hasan December 16, 2009 at 2:09 pm Very helpful. Thanks a lot! 105 PRR December 22, 2009 at 9:25 pm After so many thanks. Add one more.. thank you. It s very handy. 106 Yusuf December 25, 2009 at 7:35 pm

Mark, I am in technology myself and this tutorial page is very well organized Thanks for taking the time to create this awesome page great help for Linux new bees like myself. 107 Yusuf December 25, 2009 at 7:40 pm I meant to thank Vivek Gita once again awesome job 108 Shrik December 31, 2009 at 9:58 am Thank you very much VERY GOOD WEBSITE 109 sekar January 1, 2010 at 4:16 pm it is cool 110 Giriraaj January 5, 2010 at 7:38 am Thanks for sharing most resourceful information. 111 Bhagyesh Dhamecha January 6, 2010 at 11:58 am Dear all Members, Thanks for sharing all your knowledge about Linux.. i really thankful for your share linux tips..!! thanks and continue this jurny as well thank you.. 112 Ganesan AS January 10, 2010 at 1:53 pm Good info. Thanks for sharing. May GOD bless you to do more. 113 Mark Seger January 10, 2010 at 2:38 pm This is indeed an impressive collection of tools but I still have to ask if people are really happy with having to know so many names, so many switches and so many formats. If you run one command and see something weird doesn t it bother you if you have to run a different tool but the anomaly already passed and you can no longer see it with a different tool? For example if you see a drop in network performance and wonder if there was a memory or cpu problem, it s too late to go back and see what else was going on. I know it bothers me. Again, by running collectl I never have to worry about that because it collects everything (when run as a deamon) or you can just tell it to report lots of things when running interactively and by default is shows cpu, disk and network. If you want to

add memory, you can always include it but you will need a wider screen to see the output. As a curiosity for those who run sar I never do what do you use for a monitoring interval? The default is to take 10 minute samples which I find quite worthless remember sar has been around forever dating back to when cpus were much slower and monitoring much more expensive. I d recommend to run sar with a 10 second sampling level like collectl and you ll get far more out of it. The number of situations which this would be too much of a load on your system would be extremely rare. Anyone care to comment? -mark 114 miles January 12, 2010 at 4:58 am Amr El-Sharnoby: atop is awesome, thanks for the tip. 115 Serg January 12, 2010 at 6:09 am hi Mark absolutely agreed with you mate! if you are the sysadmin something you will do it for yourself and do it right! These tools like ps,top and other is commonly used by users who administrated a non-productive or desktop systems or for some users who s temporary came to the system and who needed to get a little bit of information about the box and its pretty good enough for them. ) 116 met00 January 12, 2010 at 6:15 pm If you are running a web server and you have multiple clients writing code, you will one day see CPU slow to a crawl. Why?, you will ask. ps -ef and top will show that mysql is eating up resources HMM? If only there was a tool which showed me what command was being issued against the database mytop Once you find the select statement that has mysql running at 99% of the CPU, you can kill the query and then go chase down the client and kill them too (or in my case bill them at $250/hr for fixing their code). 117 Mark Seger January 12, 2010 at 6:36 pm re mysql it s not necessarily that straight forward. I was working with someone who had a system with mysql that was crawling. it was taking multiple seconds for vi to echo a single character! we ran collectl on it and could see low cpu, low network and low disk i/o. Lots of available memory, so what gives? A close look showed me that even those the I/O rates were low, the average request sizes were also real low probably do so small db requests. digging even deeper with collectl I saw the i/o request service times were multiple seconds! in other words when you requested an I/O operation not matter how fast the disk is, it took over 2 second to complete and that s why vi was so slow, it was trying to write to it s backing store. bottom line running a single tool and only looking at one thing does not tell the whole story. you need to see multiple things AND see them at the same time.

-mark 118 mtituh Alu January 19, 2010 at 2:09 pm I have a postfix mail server, recently through tcpdump I see alot of traffic to dc.mx.aol.com, fedexservices.com, wi.rr.com, mx1.dixie-net.com. I believe my mail server is spamming. How do I find out it is spamming? and how do I stop it. Please help. 119 Vivek Gite January 19, 2010 at 3:01 pm Only allow authenticated email users to send an email. There are other things too such as anti-spam, ssl keys, domain keys and much more. 120 kirankumarl February 3, 2010 at 9:26 am Dear sir pls send me some linex pdf file by wich i can learn how to install & maintanes 121 Visigoth February 21, 2010 at 3:11 pm I like the saidar tool, and iptstate. Check them out. 122 JK February 23, 2010 at 12:43 pm Hiii vivek, Do you know any application to shut down a ubuntu 9.1 machine when one of its network interface is down..i need it for clustering.. 123 AD February 25, 2010 at 6:23 am Thank you very much,,,. This information is very useful for me to monitoring my server 124 Tarek February 26, 2010 at 7:18 pm Actually where I work we have and isa server acting as a proxy/firewall, which prevent me from monitoring internet traffic consumption. so i installed debian as a network bridge between the isa server and the lan, and equipped it with various monitoring tools (bandwidthd, ntop, vnstat, iftop, iptraf, darkstat). 125 deepu March 2, 2010 at 7:31 am it is a very good and resourceful infomation. 126 Solo March 7, 2010 at 11:40 pm

OMG! Amazing Super Ultra nice info. THX pinguins! 127 vijay March 12, 2010 at 7:30 am its so usefulllll thanks a lot 128 Venu Yadav March 23, 2010 at 5:05 am Good information. Thanks 129 Prashant Redkar March 25, 2010 at 7:10 am Thank you it is very helpful 130 Saorabh Kumar March 25, 2010 at 12:12 pm Good knowledge base, great post 131 Spyros March 30, 2010 at 2:52 am Very interesting read that really includes the tools that every admin should know about. 132 amitabh mishra March 30, 2010 at 9:47 am Hi Its a great topic. Actually i am a Mysql DBA and i fond a lot of new things here. So i can say it will help in future. Thanks once again 133 Chinmaya April 2, 2010 at 4:48 am Excellent one!!! 134 saurav April 3, 2010 at 6:43 pm wow this is some great info,also the various inputs in comments. One i would like to add is ulimit User limits limit the use of system-wide resources. Syntax

ulimit [-acdfhlmnpsstuv] [limit] Options -S Change and report the soft limit associated with a resource. -H Change and report the hard limit associated with a resource. -a All current limits are reported. -c The maximum size of core files created. -d The maximum size of a process s data segment. -f The maximum size of files created by the shell(default option) -l The maximum size that may be locked into memory. -m The maximum resident set size. -n The maximum number of open file descriptors. -p The pipe buffer size. -s The maximum stack size. -t The maximum amount of cpu time in seconds. -u The maximum number of processes available to a single user. -v The maximum amount of virtual memory available to the process. ulimit provides control over the resources available to the shell and to processes started by it, on systems that allow such control. 135 Mustafa Ashraf Rahman April 20, 2010 at 1:44 pm hello Vivek Gite, This is really a very good post and useful for all admin. Thanks, Ashraf 136 arief April 21, 2010 at 3:23 pm Great tips.. Thanks 137 Eduardo Cereto April 25, 2010 at 5:20 am I think you missed my top 2 monitoring tools: monit: http://mmonit.com/monit/ mrtg : http://oss.oetiker.ch/mrtg/ 138 Lava Kafle April 29, 2010 at 9:05 am Perfect examples : thanks 139 wolfc01 May 2, 2010 at 3:32 pm See also the Linux Process Explorer (in development) meant to be an equivalent the windows process explorer of Mark Russinovich.

See http://sourceforge.net/projects/procexp 140 ohwell May 2, 2010 at 6:33 pm if an admin doesnt know 90% of those tools, he isn t a real admin. you will find most of these tools explained in any basic linux howto 141 Anonymous May 7, 2010 at 7:17 pm but how to kill process ID in my server.. 142 FHJ May 11, 2010 at 2:32 pm I assume you can find the process ID for example if your process is called foo.bar, you could do ps -ef grep foo.bar this will give the PID (process ID) as well as other information. Then do kill -9 PID (where PID is the number your found in the above). If you are working on a Mac you have to do sudo kill -9 PID since the kill command is an admin action that it wants you to be sure about. Or if you use top, and you can see the process you want to kill in your list, you can just type k and you will be prompted for the PID (the screen will freeze so it s easy to read). You type the number and enter, will have to confirm (y), and the process is killed with -15. Which is less severe than a kill -9 which really kills just about any process (without allowing it a graceful exit of any kind). Use with care! 143 someone May 10, 2010 at 5:59 pm Gnome system monitor is a pretty useless utility if you ask me. its neat to have it as an applet, but thats it. 144 kalyan de May 14, 2010 at 2:18 am Thanks, I think it will be very helpfull for me as i am practicng oracle in redhat linux4. Today i will try to check it. I want 1 more help. I am not clear about crontab. saupposed i want to start a crontab in my system with any script which i have kept in /home/oracle and want to execute in every 1 hour. Can u send me how i can do with details. Thanks, kalyan de. Chennai, india +91 9962300520 145 Samuel Egwoyi May 14, 2010 at 9:29 am

how can i practice Mysql using linux 146 Basil May 21, 2010 at 8:49 pm This article simply rocks 147 Fenster June 1, 2010 at 10:24 am hey, thanks, just installed htop and iptraf, very nice tools!! 148 zim June 2, 2010 at 1:12 pm atop man atop shows The program atop is an interactive monitor to view the load on a Linux system. It shows the occupation of the most critical hardware resources (from a performance point of view) on system level, i.e. cpu, memory, disk and network.it also shows which processes are responsible for the indicated load with respect to cpu- and memory load on process level; disk- and network load is only shown per process if a kernel patch has been installed. 149 Boggles September 21, 2011 at 1:52 am Have to agree with zim. Atop is a great tool along with it s report generating sister application atopsar. This is a must-have on any server I manage. 150 Amit June 2, 2010 at 1:26 pm Hello, How to install a Suphp on cpanel. 151 Walker June 4, 2010 at 4:19 am Thanks :) THIS helped me a lot. 152 m6mb3rtx June 4, 2010 at 4:34 pm Great article, very userfull tools! 153 dudhead June 5, 2010 at 2:38 pm Great list! Missed df command in the list.

154 giftzy June 5, 2010 at 6:26 pm I become to love linux after 10 years of hp-ux 155 Rafael Quirino de Castro June 7, 2010 at 5:08 pm I m lookuing for apache parameter on the web and found here. So, my contribute is: try to use iftop, iptraf, ifstat, jnettop and ethstatus for network graphical and CLI monitoring. Use tcmpdump and ngrep for packet sniffing HTB is very good for QoS in the network, especially if you need to reduce slower VPN network 156 georges June 9, 2010 at 3:39 pm fuser command is missing from this list. it tells you which command is using a file at the moment. Since in Linux everything is a file, it is very useful to know! Use it this way: # to know which process listens on tcp port 80: fuser 80/tcp # to know which process uses the /dev/sdb1 filesystem: fuser -vm /dev/sdb1 etc 157 Naga June 13, 2010 at 7:19 am Is there any good tools for analyzing Apache/Tomcat instances. 158 Jan 'luckyduck' Brinkmann June 15, 2010 at 11:02 am ethtool can also be very useful, depending on the situation: - searching for network problems - checking link status of ethernet connections - and so on 159 Abdullah June 16, 2010 at 7:15 am nice list, at the end i think what you meant is Bonus and not bounce bounce means jump bonus means extra goodies :) 160 dust June 23, 2010 at 8:19 am

What is in Linux that is equal to cfgadm in Solaris? 161 Jerome Christopher July 6, 2010 at 7:55 pm Thanks for the excellent list of commands, links and info. Jerome. 162 sriharikanth July 12, 2010 at 1:49 pm Thanks, very useful information provided. 163 Jyoti July 13, 2010 at 9:57 am very useful 164 t.k. July 16, 2010 at 10:02 pm Good compilation of commands. Thanks! 165 Thomas August 3, 2010 at 5:40 pm If you want graphy easly your performance data, try BrainyPDM: an another open source tool! http://www.brainypdm.org 166 Zanil Hyder August 4, 2010 at 5:44 am Though i have come across most of these names, having them all in one list will prove to be a good resource. I am going to make a list from these and have it within my website which i use for reference. Thanks for the examples. 167 brownman August 20, 2010 at 8:57 am web-based gui : webmin wins them all 168 chandra August 28, 2010 at 7:39 am Hi ite really very very nice which is helful to fresher. Thanks a lot.. Regards Amuri Chandra

169 George August 30, 2010 at 3:53 pm Great resource Really helpful for a novice as well for an expert 170 SHREESAI LUG September 4, 2010 at 5:36 am hiiiiiiiiiiiii we r SHREESAI LINUX USER GROUP FRM MUMBAI THIS COMMANDS R REALLY NICE THANKS VIVEK SIR PLZ REPLY US ON MAIL 171 Tunitorios September 12, 2010 at 2:31 am Thanks for this great tips. My question is how to show the username(s) wich are connected to the server and they are using ftp protocole? 172 Marcelo Cosentino April 7, 2011 at 12:38 pm Try ftptop. I think you can find it in centos, red hat, slack, debian etc Ftptop works with a lot of ftp servers daemons. 173 mark seger September 12, 2010 at 11:48 am I don t believe that ftp usage by user is recorded anywhere, so you d have to get inventive. The way I would do it is use collectl to show both processes sorted by I/O and ftp stats. Then is simply becomes a matter of see which processes are contributing to the I/O and who their owners are. -mark 174 jan February 24, 2011 at 7:42 am Usually ftp access are recorded in /var/log/messages file (at least pure-ftpd) 175 sriram September 12, 2010 at 12:53 pm Dumpcap is another command which is useful for capturing packets. Very useful tool 176 Riadh Rezig September 12, 2010 at 1:12 pm There is another tools Incron : This program is an inotify cron system. It consists of a daemon and a table manipulator. You can use it a similar way as the regular cron. The difference is that the inotify cron handles filesystem events rather than time periods.

177 eaman September 14, 2010 at 6:03 am discus is a nice / light tool to have an idea of file system usage. 178 Amzath September 14, 2010 at 9:43 pm Handy list. Also, these might be handy as well lsdev list of installed devices lsmod list of installed modules ldd to see dependencies of a executable file watch automated refresh of any code every specified seconds, etc stat details of any file getconf to get HP server details runlevel redhat run level Search in web for more detailed info. Good luck 179 Rafiq September 20, 2010 at 11:45 am Hi guys, I m totally new to the linux & this web aswell. Would some1 help me here regarding, mirrordir utility? what would b the full syntex if i only want to copy/mirror changed/edited files from source to destination. since last mirror. And how to define specific time to run this command, i mean schedule. Thanks in advance. 180 Jalal Hajigholamali September 20, 2010 at 11:54 am Hi, use rsync command.. 181 leebert September 28, 2010 at 8:58 pm Don t forget systemtap (stap) which provides the equivalent of Solaris invaluable dtrace scripting utility. There s a dtrace for Linux project but I haven t been able to get it to compile on my OpenSuSE 11.x. On SuSE Linux is getdelays, enabled via the grub kernel command line delayacct switch (starting with SuSE 10 Enterprise ). It ll reveal the amount of wait a given process spends waiting for CPU, disk (I/O) or memory (swap), great for isolating lag in the system. There are many many other monitoring tools (don t know if these were mentioned before) atopsar (atop-related), the sysstat/sar-related sa* series (sadc, sadf, sa1), isag, saidar, blktrace (blktrace-blkiomon / blktrace-blkparse), iotop, ftop, htop, nigel s monitor (nmon), famd/fileschanged, acctail, sysctl, dstat, iftop, btrace, ftop, iostat, iptraf, jnettop, collectl, nagios, the RRD-related tools, the sys-fs tools, big sister/brother you could fill a book with them all.

182 Lonu Feruz September 29, 2010 at 8:37 am please help where I can insert the command of route add of a node. whenever the server is up i have to re do the command. I need to know where i can put this command permanently 183 nagaraju October 1, 2010 at 4:47 am IT IS SUPERB LIST 184 MAHENDRA SINGH October 2, 2010 at 12:09 pm thanx your collection is fantastic. now i want to know that, how linux works 185 Rino Rondan October 7, 2010 at 7:37 pm Thanx!!! A really completed guide! 186 games October 8, 2010 at 1:43 am thank you so much it s very usefull for me 187 sameer October 15, 2010 at 6:14 am ThanX..!! can u send basic linux commands with ex Thanks again 188 Gunjan October 17, 2010 at 3:42 pm Nice post, its really useful and helping beginners to resolve server issue 189 Moe October 19, 2010 at 9:13 am another good tool for monitoring traffic and network usage: vnstat this also makes statistics for bandwidth usage over time which can be display for daily, weekly and monthly usage. very useful if you don t want to install a web-based tool for this.

190 Stan April 21, 2011 at 12:35 pm Nice history stats. 191 vishal sapkal October 19, 2010 at 2:54 pm very nice very importan tool of monetering thanks for. 192 david a. lawson October 22, 2010 at 12:32 am this rocks. it could not have come at a better time as i am into my first networking course. thanks so much i found this through stumbleupon linux/unix 193 ram November 12, 2010 at 8:55 am well,there are so good,i love them! 194 Rajkapoor M November 30, 2010 at 12:52 pm Hi, It s awasome..thanks to builder.. Thanks&Regards, Rajkapoor M 195 jalexandre December 2, 2010 at 12:41 am Perl?! 196 jalexandre December 2, 2010 at 12:44 am And a good Sysadmin always can count with you prefered script language. I using perl for monitoring a lot of basic infra structure services, like DHCP, DNS, Ldap, and Zabbix for generate alarms and very nice graphs. 197 Sarath Babu M December 11, 2010 at 9:07 am Hi, One of My Professor is introduce about the Ubantu This os is I like very much this flyover. Before I am Using XP but now I download all app. and I all applications. i always love linux, great article. sarath

198 Laxman December 23, 2010 at 9:37 am Very interesting I will try I hope it ll help for me 199 sah December 23, 2010 at 10:19 pm thanks alot its a great help~! 200 KK December 25, 2010 at 4:19 am Sumo is the best, the best that ever was and the best that ever will be. Way to go Sumo 201 Deepak January 6, 2011 at 1:18 pm Thanks. This is really helpful. 202 mark January 7, 2011 at 7:05 am How would I get a list of slow running websites on my server via ssh? 203 nigratruo January 13, 2011 at 6:41 pm Great list, but why is TOP still used? It is a highly limited utility. HTOP can do all top can, plus a ton of stuff more: 1. use colors for better readabilty. In the 21st century, all computers have a super hightech thing on their monitor called COLORS (sarcasm off) 2. allow process termination and sending of signals (even multi select several processes) 3. show cpu / ram usage with visual bars instead of numbers 4. show ALL processes: top cannot do that, it just shows what is on the screen. It is the main limiting factor that made me chuck it to the curb. 5. Use your cursor keys to explore what cannot be shown on the screen, for example full CLI parameters from commands. 6. Active development. There are new features. Top is dead and there does not seem to have been any active development for 10 years (and that is how the tool looks) 204 coldslushy February 7, 2011 at 12:55 pm Colors? Too resource intensive 205 josh July 19, 2011 at 3:38 pm Colors do not always contrast well with the background.

206 abdul hameed February 2, 2011 at 6:52 am Dear All, My Oracle Enterprice Linux getting very slow, when my local R12.1 start. by using top command i found lot of Database users are running. normally in other R12 instance only few Database users are available. can any one tell me what might be the problem,, is it OS level issue or my Application Issue.. where i have to start the tuning. Kinldy advice me. Thanks in Advance, Abdul Hameed 207 Vimal February 9, 2011 at 8:02 pm Shit, this looks great! Thanks very much. 208 Michael February 10, 2011 at 10:30 am My Oracle Enterprice Linux getting very slow, when my local R12.1 start. Arghh! Linux is turning into Windows! These are super machines, people! Remember when 4.2BSD came out, and people were saying Unix is becoming VMS? With 4.1 BSD, we had been flying on one MIP machines (think of a one Mhz clock rate three orders of magnitude slower than today s machines, not Ghz Mhz!). So much was added so quickly into 4.2 (kernels were no longer a few hundred kilobytes at most) that performance took a nose dive. But then 4.3 BSD fixed things for a while (with lots of optimizations such as unrolling the the instructions in a bcopy loop till they just just filled an instruction cache line). It didn t hurt either that memory was getting cheaper, and we could afford to upgrade our 30 user timesharing systems from four Megabytes to eight Megabytes, or even more! It takes an awful amount of software bloat (and blind ignorance of the principles we all learned in our combinatorial algorithms classes) to be able to make machines that are over a thousand times faster than the Vaxen we cut our teeth on be slow. Today s Linux systems hardly feel much faster on multicore x86 machines than they did on personal MicroVaxes or the somewhat faster Motorola 68020 based workstations (except for compilations, which now really scream by compiling a quarter meg kernel used to take hours, whereas now it feels like barely seconds pass when compiling kernels that, even compressed, are many times larger. But then, compiler writers for the most part (25 years ago, Green Hills employees seemed a glaring exception and I don t know about Microsoft) have to prove they have learned good programming practices before their skills are considered acceptable). Other software, like the X server, still feels about the same as it did in the eighties, despite today s machines being so much faster. And forget about Windows! 209 benjamin ngobi February 15, 2011 at 3:44 pm wow these are great tools one should know.thank you so much coz it just makes me better every day 210 Mousin February 16, 2011 at 9:52 am

Awesome Thanks a ton worth a bookmark.. 211 krishna February 23, 2011 at 9:17 am Friends I have typed the corrected question here below. Please let me know if you can help: Part1 : Find out the system resources CPU Usage, Memory Usage, & How many process are running currently in exact numbers?, what are the process? Part2: Assume a process CACHE is running on the same system How many files are opened by CACHE out of the total numbers found above?? what are the files used by CACHE? Whats the virtual memory used by the process. What is the current run level of the process. Part3: How many users or terminals are accessing the process CACHE? Part4: The script should run every 15secs with the time of execution & date of script and the output should be given to a file richprocess in the same order as that of the question. Note: NO EXTERNAL TOOLS are allowed to be used with linux. Only shell script should be written for the same! 212 krishna March 4, 2011 at 1:08 pm I got the answer for it i used $vi file1 #!/bin/bash while [ true ] do echo $(date) - >> richprocess echo 1. virtual mem of the system >> richprocess vmstat >> richprocess echo 2. Free mem available in system >> richprocess free -m >> richprocess echo 3. Mem used by cache & to print files used by CACHE pmap -x `ps -A pgrep CACHE` >> richprocess sleep 15 done :wq! $bash file1 & $cat richprocess # to see the output.. I had a worse comment from someone to try a nonexistent website.. saying www.iwantothersdomyhomework.com please dont post things like this. I am asking help only because I want to learn. Thanks for support from this site.. 213 vasu April 16, 2011 at 2:07 am 1) lshw 3) w user 214 ysha March 4, 2011 at 5:06 am thanks.. i love it

215 Rohit Shrivastava March 10, 2011 at 5:01 am Very good for beginners as well as professional. Thank you very much Sir for sharing your knowledge. I really appreciate. 216 ctian March 11, 2011 at 8:41 am nice one. it really works for a newby like me 217 Michael March 17, 2011 at 7:01 am This is really helpful. I know these tools, but did not use them well. Many thanks for your tips. 218 PRADEEP March 28, 2011 at 4:33 am I ve updated kernel now i need to update it without restart the server. Plz help. 219 John April 5, 2011 at 9:29 pm cant see nload on the list, easy showing of whats going on with your network.. nload eth0 should show rest. 220 Parthyz April 12, 2011 at 6:30 am Great Work man.. thanks a lot.. 221 Matias April 12, 2011 at 12:46 pm Nice list. I would add LogWatch, to send daily reports to your mail. 222 sasidaran April 15, 2011 at 5:16 am Good collection of commands. 223 TiTiMan April 15, 2011 at 3:29 pm Thanks for sharing a good list of useful commands. I found a typo where there should not be a dash in front of the options for ps auxf

in the command for Find Out The Top 10 Memory Consuming Process and Find Out top 10 CPU Consuming Process 224 vasu April 16, 2011 at 2:07 am top 225 Sachin Jain April 18, 2011 at 2:16 pm Thanks for sharing such a use full commands, friends i want to watch terminal session, which is logged in vai ssh could you please help me?? 226 chandu May 6, 2011 at 3:06 am Plz help me how write the firewall rules in linux. 227 Jalal Hajigholamali May 6, 2011 at 12:40 pm Hi, see manual page of iptables and get examples from google 228 sudipta June 3, 2011 at 4:58 am GR8 effort Worth 2 b appreciated 229 Liunx June 10, 2011 at 7:56 am That s great! thanks very much. 230 foster June 16, 2011 at 11:13 pm Nagios fork Icinga should be on people s radar as well. https://www.icinga.org/ 231 Jalaluddin June 24, 2011 at 6:55 am Hi I want to learn linux firewall and file server from base. Can u sujjest me, in which link i can get all those useful material.

Thank You 232 Adil Husain June 30, 2011 at 10:43 am Nice list i ll bookmark it for quick ref. 233 Bhanu Kashyap July 9, 2011 at 5:26 pm Its Very Useful For Us. Thanks.!! 234 Raivis July 12, 2011 at 5:48 am systemgraph http://www.decagon.de/sw/systemgraph/ Nice graphical system statistics RRDTool frontend which produces hourly, daily, weekly, monthly graphs of various system data. At the moment it provides graphs for memory usage, cpu info, cpu frequency, disk iostat, number of users, number of processes, number of open files, number of tcp connections, system load, network traffic, protocl statistic, harddisk/partition usage and temperatures, privoxy proxy statistic, ntpdrift, fan status and system temperatures. It is simple and it doesn t require snmp. It consists only of some shell and perl scripts. 235 Aviv.A July 14, 2011 at 10:30 pm You forgot the command htop :D 236 Laurens July 15, 2011 at 10:16 pm An other interesting program wich hasn t been mentioned yet is Midnight Commander (mc). At least it s my favourite file manager in a console environment. Thanks all for your contributions. There are a lot of interesting programs wich I already use, or certainly will be using in the future. 237 Sravi Raj July 19, 2011 at 5:03 am Nice List 238 andy July 21, 2011 at 8:48 am NO PRINT FUNKTION? BIG FAIL IN YOUR FACE damn why is every hole blogging but a printfunktion is missing? i dont need the scrappie comments in my prints.. 239 Tommie September 11, 2011 at 8:27 am

Nice Roundup. However, I love you not having a print function. I am able to print what I need without it ;) htop missing? :) 240 Vivek Gite September 11, 2011 at 12:21 pm To see a print version just append /print to the end of the url. 241 GEORGE FAREED July 25, 2011 at 8:43 pm thaaaaaaaaaaaanks alot :) its useful informations :) 242 apparao August 3, 2011 at 11:36 am Thanks 243 kiran.somidi August 3, 2011 at 12:47 pm traceroute 244 kiran.somidi August 3, 2011 at 12:49 pm tarceroute coomand is not their 245 Lalit Sharma August 7, 2011 at 2:13 pm how can i copy all this? 246 amit lamba August 29, 2011 at 8:16 am m using ubuntu 9.10 on system but problem is regarding internet. unable to connect with internet waiting for useful reply 247 Daniel Brasil August 30, 2011 at 10:03 pm Very good post. I ve some problems trying to figure out historical data about disk usage. I still dont know a good tool for that. sar is wonderful but it s unable to record disk usage per process. You know any tool for that? 248 greg January 6, 2012 at 6:30 pm most monitoring tools like nagios, cacti, and zabbix give you the ability to trend your disk usage, and even

alert at certain capacity points. 249 jock September 6, 2011 at 2:45 am Its great, but i m having a little inconvenient, i want to look the detail for a process, exactly from apache, but the result is always the seem, any one have a trick for see them? explaining better, i have a process from apache but not die, it keep for a long time using the resource and overloading the machine, when i see with a ps auxf the result is apache 32327 85.7 0.5 261164 39036? R 22:49 0:49 \_ /usr/sbin/httpd I want see wath is doing this process 32327 exactly, any idea? 250 greg January 6, 2012 at 7:13 pm you can try strace as mentioned in the tools and you can also look at the files in /proc/pid/ (so /proc/32327 for you) 251 eeb2 September 7, 2011 at 9:25 pm Thanks for posting this list. Keep up the good posts! 252 khupcom September 12, 2011 at 8:30 am I m using monitorix and vnstat to monitor my servers 253 Gaurav kuamr jha October 2, 2011 at 7:42 am Great it was bagger description for me. This is article has solved my lot of problems thanks for this gkjha009 254 x@y.com October 8, 2011 at 10:14 am thanks :) 255 Peter Green October 15, 2011 at 3:29 pm Great article, there are many great suggestions! I want to contribute with these two: GoAccess real-time Apache/nginx log analyzer and viewer, runs in a terminal in *nix systems. CCZE modular log colorizer 256 cirrus October 21, 2011 at 10:44 am

great post cuz, very informative for recent nix converts PCLinuxOS#1 257 David Bothwell November 3, 2011 at 4:27 pm I have just recently released my first open source project the Remote Linux Monitor, which you can find at here. I modeled it on Gnome s System Monitor and I would love get your feedback on it. Thanks. 258 Ferenc Varga November 4, 2011 at 10:06 pm for http traffic, i suggest to use justniffer. 259 bishow November 8, 2011 at 2:22 pm yeah really nice post!!! It s really help me but how about the centos linux command can anyone tell me about that, all the linux command will be same for the all versions of linux (Is it wright guys). or please email me if you know some code of contos linux cause i using this lunux. regards, 260 Unni November 11, 2011 at 1:39 am Well written, keep up the good work... Thanks, Unni 261 Gmaster December 2, 2011 at 12:30 pm Great job in compiling all the utils in one nice post. Thank you very much! 262 Denis December 9, 2011 at 10:30 pm Great stuff, nice to have it all in one place. :-) 263 manna December 12, 2011 at 5:09 am Am working in small company having around 45 employees,we r using linux server in our office, i need to checkout or monitor the user s website, which they are accessing in office hours,please any one suggest me with correct command. Thanks 264 Sibbala Govardhan Raju December 13, 2011 at 10:08 am Dear Sir,

My Name is Govardhan Raju from TIRUPATI, ANDHRA PRADESH. working as a linux (RHEL4) operator. I want to take data backup daily. Is there any posibility to take todays date files only? Please suggest me the commands which are useful to take backup daily with syntax. Thanking U Sir, S Govardhan Raju 265 Kash January 15, 2012 at 2:41 pm This is monitoring article not backup article??? Search your question somewhere else. 266 bhaskar February 6, 2012 at 7:57 pm Hi, I m using windows 7 version. how to access the UNIX commands in windows plat form without installing any set up file or UNIX Operating System. Could you please suggest any to me. Thanks, 267 Steve February 13, 2012 at 4:11 pm I feel an important one is psacct.. Should have at least made the list. Very useful to track what commands/users are eating cpu time. 268 AL February 24, 2012 at 12:55 pm There is another tool we use for system monitoring, it s from IBM called NMON pretty good tool, I recommend it. AL 269 sudhir menon March 21, 2012 at 7:10 am nfsiostat is a great small command on linux 270 nishhhh March 22, 2012 at 2:15 pm nice collection..referencing related articles are like feathers in the cap!! appreciate it..thanks! 271 naveen March 23, 2012 at 8:54 am Dear all, I have deployed some 40 routers in the cafes,60 more in have to deploy in diff region/areas.i want to monitor the

Wifi routers sitting in one place. I have connected Debian installed thin client to each router to provide internet to the customers @ cafe,free browsing for 30 mins. Can some one suggest me a tool for monitoring the Routers & my debian machine performance. Regards Naveen C 272 naveen March 23, 2012 at 8:58 am The router model is DAP-1155 Wireless N 150 i have purchased some 100 and i am planning to buy 300 more. pls do help me Thanks in advance Naveen C 273 LTJX August 2, 2012 at 3:08 pm Such routers often include a management/monitoring package, which may be more immediately useful than using Debian-based commands, and the router software may allow for viewing the multiple routers you describe from a single screen. I know that the latest NETGEAR wireless routers include a software package like this. But, why just 30 minutes per customer? Isn t that the wrong message to give the cafe customers?: Like, hurry up and drink your coffee/tea, and then get out!! Maybe you could try a one hour limit and see what happens. Linux is much more efficient than many people realize, even under heavy usage. I think that Starbucks and similar shops in North America tend to offer unlimited Internet access with any purchase and most don t really seem to enforce the purchase requirement, unless a freeloader is annoying or being offensive to other customers, etc. 274 Stan August 6, 2012 at 6:25 am Have you tried MRTG to monitor your routers. More for just network http://oss.oetiker.ch/mrtg/ 275 Eric April 6, 2012 at 1:18 pm Great post! Some of these I never thought to use that way. When using free I will often use the -m option to display in Mb. (Example: free -m) 276 sudarshan April 11, 2012 at 6:17 am Hi Team,

I required to find the hardware information in linux, can you please advise. I recieved alert as below: Tivoli MINOR for : Accelerator board battery failed thanks sudarshan 277 Prasad August 17, 2012 at 6:23 pm Just do # uname for specific details do: # uname help 278 Navneet April 21, 2012 at 10:34 am Thanks Vivek, For Posting this. It is very useful for Beginners as well. Keep the Great work going on.. 279 Shreyansh Modi May 2, 2012 at 6:04 pm Great Share :) After using a few of these commands I am feeling like I am an Linux Operations Engineer ;) 280 Ravi May 9, 2012 at 6:17 pm Great and useful information. Thanks 281 Michael May 10, 2012 at 10:10 pm Your forgot monit (I dont care why it failed at 3a.m. just fix it and tell me!) and collectd (just record how things are going over the months, without freaky sar..) Michael ;) 282 Omar Osorio June 5, 2012 at 8:27 pm lshw -short

283 vvvv June 12, 2012 at 3:50 am I Liked it too thank you) 284 oran00b June 16, 2012 at 7:05 pm excellent and concise info. For people who are not dedicated Linux Admin but need some tools to work with Linux, this is excellent! 285 darkfader July 3, 2012 at 5:14 pm Learn to use sar well and you ll never need to use iostat, vmstat, etc. 286 William G. Loughran July 11, 2012 at 1:32 pm Excellent can t thank you enough. Not sure what CIFS tools we were using not SAMBA 287 Vichuz July 12, 2012 at 2:17 am Keep up the nice work. 288 seema July 17, 2012 at 8:54 am pl help me as i am new in linux i am copying a folder in /filesystem/usr/local. form pen derive, but it is giving error msg no permission pl help 289 Sandeep July 17, 2012 at 12:19 pm Its really useful.nice one..i liked it!!! 290 Praveen Reddy July 19, 2012 at 5:29 am Hi, How to take data back in Linux Enterprise 6 daily basis and how to speed up (refresh) in linux. is there any specific commands for this??? help me out of this 291 Chetan July 25, 2012 at 7:40 am

One of my fav network traffic monitoring tool is iftop 292 Don Saulo August 2, 2012 at 10:54 am Good job, guys! Thanks for share. 293 netman August 26, 2012 at 3:49 am thanks for your good articles 294 balwant September 1, 2012 at 5:46 pm very very nice.. 295 chinta October 1, 2012 at 3:01 pm very usefull 296 Carlos A. Junior October 1, 2012 at 4:35 pm +1 Great post now i m think more prepared to find an strange memory usage on apache server. Great post. 297 Anup October 5, 2012 at 11:57 am Nice job 298 Richard Cain October 11, 2012 at 7:09 am My new favourite tool is systemd.analyze. It is great for pin-pointing bottle-necks in startup. It can produce a very nice plot of every process, allowing you instantly see what s holding things up. 299 Girijesh October 16, 2012 at 3:54 am very informative!!! Thanks a ton.. :) 300 Shekhar October 22, 2012 at 9:30 am

What is tool to get All activity info. Like any user create/delete/move file or directory information??? 301 Rahul November 8, 2012 at 9:26 am +100 302 Hannes Dorn November 8, 2012 at 10:46 pm Instead of Cacti I prefer munin. Installation and configuration is easy and on monitored systems, only a small client is needed. 303 xuedi November 11, 2012 at 5:50 pm I would replace top with htop, it extents top with a much nicer ncurses and lots of functions 304 Bill November 14, 2012 at 3:02 pm Great list, Shekhar For File Activity etc, I use vigil and vlog client to create the logs 305 Vishal November 15, 2012 at 6:26 am try one for tool to report network interfaces bandwith just like vmstat/iostat # ifstat 306 Vishnuprasad November 25, 2012 at 3:41 pm And I am using watch utility. This is basically not a system monitoring tool. But in some case we need to watch the out put of a command continuously. That time this is not easy to enter the same command all the time and watch the output. In that case you can use this utility. You can set the interval of each refresh. Eg: watch -n 10 df -Th (this is just an example) This command will give you the output of df -Th in each 10 seconds. Then you can easily measure the hard disk usage. Cheers! 307 Vishnuprasad November 25, 2012 at 3:43 pm A better Server Management Software http://www.webmin.com/ Cheers!

308 Konstantin November 28, 2012 at 3:02 am I d also add monit utility, to monitor assorted services and perform actions 9such as restarting the stopped service). 309 jlarchev December 15, 2012 at 7:21 am Hi all, A nice monitoring tool we re using for years : http://sysusage.darold.net 310 Uday Vallamsetty December 31, 2012 at 6:03 pm All of these are must have tools for doing any analysis/monitoring of activity on Linux boxes. Thanks for collecting everything into a concise space. 311 peter January 11, 2013 at 5:04 am very useful article..im a reader of both nixcraft and cyberciti.. well done 312 veera February 7, 2013 at 7:00 am Very nice Thanks for the effort.. 313 sinlir February 8, 2013 at 10:29 am Very nice! 314 wanie February 12, 2013 at 10:38 am Hi.. i would know about your opinion i must do the project about monitoring devices availability what the software in linux about this and i must editing the coding software. 315 Ankit Srivastava February 26, 2013 at 10:01 pm You guys are awesome. I love this website :) Leave a Comment Name * E-mail *

Website You can use these HTML tags and attributes for your code and commands: <strong> <em> <ol> <li> <u> <ul> <blockquote> <pre> <a href="" title=""> Security Question: What is 11 + 6? Solve the simple math so we know that you are a human and not a bot. Tagged as: bandwidth monitoring tool linux, cpu monitoring linux, disk monitoring linux, htop command, load monitoring linux, monitoring linux servers, nagios monitoring linux, netstat command, network monitoring linux, pgrep command, process monitoring linux, ps command, ss command, top command Previous post: My 10 UNIX Command Line Mistakes Next post: Download Of the Day: Firefox 3.5 For Windows, Linux, Mac OS X GET FREE TIPS & NEWS Make the most of Linux Sysadmin work! Youtube Twitter Google + nixcraft Lubię to! 29.136 osób lubi obiekt nixcraft. W tyczka społecznościowa Facebooka Related Posts

How to: Troubleshoot UNIX / Linux BIND DNS server problems ss: Display Linux TCP / UDP Network and Socket Information Quick Tip: Find Hidden Processes and Ports [ Linux / Unix / Windows ] Linux / UNIX: Scanning network for open ports with nmap command Command Get Detailed Information About Particular IP address Connections Using netstat Security Tip: Find out current working directory of a process Linux List The Open Ports And The Process That Owns Them

Monitor and restart Apache or lighttpd webserver when daemon is killed Tentakel to execute commands on multiple Linux or UNIX Servers How do I find out what shell I m using? 2004-2013 nixcraft. All rights reserved. Cannot be reproduced without written permission. Privacy Policy Terms of Service Questions or Comments Copyright Info Sitemap