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15:52
hi
16:50
Hi, I was in the car between office and home when you started the cat
the chat
Are you there now?
hi
I am here
OK
I have 1 question
thank so much for helping me
You are welcome!
basically that file, I've posted has bunch of device entries
unlike cpu and others as only having only one
16:51
So the question I have is this:
you are examining several different sysmon files
I need to get all these device Total I/Os
Does each sysmon file contain the same device entries?
If I do this for one file, I can do it for the others
so the output would be like this
Date cpu iobusy count /dev/vx/rdsk/sybaserdatadg/datadev_125 /dev/vx/rdsk/sybaserdatadg/datadev_126 /dev/vx/rdsk/sybaserdatadg/datadev_127
those would be the column names
of course there are a lot more device
maybe like 50
it goes like this
Device Activity Detail
----------------------

Device:
/dev/vx/rdsk/sybaserdatadg/datadev_125
datadev_125 per sec per xact count % of total
------------------------- ------------ ------------ ---------- ----------
Total I/Os 0.0 0.0 0 n/a
------------------------- ------------ ------------ ---------- ----------
Total I/Os 0.0 0.0 0 0.0 %


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
so I would need to capture this as column name "/dev/vx/rdsk/sybaserdatadg/datadev_125 " and
yes
sysmon would include the same device info
they are from the same server
output I have place is here did not look right
16:55
So each file would produce a data.frame output with exactly the same number and names of columns, right?
but the I have the posted in the original post
yes
I can read your code, if I am looking to capture only one other metric I can do it
but device info is a lot
Yes, I understand that there are are many devices.
Question: do you need the Total I/Os count for ALL the devices appearing in the sysmon file?
for each device differently
for all devices
this is really good
we actually caught a problem parsing this file
that you have helped
OK -- really glad to be of help.
is it clear what I am trying to do
since the script caught a problem, next thing is to show which one :)
17:03
Yes, it is perfecly clear. I just have one more question about the structure of the dataset (the sysmon files). In your original post, I just noticed something peculiar: for devices datadev_126 and datadev_127 there are two lines with "Total I/Os"
I guess that for those devices, I should take the second "Total I/Os" (which probably is the overall total); right?
I'm asking because the sybaseR.datadev_000 device only has 1 row with "Total I/Os"
OK, I think I know enough and I believe I know how to do this. I need about 15-20 mins to test my idea.
those are there probably not doing anything
17:53
OK, I should have something working; just edited the original post with this second solution.
thank you, let me try it
it worked on a single file
file.list <- rep("file2.txt",3)
merged <- do.call("rbind", lapply(file.list, extractv2))
print(merged)
file.list is the vector of files in a directory?
Yes, it is
merged is the total data.frame?
file.list <- dir("./")
let me try that
18:02
Yes, merged is the whole data.frame for all files
it will ignore the . right?
You are on Unix, right?
no
windows
You should then give the path in Windows format
Or place the R terminal in the same directory as where the files are
I got that
I can do this to only search for files that have pattenr
let me give it a shot
I get this error
when I try to rbind all the files
Error in txt[ii_lines_IOs_dev] : invalid subscript type 'list'
is it possible to do tryCatch in this case?
18:16
Wild guess: is it possible that you have sysmon files without any "Device:" line?
I think you're right
can we do tryCatch
If you are applying extractv2 to multiple files and do not know which file generated the error, you could modify the definition of extractv2 adding a statement print(filenam) as the first line of the function; this way you know which file has zero devices
The problem with this situation is what I was afraid from the beginning: that you have a variable number of "device" columns
You might have 4 columns (4 devices, as in your original post) or zero (which generates said error); perhaps even intermediate values
We can certainly fix the code so that it executes correctly with zero devices.
does it make sense to create a one comunn called device and
put the device names in that and have another column with values
18:19
But you cannot merge at the end, because the dataframes would have different numbers/names of columns.
Yes
no
names of the columns would be same
device_name, io_value
It depends a lot on how you intend to use your resulting data.frame.
entries maybe the same or different for each datetime
this way, we get rid of the risk of having the same names for each device
if they make a change add/remove device
OK. It is now clear that your data is not "rectangular" (tabular): for each file you get a part which has non-variable structure: 4 columns Date cpu iobusy count
18:24
Plus you have a part which is variable: a list of pairs (device, count), where the lenght of the list is variable
and also the names of the devices might be variable.
if could add device_name and IO_value
I think would work
regardless of the variations in the names in sysmon
we keep adding device_names and Io values
what do you think?
Indeed, this is the most flexible data structure, which is always going to work.
But it is less "handy" than a table (data.frame)
It all strongly depends on the intended usage of your output.
once I have this, I can always play around with this table
You probably have to write automated reports?
So let's recap.
Say you have 100 files
As we imagine it now, you would have 2 outputs:
1 dataframe, containing the four columns Date cpu iobusy count, where each row corresponds to 1 sysmon file
1 dataframe containing three columns:
18:28
"sysmon.file", "device, "count"
they could be separate scripts
no
date device_name count
I would need date also
Don't you need to be able to distinguish where each (date, device, count) triple comes from?
not necessary
if it is easy, it is ok
I definitely need date
last_run current_run seconds
------------------------------- ------------------------------- -----------
Aug 2 2016 5:24AM Aug 2 2016 5:25AM 39
the same line/code in your first script
OK. So the date would again be "current_run"?
AHA
18:31
So the date is the identifier
Got it
yes, I need to parse hundreds of these and be able to see the pattern
which device is the problematic
You periodically run your monitoring script and need reports of the results
Aha! Then getting two tables is not a problem at all. You can parse/postprocess both/either of them in search of errors
And then join the identified problems using the date as key
for each line for each device_name and count, I would need a date
18:34
OK
Give me a few minutes...
thank you so much
BTW what is the "iobusy" field?
that's how long engines is waiting for an IO
we actually noticed with your script that its very hihg
so, we need to determine which device so that we can check the lun config or storage issues
with this output, we can show evidence
it'll be great
Well I meant which row so that I could incorporate it in extract() but I see that you already figured that out :D
ok
you have that in your original script
one second
sorry
no you didnot
I had to put it there
jj <- grep("Engine Utilization (Tick %)", txt, fixed=TRUE)[1]
ii <- grep("Server Summary",txt, fixed=TRUE)
ii <- 1 + min(ii[ii>jj])
line_Cpu <- Filter(function(v) v!="", strsplit(txt[ii]," ")[[1]])
Cpu <- line_Cpu[2]
##io_busy
io_busy<-line_Cpu[6]
18:40
OK I trust you did it right :D
it is in cpu_line
6th column
18:54
OK I posted extractv3
Going to a hopefully deserved dinner now :D
omg
yes
I'll buy
how does this work
running it
let's see?
I don't see the IO busy
did you grep the Total I/Os per second row and column
 
2 hours later…
20:40
thank you so much

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