sysstat
12.4.2
About: sysstat is a collection of performance monitoring tools for Linux including amongst others sar (collects and reports system activity) and iostat (reports CPU statistics and I/O statistics for tty devices and disks). Stable version.
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(C) 1999-2020 Sebastien GODARD (sysstat (at) orange (dot) fr)
The sysstat package contains various utilities, common to many commercial Unixes, to monitor system performance and usage activity:
Sysstat also contains tools you can schedule via cron or systemd to collect and historize performance and activity data:
Default sampling interval is 10 minutes but this can be changed of course (it can be as small as 1 second).
--human
):Sysstat is Open Source / Free Software, and is freely available under the GNU General Public License, version 2. The latest version of sysstat can always be found on my web site at:
http://pagesperso-orange.fr/sebastien.godard/
See the CHANGES file to know the new features/improvements/bug fixes added in this release of sysstat. Sysstat development can be tracked on GitHub.
Enter:
$ sudo yum install sysstat
CentOS and Fedora systems call the collector process using a cron job in /etc/cron.d and it's enabled by default. On recent versions, systemd is used instead of cron. You may need to enable and start the sysstat service:
$ sudo systemctl enable sysstat
$ sudo systemctl start sysstat
Enter:
$ sudo apt-get install sysstat
Then enable data collecting:
$ sudo vi /etc/default/sysstat
change ENABLED="false" to ENABLED="true"
save the file
Last, restart the sysstat service:
$ sudo service sysstat restart
Clone sysstat public repository with:
$ git clone git://github.com/sysstat/sysstat
Then configure sysstat for your system:
$ cd sysstat
$ ./configure
You can set several variables and parameters on the command line. For example you can enter the following option to activate data collecting (either using cron or systemd):
$ ./configure --enable-install-cron
Enter ./configure --help
to display all possible options.
Note: There is another way to configure sysstat instead of entering ./configure
: This is the Interactive Configuration script (iconfig) which will ask you for the value of the main sysstat variables and parameters. Enter ./iconfig
then answer the questions or enter Return to accept the (sane) default values. For yes/no questions, answer 'y' or 'n' (without the quotes): It is case sensitive! You can also enter '?' to get a help message that will explain the meaning of each variable or parameter.
Compile and install:
$ make
$ sudo make install
Please use the BUG_REPORT template file to report a bug: It contains important data that should be provided for this. Please also remember to read the FAQ that comes with sysstat or is available from the Wiki page on GitHub.
Opening an issue or a pull request on GitHub is the preferred way to report a bug or submit a patch. Patches and suggestions for improvements are always welcome!
If you are reading this README file then you are probably about to use the sysstat tools to help you monitor your system and maybe troubleshoot some performance issues. Good choice. Sysstat is made for you. Moreover sysstat is free software and always will be.
Yet have you ever considered making a donation to sysstat, regardless of how much your contribution is? This in turn would encourage me to keep up the work as good as it can be... Oh, and it would certainly also help me explain to my wife why I spend so much time in front of my computer instead of taking care of the household ;-)
Click on the "Donate PayPal" button above at the beginning of this file. You can also make a donation from my web page.
Enjoy!
--
Sebastien GODARD - sysstat (at) orange (dot) fr