Table of Contents

NMON for Linux


This systems administrator, tuner, benchmark tool gives you a huge amount of important performance information in one go. It can output the data in two ways

On screen (console, telnet, VNC, putty or X Windows) using curses for low CPU impact which is updated once every two seconds. You hit single characters on you keyboard to enable/disable the various sorts of data. You can display the CPU, memory, network, disks (mini graphs or numbers), file systems, NFS, top processes, resources (Linux version & processors) and on Power micro-partition information. For lots of examples, see the “Screen shots” from the left menu. As you can see on the left lmon12e now in colour

Save the data to a comma separated file for analysis and longer term data capture. Use this together with nmon Analyser Excel 2000 spreadsheet, which loads the nmon output file and automatically creates dozens of graphs ready for you to study or write performance reports. Filter this data, add it to a rrd database (using an excellent freely available utility called rrdtool). This graphs the data to .gif or .png files plus generates the webpage .html file and you can then put the graphs directly on a website automatically on AIX with no need of a Windows based machine. Directly put the data into a rrd database or other database for your own analysis

Details


For the pre-compiled versions - click on Download

For the source code & compiling - click on Compiling nmon Data Analysis

Once you save the nmon data you have a number of options to analyser and graph the statistics.

nmon Analyser Excel Spread-sheet Download

Sample Graphs out of the many (see screen shots for more and larger examples):

CPU Compared to Disk I/O Disk Read and Write with I/O per second Hot Disk analysis with Average, Weighted Average and Peak values Network Read (top half) and Write (bottom half) Transfer Rates

Now - Open Source


nmon for Linux is a single source code file of 5000 lines and single makefile. This will enable you to compile nmon for your precise Linux version (if you can't find what you want in the binaries) and open a few other possibilities:

Thanks for your support, suggestions, testing and I hope this starts a whole new wave of development and interest.