TranslateProject/sources/tech/20190905 How to Get Average CPU and Memory Usage from SAR Reports Using the Bash Script.md
2019-09-11 08:55:41 +08:00

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How to Get Average CPU and Memory Usage from SAR Reports Using the Bash Script

Most Linux administrator monitor system performance with SAR report because it collect performance data for a week.

But you can easily extend this to four weeks by making changes to the “/etc/sysconfig/sysstat” file.

Also, this period can be extended beyond one month. If the value exceeds 28, the log files are placed in multiple directories, one for each month.

To extend the coverage period to 28 days, make the following change to the “/etc/sysconfig/sysstat” file.

Edit the sysstat file and change HISTORY=7 to HISTORY=28.

In this article we have added three bash scripts that will help you to easily view each data file averages in one place.

We have added many useful shell scripts in the past. If you want to check out that collection, go to the link below.

These scripts are simple and straightforward. For testing purposes, we have included only two performance metrics, namely CPU and memory.

You can modify other performance metrics in the script to suit your needs.

Script-1: Bash Script to Get Average CPU Utilization from SAR Reports

This bash script collects the CPU average from each data file and display it on one page.

Since this is a month end, it shows 28 days data for August 2019.

# vi /opt/scripts/sar-cpu-avg.sh

#!/bin/sh

echo "+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+"
echo "|Average:         CPU     %user     %nice   %system   %iowait    %steal     %idle  |"
echo "+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+"

for file in `ls -tr /var/log/sa/sa* | grep -v sar`

do

dat=`sar -f $file | head -n 1 | awk '{print $4}'`

echo -n $dat

sar -f $file  | grep -i Average | sed "s/Average://"

done

echo "+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+"

Once you run the script, you will get an output like the one below.

# sh /opt/scripts/sar-cpu-avg.sh

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Average:         CPU     %user     %nice   %system   %iowait    %steal     %idle  |
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
08/01/2019        all      0.70      0.00      1.19      0.00      0.00     98.10
08/02/2019        all      1.73      0.00      3.16      0.01      0.00     95.10
08/03/2019        all      1.73      0.00      3.16      0.01      0.00     95.11
08/04/2019        all      1.02      0.00      1.80      0.00      0.00     97.18
08/05/2019        all      0.68      0.00      1.08      0.01      0.00     98.24
08/06/2019        all      0.71      0.00      1.17      0.00      0.00     98.12
08/07/2019        all      1.79      0.00      3.17      0.01      0.00     95.03
08/08/2019        all      1.78      0.00      3.14      0.01      0.00     95.08
08/09/2019        all      1.07      0.00      1.82      0.00      0.00     97.10
08/10/2019        all      0.38      0.00      0.50      0.00      0.00     99.12
.
.
.
08/29/2019        all      1.50      0.00      2.33      0.00      0.00     96.17
08/30/2019        all      2.32      0.00      3.47      0.01      0.00     94.20
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

Script-2: Bash Script to Get Average Memory Utilization from SAR Reports

This bash script will collect memory averages from each data file and display it on one page.

Since this is a month end, it shows 28 days data for August 2019.

# vi /opt/scripts/sar-memory-avg.sh

#!/bin/sh

echo "+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+"
echo "|Average:       kbmemfree kbmemused  %memused kbbuffers kbcached  kbcommit   %commit  kbactive   kbinact   kbdirty  |"
echo "+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+"

for file in `ls -tr /var/log/sa/sa* | grep -v sar`

do

dat=`sar -f $file | head -n 1 | awk '{print $4}'`

echo -n $dat

sar -r -f $file  | grep -i Average | sed "s/Average://"

done

echo "+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+"

Once you run the script, you will get an output like the one below.

# sh /opt/scripts/sar-memory-avg.sh

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Average:        kbmemfree kbmemused  %memused kbbuffers kbcached  kbcommit   %commit  kbactive   kbinact   kbdirty  |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
08/01/2019      1492331   2388461     61.55     29888   1152142   1560615     12.72   1693031    380472         6
08/02/2019      1493126   2387666     61.53     29888   1147811   1569624     12.79   1696387    373346         3
08/03/2019      1489582   2391210     61.62     29888   1147076   1581711     12.89   1701480    370325         3
08/04/2019      1490403   2390389     61.60     29888   1148206   1569671     12.79   1697654    373484         4
08/05/2019      1484506   2396286     61.75     29888   1152409   1563804     12.75   1702424    374628         4
08/06/2019      1473593   2407199     62.03     29888   1151137   1577491     12.86   1715426    371000         8
08/07/2019      1467150   2413642     62.19     29888   1155639   1596653     13.01   1716900    372574        13
08/08/2019      1451366   2429426     62.60     29888   1162253   1604672     13.08   1725931    376998         5
08/09/2019      1451191   2429601     62.61     29888   1158696   1582192     12.90   1728819    371025         4
08/10/2019      1450050   2430742     62.64     29888   1160916   1579888     12.88   1729975    370844         5
.
.
.
08/29/2019      1365699   2515093     64.81     29888   1198832   1593567     12.99   1781733    376157        15
08/30/2019      1361920   2518872     64.91     29888   1200785   1595105     13.00   1784556    375641         8
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

Script-3: Bash Script to Get Average CPU & Memory Utilization from SAR Reports

This bash script collects the CPU & memory averages from each data file and displays them on a page.

This bash script is slightly different compared to the above script. It shows the average of both (CPU & Memory) in one location, not the other data.

# vi /opt/scripts/sar-cpu-mem-avg.sh

#!/bin/bash

for file in `ls -tr /var/log/sa/sa* | grep -v sar`

do

        sar -f $file | head -n 1 | awk '{print $4}'

        echo "-----------"

        sar -u -f $file | awk '/Average:/{printf("CPU Average: %.2f%\n"), 100 - $8}'

        sar -r -f $file | awk '/Average:/{printf("Memory Average: %.2f%\n"),(($3-$5-$6)/($2+$3)) * 100 }'

        printf "\n"

done

Once you run the script, you will get an output like the one below.

# sh /opt/scripts/sar-cpu-mem-avg.sh

08/01/2019
-----------
CPU Average: 1.90%
Memory Average: 31.09%

08/02/2019
-----------
CPU Average: 4.90%
Memory Average: 31.18%

08/03/2019
-----------
CPU Average: 4.89%
Memory Average: 31.29%

08/04/2019
-----------
CPU Average: 2.82%
Memory Average: 31.24%

08/05/2019
-----------
CPU Average: 1.76%
Memory Average: 31.28%
.
.
.
08/29/2019
-----------
CPU Average: 3.83%
Memory Average: 33.15%

08/30/2019
-----------
CPU Average: 5.80%
Memory Average: 33.19%

via: https://www.2daygeek.com/linux-get-average-cpu-memory-utilization-from-sar-data-report/

作者:Magesh Maruthamuthu 选题:lujun9972 译者:译者ID 校对:校对者ID

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