ja(1)ja(1)NAMEja - starts and stops user job accounting information
SYNOPSISja [-a ash] [-c] [-d] [-D level] [-e] [-f] [-g gid] [-h] [-j jid] [-J]
[l] [m] [-M marks] [-n names] [-o] [-p projid] [-r] [-s] [-t] [-u uid]
[file]
DESCRIPTION
The ja command provides job-related accounting information. This
information is taken from the job accounting file to which the kernel
writes, provided that job accounting is enabled. The job accounting file
can be either the file you provide or the default, described in the
following. ja provides information only about terminated processes. The
login shell and the current ja command being executed are active
processes and are not reported by ja. See ps(1) for information about
active processes.
To enable job accounting, use the ja command. You may specify only the
mark option (-m) and the optional file name when enabling. If the job
accounting file does not exist, ja creates it. If the file does exist,
accounting information is appended to the existing file. If job
accounting is already enabled and the optional filename specified is a
file other than the currently active job accounting file, the newly
specified file becomes the job accounting file.
If you do not specify the optional filename, the ACCT_TMPDIR environment
variable must be set to a directory. A default name of the following
form is then used:
$ACCT_TMPDIR/.jacct<jid>
The ACCT_TMPDIR environment variable is not exported in at(1) or
crontab(1) jobs. You must specify the job accounting filename in the
at(1) or crontab(1) commands; otherwise, ja will abort.
On normal termination of job accounting (-t specified), ja removes the
default job accounting file and disables job accounting. If you specify
the optional filename when enabling, specify the same name when
terminating. The optional job accounting file is not deleted by the ja
command.
The ja command lets you mark the positions of various commands
(processes) by writing the position of the next accounting record to be
processed to standard output. You can use these marks when generating
reports to restrict the information reported.
There are four groups of options you can use with the ja command:
Report selection options
-c, -f, -o, -s
Record selection options
-a ash, -g gid, -j jid, -M marks, -n names, -p projid, and -u uid
Page 1
ja(1)ja(1)
Report modifier options
-d, -e, -h, -J, -l
Special options (debug, mark, raw, and disable)
-D, -m, -r, and -t
Report Selection Options
The ja command can produce different types of reports by using the -c,
-f, -o, and -s options. The report-selection options are first
summarized and then described in detail.
In summary, the report selection options are as follows:
-c Produces the command report (-c and -o are mutually exclusive).
-f Produces the command flow report.
-o Produces the other (alternative) command report (-o and -c are
mutually exclusive).
-s Produces the summary report.
Described in detail, the report selection options are as follows:
-c Produces a command report. The following fields are reported when
you specify the -c option with the -l option or with the -l and -h
options. These fields provide statistics about individual
processes.
Command Name First 16 characters of the name of the
command that was executed.
Started At Start time of the process.
Elapsed Seconds Elapsed time of the process.
User CPU Seconds Amount of CPU time the process consumed
while it was executing in user mode.
Sys CPU Seconds Amount of CPU time the process consumed
while it was executing in system mode.
Run Queue Wait Secs Amount of time the process waits for the
CPU.
Blk I/O Wait Secs Amount of time the process waits for
block I/O completion.
Raw I/O Wait Secs Amount of time the process waits for raw
I/O completion.
Page 2
ja(1)ja(1)
CPU MEM Avg Mbytes (-l) Average amount of memory that this
process used. This value is calculated
by dividing the memory integral by the
total CPU time (system + user CPU time).
For more information on memory integrals,
see the IRIX Admin: Resource
Administration manual.
Characters Read (-l) Number of characters in Mbytes read
by the read, reada, and lio_listio system
calls (see read(2), reada(2), and
lio_listio(3)).
Characters Written (-l) Number of characters in Mbytes
written by the write, writea, and
lio_listio system calls (see write(2),
writea(2), and lio_listio(3)).
Blocks Read (-l) Number of blocks read by the read,
reada, and lio_listio system calls (see
read(2), reada(2), and lio_listio(3)).
Blocks Written (-l) Number of blocks written by the
write, writea, and lio_listio system
calls (see writea(2), writea(2), and
lio_listio(3)).
Logical I/O Read (-l) Number of logical I/O read requests
that the process performed. A logical
I/O request is performed each time a
process calls a read or reada system
call.
Logical I/O Written (-l) Number of logical I/O write requests
that the process performed. A logical
I/O write request is performed each time
a process calls a write or writea system
call.
CoreMem HiValue (-h) (-l) Maximum amount of core memory
the process used at any one time. The
value is reported in Kbytes.
VirtMem HiValue (-h) (-l) Maximum amount of virtual
memory the process used at any one time.
The value is reported in Kbytes.
Ex St (-l) Lower 8 bits from the exit status of
the process. See wait(2) for more
information.
Page 3
ja(1)ja(1)
Ni (-l) The last nice value of the process;
reported when the total CPU time (user +
system CPU time) is less than 1 second.
If the total CPU time is greater than or
equal to 1 second, the minimum nice value
at 1 second and onward is listed. The
minimum nice value corresponds to the
highest priority the process was niced.
Fl (-l) Accounting flag. The following
values are available:
F The process forked but did not
execute.
S The process used superuser
privileges.
The accounting flags are defined in
/usr/include/sys/acct.h.
SBUs System billing unit (SBU) for the
process. The system administrator
configures SBU calculations. For more
information, see the IRIX Admin: Resource
Administration manual.
-f Produces a command flow report. This report provides information
on the parent/child relationships of processes and, if you specify
the -l option, CPU user and system time (in seconds).
-o Produces an alternative (other) command report. The -o option
report contains the following fields, which show statistics about
individual processes.
Command Name First 16 characters of the name of the
command that was executed.
Started At Start time of the process.
Elapsed Seconds Elapsed time of the process.
Proc ID Process ID of the current process.
Parent ProcID Process ID of the parent process.
Number of Swaps Number of swaps for the current process.
CoreMem HiWater Maximum amount of core memory the
process used at any one time. The value
is reported in Kbytes.
Page 4
ja(1)ja(1)
VirtMem HiWater Maximum amount of virtual memory the
process used at any one time. The value
is reported in Kbytes.
-s Produces a summary report. The -s option report contains the
following fields, which provide accumulated usage statistics for
the reporting period.
Job Accounting Filename Name of the file to which the kernel
writes the ja accounting records.
Operating System Operating system name, node name,
release, version, and hardware type.
User Name (ID) Name and user ID of the real user.
Group Name (ID) Name and group ID of the real group.
Project Name (ID) Project name and project number that
this process uses. Multiple project
ID usage is listed, but not
individual projects.
Array Session Handle Array Session Handle associated with
these processes.
Job ID Job ID associated with these
processes.
Report Starts Starting time of the process that
began first during the reporting
period.
Report Ends Ending time of the process that was
the last to complete during the
reporting period.
Elapsed Time Duration of the reporting period in
seconds (the difference between the
report ending and starting times).
User CPU Time Total CPU time (in seconds) used
during the reporting period while
the processes were in user mode.
System CPU Time Total CPU time (in seconds) used
during the reporting period while
the processes were in system mode.
Run Queue Wait Time Total time (in seconds) during the
reporting period while the processes
were waiting for the CPU.
Page 5
ja(1)ja(1)
Block I/O Wait Time Total time (in seconds) during the
reporting period while the processes
were waiting for block I/O
completion.
Raw I/O Wait Time Total time (in seconds) during the
reporting period while the processes
were waiting for raw I/O completion.
CPU Time Core Memory Integral (Mbyte-seconds)
Sum of the core memory integrals for
all processes. For more information
on memory integrals, see the IRIX
Admin: Resource Administration
manual.
CPU Time Virtual Memory Integral (Mbyte-seconds)
Sum of the virtual memory integrals
for all processes.
Maximum Core Memory Used (Mbytes)
Largest single high-water core
memory usage value among the
processes within the job (not an
aggregate total).
Maximum Virtual Memory Used (Mbytes)
Largest single high-water virtual
memory usage value among the
processes within the job (not an
aggregate total).
Characters Read Total number of characters read by
the read(2), reada(2), and
lio_listio(3) system calls by all
processes in the reporting period.
Characters Written Total number of characters written
by the write(2), writea(2), and
lio_listio(3) system calls by all
processes in the reporting period.
Blocks Read Total number of blocks read by the
read(2), reada(2), and lio_listio(3)
system calls by all processes in the
reporting period.
Blocks Written Total number of characters written
by the write(2), writea(2), and
lio_listio(3) system calls by all
processes in the reporting period.
Page 6
ja(1)ja(1)
Logical I/O Read Requests Total number of read(2) and reada(2)
system calls executed by all
processes in the reporting period.
Logical I/O Write Requests Total number of write(2) and
writea(2) system calls executed by
all processes in the reporting
period.
Number of Commands Total number of commands that
completed during the reporting
period.
System Billing Units Sum of the system billing units
(SBUs) of all processes.
Mark and Disable Options
The mark and disable options are as follows:
-m Writes the position of the next accounting record to standard
output. This can be used to mark various positions within the job
accounting file for later use with the -M option. The position
marked is the byte offset of the current end-of-information of the
job accounting file. (-m cannot be used with the report selection
and modifier options nor with the -t disable option.)
-t Disables (terminates) job accounting. (-m and -t are mutually
exclusive).
Record Selection Options
-a ash Report is for this array session handle (ash) only.
-g gid Report is for this group identifier (gid) or group name only.
-j jid Report is for this job identifier (jid) only.
-u uid Report is for this user identifier (uid) or user name only.
-n names Shows only commands matching names patterns that may be regular
expressions, as in regcmp(3G).
-p projid Report is for this project identifier (projid) or project name
only.
-M marks Shows only commands within the marked range. This can be a
list of ranges with each list item having the following form:
. First command preceding current position
m1 First command following mark
Page 7
ja(1)ja(1)
m1: All commands between the mark and EOF
m1:m2 All commands between the two marks
:m1 All commands between BOF and the mark
: All commands between BOF and EOF (default)
See the -m option for information on how to obtain marks. The
-M option must be used with the -c option.
Report Modifier Options
Report modifier options must be used with at least one report selection
option. The report modifier options are as follows:
-d Reports on NQS and tape usage.
-e Generates an extended summary report; you must use -e with the -s
option. The following are descriptions of fields produced by
specifying the -e option with the -s option. These fields provide
additional accumulated statistics for the reporting period:
Number of Swaps Number of times the processes were swapped
out of memory.
-h Provides the largest amount of core and virtual memory the process
used at one time in 1K units. Used only with both the -c and -l
options.
-J Includes information about start and end of job records in the
report when used with the -c option. Includes summary information
about record types when used with the -s option.
-l Provides additional information when used with the -c or -f
options.
-r Raw mode, no headers are printed.
-D Enables debugging for the ja command. Valid values are 1 through
4. Debugging is off by default. A debug level greater than one
provides program flow information. A debug level greater than
three provides additional information about records which are
skipped over due to the requested ja record selection options.
EXAMPLES
Examples 1 and 2 show the usage of the -m and -M options with standard
shell and Korn shell variables.
Example 1:
Page 8
ja(1)ja(1)ja #enable job accounting
.
. (Miscellaneous commands)
.
m1=`ja -m` #mark job accounting file's current position
.
. (Commands of special interest)
.
m2=`ja -m` #mark job accounting file's current position
.
. (Miscellaneous commands)
.
ja-cM $m1:$m2 #print command report from mark m1 to mark m2
ja-st #print summary report for entire session and disable
job accounting
Example 2:
ja #enable job accounting
.
. (Miscellaneous commands)
.
m1=`ja -m` #mark job accounting file's current position
.
. (Commands of special interest)
.
ja-cM $m1: #print command report from mark to EOF
.
. (Miscellaneous commands)
.
ja-st #print summary report for entire session and disable
job accounting
Example 3:
This example shows example output when you use the -c option.
Job Accounting - Command Report
===============================
Command Started Elapsed User CPU Sys CPU Run Queue Blk I/O Raw I/O
Name At Seconds Seconds Seconds Wait Secs Wait Secs Wait Secs SBU's
======= ======== ======= ======== ======= ========= ========= ========= =====
# CFG ON( 1) ( 6) 18:13:39 01/23/2000 System: bugatti 6.5-ALPHA-1286745 IP27
ja 18:13:38 0.32 0.31 0.01 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
who 18:13:46 0.03 0.00 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.00 0.00
pwd 18:13:49 0.03 0.00 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.00 0.00
ja 18:14:05 0.02 0.00 0.01 0.01 0.00 0.00 0.00
Page 9
ja(1)ja(1)
The # CFG ON output line is a configuration record written when job
accounting was enabled via the ja command. This record contains the
daemon accounting types enabled, record accounting types enabled, last
system boot-time, and system identification information.
Example 4:
The following example shows the output of the -s option:
Job CSA Accounting - Summary Report
====================================
Job Accounting File Name : /tmp/ja.username
Operating System : IRIX64 snow 6.5 10120733 IP27
User Name (ID) : username (10320)
Group Name (ID) : resmgmt (16061)
Project Name (ID) : CSA(40)
Array Session Handle : 0x000000000000034b
Job ID : 0x310
Report Starts : 01/23/00 18:13:38
Report Ends : 01/23/00 18:17:05
Elapsed Time : 207 Seconds
User CPU Time : 0.9340 Seconds
System CPU Time : 0.0643 Seconds
Run Queue Wait Time : 0.6463 Seconds
Block I/O Wait Time : 0.1888 Seconds
Raw I/O Wait Time : 0.1323 Seconds
CPU Time Core Memory Integral : 0.4305 Mbyte-seconds
CPU Time Virtual Memory Integral : 4.3298 Mbyte-seconds
Maximum Core Memory Used : 0.1094 Mbytes
Maximum Virtual Memory Used : 38.0000 Mbytes
Characters Read : 0.0603 Mbytes
Characters Written : 0.0023 Mbytes
Blocks Read : 7
Blocks Written : 0
Logical I/O Read Requests : 35
Logical I/O Write Requests : 42
Number of Commands : 7
System Billing Units : 0.0000
SEE ALSOat(1), crontab(1), csa(1M), csacom(1), sh(1), read(2), reada(2), wait(2),
write(2), writea(2), lio_listio(3).
Page 10