OSI/TS Configuration and Management Manual
Performing Monitoring and Troubleshooting Guide
OSI/TS Configuration and Management Manual—424831-001
4-3
Monitoring Performance
CPU, disk, or communications line, or by scheduling parts of the workload to run at 
different times of the day.
The operating attribute values can also cause performance problems if they are set 
incorrectly or are set at non-optimum values for your system. These attribute values are 
set at system generation and in the configuration. In some situations, changing an 
attribute may not substantially affect performance unless the congestion of the 
overcommitted resource or resources is reduced.
Monitoring Performance
Once the OSI/TS subsystem is installed and operational, you should begin procedures 
for ongoing monitoring. Monitoring should be a regular activity that continues for the 
life of the system.
At first, monitoring should be frequent and very comprehensive. When the system 
stabilizes, you can reduce monitoring activity.  Your monitoring activity must always be 
frequent enough and comprehensive enough to detect problems before they affect 
system users. To effectively monitor performance on your system, you need to 
determine the following:
•
What tools to use
•
What to monitor
•
When to monitor
What Tools to Use
You can monitor performance using various hardware and software tools, through either 
operator-initiated actions or program-initiated actions. Hardware monitoring is 
performed using response-time monitors, line monitors, and other hardware monitoring 
tools (external to Compaq products) to determine what is happening in the CPU or on 
the communications lines. Software monitoring tools include traces, SCF, DSM, 
Measure, and event messages.
What Performance Indicators to Monitor
Your goal in performance analysis and monitoring is to define both the adequacy and the 
limits of your system.  These activities, however, must be evaluated in terms of the 
performance benefit that can be obtained versus the expense of the resources.
To improve performance, it is necessary to obtain a comprehensive picture of the 
subsystem, the major applications, and the resources used by each of them.  This 
information can be divided into four types of data:
•
Current system configuration
You can determine the current system configuration and OSI/TS subsystem 
attributes using the SCF LISTDEV, SCF INFO, and SCF STATUS commands.  
These commands provide information on the number of processes and other 
attribute values.










