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Tim,

Display your QZDASOINIT jobs and look at their open files. Sometimes an
errant client application opens the same files multiple times. Look for a
pattern of duplicated file opens.

It could also be an SQL client application is not committing database
changes regularly enough. Until a commit all changes remain in memory.
Looking at the file I/O for a job should point you in the right direction.

It could also be someone running a query that has to create a data path.
You may want to query (no pun intended) users that have access to ad hoc
reporting tools and the development staff to see if they are using OPNQRYF
or SQL in an ad hoc manner.

-----Original Message-----

date: Mon, 9 Feb 2009 12:39:14 -0500
from: "tim" <tim2006@xxxxxxxxxxx>
subject: something is eating my iseries resources, but im not sure how
to find it.

At various times during the day the system comes to a crawl. I do a
wrkactjob, but it doesn't show anything. I just purchased performance tools,
but not sure how to set it up to find the hog(s).



Is there a way that the system could tell me what job/processs/etc is
slowing us down? Im guessing I have to have this monitor run all day long.
I just don't know what to run and how to find the problem.



Any suggestions would be great.






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