InfoScale™ 9.0 Storage and Availability Management for DB2 Databases - AIX, Linux
- Section I. Storage Foundation High Availability (SFHA) management solutions for DB2 databases
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Databases
- About Veritas File System
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Databases
- Section II. Deploying DB2 with InfoScale products
- Deployment options for DB2 in a Storage Foundation environment
- Deploying DB2 with Storage Foundation
- Deploying DB2 in an off-host configuration with Storage Foundation
- Deploying DB2 with High Availability
- Deployment options for DB2 in a Storage Foundation environment
- Section III. Configuring Storage Foundation for Database (SFDB) tools
- Configuring and managing the Storage Foundation for Databases repository database
- Configuring the Storage Foundation for Databases (SFDB) tools repository
- Configuring authentication for Storage Foundation for Databases (SFDB) tools
- Configuring and managing the Storage Foundation for Databases repository database
- Section IV. Improving DB2 database performance
- About database accelerators
- Improving database performance with Quick I/O
- About Quick I/O
- Improving DB2 database performance with Veritas Concurrent I/O
- Section V. Using point-in-time copies
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Volume-level snapshots
- Storage Checkpoints
- Considerations for DB2 point-in-time copies
- Administering third-mirror break-off snapshots
- Administering Storage Checkpoints
- Database Storage Checkpoints for recovery
- Backing up and restoring with Netbackup in an SFHA environment
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Section VI. Optimizing storage costs for DB2
- Section VII. Storage Foundation for Databases administrative reference
- Storage Foundation for Databases command reference
- Tuning for Storage Foundation for Databases
- Troubleshooting SFDB tools
About obtaining file I/O statistics using the Quick I/O interface
The qiostatcommand provides access to activity information on Quick I/O files on VxFS file systems. The command reports statistics on the activity levels of files from the time the files are first opened using their Quick I/O interface. The accumulated qiostat statistics are reset once the last open reference to the Quick I/O file is closed.
The qiostat command displays the following I/O statistics:
Number of read and write operations
Number of data blocks (sectors) transferred
Average time spent on read and write operations
When Cached Quick I/O is used, qiostat also displays the caching statistics when the -l (the long format) option is selected.
The following is an example of qiostat output:
OPERATIONS FILE BLOCKS AVG TIME(ms)
FILENAME READ WRITE READ WRITE READ WRITE
/db01/file1 0 00 0 0.0 0.0
/db01/file2 0 00 0 0.0 0.0
/db01/file3 73017 181735 718528 1114227 26.8 27.9
/db01/file4 13197 20252 105569 162009 25.8 397.0
/db01/file5 0 00 0 0.0 0.0
For detailed information on available options, see the qiostat(1M) manual page.