1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
|
### Understand the alert
This alarm calculates the system `load average` (CPU and I/O demand) over the period of fifteen minutes. If you receive this alarm, it means that your system is "overloaded."
The alert gets raised into warning if the metric is 2 times the expected value and cleared if the value is 1.75 times the expected value.
For further information on how our alerts are calculated, please have a look at our [Documentation](https://learn.netdata.cloud/docs/agent/health/reference#expressions).
### What does "load average" mean?
The term `system load average` on a Linux machine, measures the **number of threads that are currently working and those waiting to work** (CPU, disk, uninterruptible locks). So simply stated: **System load average measures the number of threads that aren't idle.**
### What does "overloaded" mean?
Let's look at a single core CPU system and think of its core count as car lanes on a bridge. A car represents a process in this example:
- On a 0.5 load average, the traffic on the bridge is fine, it is at 50% of its capacity.
- If the load average is at 1, then the bridge is full, and it is utilized 100%.
- If the load average gets to 2 (remember we are on a single core machine), it means that there is one car lane that is passing the bridge. However, there is **another** full car lane that waits to pass the bridge.
So this is how you can imagine CPU load, but keep in mind that `load average` counts also I/O demand, so there is an analogous example there.
### Troubleshoot the alert
- Determine if the problem is CPU load or I/O load
To get a report about your system statistics, use `vmstat` (or `vmstat 1`, to set a delay between updates in seconds):
The `procs` column, shows:
r: The number of runnable processes (running or waiting for run time).
b: The number of processes blocked waiting for I/O to complete.
- Check per-process CPU/disk usage to find the top consumers
1. To see the processes that are the main CPU consumers, use the task manager program `top` like this:
```
top -o +%CPU -i
```
2. Use `iotop`:
`iotop` is a useful tool, similar to `top`, used to monitor Disk I/O usage, if you don't have it, then [install it](https://www.tecmint.com/iotop-monitor-linux-disk-io-activity-per-process/)
```
sudo iotop
```
3. Minimize the load by closing any unnecessary main consumer processes. We strongly advise you to double-check if the process you want to close is necessary.
### Useful resources
1. [UNIX Load Average Part 1: How It Works](https://www.helpsystems.com/resources/guides/unix-load-average-part-1-how-it-works)
2. [UNIX Load Average Part 2: Not Your Average Average](https://www.helpsystems.com/resources/guides/unix-load-average-part-2-not-your-average-average)
3. [Understanding Linux CPU Load](https://scoutapm.com/blog/understanding-load-averages)
4. [Linux Load Averages: Solving the Mystery](https://www.brendangregg.com/blog/2017-08-08/linux-load-averages.html)
5. [Understanding Linux Process States](https://access.redhat.com/sites/default/files/attachments/processstates_20120831.pdf)
|