Using system statistics
Overview
The tables on this page are provided for your use in identifying and tracking statistics that are reported by Model 204 in various situations. The offsets, given in decimal and hexadecimal, are to help you locate particular statistics within statistical output. The length is in bytes.
The statistics are collected in the CCAJRNL data set, or if allocated, in CCAJLOG. The offsets in the tables below locate each statistic in the corresponding record. To accommodate sites that need to run Model 204 around the clock for many days at a time, space for most Model 204 statistics is a double word.
Description of statistics
The "Statistics with descriptions" table lists the statistics that are collected and that you can evaluate. It also describes the purpose of each statistic followed by the circumstances when you can collect the information and an offset in the journal record.
To collect several statistics you must preset a parameter to a nonzero value. Statistics that require a parameter are also noted in the "Statistics with descriptions" table. The table in Setting parameters to collect certain statistics lists those statistics with the required parameter.
Tables, identified by type, later in this topic, describe the layouts of the various journal records.
Statistic | Records... |
---|---|
APSYLD | Number of APSY loads |
APSYLDD | Number of APSY loads from a dataspace |
APSYLDT | Number of tiny APSY loads |
AUDIT | Number of lines written to the journal and/or the audit trail |
BACKOUTS | Number of BACKOUTs |
BADD | Number of fields added to Table B |
BCHG | Number of fields changed in Table B |
BDEL | Number of fields deleted from Table B |
BLKCFRE | Number of times user held a critical file resource (CFR) exclusively and forced another user to wait
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
BLKI | Percentage of performance samples at which the user was in a server but blocked from running and waiting for an external event to occur (reported only if the performance subtask is active)
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
BLKO | Percentage of performance samples at which the user was swapped out to the server data set but blocked from running and waiting for an external event to occur (reported only if the performance subtask is active)
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
BLKRLK | Number of times user was the first user identified as blocking another from obtaining a record lock
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
BXCHNG | Number of value entries changed in the ordered index. This occurs when a record number is added to or removed from an existing value entry. |
BXDELE | Number of value entries deleted from the ordered index |
BXFIND | Number of ordered index searches to locate field name=value pairs in the ordered index |
BXFREE | Number of ordered index pages (nodes) emptied and released from the ordered index |
BXINSE | Number of new value entries inserted into the ordered index |
BXNEXT | Number of value entries touched in the ordered index during a range retrieval |
BXRFND | Number of times the cursor was repositioned in the ordered index during a search |
BXSPLI | Number of Table D pages (nodes) split in the ordered index |
CCATDIFF | Difference between CCATEMP pages allocated and freed by a thread. This is an imperfect indicator of the number of CCATEMP pages a thread has allocated. CCATDIFF is imperfect because it is difficult to fully account for pages allocated or freed on behalf of the system or other users. However, if there is an acute CCATEMP page shortage, threads with high CCATDIFF values are likely culprits.
CCATDIFF is available in Model 204 7.7 and higher. |
CCATDIFH | High water mark of CCATDIFF in a request. This can be useful if a request allocated a lot of CCATEMP pages, causing an acute shortage but then freed those pages.
CCATDIFH is available in Model 204 7.7 and later. |
CDLWAIT | Number of constraint dependency lock waits |
CNCT | Elapsed time in seconds |
COMMITS | Number of COMMITs |
CPU | Total CPU time consumed in milliseconds. The system CPU statistics include both maintask and subtask CPU usage. |
DEQ | Total number of units of work taken by the MAINTASK and each MP and zIIP subtask, regardless of the queue that the work was taken from. Reported at Model 204 termination or in MONITOR TASKS output.
(type Subtask) |
DEV# | used the MXI interface to hold the IODEV type ( e.g. 7 for IODEV7 ) |
DEV5 | Output lines to procedures defined during the run |
DEV6 | Input lines from included procedures |
DEV7 | Output lines to SNA Communications Server (formerly VTAM) 3270s |
DEV8 | Input lines from SNA Communications Server 3270s |
DEV9 | Page headers or trailers defined in requests |
DEV10 | Output lines written to directed output (USE) data sets |
DEV11 | Output lines to remote User Language full screen |
DEV12 | Input lines from a remote User Language full screen |
DEV13 | Output lines to remote SQL |
DEV14 | Input lines from remote SQL |
DEV17 | Output lines to SQL CRAM IUCU |
DEV18 | Input lines from SQL CRAM |
DEV19 | Output lines to remote SQL LU62 |
DEV20 | Input lines from remote SQL LU62 |
DEV23 | Input lines to CRAM IFAM |
DEV24 | Input lines from CRAM IUCU thread |
DEV27 | Terminal error messages issued for inbound Distributed Application Facility conversations |
DEV28 | Reserved |
DEV31 | IFDISP output lines to IFAM1 programs |
DEV32 | Input arguments supplied by certain IFAM1 calls |
DEV37 | Output lines to SNA Communications Server 2741s and Teletypes |
DEV38 | Input lines from SNA Communications Server 2741s and Teletypes |
DEV49 | Reserved |
DEV50 | Lines sent to the printer when ROUTER=CICS |
DEV53 | Output lines from an IFAM1 application |
DEV54 | Input lines from an IFAM1 application |
DEV55 | Reserved |
DEV56 | Reserved |
DEV57 | Reserved |
DEV58 | Reserved |
DEV59 | Reserved |
DEV60 | Reserved |
DEV61 | Reserved |
DEV62 | Reserved |
DEV63 | Reserved |
DEV64 | Reserved |
DEV65 | Reserved |
DEV66 | Reserved |
DEV67 | Reserved |
DEV68 | Reserved |
DEV69 | Reserved |
DEV70 | Reserved |
DEV71 | Reserved |
DEV72 | Reserved |
DEV73 | Reserved |
DEV74 | Reserved |
DIRRCD | Number of records searched in direct searches of Table B |
DKAR | Number of buffers allocated without page read requests |
DKPR | Number of requests for a page (may not require real I/O) |
DKPRF | Number of fast logical page reads. Number of DKPRs that were satisfied by pending or deferred close buffers |
DKRD | Number of physical page reads from Model 204 files |
DKRDL | Number of physical page reads into the below the bar buffer pool |
DKRR | Number of real disk reads for recently requested pages |
DKSAWB | Anticipatory writes from the bottom of the LRU queue. The page in the buffer is then deleted and no longer available without a re-read. Usually a small statistic and typically only incremented by a few rare events.
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSAWBL | Same as DKSAWB but only incremented for anticipatory writes from below the bar
Offset: the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSAWW | Anticipatory writes from the anticipatory write windows set by LDKBMWND and/or LDKBMWNG
Offset: the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSAWWL | Same as DKSAWW but only incremented for anticipatory writes from below the bar |
DKSDIR | High-water mark of modified (dirty) buffers found within the DKBM statistics window which is created by the LDKBMW parameter. This parameter is not recommended due to the extremely heavy performance penalty imposed by a non-zero value.
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
DKSDIRT | The total of all modified buffers found within the DKBM statistics window
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
DKSFBS | Times a buffer was needed, and a scan was necessary, because the oldest free buffer was not immediately available
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSKIP | The highest number of buffers skipped during any search for a free buffer. A buffer is skipped because it is not immediately available.
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSKIPT | The total of all buffers skipped when looking for a free buffer
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSRR | Number of times a page that was expected to be in the buffer pool could not be located, which necessitates a physical I/O to disk
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSRRFND | Number of times that a page that was expected to be in the buffer pool was located there, which eliminates the need for a physical I/O |
DKSTBLA | Table A reads causing real I/O
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSTBLB | Table B reads causing real I/O
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSTBLC | Table C reads causing real I/O
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSTBLD | Table D reads causing real I/O
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DSKTBLE | Table E reads causing real I/O
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSTBLF | FCT reads causing real I/O
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSTKQC | Times the current Table B page had to be closed to allow a fourth buffer to be opened
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. |
DKSWRP | The highwater mark of buffers with writes outstanding within the DKBM statistics window, created by the parameter LDKBMW. Rocket Software advises against setting this parameter to a non-zero value due to the extreme performance penalty imposed.
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
DKSWRPT | The total number of buffers with outstanding writes within the DKBM statistics window
Offset: see the Disk buffer monitor statistics table. Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
DKUPTIME | Milliseconds of DKUPDT time |
DKWR | Number of physical page writes to Model 204 files |
DKWRL | Number of physical page writes from the below the bar pool |
DKWTMICS | Total wait time in microseconds for Disk I/O waits counted by DKWTS.
As of V7.7, with 77z339 applied |
DKWTS | Number Disk I/O waits
As of V7.7, with 77z339 applied |
DUMP | Writes to Model 204 file backups (DUMP command output) |
DUPDTS | Records written to a deferred update data set for the file |
ECCALL | Number of External Call Facility calls |
ECCNCT | External Call Facility - Elapsed time for external program |
ECCTOUT | Number of External Call Facility calls that timed out (program or subtask unavailable) |
ECCWAITM | ECF – Number of calls that waited for module to become available |
ECCWAITS | Number of External Call Facility calls that waited for a subtask to become available |
ECDELETE | Number of EXTERNAL DELETE calls to External Call Facility |
ECLOAD | Number of EXTERNAL LOAD calls to External Call Facility |
ECMODMAX | ECF – Highwater mark of modules loaded |
ECNAMMAX | External Call Facility – High-water mark of call names defined |
ECTSKMAX | External Call Facility – High-water mark of subtasks active |
ECTWAITM | External Call Facility – Elapsed time spent waiting for a module to become available |
ECTWAITS | External Call Facility – Elapsed time spent waiting for a subtask to become available |
ERRPDL | Highwater mark of the system pushdown list |
FBWT | Number of waits for a disk buffer |
FINDS | Number of FIND statements evaluated |
FSCB | High-water mark of bytes used in the FSCB |
FSCBSW | Number of full-screen buffer swaps |
FTBL | Highwater mark of FTBL appearing in CMPL and EVAL lines for requests containing a field name reference in group context. If one or more groups are opened but no field name references are made, the portion of FTBL used by the open groups is not reported. |
GTBL | Highwater mark of GTBL |
GTBLRS | Number of GTBL rearrangements required to add a global object |
GTBLRU | Number of GTBL rearrangements required to add a global string variable |
HEAP | Dynamic memory highwater mark |
IN | Number of terminal input lines |
INCMFS | Input lines from CMS full screen |
INCMIO | Input lines from CMS non-full screen |
INCRAM | Input lines from Remote User Language threads (IODEV 29) |
INVMFS | Input lines from IUCV or VMCF full-screen thread |
INVMIF | Input arguments supplied by certain IFAM2 or IFAM4 calls from CMS programs |
INVMIO | Input lines from IUCV or VMCF non-full screen thread |
INXX | Input lines from QSAM users (IODEV 3) |
ITBL | Highwater mark of ITBL |
IXADD | Number of index entries added to Tables C and D, including attempts to add duplicates |
IXDEL | Number of entries deleted from Tables C and D |
LKPOST | Times an MP subtask posted another task to indicate that an MP lock had become available |
LKWAIT | Times MP subtasks invoked z/OS WAIT macros to wait for an available MP lock |
LONGUPDTIME(MS) | Total milliseconds of 'too long' update units
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
LONGUPDTS | Number of 'too long' update units
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
LWTIM | Elapsed time (ms), spent waiting for a multiprocessing lock. Reported for each MP and zIIP subtask at Model 204 termination or in MONITOR TASKS output (only on Model 5 terminals). |
MAXIOX | Number of times Model 204 waited for a free database buffer |
MBO | Highwater mark of transaction backout pages
As of V7.7, with zap 77z257 applied. |
MCP | Highwater mark of transaction checkpoint spans
As of V7.7, with zap 77z257 applied. |
MOVE | Number of times the scheduler switched from one user to another |
MPLKPREM | Total elapsed time in milliseconds, across the maintask and all subtasks, the Online spent waiting due to operating system preemption.
This is the elapsed time between when an MP lock becomes available (lock post) making a task ready to run, and when the task actually gets the CPU. That preemption delay is caused by the operating system dispatching other tasks ahead of this task. Only collected in MP/204 systems. |
MPLKWTIM | Total elapsed time in milliseconds, across the maintask and all subtasks, the Online spent waiting for MP locks
Only collected in MP/204 systems. |
MPR | Highwater mark of transaction pre-images
As of V7.7, with zap 77z257 applied. |
MQAPICNT | MQ/204 – Count of MQ/Series API calls |
MQAPITIM | MQ/204 – Elapsed time of MQSeries API calls |
MQBYTEIN | MQ/204 – Total bytes retrieved (MQGET) |
MQBYTEOU | MQ/204 – Total bytes sent (MQPUT/MQPUT1) |
MQGETS | MQ/204 – Number of MQGETs performed |
MQGWTCNT | MQ/204 – Number of MQGETs with nonzero, non-unlimited wait |
MQGWTSUC | MQ/204 – Number of MQGETs with nonzero, non-unlimited wait that succeeded |
MQGWTTIM | MQ/204 – Elapsed time for MQGETs with nonzero, non-unlimited wait |
MQGWTTSP | MQ/204 – Total wait time specified on MQGETs with nonzero, non-unlimited wait |
MQHWQU | MQ/204 – High-water mark of queues concurrently in use |
MQHWTASK | MQ/204 – High-water mark of MQ/204 subtasks in use |
MQNUMQM | MQ/204 – Number of distinct queue managers connected |
MQNUMQU | MQ/204 – Number of distinct queues accessed |
MQPUTS | MQ/204 – Number of MQPUTs performed |
MQWTM | Mean queue wait time, the average time a subtask spent waiting for work (waiting for PCBs to come into the offload queue) |
MTDEQ | The number of times that the MAINTASK took a unit of work from the MAINTASK queue and processed it |
MTSDEQ | The number of times that the MAINTASK took a unit of work from an MP subtask queue and processed it because the MAINTASK was idle |
MTZDEQ | The number of times that the MAINTASK took a unit of work from a zIIP subtask queue and processed it because the MAINTASK was idle |
NTBL | Highwater mark of NTBL |
OBJSWAP | number of object swaps for Sirius objects |
OFFIN | Count of records read in by the OFFLOAD subtask |
OFFOU | Count of records written to the OFFLOAD stream |
OUT | Number of terminal output lines |
OUTCMFS | Output lines to CMS full-screen thread |
OUTCMIO | Output lines to CMS line-by-line thread |
OUTCRAM | Output lines from remote User Language threads (IODEV 29) |
OUTPB | Highwater mark of OUTPB |
OUTVMFS | Output lines to IUCV or VMCF full-screen thread |
OUTVMIF | Output lines to IFAM2 or IFAM4 calls from CMS programs |
OUTVMIO | Output lines to IUCV or VMCF line-by-line threads |
OUTXX | Output lines to QSAM users (IODEV 3) |
PBRSFLT | Number of private buffer reservation faults |
PCPU | Percentage of time Model 204 was given the CPU when it wanted CPU time. In an MP environment, system PCPU is the sum of CPU time in all tasks divided by the sum of elapsed time in all tasks. |
PDL | Highwater mark of the pushdown list |
PETIM | Elapsed time (ms), spent waiting due to OS preemption. Reported for the MAINTASK and each MP and zIIP subtask at Model 204 termination or in MONITOR TASKS output (only on Model 5 terminals) |
PNDGTIME | Milliseconds of unnecessary broken time |
PR | Real time consumed, in milliseconds. PCPU = CPU / PR. |
QTBL | Highwater mark of QTBL |
RCV | Number of blocks needed for subtransaction recovery
As of V7.7, with zap 77z257 applied. |
RECADD | Number of records started in Table B, not including extension records |
RECDEL | Number of records deleted from Table B, not including extension records or records deleted by DELETE RECORDS or IFDSET |
RECDS | Number of records processed by FOR statements, SORT statements, IFGET calls, or IFPOINT calls, or similar SQL record processing |
REDY | Percentage of performance samples at which the user was ready to run (reported only if the performance subtask is active)
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
REQ | Number of SOUL requests evaluated |
REST | Number of reads from a Model 204 file backup (RESTORE command) |
RETRYA | Page retries in Table A |
RETRYC | Page retries in Table C |
RQTM | Elapsed time for the activity being reported, exclusive of terminal I/O time |
RSXCOMP | Number of compactions of the record locking table. If greater than 0, increase LRETBL. |
RUNG | Percentage of performance samples at which the user was running (reported only if the performance subtask is active)
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
SCHDCPU | In MP configuration, total scheduler CPU for the user or request |
SCREENS | Total number of full-screen reads (READ SCREEN statements) evaluated by a SOUL request. |
SGMTI | Number of input lines from included procedures |
SGMTO | Number of output lines to procedures defined by the user |
SLIC | Number of times that the user was time-sliced by the Model 204 scheduler |
SMPLS | Number of performance sample points at which the user was active or total number of performance samples taken at the system level (reported only if the performance subtask is active)
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
SORTS | Number of SOUL SORT statements or SQL sorts evaluated |
SQLI | Remote SQL input highwater mark |
SQLO | Remote SQL output highwater mark |
SQRD | Number of terminal input lines |
SQWR | Number of terminal output lines |
STBL | Highwater mark of STBL |
STCPU | Total amount of time, in milliseconds, that the user has run in an MP offload subtask |
STDEQ | Number of times that an MP subtask took a unit of work from an MP subtask queue and processed it |
STIMERS | Total number of STIMER or STIMERM calls |
STPOST | Times MP subtasks performed real operating system POSTs to send work to the maintask |
STRECDS | Number of records processed by SORT statements or SQL sorts |
STWAIT | Number of times MP subtasks invoked z/OS WAIT macros to wait for work from the maintask |
STZDEQ | Number of times that an MP subtask took a unit of work from a zIIP subtask queue and processed it because the MP subtask was idle |
SVAC | Active servers (an average, included on a performance line) |
SVMX | Highwater mark for servers (0 if no server swapping) |
SVPAGES | SVPAGES * 4096 is the number of bytes transferred as a result of server reads and writes |
SVRD | Number of server reads |
SVWR | Number of server writes |
SWPG | Percentage of performance samples at which the user was swapping in or out (reported only if the performance subtask is active) |
SWT | Times Model 204 issued a real WAIT while not in user-switching mode |
TEMX | Highwater mark of CCATEMP pages used in the expansion area |
TFMX | Highwater mark of CCATEMP pages used |
TSMX | Highwater mark of CCATEMP pages used in the small model page pool |
TTBL | Highwater mark of TTBL |
UBUFHWS | Highwater mark, in bytes, of user's Universal Buffer |
UDD | Number of lines written to a directed output (USE) data set |
UPDTTIME(MS) | Number of milliseconds that a file was being updated
UPT(MS) appears as the column header for this statistic on a report |
UPDTTIME | Number of milliseconds that the user was actively updating at least one file |
USMX | Highwater mark for simultaneous active users (reported only if the performance subtask is active) |
USRS | Average number of active users (reported only if the performance subtask is active)
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
VTBL | Number of VTBL entries at the end of compilation (CMPL) processing or the end of evaluation (EVAL) processing |
WAIT | Number of real operating system waits |
WTCFR | Number of times that the user waited to obtain a critical file resource, either share or exclusive
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
WTRLK | Number of times that the user waited to obtain a record lock
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
WTSV | Percentage of performance samples at which the user was waiting for a server (reported only if the performance subtask is active)
Parameter setting required: see Parameters to set to collect certain statistics. |
XTBL | Highwater mark of XTBL |
ZTCPU | The CPU (ms) consumed on a zIIP processor by the MAINTASK, an MP subtask or a zIIP subtask. Reported for each task at Model 204 termination and in MONITOR TASKS output (for Model 5 terminals only) |
ZTDEQ | The number of times that a zIIP subtask took a unit of work from a zIIP subtask queue and processed it |
Header and trailer entries (Type 0)
Each journal block begins with a header record and ends with a trailer record.
Header entries (Type 0)
Header entries have the format shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entire journal record, including header and trailer |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'00' |
3(3) | 1 | Binary | Flags used by recovery |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
12(0C) | 4 | Binary | Sequence number |
16(10) | 10 | Binary | System Store Clock Extended (STCKE) value to provide picosecond accuracy on the journal date/time stamp
Bytes 1-9 || byte 16 |
26(1A) | 2 | Binary | Length of header, type 00 |
28(1C) | 2 | Binary | Version in hex |
30(1E) | 8 | EBCDIC | Version in EBCDIC |
38(26) | 8 | EBCDIC | Job name |
46(2E) | 8 | EBCDIC | JES Job ID |
54(36) | 4 | EBCDIC | SMF System ID |
- If the flag byte at offset 3 of type 00 has the X'02' bit on, then it is a header record from Model 204 version 7.4.0 or later with its length at offset X'1A'.
- If that flag byte has the X'01' bit on, then the header is from version 7.1.0 and is 26 bytes in length.
- If neither of those bits is on, then the header is a from a pre-7.1.0 version and is 16 bytes in length.
Recovery flags
Flags used by recovery can have the value of X'00' or a sum of any of the following:
Value | Block contains these records... |
---|---|
X'80' | Type 1 |
X'40' | Type 2 |
X'20' | Type 3 |
X'10' | Type 4 |
X'08' | Type 5 |
X'04' | Type 6 |
Sequence numbers
The sequence number represents the number of each journal record, starting at 0 and increasing by 1. A merged journal (output of the MERGEJ utility) sequence number consists of a 2-byte hexadecimal number at offset 12(0C), which indicates the input file this journal record came from, and a 2-byte hexadecimal field at offset 14(0E), which indicates the sequence within the INPUT journal.
Trailer entries (Type 0)
Trailer entries have the format shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry = X'000C' |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'00' |
3(3) | 1 | — | Unused |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
Recovery entries (Types 1-6)
Entry types X'01' through X'06' contain information used for recovery. They follow the same general format as all other journal entries. There is no type X'07' journal entry.
The format of the recovery entries is meaningful only in the context of the Model 204 ROLL FORWARD algorithm. However, entry types might be of interest in some statistics gathering applications, as follows:
Type | Contains recovery information from... |
---|---|
1 | Discontinuity |
2 | Begin update unit.
More than one type 2 entry can be written for each update unit. The update unit number appears as a 4-byte binary number at offset 16(10). |
3 | End update unit.
The update unit number appears in the same format and location as the type 2 entry. |
4 | File state information: opened, closed, dumped, file parameter list (FPL) page preimage logged or open at the time of a checkpoint |
5 | Checkpoint |
6 | File update |
System statistics entries (Type 8)
Cumulative statistics, listed by offset in the Layout of system subtype X'02' entries table, are kept for the entire system. Final, partial, and performance system statistics are written to the journal during Model 204 termination in a line that begins with:
ST $$$ SYSTEM='version#'
For additional information about:
- Using system statistics for performance monitoring, see Performance monitoring and tuning.
- Disk buffer monitor statistics and parameters, see Disk buffer monitor statistics and parameters.
Final statistics
The system final statistics line, similar to the following, is produced as part of system termination:
ST $$$ SYSTEM='5A 'AUDIT=43 OUT=38 IN=14 WAIT=19 ...
Partial statistics
Statistics in a system partial statistics line, similar to the following, accumulate from the beginning of the run, if the User 0 ACCTIM parameter is nonzero:
ST $$$ SYSTEM='6.1.0'PARTIAL=3 AUDIT=19 OUT=10 IN=5 WAIT=3 ...
Performance statistics
System performance statistic lines, similar to the following, are written if the User 0 RPTCNT and SMPLTIM parameters are nonzero:
ST $$$ SYSTEM='6.1.0' PERFORMANCE=n
The numbers determined at the performance sample points are averaged for the entire run.
Entry formats
System statistics entries have the format shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'08' |
3(3) | 1 | Binary | Subtype indicator:
X'00' = final statistics X'01' = partial statistics X'02' = performance statistics X'04' = additional disk buffer monitor X'08' = subtask statistics |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8 | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
12(0C) | 2 | Binary | Subtask number if subtype = X'08'; otherwise unused |
14(0E) | 2 | Binary | Unused |
16(10) to end of journal | — | — |
Contents depend on subtypes, shown in tables in the following sections: |
System final and partial statistics
For subtypes X'00' (final statistics) and X'01' (partial statistics), the layout of the remainder of the entry is shown in the following table. For a description of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table. The following statistics are data type Binary. However, the length varies — either 4 or 8, to accommodate 64-bit system architecture.
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Description |
---|---|---|
16(10) | 8 | AUDIT |
24(18) | 8 | OUT |
32(20) | 8 | IN |
40(28) | 8 | OUTXX |
48(30) | 8 | INXX |
56(38) | 8 | DEV5 |
64(40) | 8 | DEV6 |
72(48) | 8 | DEV7 |
80(50) | 8 | DEV8 |
88(58) | 8 | DEV9 |
96(60) | 8 | DEV10 |
104(68) | 8 | DEV11 |
112(70) | 8 | DEV12 |
120(78) | 8 | DEV13 |
128(80) | 8 | DEV14 |
136(88) | 8 | OUTTTY |
144(90) | 8 | INTTY |
152(98) | 8 | DEV17 |
160(A0) | 8 | DEV18 |
168(A8) | 8 | DEV19 |
176(B0) | 8 | DEV20 |
184(B8) | 8 | Spare |
192(C0) | 8 | Spare |
200(C8) | 8 | DEV23 |
208(D0) | 8 | DEV24 |
216(D8) | 8 | DEV25 |
224(E0) | 8 | DEV26 |
232(E8) | 8 | DEV27 |
240(F0) | 8 | DEV28 |
248(F8) | 8 | OUTCRAM |
256(100) | 8 | INCRAM |
264(108) | 8 | DEV31 |
272(110) | 8 | DEV32 |
280(118) | 8 | Spare |
288(120) | 8 | Spare |
296(128) | 8 | DEV35 |
304(130) | 8 | DEV36 |
312(138) | 8 | DEV37 |
320(140) | 8 | DEV38 |
328(148) | 8 | OUTVMIO |
336(150) | 8 | INVMIO |
344(158) | 8 | OUTVMFS |
352(160) | 8 | INVMFS |
360(168) | 8 | OUTVMIF |
368(170) | 8 | INVMIF |
376(178) | 8 | OUTCMIO |
384(180) | 8 | INCMIO |
392(188) | 8 | OUTCMFS |
400(190) | 8 | INCMFS |
408(198) | 8 | DEV49 |
416(1A0) | 8 | DEV50 |
424(1A8) | 8 | OFFIN |
432(1B0) | 8 | OFFOU |
440(1B8) | 8 | DEV53 |
448(1C0) | 8 | DEV54 |
456(1C8) | 8 | DEV55 |
464(1D0) | 8 | DEV56 |
472(1D8) | 8 | DEV57 |
480(1E0) | 8 | DEV58 |
488(1E8) | 8 | DEV59 |
496(1F0) | 8 | DEV60 |
504(1F8) | 8 | DEV61 |
512(200) | 8 | DEV62 |
520(208) | 8 | DEV63 |
528(210) | 8 | DEV64 |
536(218) | 8 | DEV65 |
544(220) | 8 | DEV66 |
552(228) | 8 | DEV67 |
560(230) | 8 | DEV68 |
568(238) | 8 | DEV69 |
576(240) | 8 | DEV70 |
584(248) | 8 | DEV71 |
592(250) | 8 | DEV72 |
600(258) | 8 | DEV73 |
608(260) | 8 | DEV74 |
616(268) | 4 | WAIT |
620(26C) | 4 | MPLKWTIM |
624(270) | 8 | DKRD |
632(278) | 8 | DKWR |
640(280) | 4 | SVRD |
644(284) | 4 | SVWR |
648(288) | 8 | CPU |
656(290) | 8 | REQ |
664(298) | 8 | MOVE |
672(2A0) | 4 | DUMP |
676(2A4) | 4 | REST |
680(2A8) | 4 | SLIC |
684(2AC) | 4 | CNCT |
688(2B0) | 4 | FBWT |
692(2B4) | 4 | SWT |
696(2B8) | 4 | ERRPDL |
700(2BC) | 4 | MPLKPREM |
704(2C0) | 8 | RECADD |
712(2C8) | 8 | RECDEL |
720(2D0) | 8 | BADD |
728(2D8) | 8 | BDEL |
736(2E0) | 8 | BCHG |
744(2E8) | 8 | IXADD |
752(2F0) | 8 | IXDEL |
760(2F8) | 8 | FINDS |
768(300) | 4 | SORTS |
772(304) | 4 | Spare |
776(308) | 8 | RECDS |
784(310) | 8 | STRECDS |
792(318) | 8 | DKAR |
800(320) | 8 | DKPR |
808(328) | 4 | DKRR |
816(330) | 4 | TFMX |
820(334) | 4 | USMX |
824(338) | 4 | SVMX |
828(33C) | 4 | SFTRSTRT (number of soft restarts) |
832(340) | 8 | APSYLD |
840(348) | 8 | APSYLDD |
848(350) | 4 | APSYLDT |
852(354) | 4 | Spare |
856(358) | 8 | DKPRF |
864(360) | 4 | SMPLS |
868(364) | 4 | USRS |
872(368) | 4 | SVAC |
876(36C) | 4 | RUNG |
880(370) | 4 | REDY |
884(374) | 4 | BLKI |
888(378) | 4 | WTSV |
892(37C) | 4 | BLKO |
896(380) | 4 | SWPG |
900(384) | 4 | PCPU |
904(388) | 4 | DIRRCD |
908(38C) | 4 | Spare |
912(390) | 8 | STCPU |
920(398) | 8 | STDEQ |
928(3A0) | 8 | STWAIT |
936(3A8) | 4 | STPOST |
940(3AC) | 4 | LKWAIT |
944(3B0) | 4 | LKPOST |
948(3B4) | 4 | RSXCOMP |
952(3B8) | 4 | SCHDCPU |
956(3BC) | 4 | SCREENS |
960(3C0) | 4 | STIMERS |
964(3C4) | 4 | HRDRSTRT (number of hard restarts) |
968(3C8) | 8 | SVPAGES |
976(3D0) | 4 | PBRSFLT |
980(3D4) | 4 | COMMITS |
984(3D8) | 4 | BACKOUTS |
988(3DC) | 4 | LONGUPDTS |
992(3E0) | 4 | LONGUPDTIME(MS) |
996(3E4) | 4 | Spare |
1000(3E8) | 4 | CDLWAIT |
1004(3EC) | 4 | MQGETS |
1008(3F0) | 4 | MQPUTS |
1012(3F4) | 4 | UBUFHWS |
1016(3F8) | 4 | MQHWTASK |
1020(3FC) | 4 | Spare |
1024(400) | 8 | MQBYTEIN |
1032(408) | 8 | MQBYTEOU |
1040(410) | 4 | MQHWQU |
1044(414) | 4 | MQNUMQU |
1048(418) | 4 | MQNUMQM |
1052(41C) | 4 | Spare |
1056(420) | 8 | MQAPITIM |
1064(428) | 8 | MQAPICNT |
1072(430) | 8 | MQGWTTIM |
1080(438) | 4 | MQGWTCNT |
1084(43C) | 4 | Spare |
1088(440) | 8 | MQGWTTSP |
1096(448) | 4 | MQGWTSUC |
1100(44C) | 4 | ECLOAD |
1104(450) | 4 | ECDELETE |
1108(454) | 4 | Spare |
1112(458) | 8 | ECCALL |
1120(460) | 4 | ECCWAITM |
1124(464) | 4 | ECCWAITS |
1128(468) | 4 | ECTWAITM |
1132(46C) | 4 | ECTWAITS |
1136(470) | 4 | ECCTOUT |
1140(474) | 4 | ECCNCT |
1144(478) | 4 | ECMODMAX |
1148(47C) | 4 | ECNAMMAX |
1152(480) | 4 | ECTSKMAX |
1156(484) | 4 | GTBLRU |
1160(488) | 4 | GTBLRS |
1164(48C) | 4 | TSMX |
1168(490) | 4 | TEMX |
1172(494) | 4 | MAXIOX |
1176(498) | 8 | DKRDL |
1184(4A0) | 8 | DKWRL |
1192(4A8) | 8 | CPUTOTZE |
1200(4B0) | 8 | CPUONZIP |
1208(4B8) | 4 | MPR
as of V7.7 with 77z257 applied |
1212(4BC) | 4 | MBO
as of V7.7 with 77z257 applied |
1216(4C0) | 4 | MCP
as of V7.7 with 77z257 applied |
1220(4C4) | 4 | RCV
as of V7.7 with 77z257 applied |
1224(4C8) | 8 | Spare |
1232(4D0) | 8 | DKWTMICS
as of V7.7, with 77z339 applied |
1240(4D8) | 8 | DKWTS
as of V7.7, with 77z339 applied |
1248(4E0) | 8 | MTDEQ |
1256(4E8) | 8 | MTSDEQ |
1264(4F0) | 8 | MTZDEQ |
1272(4F8) | 8 | STZDEQ |
1280(500) | 8 | ZTDEQ |
System performance statistics
Entry format
For subtype X'02'(system performance statistics), the layout of the remainder of the entry is shown in the following table. Each statistic in the table is: Length, 4; Data type, Binary. See Statistics with descriptions table for the meaning of each statistic.
Offset dec(hex) | Statistic |
---|---|
16(10) | SMPLS |
20(14) | USRS |
24(18) | SVAC |
28(1C) | RUNG |
32(20) | REDY |
36(24) | BLKI |
40(28) | WTSV |
44(2C) | BLKO |
48(30) | SWPG |
Additional disk buffer monitor statistics
For subtype X'04' (additional disk buffer monitor statistics), the layout of the entry is shown in the following table. Each statistic in the table is: Length, 8; Data type, Binary. For a description of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table.
Offset dec(hex) | Disk buffer monitor statistic |
---|---|
16(10) | Spare |
24(18) | DKSTKQC |
32(20) | DKSWRP |
40(28) | DKSWRPT |
48(30) | DKSDIR |
56(38) | DKSDIRT |
64(40) | DKSKIP |
72(48) | Spare |
80(50) | Spare |
88(58) | DKSRR |
96(60) | DKSFBS |
104(68) | DKSKIPT |
112(70) | DKSAWT |
120(78) | DKSAWW |
128(80) | DKSAWWL |
136(88) | DKSAWB |
144(90) | DKSAWBL |
152(98) | DKSRRFND |
160(A0) | DKSTBLF |
168(A8) | DKSTBLA |
176(B0) | DKSTBLB |
184(B8) | DKSTBLC |
192(C0) | DKSTBLD |
200(C8) | Spare |
208(D0) | Spare |
216(D8) | Spare |
224(E0) | Spare |
232(E8) | Spare |
240(F0) | Spare |
248(F8) | Spare |
256(100) | DKSTBLX |
264(108) | DKSTBLE |
272(110) | Spare |
Multiprocessing (MP) subtask statistics
The following statistics apply only to installations configured for multiprocessing using MP/204. For subtype X'08' (subtask specific statistics), the layout of the entry is shown in the following table. For the meaning of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table.
MP statistic | Offset dec(hex) | Length |
---|---|---|
CPU | 16(10) | 8 |
PR | 24(18) | 8 |
PCPU | 32(20) | 4 |
STWAIT | 36(24) | 4 |
STPOST | 40(28) | 4 |
LKWAIT | 44(2C) | 4 |
LKPOST | 48(30) | 4 |
SPARE | 52(34) | 4 |
MQWTM | 56(38) | 8 |
DEQ | 64(40) | 8 |
ZTDEQ | 72(48) | 8 |
STDEQ | 80(50) | 8 |
LWTIM | 88(58) | 4 |
PETIM | 92(5C) | 4 |
ZCPU | 96(60) | 8 |
User statistics entries (Type 9)
User lines report on an individual user's activity. These statistics include:
- Final (logout) and partial statistics
- Since-last and ordered index statistics
- Performance statistics
Each user line starts with the following statistics:
ST $$$ USERID='userid' ACCOUNT='account'
The subtype, in this case PERFORMANCE, follows USERID and ACCOUNT statistics:
ST $$$ USERID='userid' ACCOUNT='account' PERFORMANCE=n
The format of user statistics entries is shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'09' |
3(3) | 1 | Binary | Subtype indicator:
|
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
12(0C) | 2 | Binary | Server number |
14(0E) | 2 | Binary | User number |
16(10) | 10(0A) | EBCDIC |
Account:
|
26(1A) | 10(0A) | EBCDIC | User ID |
36(24) | 4 | EBCDIC | Since-last ID = See the Activity types table where the possible activity types are listed. |
40(28) | 1 | Binary | IODEV number (added for MXI) |
41(29) | 3 | N/A | Unused |
44(2C) to end of journal | Binary |
Contents depend on subtypes, shown in: |
User final and partial statistics
Final (logout) statistics
Final (logout) statistics, listed in the Layout of user subtype X'00' and X'02' entries table, summarize a user's activities since the last login. A LOGOUT statistics line, such as the following, is written after each logout if the parameter following ACCOUNT is not PARTIAL, LAST, or PERFORMANCE:
yydddhhmmssnnnsssuuuuu ST $$$ ACCOUNT='NO ACCOUNT' SQRD=5 ...
- yyddd is the year and Julian day.
- hhmmss is the time of day in hours, minutes, and seconds.
- nnn is a counter to distinguish lines produced in the same second.
- sss is the number of the server currently handling the user. Leading zeros are suppressed.
- uuuuu is a 5-digit user number associated with the audit trail line. Leading zeros are suppressed.
In some cases, the account name appears as "NO USERID NO ACCOUNT". Statistics in this category are not chargeable to any one user and should be considered system overhead.
Final lines are recognized by the absence of an indicator for another type of line.
Partial statistics
Optional partial statistics, listed in the "Layout of user subtype X'00' and X'02' entries" table below, can be provided for a run up to a few minutes before a system failure that prevents normal termination and production of final user and system statistics.
User partial statistics lines, such as the following, are made available for active users:
ST $$$ ACCOUNT='NO ACCOUNT' PARTIAL=21 ...
Statistics accumulate either:
- As long as the user is logged in
or
- From the first terminal input to disconnection when a login is not required
Partial statistics are requested by setting the time interval, in minutes, between successive partial lines on User 0's parameter line with the ACCTIM parameter. ACCTIM must be nonzero.
The contents of the statistics portion of the entry, starting at offset 40(28)
, depends upon the subtype of the entry.
Partial statistics lines are indicated on the journal by the parameter PARTIAL=n
, where n is a counter from the beginning of the run. PARTIAL=n
immediately follows the type parameter.
For subtypes X'00' (logout statistics), and X'02' (partial statistics), the layout of the remainder of the entry is shown in the following table. Each statistic in the table is: Length, 4; Data type, Binary. For the meaning of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table.
Offset dec(hex) | Statistic |
---|---|
40(28) | CNCT |
44(2C) | DKRD |
48(30) | DKWR |
52(34) | SQRD |
56(38) | SQWR |
60(3C) | SGMTI |
64(40) | SGMTO |
68(44) | SVRD |
72(48) | SVWR |
76(4C) | CPU |
80(50) | REQ |
84(54) | MOVE |
88(58) | DUMP |
92(5C) | REST |
96(60) | SLIC |
100(64) | AUDIT |
104(68) | WAIT |
108(6C) | FBWT |
112(70) | UDD |
116(74) | RECADD |
120(78) | RECDEL |
124(7C) | BADD |
128(80) | BDEL |
132(84) | BCHG |
136(88) | IXADD |
140(8C) | IXDEL |
144(90) | FINDS |
148(94) | SORTS |
152(98) | RECDS |
156(9C) | STRECDS |
160(A0) | DKAR |
164(A4) | DKPR |
168(A8) | DKRR |
172(AC) | COMMITS |
176(B0) | BACKOUTS |
180(B4) | UPDTTIME(MS) |
184(B8) | LONGUPDTS |
188(BC) | LONGUPDTIME(MS) |
192(C0) | SMPLS |
196(C4) | RUNG |
200(C8) | REDY |
204(CC) | BLKI |
208(D0) | WTSV |
212(D4) | BLKO |
216(D8) | SWPG |
220(DC) | PCPU |
224(E0) | DIRRCD |
228(E4) | BXCHNG |
232(E8) | BXDELE |
236(EC) | BXNEXT |
240(F0) | BXFIND |
244(F4) | BXINSE |
248(F8) | BXSPLI |
252(FC) | BXRFND |
256(100) | BXFREE |
260(104) | STCPU |
264(108) | STDEQ |
268(10C) | SCHDCPU |
272(110) | SCREENS |
276(114) | SVPAGES |
280(118) | PBRSFLT |
284(11C) | MQGETS |
288(120) | MQPUTS |
292(124) | UBUFHWS |
296(128) | MQHWTASK |
300(12C) | MQBYTEIN |
304(130) | MQBYTOU |
308((134) | MQHWQU |
312(138) | MQNUMQU |
316(13C) | MQNUMQM |
320(140) | MQAPITIM |
324(144) | MQAPICNT |
328(148) | MQGWTTIM |
332(14C) | MQGWTCNT |
336(150) | MQGWTTSP |
340(154) | MQGWTSUC |
344(158) | ECLOAD |
348(15C) | ECDELETE |
352(160) | ECCALL |
356(164) | ECCWAITM |
360(168) | ECCWAITS |
364(16C) | ECTWAITM |
368(170) | ECTWAITS |
372(174) | ECCTOUT |
376(178) | ECCNCT |
380(17C) | GTBLRU |
384(180) | GTBLRS |
388(184) | FSCBSW |
392(188) | Spare |
396(18C) | MPR (V7.7 onwards) |
400(190) | MBO (V7.7 onwards) |
404(194) | DEV# |
408(198) | ZTCPU |
412(19C) | ZTDEQ |
416(1A0) | CCATDIFF |
User since-last statistics
Since-last statistics
Statistics are kept for each SOUL request, host language interface call, and a number of Model 204 system commands. When each request or command completes, a since-last statistics line is written. The line includes the ACCOUNT parameter at the beginning, followed by the IODEV parameter and the LAST parameter.
Several MONITOR commands produce displays containing the user's last or current activity in the FUNC
column. When this activity completes, statistics are also written to CCAAUDIT and the activity is described in ST lines as LAST='activity'
.
Syntax
ST $$$ USERID='userid' ACCOUNT='accountname' IODEV='devicetype' LAST='acty'
Where:
acty can be one of the following:
Option | Meaning |
---|---|
BLDR | BLDREUSE command |
BLDX | Z command |
CMPL | Compilation of a SOUL request |
CPTB | COMPACTB command |
CPTE | COMPACTE command |
CPYP | COPY PROCEDURE command |
CREA | CREATE FILE filename command |
DISP | DISPLAY PROCEDURE command |
DUMP | DUMP file command |
EDIT | Editing a request |
EVAL | Evaluation of a SOUL request |
EXEC | Execution of an SQL request |
FLDC | Compilation of a FLOD procedure |
FLDE | Evaluation of a FLOD procedure |
IMPC | Implied commit |
INCR | IN FILE filename INCREASE DATASETS command |
INIT | IN FILE filename INITIALIZE command |
LOAD | Loading a precompiled (ASPY) procedure |
PREP | Compilation of an SQL request |
REST | RESTORE file command |
Since-last highwater marks
The since-last statistics include highwater marks of various work tables used by SOUL requests. Values are reported in terms of the units in which each table is allocated. For example, QTBL is allocated in units of 16 bytes.
Since-last in relation to final and partial statistics
Many since-last statistics, such as CNCT, CPU, and DKRD, are also reported on user final and partial statistics lines. (See the Statistics with descriptions table.) The statistics on these lines are roughly equal to the sum of all of the preceding since-last statistics for the user. Because since-last statistics are not maintained for every Model 204 command, final statistics are generally larger.
For subtype X'01' (since-last statistics), the layout of the remainder of the entry begins as shown in the following table. For the meaning of each statistic in this table and in the Layout of user subtype X'01' entries (CFRJRNL=0) table, see the Statistics with descriptions table. The layout of the end of the entry depends on whether you chose to collect conflict statistics:
- If you do not collect conflict statistics, the end of the entry is described in the Layout of user subtype X'01' entries (CFRJRNL=0) table.
- If you do collect conflict statistics, the end of the entry is described in the Layout of user subtype X'81' entries (CFRJRNL=1) table. When you collect conflict statistics, the subtype changes to X'81'.
Offset dec(hex) | Statistic |
---|---|
44(2C) | NTBL |
48(30) | GTBL |
52(34) | QTBL |
56(38) | STBL |
60(3C) | TTBL |
64(40) | VTBL |
68(44) | PDL |
72(48) | FTBL |
76(4C) | XTBL |
80(50) | ITBL |
84(54) | FSCB |
88(58) | OUTPB |
92(5C) | HEAP |
96(60) | SQLI |
100(64) | SQLO |
104(68) | CNCT |
108(6C) | CPU |
112(70) | DKRD |
116(74) | DKWR |
120(78) | UDD |
124(7C) | OUT |
128(80) | SLIC |
132(84) | IN |
136(88) | RECADD |
140(8C) | RECDEL |
144(90) | BADD |
148(94) | BDEL |
152(98) | BCHG |
156(9C) | IXADD |
160(A0) | IXDEL |
164(A4) | FINDS |
168(A8) | SORTS |
172(AC) | RECDS |
176(B0) | STRECDS |
180(B4) | PCPU |
184(B8) | RQTM |
188(BC) | DIRRCD |
192(CO) | BXCHNG |
196(C4) | BXDELE |
200(C8) | BXNEXT |
204(CC) | BXFIND |
208(DO) | BXINSE |
212(D4) | BXSPLI |
216(D8) | BXRFND |
220(DC) | BXFREE |
224(E0) | STCPU |
228(E4) | STDEQ |
232(E8) | SCHDCPU |
236(EC) | SCREENS |
240(F0) | SVRD |
244(F4) | SVWR |
248(F8) | DKPR |
252(FC) | SVPAGES |
256(100) | COMMITS |
260(104) | BACKOUTS |
264(108) | UPDTTIME(MS) |
268(10C) | LONGUPDTS |
272(110) | LONGUPDTIME(MS) |
276(114) | MQGETS |
280(118) | MQPUTS |
284(11C) | UBUFHWS |
288(120) | MQHWTASK |
292(124) | MQBYTEIN |
296(128) | MQBYTEOU |
300(12C) | MQHWQU |
304(130) | MQNUMQU |
308(134) | MQNUMQM |
312(138) | MQAPITIM |
316(13C) | MQAPICNT |
320(140) | MQGWTTIM |
324(144) | MQGWTCNT |
328(148) | MQGWTTSP |
332(14C) | MQGWTSUC |
336(150) | ECLOAD |
340(154) | ECDELETE |
344(158) | ECCALL |
348(15C) | ECCWAITM |
352(160) | ECCWAITS |
356(164) | ECTWAITM |
360(168) | ECTWAITS |
364(16C) | ECCTOUT |
368(170) | ECCNCT |
372(174) | GTBLRU |
376(178) | GTBLRS |
380(17C) | FSCBSW |
384(180) | OBJSWAP |
388()184 | SIRIUS02 |
392(188) | SIRIUS03 |
396(18C) | ZTCPU |
400(190) | ZTDEQ |
404(194) | CCATDIFF |
408(198) | CCATDIFH |
Conflict statistics
Whether you are collecting conflict statistics determines the layout at the end of the entry. Two of the conflict statistics keep track of critical file-resource conflicts, and two keep track of record-locking conflicts. Whether these statistics are collected and journaled depends on settings of the parameters CFRLOOK and CFRJRNL.
These statistics are not displayed with the output of the MONITOR SL
command. Instead, you can view them (with all the other since-last statistics) by issuing the MONITOR command with the keyword CONFLICT.
The remainder of the entry depends on the setting of CFRJRNL.
The following table shows the layout when CFRJRNL is set to 0:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
412(19C) | 10 | EBCDIC | Subsystem name |
422(1A6) | 8 | EBCDIC | Procedure file name |
430(1AE) | 1 | Binary | Length of following procedure name |
431(1AF) | LAUDPROC | EBCDIC | Procedure name |
The following table shows the layout when CFRJRNL is set to 1. It reflects the change in offset and that the user subtypes are now X'81' entries.
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Entry type |
---|---|---|---|
412(19C) | 4 | Binary | BLKCFRE stastic |
416(1A0) | 4 | Binary | BLKRLK statistic |
420(1A4) | 4 | Binary | WTCFR statistic |
424(1A8) | 4 | Binary | WTRLK statistic |
428(1AC) | 10 | EBCDIC | Subsystem name |
438(1B6) | 8 | EBCDIC | Procedure file name |
446(1BE) | 1 | Binary | Length of following procedure name |
447(1BF) | LAUDPROC | EBCDIC | Procedure name |
Note: The conflict statistics, BLKCFRE, BLKRLK, WTCFR, and WTRLK, are inexact. Although a user might at times conflict with multiple other users, only the first conflict encountered is counted.
User performance statistics
Optional performance statistics lines provide information about the operation of the Model 204 scheduler during a short period of time. Information about the length of the scheduler queues, the number of active users and servers, and the queue distribution for each user, is obtained by sampling.
A performance line starts with:
ST $$$ USERID='userid' ACCOUNT='accountname' PERFORMANCE=n
Parameters to activate performance statistics
To request performance statistics, specify the number of samples to take between performance statistics lines (RPTCNT parameter) and the time interval between samples (SMPLTIM parameter) on User 0's parameter line. When you request scheduler and server performance data (SMPLTIM parameter), an asynchronous operating system task, called the performance subtask, is created. Both RPTCNT and SMPLTIM must be nonzero.
Sampling
The performance subtask spends most of its time in a wait state. Every SMPLTIM milliseconds, it records the current state of the system. Data from the most recent sample is available at an Online terminal through the MONITOR command, described in ONLINE monitoring.
The number of samples taken during a run (RPTCNT), times the number of users in the run (NUSERS), must be less than 4.2 million. In large systems that run for a very long period of time, the time interval between samples cannot be extremely short. If the limit is exceeded, an OC1 interrupt occurs when the SMPLS statistic value is calculated during the printing of the system statistics, either a performance or final line.
Layout of performance statistics
For subtype X'04' (performance statistics), the layout of the remainder of the entry is shown in the following table. Each statistic in the table is: Length, 4; Data type, Binary. For the description of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table.
Offset dec(hex) | Statistic |
---|---|
40(28) | SMPLS |
44(2C) | RUNG |
48(30) | REDY |
52(34) | BLKI |
56(38) | WTSV |
60(3C) | BLKO |
64(40) | SWPG |
File statistics entries (Type 10)
File statistics, summarized in the File statistics entry formats table, are kept for every file opened during a run, including CCAGRP, CCASYS, and CCATEMP. The activity of a file for all users is summarized from the time the file is first opened until the last user issues a CLOSE command. The statistics appear after the last CLOSE command in lines that follow the date and time information (yyyydddhhmmssnnnsssuuuuu) with:
ST $$$ FILE='filename'
System termination writes file statistics for each file still open at the end of the run.
Final statistics
A final statistics line similar to the following is produced when the last user of a file closes the file:
ST $$$ FILE='PAYABLES'DKRD=25 DKRD=25 DKWR=15 REQ=3 RECADD=6 ...
Partial statistics
File partial statistics lines similar to the following are furnished for each open file:
ST $$$ FILE='PAYABLES'PARTIAL=3 ...
File statistics journal records layout
File statistics entries have the format shown in the following table. For a description of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table.
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Type of entry |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'0A' |
3(3) | 1 | Binary | Subtype indicator:
X'00' = file closeX'01' = partial |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
12(0C) | 4 | — | Unused |
16(10) | 8 | EBCDIC | File name |
24(18) | 2 | — | Unused |
The following table lists the file statistics and the decimal(hexidecimal) offset. These statistics are data type Binary and eight bytes long.
File statistic | Offset dec(hex) |
---|---|
DKRD | 26(1A) |
DKWR | 34(22) |
REQ | 42(2A) |
RETRYA | 50(32) |
RETRYC | 58(3A) |
DUPDTS | 66(42) |
RECADD | 74(4A) |
RECDEL | 82(52) |
BADD | 90(5A) |
BDEL | 98(62) |
BCHG | 106(6A) |
IXADD | 114(72) |
IXDEL | 122(7A) |
DIRRCD | 130(82) |
BXCHNG | 138(8A) |
BXDELE | 146(92) |
BXNEXT | 154(9A) |
BXFIND | 162(A2) |
BXINSE | 170(AA) |
BXSPLI | 178(B2) |
BXRFND | 186(BA) |
BXFREE | 194(C2) |
UPDTTIME | 202(CA) |
PNDGTIME | 210(D2) |
DKUPTIME | 218(DA) |
COMMITS | 226(E2) |
BACKOUTS | 234(EA) |
Text entries (Type 11, Type 13)
Type 11 (X'0B') and Type 13 (X'0D') entries record most of the actual text of the audit trail.
Noncontinued text entries, Type 11 (X'0B')
Each Type 11 journal entry corresponds to one logical entry in the audit trail, even though it might generate more than one line of physical output in the audit trail.
The format of a Type 11 entry is shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'0B' |
3(3) | 1 | Binary | Subtype indicator:
X'01' = LI line X'02' = LP line X'03' = LR line X'04' = CI line X'05' = QT line X'08' = CP line X'10' = OI line X'20' = OO line X'40' = LS line X'80' = CS line |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
12(0C) | 2 | Binary | Server number |
14(0E) | 2 | Binary | User number |
16(10) | Variable | EBCDIC | Text of audit trail entry |
Possibly continued text entries, Type 13 (X'0D')
Each Type 13 journal entry corresponds to one, or part of one, logical entry in the audit trail. See the Types of audit trail lines table for a definition of the line types.
The format of a Type 13 entry is shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'0D' |
3(3) | 1 | Binary |
Subtype indicator: X'01' = US line X'02' = XX line X'04' = RK line X'08' = AD line X'10' = MS line X'20' = ER line |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
12(0C) | 2 | Binary | Server number |
14(0E) | 2 | Binary | User number |
16(10) | Variable | EBCDIC | Text of audit trail entry |
Note: Subtype indicator X'80' summed with any subtype means continuation into the next entry.
Initialization entries, Type 12 (X'0C')
One Type 12 journal entry is written as the first nonheader entry in the journal during initialization. It contains basic information about the run being initialized.
The format of a Type 12 entry is shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry = X'001A' |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'0C' |
3(3) | 1 | — | Unused |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
12(0C) | 8 | EBCDIC | Version ID (for example, 4.2.0G) |
20(14) | 2 | Binary | Spare for the run |
22(16) | 4 | EBCDIC | SMF ID (SYSID parameter) |
Time-stamp entries, Type 14 (X'0E')
Type 14 entries are used to force time-stamps to the journal.
The format of a Type 14 entry is shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry = X'000C' |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'0E' |
3(3) | 1 | — | Unused |
4(4) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Julian date = 0CYYDDDF |
8(8) | 4 | Unsigned packed data | Time = HHMMSSTH |
Merged journal bracketing entries (Type 15)
Type 15 entries appear only in the output of the MERGEJ utility. See Using the MERGEJ utility.
The format of a Type 15 entry is shown in the following table:
Offset dec(hex) | Length | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Binary | Length of entry = X'002E' |
2(2) | 1 | Binary | Type indicator = X'0F' |
3(3) | 1 | Binary |
Subtype indicator: X'01' = begin bracket X'02' = end bracket |
4(4) | 12(0C) | — | Unused |
16(10) | 2(2) | Binary | Number of journals merged together |
18(12) | 28(1C) | EBCDIC | Text:
|
System Management Facilities
You can write certain statistics to the System Management Facilities (SMF) data set by:
- Setting the SMFSLRN and SMFLORN parameters on the User 0 command line to activate the SMF feature. (z/OS and z/VM)
- Modifying the program that processes the SMF data set to handle the records written by Model 204. (z/VM only)
See the z/VM requirements and the the z/OS requirements sections for details.
Since-last statistics or logout statistics can be written concurrently with statistics that are written to the journal. Logout statistics are more complete than since-last statistics. Many more since-last records than logout records are usually written.
If the operating system crashes before a user logs out, the SMF data set has a since-last record for every request run, but no logout record.
File and system statistics cannot be written to the SMF data set.
During system initialization, Model 204 issues a message reporting the SMF system ID, the run's job name, the step name, and the JES ID. For operating systems other than z/OS, the JES ID is blank.
z/VM requirements
In the CMS interface to Model 204, you can incorporate a user-written accounting exit that invokes the ACCTEXIT routine to process each statistics record as it is written. The following considerations apply:
- Take care to preserve the CMS environment in which Model 204 is running. Do not change the contents of general registers 13 and 14.
- You must specify the SMFLORN and/or SMFSLRN parameters on User 0's parameter line to activate accounting record production.
- TEXT file for the ACCTEXIT module must be available on an accessed disk when generating M204CMS using M204GEN. For complete installation procedures, see the Rocket Model 204 z/VM Installation Guide.
z/OS requirements
To write since-last SMF records in a z/OS environment, activate the SMF feature.
To activate SMF, set the following parameters on User 0's parameter line:
- SMFSLRN — SMF record number for since-last records
- SMFLORN — SMF record number for logout records
The following considerations apply:
- Since-last SMF records are written only if the SMFSLRN parameter is set to a non-zero value at the beginning of the run.
- Logout SMF records are written only if the SMFLORN parameter is set to a non-zero value at the beginning of the run.
- If both parameters are set, each type of record is written.
SMF record numbers, which identify the record type to the programs that process the SMF data set, are written as part of the header of the SMF records. The record numbers must be between 128 and 255.
See the "System Management Facility record layout and statistics" section, which follows.
System Management Facility record layout and statistics
SMF logout record layout
The following table shows the basic format of the Model 204 SMF logout record:
Offset(hex) | Length | Description |
---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Length of record |
2(2) | 2 | Zeros |
4(4) | 1 | System configuration |
5(5) | 1 | Record number (SMFSLRN or SMFLORN) |
6(6) | 8 | Time and date |
14(E) | 4 | System identification |
18(12) | 8 | Job name |
26(1A) | 8 | Time and date of login |
34(22) | 10 | Login user ID |
44(2C) | 10 | Login account |
54(36) | 2 | Binary user number |
56(38) | 1 | Unused (reserved) |
57(39) | 1 | Model 204 version number in hex:
For V7.4: For V7.5: For V7.6: |
58(3A) | 2 | Unused (reserved) |
60(3C) | Binary fullwords of statistics |
- Statistics depend upon the record number.
- The SMF system identification field (offset 16) is the site-definable
4-character field retrieved from the SMF control area.
The SMF control area field contains the CPU identification string that is stored at system IPL time, and it can be used to determine on which CPU Model 204 is running in a multi-CPU environment.
Offsets for SMF logout record statistics
The following table shows the layout of SMF logout record statistics. Each statistic in the table is: Length, 4 (bytes); data type, Binary. This record has the same statistics in the same order as the CCAJRNL logout record, only the offsets are different. For a description of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table.
Offset dec(hex) | Statistic |
---|---|
60(3C) | CNCT |
64(40) | DKRD |
68(44) | DKWR |
72(48) | SQRD |
76(4C) | SQWR |
80(50) | SGMTI |
84(54) | SGMTO |
88(58) | SVRD |
92(5C) | SVWR |
96(60) | CPU |
100(64) | REQ |
104(68) | MOVE |
108(6C) | DUMP |
112(70) | REST |
116(74) | SLIC |
120(78) | AUDIT |
124(7C) | WAIT |
128(80) | FBWT |
132(84) | UDD |
136(88) | RECADD |
140(8C) | RECDEL |
144(90) | BADD |
148(94) | BDEL |
152(98) | BCHG |
156(9C) | IXADD |
160(A0) | IXDEL |
164(A4) | FINDS |
168(A8) | SORTS |
172(AC) | RECDS |
176(B0) | STRECDS |
180(B4) | DKAR |
184(B8) | DKPR |
188(BC) | DKRR |
192(C0) | COMMITS |
196(C4) | BACKOUTS |
200(C8) | UPDTTIME(MS) |
204(CC) | LONGUPDTS |
208(D0) | LONGUPDTIME(MS) |
212(D4) | SMPLS |
216(D8) | RUNG |
220(DC) | REDY |
224(E0) | BLKI |
228(E4) | WTSV |
232(E8) | BLKO |
236(EC) | SWPG |
240(F0) | PCPU |
244(F4) | DIRRCD |
248(F8) | BXCHNG |
252(FC) | BXDELE |
256(100) | BXNEXT |
260(104) | BXFIND |
264(108) | BXINSE |
268(10C) | BXSPLI |
272(110) | BXFND |
276(114) | BXFREE |
280(118) | STCPU |
284(11C) | STDEQ |
288(120) | SCHDCPU |
292(124) | SCREENS |
296(128) | SVPAGES |
300(12C) | PBRSFLT |
304(130) | MQGETS |
308(134) | MQPUTS |
312(138) | UBUFHWS |
316(13C) | MQHWTASK |
320(140) | MQBYTEIN |
324(144) | MQBYTEOU |
328(148) | MQHWQU |
332(14C) | MQNUMQU |
336(150) | MQNUMQM |
340(154) | MQAPITIM |
344(158) | MQAPICNT |
348(15C) | MQGWTTIM |
352(160) | MQGWTCNT |
356(164) | MQGWTTSP |
360(168) | MQGWTSUC |
364(16C) | ECLOAD |
368(170) | ECDELETE |
372(174) | ECCALL |
376(178) | ECCWAITM |
380(17C) | ECCWAITS |
384(180) | ECTWAITM |
388(184) | ECTWAITS |
392(188) | ECCTOUT |
396(18C) | ECCNCT |
400(190) | GTBLRU |
404(194) | GTBLRS |
408(198) | FSCBSW |
412(19C) | Spare |
416(1A0) | Spare |
420(1A4) | Spare |
424(1A8) | ZTCPU |
428(1AC) | ZTDEQ |
432(1B0) | Spare |
436(1B4) | Spare |
440(1B8) | Spare |
SMF since-last record layout
The following table shows the basic format of since-last Model 204 SMF records.
Offset(hex) | Length (bytes) | Description |
---|---|---|
0(0) | 2 | Length of record |
2(2) | 2 | Zeros |
4(4) | 1 | System configuration |
5(5) | 1 | Record number (SMFSLRN) |
6(6) | 8 | Time and date |
14(E) | 4 | System identification |
18(12) | 8 | Job name |
26(1A) | 8 | Time and date of login |
34(22) | 10 | Login user ID |
44(2C) | 10 | Login account |
54(36) | 2 | Binary user number |
56(38) | 1 | SMFSLTYP - X'01' if CRFJRNL=1 (conflict counters present)
SMFSLTYP - X'00' if CRFJRNL=0 (conflict counters not present) |
57(39) | 1 | Model 204 version number in hex:
For V7.4: For V7.5: For V7.6: |
58(3A) | 2 | Unused (reserved) |
60(3C) | 4 | Since-last type (EVAL CMPL DUMP REST...) |
64(40) | 8 | File name |
72(48) | 10 | Since-last subsystem name |
82(52) | 40 | Since-last procedure name |
122(7A) | 2 | Reserved two bytes |
124(7C) | Binary fullwords of statistics |
- Statistics depend upon the record number.
- The SMF system identification field (offset 16) is the site-definable 4-character field retrieved from the SMF control area.
- The SMF control area field contains the CPU identification string that is stored at system IPL time, and it can be used to determine on which CPU Model 204 is running in a multi-CPU environment.
Offsets for SMF since-last record statistics
The following table shows the layout of SMF since-last record statistics. Each statistic in the table is: Length, 4 (bytes); Data type, Binary. This record has the same statistics in the same order as the CCAJRNL user since-last records; only the offsets are different. For a description of each statistic, see the Statistics with descriptions table.
Offset dec(hex) | Description |
---|---|
124(7C) | NTBL |
128(80) | GTBL |
132(84) | QTBL |
136(88) | STBL |
140(8C) | TTBL |
144(90) | VTBL |
148(94) | PDL |
152(98) | FTBL |
156(9C) | XTBL |
160(A0) | ITBL |
164(A4) | FSCB |
168(A8) | OUTPB |
172(AC) | HEAP |
176(B0) | SQLI |
180(B4) | SQLO |
184(B8) | CNCT |
188(BC) | CPU |
192(C0) | DKRD |
196(C4) | DKWR |
200(C8) | UDD |
204(CC) | OUT |
208(D0) | SLIC |
212(D4) | IN |
216(D8) | RECADD |
220(DC) | RECDEL |
224(E0) | BADD |
228(E4) | BDEL |
232(E8) | BCHG |
236(EC) | IXADD |
240(F0) | IXDEL |
244(F4) | FINDS |
248(F8) | SORT |
252(FC) | RECDS |
256(100) | STRECDS |
260(104) | PCPU |
264(108) | RQTM |
268(10C) | DIRRCD |
272(110) | BXCHNG |
276(114) | BXDELE |
280(118) | BXNEXT |
284(11C) | BXFIND |
288(120) | BXINSE |
292(124) | BXSPLI |
296(128) | BXRFND |
300(12C) | BXFREE |
304(130) | STCPU |
308(134) | STDEQ |
312(138) | SCHDCPU |
316(13C) | SCREENS |
320(140) | SVRD |
324(144) | SVWR |
328(148) | DKPR |
332(14C) | SVPAGES |
336(150) | COMMITS |
340(154) | BACKOUTS |
344(158) | UPDTTIME(MS) |
348(15C) | LONGUPDTS |
352(160) | LONGUPDTIME(MS) |
356(164) | MQGETS |
360(168) | MQPUTS |
364(16C) | UBUFHWS |
368(170) | MQHWTASK |
372(174) | MQBYTEIN |
376(178) | MQBYTEOU |
380(17C) | MQHWQU |
384(180) | MQNUMQU |
388(184) | MQNUMQM |
392(188) | MQAPITIM |
396(18C) | MAPICNT |
400(190) | MQGWTTIM |
404(194) | MQGWTCNT |
408(198) | MQGWTTSP |
412(19C) | MQGWTSUC |
416(1A0) | ECLOAD |
420(1A4) | ECDELETE |
424(1A8) | ECCALL |
428(1AC) | ECCWAITM |
432(1B0) | ECCWAITS |
436(1B4) | ECTWAITM |
440(1B8) | ECTWAITS |
444(1BC) | ECCTOUT |
448(1C0) | ECCNCT |
452(1C4) | GTBLRU |
456(1C8) | GTBLRS |
460(1CC) | FSCBSW |
464(1D0) | Sirius |
468(1D4) | Sirius |
472(1D8) | Sirius |
476(1DC) | ZTCPU |
480(1E0) | ZTDEQ |
484(1E4) | Spare |
488(1E8) | Spare |
The following table lists the conflict statistics, if CFRJRNL=1
:
Offset dec(hex) | Description |
---|---|
492(1EC) | BLKCFRE |
496(1F0) | BLKRLK |
500(1F4) | WTCFR |
504(1F8) | WTRLK |