The figure below and the steps that follow provide an example of the values and the calculation that determine the value of the NUMBER OF 4-HOUR PERIODS field in the Rolling 4-Hour MSU Usage Distribution Section of the CPU Utilization Report.
Figure 1. NUMBER OF 4-HOUR PERIODS field example
PRODUCED BY CMF ANALYZER (v.r.mm RSL yymm ) CPU UTILIZATION REPORT
BMC SOFTWARE, INC. XYZ COMPANY.
REQD 13 JUL 10 08.00.00 13 JUL 10 23.00.59 WORLDWIDE HEADQUARTERS
SHFT 00.00.00 23.59.00 DAYS=ALL
ACTL 13 JUL 10 08.09.00 13 JUL 10 23.09.00
BASED ON REC TYPE/# RECS/# SAMPLES/REC HOURS: 240-1/90/107K/15 70-1/90/107K/15
----------------------------------------- ROLLING 4-HOUR MSU USAGE DISTRIBUTION
CPU FAMILY: 2097 VERSION: 00 MODEL: 507 CEC CAPACITY = 340
PARTITION = SJSB
NUMBER OF 4-HOUR PERIODS = 67 CONSUMED MSU 238 237 236 ----- ----- ----- % OF 4-HOUR PERIODS USING MORE THAN THE CONSUMED MSU 3.0 7.5 13.4 To calculate the number of 4-hour periods
- Determine the total elapsed time of the report, taken from the REC HOURS value in the BASED ON line (15 in the example).
- Determine the number of recording intervals, taken from the # RECS value in the BASED ON line (90 in the example).
- Convert the total elapsed time to minutes: 15 hours * 60 minutes per hour = 900 minutes.
- Calculate the recording interval length = 900 minutes / 90 recording intervals = 10 minutes per interval.
- Calculate the number of recording intervals per hour = 60 minutes per hour / 10 minute interval = (6) 10-minute samples per hour.
- Calculate the number of hours following the first four hours: 15 - 4 = 11.
- Calculate the number of ten-minute recording intervals in 11 hours = (11 * 6) = 66.
- Add 1, representing the last reporting interval of the first four-hour period = 66 + 1 = 67.
The total is 67 4-hour periods.