You could run the show system resources follow command. Look at the load average and the wa% top - 16:57:15 up 14 days, 23:37, 1 user, load average: 1.00, 1.18, 1.38 Tasks: 95 total, 3 running, 92 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie Cpu(s): 50.2%us, 0.0%sy, 0.0%ni, 49.8%id, 0.0%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 0.0%st Mem: 2575620k total, 2389496k used, 186124k free, 44344k buffers Swap: 7992k total, 7992k used, 0k free, 939372k cached You can also check the CPU% (I ran this on a PA200 so it will always show 100%) PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND 2317 root 20 0 48536 23m 2676 R 100 0.9 21575:07 pan_task 2510 root 20 0 180m 82m 68m S 0 3.3 6:16.29 useridd 2525 root 20 0 759m 572m 9m S 0 22.7 131:46.22 mgmtsrvr You can run the show session meter command which will show if any session throttling occurred due to lack of resources.
... View more