ÿØÿà JFIF    ÿþ >CREATOR: gd-jpeg v1.0 (using IJG JPEG v62), default quality ÿÛ C     p!ranha?
Server IP : 172.67.171.101  /  Your IP : 216.73.216.123
Web Server : Apache
System : Linux server1.morocco-tours.com 3.10.0-1127.19.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Aug 25 17:23:54 UTC 2020 x86_64
User : zagoradraa ( 1005)
PHP Version : 7.4.33
Disable Function : NONE
MySQL : OFF  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : ON  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : ON  |  Sudo : ON  |  Pkexec : ON
Directory :  /usr/share/doc/sysstat-10.1.5/

Upload File :
Curr3nt_D!r [ Writeable ] D0cum3nt_r0Ot [ Writeable ]

 
Command :
Current File : /usr/share/doc/sysstat-10.1.5/FAQ
This is sysstat's Frequently Asked Questions!
Be sure to read this carefully before asking for help...
If you don't find the solution to your problem here then send me an email
(please remember to include the version numbers of sysstat and of your kernekl).


1. GENERAL QUESTIONS

1.1. When I compile sysstat, it fails with the following message:
     "make: msgfmt: Command not found".
1.2. When I try to compile sysstat, it fails and says it cannot find some
     include files.
1.3. I don't understand why sysstat displays the time sometimes as HH:MM:SS
     and sometimes as HH:MM:SS AM/PM...
     
2. QUESTIONS RELATING TO SAR/SADC/SADF

2.1. The sar command complains with the following message:
     "Invalid system activity file: ...".
2.2. The sar command complains with the following message:
     "Cannot append data to that file (...)".
2.3. The sar command complains with the following message:
     "Invalid data format".
2.4. I get the following error message when I try to run sar:
     "Cannot open /var/log/sa/sa30: No such file or directory".
2.5. Are sar daily data files fully compatible with Sun Solaris format
     sar files?
2.6. I have some trouble running sar on my SMP box. My server crashes
     with a kernel oops.
2.7. The "Average:" results from the sar command are just rubbish...
2.8. My database (e.g. MySQL) doesn't appear to understand the time zone
     displayed by 'sadf -d'...
2.9. I tried to use options -s and -e with sadf. Unfortunately, I have
     nothing displayed at all.
2.10. I cannot see all my disks when I use the sar -d command...
2.11. Do you know a tool which can graphically plot the data collected by sar?
2.12. When I launch sadc, I get the error message:
      "flock: Resource temporarily unavailable".
2.13. How should I run sysstat / sar so that I get a reading for 00:00:00?
2.14. The sar command complains with the following message:
      "Requested activities not available in file ...".
2.15. Does sar need a lot of resources to run?
2.16. Are the measurements gathered by sadc cumulative or instantaneous?
2.17. Some fields are always displayed as 0.00 when I use the sar -d
      command.
2.18. The sar command complains with the following message:
      "Requested activities not available".
2.19. How can I keep sar data for more than one month?
2.20. How can I load sar data into an Oracle database for performance
      analysis and capacity planning?
2.21. The sar command displays some weird output values...
2.22. What happened to sar's options -h, -H, -x and -X?
2.23. What is the exact meaning of the <count> parameter for sar and sadc?
2.24. Why doesn't sar deal with sub-second sampling/monitoring?

3. QUESTIONS RELATING TO IOSTAT

3.1. I can't see all my disks when I use the iostat command...
3.2. iostat -x doesn't report disk I/O statistics...
3.3. Why can't iostat display extended statistics for partitions with
     2.6.x kernels?
3.4. I don't understand the output of iostat. It doesn't match what I expect
     it to be...
3.5. Why values displayed by iostat are so different in the first report
     from those displayed in subsequent ones?
3.6. iostat -x displays huge numbers for some fields...

4. QUESTIONS RELATING TO PIDSTAT

4.1. pidstat -d doesn't report task I/O statistics...
4.2. The pidstat command complains with the following message:
      "Requested activities not available".
4.3. pidstat doesn't display statistics for process (task) xyz...
4.4. I noticed that the total CPU utilization for threads running on
     an individual CPU can exceed 100%...


1. GENERAL QUESTIONS
####################

1.1. When I compile sysstat, it fails with the following message:
make: msgfmt: Command not found
make: ***[locales] Error 127

The msgfmt command belongs to the GNU gettext package.
If you don't have it on your system, just configure sysstat with
NLS disabled like this:

$ ./configure --disable-nls

or answer 'y' (for "yes") to the question
"Disable National Language Support (NLS)? (y/n) [--disable-nls]"
if you use the Interactive Configuration script (iconfig),
then compile sysstat as usual (make ; make install).
Please read the README-nls file included in sysstat source package to learn
some more about National Language Support.

~~~

1.2. When I try to compile sysstat, it fails and says it cannot find some
include files:
In file included from /usr/include/bits/errno.h:25,
                 from /usr/include/errno.h:36,
                 from common.c:26:
/usr/include/linux/errno.h:4: asm/errno.h: No such file or directory
<SNIP>
common.c: In function `get_kb_shift':
common.c:180: `PAGE_SIZE' undeclared (first use in this function)
common.c:178: warning: `size' might be used uninitialized in this function
make: *** [common.o] Error 1

Make sure that you have the Linux kernel sources installed in
/usr/src/linux. Also make sure that the symbolic link exists in the
/usr/src/linux/include directory and points to the right architecture, e.g.:

# ll /usr/src/linux/include/asm
lrwxrwxrwx   1 root     root            8 May  5 18:31 /usr/src/linux/include/asm -> asm-i386

In fact, only the Linux kernel headers should be necessary to be able
to compile sysstat.

~~~

1.3. I don't understand why sysstat displays the time sometimes as HH:MM:SS
and sometimes as HH:MM:SS AM/PM...

The time format used by sysstat tools depends on the locale of your system.
The locale is defined by several environment variables, among which the LANG
variable is perhaps the most widely used. See the following example:

$ export LANG=en_US
$ sar
Linux 2.4.9 (brooks.seringas.fr)        07/20/04

04:32:11 PM       LINUX RESTART

05:00:00 PM       CPU     %user     %nice   %system   %iowait     %idle
05:10:00 PM       all      0.24      0.00     89.64      0.00     10.12
Average:          all      0.24      0.00     89.64      0.00     10.12

$ export LANG=fr_FR
$ sar
Linux 2.4.9 (brooks.seringas.fr)        20.07.2004

16:32:11          LINUX RESTART

17:00:00          CPU     %user     %nice   %system   %iowait     %idle
17:10:00          all      0,24      0,00     89,64      0,00     10,12
Moyenne:          all      0,24      0,00     89,64      0,00     10,12

As you can notice, the time format but also the date, the decimal point, and
even some words (like "Average") have changed according to the specified
locale.


2. QUESTIONS RELATING TO SAR/SADC/SADF
######################################

2.1. The sar command complains with the following message:
Invalid system activity file: ...

You are trying to use a file which is not a system activity file, or
whose format is no longer compatible with that of files created by
current version of sar.
If you were trying to use the standard system activity files located in the
/var/log/sa directory then the solution is easy: just log in as root and
remove by hand all the files located in the /var/log/sa directory:

# rm /var/log/sa/sa??

With recent versions of sysstat (8.1.1 and later), it is now possible to
know which version of sar or sadc has been used to create a data file.
Just enter the following command:

$ sadf -H /your/datafile | grep sysstat
File created using sar/sadc from sysstat version 8.1.7

~~~

2.2. The sar command complains with the following message:
Cannot append data to that file (...)

The internal structure of the data file does not allow sar to append
data to it. The data file may come from another machine, or the components
of the current box, such as the number of processors, may have changed.
Use another data file, or delete the current daily data file, and try again.

~~~

2.3. The sar command complains with the following message:
Invalid data format

This error message means that sadc (the system activity data collector that
sar is using) is not consistent with the sar command. In most cases this is
because the sar and sadc commands do not belong to the same release of the
sysstat package. Remember that sar may search for sadc in predefined
directories (/usr/local/lib/sa, /usr/lib/sa, ...) before looking in the
current directory!

~~~

2.4. I get the following error message when I try to run sar:
Cannot open /var/log/sa/sa30: No such file or directory

Please read the sar(1) manual page! Daily data files are created in the
/var/log/sa directory using the data collector (sadc) or using option
-o with sar. Once they are created, sar can display statistics saved
in those files.
But sar can also display statistics collected "on the fly": Just enter
the proper options on the command line to indicate which statistics are
to be displayed, and also specify <interval> and <count> numbers.
E.g.:

# sar 2 5  --> will report CPU utilization every two seconds, five times.
# sar -n DEV 3  --> will report network device utilization every
3 seconds, in an infinite loop.

~~~

2.5. Are sar daily data files fully compatible with Sun Solaris format
sar files?

No, the format of the binary data files created by sysstat's sar command
is not compatible with formats from other Unixes, because it contains
data which are closely linked to Linux.
For the same reason, sysstat cannot work on platforms other than Linux...

~~~

2.6. I have some trouble running sar on my SMP box. My server crashes
with a kernel oops:
Feb 17 04:05:00 bolums1 kernel: Unable to handle kernel paging request
at virtual address fffffc1c
Feb 17 04:05:00 bolums1 kernel: current->tss.cr3 = 19293000, %cr3 = 19293000
Feb 17 04:05:00 bolums1 kernel: *pde = 0026b067
Feb 17 04:05:00 bolums1 kernel: *pte = 00000000
Feb 17 04:05:00 bolums1 kernel: Oops: 0000
Feb 17 04:05:00 bolums1 kernel: CPU:    0
Feb 17 04:05:00 bolums1 kernel: EIP:
<...>

The trouble you have is triggered by a *Linux* kernel bug, not a sysstat
one... The best solution is to upgrade your kernel to the latest stable
release.
Also, if you cannot upgrade your box, try to configure sysstat with the
SMP race workaround:

$ ./configure --enable-smp-race

or answer 'y' to the question:
"Linux SMP race in serial driver workaround? (y/n) [--enable-smp-race]"
if you use the Interactive Configuration script (iconfig).
Indeed, we found that 2.2.x kernels (with x <= 15) have an SMP race
condition, which the sar command may trigger when it reads the
/proc/tty/driver/serial file.
Note: Option "--enable-smp-race" was removed in sysstat version 9.1.4.
Anyway you don't run a kernel 2.2.x any more, do you?

~~~

2.7. The "Average:" results from the sar command are just rubbish...
E.g.:
 11:00:00 AM       CPU     %user     %nice   %system     %idle
 11:10:00 AM       all      0.54      0.00      0.89     98.57
 11:20:01 AM       all      3.02      8.05     22.85     66.08
 11:30:01 AM       all      8.15      0.00      2.31     89.54
 11:40:01 AM       all      8.03      0.00      2.42     89.55
 11:50:01 AM       all     16.04      0.00      2.81     81.16
 12:00:00 PM       all     21.11      0.00      3.23     75.66
 03:40:01 PM       all    100.01    100.01    100.01      0.00
 04:40:00 PM       all    100.00      0.00    100.00      0.00
 04:50:00 PM       all      5.87      0.00      1.26     92.87
 05:00:00 PM       all      4.70      0.00      1.48     93.82
 05:10:00 PM       all      4.93      0.00      1.29     93.78
 Average:          all    100.22    100.20    100.13      0.00

Your sar command was not installed properly. Whenever your computer
is restarted (as it is the case here between 12:00:00 PM and 03:40:01 PM),
the 'sysstat' shell script must be called by the system, so that the
LINUX RESTART message can be inserted into the daily data file, indicating
that the relevant kernel counters have been reinitialized...
You can install the 'sysstat' script by hand in the relevant startup
directory, or you can ask sysstat to do it for you during configuration
stage by entering:

$ ./configure --enable-install-cron

Or you can answer 'y' to the question:
"Set crontab to start sar automatically? (y/n) [--enable-install-cron]"
if you use the Interactive Configuration script (iconfig).
Then compile sysstat as usual and run 'make install' as the last stage.

~~~

2.8. My database (e.g. MySQL) doesn't appear to understand the time zone
displayed by 'sadf -d'...

The format includes the timezone detail in the output. This is to make
sure it is communicated clearly that UTC is how the data is always
converted and printed. Moreover we don't depend on the TZ environment
variable and we don't have some data converted to a different timezone
for any reason, known or unknown.
When you deal with raw accounting data you always want it in UTC.
Of course, you want it to all be the same when loading into a database.
If your database can't deal with timezones, you should write a short script
to strip the "UTC" characters from the data being loaded into the database.

~~~

2.9. I tried to use options -s and -e with sadf. Unfortunately, I have
nothing displayed at all.

This is because no data belong to the specified time interval!
The time specified with options -s and -e is now always considered as
being given in local time to be consistent with sar default output.
Remember that timestamps are displayed by sadf in UTC (Coordinated
Universal Time) by default. Use option -T to tell sadf to display them
in local time.

~~~

2.10. I cannot see all my disks when I use the sar -d command...

See question 3.1 below.

~~~

2.11. Do you know a tool which can graphically plot the data collected by sar?

Several such tools are lying around on the internet. I haven't tested all of
them and there must still be some way for improvement...
First, some tools are included in the sysstat package: isag (a Perl script)
or sargraph (a shell script).
You can also find: kSar, sarvant, sar2gp, loadgraph, SysStat Charts, sarplot...
rrd.cgi (http://haroon.sis.utoronto.ca/rrd/scripts/) is a perl front-end for
rrdtool and can be used to make some graphs (see a demo at
http://haroon.sis.utoronto.ca/perl/rrd.cgi/sar_stats/).
I've also heard of commercial tools which use sysstat: PerfMan comes to mind,
among others.
If you find others which you think are of real interest, please let me know
so that I can update this list.

~~~

2.12. When I launch sadc, I get the error message:
flock: Resource temporarily unavailable

You are launching sadc using -L option. With this option, sadc tries to
get an exclusive lock on the output file. The above error message indicates
that another sadc process was running and had already locked the same output
file. Stop all sadc instances and try again.

~~~

2.13. I have sysstat setup to run via cron:
0 * * * * /usr/local/lib/sa/sa1 600 6 &
so that I get an activity report every 10 minutes.
When I use sar to get my output, there is no reading for 00:00:00. This
means that at midnight every night there is a spike, or dip, in the graphs.
How should I run sysstat / sar so that I get a reading for 00:00:00?

Sysstat does get its data at midnight, but two data samples are needed to
display the values.
When there is a "file rotation" (beginning of a new day), sadc writes its data
at the end of the previous daily data file (/var/log/sa/sa<DD>) *and* at the
beginning of the new one (/var/log/sa/sa<DD+1>). Please note that '-' must be
used to specify the output file for sadc to be able to detect such a file
rotation. So a crontab like the following one should enable you to get the
data for midnight at the end of each daily data file:

# Activity reports every 10 minutes from 01:00:00 to 22:50:00
0 1-22 * * * /usr/local/lib/sa/sa1 600 6 &
# Activity reports every 10 minutes from 23:00:00 to 00:00:00
# Reporting until 00:00:00 ensures that a file rotation will be detected
# by sadc
0 23 * * * /usr/local/lib/sa/sa1 600 7 &
# Activity reports every 10 minutes from 00:10:00 to 00:50:00
10 0 * * * /usr/local/lib/sa/sa1 600 5 &

Another possible crontab would be:

*/10 1-22 * * * /usr/lib/sa/sa1 1 1
0,10,20,30,40 23 * * * /usr/lib/sa/sa1 1 1
50 23 * * * /usr/lib/sa/sa1 600 2
10,20,30,40,50 0 * * * /usr/lib/sa/sa1 1 1

~~~

2.14. The sar command complains with the following message:
Requested activities not available in file ...

This error message means that you are trying to extract non-existent activities
from the data file. Usually sadc reads all the available activities from the
system and stores them in the data file. However, to prevent data files from
taking too much space on disk, some activities must be explicitly set on the
command line to be read by sadc.
To tell sadc that an optional activity should be collected, use switch -S
followed by the keyword corresponding to that activity (see sadc(8) manual page).
As of this writing, optional activities are: interrupts, disks, SNMP, IPv6 and
power management statistics.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The list of activities that are saved in a file can no longer
be modified once the file has been created. So it is important to use the proper
options the first time sadc is called (whether via a crontab, a script like
sa1 or even the script used to insert a RESTART message when the machine is
rebooted).
NB: If the sar command complains with the error message:
"Requested activities not available" (without mentioning "in file"),
then see question 2.18 below.

~~~

2.15. Does sar need a lot of resources to run?

No, sar doesn't need a lot of CPU to run, nor does it make your system slow,
contrary to what some people think. In the first place, it only runs every ten
minutes by default. Secondly, when it does run, it is over and done very
quickly. Try:

$ time /usr/lib/sa/sa1

to verify that for yourself.
Nor do you have to be concerned about using up all your disk space.
sar will use a few hundred kilobytes for a whole day's worth of data, and it
normally only stores one week worth (this can be configured via the HISTORY
variable in the /etc/sysconfig/sysstat file). It is entirely self limiting.
Moreover, you can ask sar to compress its datafiles older than a certain
number of days: see the COMPRESSAFTER parameter in the /etc/sysconfig/sysstat
configuration file.

~~~

2.16. Are the measurements gathered by sadc cumulative or instantaneous values?

Each counter maintained by the kernel is cumulative since system boot. As a
consequence the measurements gathered by sadc are cumulative values.
Moreover all per-second statistics displayed by sar are average values on the
given time interval. So the value for counter foo at time T is calculated as:
foo/s = [foo(T) - foo(T-dt)] / dt
where dt is the interval given on the command line.

~~~

2.17. Some fields are always displayed as 0.00 when I use the sar -d
command.

See question 3.2 below.

~~~

2.18. The sar command complains with the following message:
Requested activities not available

This error message means that you are trying to display activities that the
kernel itself is unable to provide.
When this error message is displayed while trying to save the data into an
existing file ("sar -o datafile ..."), this may also be because the target
file cannot accept the requested activities. In this case, just try to use
another file or create a new one. See also question 2.14 above.

~~~

2.19. How can I keep sar data for more than one month?

By default sar saves its data in the standard system activity data file,
the /var/log/sa/sa<DD> file, where <DD> is the current day in the month.
To prevent sar from overwriting any existing files, just set the variable
HISTORY in /etc/sysconfig/sysstat to the number of days during which data
must be kept. When this variable has a value greater than 28, sa1 script
uses a month-by-month directory structure; datafiles are named YYYYMM/saDD
and the script maintains links to these datafiles to mimic the standard
sar datafile structure.
However please note that pre-existing datafiles will be deleted as links
will be created and replace them.

~~~

2.20. How can I load sar data into an Oracle database for performance
analysis and capacity planning?

The simplest way for that is to use sadf (a command included in sysstat
package) with its option -d. It displays sar data in a format that can
easily be ingested by a relational database system (fields are separated
by a semicolon). It should then be easy for a tool like SQL*Loader to
load the data into the Oracle database.

~~~

2.21. The sar command displays some weird CPU values...
E.g.:
10:50:01 AM       CPU     %user     %nice   %system   %iowait     %idle
11:00:01 AM       all     90.90      0.00      5.17      3.93      0.00
11:00:01 AM         0     39.40      0.00      2.37      2.07     56.17
11:00:01 AM         1     29.71      0.00      1.73      1.17     67.39
11:00:01 AM         2     42.69      0.00      2.34      1.11     53.85
11:00:01 AM         3     26.24      0.00      1.41      1.61     70.74
...

Sysstat may have met an overflow condition while reading CPU usage from
your /proc/stat file. This condition is all the more likely to happen as
your machine uptime is high and/or there are many processors.
Sysstat up to version 5.0.6 uses 32-bit integer variables to store CPU usage.
Then, beginning with version 5.1.1, sysstat has shifted to 64-bit variables,
which has fixed the problem. So try to upgrade your version of sysstat to
the latest stable release and check that the problem has gone.

~~

2.22. What happened to sar's options -h, -H, -x and -X?

These old options have been removed from sar because new commands have been
made available. You should now use the sadf command instead of sar -h or
sar -H, and the pidstat command instead of sar -x or sar -X. Please read
their manual page to learn some more about their respective options.

~~

2.23. What is the exact meaning of the <count> parameter for sar and sadc?

For sadc, <count> is the number of data samples collected.
For sar, <count> is the number of records to display (a record contains
the average values for counters over the given time interval - See 2.16).

Starting with an empty file <file>:

sadc <file> 1 6 	will write 6 data samples to file.
sar -f <file> 1 6 	6 is invalid because there are only 5 intervals.

Based on the <count> value entered for sadc the "valid" <count> values for
sar are 1 through 5. Any value greater than 5 for sar will give the
same output as 5 in this example. So entering sar -f <file> 1 2000
for a file populated with the output of sadc 1 6 <file> will give the
same output as sar -f <file> 1 5. Note that it all depends on the number
of data samples pre-existing in the data file. If the file is empty
when first running sadc then the above is true.

~~

2.24. Why doesn't sar deal with sub-second sampling/monitoring?

There are two reasons for sar to not handle sub-second intervals:

1) This is not sar's purpose. sar has been created to give the
sys admin a global overview of its machine daily utilization so
that when a problem happens, he has a benchmark and can compare
the statistics gathered by sar with those saved before. For that
reason an interval of 10 minutes (which is the default for sar) is
quite appropriate.

2) Because this is just a dumb idea to try to gather a huge amount
of data on a sub-second interval basis (and sar really collects
a lot of data). This can be resource-consuming and you are all the
more prone to have an influence on the data you are retrieving as
the interval of time is small.


3. QUESTIONS RELATING TO IOSTAT
###############################

3.1. I can't see all my disks when I use the iostat command...

Yes. This is a kernel limit. Old kernels (2.2.x for instance) used to
maintain stats for the first four devices.
The accounting code has changed in 2.4 kernels, and the result may (or
may not) be better for your system. Indeed, Linux 2.4 maintains the stats
in a two dimensional array, with a maximum of 16 devices (DK_MAX_DISK
in the kernel sources). Moreover, if the device major number exceeds
DK_MAX_MAJOR (whose value also defaults to 16 in the kernel sources),
then stats for this device will not be collected.
So, a solution may be simply to change the values of these limits in 
linux/include/linux/kernel_stat.h and recompile your kernel.
You should no longer have any problem with post 2.5 kernels, since
statistics are maintained by the kernel for all the devices.
In the particular case of iostat, also be sure to use the ALL keyword
on the command line to display statistical information relating to
every device, including those that are defined but have never been used
by the system.

~~~

3.2. iostat -x doesn't report disk I/O statistics...

For 'iostat -x' to be able to report extended disk I/O statistics,
it is better to use a recent version of the Linux kernel (2.6.x).
Indeed, iostat tries to read data from the /proc/diskstats file or
from the sysfs filesystem for that.
But iostat may also be able to display extended statistics with
older kernels (e.g. 2.4.x) providing that all the necessary
statistical information is available in the /proc/partitions file,
which requires that a patch be applied to the kernel (this is
often done on kernels included in various distros). In recent 2.4.x
kernels, the /proc/partitions file has all the necessary data
providing that the kernel has been compiled with CONFIG_BLK_STATS=y.

~~~

3.3. Why can't iostat display extended statistics for partitions with
     some 2.6.x kernels?

Because the kernel maintains these stats only for devices, and not for
partitions! Here is an excerpt from the document iostats.txt written by
Rick Lindsley (ricklind@us.ibm.com) and included in the kernel source
documentation:
"There were significant changes between 2.4 and 2.6 in the I/O subsystem.
As a result, some statistic information disappeared. The translation from
a disk address relative to a partition to the disk address relative to
the host disk happens much earlier.  All merges and timings now happen
at the disk level rather than at both the disk and partition level as
in 2.4.  Consequently, you'll see a different statistics output on 2.6 for
partitions from that for disks."
Extended I/O statistics for partitions are available again with kernels
2.6.25 and later.

~~~

3.4. I don't understand the output of iostat. It doesn't match what I expect it
to be...

By default iostat displays I/O activity in blocks per second. With old
kernels (i.e. older than 2.4.x) a block is of indeterminate size and therefore
the displayed values are not useful.
With recent kernels (kernels 2.4 and later), iostat is now able to get disk
activities from the kernel expressed in a number of sectors. If you take a
look at the kernel code, the sector size is actually allowed to vary although
I have never seen anything other than 512 bytes.

~~~

3.5. Why values displayed by iostat are so different in the first report
     from those displayed in subsequent ones?

Probably because, as written in the manual page, the first report generated
by iostat concerns the time since system startup, whereas subsequent ones
cover only the time since the previous report (that is to say, the interval
of time entered on the command line).

~~~

3.6. iostat -x displays huge numbers for some fields...

Because of a Linux kernel bug, iostat -x may display huge I/O response times 
(svctm) and a bandwidth utilization (%util) of 100% for some devices. Indeed
these devices have a value for the field #9 (beginning after the device name)
in /proc/{partitions,diskstats} which is always different from 0, and even
negative sometimes. Yet this field should go to zero, since it gives the
number of I/Os currently in progress (it is incremented as requests are
submitted, and decremented as they finish).
To (temporarily) fix the problem, you should reboot your system to reset the
counters in /proc/{partitions,diskstats}.


4. QUESTIONS RELATING TO PIDSTAT
################################

4.1. pidstat -d doesn't report task I/O statistics...

For pidstat -d to be able to report I/O statistics for tasks, you need
a recent Linux kernel (2.6.20 or later) with the option
CONFIG_TASK_IO_ACCOUNTING compiled in.

~~~

4.2. The pidstat command complains with the following message:
      "Requested activities not available".

This message is displayed when the pidstat command is unable to display
the statistics you have requested. This may happen when you try to display
statistics for child processes (option -T CHILD) because all options of
pidstat don't necessarily work for child processes. Read the manual page
to know which statistics are available for child processes.

~~~

4.3. pidstat doesn't display statistics for process (task) xyz...

This must be because pidstat only displays statistics for active tasks
by default. If you don't use option -p on the command line, then pidstat
will display only tasks with non-zero statistics. For example, "pidstat -u"
will display only tasks that have actually used some CPU resources since
system startup. You should enter "pidstat -u -p ALL" to make sure that all
the processes are listed in the report.

~~~

4.4. I noticed that the total CPU utilization for threads running on
     an individual CPU can exceed 100%...

The CPU number displayed by pidstat is the CPU to which the task is attached
when the statistics are actually displayed. This doesn't mean that the task
has spent its whole interval of time attached to it. Hence the CPU ressource
used by a thread on an interval of time as displayed by pidstat may have
concerned several processors.

--	
Sebastien Godard (sysstat <at> orange.fr) is the author and the current
maintainer of this package.
N4m3
5!z3
L45t M0d!f!3d
0wn3r / Gr0up
P3Rm!55!0n5
0pt!0n5
..
--
August 27 2025 03:05:39
root / root
0755
CHANGES
81.66 KB
March 23 2013 16:30:36
root / root
0644
COPYING
17.561 KB
September 12 2009 18:59:04
root / root
0644
CREDITS
8.814 KB
October 13 2023 14:55:19
root / root
0644
FAQ
28.758 KB
March 01 2013 13:34:11
root / root
0644
README
4.273 KB
September 03 2012 14:41:55
root / root
0644
sysstat-10.1.5.lsm
1.78 KB
October 13 2023 14:55:22
root / root
0644
 $.' ",#(7),01444'9=82<.342ÿÛ C  2!!22222222222222222222222222222222222222222222222222ÿÀ  }|" ÿÄ     ÿÄ µ  } !1AQa "q2‘¡#B±ÁRÑð$3br‚ %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyzƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š’“”•–—˜™š¢£¤¥¦§¨©ª²³´µ¶·¸¹ºÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊÒÓÔÕÖרÙÚáâãäåæçèéêñòóôõö÷øùúÿÄ     ÿÄ µ   w !1AQ aq"2B‘¡±Á #3RðbrÑ $4á%ñ&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š’“”•–—˜™š¢£¤¥¦§¨©ª²³´µ¶·¸¹ºÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊÒÓÔÕÖרÙÚâãäåæçèéêòóôõö÷øùúÿÚ   ? ÷HR÷j¹ûA <̃.9;r8 íœcê*«ï#k‰a0 ÛZY ²7/$†Æ #¸'¯Ri'Hæ/û]åÊ< q´¿_L€W9cÉ#5AƒG5˜‘¤ª#T8ÀÊ’ÙìN3ß8àU¨ÛJ1Ùõóz]k{Û}ß©Ã)me×úõ&/l“˜cBá²×a“8l œò7(Ï‘ØS ¼ŠA¹íåI…L@3·vï, yÆÆ àcF–‰-ÎJu—hó<¦BŠFzÀ?tãúguR‹u#‡{~?Ú•£=n¾qo~öôüô¸¾³$õüÑ»jò]Mä¦  >ÎÈ[¢à–?) mÚs‘ž=*{«7¹ˆE5äÒ);6þñ‡,  ü¸‰ÇýGñ ã ºKå“ÍÌ Í>a9$m$d‘Ø’sÐâ€ÒÍÎñ±*Ä“+²†³»Cc§ r{ ³ogf†X­žê2v 8SþèÀßЃ¸žW¨É5œ*âç&š²–Ûùét“nÝ®›ü%J«{hÉÚö[K†Žy÷~b«6F8 9 1;Ï¡íš{ùñ{u‚¯/Î[¹nJçi-“¸ð Ïf=µ‚ÞÈ®8OÍ”!c H%N@<ŽqÈlu"š…xHm®ä<*ó7•…Á Á#‡|‘Ó¦õq“êífÛüŸ•­oNÚ{ËFý;– ŠÙ–!½Òq–‹væRqŒ®?„ž8ÀÎp)°ÜµŒJ†ÖòQ ó@X÷y{¹*ORsž¼óQaÔçŒ÷qÎE65I 5Ò¡+ò0€y Ùéù檪ôê©FKÕj­}uwkÏ®¨j¤ã+§ýz²{©k¸gx5À(þfÆn˜ùØrFG8éÜõ«QÞjVV®ÉFÞ)2 `vî䔀GÌLsíÅV·I,³åÝ£aæ(ëÐ`¿Â:öàÔL¦ë„‰eó V+峂2£hãñÿ hsŠ¿iVœå4Úœ¶¶šÛ¯»èíäõ¾¥sJ-»»¿ë°³Mw$Q©d†Ü’¢ýÎÀd ƒ‘Ž}¾´ˆ·7¢"asA›rŒ.v@ ÞÇj”Y´%Š–·–5\Ü²õåË2Hã×­°*¾d_(˜»#'<ŒîØ1œuþ!ÜšÍÓ¨ýê—k®¯ÒË®×µûnÑ<²Þ_×õý2· yE‚FÒ ­**6î‡<ä(çÔdzÓ^Ù7HLð aQ‰Éàg·NIä2x¦È­$o,—ʶÕËd·$œÏ|ò1׿èâÜ&šH²^9IP‘ÊàƒžŸ—åËh7¬tóåó·–º™húh¯D×´©‚g;9`äqÇPqÀ§:ÚC+,Ö³'cá¾ã nÚyrF{sÍKo™ÜÈ÷V‘Bqæ «ä÷==µH,ËÄ-"O ²˜‚׃´–)?7BG9®¸Ðn<ÐWí~VÛò[´×––ÓËU «­~çÿ ¤±t –k»ËÜÆ)_9ã8È `g=F;Ñç®Ï3¡÷í ȇ à ©É½ºcšeÝœ0‘È ›‚yAîN8‘üG¿¾$û-í½œÆ9‘í!ˆ9F9çxëøž*o_žIÆÖZò¥ÓºVùöõ¿w¦Ýˆæ•´ÓYÄ®­³ËV£êƒæõç?áNòîn.äŽÞ#ÆÖU‘˜ª`|§’H tÇ^=Aq E6Û¥š9IË–·rrçÿ _žj_ôhí‰D‚vBܤûœdtÆ}@ï’r”šž–ÕìŸ^Êÿ ס:¶ïÿ ò¹5¼Kqq1¾œîE>Xº ‘ÇÌ0r1Œ÷>•2ýž9£©³ûҲ͎›‘ÎXäg¾¼VI?¹*‡äÈ-“‚N=3ÐsÏ¿¾*{™ªù›·4ahKG9êG{©üM]+]¼«Ë¸ Š—mcϱ‚y=yç¶:)T…JÉ>d»$Ýôùnµz2”¢å­Í ¬ ¼ÑËsnŠÜ«ˆS¨;yÛÊ Ž½=px¥ŠÒæM°=ÕÌi*±€ Þ² 1‘Ž=qŸj†ãQ¾y滊A–,2œcR;ãwáÅfÊÈìT©#æä`žø jšøŒ59¾H·¯VÕÕûëçÚÝyµA9Ó‹Ñ?Çúþºš—QÇ ÔvòßNqù«¼!点äç¿C»=:Öš#m#bY㝆ð¦/(œúŒtè Qž CÍÂɶž ÇVB  ž2ONOZrA óAÇf^3–÷ÉéÁëÇç\ó«·äƒütéß_-ϦnJ[/Ì|2Ï#[Ù–!’,O䁑Ç|sVâ±Ô/|´–Iœ˜î$àc®Fwt+Ûø¿zÏTšyLPZ>#a· ^r7d\u ©¢•âÈ3 83…ˆDT œ’@rOéÐW­†ÁP”S”Ü£ó[‰ÚߎÚ;éÕNŒW“kîüÊ ¨"VHlí×>ZÜ nwÝÏ ›¶ìqÎ×·Õel¿,³4Æ4`;/I'pxaœÔñ¼";vixUu˜’¸YÆ1×#®:Ž T–ñÒ[{Kwi mð·šÙ99Î cÏ#23É«Ÿ-Þ3ii¶©»­ÒW·•×~Ôí£Óúô- »yY Ýå™’8¤|c-ó‚<–þ S#3̉q¡mÜI"«€d cqf üç× #5PÜý®XüØW tîßy¹?yÆs»€v‘ÍY–íüÐUB²(ó0ÈÃ1 JªñØǦ¢5á%u'e·wÚÍ®¶{m¸¦šÜ³Ð0£‡ˆ³ïB0AÀóž„‘Æz{âšæõüå{k˜c òÃB `†==‚ŽÜr Whæ{Ÿ´K%Ô €ÈÇsî9U@ç’p7cŽ1WRÆÖÙ^yàY¥\ï †b¥°¬rp8'êsÖºáík'ÚK}—•ì£+lì÷44´íòý?«Ö÷0¤I"Ú³.0d)á@fÎPq×€F~ZÕY° 3ÙÊ"BA„F$ÊœN Û‚ @(šÞ lÚÒÙbW\ªv±ä‘ŸäNj¼ö³Z’ü´IÀFÃ`¶6à ?! NxÇÒ©Ò­†Oª²½’·ŸM¶{êºjÚqŒ©®èþ ‰ ’&yL%?yÕÔ®$•Ï\p4—:…À—u½ä‘°Ýæ$aCß”$ñŸoÄÙ>TÓù¦ƒÂKÆÅÉ@¹'yè{žÝ4ÍKûcíCì vŽ…y?]Ol©Ê|Íê¾Þ_;üÿ Ï¡Rçånÿ rÔ’[m²»˜¡Ž4ùDŽ›Ë) $’XxËëšY8¹i•†Á!‘þpJ•V^0 Œ±õèi²Å²en%·„†8eeù²Yˆ,S†=?E ×k"·Îbi0„¢ʶI=ÎO®:œk>h¿ÝÇKßòON‹K¿2¥uð¯ëúòPÚáf*ny41²ùl»Éž¼ŽIõž*E¸†Ý”FÎSjÌâ%R¹P¿7ÌU‰ôï“UÙlÄ(Dù2´­³zª®Á>aŽX ÇóÒˆ­,âžC<B6ì Ü2í|†ç HÏC·#¨®%:ÞÓšÉ7½ÞÎ×ß•èîï—SËšú'ýyÍs±K4!Ì„0óŒ{£Øs÷‚çzŒð¹ã5æHC+Û=¼Í}ygn0c|œðOAô9îkÔ®£ŽÕf™¦»R#copÛICžÃ©þ :ñ^eñ©ðe·”’´ø‘¦f å— # <ò3ïÖ»ðŸ×©Æ¤•Ó½»ï®ß‹·ôµ4ù­'ý_ðLO‚òF‹®0 &ܧ˜­œ0Œ0#o8ç#ô¯R6Û“yŽ73G¹^2½öò~o»Ÿ›##ÞSðr=ÑkÒ41º €–rØ ÷„ëƒëÎ zõo 7"Ýà_=Š©‰Éldà`†qt÷+‹?æxù©%m,ö{.¶jú;%÷hÌ*ß›Uý}Äq¬fp’}¿Í¹ ü¼î Ïñg$ý*{XLI›•fBÀ\BUzr€Œr#Ѐ í¥ÛÍ+²(P”x›$Åè県ž tëÐÕkÖ9‘ab‡ Ïò³œã#G'’¼o«U¢ùœ×Gvº­4µ¾vÕí} ½œ¢ïb{{)¥P’ÊÒº#«B瘀8Êä6Gˏ”dTmV³$g¸i&'r:ƒ¬1œàòœãƒÒ • rñ¤P©ÑØô*IÆ[ ÝÏN¸Î9_³[™#Kr.Fí¤í*IÁ?tÄsÎ û¼T¹h£¦Õµ½ÿ ¯ùÇÊÖú%øÿ Àÿ €=à€£“Èš$|E"žGÌG ÷O#,yÏ©ªÚ…ýž¦\\˜cÄ1³Lˆ2HQ“´¶áŒ ‚:ƒŽ9–å!Š–͐‚ɾF''‘÷yÇNüûãëpÆ|=~¢D•䵕vn2„sÓžGLë IUP´Uíw®Ú-/mm£²×Ì–ìíeý] ? øÑüa¨ÞZÏeki,q‰c10PTpAÜÀg%zSß°2Ĥ¡U]®ØŠÜçžI;€èpx?_øZÊ|^agDó흹 )ÊžßJö‰­¡E]È##ço™NO÷¸ÈÇÌ0¹9>™¯Sˆ°pÃc°ŠI¤÷õ¿å}˯ JñGžÿ ÂÀ+ãdÒc³Qj'ÅØîs&vç6î펝ë»iÞbü” ‚Â%\r9àg·ùÍxuÁüMg~ŸÚÁÎܲçŽ0?*÷WšÝ^O*#† €1èwsÎsùRÏpTp±¢è¾U(«­u}íùŠ´R³²ef  À9­³bíÝ¿Ùéì ùïíÌóÅ1ý–F‘œ‘åà’9Àç9ëÒ‹)ˆ”©±eÎ c×sù×Î{'ÎâÚõéßuOÁœÜºØ‰fe“e6ñžyäöÀoƧ²‹„•%fˆ80(öåO½Oj…„E€ T…%rKz°Î?.;{šXÙ‡ŸeUÚd!üx9þtã%wO_øoòcM- j–ÒHX_iK#*) ž@Ž{ ôǽBd¹‰RÝn–ê0«7ˆìyÀ÷Í@¬Ì¢³³’ 9é÷½?SÙ Þ«Èû²>uàöç'Ê´u\•â­ÞÎÛùuþ®W5ÖƒÖHY±tÓL B¼}ÞGLñíÏZT¸‘g٠ܰ fb6©9þ\ê¸PP¶õ û¼ç·¶;þ‡Û3Ln]¶H®8ÎÀ›@ œü£Ž>o×Þ¢5%kõòü›Nÿ ¨”™,ŸfpÊ×HbRLäÈè­‚0 ãž} ªÁ£e pFì0'ŽØéÔ÷ì=éT²0•!…Îzt9ç¾?”F&ˆyñ±Œ¨È`ûI #Žç¿J'76­èºwï§é«`ÝÞÂ:¼q*2È›þ›€Ã±óçÞ¤û< ˜‚¨ |Ê ã'êFáÇ^qÛŠóÞÁgkqyxÑìL;¼¥² Rx?‡¯Y7PŽwnù¶†û¾Ü·.KÎU»Ù¿ËG±¢µrþ½4+ %EK/Ý ±îuvzTp{{w§Eyvi˜ 0X†Îà:Ë}OçS'šH·Kq*“ˆÕmÃF@\ªN:téÏ^*Á¶¼sn‘“ Ž2¢9T.½„\ ýò@>˜7NFïNRÓ·wèôßEÕua'¬[þ¾cö¡̐Oæ¦âÅŠ². Ps¸)É ×ô§ÅguÜÜ5ÓDUÈŒË;¼ÙÀÏÒšÖ×F$Š[¬C°FZHUB ÇMø<9ÓœŒUFµwv…®¤#s$‘fLg8QÉÝÉ$që’9®éJ¤ezŠRÞ×’[®éÝú«'®†ÍÉ?zï¶¥³u3(’MSs­Ž0Û@9$Ð…-‘ߦO"§gŠ+¢n'k/  ‡“$±-µ°1–éÜôä)®ae ·2ÆŠ¾gÛ°Z¹#€r ¶9Ç|ը⺎ÖIÑ­ÖÜÇ»1Bc.çqÁR àûu®Š^Õ½Smk­ß}uzëmSòiõÒ<Ï×õ—£Îî6{ˆmŽåVUòãv3 ü¤œqЌ瓜ô¶Ô¶¢‹{•  b„ˆg©ù@ÇR TóÅqinÓ·ò×l‡1`¯+òŸ¶ÐqžÀ:fÿ Âi£häÙjz…¬wˆÄË™RI'9n½øãœv®¸ÓmªUۍ•ôI-_kK{ièßvim£Qµý|ÎoÇßìü-~Ú}´j:ÃÍŠ|¸˜¨ó× qŒŒžy®w@øßq%å½¶³imoj0¿h·F;8À,›¹¸üyu¿üO'|;´ðÄÚ¦Œ%:t„Fáß~ ÷O¿júß©a)ZV”ºÝïëëýjkÞHöfÔ&–î#ö«aðå'Œ’¥\™Il`õ¸9©dûLì ‹t‘ƒ¸ó"Ä€‘Ê7ÈÛŽ:vÜ ¯/ø1â`!»Ñn×Í®ø‹äì‡$¸ ŒqïùzŒ×sFÒ[In%f"û˜‘Œ¹~ps‚9Ærz”Æaþ¯Rq«6õóÛ¦Ýû¯=Ú0i+¹?ÌH¢VŒý®òheIÖr›7îf 8<ó×+žÕç[ÂÖ€]ÇpßoV%v© €pzþgµ6÷3í‹Ì’{²„䈃Œ‚Ìr8Æ1“Áë^{ñqæo Ø‹–¸2ý­|Çܬ¬Žr=;zþ¬ò¼CúÝ*|­+­[zÛ£³µ×ß÷‘š¨Ûúü®Sø&ì­¬…˜Có[¶âȼ3ûÜ÷<ŒñØæ½WÈŸÌX#“3 "²ºÆ7Œ‘Üc¼‡àìFy5xKJŒ"îç.r@ï×Þ½Ä-ÿ þ“}ª}’*Þ!,Fm¸Î@†9b?1W{Yæ3„`Ú¼VõŠÚÛ_kùöG.mhÎñ ôíhí§Ô$.ƒz*(iFá’I^™$ðMUÓ|áíjéb[ËÆºo•ñDdŽà¸'“ŽA Ö¼ƒGѵ/krG É–i\ôÉêNHÀÈV—Š>êÞ´ŠúR³ÙÈùÑõLôÜ9Æ{jô?°°Kýš¥WíZ¿V—m6·E}{X~Æ? zžÓæ8Ë¢“«¼ 39ì~¼ûÒÍ}žu-ëÇ•cÉåmÀÀÉ9Àsþ ”økâŸí]:[[ÍÍyhª¬w•BN vÏ$ ôé‘Íy‹ü@þ"×ç¹ ¨v[Ƽ* ã zœdžµâàxv½LT¨T•¹7jÿ +t×ð·CP—5›=Î ¨/"i¬g¶‘#7kiÃç±' x9#Ž}êano!òKD‘ílï”('¿SÔð?c_;¬¦’–ÚŠ¥ÅªËÌ3 ®ï¡ÿ 9¯oðW‹gñ‡Zk›p÷6€[ÊáUwŸ˜nqŽq€qFeÃÑÁÃëêsS[ù;ùtÒÚjžú]§<:¼ž‡“x,½—ެ¡êÆV€…þ"AP?ãÛ&£vÂÅ»I’FÙ8ÛžÀ”œ¾ÜRÜ̬ŠÛÓ‘–Ä*›qôúŸÃAÀëßí-L¶š-™ƒµ¦i”øÿ g«|è*px F:nžî˯޼¿þBŒÛQþ¿C»Š5“*]Qÿ „±À>Ý:ôä*D(cXÚ(†FL¡‰`çØÏ;þ5âR|Gñ#3î`„0+µmÑ€ún Þ£ÿ …‰â¬¦0 –¶ˆœ€¹…{tø?ʯ(_çþ_Š5XY[¡Ù|Q¿ú µŠ2︛sO* Бÿ ×â°<+à›MkÂ÷š…ij ·Ü–ˆ«ò‚?ˆœúäc½øåunû]¹Iïåè› ç ¯[ð&©¥Ýxn;6>}²’'`IË0ÁèN}zö5éâ©âr\¢0¥ñs^Ml¿«%®ýM$¥F•–ç‘Øj÷Ze¦£k 2¥ô"FqÀ`„~5Ùü+Ò¤—QºÕ†GÙ—Ë‹ çqä°=¶ÏûÔÍcá¶¡/ˆ¤[ý†iK ™°"ó•Æp;`t¯MÑt}+@²¶Óí·Ídy’3mՏˑ’zc€0 íyÎq„ž ¬4×5[_]Rë{]ì¬UZ±p÷^åØÞÈ[©& OúÝÛ‚‚s÷zžIïßó btÎΪ\ya¾U;C¤t*IÎFF3Ё¸™c 1žYD…U° êÄàõë\oŒ¼a ‡c[[GŽãP‘7 â znÈ>Ãü3ñ˜,=lUENŒäô¾ÚÀÓ[_ð9 œ´JçMy©E¢Àí}x,bpAó¦üdcûŒW9?Å[Há$¿¹pÄ™#^9O88©zO=«Ë!µÖüY¨³ªÍy9ûÒ1 úôÚ»M?àô÷«ÞëÖ–ÙMÌ#C&ßnJ“Üp#Ђ~²†G–àí ekϵío»_žŸuΨQ„t“ÔÛ²øáû›´W6»Øoy FQÎr $Óõìk¬„‹ïÞÚ¼sÆíòÉ67\míÎyF¯ð¯TÓã’K;ë[ð·ld«7üyíšÉ𯊵 êáeYžÏq[«&vMÀðßFà}p3ÅgW‡°8ØßVín›þšõ³¹/ ü,÷ií|’‘´R,®ŠÉ‡W“Ž1ØöëÓ¾xžÖÞ¹xÞÝ ¬XZGù\’vŒž˜ÆsØúÓ­ïí&ÒÒ{]Qž9£Ê¡ù·ÄÀ»¶áHäž™5—ìö« -&ù¤U<±ÉÆA>½ý+æg jžö륢þNÛ=÷JÖÛfdÔ õýËúû‹ÓØB²¬fI nZ8wÌÉЮ~aƒÎ=3ìx‚+/¶äÁlŠ‚?™Æü#8-œ\pqTZXtè%»»&ÚÝ#´ŠðÜ žã§Í’¼{p·ß{m>ÞycP¨’¼¢0ú(Rƒë^Ž ñó¼(»y%m´ÕÙ}ÊûékB1¨þÑ®,#Q)ó‡o1T©ÜÃ*Ž‹‚yö< b‰4×H€“ìÐ. ¤²9ÌŠ>„Žãøgšñ ¯Š~)¸ßå\ÛÛoBŒa·L²œg$‚Iã¯ZÈ—Æ~%”äë—È8â)Œcƒ‘Âàu9¯b%)ÞS²¿Ïïÿ 4Öºù}Z/[H%¤vÉ#Ì’x§†b © ³´tÜ{gn=iï%õªÇç]ܧ—! åw„SÓp ·VÈÏ¡?5Âcâb¥_ĤŠz¬—nàþÖΟñKÄöJé=ÌWèêT‹¸÷qÎჟ•q’zWUN«N/ØO^Ÿe|í¾©k{üõ4öV^ïù~G¹êzÂèº|·÷×[’Þ31†rpjg·n Æ0Ý}kåË‹‰nîe¹ËÍ+™ÏVbrOç]'‰¼o®xÎh`¹Ç*±ÙÚ!T$d/$žN>¼WqᯅZ9ÑÒO\ÜÛê1o&,-z ~^NCgNÕéá)ÒÊ©7‰¨¯'Õþ¯þ_¿Ehîþóâ €ï¬uÛûý*ÎK9ä.â-öv<²‘×h$àãúW%ö¯~«g-ÕõÀàG~>Zú¾Iš+(šM³ Û#9äl%ðc¬ ûÝ xÖKG´x®|¸¤Ï™O:Ê8Ã’qÉcÔä‚yÇNJyËŒTj¥&µOmztjÿ ?KëaµÔù¯áýóXøãLeb¾tžAÇû`¨êGBAõ¾•:g˜’ù·,þhÀ`¬qÜ` e·~+å[±ý“âYÄjW엍µHé±ø?Nõô>½âX<5 Ç©ÏѼM¶8cܪXŽÉ^r?¼IróÈS•ZmÇ›™5»òÚÚ7ïu«&|·÷•Ά >[©ÞXHeS$Œyà€ ÷ù²:ò2|óãDf? Z¼PD¶ÓßC(xÆ0|©ßR;ôMsÿ µ´ÔVi¬,͹›Ìxâi˜`¹,GAéÇlV§ÄýF×Yø§ê–‘:Ã=ò2³9n±ÉžØÏ@yÎWžæ±Ãàe„ÄÒN ]ïòêìú_Go'¦ŽÑ’_×õЯðR66þ!›ÑÄ gFMÙ— äžäqôÈ;ÿ eX<#%»Aö‰ãR¤ Í”Ž¹È G&¹Ÿƒ&á?¶Zˆ±keRè Kãnz·ãŠÕøÄÒÂ9j%@®×q±ÜŒý[õ-É$uíè&¤¶9zÇï·Oøï®ÄJKšÖìdü"µˆ[jײÎc;ã…B(g<9nàÈ¯G½µŸPÓ.´Éfâ¼FŽP 31 ‘ÏR}<3šä~ Ã2xVöî Dr Ç\›}Ý#S÷ÈÀëŽHÆI®à\OçKuäI¹†ó(”—GWî ñ³¹¸æ2¨›‹ºÚû%¾ýÖ_3ºNú¯ëúì|ÕÅÖ‰}y lM’ZËîTÿ á[ðÐñ/ˆ9Àû ¸ón3 Mòd‘÷ döª^.Êñް›BâîNp>cëÏçÍzïíôÏ YÍ%ª¬·ãÏ-*9Ü­ÂãhéŒc¾dÈêú¼Ë,. VŠ÷çeÿ n/¡¼äãõâ=‹xGQKx”|¹bÌŠD@2Œ 8'Ž àúƒŽ+áDÒ&¡¨"Œ§–Žr22 Ç·s]ŸÄ‹«ð%ÚÄ<¹ä’(×{e›HÀqÁç©Ç½`üŽÚõK饚9ƒÄ±€< –úƒú~ çðñO#­Í%iKKlµ¦¾F)'Iê¬Î+Ç(`ñ¾£œdÈ’` ™ºcßéé^ÿ i¸”Û\ý¡æhÔB«aq¸}ãÀÆ:ÜWƒ|FÛÿ BŒÇÀeaŸ-sÊ€:úW½ÜÝÜ<%$µ†%CóDªÀí%IÈÏʤ…ôäñÞŒ÷‘a0“ôŽÚë¤nŸoW÷0«e¶y'Å»aΗ2r’# Û°A^ý9ÉQÔõ=ù5¬£Öü.(Þ’M$~V«=éSÄFN½®©ÔWô»ÿ þHžkR‹ìÏ+µµžöê;khÚI¤m¨‹Ôš–âÖçJ¾_Z•’6 a”Èô> ÕÉaÕ<%®£2n bQŠå\tÈõUÿ ø»þ‹k15‚ÃuCL$ݹp P1=Oøýs¯^u éEJ”–éêŸê½5ýzy›jÛ³á›Ûkÿ ÚOcn±ÛÏîW;boºz{ãžüVÆ¡a£a5½äÎÂks¸J@?1è¿{$䑐=k”øsÖ^nŒ¦)ÝåXÃíùN1ØõÚOJë–xF÷h¸ Œ"Ž?x䜚ü³ì¨c*Fœ¯i;7~ñí׫Ðó¥Ë»3Ãü púw ‰°<Á%»ñž ÿ P+Û^ ¾Ye£ŽCÄŒ„/>˜>•á¶Ìm~&&À>M[hÈÈÿ [Ž•íd…RO@3^Ç(ʽ*¶ÖQZyßþ 1Vº}Ñç?¼O4Rh6R€ª£í¡ûÙ a‚3ß·Õ ü=mRÍ/µ9¤‚0ÑC¼Iè:cŽsÛ¾™x£ÆÐ¬ªÍöˢ샒W$•€Å{¨ÀPG ÀÀàŸZìÍ1RÉ0´ðxEË9+Éÿ ^rEÕ—±Š„70l¼áË@û.' ¼¹Žz€N3úUÉ<3á×*?²¬‚ä†"Ùc=p íÛ'¡ª1ñ"økJ†HÒ'»Ÿ+ oÏN¬Ã9 dÙãÜדÏâÍ~æc+j·Jzâ7(£ðW]•晍?nê´º6åwéåç÷N•ZŠíž›¬|?Ðõ?Ñ-E…®³ÇV$~X¯/…õ x‘LˆÑÜÚÈ7¦pzãÜüë½ðÄ^õtÝYËÍ7ÉÖÕ8ÏUe# #€r=sU¾/é’E§jRC4mxNÝ´9†íuá»›V‘ ZI€­×cr1Ÿpzsøf»¨åV‹ìû`qËLÊIã?\~¼³áËC©êhªOîO»‘ÃmçÛçút×¢x“Z}?Üê#b-¤X7õ Äò gž zzbº3œm*qvs·M=íúéw}¿&Úª°^Ö×µÏ(ø‡â†Öµƒenñý†×åQáYûœ÷ÇLœôÎNk¡ð‡¼/µ¸n0æÉ0¬ƒ‚üîÉÆvŒw®Sáö”š¯‹-üÕVŠØÙ[$`(9cqƒÔ_@BëqûÙ`Ýæ­0;79È?w<ó |ÙÜkßÌ1±Ëã ¿ìÒ»ðlìï«ÓnªèèrP´NÏš&Žéö Ù¸÷æ°~-_O'‰`°!RÚÚÝ%]Ø%þbß1'¿ÿ X՝áOöÎŒ·‹¬+Åæ*ÛÛ™0¤ƒOÍÔ `u¯¦ÂaèÐÃÓ«‹¨Ô¥µœ¿¯ÉyÅÙ.oÔôŸ Úx&(STðݽ¦õ] ’ÒNóÁäÈùr3í·žÚ[™ƒ¼veÈ÷ÞIõÎGlqÎ=M|«gsªxÅI6 ]Z·Îªä,¨zŒŽÄ~#ØŠúFñiÉqc©éÐD>S딑 GñŽ1éÐ^+ Ëi;Ô„µVÕú»i¯ÈÒ-ZÍ]òܘ®ì` bÛÙ¥_/y(@÷qÐúg Ô÷W0.Ø› 6Ò© r>QƒŒ0+Èîzb¨É+I0TbNñ"$~)ÕÒ6Þ‹{0VÆ27œWWñcÄcX×íôûyKZéðªc'iQ¿¯LaWŠŸS\·Š“źʸ…ôÙÂí|öÀÇåV|!¤ÂGâÛ[[’ï 3OrÙËPY¹=Î1õ5öåTžÑè Ú64/üö?Zëžk}¬¶éào፾á}3“ü]8Éæ¿´n²Žš_6¾pœ)2?úWÓÚ¥¾¨iWúdŽq{*ª1rXŒd…m»‰äcô¯–dâ•ã‘Jº¬§¨#¨® §,df«8ÉÅßN¾hˆ;îÓ=7áùpën®É 6ûJžO2^œÐò JÖø¥²ã›Ò6Ü·‰!wbÍ‚¬O©»õ¬ÿ ƒP=Ä:â¤-&ÙŽ ` È9 r9íϧzë> XÅ7ƒ5X–krÑ¢L 7€ìw}ÑŸNHëŒüþ:2†á¼+u·á÷N/Û'Ðç~ߘô«ëh!ónRéeQ´6QÛÿ èEwëÅÒ|¸Yqó1uêyùzð8 ƒŠù¦Ò;¹ä6öi<'ü³„[íZhu½ ùÍ¡g‚>r¯׊îÌx}bñ2“­k꣧oø~›hTèóËWò4|ki"xßQ˜Ï6øÀLnß‚0 ¹Æ{±–¶Öe#¨27È@^Ìß.1N¾œyç€õ†ñeé·Õã†çQ°€=­Ì©ºB€Ø8<‚ÃSõ®ùcc>×Ú .Fr:žÝGæ=kÁâ,^!Fž ¬,àµ}%¶«îõ¹†"r²ƒGœüYÕd?aÑÍY®49PyU ÷þ!žxÅm|/‚ãNð˜¼PcûTÒ,¹/Ý=FkÏ|u¨¶«â녏{¤m¢]Û¾ïP>®XãÞ½iÓÁ¾ ‰'¬–6ß¼(„ï— í!úÙäzôë^–:œ¨å|,_¿&š×]uÓѵÛô4’j”bž§x‘Æ©ã›á,‚[Ô ÎÞ= ŒËæ ÀùYÁ?ŽïÚ¼?ÁªxºÕÛ,°1¸‘¿ÝäãØ¯v…@¤åq½ºã œàûââ·z8Xýˆþz~—û»™âµj=Ž â~ãáh@'h¼F#·Üp?ŸëQü-løvépx»cŸø…lxâÃûG·‰¶ø”L£©%y?¦úõÆü-Õ¶¥y`Òl7>q’2üA?•F}c‡jB:¸Jÿ +§¹¿¸Q÷°ív=VÑìu[Qml%R7a×IèTõéŽx¬ ?†š7 1†îã-ˆã’L¡lŽ0OÓ=ÅuˆpÇ•¼3ÛùÒ¶W/!|’wŽw^qÔ×Ïaó M8Q¨ãÑ?ëï0IEhÄa¸X•`a ?!ÐñùQ!Rä ÂžqŽžÝO`I0ÿ J“y|ñ!Îã@99>þ8–+éáu…!ù—ä ʰ<÷6’I®z ÅS„¾)Zþ_Öýµ×ËPåOwø÷þ*üïænÖùmØÝûþ¹=>¦½öî×Jh]¼ç&@§nTŒ6IT Àõ^Fxð7Å3!Ö·aÛ$þÿ ¹ã5îIo:ȪmËY[’8ÇӾlj*òû¢¥xõ¾¼ú•åk+\ð¯ HÚoŽl•Ûk,¯ ç²²cõÅ{²Z\ ´ìQ åpzŽ3Ôð}ÿ Jð¯XO¡øÎé€hÙ¥ûLdŒ`““ù6Gá^ÃáÝ^Ë[Ñb¾YåŒÊ»dŽ4 †2§,;ÿ CQÄ´¾°¨c–±”mºV{«ßÕýÄW\ÖŸ‘çŸ,çMRÆí“l-ƒn~ë©ÉÈê Ü?#Ž•¹ðãSÒ¥ÐWNíà½;ãž)™ÎSÈ9cóLj뵿Å«iÍk¨ió­¶X‚7÷ƒ€yãnyÏŽëÞ Öt`×À×V's$È9Ú:ä{wÆEk€«†Çàc—â$éÎ.éí~Ýëk}ÅAÆpörÑ¢‡Šl¡ÑüSs‹¨‰IÝ„óÀ×wñ&eºðf™pŒÆ9gŽTø£lñëÀçŽ NkÊUK0U’p ï^¡ãÈ¥´ø{£ÙHp`’ØåbqÏ©äó^Æ: Ž' ÊóM«õz+ß×ó5Ÿ»('¹­ð¦C„$˜Å¢_ºÈI?»^äã'ñêzž+ë€ñ-½»´}¡Ë*õ?.xÇ^1ŽMyǸ&“—L–îëöâ7…' bqéÎGé]˪â1$o²¸R8Ã`.q€}sÖ¾C9­8cêÆÞíïóòvÓòùœÕfÔÚéýu­èÖ·Ú Å‚_¤³ÜۺƑߝ”àרý:׃xPþÅÕî-/üØmnQìïGΊÙRqê=>¢½õnæ·r!—h`+’;ò3È<“Û©éšóŸx*÷V¹¸×tÈiˆßwiÔÿ |cŒñÏ®3Ö½̰‰Ë Qr©ö½®¼ÛoÑÙZÅÑ«O൯ýw8;k›ÿ x†;ˆJa;‘º9÷÷R+¡ñgŽí|Iáë{ôáo2ʲ9 029ÉÏLí\‰¿¸Ÿb˜ "Bv$£&#ßiê>=ªª©f  ’N ëí>¡N­XW­~5×úíø\‰»½Ï^ø(—wÖú¥¤2íŽÞXæÁ$ °eÈ888^nÝë²ñÝÔ^ ÖÚ9Q~Ëå7ï DC¶ÑµƒsËÇè9®Wáþƒ6‡£´·°2\Ý:ÈÑ?(#¨'$õèGJ¥ñW\ÿ ‰E¶—¸™g˜ÌÀ¹;Pv ú±ÎNs·ëŸ’–"Ž/:té+ûË]öJöÓM»ëø˜*‘•^Uý—êd|‰åñMæÔÝ‹23å™6æHùÛ‚ëüñ^…ñ1¢oêûÑEØ.õ7*ÅHtÎp{g<·Á«+¸c¿¿pÓ¾Æby=8É_ÄsÆk¬ñB\jÞÔì••Ë[9Píb‹Bヅ =9­3§ð§LšÛáÖšÆæXÌÞdÛP.0\ãïÛ0?™úJ¸™Ë ”•œº+=<µI£¦í¯õêt¬d‹T¬P=ËFêT>ÍØØ@Ï9<÷AQÌ×»Õ¡xùk",JÎæù±Éç$œŽŸZWH®¯"·UÌQ ’ÙÈ]ÅXg<ã ߨg3-Üqe€0¢¨*Œ$܃ ’Sû 8㎼_/e'+Ï–-èÓ¶¶Õíß[·ÙÙ½î쏗¼sk%§µxä‰â-pÒeÆCrú ôσžû=”šÅô(QW‚Õd\ƒæ. \àö¹¯F½°³½0M>‘gr÷q+œ¶NïºHO— ¤ ܥݭ”n·J|ÆP6Kµc=Isó}Ò çGš)a=—#vK›åoK§ßóٍ¤¶¿õú…ÄRÚ[Ësöټˏ•Ë ópw®qœŒ·Ø ùÇâ‹ý‡ãKèS&ÞvûD Aù‘É9 ŒîqÅ} $SnIV[]ѐ´Ó}ØÜ¾A Ü|½kÅþÓ|E Mu R¼.I¼¶däò‚ÃkÆ}ðy¹vc iUœZ…­Õõ»z¾÷¿n¦*j-É­/àœHã\y5 Û ß™ó0— äŸnzôã#Ô¯,†¥ÚeÔ÷ÜÅ´„“'c…<íÝ€<·SŠ¥k§Ã¢éÆÆÙna‚8–=«ʪ[Ÿ™°pNî02z“ÔÙ–K8.È’Þî(vƒ2®@ äÈûãçžxäÇf¯ˆu¹yUÕîýWšÙ|›ëÒ%Q^í[æ|éo5ZY•^{96ˆY‚§v*x>âº_|U¹Ö´©tûMÒÂ9PÇ#«£#€ éÉñ‘ƒÍz/‰´-į¹°dd,Б›p03ƒœ{ç9=+ Ûᧇ¬¦[‡‚ê婺¸#±ß=³ý¿•Õµjñ½HÙh›Û[§ÚýÊöô÷{˜?ô÷·Ô.u©–_%còcAÀ˜’ }0x9Î>žñÇáÍ9,ahï¦Ì2òÓ ñÛAäry$V²Nð ]=$Ž ‚#Ù‚1ƒƒødõMax‡ÂÖ^!±KkÛ‘ «“Çó²FN8+ëÎ{Ò¼oí§[«ÕMRoËeç×[_m/¦¦k.kôgŽxsSÓ´ý`êzªÜÜKo‰cPC9ÎY‰#§^üý9¹âïÞx£Ë·Ú`±‰‹¤;³–=ÏaôÕAð‚÷kêÁNBéÎælcõö®£Fð†ô2Ò¬]ßÂK$ÓÜ®•”/ÊHàã$ä ¸÷ëf¹Oµúâ“”’²ø­è´µþöjçNü÷üÌ¿ xNïFÒd»¼·h®îT9ŽAµÖ>qÁçÔœtïÒ»\ȶÎîcÞäîó3¶@#ÉIÎ ÔñW.<´’¥–ÑÑ€ÕšA‚ ;†qÓë‚2q ÒÂó$# Çí‡ !Ë}Õ9ÈÎÑÉã=;ŒÇÎuñ+ÉûÏ¥öíeÙ+$úíÜ娯'+êZH4ƒq¶FV‹gïŒ208ÆÌ)íб>M|÷âÍã¾"iì‹¥£Jd´™OÝç;sÈúr+ÜäˆË)DŒ¥šF°*3Õ”d {zÔwºQ¿·UžÉf†~>I+ŒqÔ`ð3œ“Ü×f]œTÁÔn4“ƒø’Ýßõ_«*5šzGCÊ,þ+ê1ò÷O¶¸cœºb2yÇ;cùÕ£ñh¬›áÑŠr¤ÝäNBk¥—á—†gxšX/쑘hŸ*Tçn =û㦠2|(ð¿e·ºÖ$ ýìŸ!'åΰyîî+×öœ=Y:²¦ÓÞ×iü’—ü -BK™£˜›âÆ¡&véðõ-ûÉY¹=Onj¹ø¯¯yf4·±T Pó`çœ7={×mÃ/ ¢˜ZÚòK…G½¥b„’G AãÜœ*í¯Ã¿ IoæI¦NU8‘RwÈã;·€ Û×ëÒ”1Y •£E»ÿ Oyto¢<£Áö·šï,䉧ûA¼sû»Nò}¹üE{ÜÖªò1’õÞr0â}ÎØ#>à/8ïéÎ~—áÍ#ñÎlí§³2f'h”?C÷YËdð:qëõÓ·‚ïeÄ© ÔÈØÜRL+žAÎ3¼g=åšó³Œt3 ÑQ¦ùRÙßE®¼±w_;þhš’Sirÿ ^ˆã¼iੇ|RòO„m°J/“$·l“ ÇÓ¿ÿ [ÑŠÆ“„†Õø>cFÆ6Ø1ƒ– àz7Ldòxäüwá‹ÝAXùO•Úý’é®ähm­ •NÀ±ÌTÈç ƒ‘I$pGž:‚ÄbêW¢®œ´|­¦­nÍ>¶ÖÏ¢§ÎÜ¢ºö¹•%ÄqL^öÛ KpNA<ã¡ …î==ª¸óffËF‡yÌcÉ ©ç$ð=ñÏ­YþÊ’Ú]—¥‚¬‚eDïÎH>Ÿ_ÌTP™a‰ch['çÆÜò7a‡?w°Ïn§âÎ5”’¨¹uÚÛ|´ÓÓc§{O—ü1•ªxsÃZ…ÊÏy¡Ã3¸Ë2Èé» ‘ƒÎ äžÜðA§cáOéúÛ4ý5-fŒï„ù¬ûô.Ç Üsž•Ò¾•wo<¶Ÿ"¬¡º|£ î2sÇ¡éE²ÉFѱrU°dÜ6œ¨ mc†Îxë׺Þ'0²¡Rr„{j¾í·è›µ÷)º·å–‹î2|I®Y¼ºÍË·–ÃÆà㍣'óÆxƒOÆÞ&>\lóÌxP Xc¸ì Sþ5§qà/ê>#žÞW¸if$\3 ® ûÄ“ùŽÕê¾ð<Ó‹H¶óÏ" å·( á‘€:ã†8Ï=+ꨬUA×ÃËÚT’ÑÞöù¥¢]{»ms¥F0\ÑÕ—ô}&ÛB´ƒOŽÚ+›xíÄÀ1 ,v± žIëíZ0ǧ™3 í2®0ทp9öÝÔž)ÓZËoq/Ú“‘L ²ŒmùŽÓ9§[Û#Ä‘\ÞB¬Çs [;à à«g‚2ôòªœÝV§»·¯/[uó½õÛï¾ /šÍ}öüÿ «=x»HŸÂÞ.™ ÌQùŸh´‘#a$‚'¡u<Š›Æ>2>+ƒLSiöwµFó1!eg`£åœ ÷ëÛö}Á¿ÛVÙêv $¬ƒ|,s÷z€ð΃¨x÷ÅD\ÜŒÞmåÔ„ ˆ o| :{ÇÓ¶–òÁn!´0Ål€, ƒ ( ÛŒŒ c¶rsšæ,4‹MÛOH!@¢ ÇŽ„`å²9ÝÃw;AÍt0®¤¡…¯ØÄ.Àì클ƒ‘ßñ5Í,Óëu-ÈÔc¢KÃÓ£òÖ̺U.õL¯0…%2È—"~x ‚[`có±nHàŽyàö™¥keˆìŒÛFç{(Ø©†`Jã#Žwg<“:ÚÉ;M ^\yhûX‡vB·÷zrF?§BÊÔ/s<ÐÈB)Û± ·ÍÔwç5Âã:så§e{mѤï«Òíh—]Wm4âí¿ùþW4bC3¶ª¾Ùr$ pw`àädzt!yŠI„hÂîàM)!edŒm'æ>Ç?wzºK­ìcŒ´¯Ìq6fp$)ãw¡éUl`µ»ARAˆÝÕgr:äŒgƒéé[Ôö±”iYs5Ýï«ÙG—K=þF’æMG«óÿ `ŠKɦuOQ!ÕåŒ/ÎGÞ`@ËqÕzdõâ«Ê/Ö(ƒK´%ŽbMü åÜŸö—>¤óŒŒV‘°„I¢Yž#™¥ùÏÊ@8 œgqöö5ª4vד[¬(q cò¨À!FGaÁõõ¯?§†¥ÏU½í¿WªZ$úyú½Žz×§Éþ?>Ã×È•6°{™™ŽÙ.$`­ÎUœ…çè ' ¤r$1Ø(y7 ðV<ž:È  ÁÎMw¾Â'Øb§øxb7gãО½óÉÊë²,i„Fȹ£§8ãä½k¹¥¦ê/ç{ïê驪2œ/«ü?¯Ô›ìñÜ$þeýœRIåŒg9Ác’zrrNO bÚi¢ ѺË/$,“ª¯Ýä;Œ× ´<ÛÑn³IvŸb™¥ nm–ÄŸ—nÝÀãŽ3ëÍG,.öó³˜Ù£¹u ÊÌrŠ[<±!@Æ:c9ÅZh ì’M5ÄìÌ-‚¼ëÉùqŽGì9¬á ;¨A-ž—évþÖ–^ON·Ô”ŸEý}ú×PO&e[]ÒG¸˜Ûp ƒÃà/Ë·8ûÀ€1ž@¿ÚB*²­¼ñì8@p™8Q“žÆH'8«I-%¸‚ F»“åó6°Uù|¶Ú¸ã ò^Äw¥ŠÖK–1ÜÝK,Žddlí²0PÀü“×ükG…¯U«·¶–´w¶ŽÍ¾©yÞú[Zös•¯Á[™6° ¨¼ÉVæq·,# ìãï‘×8îry®A››¨,ãc66»Ë´ã'æÉù?t}¢æH--Òá"›|ˆ¬[í  7¶ö#¸9«––‹$,+Ëqœ\Êø c€yê^ݸÄa°«™B-9%«×®‹V´w~vÜTéꢷþ¼ˆ%·¹• ’[xç•÷2gØS?6åÀÚ õ9É#š@÷bT¸º²C*3Bá¤òÎA9 =úU§Ó"2Ãlá0iÝIc‚2Î@%öç94ùô»'»HÄ¥Ô¾@à Tp£šíx:úÊ:5eºßMý×wµ›Ó_+šº3Ýyvÿ "ºÇ<ÂI>Õ 1G·Ë«È«É# àÈÇ øp Jv·šæDûE¿›†Ë’NFr2qŸ½ÇAÜšu•´éí#Ħ8£2”Ú2Ã/€[ÎTr;qŠz*ý’Îþ(≠;¡TÆâ›;ºÿ àçœk‘Þ­8¾Uª¾íé{^×IZéwÓkXÉûÑZo¯_øo×È¡¬ â–ÞR§2„‚Àœü½ùç® SVa†Âüª¼±D‘ŒísŸàä|ä2 æ[‹z”¯s{wn„ÆmáóCO+†GO8Ïeçåº`¯^¼ðG5f{Xžä,k‰<á y™¥voÆ éÛõëI=œ1‹éíÔÀÑ)R#;AÂncäŽ:tÏ#¶TkB.0Œ-ÖÞZÛgumß}fÎJÉ+#2êÔP£žùÈÅi¢%œ3P*Yƒò‚Aì“Ž2r:ƒÐúñi­RUQq‰H9!”={~¼ “JŽV¥»×²m.ÛߺiYl¾òk˜gL³·rT• ’…wHÁ6ä`–Î3ùÌ4Øe³†&òL‘•%clyîAÂäà0 žüç$[3uŘpNOÀÉ=† cï{rYK ååä~FÁ •a»"Lär1Ó¯2Äõæ<™C•.fÕ»è¥~½-¿g½Â4¡{[ør¨¶·Žõäx¥’l®qpwÇ»8ärF \cޏܯÓ-g‚yciÏÀ¾rÎwèØÈ#o°Á9ã5¢šfÔxÞæfGusÏÌJÿ µ×œ/LtãÅT7²¶w,l ɳ;”eúà·¨çîŒsÜgTÃS¦­^ '~‹®›¯+k÷ZÖd©Æ*Ó[Ü«%Œk0ŽXƒ”$k#Ȩ P2bv‘ƒŸáÇ™ÆÕb)m$É*8óLE‘8'–ÜN Úyàúô­+{uº±I'wvš4fÜr íì½=úuú sFlìV$‘ö†Hсù€$§ õ=½¸«Ž] :Ž+•¦ïmRþ½l´îÊT#nkiøÿ _ðÆT¶7Ò½ºÒ£Î¸d\ã8=yãŽÜäR{x]ZâÚé#¸r²#»ÎHÆ6õ ç® ÎFkr;sºÄ.&;só± Ç9êH÷ýSšÕ­tÐU¢-n­ Ì| vqœ„{gŒt§S.P‹’މ_[;m¥Þ­ZýRûÂX{+¥úü¼ú•-àÓ7!„G"“´‹žƒnrYXã¸îp éœ!Ó­oP̏tÑ (‰Þ¹é€sÓ#GLçÕšÑnJý¡!‘Tä#“ß?îýp}xÇ‚I¥Õn#·¸–y'qó@r[ Êô÷<ÔWÃÓ¢áN¥4ԝ’I&ݼ¬¬¼ÞºvéÆ FQV~_ÒüJÖÚt¥¦Xá3BÄP^%ÈÎW-×c¡ú©¤·Iþèk¥š?–UQåIR[’O 5x\ÉhÆI¶K4«2ùªŠŒ<¼óœçØ`u«‚Í.VHä € Ëgfx''9ÆI#±®Z8 sISºku¢ßÞ]úk»Jößl¡B.Ü»ÿ MWe °·Ž%šêɆ¼»Âù³´œ O¿cÐÓÄh©"ÛÜÏ.ÖV ’3nüÄmnq[ŒòznšÖ>J¬òˆæ…qýØP Ž:ä7^0yëWšÍ_79äoaÈ °#q0{ää×mœy”R{vÒÞ¶ÚÏe¥“ÚÆÐ¥Ì®—õýjR •íç›Ìb„+J yÜØÙ•Ç]¿Ôd þËOL²”9-Œ—õÃc'æÝלçÚ²ìejP“½ âù°¨†ðqòädЃÉäÖÜj÷PÇp“ÍšŠå«‘î <iWN­smª»¶vÓz5»ûì:Rs\Ðßôû×uÔÿÙ