You can check the tenant resource usage by using SQL statements.
The statement is as follows:
obclient> SELECT t1.tenant_name,concat(svr_ip,":",svr_port) as "unit_server",t3.max_cpu,t3.min_cpu FROM OCEANBASE.DBA_OB_TENANTS t1,OCEANBASE.DBA_OB_UNITS t2,OCEANBASE.DBA_OB_UNIT_CONFIGS t3,OCEANBASE.DBA_OB_RESOURCE_POOLS t4
where t1.tenant_id = t4.tenant_id
AND t4.resource_pool_id=t2.resource_pool_id
AND t4.unit_config_id=t3.unit_config_id
ORDER BY t1.tenant_name;
+---------------+----------------+---------+---------+
| tenant_name | unit_server | max_cpu | min_cpu |
+---------------+----------------+---------+---------+
| sys | 10.0.0.0:7702 | 5 | 2.5 |
| tenant_mysql | 10.0.0.0:7702 | 2 | 2 |
| tenant_oracle | 10.0.0.0:7702 | 4 | 4 |
+---------------+--------------------+---------+---------+
The following table describes the fields in the output.
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| tenant_name | The tenant name. |
| unit_server | The OBServer node to which the resource units of the tenant belong. |
| max_cpu | The maximum number of CPU cores available for the resource units of the tenant. |
| min_cpu | The minimum number of CPU cores available for the resource units of the tenant. |