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457 lines
14 KiB
Groff
457 lines
14 KiB
Groff
.\" This file Copyright 1992 Robert J. Nation
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.\" (nation@rocket.sanders.lockheed.com)
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.\" It may be distributed under the GNU Public License, version 2, or
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.\" any higher version. See section COPYING of the GNU Public license
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.\" for conditions under which this file may be redistributed.
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.\"
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.\" Modified 1994/04/25 Michael Shields <mjshield@nyx.cs.du.edu>
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.\" Cleaned up, and my changes documented. New `.It' macro. Edited.
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.\" modified 1996/01/27 Helmut Geyer to match my changes.
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.
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.de It
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.TP 0.5i
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.B "\\$1 "
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..
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.TH TOP 1 "Feb 1 1993" "Linux" "Linux User's Manual"
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.SH NAME
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top \- display top CPU processes
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B top
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.RB [ \- ]
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.RB [ d
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.IR delay ]
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.RB [ p
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.IR pid ]
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.RB [ q ]
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.RB [ c ]
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.RB [ C ]
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.RB [ S ]
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.RB [ s ]
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.RB [ i ]
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.RB [ n
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.IR iter ]
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.RB [ b ]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.B top
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provides an ongoing look at processor activity in real time. It
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displays a listing of the most CPU-intensive tasks on the system, and
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can provide an interactive interface for manipulating processes.
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It can sort the tasks by CPU usage, memory usage and runtime.
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.N top
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can be better configured than the standard top from the procps suite.
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Most features can either be selected by an interactive command or by
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specifying the feature in the personal or system-wide configuration
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file. See below for more information.
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.PP
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.SH "COMMAND\-LINE OPTIONS"
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.It d
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Specifies the delay between screen updates. You can change this with
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the
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.B s
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interactive command.
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.It p
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Monitor only processes with given process id.
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This flag can be given up to twenty times. This option is neither
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available interactively nor can it be put into the configuration file.
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.It q
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This causes
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.B top
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to refresh without any delay. If the caller has superuser priviledges,
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top runs with the highest possible priority.
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.It S
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Specifies cumulative mode, where each process is listed with the CPU
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time that it
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.I as well as its dead children
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has spent. This is like the
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.B -S
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flag to
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.BR ps (1).
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See the discussion below of the
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.B S
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interactive command.
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.It s
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Tells
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.B top
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to run in secure mode. This disables the potentially dangerous of the
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interactive commands (see below). A secure
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.B top
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is a nifty thing to leave running on a spare terminal.
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.It i
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Start
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.B top
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ignoring any idle or zombie processes. See the interactive command
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.B i
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below.
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.It C
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display total CPU states in addition to individual CPUs. This option
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only affects SMP systems.
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.It c
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display command line instead of the command name only. The default
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behaviour has been changed as this seems to be more useful.
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.It n
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Number of iterations. Update the display this number of times and then exit.
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.It b
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Batch mode. Useful for sending output from top to other programs or to a file.
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In this mode,
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.B top
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will not accept command line input. It runs until it produces the number of
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iterations requested with the
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.B n
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option or until killed. Output is plain text suitable for display on a dumb
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terminal.
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.
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.SH "FIELD DESCRIPTIONS"
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.B top
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displays a variety of information about the processor state. The
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display is updated every 5 seconds by default, but you can change that
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with the
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.B d
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command-line option or the
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.B s
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interactive command.
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.It "uptime"
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This line displays the time the system has been up, and the three load
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averages for the system. The load averages are the average number of
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process ready to run during the last 1, 5 and 15 minutes. This line is
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just like the output of
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.BR uptime (1).
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The uptime display may be toggled by the interactive
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.B l
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command.
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.It processes
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The total number of processes running at the time of the last update.
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This is also broken down into the number of tasks which are running,
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sleeping, stopped, or undead. The processes and states display may be
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toggled by the
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.B t
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interactive command.
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.It "CPU states"
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Shows the percentage of CPU time in user mode, system mode, niced tasks,
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and idle. (Niced tasks are only those whose nice value is negative.)
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Time spent in niced tasks will also be counted in system and user time,
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so the total will be more than 100%. The processes and states display
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may be
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toggled by the
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.B t
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interactive command.
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.It Mem
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Statistics on memory usage, including total available memory, free
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memory, used memory, shared memory, and memory used for buffers. The
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display of memory information may be toggled by the
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.B m
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interactive command.
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.It Swap
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Statistics on swap space, including total swap space, available swap
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space, and used swap space. This and
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.B Mem
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are just like the output of
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.BR free (1).
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.It PID
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The process ID of each task.
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.It PPID
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The parent process ID each task.
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.It UID
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The user ID of the task's owner.
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.It USER
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The user name of the task's owner.
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.It PRI
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The priority of the task.
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.It NI
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The nice value of the task. Negative nice values are higher priority.
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.It SIZE
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The size of the task's code plus data plus stack space, in kilobytes,
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is shown here.
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.It TSIZE
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The code size of the task. This gives strange values for kernel
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processes and is broken for ELF processes.
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.It DSIZE
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Data + Stack size. This is broken for ELF processes.
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.It TRS
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Text resident size.
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.It SWAP
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Size of the swapped out part of the task.
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.It D
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Size of pages marked dirty.
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.It LC
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Last used processor. (That this changes from time to time is not
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a bug; Linux intentionally uses weak affinity. Also notice that
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the very act of running top may break weak affinity and cause more
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processes to change current CPU more often because of the extra
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demand for CPU time.)
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.It RSS
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The total amount of physical memory used by the task, in kilobytes, is
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shown here. For ELF processes used library pages are counted here, for
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a.out processes not.
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.It SHARE
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The amount of shared memory used by the task is shown in this column.
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.It STAT
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The state of the task is shown here. The state is either
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.B S
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for sleeping,
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.B D
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for uninterruptible sleep,
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.B R
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for running,
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.B Z
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for zombies, or
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.B T
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for stopped or traced. These states are modified by trailing
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.B <
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for a process with negative nice value,
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.B N
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for a process with positive nice value,
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.B W
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for a swapped out process (this does not work correctly for kernel
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processes).
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.It WCHAN
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depending on the availablity of either
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.I /boot/psdatabase
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or the kernel link map
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.I /boot/System.map
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this shows the address or the name of the kernel function the task
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currently is sleeping in.
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.It TIME
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Total CPU time the task has used since it started. If cumulative mode
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is on, this also includes the CPU time used by the process's children
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which have died. You can set cumulative mode with the
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.B S
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command line option or toggle it with the interactive command
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.BR S .
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The header line will then be changed to
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.BR CTIME .
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.It %CPU
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The task's share of the CPU time since the last screen update, expressed
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as a percentage of total CPU time per processor.
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.It %MEM
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The task's share of the physical memory.
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.It COMMAND
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The task's command name, which will be truncated if it is too long to be
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displayed on one line. Tasks in memory will have a full command line,
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but swapped-out tasks will only have the name of the program in
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parentheses (for example, "(getty)").
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.It "A , WP"
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these fields from the kmem top are not supported.
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.
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.SH "INTERACTIVE COMMANDS"
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Several single-key commands are recognized while
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.B top
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is running. Some are disabled if the
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.B s
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option has been given on the command line.
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.It space
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Immediately updates the display.
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.It ^L
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Erases and redraws the screen.
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.It "h\fR or \fB?"
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Displays a help screen giving a brief summary of commands, and the
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status of secure and cumulative modes.
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.It k
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Kill a process. You will be prompted for the PID of the task, and the
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signal to send to it. For a normal kill, send signal 15. For a sure,
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but rather abrupt, kill, send signal 9. The default signal, as with
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.BR kill (1),
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is 15,
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.BR SIGTERM .
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This command is not available in secure mode.
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.It i
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Ignore idle and zombie processes. This is a toggle switch.
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.It I
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Toggle between Solaris (CPU percentage divided by total number of CPUs)
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and Irix (CPU percentage calculated solely by amount of time) views.
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This is a toggle switch that affects only SMP systems.
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.It "n\fR or \fB#"
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Change the number of processes to show. You will be prompted to enter
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the number. This overrides automatic determination of the number of
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processes to show, which is based on window size measurement. If 0 is
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specified, then top will show as many processes as will fit on the
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screen; this is the default.
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.It q
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Quit.
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.It r
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Re-nice a process. You will be prompted for the PID of the task, and
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the value to nice it to. Entering a positve value will cause a process
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to be niced to negative values, and lose priority. If root is running
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.BR top ,
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a negative value can be entered, causing a process to get a higher than
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normal priority. The default renice value is 10. This command is not
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available in secure mode.
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.It S
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This toggles cumulative mode, the equivalent of
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.BR "ps -S" ,
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i.e., that CPU times will include a process's defunct children. For
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some programs, such as compilers, which work by forking into many
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seperate tasks, normal mode will make them appear less demanding than
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they actually are. For others, however, such as shells and
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.BR init ,
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this behavior is correct. In any case, try cumulative mode for an
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alternative view of CPU use.
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.It s
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Change the delay between updates. You will be prompted to enter the
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delay time, in seconds, between updates. Fractional values are
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recognized down to microseconds. Entering 0 causes continuous updates.
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The default value is 5 seconds. Note that low values cause nearly
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unreadably fast displays, and greatly raise the load. This command is
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not available in secure mode.
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.It "f\fR or \fBF"
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Add fields to display or remove fields from the display. See below for
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more information.
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.It "o\fR or \fBO"
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Change order of displayed fields. See below for more information.
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.It l
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toggle display of load average and uptime information.
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.It m
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toggle display of memory information.
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.It t
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toggle display of processes and CPU states information.
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.It c
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toggle display of command name or full command line.
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.It N
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sort tasks by pid (\fIn\fPumerically).
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.It A
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sort tasks by age (newest first).
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.It P
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sort tasks by CPU usage (default).
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.It M
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sort tasks by resident memory usage.
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.It T
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sort tasks by time / cumulative time.
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.It W
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Write current setup to
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.IR ~/.toprc .
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This is the recommended way to write a top configuration file.
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.
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.SH The Field and Order Screens
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After pressing
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.BR f ,
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.BR F ,
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.B o
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or
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.B O
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you will be shown a screen specifying the field order on the top line
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and short descriptions of the field contents. The field order string
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uses the following syntax: If the letter in the filed string
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corresponding to a field is upper case, the field will be displayed.
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This is furthermore indicated by an asterisk in front of the field
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description.
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The order of the fields corresponds to the order of the letters in the
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string.
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From the field select screen you can toggle the display of a field by
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pressing the corresponding letter.
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From the order screen you may move a field to the left by pressing
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the corresponding upper case letter resp. to the right by pressing the
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lower case one.
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.
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.SH Configuration Files
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Top reads it's default configuration from two files,
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.I /etc/toprc
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and
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.IR ~/.toprc .
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The global configuration file may be used to restrict the usage of top
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to the secure mode for non-priviledged users. If this is desired, the
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file should contain a 's' to specify secure mode and a digit d (2<=d<=9)
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for the default delay (in seconds) on a single line.
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.
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The personal configuration file contains two lines. The first line
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contains lower and upper letters to specify which fields in what
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order are to be displayed. The letters correspond to the letters in the
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Fields or Order screens from top. As this is not very instructive, it is
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recommended to select fields and order in a running top process and to
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save this using the
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.I W
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interactive command.
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.
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The second line is more interesting (and important). It contains
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information on the other options. Most important, if you have saved a
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configuration in secure mode, you will not get an insecure top without
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removing the lower 's' from the second line of your
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.IR ~/.toprc .
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A digit specifies the delay time between updates, a capital 'S'
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cumulative mode, a lower 'i' no-idle mode, a capital 'I' Irix view. As
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in interactive mode, a lower 'm', 'l', and 't' suppresses the display
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of memory, uptime resp. process and CPU state information.
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Currently changing the default sorting order (by CPU usage) is not
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supported.
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.
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.SH NOTES
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This
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.BR proc -based
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.B top
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works by reading the files in the
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.B proc
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filesystem,
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mounted on
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.IR /proc .
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If
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.I /proc
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is not mounted,
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.B top
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will not work.
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.PP
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.B %CPU
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shows the cputime/realtime percentage in the period of time between
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updates. For the first update, a short delay is used, and
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.B top
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itself dominates the CPU usage. After that,
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.B top
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will drop back, and a more reliable estimate of CPU usage is available.
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.PP
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The
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.B SIZE
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and
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.B RSS fields don't count the page tables and the
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.B task_struct
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of a process; this is at least 12K of memory that is always resident.
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.B SIZE
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is the virtual size of the process (code+data+stack).
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.PP
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Keep in mind that a process must die for its time to be recorded on its
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parent by cumulative mode. Perhaps more useful behavior would be to
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follow each process upwards, adding time, but that would be more
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expensive, possibly prohibitively so. In any case, that would make
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.BR top 's
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behavior incompatible with
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.BR ps .
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.
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.SH FILES
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.I /etc/toprc
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The global configuration file.
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.I ~/.toprc
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The personal configuration file.
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.
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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.BR ps (1),
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.BR free (1),
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.BR uptime (1),
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.BR kill (1),
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.BR renice (1).
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.
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.SH
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BUGS
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If the window is less than about 70x7,
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.B top
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will not format information correctly.
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Many fields still have problems with ELF processes.
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the help screens are not yet optimized for windows with less than
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25 lines
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.
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.SH AUTHOR
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.B top
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was originally written by Roger Binns, based on Branko Lankester's
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<lankeste@fwi.uva.nl> ps program.
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Robert Nation <nation@rocket.sanders.lockheed.com> re-wrote it
|
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significantly to use the proc filesystem, based on Michael K. Johnson's
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<johnsonm@redhat.com> proc-based ps program.
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Michael Shields <mjshield@nyx.cs.du.edu> made many changes, including
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secure and cumulative modes and a general cleanup.
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Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org> added age sorting and the ability to monitor
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specific processes through their ids.
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Helmut Geyer <Helmut.Geyer@iwr.uni-heidelberg.de>
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Heavily changed it to include support for configurable fields and other
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new options, and did further cleanup and use of the new readproc interface.
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The "b" and "n" options contributed by George Bonser <george@captech.com>
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for CapTech IT Services.
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Please send bug reports to <acahalan@cs.uml.edu>
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