roberto wrote:

> and what about "free -m" ??
> it gives output like this
> ~:$ free -m
>                   total       used       free     shared    buffers    
>                   cached
> Mem:           885        583        302          0         58        319
> -/+ buffers/cache:        204        680
> Swap:         1906          0       1906
> 
> perhaps it may be useful for you : )

Only if I run it repeatedly (or use top) and watch it closely while the
program I'm testing is running.

I was hoping for something I could run in a batch job to get the maximum
memory use after the fact.


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