Hi,
I need to find the current cpu (& memory) usage on my machine, as a
percentage, can anyone help ?
Steve.
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SW> Hi,
SW> I need to find the current cpu (& memory) usage on my machine, as a
SW> percentage, can anyone help ?
top
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| Ilya Martynov (http://martynov.org/)|
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Ilya,
sorry, I should have been more specific, I need to get the output in a format
a script could use.
I have tried the uptime command however I'm a bit lost at what the numbers
displayed represent (& how to turn these into a percentage).
(If indeed this is a good way to do this)
Steve.
--
> sorry, I should have been more specific, I need to get the output in a format
> a script could use.
> I have tried the uptime command however I'm a bit lost at what the numbers
> displayed represent (& how to turn these into a percentage).
> (If indeed this is a good way to do this)
/usr/bin/to
Peter Billson writes:
> > sorry, I should have been more specific, I need to get the output in a format
> > a script could use.
> > I have tried the uptime command however I'm a bit lost at what the numbers
> > displayed represent (& how to turn these into a percentage).
> > (If indeed this i
On Thu, 06 Sep 2001 09:00:37 EDT, Peter Billson writes:
>> sorry, I should have been more specific, I need to get the output in a forma
>t
>> a script could use.
>> I have tried the uptime command however I'm a bit lost at what the numbers
>> displayed represent (& how to turn these into a percen
Thanks for that,
top -bin 1 seems to do the trick nicely, also found a bit of documentation at
http://faq.mrtg.org/linux/proc-load.html
that should let me do it without using top.
Cheers.
Steve.
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> cat /proc/meminfo
> cat /proc/loadavg
The meminfo would help him but he posted that he didn't understand load
average and, anyway, needs percent of CPU used. You can not calculate
CPU usage from load average.
You could use /proc to get CPU usage but it would be rather involved
to do and why
On Thu, 06 Sep 2001 09:34:05 EDT, Peter Billson writes:
>> cat /proc/meminfo
>> cat /proc/loadavg
>
> The meminfo would help him but he posted that he didn't understand load
>average and, anyway, needs percent of CPU used. You can not calculate
>CPU usage from load average.
Not to mention the de
Hi I am a Canadian University Student. I was wondering, does anyone
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In the depths of that dark day Thu Sep 06, the words of Robert Waldner were the beacon:
>
> On Thu, 06 Sep 2001 09:34:05 EDT, Peter Billson writes:
> >> cat /proc/meminfo
> >> cat /proc/loadavg
> >
> > The meminfo would help him but he posted that he didn't understand load
> >average and, anyway,
On Thu, Sep 06, 2001 at 03:50:01PM +0200, Robert Waldner wrote:
>
> On Thu, 06 Sep 2001 09:34:05 EDT, Peter Billson writes:
> >> cat /proc/meminfo
> >> cat /proc/loadavg
> >
> > The meminfo would help him but he posted that he didn't understand load
> >average and, anyway, needs percent of CPU us
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