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677 lines
21 KiB
677 lines
21 KiB
.TH "HTOP" "1" "2022" "@PACKAGE_STRING@" "User Commands" |
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.SH "NAME" |
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htop, pcp-htop \- interactive process viewer |
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.SH "SYNOPSIS" |
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.B htop |
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.RB [ \-dCFhpustvH ] |
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.br |
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.B pcp\ htop |
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.RB [ \-dCFhpustvH ] |
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.RB [ \-\-host/-h\ host ] |
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.SH "DESCRIPTION" |
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.B htop |
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is a cross-platform ncurses-based process viewer. |
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.LP |
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It is similar to |
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.BR top , |
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but allows you to scroll vertically and horizontally, and interact using |
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a pointing device (mouse). |
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You can observe all processes running on the system, along with their |
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command line arguments, as well as view them in a tree format, select |
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multiple processes and act on them all at once. |
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.LP |
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Tasks related to processes (killing, renicing) can be done without |
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entering their PIDs. |
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.LP |
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.B pcp-htop |
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is a version of |
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.B htop |
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built using the Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) Metrics API (see \c |
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.BR PCPIntro (1), |
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.BR PMAPI (3)), |
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allowing to extend |
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.B htop |
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to display values from arbitrary metrics. |
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See the section below titled |
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.B "CONFIG FILES" |
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for further details. |
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.br |
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.SH "COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS" |
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Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too. |
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.TP |
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\fB\-d \-\-delay=DELAY\fR |
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Delay between updates, in tenths of a second. If the delay value is |
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less than 1, it is increased to 1, i.e. 1/10 second. If the delay value |
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is greater than 100, it is decreased to 100, i.e. 10 seconds. |
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.TP |
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\fB\-C \-\-no-color \-\-no-colour\fR |
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Start |
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.B htop |
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in monochrome mode |
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.TP |
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\fB\-F \-\-filter=FILTER |
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Filter processes by terms matching the commands. The terms are matched |
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case-insensitive and as fixed strings (not regexs). You can separate multiple terms with "|". |
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.TP |
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\fB\-h \-\-help |
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Display a help message and exit |
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.TP |
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\fB\-p \-\-pid=PID,PID...\fR |
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Show only the given PIDs |
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.TP |
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\fB\-s \-\-sort\-key COLUMN\fR |
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Sort by this column (use \-\-sort\-key help for a column list). |
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This will force a list view unless you specify -t at the same time. |
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.TP |
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\fB\-u \-\-user=USERNAME|UID\fR |
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Show only the processes of a given user |
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.TP |
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\fB\-U \-\-no-unicode\fR |
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Do not use unicode but ASCII characters for graph meters |
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.TP |
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\fB\-M \-\-no-mouse\fR |
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Disable support of mouse control |
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.TP |
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\fB\-\-readonly\fR |
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Disable all system and process changing features |
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.TP |
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\fB\-V \-\-version |
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Output version information and exit |
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.TP |
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\fB\-t \-\-tree |
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Show processes in tree view. This can be used to force a tree view when |
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requesting a sort order with -s. |
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.TP |
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\fB\-H \-\-highlight-changes=DELAY\fR |
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Highlight new and old processes |
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.TP |
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\fB \-\-drop-capabilities[=off|basic|strict]\fR |
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Linux only; requires libcap support. |
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.br |
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Drop unneeded Linux capabilities. |
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In strict mode features like killing, changing process priorities, and reading |
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process delay accounting information will not work, due to less capabilities |
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held. |
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.SH "INTERACTIVE COMMANDS" |
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The following commands are supported while in |
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.BR htop : |
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.TP 5 |
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.B Tab, Shift-Tab |
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Select the next / the previous screen tab to display. |
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You can enable showing the screen tab names in the Setup screen (F2). |
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.TP |
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.B Up, Alt-k |
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Select (highlight) the previous process in the process list. Scroll the list |
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if necessary. |
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.TP |
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.B Down, Alt-j |
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Select (highlight) the next process in the process list. Scroll the list if |
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necessary. |
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.TP |
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.B Left, Alt-h |
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Scroll the process list left. |
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.TP |
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.B Right, Alt-l |
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Scroll the process list right. |
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.TP |
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.B PgUp, PgDn |
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Scroll the process list up or down one window. |
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.TP |
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.B Home |
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Scroll to the top of the process list and select the first process. |
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.TP |
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.B End |
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Scroll to the bottom of the process list and select the last process. |
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.TP |
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.B Ctrl-A, ^ |
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Scroll left to the beginning of the process entry (i.e. beginning of line). |
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.TP |
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.B Ctrl-E, $ |
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Scroll right to the end of the process entry (i.e. end of line). |
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.TP |
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.B Space |
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Tag or untag a process. Commands that can operate on multiple processes, |
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like "kill", will then apply over the list of tagged processes, instead |
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of the currently highlighted one. |
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.TP |
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.B c |
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Tag the current process and its children. Commands that can operate on multiple |
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processes, like "kill", will then apply over the list of tagged processes, |
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instead of the currently highlighted one. |
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.TP |
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.B U |
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Untag all processes (remove all tags added with the Space or c keys). |
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.TP |
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.B s |
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Trace process system calls: if strace(1) is installed, pressing this key |
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will attach it to the currently selected process, presenting a live |
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update of system calls issued by the process. |
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.TP |
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.B l |
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Display open files for a process: if lsof(1) is installed, pressing this key |
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will display the list of file descriptors opened by the process. |
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.TP |
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.B w |
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Display the command line of the selected process in a separate screen, wrapped |
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onto multiple lines as needed. |
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.TP |
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.B x |
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Display the active file locks of the selected process in a separate screen. |
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.TP |
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.B F1, h, ? |
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Go to the help screen |
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.TP |
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.B F2, S |
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Go to the setup screen, where you can configure the meters displayed at the top |
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of the screen, set various display options, choose among color schemes, and |
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select which columns are displayed, in which order. |
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.TP |
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.B F3, / |
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Incrementally search the command lines of all the displayed processes. The |
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currently selected (highlighted) command will update as you type. While in |
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search mode, pressing F3 will cycle through matching occurrences. |
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Pressing Shift-F3 will cycle backwards. |
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|
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Alternatively the search can be started by simply typing the command |
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you are looking for, although for the first character normal key |
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bindings take precedence. |
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.TP |
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.B F4, \\\\ |
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Incremental process filtering: type in part of a process command line and |
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only processes whose names match will be shown. To cancel filtering, |
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enter the Filter option again and press Esc. |
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The matching is done case-insensitive. Terms are fixed strings (no regex). |
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You can separate multiple terms with "|". |
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.TP |
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.B F5, t |
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Tree view: organize processes by parenthood, and layout the relations |
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between them as a tree. Toggling the key will switch between tree and |
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your previously selected sort view. Selecting a sort view will exit |
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tree view. |
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.TP |
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.B F6, <, > |
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Selects a field for sorting, also accessible through < and >. |
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The current sort field is indicated by a highlight in the header. |
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.TP |
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.B F7, ] |
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Increase the selected process's priority (subtract from 'nice' value). |
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This can only be done by the superuser. |
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.TP |
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.B F8, [ |
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Decrease the selected process's priority (add to 'nice' value) |
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.TP |
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.B Shift-F7, } |
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Increase the selected process's autogroup priority (subtract from autogroup 'nice' value). |
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This can only be done by the superuser. |
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.TP |
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.B Shift-F8, { |
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Decrease the selected process's autogroup priority (add to autogroup 'nice' value) |
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.TP |
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.B F9, k |
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"Kill" process: sends a signal which is selected in a menu, to one or a group |
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of processes. If processes were tagged, sends the signal to all tagged processes. |
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If none is tagged, sends to the currently selected process. |
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.TP |
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.B F10, q |
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Quit |
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.TP |
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.B I |
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Invert the sort order: if sort order is increasing, switch to decreasing, and |
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vice-versa. |
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.TP |
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.B +, \-, * |
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When in tree view mode, expand or collapse subtree. When a subtree is collapsed |
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a "+" sign shows to the left of the process name. |
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Pressing "*" will expand or collapse all children of PIDs without parents, so |
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typically PID 1 (init) and PID 2 (kthreadd on Linux, if kernel threads are shown). |
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.TP |
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.B a (on multiprocessor machines) |
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Set CPU affinity: mark which CPUs a process is allowed to use. |
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.TP |
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.B u |
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Show only processes owned by a specified user. |
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.TP |
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.B N |
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Sort by PID. |
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.TP |
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.B M |
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Sort by memory usage (top compatibility key). |
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.TP |
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.B P |
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Sort by processor usage (top compatibility key). |
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.TP |
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.B T |
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Sort by time (top compatibility key). |
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.TP |
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.B F |
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"Follow" process: if the sort order causes the currently selected process |
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to move in the list, make the selection bar follow it. This is useful for |
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monitoring a process: this way, you can keep a process always visible on |
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screen. When a movement key is used, "follow" loses effect. |
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.TP |
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.B K |
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Hide kernel threads: prevent the threads belonging the kernel to be |
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displayed in the process list. (This is a toggle key.) |
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.TP |
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.B H |
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Hide user threads: on systems that represent them differently than ordinary |
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processes (such as recent NPTL-based systems), this can hide threads from |
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userspace processes in the process list. (This is a toggle key.) |
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.TP |
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.B p |
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Show full paths to running programs, where applicable. (This is a toggle key.) |
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.TP |
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.B Z |
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Pause/resume process updates. |
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.TP |
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.B m |
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Merge exe, comm and cmdline, where applicable. (This is a toggle key.) |
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.TP |
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.B Ctrl-L |
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Refresh: redraw screen and recalculate values. |
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.TP |
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.B Numbers |
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PID search: type in process ID and the selection highlight will be moved to it. |
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.PD |
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.SH "COLUMNS" |
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The following columns can display data about each process. A value of '\-' in |
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all the rows indicates that a column is unsupported on your system, or |
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currently unimplemented in |
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.BR htop . |
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The names below are the ones used in the |
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"Available Columns" section of the setup screen. If a different name is |
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shown in |
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.BR htop 's |
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main screen, it is shown below in parenthesis. |
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.TP 5 |
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.B Command |
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The full command line of the process (i.e. program name and arguments). |
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If the option 'Merge exe, comm and cmdline in Command' (toggled by the 'm' key) |
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is active, the executable path (/proc/[pid]/exe) and the command name |
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(/proc/[pid]/comm) are also shown merged with the command line, if available. |
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The program basename is highlighted if set in the configuration. Additional |
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highlighting can be configured for stale executables (cf. EXE column below). |
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.TP |
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.B COMM |
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The command name of the process obtained from /proc/[pid]/comm, if readable. |
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Requires Linux kernel 2.6.33 or newer. |
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.TP |
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.B EXE |
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The abbreviated basename of the executable of the process, obtained from |
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/proc/[pid]/exe, if readable. htop is able to read this file on linux for ALL |
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the processes only if it has the capability CAP_SYS_PTRACE or root privileges. |
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The basename is marked in red if the executable used to run the process has |
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been replaced or deleted on disk since the process started. The information is |
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obtained by processing the contents of /proc/[pid]/exe. |
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Furthermore the basename is marked in yellow if any library is reported as having |
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been replaced or deleted on disk since it was last loaded. The information is |
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obtained by processing the contents of /proc/[pid]/maps. |
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|
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When deciding the color the replacement of the main executable always takes |
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precedence over replacement of any other library. If only the memory map indicates |
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a replacement of the main executable, this will show as if any other library had |
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been replaced or deleted. |
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This additional color markup can be configured in the "Display Options" section of |
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the setup screen. |
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Displaying EXE requires CAP_SYS_PTRACE and PTRACE_MODE_READ_FSCRED. |
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.TP |
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.B PID |
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The process ID. |
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.TP |
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.B STATE (S) |
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The state of the process: |
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\fBS\fR for sleeping |
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\fBI\fR for idle (longer inactivity than sleeping on platforms that distinguish) |
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\fBR\fR for running |
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\fBD\fR for disk sleep (uninterruptible) |
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\fBZ\fR for zombie (waiting for parent to read its exit status) |
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\fBT\fR for traced or suspended (e.g by SIGTSTP) |
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\fBW\fR for paging |
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.TP |
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.B PPID |
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The parent process ID. |
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.TP |
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.B PGRP |
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The process's group ID. |
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.TP |
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.B SESSION (SID) |
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The process's session ID. |
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.TP |
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.B TTY |
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The controlling terminal of the process. |
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.TP |
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.B TPGID |
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The process ID of the foreground process group of the controlling terminal. |
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.TP |
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.B MINFLT |
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The number of page faults happening in the main memory. |
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.TP |
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.B CMINFLT |
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The number of minor faults for the process's waited-for children (see MINFLT above). |
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.TP |
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.B MAJFLT |
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The number of page faults happening out of the main memory. |
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.TP |
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.B CMAJFLT |
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The number of major faults for the process's waited-for children (see MAJFLT above). |
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.TP |
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.B UTIME (UTIME+) |
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The user CPU time, which is the amount of time the process has spent executing |
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on the CPU in user mode (i.e. everything but system calls), measured in clock |
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ticks. |
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.TP |
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.B STIME (STIME+) |
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The system CPU time, which is the amount of time the kernel has spent |
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executing system calls on behalf of the process, measured in clock ticks. |
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.TP |
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.B CUTIME (CUTIME+) |
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The children's user CPU time, which is the amount of time the process's |
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waited-for children have spent executing in user mode (see UTIME above). |
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.TP |
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.B CSTIME (CSTIME+) |
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The children's system CPU time, which is the amount of time the kernel has spent |
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executing system calls on behalf of all the process's waited-for children (see |
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STIME above). |
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.TP |
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.B PRIORITY (PRI) |
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The kernel's internal priority for the process, usually just its nice value |
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plus twenty. Different for real-time processes. |
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.TP |
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.B NICE (NI) |
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The nice value of a process, from 19 (low priority) to -20 (high priority). A |
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high value means the process is being nice, letting others have a higher |
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relative priority. The usual OS permission restrictions for adjusting priority apply. |
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.TP |
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.B STARTTIME (START) |
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The time the process was started. |
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.TP |
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.B PROCESSOR (CPU) |
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The ID of the CPU the process last executed on. |
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.TP |
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.B M_VIRT (VIRT) |
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The size of the virtual memory of the process. |
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.TP |
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.B M_RESIDENT (RES) |
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The resident set size (text + data + stack) of the process (i.e. the size of the |
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process's used physical memory). |
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.TP |
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.B M_SHARE (SHR) |
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The size of the process's shared pages. |
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.TP |
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.B M_TRS (CODE) |
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The text resident set size of the process (i.e. the size of the process's |
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executable instructions). |
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.TP |
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.B M_DRS (DATA) |
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The data resident set size (data + stack) of the process (i.e. the size of anything |
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except the process's executable instructions). |
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.TP |
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.B M_LRS (LIB) |
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The library size of the process. |
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.TP |
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.B M_SWAP (SWAP) |
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The size of the process's swapped pages. |
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.TP |
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.B M_PSS (PSS) |
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The proportional set size, same as M_RESIDENT but each page is divided by the |
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number of processes sharing it. |
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.TP |
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.B M_M_PSSWP (PSSWP) |
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The proportional swap share of this mapping, unlike M_SWAP this does not take |
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into account swapped out page of underlying shmem objects. |
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.TP |
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.B ST_UID (UID) |
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The user ID of the process owner. |
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.TP |
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.B PERCENT_CPU (CPU%) |
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The percentage of the CPU time that the process is currently using. |
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This is the default way to represent CPU usage in Linux. Each process can |
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consume up to 100% which means the full capacity of the core it is running |
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on. This is sometimes called "Irix mode" e.g. in |
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.BR top (1). |
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.TP |
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.B PERCENT_NORM_CPU (NCPU%) |
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The percentage of the CPU time that the process is currently using normalized |
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by CPU count. This is sometimes called "Solaris mode" e.g. in |
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.BR top (1). |
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.TP |
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.B PERCENT_MEM (MEM%) |
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The percentage of memory the process is currently using (based on the process's |
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resident memory size, see M_RESIDENT above). |
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.TP |
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.B USER |
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The username of the process owner, or the user ID if the name can't be |
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determined. |
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.TP |
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.B TIME (TIME+) |
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The time, measured in clock ticks that the process has spent in user and system |
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time (see UTIME, STIME above). |
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.TP |
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.B NLWP |
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The number of Light-Weight Processes (=threads) in the process. |
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.TP |
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.B TGID |
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The thread group ID. |
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.TP |
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.B CTID |
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OpenVZ container ID, a.k.a virtual environment ID. |
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.TP |
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.B VPID |
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OpenVZ process ID. |
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.TP |
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.B VXID |
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VServer process ID. |
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.TP |
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.B RCHAR (RD_CHAR) |
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The number of bytes the process has read. |
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.TP |
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.B WCHAR (WR_CHAR) |
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The number of bytes the process has written. |
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.TP |
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.B SYSCR (RD_SYSC) |
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The number of read(2) syscalls for the process. |
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.TP |
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.B SYSCW (WR_SYSC) |
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The number of write(2) syscalls for the process. |
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.TP |
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.B RBYTES (IO_RBYTES) |
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Bytes of read(2) I/O for the process. |
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.TP |
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.B WBYTES (IO_WBYTES) |
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Bytes of write(2) I/O for the process. |
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.TP |
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.B CNCLWB (IO_CANCEL) |
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Bytes of cancelled write(2) I/O. |
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.TP |
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.B IO_READ_RATE (DISK READ) |
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The I/O rate of read(2) in bytes per second, for the process. |
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.TP |
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.B IO_WRITE_RATE (DISK WRITE) |
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The I/O rate of write(2) in bytes per second, for the process. |
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.TP |
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.B IO_RATE (DISK R/W) |
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The I/O rate, IO_READ_RATE + IO_WRITE_RATE (see above). |
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.TP |
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.B CGROUP |
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Which cgroup the process is in. For a shortened view see the CCGROUP column below. |
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.TP |
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.B CCGROUP |
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Shortened view of the cgroup name that the process is in. |
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This performs some pattern-based replacements to shorten the displayed string and thus condense the information. |
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\fB/*.slice\fR is shortened to \fB/[*]\fR (exceptions below) |
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\fB/system.slice\fR is shortened to \fB/[S]\fR |
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\fB/user.slice\fR is shortened to \fB/[U]\fR |
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\fB/user-*.slice\fR is shortened to \fB/[U:*]\fR (directly preceding \fB/[U]\fR before dropped) |
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\fB/machine.slice\fR is shortened to \fB/[M]\fR |
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\fB/machine-*.scope\fR is shortened to \fB/[SNC:*]\fR (SNC: systemd nspawn container), uppercase for the monitor |
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\fB/lxc.monitor.*\fR is shortened to \fB/[LXC:*]\fR |
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\fB/lxc.payload.*\fR is shortened to \fB/[lxc:*]\fR |
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\fB/*.scope\fR is shortened to \fB/!*\fR |
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\fB/*.service\fR is shortened to \fB/*\fR (suffix removed) |
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|
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Encountered escape sequences (e.g. from systemd) inside the cgroup name are not decoded. |
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.TP |
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.B OOM |
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OOM killer score. |
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.TP |
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.B CTXT |
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Incremental sum of voluntary and nonvoluntary context switches. |
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.TP |
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.B IO_PRIORITY (IO) |
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The I/O scheduling class followed by the priority if the class supports it: |
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\fBR\fR for Realtime |
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\fBB\fR for Best-effort |
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\fBid\fR for Idle |
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.TP |
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.B PERCENT_CPU_DELAY (CPUD%) |
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The percentage of time spent waiting for a CPU (while runnable). Requires CAP_NET_ADMIN. |
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.TP |
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.B PERCENT_IO_DELAY (IOD%) |
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The percentage of time spent waiting for the completion of synchronous block I/O. Requires CAP_NET_ADMIN. |
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.TP |
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.B PERCENT_SWAP_DELAY (SWAPD%) |
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The percentage of time spent swapping in pages. Requires CAP_NET_ADMIN. |
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.TP |
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.B AGRP |
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The autogroup identifier for the process. Requires Linux CFS to be enabled. |
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.TP |
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.B ANI |
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The autogroup nice value for the process autogroup. Requires Linux CFS to be enabled. |
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.TP |
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.B All other flags |
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Currently unsupported (always displays '-'). |
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.SH "EXTERNAL LIBRARIES" |
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While |
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.B htop |
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depends on most of the libraries it uses at build time there are two |
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noteworthy exceptions to this rule. These exceptions both relate to |
|
data displayed in meters displayed in the header of |
|
.B htop |
|
and were intentionally created as optional runtime dependencies instead. |
|
These exceptions are described below: |
|
.TP |
|
.B libsystemd |
|
The bindings for libsystemd are used in the SystemD meter to determine |
|
the number of active services and the overall system state. Looking for |
|
the functions to determine these information at runtime allows for |
|
builds to support these meters without forcing the package manager |
|
to install these libraries on systems that otherwise don't use systemd. |
|
|
|
Summary: no build time dependency, optional runtime dependency on |
|
.B libsystemd |
|
via dynamic loading, with |
|
.B systemctl(1) |
|
fallback. |
|
.TP |
|
.B libsensors |
|
The bindings for libsensors are used for the CPU temperature readings |
|
in the CPU usage meters if displaying the temperature is enabled through |
|
the setup screen. In order for |
|
.B htop |
|
to show these temperatures correctly though, a proper configuration |
|
of libsensors through its usual configuration files is assumed and that |
|
all CPU cores correspond to temperature sensors from the |
|
.B coretemp |
|
driver with core 0 corresponding to a sensor labelled "Core 0". The |
|
package temperature may be given as "Package id 0". If missing it is |
|
inferred as the maximum value from the available per-core readings. |
|
|
|
Summary: build time dependency on |
|
.B libsensors(3) |
|
C header files, optional runtime dependency on |
|
.B libsensors(3) |
|
via dynamic loading. |
|
.SH "CONFIG FILES" |
|
By default |
|
.B htop |
|
reads its configuration from the XDG-compliant path |
|
.IR ~/.config/htop/htoprc . |
|
The configuration file is overwritten by |
|
.BR htop 's |
|
in-program Setup configuration, so it should not be hand-edited. |
|
If no user configuration exists |
|
.B htop |
|
tries to read the system-wide configuration from |
|
.I @sysconfdir@/htoprc |
|
and as a last resort, falls back to its hard coded defaults. |
|
.LP |
|
You may override the location of the configuration file using the $HTOPRC |
|
environment variable (so you can have multiple configurations for different |
|
machines that share the same home directory, for example). |
|
.LP |
|
The |
|
.B pcp-htop |
|
utility makes use of |
|
.I htoprc |
|
in exactly the same way. |
|
In addition, it supports additional configuration files allowing |
|
new meters and columns to be added to the display via the usual |
|
Setup function, which will display additional Available Meters |
|
and Available Column entries for each runtime configured meter |
|
or column. |
|
.LP |
|
These |
|
.B pcp-htop |
|
configuration files are read once at startup. |
|
The format of these files is described in detail in the |
|
.BR pcp-htop (5) |
|
manual page. |
|
.LP |
|
This functionality makes available many thousands of Performance |
|
Co-Pilot metrics for display by |
|
.BR pcp-htop , |
|
as well as the ability to display custom metrics added at individual sites. |
|
Applications and services instrumented using the OpenMetrics format |
|
.B https://openmetrics.io |
|
can also be displayed by |
|
.B pcp-htop |
|
if the |
|
.BR pmdaopenmetrics (1) |
|
component is configured. |
|
.SH "MEMORY SIZES" |
|
Memory sizes in |
|
.B htop |
|
are displayed in a human-readable form. |
|
Sizes are printed in powers of 1024. (e.g., 1023M = 1072693248 Bytes) |
|
.LP |
|
The decision to use this convention was made in order to conserve screen |
|
space and make memory size representations consistent throughout |
|
.BR htop . |
|
.SH "SEE ALSO" |
|
.BR proc (5), |
|
.BR top (1), |
|
.BR free (1), |
|
.BR ps (1), |
|
.BR uptime (1) |
|
and |
|
.BR limits.conf (5). |
|
.SH "SEE ALSO FOR PCP" |
|
.BR pmdaopenmetrics (1), |
|
.BR PCPIntro (1), |
|
.BR PMAPI (3), |
|
and |
|
.BR pcp-htop (5). |
|
.SH "AUTHORS" |
|
.B htop |
|
was originally developed by Hisham Muhammad. |
|
Nowadays it is maintained by the community at <htop@groups.io>. |
|
.LP |
|
.B pcp-htop |
|
is maintained as a collaboration between the <htop@groups.io> and <pcp@groups.io> |
|
communities, and forms part of the Performance Co-Pilot suite of tools. |
|
.SH "COPYRIGHT" |
|
Copyright \(co 2004-2019 Hisham Muhammad. |
|
.br |
|
Copyright \(co 2020-2022 htop dev team. |
|
.LP |
|
License GPLv2+: GNU General Public License version 2 or, at your option, any later version. |
|
.LP |
|
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. |
|
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
|
|
|