Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Top command
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Top command Post 302111920 by Georgesaa on Friday 23rd of March 2007 11:21:56 AM
Old 03-23-2007
Top command

Hey,
Using one single line of command i am trying to show the CPU usage for 4 processors and then filter it out and write it to a text file. Everything seams ok except that i am not able to switch from having the top command show me all CPU processes seperate opposed to showing me the average of all 4.
I know once i go into top, i can toggle that option by hitting the '1' key. However, i would like to have one command that does this.

I've looked into different configurations files as well but no luck. Any ideas or help would be appreciated. Thanck You

Georges A A

EX:

top -n 1 | cat | head -6 | tail -3 | tr -cs 'a-z',.,'0-9' '\n' | sed '1,8d' | sed '2,8d' | sed '3,9d'> /output.txt

This commmand will get and filter the CPU process and write it to a text file. However, this is only displaying the average of all 4.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

command --> top

I understand the numbers displayed in variable "load average". My question: what are the correct/ideal numbers? Sometimes, I got less than 1. Others, above 6. Also, what HW/SW should I tune in order to have the ideal numbers? Thank you ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dgromerog
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

top command

hi guys, i am having a dual cpu xeon machine. i came to know that i can view the performance by giving top command. but top command shows only the usage of one cpu in percentage while the process are using more than 100% usage in the list . can i know separately the usage of cpus. can you... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bijuhpd
5 Replies

3. SCO

HP-UX top command

Is there a command in SCO Unix that does the same as the top command in HPUX. The command displays the jobs using the most system resources. Thanks You (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: joestrosser
0 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

top command

Hey, Using one single line of command i am trying to show the CPU usage for 4 processors and then filter it out and write it to a text file. Everything seams ok except that i am not able to switch from having the top command show me all CPU processes seperate opposed to showing me the average of... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Georgesaa
0 Replies

5. Solaris

top command

Hi, How to install software package top in solaris, (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Top command

Hi , can some one please assist me in using top command im facing following after using top: # top -hv UX:sh (top): ERROR: top: syntax error at line 1: `(' unexpected # top -p UX:sh (top): ERROR: top: syntax error at line 1: `(' unexpected thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: NIMISH AGARWAL
3 Replies

7. AIX

Top command in AIX 4.2 (no topas, no nmon, no top)?

Is there a 'top' command equivalent in AIX 4.2 ? I already checked and I do not see the following ones anywhere: top nmon topas (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Browser_ice
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Command to find the Memory and CPU utilization using 'top' command

Hi all, I found like top command could be used to find the Memory and CPU utilization. But i want to know how to find the Memory and CPU utilization for a particular user using top command. Thanks in advance. Thanks, Ananthi.U (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ananthi_ku
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with top command

Currently when i run top command i get the following columns . CPU TTY PID USERNAME PRI NI SIZE RES STATE TIME %WCPU %CPU COMMAND In this how to remove '%WCPU' column ? Thanks very much in advance . (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: kpravinraj
6 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Top command

Hi All, i am using the below command and once get the output and i need to keep the first batch only.in this case how to do this one. please help me on thistop -b -n 5 >top.txt Thanks, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bmk
3 Replies
top(1)							      General Commands Manual							    top(1)

NAME
top - display and update information about the top processes on the system SYNOPSIS
time] count] number] filename] pset_id] DESCRIPTION
displays the top processes on the system and periodically updates the information. Raw CPU percentage is used to rank the processes. Options recognizes the following command-line options: Set the delay between screen updates to time seconds. The default delay between updates is 5 seconds. Show only count displays, then exit. A display is considered to be one update of the screen. This option is used to select the number of displays to be shown before the program exits. This option runs the program at the same priority as if it is executed via a command so that it will execute faster (see nice(1)). This can be very useful in discovering any system problem when the system is very sluggish. This option is accessible only to users who have appropriate privileges. User ID (uid) numbers are displayed instead of usernames. This improves execution speed by eliminating the additional time required to map uid numbers to user names. Hides the individual CPU state information for systems having multiple processors. Only the average CPU status will be displayed. Show only number processes per screen. Note that, if number is greater than the maximum number of processes that can be displayed per screen, this option is ignored. But when used with option, there is no limit on the maximum number of processes that can be displayed. Output is appended to filename. When is used, defaults to 1 for and 16 for Show load averages and process state break down for system and processor set pset_id. Show only the processes running on the processor set pset_id. This option is supported only if the kernel supports processor sets functionality. Adds column PSET before column CPU for individual CPU information. Adds columns PSET before column CPU for each process informa- tion. This option is supported only if the kernel supports processor sets functionality. Show individual CPU information. By default, does not display any individual CPU information. The user can toggle between individual process information and individual CPU information by using the screen-control key. When used with the option, the option overrides the option. Screen-Control Commands When displaying multiple-screen data, recognizes the following keyboard screen-control commands: Display next screen if the current screen is not the last screen. Display previous screen if the current screen is not the first screen. Display the first (top) screen. Display individual CPU information in place of individual process information and vice versa. Program Termination To exit the program and resume normal user activities, type at any time. Display Description Three general classes of information are displayed by The first few lines at the top of the display show general information about the state of the system, including: o System name and current time. o Load averages in the last one, five, and fifteen minutes of all the active processors in the system. o Number of existing processes and the number of processes in each state (sleeping, waiting, running, starting, zombie, and stopped). o Percentage of time spent in each of the processor states (user, nice, system, idle, interrupt and swapper) per active processor on the system. o Average value for each of the active processor states (only on multi-processor systems). Reports virtual and real memory used by user processes (with the amount of memory considered "active" in parentheses) and the amount of free memory. Information about individual processes on the system. When process data cannot fit on a single screen, divides the data into two or more screens. To view multiple-screen data, use the and commands described previously. Note that the system- and memory-data displays are present in each screen of multiple- screen process data. Process data is displayed in a format similar to that used by Processor number on which the process is executing (only on multi-processor systems). Terminal interface used by the process. Process ID number. ID of the processor set to which the processor belongs. This is shown only when option is used. Name of the owner of the process. When the option is specified, the user ID (uid) is displayed instead of Current priority of the process. Nice value ranging from -20 to +20. Total virtual size of the process in kilobytes. This includes virtual sizes of text, data, stack, mmap regions, shared memory regions and IO mapped regions. This may also include virtual memory regions shared with other processes. Resident size of the process in kilobytes. It includes the sizes of all private regions in the process. The resident size information is, at best, an approximate value. Current state of the process. The various states are or Number of system and CPU seconds the process has consumed. Weighted CPU (central processing unit) percentage. Raw CPU percentage. This field is used to sort the top processes. Name of the command the process is currently running. EXAMPLES
can be executed with or without command-line options. To display five screens of data at two-second intervals then automatically exit, use: To display information about pset 2, use: To display individual CPU information in place of individual process information, use: and press the key. AUTHOR
was developed by HP and William LeFebvre of Rice University. top(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:59 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy