Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: top command line utility
Top Forums Programming top command line utility Post 302146435 by LivinFree on Tuesday 20th of November 2007 01:20:58 PM
Old 11-20-2007
What information are you trying to get? What platform and Unix are you using? Running a curses-based app that imposes a measurable amount of load on it's own doesn't sound optimal to me - perhaps there's a way to avoid using 'top -b' to get what you want.
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

how can i extract only the Memory line from top command ?

Hello all i need in csh to extract only the Memory line from the out put of the top command how can it easily done (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: umen
1 Replies

2. Programming

command line socket read utility

HI I have a messaging s/w daemon(TIBCO rvrd) provided by vendor which will accept connections from various clients and routes messages to the destinations. In order to route it internally uses two ports(one tcp adn one udp). I want to know on which port(tcp/udp) it is transmitting... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: axes
3 Replies

3. Linux

The dot command-line utility?

Hi, What else is the dot used beside relative filepaths in bash? Is it a shell utility as well? No man entry for dot (.)... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: varelg
3 Replies

4. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

How do you reverse terminal command line to the top?

Hi All, I work on a Linux platform which runs Red Hat (forget which version) and use both korn and bash shells. Is there a way of making the command line appear at the top of the terminal window and any lists, commands or directory names etc to appear below the top, that is to say reverse the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ray_m
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

DB Access Command Line Utility

To read/write to a DB from Java or Perl, you usually have to install/reference several drivers and write a whole bunch of boilerplate DB access code. I'm curious if someone has written a command line utility for Unix/Linux for simple database access for the major providers, something like: ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: furashgf
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

FTP command-line utility usage

Hi, Using command-line utility "ftp or sftp", I want to transfer files across Windows and UNIX. Can you please tell me from where I need to connect to ftp and how do I specify the hostname, credentials and how do I get and put files between DOS and UNIX? Please provide me as much... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dev_Dev
10 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Top utility in bash for loop

Dear All, is it possible to use top utility in for loop? I am trying to get top swap space consuming processes in my for loop. I got multiple way (using /proc FS) however have anybody used top command in for loop? Using /proc FS giving solutionbut itrs more complex. Please suggest if... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mail2vivek1
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Issue in running a command line utility in CRON

Hi Everyone! I am facing an issue in running a command line utility from the CRON. This utility displays IPC statistics on UNIX message queues: The "queue name" and the "count" of messages in the queue. When running this utility from prompt, it will provide an output on the screen, like the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: vai_sh
4 Replies
atos(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   atos(1)

NAME
atos -- convert numeric addresses to symbols of binary images or processes SYNOPSIS
atos [-o <binary-image-file>] [-p <pid> | <partial-executable-name>] [-arch architecture] [-l <load-address>] [-s <slide>] [-printHeader] [-fullPath] [-f <address-input-file>] [<address> ...] DESCRIPTION
The atos command converts numeric addresses to their symbolic equivalents. If full debug symbol information is available, for example in a .app.dSYM sitting beside a .app, then the output of atos will include file name and source line number information. The input addresses may be given in one of three ways: 1. A list of addresses at the end of the argument list. 2. Using the -f <address-input-file> argument to specify the path of an input file containing whitespace-separated numeric addresses. 3. If no addresses were directly specified, atos enters an interactive mode, reading addresses from stdin. The symbols are found in either a binary image file or in a currently executing process, as specified by: -o <binary-image-file> The path to a binary image file in which to look up symbols. -p <pid> | <partial-executable-name> The process ID or the partial name of a currently executing process in which to look up symbols. Multiple process IDs or paths can be specified if necessary, and the two can be mixed in any order. When working with a Mach-O binary image file, atos considers only addresses and symbols defined in that binary image file, at their default locations (unless the -l or -s option is given). When working with a running process, atos considers addresses and symbols defined in all binary images currently loaded by that process, at their loaded locations. The following additional options are available. -arch architecture The particular architecure of a binary image file in which to look up symbols. -l <load-address> The load address of the binary image. This value is always assumed to be in hex, even without a "0x" prefix. The input addresses are assumed to be in a binary image with that load address. Load addresses for binary images can be found in the Binary Images: sec- tion at the bottom of crash, sample, leaks, and malloc_history reports. -s <slide> The slide value of the binary image -- this is the difference between the load address of a binary image, and the address at which the binary image was built. This slide value is subtracted from the input addresses. It is usually easier to directly specify the load address with the -l argument than to manually calculate a slide value. -printHeader If a process was specified, the first line of atos output should be a header of the form "Looking up symbols in process <pid> named: <process-name>". This is primarily used when atos is invoked as part of a stackshot(1) run, for verification of the process ID and name. -fullPath Print the full path of the source files. EXAMPLE
A stripped, optimized version of Sketch was built as an x86_64 position-independent executable (PIE) into /BuildProducts/Release. Full debug symbol information is available in Sketch.app.dSYM, which sits alongside Sketch.app. When Sketch.app was run, the Sketch binary (which was built at 0x100000000) was loaded at 0x10acde000. Running 'sample Sketch' showed 3 addresses that we want to get symbol information for -- 0x10acea1d3, 0x10ace4bea, and 0x10ace4b7a. First notice that the .dSYM is next to the .app: % ls -1 /BuildProducts/Release/ Sketch.app Sketch.app.dSYM Now, to symbolicate, we run atos with the -o flag specifying the path to the actual Sketch executable (not the .app wrapper), the -arch x86_64 flag, and the -l 0x10acde000 flag to specify the load address. % atos -o /BuildProducts/Release/Sketch.app/Contents/MacOS/Sketch -arch x86_64 -l 0x10acde000 0x10acea1d3 0x10ace4bea 0x10ace4b7a -[SKTGraphicView drawRect:] (in Sketch) (SKTGraphicView.m:445) -[SKTGraphic drawHandlesInView:] (in Sketch) (NSGeometry.h:110) -[SKTGraphic drawHandleInView:atPoint:] (in Sketch) (SKTGraphic.m:490) GETTING SYMBOLS FOR A DIFFERENT MACHINE ARCHITECTURE
It is possible to get symbols for addresses from a different machine architecture than the system on which atos is running. For example, when running atos on an Intel-based system, one may wish to get the symbol for an address that came from a backtrace of a process running on an ARM device. To do so, use the -arch flag to specify the desired architecture (such as i386 or arm) and pass in a corresponding symbol- rich Mach-O binary image file with a binary image of the corresponding architecture (such as a Universal Binary). BSD
May 9, 2017 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:24 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy