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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Using "ps" command to find high processes Post 302826725 by zaxxon on Thursday 27th of June 2013 07:40:27 AM
Old 06-27-2013
Sorry but that is usually not helping. It is exact the problem I formerly described. You just display the CPU usage of the process, since the process has been started and so with an average. An average over such a long time/interval never gets peaks of any kind. They will be flattened away. I saw Nagios-plugins, that used something like that, but they are useless in terms of alarming threshold of unwanted kinds of peaks for example.

Example:
So when a process runs for 20 hours now, with a CPU usage of 40% and then another hour with 99%, you will get displayed a somewhat constant value which is the average of 21 hours which would be (20*40 + 1*99) / 21 = 42.8%.
If you take this to decide if you kill a process, then good night Smilie

Sorry but, I strongly doubt that your ps helps you at all for this.
Maybe check out the top -b I mentioned.

The C column Robin stated is helpful too, but as he discribed is hard to set into relation to other processes and has to be monitored over some time to get a feeling for what is high and what is low.
 

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UPTIME(1)							   User Commands							 UPTIME(1)

NAME
uptime - Tell how long the system has been running. SYNOPSIS
uptime [options] DESCRIPTION
uptime gives a one line display of the following information. The current time, how long the system has been running, how many users are currently logged on, and the system load averages for the past 1, 5, and 15 minutes. This is the same information contained in the header line displayed by w(1). System load averages is the average number of processes that are either in a runnable or uninterruptable state. A process in a runnable state is either using the CPU or waiting to use the CPU. A process in uninterruptable state is waiting for some I/O access, eg waiting for disk. The averages are taken over the three time intervals. Load averages are not normalized for the number of CPUs in a system, so a load average of 1 means a single CPU system is loaded all the time while on a 4 CPU system it means it was idle 75% of the time. OPTIONS
-p, --pretty show uptime in pretty format -h, --help display this help text -s, --since system up since, in yyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:SS format -V, --version display version information and exit FILES
/var/run/utmp information about who is currently logged on /proc process information AUTHORS
uptime was written by Larry Greenfield <greenfie@gauss.rutgers.edu> and Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@sunsite.unc.edu> SEE ALSO
ps(1), top(1), utmp(5), w(1) REPORTING BUGS
Please send bug reports to <procps@freelists.org> procps-ng December 2012 UPTIME(1)
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