12-17-2002
Running 'top' in the terminal should help you look at which processes are taking up the most memory/CPU... If you need to go further than that, I'm sure there are other utilities but I can't name them off the top of my head.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
systemd-cgtop
SYSTEMD-CGTOP(1) systemd-cgtop SYSTEMD-CGTOP(1)
NAME
systemd-cgtop - Show top control groups by their resource usage
SYNOPSIS
systemd-cgtop [OPTIONS...]
DESCRIPTION
systemd-cgtop shows the top control groups of the local Linux control group hierarchy, ordered by their CPU, memory and disk I/O load. The
display is refreshed in regular intervals (by default every 1s), similar in style to top(1).
Resource usage is only accounted for control groups in the relevant hierarchy, i.e. CPU usage is only accounted for control groups in the
cpuacct hierarchy, memory usage only for those in memory and disk I/O usage for those in blkio. systemd(1) by default places all services
in their own control group in the cpuacct hierarchy, but not in memory nor blkio. If resource monitoring for these resources is required it
is recommended to add blkio and memory to the DefaultControllers= setting in /etc/systemd/system.conf (see systemd.conf(5) for details).
Alternatively, it is possible to enable resource accounting individually for services, by making use of the ControlGroup= option in the
unit files (See systemd.exec(5) for details).
To emphasize this: unless blkio and memory are enabled for the services in question with either of the options suggested above no resource
accounting will be available for system services and the data shown by systemd-cgtop will be incomplete.
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
-h, --help
Prints a short help text and exits.
-p
Order by control group path name.
-t
Order by number of tasks in control group (i.e. threads and processes).
-c
Order by CPU load.
-m
Order by memory usage.
-i
Order by disk I/O load.
-d, --delay=
Specify refresh delay in seconds (or if one of ms, us, min is specified as unit in this time unit).
--depth=
Maximum control group tree traversal depth. Specifies how deep systemd-cgtop shall traverse the control group hierarchies. If 0 is
specified only the root group is monitored, for 1 only the first level of control groups is monitored, and so on. Defaults to 2.
KEYS
systemd-cgtop is an interactive tool and may be controlled via user input using the following keys:
h
Shows a short help text.
SPACE
Immediately refresh output.
q
Terminate the program.
p, t, c, m, i
Change ordering of control groups by path, number of tasks, CPU load, memory usage resp. IO load.
+, -
Increase, resp. decrease refresh delay.
EXIT STATUS
On success 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.
SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemctl(1), systemd-cgls(1), top(1)
AUTHOR
Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>
Developer
systemd 10/07/2013 SYSTEMD-CGTOP(1)