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eventstat(8) [debian man page]

EVENTSTAT(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      EVENTSTAT(8)

NAME
eventstat - a tool to measure system events. SYNOPSIS
eventstat [-rcsv_file][-nevent_count][delay [count]] DESCRIPTION
eventstat is a program that dumps the current active system events. OPTIONS
eventstat options are as follow: -h show help -n event_count only display the first event_count number of top events. -q run quietly, only really makes sense with -r option. -r csv_file output gathered data in a comma separated values file. This can be then imported and graphed using your favourite open source spread sheet. -t threshold ignore samples where the event delta per second less than the given threshold EXAMPLES
Dump events every second until stopped. sudo eventstat Dump the top 20 events every 60 seconds until stopped. sudo eventstat -n 20 60 Dump events every 10 seconds just 5 times. sudo eventstat 10 5 SEE ALSO
powertop(8) AUTHOR
eventstat was written by Colin King <colin.king@canonical.com> This manual page was written by Colin King <colin.king@canonical.com>, for the Ubuntu project (but may be used by others). June 13, 2012 EVENTSTAT(8)

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iotop(1m)							   USER COMMANDS							 iotop(1m)

NAME
iotop - display top disk I/O events by process. Uses DTrace. SYNOPSIS
iotop [-C] [-D|-o|-P] [-j|-Z] [-d device] [-f filename] [-m mount_point] [-t top] [interval [count]] DESCRIPTION
iotop tracks disk I/O by process, and prints a summary report that is refreshed every interval. This is measuring disk events that have made it past system caches. Since this uses DTrace, only users with root privileges can run this command. OPTIONS
-C don't clear the screen -D print delta times - elapsed, us -j print project ID -o print disk delta times, us -P print %I/O (disk delta times) -Z print zone ID -d device instance name to snoop (eg, dad0) -f filename full pathname of file to snoop -m mount_point mountpoint for filesystem to snoop -t top print top number only EXAMPLES
Default output, print summary every 5 seconds # iotop One second samples, # iotop 1 print %I/O (time based), # iotop -P Snoop events on the root filesystem only, # iotop -m / Print top 20 lines only, # iotop -t 20 Print 12 x 5 second samples, scrolling, # iotop -C 5 12 FIELDS
UID user ID PID process ID PPID parent process ID PROJ project ID ZONE zone ID CMD command name for the process DEVICE device name MAJ device major number MIN device minor number D direction, Read or Write BYTES total size of operations, bytes ELAPSED total elapsed times from request to completion, us (this is the elapsed time from the disk request (strategy) to the disk completion (iodone)) DISKTIME total times for disk to complete request, us (this is the time for the disk to complete that event since it's last event (time between iodones), or, the time to the strategy if the disk had been idle) %I/O percent disk I/O, based on time (DISKTIME) load 1 minute load average disk_r total disk read Kb for sample disk_w total disk write Kb for sample DOCUMENTATION
See the DTraceToolkit for further documentation under the Docs directory. The DTraceToolkit docs may include full worked examples with ver- bose descriptions explaining the output. EXIT
iotop will run forever until Ctrl-C is hit, or the specified interval is reached. AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg [Sydney, Australia] SEE ALSO
iosnoop(1M), dtrace(1M) version 0.75 Oct 25, 2005 iotop(1m)
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