Skip to content

saravanabalagi/pid_usage

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

23 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

PID Usage

pid-usage pid-usage

A tiny command line utility to get current CPU Utilization, RAM Usage and Virtual Memory Usage of a process (including all its subprocesses) in CSV Format. It's particularly more useful if you're looking to save as a CSV file for making graphs.

pid_usage --pid=5432                                                                                                                                                                                                                         master ✭  
CPU %, Virtual Memory, Resident Memory
10.0%, 4601 MiB, 154 MiB

Screencast

Options

You can customlize the following options:

  -i, --interval=I           (float) Calculate usage every I seconds
      --no-header            Don't print the header row
  -p, --pid=PID              (int) PID of program to monitor
  -r, --repeat=R             (int) Program prints output R times
  -?, --help                 Give this help list
      --usage                Give a short usage message
  -V, --version              Print program version

Installation

Install from Snap Store

Get it from the Snap Store

Install from PPA

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:saravanabalagi/linux-utils
sudo apt update
sudo apt install pid-usage

Download Binary

Installation instructions for current user, all users, and for temporary execution can be found in INSTALL.md

What's wrong with ps and top?

Firstly, cpu% values from ps and top are not similar. ps gives total cpu usage as the percentage of time spent running during the entire lifetime of a process. This value is not current cpu utilization value. top gives correct current CPU utilization for a given process.

Secondly, CPU Utilization and memory values of a process in both ps and top do not include that of it's subprocesses.

For total cpu utilization, during the first time, top gives cpu usage since boot. After that, it gives cpu usage since the last queried time. This means when you use top and parse the cpu percent using awk in your shell script inside a for loop, the values you get won't be the current cpu utilization!

Contribution

Pull requests are very welcome.

  1. Fork the repo
  2. Create new branch with feature name as branch name
  3. Check if things work with a jupyter notebook
  4. Raise a pull request

Licence

See attached Licence

About

Lightweight CLI Utility written in C to find current CPU Utilization, RAM Usage and Virtual Memory Usage for a given PID and all it's subprocesses

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published