NAME
top - display Linux tasks
SYNOPSIS
top -hv | -bcHisS -d
delay -niterations -p pid [,
pid ...]
The traditional switches '-' and whitespace are optional.
DESCRIPTION
The top program provides a dynamic
real-time view of a running system. It can display system
summary information as well as a list oftasks currently
being managed by the Linux kernel. The types of system summary
information shown and the types, order and size of information
displayed for tasks are all user configurable and that
configuration can be made persistent across restarts.
The program provides a limited interactive interface for process
manipulation as well as a much more extensive interface for
personal configuration -- encompassing every
aspect of its operation. And while top is referred to
throughout this document, you are free to name the program anything
you wish. That new name, possibly an alias, will then be reflected
on top's display and used when reading and writing a configuration
file.
OVERVIEW
Documentation
The remaining Table of Contents
1. COMMAND-LINE Options
2. FIELDS / Columns
a. DESCRIPTIONS of Fields
b. SELECTING and ORDERING Columns
3. INTERACTIVE Commands
a. GLOBAL Commands
b. SUMMARY Area Commands
c. TASK Area Commands
d. COLOR Mapping
4. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Mode
a. WINDOWS Overview
b. COMMANDS for Windows
5. FILES
a. SYSTEM Configuration File
b. PERSONAL Configuration File
6. STUPID TRICKS Sampler
a. Kernel Magic
b. Bouncing Windows
c. The Big Bird Window
7. BUGS, 8. HISTORY Former top, 9. AUTHOR, 10. SEE ALSO
Operation
When operating top, the two most important keys
are help ('h' or '?') and quit ('q') key. Alternatively, you could
simply use the traditional interrupt key ('^C') when you're done.
When you start top for the first time, you'll be presented with
the traditional screen elements: 1) Summary Area; 2) Message/Prompt
Line; 3) Columns Header; 4) Task Area. There will, however, be some
differences when compared to the former top.
- Highlighting
- Summary_Area: There is no highlighting for load/uptime
and only values are highlighted for other elements.
Task_Area: Tasks running (or ready to run) will be
highlighted, and bold is only one way of emphasizing such
processes.
- Content/Labels
- Summary_Area: The program name is shown, perhaps a
symlink or alias. The Cpu(s) state label hints at other
possibilities. The memory stats use a lower case 'k'.
Columns_Header: Will show a new field and some changed
labels. More new fields will be found as you customize your
top.
Note: the width of top's display will be limited to 512
positions. Displaying all fields requires a minimum of 160
characters. The remaining width could be used for the 'Command'
column.
Startup Defaults
The following startup defaults assume no
configuration file, thus no user customizations. Even so, items
shown with an asterisk ('*') could be overridden through the
command-line.
Global_defaults
'A' - Alt display Off (full-screen)
* 'd' - Delay time 3.0 seconds
'I' - Irix mode On (no, 'solaris' smp)
* 'p' - PID monitoring Off
* 's' - Secure mode Off (unsecured)
'B' - Bold disable Off
Summary_Area_defaults
'l' - Load Avg/Uptime On (thus program name)
't' - Task/Cpu states On (1+1 lines, see '1')
'm' - Mem/Swap usage On (2 lines worth)
'1' - Single Cpu On (thus 1 line if smp)
Task_Area_defaults
'b' - Bold hilite On (not 'reverse')
* 'c' - Command line Off (name, not cmdline)
* 'H' - Threads Off (show all threads)
* 'i' - Idle tasks On (show all tasks)
'R' - Reverse sort On (pids high-to-low)
* 'S' - Cumulative time Off (no, dead children)
'x' - Column hilite Off (no, sort field)
'y' - Row hilite On (yes, running tasks)
'z' - color/mono Off (no, colors)
1. COMMAND-LINE Options
The command-line syntax for top
consists of:
-hv | -bcHisS -
d delay -n iterations -
p pid [,pid...]
The typically mandatory switches ('-') and even whitespace are
completely optional.
- -b : Batch mode operation
- Starts top in 'Batch mode', which could be useful for sending
output from top to other programs or to a file. In this mode, top
will not accept input and runs until the iterations limit you've
set with the '-n' command-line option or until killed.
- -c : Command line/Program name toggle
- Starts top with the last remembered 'c' state reversed. Thus,
if top was displaying command lines, now that field will show
program names, and visa versa. See the 'c' interactive command for
additional information.
- -d : Delay time interval as: -d
ss.tt (seconds.tenths)
- Specifies the delay between screen updates, and overrides the
corresponding value in one's personal configuration file or the
startup default. Later this can be changed with the 'd' or 's'
interactive commands.
Fractional seconds are honored, but a negative number is not
allowed. In all cases, however, such changes are prohibited if top
is running in 'Secure mode', except for root (unless the 's'
command-line option was used). For additional information on
'Secure mode' see topic 5a. SYSTEM Configuration File.
- -h : Help
- Show library version and the usage prompt, then quit.
- -H : Threads toggle
- Starts top with the last remembered 'H' state reversed. When
this toggle is On, all individual threads will be displayed.
Otherwise, top displays a summation of all threads in a process.
- -i : Idle Processes toggle
- Starts top with the last remembered 'i' state reversed. When
this toggle is Off, tasks that are idled or zombied will not
be displayed.
- -n : Number of iterations limit
as: -n number
- Specifies the maximum number of iterations, or frames, top
should produce before ending.
- -u : Monitor by user as: -u
somebody
- Monitor only processes with an effective UID or user name
matching that given.
- -U : Monitor by user as: -U
somebody
- Monitor only processes with a UID or user name matching that
given. This matches real, effective, saved, and filesystem
UIDs.
- -p : Monitor PIDs as: -pN1 -pN2
... or -pN1, N2 [,...]
- Monitor only processes with specified process IDs. This
option can be given up to 20 times, or you can provide a comma
delimited list with up to 20 pids. Co-mingling both approaches is
permitted.
This is a command-line option only. And should you wish to
return to normal operation, it is not necessary to quit and and
restart top -- just issue the '=' interactive
command.
- -s : Secure mode operation
- Starts top with secure mode forced, even for root. This mode is
far better controlled through the system configuration file (see
topic 5. FILES).
- -S : Cumulative time mode toggle
- Starts top with the last remembered 'S' state reversed. When
'Cumulative mode' is On, each process is listed with the cpu
time that it and its dead children have used. See the 'S'
interactive command for additional information regarding this mode.
- -v : Version
- Show library version and the usage prompt, then
quit.
2. FIELDS / Columns
2a. DESCRIPTIONS of Fields
Listed below are top's available
fields. They are always associated with the letter shown,
regardless of the position you may have established for them with
the 'o' (Order fields) interactive command.
Any field is selectable as the sort field, and you control
whether they are sorted high-to-low or low-to-high. For additional
information on sort provisions see topic 3c. TASK Area Commands.
- a: PID -- Process Id
- The task's unique process ID, which periodically wraps, though
never restarting at zero.
- b: PPID -- Parent Process Pid
- The process ID of a task's parent.
- c: RUSER -- Real User Name
- The real user name of the task's owner.
- d: UID -- User Id
- The effective user ID of the task's owner.
- e: USER -- User Name
- The effective user name of the task's owner.
- f: GROUP -- Group Name
- The effective group name of the task's owner.
- g: TTY -- Controlling Tty
- The name of the controlling terminal. This is usually the
device (serial port, pty, etc.) from which the process was started,
and which it uses for input or output. However, a task need not be
associated with a terminal, in which case you'll see '?' displayed.
- h: PR -- Priority
- The priority of the task.
- i: NI -- Nice value
- The nice value of the task. A negative nice value means higher
priority, whereas a positive nice value means lower priority. Zero
in this field simply means priority will not be adjusted in
determining a task's dispatchability.
- j: P -- Last used CPU (SMP)
- A number representing the last used processor. In a true SMP
environment this will likely change frequently since the kernel
intentionally uses weak affinity. Also, the very act of running top
may break this weak affinity and cause more processes to change
CPUs more often (because of the extra demand for cpu time).
- k: %CPU -- CPU usage
- The task's share of the elapsed CPU time since the last screen
update, expressed as a percentage of total CPU time. In a true SMP
environment, if 'Irix mode' is Off, top will operate in
'Solaris mode' where a task's cpu usage will be divided by the
total number of CPUs. You toggle 'Irix/Solaris' modes with the 'I'
interactive command.
- l: TIME -- CPU Time
- Total CPU time the task has used since it started. When
'Cumulative mode' is On, each process is listed with the cpu
time that it and its dead children has used. You toggle 'Cumulative
mode' with 'S', which is a command-line option and an interactive
command. See the 'S' interactive command for additional information
regarding this mode.
- m: TIME+ -- CPU Time, hundredths
- The same as 'TIME', but reflecting more granularity through
hundredths of a second.
- n: %MEM -- Memory usage (RES)
- A task's currently used share of available physical
memory.
- o: VIRT -- Virtual Image (kb)
- The total amount of virtual memory used by the task. It
includes all code, data and shared libraries plus pages that have
been swapped out. (Note: you can define the STATSIZE=1 environment
variable and the VIRT will be calculated from the /proc/#/state
VmSize field.)
VIRT = SWAP + RES.
- p: SWAP -- Swapped size (kb)
- The swapped out portion of a task's total virtual memory
image.
- q: RES -- Resident size (kb)
- The non-swapped physical memory a task has used.
RES = CODE + DATA.
- r: CODE -- Code size (kb)
- The amount of physical memory devoted to executable
code, also known as the 'text resident set' size or TRS.
- s: DATA -- Data+Stack size (kb)
- The amount of physical memory devoted to other than
executable code, also known as the 'data resident set' size or DRS.
- t: SHR -- Shared Mem size (kb)
- The amount of shared memory used by a task. It simply
reflects memory that could be potentially shared with other
processes.
- u: nFLT -- Page Fault count
- The number of major page faults that have occurred for a
task. A page fault occurs when a process attempts to read from or
write to a virtual page that is not currently present in its
address space. A major page fault is when disk access is involved
in making that page available.
- v: nDRT -- Dirty Pages count
- The number of pages that have been modified since they were
last written to disk. Dirty pages must be written to disk before
the corresponding physical memory location can be used for some
other virtual page.
- w: S -- Process Status
- The status of the task which can be one of:
'D' = uninterruptible sleep
'R' = running
'S' = sleeping
'T' = traced or stopped
'Z' = zombie
Tasks shown as running should be more properly thought of as
'ready to run' -- their task_struct is simply
represented on the Linux run-queue. Even without a true SMP
machine, you may see numerous tasks in this state depending on
top's delay interval and nice value.
- x: Command -- Command line or
Program name
- Display the command line used to start a task or the name of
the associated program. You toggle between command line and
name with 'c', which is both a command-line option and an
interactive command.
When you've chosen to display command lines, processes without a
command line (like kernel threads) will be shown with only the
program name in parentheses, as in this example:
( mdrecoveryd )
Either form of display is subject to potential truncation if
it's too long to fit in this field's current width. That width
depends upon other fields selected, their order and the current
screen width.
Note: The 'Command' field/column is unique, in that it is
not fixed-width. When displayed, this column will be allocated all
remaining screen width (up to the maximum 512 characters) to
provide for the potential growth of program names into command
lines.
- y: WCHAN -- Sleeping in Function
- Depending on the availability of the kernel link map
('System.map'), this field will show the name or the address of the
kernel function in which the task is currently sleeping. Running
tasks will display a dash ('-') in this column.
Note: By displaying this field, top's own working set
will be increased by over 700Kb. Your only means of reducing that
overhead will be to stop and restart top.
- z: Flags -- Task Flags
- This column represents the task's current scheduling flags
which are expressed in hexadecimal notation and with zeros
suppressed. These flags are officially documented in <linux/sched.h>. Less
formal documentation can also be found on the 'Fields select' and
'Order fields' screens.
2b. SELECTING and ORDERING Columns
After pressing the
interactive commands 'f' (Fields select) or 'o' (Order fields) you
will be shown a screen containing the current fields string
followed by names and descriptions for all fields.
Here is a sample fields string from one of top's four
windows/field groups and an explanation of the conventions used:
- -
- Sample fields string:
ANOPQRSTUVXbcdefgjlmyzWHIK
- -
- The order of displayed fields corresponds to the order of the
letters in that string.
- -
- If the letter is upper case the corresponding field
itself will then be shown as part of the task display (screen width
permitting). This will also be indicated by a leading asterisk
('*'), as in this excerpt:
...
* K: %CPU = CPU usage
l: TIME = CPU Time
m: TIME+ = CPU Time, hundredths
* N: %MEM = Memory usage (RES)
* O: VIRT = Virtual Image (kb)
...
- Fields select screen -- the 'f'
interactive command
- You toggle the display of a field by simply
pressing the corresponding letter.
- Order fields screen -- the 'o'
interactive command
- You move a field to the left by pressing the
correspondingupper case letter and to the right with
the lower case letter.
3. INTERACTIVE Commands
Listed below is a brief index of
commands within categories. Some commands appear more than once
-- their meaning or scope may vary depending on
the context in which they are issued.
3a. GLOBAL_Commands
<Ret/Sp> ?, =, A, B, d, G, h, I, k, q, r, s, W, Z
3b. SUMMARY_Area_Commands
l, m, t, 1
3c. TASK_Area_Commands
Appearance: b, x, y, z
Content: c, f, H, o, S, u
Size: #, i, n
Sorting: <, >, F, O, R
3d. COLOR_Mapping
<Ret>, a, B, b, H, M, q, S, T, w, z, 0 - 7
4b. COMMANDS_for_Windows
-, _, =, +, A, a, G, g, w
3a. GLOBAL Commands
The global interactive commands are
always available in both full-screen mode and
alternate-display mode. However, some of these interactive commands
are not available when running in 'Secure mode'.
If you wish to know in advance whether or not your top has been
secured, simply ask for help and view the system summary on the
second line.
- <Enter> or <Space>
:Refresh_Display
- These commands do nothing, they are simply ignored. However,
they will awaken top and following receipt of any input the entire
display will be repainted.
Use either of these keys if you have a large delay interval and
wish to see current status,
- '?' or 'h' :Help
- There are two help levels available. The first will provide a
reminder of all the basic interactive commands. If top is
secured, that screen will be abbreviated.
Typing 'h' or '?' on that help screen will take you to help for
those interactive commands applicable to alternate-display mode.
- '=' :Exit_Task_Limits
- Removes restrictions on which tasks are shown. This command
will reverse any 'i' (idle tasks) and 'n' (max tasks) commands that
might be active. It also provides for an 'exit' from PID
monitoring. See the '-p' command-line option for a discussion of
PID monitoring.
When operating in alternate-display mode this command has a
slightly broader meaning.
- 'A' :Alternate_Display_Mode_toggle
- This command will switch between full-screen mode and
alternate-display mode. See topic 4. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Mode and the
'G' interactive command for insight into 'current' windows and
field groups.
- 'B' :Bold_Disable/Enable_toggle
- This command will influence use of the 'bold' terminfo
capability and alters both the summary area and task area
for the 'current' window. While it is intended primarily for use
with dumb terminals, it can be applied anytime.
Note: When this toggle is On and top is operating
in monochrome mode, the entire display will appear as normal
text. Thus, unless the 'x' and/or 'y' toggles are using reverse for
emphasis, there will be no visual confirmation that they are even
on.
- * 'd' or 's'
:Change_Delay_Time_interval
- You will be prompted to enter the delay time, in seconds,
between display updates.
Fractional seconds are honored, but a negative number is not
allowed. Entering 0 causes (nearly) continuous updates, with an
unsatisfactory display as the system and tty driver try to keep up
with top's demands. The delay value is inversely proportional to
system loading, so set it with care.
If at any time you wish to know the current delay time, simply
ask for help and view the system summary on the second line.
- 'G'
:Choose_Another_Window/Field_Group
- You will be prompted to enter a number between 1 and 4
designating the window/field group which should be made the
'current' window. You will soon grow comfortable with these 4
windows, especially after experimenting with alternate-display
mode.
- 'I' :Irix/Solaris_Mode_toggle
- When operating in 'Solaris mode' ('I' toggled Off), a
task's cpu usage will be divided by the total number of CPUs. After
issuing this command, you'll be informed of the new state of this
toggle.
- 'u' :select a user
- You will be prompted for a UID or username. Only processes
belonging to the selected user will be displayed. This option
matches on the effective UID.
- 'U' :select a user
- You will be prompted for a UID or username. Only processes
belonging to the selected user will be displayed. This option
matches on the real, effective, saved, and filesystem UID.
- * 'k' :Kill_a_task
- You will be prompted for a PID and then the signal to send. The
default signal, as reflected in the prompt, is SIGTERM. However,
you can send any signal, via number or name.
If you wish to abort the kill process, do one of the following
depending on your progress:
1) at the pid prompt, just press <Enter>
2) at the signal prompt, type 0
- 'q' :Quit
- * 'r' :Renice_a_Task
- You will be prompted for a PID and then the value to nice it
to. Entering a positive value will cause a process to lose
priority. Conversely, a negative value will cause a process to be
viewed more favorably by the kernel.
- 'W' :Write_the_Configuration_File
- This will save all of your options and toggles plus the current
display mode and delay time. By issuing this command just before
quitting top, you will be able restart later in exactly that same
state.
- 'Z' :Change_Color_Mapping
- This key will take you to a separate screen where you can
change the colors for the 'current' window, or for all windows. For
details regarding this interactive command see topic 3d. COLOR
Mapping.
- *
- The commands shown with an asterisk ('*') are not available
in 'Secure mode', nor will they be shown on the level-1 help
screen.
3b. SUMMARY Area Commands
The summary area interactive
commands are always available in both full-screen mode and
alternate-display mode. They affect the beginning lines of your
display and will determine the position of messages and prompts.
These commands always impact just the 'current' window/field
group. See topic 4. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Mode and the 'G' interactive
command for insight into 'current' windows and field groups.
- 'l' :Toggle_Load_Average/Uptime
-- On/Off
- This is also the line containing the program name (possibly an
alias) when operating in full-screen mode or the 'current' window
name when operating in alternate-display mode.
- 'm' :Toggle_Memory/Swap_Usage
-- On/Off
- This command affects two summary area lines.
- 't' :Toggle_Task/Cpu_States
-- On/Off
- This command affects from 2 to many summary area lines,
depending on the state of the '1' toggle and whether or not top is
running under true SMP.
- '1'
:Toggle_Single/Separate_Cpu_States --
On/Off
- This command affects how the 't' command's Cpu States portion
is shown. Although this toggle exists primarily to serve
massively-parallel SMP machines, it is not restricted to solely SMP
environments.
When you see 'Cpu(s):' in the summary area, the '1' toggle is
On and all cpu information is gathered in a single line.
Otherwise, each cpu is displayed separately as: 'Cpu0, Cpu1,
...'
Note: If the entire summary area has been toggled
Off for any window, you would be left with just the
message line. In that way, you will have maximized available
task rows but (temporarily) sacrificed the program name in
full-screen mode or the 'current' window name when in
alternate-display mode.
3c. TASK Area Commands
The task area interactive commands
are always available in full-screen mode.
The task area interactive commands are never available in
alternate-display mode if the 'current' window's task
display has been toggled Off (see topic 4. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY
Mode).
APPEARANCE of task window
The following commands will also be influenced by the state of the
global 'B' (bold disable) toggle.
- 'b' :Bold/Reverse_toggle
- This command will impact how the 'x' and 'y' toggles are
displayed. Further, it will only be available when at least one of
those toggles is On.
- 'x' :Column_Highlight_toggle
- Changes highlighting for the current sort field. You probably
don't need a constant visual reminder of the sort field and top
hopes that you always run with 'column highlight' Off, due
to the cost in path-length.
If you forget which field is being sorted this command can serve
as a quick visual reminder.
- 'y' :Row_Highlight_toggle
- Changes highlighting for "running" tasks. For additional
insight into this task state, see topic 2a. DESCRIPTIONS of Fields,
Process Status.
Use of this provision provides important insight into your
system's health. The only costs will be a few additional tty escape
sequences.
- 'z' :Color/Monochrome_toggle
- Switches the 'current' window between your last used color
scheme and the older form of black-on-white or white-on-black. This
command will alter both the summary area and task area but
does not affect the state of the 'x', 'y' or 'b' toggles.
CONTENT of task window
- 'c' :Command_Line/Program_Name_toggle
- This command will be honored whether or not the 'Command'
column is currently visible. Later, should that field come into
view, the change you applied will be seen.
- 'f' and 'o' :Fields_select or
Order_fields
- These keys display separate screens where you can change which
fields are displayed and their order. For additional information on
these interactive commands see topic 2b. SELECTING and ORDERING
Columns.
- 'H' :Threads_toggle
- When this toggle is On, all individual threads will be
displayed. Otherwise, top displays a summation of all threads in a
process.
- 'S' :Cumulative_Time_Mode_toggle
- When 'Cumulative mode' is On, each process is listed
with the cpu time that it and its dead children have used.
When Off, programs that fork into many separate tasks
will appear less demanding. For programs like 'init' or a shell
this is appropriate but for others, like compilers, perhaps not.
Experiment with two task windows sharing the same sort field but
with different 'S' states and see which representation you prefer.
After issuing this command, you'll be informed of the new state
of this toggle. If you wish to know in advance whether or not
'Cumulative mode' is in effect, simply ask for help and view the
window summary on the second line.
- 'u' :Show_Specific_User_Only
- You will be prompted to enter the name of the user to display.
Thereafter, in that task window only matching User ID's will be
shown, or possibly no tasks will be shown.
Later, if you wish to monitor all tasks again, re-issue this
command but just press <Enter> at the prompt, without
providing a name.
SIZE of task window
- 'i' :Idle_Processes_toggle
- Displays all tasks or just active tasks. When this toggle is
Off, idled or zombied processes will not be displayed.
If this command is applied to the last task display when in
alternate-display mode, then it will not affect the window's size,
as all prior task displays will have already been painted.
- 'n' or '#' :Set_Maximum_Tasks
- You will be prompted to enter the number of tasks to display.
The lessor of your number and available screen rows will be used.
When used in alternate-display mode, this is the command that
gives you precise control over the size of each currently visible
task display, except for the very last. It will not affect the last
window's size, as all prior task displays will have already been
painted.
Note: If you wish to increase the size of the last
visible task display when in alternate-display mode, simply
decrease the size of the task display(s) above it.
SORTING of task window
For compatibility, this top supports most of the former top sort
keys. Since this is primarily a service to former top users, these
commands do not appear on any help screen.
command sorted field supported
A start time (non-display) No
M %MEM Yes
N PID Yes
P %CPU Yes
T TIME+ Yes
Before using any of the following sort provisions, top suggests
that you temporarily turn on column highlighting using the 'x'
interactive command. That will help ensure that the actual sort
environment matches your intent.
The following interactive commands will only be honored
when the current sort field is visible. The sort field might
not be visible because:
1) there is insufficient
Screen Width
2) the 'f' interactive
command turned it Off
- '<' :Move_Sort_Field_Left
- Moves the sort column to the left unless the current sort field
is the first field being displayed.
- '>' :Move_Sort_Field_Right
- Moves the sort column to the right unless the current sort
field is the last field being displayed.
The following interactive commands will always be honored
whether or not the current sort field is visible.
- 'F' or 'O' :Select_Sort_Field
- These keys display a separate screen where you can change which
field is used as the sort column.
If a field is selected which was not previously being displayed,
it will be forced On when you return to the top display.
However, depending upon your screen width and the order of your
fields, this sort field may not be displayable.
This interactive command can be a convenient way to simply
verify the current sort field, when running top with column
highlighting turned Off.
- 'R' :Reverse/Normal_Sort_Field_toggle
- Using this interactive command you can alternate between
high-to-low and low-to-high sorts.
Note: Field sorting uses internal values, not those in
column display. Thus, the TTY and WCHAN fields will violate strict
ASCII collating sequence.
3d. COLOR Mapping
When you issue the 'Z' interactive
command, you will be presented with a separate screen. That screen
can be used to change the colors in just the 'current' window or in
all four windows before returning to the top display.
Available interactive commands
4 upper case letters to select a
target
8 numbers to select a
color
normal toggles available
'B' :bold disable/enable
'b' :running tasks "bold"/reverse
'z' :color/mono
other commands available
'a'/'w' :apply, then go to next/prior
<Enter> :apply and exit
'q' :abandon current changes and exit
If your use 'a' or 'w' to cycle the targeted window, you will
have applied the color scheme that was displayed when you left that
window. You can, of course, easily return to any window and reapply
different colors or turn colors Off completely with the 'z'
toggle.
The Color Mapping screen can also be used to change the
'current' window/field group in either full-screen mode or
alternate-display mode. Whatever was targeted when 'q' or
<Enter> was pressed will be made current as you return to the
top display.
4. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Mode
4a. WINDOWS Overview
- Field Groups/Windows:
-
In full-screen mode there is a single window represented by the
entire screen. That single window can still be changed to display 1
of 4 different field groups (see the 'G' interactive
command, repeated below). Each of the 4 field groups has a unique
separately configurable summary area and its own
configurable task area.
In alternate-display mode, those 4 underlying field groups can
now be made visible simultaneously, or can be turned Off
individually at your command.
The summary area will always exist, even if it's only the
message line. At any given time only one summary area can be
displayed. However, depending on your commands, there could be from
zero to four separate task displays currently showing
on the screen.
- Current Window:
-
The 'current' window is the window associated with the summary area
and the window to which task related commands are always directed.
Since in alternate-display mode you can toggle the task display
Off, some commands might be restricted for the 'current'
window.
A further complication arises when you have toggled the first
summary area line Off. With the loss of the window name (the
'l' toggled line), you'll not easily know what window is the
'current' window.
4b. COMMANDS for Windows
- '-' and '_'
:Show/Hide_Window(s)_toggles
- The '-' key turns the 'current' window's task display On
and Off. When On, that task area will show a minimum
of the columns header you've established with the 'f' and 'o'
commands. It will also reflect any other task area options/toggles
you've applied yielding zero or more tasks.
The '_' key does the same for all task displays. In other words,
it switches between the currently visible task display(s) and any
task display(s) you had toggled Off. If all 4 task displays
are currently visible, this interactive command will leave the
summary area as the only display element.
- * '=' and '+'
:Equalize_(re-balance)_Window(s)
- The '=' key forces the 'current' window's task display to be
visible. It also reverses any 'i' (idle tasks) and 'n' (max tasks)
commands that might be active.
The '+' key does the same for all windows. The four task
displays will reappear, evenly balanced. They will also have
retained any customizations you had previously applied, except for
the 'i' (idle tasks) and 'n' (max tasks) commands.
- * 'A' :Alternate_Display_Mode_toggle
- This command will switch between full-screen mode and
alternate-display mode.
The first time you issue this command, all four task displays
will be shown. Thereafter when you switch modes, you will see only
the task display(s) you've chosen to make visible.
- * 'a' and 'w'
:Next_Window_Forward/Backward
- This will change the 'current' window, which in turn changes
the window to which commands are directed. These keys act in a
circular fashion so you can reach any desired 'current' window
using either key.
Assuming the window name is visible (you have not toggled 'l'
Off), whenever the 'current' window name loses its
emphasis/color, that's a reminder the task display is Off
and many commands will be restricted.
- * 'G' :Choose_Another_Window/Field_Group
- You will be prompted to enter a number between 1 and 4
designating the window/field group which should be made the
'current' window.
In full-screen mode, this command is necessary to alter the
'current' window. In alternate-display mode, it is simply a less
convenient alternative to the 'a' and 'w' commands.
- 'g' :Change_Window/Field_Group_Name
- You will be prompted for a new name to be applied to the
'current' window. It does not require that the window name be
visible (the 'l' toggle to be On).
- *
- The interactive commands shown with an asterisk ('*') have use
beyond alternate-display mode.
'=', 'A', 'G' are always available
'a', 'w' act the same when color mapping
5. FILES
5a. SYSTEM Configuration File
The presence of this file
will influence which version of the 'help' screen is shown to an
ordinary user. More importantly, it will limit what ordinary users
are allowed to do when top is running. They will not be able to
issue the following commands.
k Kill a task
r Renice a task
d or s Change delay/sleep interval
The system configuration file is not created by top.
Rather, you create this file manually and place it in the
/etc directory. Its name must be 'toprc' and must have no
leading '.' (period). It must have only two lines.
Here is an example of the contents of /etc/toprc:
s # line 1: 'secure' mode switch
5.0 # line 2: 'delay' interval in seconds
5b. PERSONAL Configuration File
This file is written as
'$HOME/.your-name-4-top' + 'rc'. Use the 'W' interactive command to
create it or update it.
Here is the general layout:
global # line 1: the program name/alias notation
" # line 2: id,altscr,irixps,delay,curwin
per ea # line a: winname,fieldscur
window # line b: winflags,sortindx,maxtasks
" # line c: summclr,msgsclr,headclr,taskclr
If the $HOME variable is not present, top will try to write the
personal configuration file to the current directory, subject to
permissions.
6. STUPID TRICKS Sampler
Many of these 'tricks' work best
when you give top a scheduling boost. So plan on starting him with
a nice value of -10, assuming you've got the authority.
6a. Kernel Magic
For these stupid tricks, top needs
full-screen mode.
- -*-
- The user interface, through prompts and help, intentionally
implies that the delay interval is limited to tenths of a second.
However, you're free to set any desired delay. If you want to see
Linux at his scheduling best, try a delay of .09 seconds or less.
For this experiment, under x-windows open an xterm and maximize
it. Then do the following:
. provide a scheduling boost and tiny delay via:
nice -n -10 top -d.09
. keep sorted column highlighting
Off to minimize
path length
. turn On reverse row highlighting for emphasis
. try various sort columns (TIME/MEM work well),
and normal or reverse sorts to bring the most
active processes into view
What you'll see is a very busy Linux doing what he's always done
for you, but there was no program available to illustrate this.
- -*-
- Under an xterm using 'white-on-black' colors, try setting top's
task color to black and be sure that task highlighting is set to
bold, not reverse. Then set the delay interval to around .3
seconds.
After bringing the most active processes into view, what you'll
see are the ghostly images of just the currently running tasks.
- -*-
- Delete the existing rcfile, or create a new symlink. Start this
new version then type 'T' (a secret key, see topic 3c. TASK Area
Commands, Sorting) followed by 'W' and 'q'. Finally, restart the
program with -d0 (zero delay).
Your display will be refreshed at three times the rate of the
former top, a 300% speed advantage. As top climbs the TIME ladder,
be as patient as you can while speculating on whether or not top
will ever reach the top.
6b. Bouncing Windows
For these stupid tricks, top needs
alternate-display mode.
- -*-
- With 3 or 4 task displays visible, pick any window other than
the last and turn idle processes Off. Depending on where you
applied 'i', sometimes several task displays are bouncing and
sometimes it's like an accordion, as top tries his best to allocate
space.
- -*-
- Set each window's summary lines differently: one with no
memory; another with no states; maybe one with nothing at all, just
the message line. Then hold down 'a' or 'w' and watch a variation
on bouncing windows -- hopping windows.
- -*-
- Display all 4 windows and for each, in turn, set idle processes
to Off. You've just entered the "extreme bounce"
zone.
6c. The Big Bird Window
This stupid trick also requires
alternate-display mode.
- -*-
- Display all 4 windows and make sure that 1:Def is the 'current'
window. Then, keep increasing window size until the all the other
task displays are "pushed out of the nest".
When they've all been displaced, toggle between all
visible/invisible windows. Then ponder this:
is top fibbing or telling honestly your imposed truth?
7. BUGS
Send bug reports to:
Albert D. Cahalan, <albert@users.sf.net>
The top command calculates Cpu(s) by looking at the change in
CPU time values between samples. When you first run it, it has no
previous sample to compare to, so these initial values are the
percentages since boot. It means you need at least two loops or you
have to ignore summary output from the first loop. This is problem
for example for batch mode. There is a possible workaround if you
define the CPULOOP=1 environment variable. The top command will be
run one extra hidden loop for CPU data before standard output.
8. HISTORY Former top
The original top was written by Roger
Binns, based on Branko Lankester's <lankeste@fwi.uva.nl> ps
program.
Robert Nation <nation@rocket.sanders.lockheed.com>
adapted it for the proc file system.
Helmut Geyer <Helmut.Geyer@iwr.uni-heidelberg.de>
added support for configurable fields.
Plus many other individuals contributed over the years.
9. AUTHOR
This entirely new and enhanced replacement was
written by:
Jim / James C. Warner, <
warnerjc@worldnet.att.net>
With invaluable help from:
Albert D. Cahalan, <albert@users.sf.net>
Craig Small, <csmall@small.dropbear.id.au>
10. SEE ALSO
free(1),
ps(1),
uptime(1),
atop(1),
slabtop(1),
(8),
w(1).