systemd-cgtop
Show the top control groups of the local Linux control group hierarchy, ordered by their CPU, memory, or disk I/O load. See also: top. More information: <https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-cgtop.html>.
Install
- All systems
-
curl cmd.cat/systemd-cgtop.sh
- Debian
-
apt-get install systemd - Ubuntu
-
apt-get install systemd - Arch Linux
-
pacman -S systemd - Kali Linux
-
apt-get install systemd - CentOS
-
yum install systemd - Fedora
-
dnf install systemd - Windows (WSL2)
-
sudo apt-get updatesudo apt-get install systemd - Raspbian
-
apt-get install systemd
Show the top control groups of the local Linux control group hierarchy, ordered by their CPU, memory, or disk I/O load. See also: top. More information: <https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-cgtop.html>.
-
Start an interactive view:
systemd-cgtop -
Change the sort order:
systemd-cgtop --order=cpu|memory|path|tasks|io -
Show the CPU usage by time instead of percentage:
systemd-cgtop --cpu=percentage -
Change the update interval in seconds (or one of these time units: `ms`, `us`, `min`):
systemd-cgtop --delay=interval -
Only count userspace processes (without kernel threads):
systemd-cgtop -P
© tl;dr; authors and contributors