TOP(1) User Commands TOP(1)
NAME
top - display Linux processes
SYNOPSIS
top -hv|-bcEHiOSs1 -d secs -n max -u|U user -p pid -o fld -w [cols]
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 of pro-
cesses or threads currently being managed by the Linux kernel. The
types of system summary information shown and the types, order and size
of information displayed for processes are all user configurable and
that configuration can be made persistent across restarts.
The program provides a limited interactive interface for process manip-
ulation as well as a much more extensive interface for personal config-
uration -- encompassing every aspect of its operation. And while top
is referred to throughout this document, you are free to name the pro-
gram anything you wish. That new name, possibly an alias, will then be
reflected on top's display and used when reading and writing a configu-
ration file.
OVERVIEW
Documentation
The remaining Table of Contents
OVERVIEW
Operation
Linux Memory Types
1. COMMAND-LINE Options
2. SUMMARY Display
a. UPTIME and LOAD Averages
b. TASK and CPU States
c. MEMORY Usage
3. FIELDS / Columns Display
a. DESCRIPTIONS of Fields
b. MANAGING Fields
4. INTERACTIVE Commands
a. GLOBAL Commands
b. SUMMARY AREA Commands
c. TASK AREA Commands
1. Appearance
2. Content
3. Size
4. Sorting
d. COLOR Mapping
5. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Provisions
a. WINDOWS Overview
b. COMMANDS for Windows
c. SCROLLING a Window
d. SEARCHING in a Window
e. FILTERING in a Window
6. FILES
a. PERSONAL Configuration File
b. ADDING INSPECT Entries
c. SYSTEM Configuration File
d. SYSTEM Restrictions File
7. STUPID TRICKS Sampler
a. Kernel Magic
b. Bouncing Windows
c. The Big Bird Window
d. The Ol' Switcheroo
8. BUGS, 9. SEE Also
Operation
When operating top, the two most important keys are the help (h or ?)
key and quit (`q') key. Alternatively, you could simply use the tradi-
tional interrupt key (^C) when you're done.
When started for the first time, you'll be presented with these tradi-
tional elements on the main top screen: 1) Summary Area; 2) Fields/Col-
umns Header; 3) Task Area. Each of these will be explored in the sec-
tions that follow. There is also an Input/Message line between the
Summary Area and Columns Header which needs no further explanation.
The main top screen is generally quite adaptive to changes in terminal
dimensions under X-Windows. Other top screens may be less so, espe-
cially those with static text. It ultimately depends, however, on your
particular window manager and terminal emulator. There may be occa-
sions when their view of terminal size and current contents differs
from top's view, which is always based on operating system calls.
Following any re-size operation, if a top screen is corrupted, appears
incomplete or disordered, simply typing something innocuous like a
punctuation character or cursor motion key will usually restore it. In
extreme cases, the following sequence almost certainly will:
key/cmd objective
^Z suspend top
fg resume top
<Left> force a screen redraw (if necessary)
But if the display is still corrupted, there is one more step you could
try. Insert this command after top has been suspended but before re-
suming it.
key/cmd objective
reset restore your terminal settings
Note: the width of top's display will be limited to 512 positions.
Displaying all fields requires approximately 250 characters. Remaining
screen width is usually allocated to any variable width columns cur-
rently visible. The variable width columns, such as COMMAND, are noted
in topic 3a. DESCRIPTIONS of Fields. Actual output width may also be
influenced by the -w switch, which is discussed in topic 1. COM-
MAND-LINE Options.
Lastly, some of top's screens or functions require the use of cursor
motion keys like the standard arrow keys plus the Home, End, PgUp and
PgDn keys. If your terminal or emulator does not provide those keys,
the following combinations are accepted as alternatives:
key equivalent-keys
Left alt + h
Down alt + j
Up alt + k
Right alt + l
Home alt + ctrl + h
PgDn alt + ctrl + j
PgUp alt + ctrl + k
End alt + ctrl + l
The Up and Down arrow keys have special significance when prompted for
line input terminated with the <Enter> key. Those keys, or their
aliases, can be used to retrieve previous input lines which can then be
edited and re-input. And there are four additional keys available with
line oriented input.
key special-significance
Up recall older strings for re-editing
Down recall newer strings or erase entire line
Insert toggle between insert and overtype modes
Delete character removed at cursor, moving others left
Home jump to beginning of input line
End jump to end of input line
Linux Memory Types
For our purposes there are three types of memory, and one is optional.
First is physical memory, a limited resource where code and data must
reside when executed or referenced. Next is the optional swap file,
where modified (dirty) memory can be saved and later retrieved if too
many demands are made on physical memory. Lastly we have virtual mem-
ory, a nearly unlimited resource serving the following goals:
1. abstraction, free from physical memory addresses/limits
2. isolation, every process in a separate address space
3. sharing, a single mapping can serve multiple needs
4. flexibility, assign a virtual address to a file
Regardless of which of these forms memory may take, all are managed as
pages (typically 4096 bytes) but expressed by default in top as KiB
(kibibyte). The memory discussed under topic `2c. MEMORY Usage' deals
with physical memory and the swap file for the system as a whole. The
memory reviewed in topic `3. FIELDS / Columns Display' embraces all
three memory types, but for individual processes.
For each such process, every memory page is restricted to a single
quadrant from the table below. Both physical memory and virtual memory
can include any of the four, while the swap file only includes #1
through #3. The memory in quadrant #4, when modified, acts as its own
dedicated swap file.
Private | Shared
1 | 2
Anonymous . stack |
. malloc() |
. brk()/sbrk() | . POSIX shm*
. mmap(PRIVATE, ANON) | . mmap(SHARED, ANON)
-----------------------+----------------------
. mmap(PRIVATE, fd) | . mmap(SHARED, fd)
File-backed . pgms/shared libs |
3 | 4
The following may help in interpreting process level memory values dis-
played as scalable columns and discussed under topic `3a. DESCRIPTIONS
of Fields'.
%MEM - simply RES divided by total physical memory
CODE - the `pgms' portion of quadrant 3
DATA - the entire quadrant 1 portion of VIRT plus all
explicit mmap file-backed pages of quadrant 3
RES - anything occupying physical memory which, beginning with
Linux-4.5, is the sum of the following three fields:
RSan - quadrant 1 pages, which include any
former quadrant 3 pages if modified
RSfd - quadrant 3 and quadrant 4 pages
RSsh - quadrant 2 pages
RSlk - subset of RES which cannot be swapped out (any quadrant)
SHR - subset of RES (excludes 1, includes all 2 & 4, some 3)
SWAP - potentially any quadrant except 4
USED - simply the sum of RES and SWAP
VIRT - everything in-use and/or reserved (all quadrants)
Note: Even though program images and shared libraries are considered
private to a process, they will be accounted for as shared (SHR) by the
kernel.
1. COMMAND-LINE Options
The command-line syntax for top consists of:
-hv|-bcEHiOSs1 -d secs -n max -u|U user -p pid -o fld -w [cols]
The typically mandatory switch (`-') and even whitespace are completely
optional.
-h | -v :Help/Version
Show library version and the usage prompt, then quit.
-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 vice versa. See the `c' interactive command for addi-
tional information.
-d :Delay-time interval as: -d ss.t (secs.tenths)
Specifies the delay between screen updates, and overrides the cor-
responding 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 al-
lowed. In all cases, however, such changes are prohibited if top
is running in Secure mode, except for root (unless the `s' com-
mand-line option was used). For additional information on Secure
mode see topic 6d. SYSTEM Restrictions File.
-E :Extend-Memory-Scaling as: -E k | m | g | t | p | e
Instructs top to force summary area memory to be scaled as:
k - kibibytes
m - mebibytes
g - gibibytes
t - tebibytes
p - pebibytes
e - exbibytes
Later this can be changed with the `E' command toggle.
-H :Threads-mode operation
Instructs top to display individual threads. Without this com-
mand-line option a summation of all threads in each process is
shown. Later this can be changed with the `H' interactive com-
mand.
-i :Idle-process toggle
Starts top with the last remembered `i' state reversed. When this
toggle is Off, tasks that have not used any CPU since the last up-
date will not be displayed. For additional information regarding
this toggle see topic 4c. TASK AREA Commands, SIZE.
-n :Number-of-iterations limit as: -n number
Specifies the maximum number of iterations, or frames, top should
produce before ending.
-o :Override-sort-field as: -o fieldname
Specifies the name of the field on which tasks will be sorted, in-
dependent of what is reflected in the configuration file. You can
prepend a `+' or `-' to the field name to also override the sort
direction. A leading `+' will force sorting high to low, whereas
a `-' will ensure a low to high ordering.
This option exists primarily to support automated/scripted batch
mode operation.
-O :Output-field-names
This option acts as a form of help for the above -o option. It
will cause top to print each of the available field names on a
separate line, then quit. Such names are subject to NLS (National
Language Support) translation.
-p :Monitor-PIDs mode as: -pN1 -pN2 ... or -pN1,N2,N3 ...
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 permit-
ted.
A pid value of zero will be treated as the process id of the top
program itself once it is running.
This is a command-line option only and should you wish to return
to normal operation, it is not necessary to quit and restart top
-- just issue any of these interactive commands: `=', `u' or
`U'.
The `p', `u' and `U' command-line options are mutually exclusive.
-s :Secure-mode operation
Starts top with secure mode forced, even for root. This mode is
far better controlled through a system configuration file (see
topic 6. FILES).
-S :Cumulative-time toggle
Starts top with the last remembered `S' state reversed. When Cu-
mulative time 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.
-u | -U :User-filter-mode as: -u | -U number or name
Display only processes with a user id or user name matching that
given. The `-u' option matches on effective user whereas the
`-U' option matches on any user (real, effective, saved, or
filesystem).
Prepending an exclamation point (`!') to the user id or name in-
structs top to display only processes with users not matching the
one provided.
The `p', `u' and `U' command-line options are mutually exclusive.
-w :Output-width-override as: -w [ number ]
In Batch mode, when used without an argument top will format out-
put using the COLUMNS= and LINES= environment variables, if set.
Otherwise, width will be fixed at the maximum 512 columns. With
an argument, output width can be decreased or increased (up to
512) but the number of rows is considered unlimited.
In normal display mode, when used without an argument top will at-
tempt to format output using the COLUMNS= and LINES= environment
variables, if set. With an argument, output width can only be de-
creased, not increased. Whether using environment variables or an
argument with -w, when not in Batch mode actual terminal dimen-
sions can never be exceeded.
Note: Without the use of this command-line option, output width is
always based on the terminal at which top was invoked whether or
not in Batch mode.
-1 :Single/Separate-Cpu-States toggle
Starts top with the last remembered Cpu States portion of the sum-
mary area reversed. Either all cpu information will be displayed
in a single line or each cpu will be displayed separately, depend-
ing on the state of the NUMA Node command toggle ('2').
See the `1' and '2' interactive commands for additional informa-
tion.
2. SUMMARY Display
Each of the following three areas are individually controlled through
one or more interactive commands. See topic 4b. SUMMARY AREA Commands
for additional information regarding these provisions.
2a. UPTIME and LOAD Averages
This portion consists of a single line containing:
program or window name, depending on display mode
current time and length of time since last boot
total number of users
system load avg over the last 1, 5 and 15 minutes
2b. TASK and CPU States
This portion consists of a minimum of two lines. In an SMP environ-
ment, additional lines can reflect individual CPU state percentages.
Line 1 shows total tasks or threads, depending on the state of the
Threads-mode toggle. That total is further classified as:
running; sleeping; stopped; zombie
Line 2 shows CPU state percentages based on the interval since the last
refresh.
As a default, percentages for these individual categories are dis-
played. Where two labels are shown below, those for more recent kernel
versions are shown first.
us, user : time running un-niced user processes
sy, system : time running kernel processes
ni, nice : time running niced user processes
id, idle : time spent in the kernel idle handler
wa, IO-wait : time waiting for I/O completion
hi : time spent servicing hardware interrupts
si : time spent servicing software interrupts
st : time stolen from this vm by the hypervisor
In the alternate cpu states display modes, beyond the first
tasks/threads line, an abbreviated summary is shown consisting of these
elements:
a b c d
%Cpu(s): 75.0/25.0 100[ ...
Where: a) is the combined us and ni percentage; b) is the sy percent-
age; c) is the total; and d) is one of two visual graphs of those rep-
resentations. See topic 4b. SUMMARY AREA Commands and the `t' command
for additional information on that special 4-way toggle.
2c. MEMORY Usage
This portion consists of two lines which may express values in
kibibytes (KiB) through exbibytes (EiB) depending on the scaling factor
enforced with the `E' interactive command.
As a default, Line 1 reflects physical memory, classified as:
total, free, used and buff/cache
Line 2 reflects mostly virtual memory, classified as:
total, free, used and avail (which is physical memory)
The avail number on line 2 is an estimation of physical memory avail-
able for starting new applications, without swapping. Unlike the free
field, it attempts to account for readily reclaimable page cache and
memory slabs. It is available on kernels 3.14, emulated on kernels
2.6.27+, otherwise the same as free.
In the alternate memory display modes, two abbreviated summary lines
are shown consisting of these elements:
a b c
GiB Mem : 18.7/15.738 [ ...
GiB Swap: 0.0/7.999 [ ...
Where: a) is the percentage used; b) is the total available; and c) is
one of two visual graphs of those representations.
In the case of physical memory, the percentage represents the total mi-
nus the estimated avail noted above. The `Mem' graph itself is divided
between used and any remaining memory not otherwise accounted for by
avail. See topic 4b. SUMMARY AREA Commands and the `m' command for ad-
ditional information on that special 4-way toggle.
This table may help in interpreting the scaled values displayed:
KiB = kibibyte = 1024 bytes
MiB = mebibyte = 1024 KiB = 1,048,576 bytes
GiB = gibibyte = 1024 MiB = 1,073,741,824 bytes
TiB = tebibyte = 1024 GiB = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes
PiB = pebibyte = 1024 TiB = 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes
EiB = exbibyte = 1024 PiB = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes
3. FIELDS / Columns
3a. DESCRIPTIONS of Fields
Listed below are top's available process fields (columns). They are
shown in strict ascii alphabetical order. You may customize their po-
sition and whether or not they are displayable with the `f' or `F'
(Fields Management) interactive commands.
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 4c. TASK AREA Commands, SORTING.
The fields related to physical memory or virtual memory reference
`(KiB)' which is the unsuffixed display mode. Such fields may, how-
ever, be scaled from KiB through PiB. That scaling is influenced via
the `e' interactive command or established for startup through a build
option.
1. %CPU -- CPU Usage
The task's share of the elapsed CPU time since the last screen up-
date, expressed as a percentage of total CPU time.
In a true SMP environment, if a process is multi-threaded and top
is not operating in Threads mode, amounts greater than 100% may be
reported. You toggle Threads mode with the `H' interactive com-
mand.
Also for multi-processor environments, if Irix mode is Off, top
will operate in Solaris mode where a task's cpu usage will be di-
vided by the total number of CPUs. You toggle Irix/Solaris modes
with the `I' interactive command.
Note: When running in forest view mode (`V') with children col-
lapsed (`v'), this field will also include the CPU time of those
unseen children. See topic 4c. TASK AREA Commands, CONTENT for
more information regarding the `V' and `v' toggles.
2. %MEM -- Memory Usage (RES)
A task's currently resident share of available physical memory.
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
3. CGNAME -- Control Group Name
The name of the control group to which a process belongs, or `-' if
not applicable for that process.
This will typically be the last entry in the full list of control
groups as shown under the next heading (CGROUPS). And as is true
there, this field is also variable width.
4. CGROUPS -- Control Groups
The names of the control group(s) to which a process belongs, or
`-' if not applicable for that process.
Control Groups provide for allocating resources (cpu, memory, net-
work bandwidth, etc.) among installation-defined groups of pro-
cesses. They enable fine-grained control over allocating, denying,
prioritizing, managing and monitoring those resources.
Many different hierarchies of cgroups can exist simultaneously on a
system and each hierarchy is attached to one or more subsystems. A
subsystem represents a single resource.
Note: The CGROUPS field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be
allocated all remaining screen width (up to the maximum 512 charac-
ters). Even so, such variable width fields could still suffer
truncation. See topic 5c. SCROLLING a Window for additional infor-
mation on accessing any truncated data.
5. CODE -- Code Size (KiB)
The amount of physical memory currently devoted to executable code,
also known as the Text Resident Set size or TRS.
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
6. COMMAND -- Command Name or Command Line
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 com-
mand.
When you've chosen to display command lines, processes without a
command line (like kernel threads) will be shown with only the pro-
gram name in brackets, as in this example:
[kthreadd]
This field may also be impacted by the forest view display mode.
See the `V' interactive command for additional information regard-
ing that mode.
Note: The COMMAND field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be
allocated all remaining screen width (up to the maximum 512 charac-
ters). Even so, such variable width fields could still suffer
truncation. This is especially true for this field when command
lines are being displayed (the `c' interactive command.) See topic
5c. SCROLLING a Window for additional information on accessing any
truncated data.
7. DATA -- Data + Stack Size (KiB)
The amount of private memory reserved by a process. It is also
known as the Data Resident Set or DRS. Such memory may not yet be
mapped to physical memory (RES) but will always be included in the
virtual memory (VIRT) amount.
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
8. ENVIRON -- Environment variables
Display all of the environment variables, if any, as seen by the
respective processes. These variables will be displayed in their
raw native order, not the sorted order you are accustomed to seeing
with an unqualified `set'.
Note: The ENVIRON field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be
allocated all remaining screen width (up to the maximum 512 charac-
ters). Even so, such variable width fields could still suffer
truncation. This is especially true for this field. See topic 5c.
SCROLLING a Window for additional information on accessing any
truncated data.
9. 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>.
10. GID -- Group Id
The effective group ID.
11. GROUP -- Group Name
The effective group name.
12. LXC -- Lxc Container Name
The name of the lxc container within which a task is running. If a
process is not running inside a container, a dash (`-') will be
shown.
13. 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 deter-
mining a task's dispatch-ability.
14. NU -- Last known NUMA node
A number representing the NUMA node associated with the last used
processor (`P'). When -1 is displayed it means that NUMA informa-
tion is not available.
See the `'2' and `3' interactive commands for additional NUMA pro-
visions affecting the summary area.
15. OOMa -- Out of Memory Adjustment Factor
The value, ranging from -1000 to +1000, added to the current out of
memory score (OOMs) which is then used to determine which task to
kill when memory is exhausted.
16. OOMs -- Out of Memory Score
The value, ranging from 0 to +1000, used to select task(s) to kill
when memory is exhausted. Zero translates to `never kill' whereas
1000 means `always kill'.
17. P -- Last used CPU (SMP)
A number representing the last used processor. In a true SMP envi-
ronment this will likely change frequently since the kernel inten-
tionally 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).
18. PGRP -- Process Group Id
Every process is member of a unique process group which is used for
distribution of signals and by terminals to arbitrate requests for
their input and output. When a process is created (forked), it be-
comes a member of the process group of its parent. By convention,
this value equals the process ID (see PID) of the first member of a
process group, called the process group leader.
19. PID -- Process Id
The task's unique process ID, which periodically wraps, though
never restarting at zero. In kernel terms, it is a dispatchable
entity defined by a task_struct.
This value may also be used as: a process group ID (see PGRP); a
session ID for the session leader (see SID); a thread group ID for
the thread group leader (see TGID); and a TTY process group ID for
the process group leader (see TPGID).
20. PPID -- Parent Process Id
The process ID (pid) of a task's parent.
21. PR -- Priority
The scheduling priority of the task. If you see `rt' in this
field, it means the task is running under real time scheduling pri-
ority.
Under linux, real time priority is somewhat misleading since tradi-
tionally the operating itself was not preemptible. And while the
2.6 kernel can be made mostly preemptible, it is not always so.
22. RES -- Resident Memory Size (KiB)
A subset of the virtual address space (VIRT) representing the non-
swapped physical memory a task is currently using. It is also the
sum of the RSan, RSfd and RSsh fields.
It can include private anonymous pages, private pages mapped to
files (including program images and shared libraries) plus shared
anonymous pages. All such memory is backed by the swap file repre-
sented separately under SWAP.
Lastly, this field may also include shared file-backed pages which,
when modified, act as a dedicated swap file and thus will never im-
pact SWAP.
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
23. RSan -- Resident Anonymous Memory Size (KiB)
A subset of resident memory (RES) representing private pages not
mapped to a file.
24. RSfd -- Resident File-Backed Memory Size (KiB)
A subset of resident memory (RES) representing the implicitly
shared pages supporting program images and shared libraries. It
also includes explicit file mappings, both private and shared.
25. RSlk -- Resident Locked Memory Size (KiB)
A subset of resident memory (RES) which cannot be swapped out.
26. RSsh -- Resident Shared Memory Size (KiB)
A subset of resident memory (RES) representing the explicitly
shared anonymous shm*/mmap pages.
27. RUID -- Real User Id
The real user ID.
28. RUSER -- Real User Name
The real user name.
29. S -- Process Status
The status of the task which can be one of:
D = uninterruptible sleep
I = idle
R = running
S = sleeping
T = stopped by job control signal
t = stopped by debugger during trace
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.
30. SHR -- Shared Memory Size (KiB)
A subset of resident memory (RES) that may be used by other pro-
cesses. It will include shared anonymous pages and shared file-
backed pages. It also includes private pages mapped to files rep-
resenting program images and shared libraries.
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
31. SID -- Session Id
A session is a collection of process groups (see PGRP), usually es-
tablished by the login shell. A newly forked process joins the
session of its creator. By convention, this value equals the
process ID (see PID) of the first member of the session, called the
session leader, which is usually the login shell.
32. SUID -- Saved User Id
The saved user ID.
33. SUPGIDS -- Supplementary Group IDs
The IDs of any supplementary group(s) established at login or in-
herited from a task's parent. They are displayed in a comma delim-
ited list.
Note: The SUPGIDS field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be
allocated all remaining screen width (up to the maximum 512 charac-
ters). Even so, such variable width fields could still suffer
truncation. See topic 5c. SCROLLING a Window for additional infor-
mation on accessing any truncated data.
34. SUPGRPS -- Supplementary Group Names
The names of any supplementary group(s) established at login or in-
herited from a task's parent. They are displayed in a comma delim-
ited list.
Note: The SUPGRPS field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be
allocated all remaining screen width (up to the maximum 512 charac-
ters). Even so, such variable width fields could still suffer
truncation. See topic 5c. SCROLLING a Window for additional infor-
mation on accessing any truncated data.
35. SUSER -- Saved User Name
The saved user name.
36. SWAP -- Swapped Size (KiB)
The formerly resident portion of a task's address space written to
the swap file when physical memory becomes over committed.
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
37. TGID -- Thread Group Id
The ID of the thread group to which a task belongs. It is the PID
of the thread group leader. In kernel terms, it represents those
tasks that share an mm_struct.
38. 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 have used. You toggle Cumulative mode with `S',
which is both a command-line option and an interactive command.
See the `S' interactive command for additional information regard-
ing this mode.
39. TIME+ -- CPU Time, hundredths
The same as TIME, but reflecting more granularity through hun-
dredths of a second.
40. TPGID -- Tty Process Group Id
The process group ID of the foreground process for the connected
tty, or -1 if a process is not connected to a terminal. By conven-
tion, this value equals the process ID (see PID) of the process
group leader (see PGRP).
41. 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 as-
sociated with a terminal, in which case you'll see `?' displayed.
42. UID -- User Id
The effective user ID of the task's owner.
43. USED -- Memory in Use (KiB)
This field represents the non-swapped physical memory a task is us-
ing (RES) plus the swapped out portion of its address space (SWAP).
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
44. USER -- User Name
The effective user name of the task's owner.
45. VIRT -- Virtual Memory Size (KiB)
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 and pages that have been mapped but not used.
See `OVERVIEW, Linux Memory Types' for additional details.
46. WCHAN -- Sleeping in Function
This field will show the name of the kernel function in which the
task is currently sleeping. Running tasks will display a dash
(`-') in this column.
47. nDRT -- Dirty Pages Count
The number of pages that have been modified since they were last
written to auxiliary storage. Dirty pages must be written to aux-
iliary storage before the corresponding physical memory location
can be used for some other virtual page.
This field was deprecated with linux 2.6 and is always zero.
48. nMaj -- Major 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 auxiliary storage access is involved in
making that page available.
49. nMin -- Minor Page Fault count
The number of minor 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 minor page fault does not involve auxiliary storage access in
making that page available.
50. nTH -- Number of Threads
The number of threads associated with a process.
51. nsIPC -- IPC namespace
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate interprocess communica-
tion (IPC) resources such as System V IPC objects and POSIX message
queues.
52. nsMNT -- MNT namespace
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate filesystem mount points
thus offering different views of the filesystem hierarchy.
53. nsNET -- NET namespace
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate resources such as net-
work devices, IP addresses, IP routing, port numbers, etc.
54. nsPID -- PID namespace
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate process ID numbers mean-
ing they need not remain unique. Thus, each such namespace could
have its own `init/systemd' (PID #1) to manage various initializa-
tion tasks and reap orphaned child processes.
55. nsUSER -- USER namespace
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate the user and group ID
numbers. Thus, a process could have a normal unprivileged user ID
outside a user namespace while having a user ID of 0, with full
root privileges, inside that namespace.
56. nsUTS -- UTS namespace
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate hostname and NIS domain
name. UTS simply means "UNIX Time-sharing System".
57. vMj -- Major Page Fault Count Delta
The number of major page faults that have occurred since the last
update (see nMaj).
58. vMn -- Minor Page Fault Count Delta
The number of minor page faults that have occurred since the last
update (see nMin).
3b. MANAGING Fields
After pressing the interactive command `f' or `F' (Fields Management)
you will be presented with a screen showing: 1) the `current' window
name; 2) the designated sort field; 3) all fields in their current or-
der along with descriptions. Entries marked with an asterisk are the
currently displayed fields, screen width permitting.
o As the on screen instructions indicate, you navigate among the
fields with the Up and Down arrow keys. The PgUp, PgDn, Home
and End keys can also be used to quickly reach the first or last
available field.
o The Right arrow key selects a field for repositioning and the
Left arrow key or the <Enter> key commits that field's place-
ment.
o The `d' key or the <Space> bar toggles a field's display status,
and thus the presence or absence of the asterisk.
o The `s' key designates a field as the sort field. See topic 4c.
TASK AREA Commands, SORTING for additional information regarding
your selection of a sort field.
o The `a' and `w' keys can be used to cycle through all available
windows and the `q' or <Esc> keys exit Fields Management.
The Fields Management 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 <Esc> was pressed will be made
current as you return to the top display. See topic 5. ALTERNATE-DIS-
PLAY Provisions and the `g' interactive command for insight into `cur-
rent' windows and field groups.
Note: Any window that has been scrolled horizontally will be reset if
any field changes are made via the Fields Management screen. Any ver-
tical scrolled position, however, will not be affected. See topic 5c.
SCROLLING a Window for additional information regarding vertical and
horizontal scrolling.
4. INTERACTIVE Commands
Listed below is a brief index of commands within categories. Some com-
mands appear more than once -- their meaning or scope may vary de-
pending on the context in which they are issued.
4a. Global-Commands
<Ent/Sp> ?, =, 0,
A, B, d, E, e, g, h, H, I, k, q, r, s, W, X, Y, Z
4b. Summary-Area-Commands
C, l, t, m, 1, 2, 3
4c. Task-Area-Commands
Appearance: b, J, j, x, y, z
Content: c, f, F, o, O, S, u, U, V, v
Size: #, i, n
Sorting: <, >, f, F, R
4d. Color-Mapping
<Ret>, a, B, b, H, M, q, S, T, w, z, 0 - 7
5b. Commands-for-Windows
-, _, =, +, A, a, g, G, w
5c. Scrolling-a-Window
C, Up, Dn, Left, Right, PgUp, PgDn, Home, End
5d. Searching-in-a-Window
L, &
4a. 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 se-
cured, simply ask for help and view the system summary on the second
line.
<Enter> or <Space> :Refresh-Display
These commands awaken top and following receipt of any input the
entire display will be repainted. They also force an update of
any hotplugged cpu or physical memory changes.
Use either of these keys if you have a large delay interval and
wish to see current status,
? | h :Help
There are two help levels available. The first will provide a
reminder of all the basic interactive commands. If top is se-
cured, 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), `n' (max tasks) and `v' (hide
children) commands that might be active. It also provides for
an exit from PID monitoring, User filtering, Other filtering and
Locate processing.
Additionally, if the window has been scrolled it will be reset
with this command.
0 :Zero-Suppress toggle
This command determines whether zeros are shown or suppressed
for many of the fields in a task window. Fields like UID, GID,
NI, PR or P are not affected by this toggle.
A :Alternate-Display-Mode toggle
This command will switch between full-screen mode and alter-
nate-display mode. See topic 5. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Provisions
and the `g' interactive command for insight into `current' win-
dows 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 termi-
nals, 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, un-
less the `x' and/or `y' toggles are using reverse for emphasis,
there will be no visual confirmation that they are even on.
* d | s :Change-Delay-Time-interval
You will be prompted to enter the delay time, in seconds, be-
tween display updates.
Fractional seconds are honored, but a negative number is not al-
lowed. 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 propor-
tional 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.
E :Extend-Memory-Scale in Summary Area
With this command you can cycle through the available summary
area memory scaling which ranges from KiB (kibibytes or 1,024
bytes) through EiB (exbibytes or 1,152,921,504,606,846,976
bytes).
If you see a `+' between a displayed number and the following
label, it means that top was forced to truncate some portion of
that number. By raising the scaling factor, such truncation can
be avoided.
e :Extend-Memory-Scale in Task Windows
With this command you can cycle through the available task win-
dow memory scaling which ranges from KiB (kibibytes or 1,024
bytes) through PiB (pebibytes or 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes).
While top will try to honor the selected target range, addi-
tional scaling might still be necessary in order to accommodate
current values. If you wish to see a more homogeneous result in
the memory columns, raising the scaling range will usually ac-
complish that goal. Raising it too high, however, is likely to
produce an all zero result which cannot be suppressed with the
`0' interactive command.
g :Choose-Another-Window/Field-Group
You will be prompted to enter a number between 1 and 4 designat-
ing the 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.
H :Threads-mode toggle
When this toggle is On, individual threads will be displayed for
all processes in all visible task windows. Otherwise, top dis-
plays a summation of all threads in each process.
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 issu-
ing this command, you'll be told the new state of this toggle.
* k :Kill-a-task
You will be prompted for a PID and then the signal to send.
Entering no PID or a negative number will be interpreted as the
default shown in the prompt (the first task displayed). A PID
value of zero means the top program itself.
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, type an invalid number
2) at the signal prompt, type 0 (or any invalid signal)
3) at any prompt, type <Esc>
q :Quit
* r :Renice-a-Task
You will be prompted for a PID and then the value to nice it to.
Entering no PID or a negative number will be interpreted as the
default shown in the prompt (the first task displayed). A PID
value of zero means the top program itself.
A positive nice value will cause a process to lose priority.
Conversely, a negative nice value will cause a process to be
viewed more favorably by the kernel. As a general rule, ordi-
nary users can only increase the nice value and are prevented
from lowering it.
If you wish to abort the renice process, do one of the following
depending on your progress:
1) at the pid prompt, type an invalid number
2) at the nice prompt, type <Enter> with no input
3) at any prompt, type <Esc>
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 be-
fore quitting top, you will be able restart later in exactly
that same state.
X :Extra-Fixed-Width
Some fields are fixed width and not scalable. As such, they are
subject to truncation which would be indicated by a `+' in the
last position.
This interactive command can be used to alter the widths of the
following fields:
field default field default field default
GID 5 GROUP 8 WCHAN 10
RUID 5 LXC 8 nsIPC 10
SUID 5 RUSER 8 nsMNT 10
UID 5 SUSER 8 nsNET 10
TTY 8 nsPID 10
USER 8 nsUSER 10
nsUTS 10
You will be prompted for the amount to be added to the default
widths shown above. Entering zero forces a return to those de-
faults.
If you enter a negative number, top will automatically increase
the column size as needed until there is no more truncated data.
You can accelerate this process by reducing the delay interval
or holding down the <Space> bar.
Note: Whether explicitly or automatically increased, the widths
for these fields are never decreased by top. To narrow them you
must specify a smaller number or restore the defaults.
Y :Inspect-Other-Output
After issuing the `Y' interactive command, you will be prompted
for a target PID. Typing a value or accepting the default re-
sults in a separate screen. That screen can be used to view a
variety of files or piped command output while the normal top
iterative display is paused.
Note: This interactive command is only fully realized when sup-
porting entries have been manually added to the end of the top
configuration file. For details on creating those entries, see
topic 6b. ADDING INSPECT Entries.
Most of the keys used to navigate the Inspect feature are re-
flected in its header prologue. There are, however, additional
keys available once you have selected a particular file or com-
mand. They are familiar to anyone who has used the pager `less'
and are summarized here for future reference.
key function
= alternate status-line, file or pipeline
/ find, equivalent to `L' locate
n find next, equivalent to `&' locate next
<Space> scroll down, equivalent to <PgDn>
b scroll up, equivalent to <PgUp>
g first line, equivalent to <Home>
G last line, equivalent to <End>
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 4d. COLOR
Mapping.
* The commands shown with an asterisk (`*') are not available in Se-
cure mode, nor will they be shown on the level-1 help screen.
4b. 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 5. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Provisions and the `g' interactive com-
mand for insight into `current' windows and field groups.
C :Show-scroll-coordinates toggle
Toggle an informational message which is displayed whenever the
message line is not otherwise being used. For additional infor-
mation see topic 5c. SCROLLING a Window.
l :Load-Average/Uptime toggle
This is also the line containing the program name (possibly an
alias) when operating in full-screen mode or the `current' win-
dow name when operating in alternate-display mode.
t :Task/Cpu-States toggle
This command affects from 2 to many summary area lines, depend-
ing on the state of the `1', `2' or `3' command toggles and
whether or not top is running under true SMP.
This portion of the summary area is also influenced by the `H'
interactive command toggle, as reflected in the total label
which shows either Tasks or Threads.
This command serves as a 4-way toggle, cycling through these
modes:
1. detailed percentages by category
2. abbreviated user/system and total % + bar graph
3. abbreviated user/system and total % + block graph
4. turn off task and cpu states display
When operating in either of the graphic modes, the display be-
comes much more meaningful when individual CPUs or NUMA nodes
are also displayed. See the the `1', `2' and `3' commands below
for additional information.
m :Memory/Swap-Usage toggle
This command affects the two summary area lines dealing with
physical and virtual memory.
This command serves as a 4-way toggle, cycling through these
modes:
1. detailed percentages by memory type
2. abbreviated % used/total available + bar graph
3. abbreviated % used/total available + block graph
4. turn off memory display
1 :Single/Separate-Cpu-States toggle
This command affects how the `t' command's Cpu States portion is
shown. Although this toggle exists primarily to serve mas-
sively-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. Other-
wise, each cpu is displayed separately as: `%Cpu0, %Cpu1, ...'
up to available screen height.
2 :NUMA-Nodes/Cpu-Summary toggle
This command toggles between the `1' command cpu summary display
(only) or a summary display plus the cpu usage statistics for
each NUMA Node. It is only available if a system has the requi-
site NUMA support.
3 :Expand-NUMA-Node
You will be invited to enter a number representing a NUMA Node.
Thereafter, a node summary plus the statistics for each cpu in
that node will be shown until either the `1' or `2' command tog-
gle is pressed. This interactive command is only available if a
system has the requisite NUMA support.
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.
4c. TASK AREA Commands
The task area interactive commands are always available in full-screen
mode.
The task area interactive commands are never available in alter-
nate-display mode if the `current' window's task display has been tog-
gled Off (see topic 5. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Provisions).
APPEARANCE of task window
J :Justify-Numeric-Columns toggle
Alternates between right-justified (the default) and left-justi-
fied numeric data. If the numeric data completely fills the
available column, this command toggle may impact the column
header only.
j :Justify-Character-Columns toggle
Alternates between left-justified (the default) and right-justi-
fied character data. If the character data completely fills the
available column, this command toggle may impact the column
header only.
The following commands will also be influenced by the state of the
global `B' (bold enable) toggle.
b :Bold/Reverse toggle
This command will impact how the `x' and `y' toggles are dis-
played. It may also impact the summary area when a bar graph
has been selected for cpu states or memory usage via the `t' or
`m' toggles.
x :Column-Highlight toggle
Changes highlighting for the current sort field. If you forget
which field is being sorted this command can serve as a quick
visual reminder, providing the sort field is being displayed.
The sort field might not be visible because:
1) there is insufficient Screen Width
2) the `f' interactive command turned it Off
Note: Whenever Searching and/or Other Filtering is active in a
window, column highlighting is temporarily disabled. See the
notes at the end of topics 5d. SEARCHING and 5e. FILTERING for
an explanation why.
y :Row-Highlight toggle
Changes highlighting for "running" tasks. For additional in-
sight into this task state, see topic 3a. DESCRIPTIONS of
Fields, the `S' field (Process Status).
Use of this provision provides important insight into your sys-
tem's health. The only costs will be a few additional tty es-
cape 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 | F :Fields-Management
These keys display a separate screen where you can change which
fields are displayed, their order and also designate the sort
field. For additional information on these interactive commands
see topic 3b. MANAGING Fields.
o | O :Other-Filtering
You will be prompted for the selection criteria which then de-
termines which tasks will be shown in the `current' window.
Your criteria can be made case sensitive or case can be ignored.
And you determine if top should include or exclude matching
tasks.
See topic 5e. FILTERING in a window for details on these and ad-
ditional related interactive commands.
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 ap-
pear less demanding. For programs like `init' or a shell this
is appropriate but for others, like compilers, perhaps not. Ex-
periment with two task windows sharing the same sort field but
with different `S' states and see which representation you pre-
fer.
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 | U :Show-Specific-User-Only
You will be prompted for the uid or name of the user to display.
The -u option matches on effective user whereas the -U option
matches on any user (real, effective, saved, or filesystem).
Thereafter, in that task window only matching users will be
shown, or possibly no processes will be shown. Prepending an
exclamation point (`!') to the user id or name instructs top to
display only processes with users not matching the one provided.
Different task windows can be used to filter different users.
Later, if you wish to monitor all users again in the `current'
window, re-issue this command but just press <Enter> at the
prompt.
V :Forest-View-Mode toggle
In this mode, processes are reordered according to their parents
and the layout of the COMMAND column resembles that of a tree.
In forest view mode it is still possible to toggle between pro-
gram name and command line (see the `c' interactive command) or
between processes and threads (see the `H' interactive command).
Note: Typing any key affecting the sort order will exit forest
view mode in the `current' window. See topic 4c. TASK AREA Com-
mands, SORTING for information on those keys.
v :Hide/Show-Children toggle
When in forest view mode, this key serves as a toggle to col-
lapse or expand the children of a parent.
The toggle is applied against the first (topmost) process in the
`current' window. See topic 5c. SCROLLING a Window for addi-
tional information regarding vertical scrolling.
If the target process has not forked any children, this key has
no effect. It also has no effect when not in forest view mode.
SIZE of task window
i :Idle-Process toggle
Displays all tasks or just active tasks. When this toggle is
Off, tasks that have not used any CPU since the last update will
not be displayed. However, due to the granularity of the %CPU
and TIME+ fields, some processes may still be displayed that ap-
pear to have used no CPU.
If this command is applied to the last task display when in al-
ternate-display mode, then it will not affect the window's size,
as all prior task displays will have already been painted.
n | # :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 visi-
ble task display, except for the very last. It will not affect
the last window's size, as all prior task displays will have al-
ready 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' interac-
tive command. That will help ensure that the actual sort environ-
ment 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 | F :Fields-Management
These keys display a separate screen where you can change
which field is used as the sort column, among other func-
tions. This 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 dis-
play. Thus, the TTY and WCHAN fields will violate strict ASCII col-
lating sequence.
4d. 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.
The following interactive commands are available.
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 you use `a' or `w' to cycle the targeted window, you will have ap-
plied 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' win-
dow/field group in either full-screen mode or alternate-display mode.
Whatever was targeted when `q' or <Enter> was pressed will be made cur-
rent as you return to the top display.
5. ALTERNATE-DISPLAY Provisions
5a. WINDOWS Overview
Field Groups/Windows:
In full-screen mode there is a single window represented by the en-
tire screen. That single window can still be changed to display 1
of 4 different field groups (see the `g' interactive command, re-
peated 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 sum-
mary area line Off. With the loss of the window name (the `l' tog-
gled line), you'll not easily know what window is the `current' win-
dow.
5b. COMMANDS for Windows
- | _ :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' interactive command. It
will also reflect any other task area options/toggles you've ap-
plied 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 dis-
plays are currently visible, this interactive command will leave
the summary area as the only display element.
* = | + :Equalize-(reinitialize)-Window(s)
The `=' key forces the `current' window's task display to be
visible. It also reverses any active `i' (idle tasks), `n' (max
tasks), `u/U' (user filter), `o/O' (other filter), `v' (hide
children) and 'L' (locate) commands. Also, if the window had
been scrolled, it will be reset with this command. See topic
5c. SCROLLING a Window for additional information regarding ver-
tical and horizontal scrolling.
The `+' key does the same for all windows. The four task dis-
plays will reappear, evenly balanced. They will also have re-
tained any customizations you had previously applied, except for
the `i' (idle tasks), `n' (max tasks), `u/U' (user filter),
`o/O' (other filter), `v' (hide children), `L' (locate) and
scrolling interactive commands.
* A :Alternate-Display-Mode toggle
This command will switch between full-screen mode and alter-
nate-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 | 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 cir-
cular fashion so you can reach any desired window using either
key.
Assuming the window name is visible (you have not toggled `l'
Off), whenever the `current' window name loses its empha-
sis/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 designat-
ing the 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 `cur-
rent' window. It does not require that the window name be visi-
ble (the `l' toggle to be On).
* The interactive commands shown with an asterisk (`*') have use be-
yond alternate-display mode.
=, A, g are always available
a, w act the same with color mapping
and fields management
5c. SCROLLING a Window
Typically a task window is a partial view into a systems's total
tasks/threads which shows only some of the available fields/columns.
With these scrolling keys, you can move that view vertically or hori-
zontally to reveal any desired task or column.
Up,PgUp :Scroll-Tasks
Move the view up toward the first task row, until the first task is
displayed at the top of the `current' window. The Up arrow key
moves a single line while PgUp scrolls the entire window.
Down,PgDn :Scroll-Tasks
Move the view down toward the last task row, until the last task is
the only task displayed at the top of the `current' window. The
Down arrow key moves a single line while PgDn scrolls the entire
window.
Left,Right :Scroll-Columns
Move the view of displayable fields horizontally one column at a
time.
Note: As a reminder, some fields/columns are not fixed-width but
allocated all remaining screen width when visible. When scrolling
right or left, that feature may produce some unexpected results
initially.
Additionally, there are special provisions for any variable width
field when positioned as the last displayed field. Once that field
is reached via the right arrow key, and is thus the only column
shown, you can continue scrolling horizontally within such a field.
See the `C' interactive command below for additional information.
Home :Jump-to-Home-Position
Reposition the display to the un-scrolled coordinates.
End :Jump-to-End-Position
Reposition the display so that the rightmost column reflects the
last displayable field and the bottom task row represents the last
task.
Note: From this position it is still possible to scroll down and
right using the arrow keys. This is true until a single column and
a single task is left as the only display element.
C :Show-scroll-coordinates toggle
Toggle an informational message which is displayed whenever the
message line is not otherwise being used. That message will take
one of two forms depending on whether or not a variable width col-
umn has also been scrolled.
scroll coordinates: y = n/n (tasks), x = n/n (fields)
scroll coordinates: y = n/n (tasks), x = n/n (fields) + nn
The coordinates shown as n/n are relative to the upper left corner
of the `current' window. The additional `+ nn' represents the dis-
placement into a variable width column when it has been scrolled
horizontally. Such displacement occurs in normal 8 character tab
stop amounts via the right and left arrow keys.
y = n/n (tasks)
The first n represents the topmost visible task and is con-
trolled by scrolling keys. The second n is updated automati-
cally to reflect total tasks.
x = n/n (fields)
The first n represents the leftmost displayed column and is
controlled by scrolling keys. The second n is the total number
of displayable fields and is established with the `f' interac-
tive command.
The above interactive commands are always available in full-screen mode
but never available in alternate-display mode if the `current' window's
task display has been toggled Off.
Note: When any form of filtering is active, you can expect some slight
aberrations when scrolling since not all tasks will be visible. This
is particularly apparent when using the Up/Down arrow keys.
5d. SEARCHING in a Window
You can use these interactive commands to locate a task row containing
a particular value.
L :Locate-a-string
You will be prompted for the case-sensitive string to locate start-
ing from the current window coordinates. There are no restrictions
on search string content.
Searches are not limited to values from a single field or column.
All of the values displayed in a task row are allowed in a search
string. You may include spaces, numbers, symbols and even forest
view artwork.
Keying <Enter> with no input will effectively disable the `&' key
until a new search string is entered.
& :Locate-next
Assuming a search string has been established, top will attempt to
locate the next occurrence.
When a match is found, the current window is repositioned vertically so
the task row containing that string is first. The scroll coordinates
message can provide confirmation of such vertical repositioning (see
the `C' interactive command). Horizontal scrolling, however, is never
altered via searching.
The availability of a matching string will be influenced by the follow-
ing factors.
a. Which fields are displayable from the total available,
see topic 3b. MANAGING Fields.
b. Scrolling a window vertically and/or horizontally,
see topic 5c. SCROLLING a Window.
c. The state of the command/command-line toggle,
see the `c' interactive command.
d. The stability of the chosen sort column,
for example PID is good but %CPU bad.
If a search fails, restoring the `current' window home (unscrolled) po-
sition, scrolling horizontally, displaying command-lines or choosing a
more stable sort field could yet produce a successful `&' search.
The above interactive commands are always available in full-screen mode
but never available in alternate-display mode if the `current' window's
task display has been toggled Off.
Note: Whenever a Search is active in a window, top will turn column
highlighting Off to prevent false matches on internal non-display es-
cape sequences. Such highlighting will be restored when a window's
search string is empty. See the `x' interactive command for additional
information on sort column highlighting.
5e. FILTERING in a Window
You can use this `Other Filter' feature to establish selection criteria
which will then determine which tasks are shown in the `current' win-
dow. Such filters can be made presistent if preserved in the rcfile
via the 'W' interactive command.
Establishing a filter requires: 1) a field name; 2) an operator; and 3)
a selection value, as a minimum. This is the most complex of top's
user input requirements so, when you make a mistake, command recall
will be your friend. Remember the Up/Down arrow keys or their aliases
when prompted for input.
Filter Basics
1. field names are case sensitive and spelled as in the header
2. selection values need not comprise the full displayed field
3. a selection is either case insensitive or sensitive to case
4. the default is inclusion, prepending `!' denotes exclusions
5. multiple selection criteria can be applied to a task window
6. inclusion and exclusion criteria can be used simultaneously
7. the 1 equality and 2 relational filters can be freely mixed
8. separate unique filters are maintained for each task window
If a field is not turned on or is not currently in view, then your
selection criteria will not affect the display. Later, should a
filtered field become visible, the selection criteria will then be
applied.
Keyboard Summary
o :Other-Filter (lower case)
You will be prompted to establish a filter that ignores case when
matching.
O :Other-Filter (upper case)
You will be prompted to establish a case sensitive filter.
^O :Show-Active-Filters (Ctrl key + `o')
This can serve as a reminder of which filters are active in the
`current' window. A summary will be shown on the message line
until you press the <Enter> key.
= :Reset-Filtering in current window
This clears all of your selection criteria in the `current' win-
dow. It also has additional impact so please see topic 4a.
GLOBAL Commands.
+ :Reset-Filtering in all windows
This clears the selection criteria in all windows, assuming you
are in alternate-display mode. As with the `=' interactive com-
mand, it too has additional consequences so you might wish to see
topic 5b. COMMANDS for Windows.
Input Requirements
When prompted for selection criteria, the data you provide must take
one of two forms. There are 3 required pieces of information, with
a 4th as optional. These examples use spaces for clarity but your
input generally would not.
#1 #2 #3 ( required )
Field-Name ? include-if-value
! Field-Name ? exclude-if-value
#4 ( optional )
Items #1, #3 and #4 should be self-explanatory. Item #2 represents
both a required delimiter and the operator which must be one of ei-
ther equality (`=') or relation (`<' or `>').
The `=' equality operator requires only a partial match and that can
reduce your `if-value' input requirements. The `>' or `<' rela-
tional operators always employ string comparisons, even with numeric
fields. They are designed to work with a field's default justifica-
tion and with homogeneous data. When some field's numeric amounts
have been subjected to scaling while others have not, that data is
no longer homogeneous.
If you establish a relational filter and you have changed the de-
fault Numeric or Character justification, that filter is likely to
fail. When a relational filter is applied to a memory field and you
have not changed the scaling, it may produce misleading results.
This happens, for example, because `100.0m' (MiB) would appear
greater than `1.000g' (GiB) when compared as strings.
If your filtered results appear suspect, simply altering justifica-
tion or scaling may yet achieve the desired objective. See the `j',
`J' and `e' interactive commands for additional information.
Potential Problems
These GROUP filters could produce the exact same results or the sec-
ond one might not display anything at all, just a blank task window.
GROUP=root ( only the same results when )
GROUP=ROOT ( invoked via lower case `o' )
Either of these RES filters might yield inconsistent and/or mislead-
ing results, depending on the current memory scaling factor. Or
both filters could produce the exact same results.
RES>9999 ( only the same results when )
!RES<10000 ( memory scaling is at `KiB' )
This nMin filter illustrates a problem unique to scalable fields.
This particular field can display a maximum of 4 digits, beyond
which values are automatically scaled to KiB or above. So while
amounts greater than 9999 exist, they will appear as 2.6m, 197k,
etc.
nMin>9999 ( always a blank task window )
Potential Solutions
These examples illustrate how Other Filtering can be creatively ap-
plied to achieve almost any desired result. Single quotes are some-
times shown to delimit the spaces which are part of a filter or to
represent a request for status (^O) accurately. But if you used
them with if-values in real life, no matches would be found.
Assuming field nTH is displayed, the first filter will result in
only multi-threaded processes being shown. It also reminds us that
a trailing space is part of every displayed field. The second fil-
ter achieves the exact same results with less typing.
!nTH=` 1 ' ( ' for clarity only )
nTH>1 ( same with less i/p )
With Forest View mode active and the COMMAND column in view, this
filter effectively collapses child processes so that just 3 levels
are shown.
!COMMAND=` `- ' ( ' for clarity only )
The final two filters appear as in response to the status request
key (^O). In reality, each filter would have required separate in-
put. The PR example shows the two concurrent filters necessary to
display tasks with priorities of 20 or more, since some might be
negative. Then by exploiting trailing spaces, the nMin series of
filters could achieve the failed `9999' objective discussed above.
`PR>20' + `!PR=-' ( 2 for right result )
`!nMin=0 ' + `!nMin=1 ' + `!nMin=2 ' + `!nMin=3 ' ...
Note: Whenever Other Filtering is active in a window, top will turn
column highlighting Off to prevent false matches on internal non-dis-
play escape sequences. Such highlighting will be restored when a win-
dow is no longer subject to filtering. See the `x' interactive command
for additional information on sort column highlighting.
6. FILES
6a. PERSONAL Configuration File
This file is created or updated via the 'W' interactive command.
The legacy version is written as `$HOME/.your-name-4-top' + `rc' with a
leading period.
A newly created configuration file is written as
procps/your-name-4-top' + `rc' without a leading period. The procps
directory will be subordinate to either $XDG_CONFIG_HOME when set as an
absolute path or the $HOME/.config directory.
While not intended to be edited manually, 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,graph modes
" # line c: summclr,msgsclr,headclr,taskclr
global # line 15: additional miscellaneous settings
" # any remaining lines are devoted to optional
" # active 'other filters' discussed in section 5e above
" # plus 'inspect' entries discussed in section 6b below
If a valid absolute path to the rcfile cannot be established, cus-
tomizations made to a running top will be impossible to preserve.
6b. ADDING INSPECT Entries
To exploit the `Y' interactive command, you must add entries at the end
of the top personal configuration file. Such entries simply reflect a
file to be read or command/pipeline to be executed whose results will
then be displayed in a separate scrollable, searchable window.
If you don't know the location or name of your top rcfile, use the `W'
interactive command to rewrite it and note those details.
Inspect entries can be added with a redirected echo or by editing the
configuration file. Redirecting an echo risks overwriting the rcfile
should it replace (>) rather than append (>>) to that file. Con-
versely, when using an editor care must be taken not to corrupt exist-
ing lines, some of which will contain unprintable data or unusual char-
acters.
Those Inspect entries beginning with a `#' character are ignored, re-
gardless of content. Otherwise they consist of the following 3 ele-
ments, each of which must be separated by a tab character (thus 2 `\t'
total):
.type: literal `file' or `pipe'
.name: selection shown on the Inspect screen
.fmts: string representing a path or command
The two types of Inspect entries are not interchangeable. Those desig-
nated `file' will be accessed using fopen and must reference a single
file in the `.fmts' element. Entries specifying `pipe' will employ
popen, their `.fmts' element could contain many pipelined commands and,
none can be interactive.
If the file or pipeline represented in your `.fmts' deals with the spe-
cific PID input or accepted when prompted, then the format string must
also contain the `%d' specifier, as these examples illustrate.
.fmts= /proc/%d/numa_maps
.fmts= lsof -P -p %d
For `pipe' type entries only, you may also wish to redirect stderr to
stdout for a more comprehensive result. Thus the format string be-
comes:
.fmts= pmap -x %d 2>&1
Here are examples of both types of Inspect entries as they might appear
in the rcfile. The first entry will be ignored due to the initial `#'
character. For clarity, the pseudo tab depictions (^I) are surrounded
by an extra space but the actual tabs would not be.
# pipe ^I Sockets ^I lsof -n -P -i 2>&1
pipe ^I Open Files ^I lsof -P -p %d 2>&1
file ^I NUMA Info ^I /proc/%d/numa_maps
pipe ^I Log ^I tail -n100 /var/log/syslog | sort -Mr
Except for the commented entry above, these next examples show what
could be echoed to achieve similar results, assuming the rcfile name
was `.toprc'. However, due to the embedded tab characters, each of
these lines should be preceded by `/bin/echo -e', not just a simple an
`echo', to enable backslash interpretation regardless of which shell
you use.
"pipe\tOpen Files\tlsof -P -p %d 2>&1" >> ~/.toprc
"file\tNUMA Info\t/proc/%d/numa_maps" >> ~/.toprc
"pipe\tLog\ttail -n200 /var/log/syslog | sort -Mr" >> ~/.toprc
If any inspect entry you create produces output with unprintable char-
acters they will be displayed in either the ^C notation or hexadecimal
<FF> form, depending on their value. This applies to tab characters as
well, which will show as `^I'. If you want a truer representation, any
embedded tabs should be expanded. The following example takes what
could have been a `file' entry but employs a `pipe' instead so as to
expand the embedded tabs.
# next would have contained `\t' ...
# file ^I <your_name> ^I /proc/%d/status
# but this will eliminate embedded `\t' ...
pipe ^I <your_name> ^I cat /proc/%d/status | expand -
Note: Some programs might rely on SIGINT to end. Therefore, if a
`pipe' such as the following is established, one must use Ctrl-C to
terminate it in order to review the results. This is the single occa-
sion where a `^C' will not also terminate top.
pipe ^I Trace ^I /usr/bin/strace -p %d 2>&1
Lastly, while `pipe' type entries have been discussed in terms of pipe-
lines and commands, there is nothing to prevent you from including
shell scripts as well. Perhaps even newly created scripts designed
specifically for the `Y' interactive command.
For example, as the number of your Inspect entries grows over time, the
`Options:' row will be truncated when screen width is exceeded. That
does not affect operation other than to make some selections invisible.
However, if some choices are lost to truncation but you want to see
more options, there is an easy solution hinted at below.
Inspection Pause at pid ...
Use: left/right then <Enter> ...
Options: help 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ...
The entries in the top rcfile would have a number for the `.name' ele-
ment and the `help' entry would identify a shell script you've written
explaining what those numbered selections actually mean. In that way,
many more choices can be made visible.
6c. SYSTEM Configuration File
This configuration file represents defaults for users who have not
saved their own configuration file. The format mirrors exactly the
personal configuration file and can also include `inspect' entries as
explained above.
Creating it is a simple process.
1. Configure top appropriately for your installation and preserve that
configuration with the `W' interactive command.
2. Add and test any desired `inspect' entries.
3. Copy that configuration file to the /etc/ directory as `topde-
faultrc'.
6d. SYSTEM Restrictions 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 com-
mands.
k Kill a task
r Renice a task
d or s Change delay/sleep interval
This configuration file is not created by top. Rather, it is created
manually and placed it in the /etc/ directory as `toprc'.
It should have exactly two lines, as shown in this example:
s # line 1: secure mode switch
5.0 # line 2: delay interval in seconds
7. 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.
7a. Kernel Magic
For these stupid tricks, top needs full-screen mode.
o 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 so as 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.
o Under an xterm using `white-on-black' colors, on top's Color Mapping
screen set the task color to black and be sure that task highlight-
ing 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.
o Delete the existing rcfile, or create a new symlink. Start this new
version then type `T' (a secret key, see topic 4c. Task Area Com-
mands, SORTING) followed by `W' and `q'. Finally, restart the pro-
gram 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.
7b. Bouncing Windows
For these stupid tricks, top needs alternate-display mode.
o With 3 or 4 task displays visible, pick any window other than the
last and turn idle processes Off using the `i' command toggle. De-
pending 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.
o Set each window's summary lines differently: one with no memory
(`m'); another with no states (`t'); maybe one with nothing at all,
just the message line. Then hold down `a' or `w' and watch a varia-
tion on bouncing windows -- hopping windows.
o Display all 4 windows and for each, in turn, set idle processes to
Off using the `i' command toggle. You've just entered the "extreme
bounce" zone.
7c. The Big Bird Window
This stupid trick also requires alternate-display mode.
o Display all 4 windows and make sure that 1:Def is the `current' win-
dow. Then, keep increasing window size with the `n' interactive
command until all the other task displays are "pushed out of the
nest".
When they've all been displaced, toggle between all visible/invisi-
ble windows using the `_' command toggle. Then ponder this:
is top fibbing or telling honestly your imposed truth?
7d. The Ol' Switcheroo
This stupid trick works best without alternate-display mode, since jus-
tification is active on a per window basis.
o Start top and make COMMAND the last (rightmost) column displayed.
If necessary, use the `c' command toggle to display command lines
and ensure that forest view mode is active with the `V' command tog-
gle.
Then use the up/down arrow keys to position the display so that some
truncated command lines are shown (`+' in last position). You may
have to resize your xterm to produce truncation.
Lastly, use the `j' command toggle to make the COMMAND column right
justified.
Now use the right arrow key to reach the COMMAND column. Continuing
with the right arrow key, watch closely the direction of travel for
the command lines being shown.
some lines travel left, while others travel right
eventually all lines will Switcheroo, and move right
8. BUGS
Please send bug reports to <procps@freelists.org>.
9. SEE Also
free(1), ps(1), uptime(1), atop(1), slabtop(1), vmstat(8), w(1)
procps-ng October 2019 TOP(1)