xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/systat/systat.1 (revision 389e4940069316fe667ffa263fa7d6390d0a960f)
1.\" Copyright (c) 1985, 1990, 1993
2.\"	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
6.\" are met:
7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
8.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
10.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
11.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
12.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
13.\"    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
14.\"    without specific prior written permission.
15.\"
16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
17.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
18.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
19.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
20.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
21.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
22.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
23.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
24.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
25.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
26.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
27.\"
28.\"	@(#)systat.1	8.2 (Berkeley) 12/30/93
29.\" $FreeBSD$
30.\"
31.Dd December 5, 2016
32.Dt SYSTAT 1
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm systat
36.Nd display system statistics
37.Sh SYNOPSIS
38.Nm
39.Op Fl display
40.Op Ar display-commands
41.Op Ar refresh-interval
42.Sh DESCRIPTION
43The
44.Nm
45utility displays various system statistics in a screen oriented fashion
46using the curses screen display library,
47.Xr ncurses 3 .
48.Pp
49While
50.Nm
51is running the screen is usually divided into two windows (an exception
52is the vmstat display which uses the entire screen).
53The
54upper window depicts the current system load average.
55The
56information displayed in the lower window may vary, depending on
57user commands.
58The last line on the screen is reserved for user
59input and error messages.
60.Pp
61By default
62.Nm
63displays the processes getting the largest percentage of the processor
64in the lower window.
65Other displays show swap space usage, disk
66.Tn I/O
67statistics (a la
68.Xr iostat 8 ) ,
69virtual memory statistics (a la
70.Xr vmstat 8 ) ,
71.Tn TCP/IP
72statistics,
73and network connections (a la
74.Xr netstat 1 ) .
75.Pp
76Input is interpreted at two different levels.
77A ``global'' command interpreter processes all keyboard input.
78If this command interpreter fails to recognize a command, the
79input line is passed to a per-display command interpreter.
80This
81allows each display to have certain display-specific commands.
82.Pp
83Command line options:
84.Bl -tag -width "refresh_interval"
85.It Fl Ns Ar display
86The
87.Fl
88flag expects
89.Ar display
90to be one of:
91.Ic icmp ,
92.Ic icmp6 ,
93.Ic ifstat ,
94.Ic iostat ,
95.Ic ip ,
96.Ic ip6 ,
97.Ic netstat ,
98.Ic pigs ,
99.Ic sctp ,
100.Ic swap ,
101.Ic tcp ,
102.Ic vmstat ,
103or
104.Ic zarc ,
105These displays can also be requested interactively (without the
106.Dq Fl )
107and are described in
108full detail below.
109.It Ar refresh-interval
110The
111.Ar refresh-value
112specifies the screen refresh time interval in seconds.
113Time interval can be fractional.
114.It Ar display-commands
115A list of commands specific to this display.
116These commands can also be entered interactively and are described for
117each display separately below.
118If the command requires arguments, they can be specified as separate
119command line arguments.
120A command line argument
121.Fl -
122will finish display commands.
123For example:
124.Pp
125.Dl Nm Fl ifstat Fl match Ar bge0,em1 Fl pps
126.Pp
127This will display statistics of packets per second for network interfaces
128named as bge0 and em1.
129.Pp
130.Dl Nm Fl iostat Fl numbers Fl - Ar 2.1
131.Pp
132This will display all IO statistics in a numeric format and the information
133will be refreshed each 2.1 seconds.
134.El
135.Pp
136Certain characters cause immediate action by
137.Nm .
138These are
139.Bl -tag -width Fl
140.It Ic \&^L
141Refresh the screen.
142.It Ic \&^G
143Print the name of the current ``display'' being shown in
144the lower window and the refresh interval.
145.It Ic \&:
146Move the cursor to the command line and interpret the input
147line typed as a command.
148While entering a command the
149current character erase, word erase, and line kill characters
150may be used.
151.El
152.Pp
153The following commands are interpreted by the ``global''
154command interpreter.
155.Bl -tag -width Fl
156.It Ic help
157Print the names of the available displays on the command line.
158.It Ic load
159Print the load average over the past 1, 5, and 15 minutes
160on the command line.
161.It Ic stop
162Stop refreshing the screen.
163.It Xo
164.Op Ic start
165.Op Ar number
166.Xc
167Start (continue) refreshing the screen.
168If a second, numeric,
169argument is provided it is interpreted as a refresh interval
170(in seconds).
171Supplying only a number will set the refresh interval to this
172value.
173.It Ic quit
174Exit
175.Nm .
176(This may be abbreviated to
177.Ic q . )
178.El
179.Pp
180The available displays are:
181.Bl -tag -width Ic
182.It Ic pigs
183Display, in the lower window, those processes resident in main
184memory and getting the
185largest portion of the processor (the default display).
186When less than 100% of the
187processor is scheduled to user processes, the remaining time
188is accounted to the ``idle'' process.
189.It Ic icmp
190Display, in the lower window, statistics about messages received and
191transmitted by the Internet Control Message Protocol
192.Pq Dq Tn ICMP .
193The left half of the screen displays information about received
194packets, and the right half displays information regarding transmitted
195packets.
196.Pp
197The
198.Ic icmp
199display understands two commands:
200.Ic mode
201and
202.Ic reset .
203The
204.Ic mode
205command is used to select one of four display modes, given as its argument:
206.Bl -tag -width absoluteXX -compact
207.It Ic rate :
208show the rate of change of each value in packets (the default)
209per second
210.It Ic delta :
211show the rate of change of each value in packets per refresh interval
212.It Ic since :
213show the total change of each value since the display was last reset
214.It Ic absolute :
215show the absolute value of each statistic
216.El
217.Pp
218The
219.Ic reset
220command resets the baseline for
221.Ic since
222mode.
223The
224.Ic mode
225command with no argument will display the current mode in the command
226line.
227.It Ic icmp6
228This display is like the
229.Ic icmp
230display,
231but displays statistics for IPv6 ICMP.
232.It Ic ip
233Otherwise identical to the
234.Ic icmp
235display, except that it displays
236.Tn IP
237and
238.Tn UDP
239statistics.
240.It Ic ip6
241Like the
242.Ic ip
243display,
244except that it displays
245.Tn IPv6
246statistics.
247It does not display
248.Tn UDP statistics.
249.It Ic sctp
250Like
251.Ic icmp ,
252but with
253.Tn SCTP
254statistics.
255.It Ic tcp
256Like
257.Ic icmp ,
258but with
259.Tn TCP
260statistics.
261.It Ic iostat
262Display, in the lower window, statistics about processor use
263and disk throughput.
264Statistics on processor use appear as
265bar graphs of the amount of time executing in user mode (``user''),
266in user mode running low priority processes (``nice''), in
267system mode (``system''), in interrupt mode (``interrupt''),
268and idle (``idle'').
269Statistics
270on disk throughput show, for each drive, megabytes per second,
271average number of disk transactions per second, and
272average kilobytes of data per transaction.
273This information may be
274displayed as bar graphs or as rows of numbers which scroll downward.
275Bar
276graphs are shown by default.
277.Pp
278The following commands are specific to the
279.Ic iostat
280display; the minimum unambiguous prefix may be supplied.
281.Pp
282.Bl -tag -width Fl -compact
283.It Cm numbers
284Show the disk
285.Tn I/O
286statistics in numeric form.
287Values are
288displayed in numeric columns which scroll downward.
289.It Cm bars
290Show the disk
291.Tn I/O
292statistics in bar graph form (default).
293.It Cm kbpt
294Toggle the display of kilobytes per transaction.
295(the default is to
296not display kilobytes per transaction).
297.El
298.It Ic swap
299Show information about swap space usage on all the
300swap areas compiled into the kernel.
301The first column is the device name of the partition.
302The next column is the total space available in the partition.
303The
304.Ar Used
305column indicates the total blocks used so far;
306the graph shows the percentage of space in use on each partition.
307If there are more than one swap partition in use,
308a total line is also shown.
309Areas known to the kernel, but not in use are shown as not available.
310.It Ic vmstat
311Take over the entire display and show a (rather crowded) compendium
312of statistics related to virtual memory usage, process scheduling,
313device interrupts, system name translation caching, disk
314.Tn I/O
315etc.
316.Pp
317The upper left quadrant of the screen shows the number
318of users logged in and the load average over the last one, five,
319and fifteen minute intervals.
320Below this line are statistics on memory utilization.
321The first row of the table reports memory usage only among
322active processes, that is processes that have run in the previous
323twenty seconds.
324The second row reports on memory usage of all processes.
325The first column reports on the number of kilobytes in physical pages
326claimed by processes.
327The second column reports the number of kilobytes in physical pages that
328are devoted to read only text pages.
329The third and fourth columns report the same two figures for
330virtual pages, that is the number of kilobytes in pages that would be
331needed if all processes had all of their pages.
332Finally the last column shows the number of kilobytes in physical pages
333on the free list.
334.Pp
335Below the memory display is a list of the
336average number of processes (over the last refresh interval)
337that are runnable (`r'), in page wait (`p'),
338in disk wait other than paging (`d'),
339sleeping (`s'), and swapped out but desiring to run (`w').
340The row also shows the average number of context switches
341(`Csw'), traps (`Trp'; includes page faults), system calls (`Sys'),
342interrupts (`Int'), network software interrupts (`Sof'), and page
343faults (`Flt').
344.Pp
345Below the process queue length listing is a numerical listing and
346a bar graph showing the amount of
347system (shown as `='), interrupt (shown as `+'), user (shown as `>'),
348nice (shown as `-'), and idle time (shown as ` ').
349.Pp
350Below the process display are statistics on name translations.
351It lists the number of names translated in the previous interval,
352the number and percentage of the translations that were
353handled by the system wide name translation cache, and
354the number and percentage of the translations that were
355handled by the per process name translation cache.
356.Pp
357To the right of the name translations display are lines showing
358the number of dirty buffers in the buffer cache (`dtbuf'),
359desired maximum size of vnode cache (`desvn'),
360number of vnodes actually allocated (`numvn'),
361and
362number of allocated vnodes that are free (`frevn').
363.Pp
364At the bottom left is the disk usage display.
365It reports the number of
366kilobytes per transaction, transactions per second, megabytes
367per second and the percentage of the time the disk was busy averaged
368over the refresh period of the display (by default, five seconds).
369The system keeps statistics on most every storage device.
370In general, up
371to seven devices are displayed.
372The devices displayed by default are the
373first devices in the kernel's device list.
374See
375.Xr devstat 3
376and
377.Xr devstat 9
378for details on the devstat system.
379.Pp
380Under the date in the upper right hand quadrant are statistics
381on paging and swapping activity.
382The first two columns report the average number of pages
383brought in and out per second over the last refresh interval
384due to page faults and the paging daemon.
385The third and fourth columns report the average number of pages
386brought in and out per second over the last refresh interval
387due to swap requests initiated by the scheduler.
388The first row of the display shows the average
389number of disk transfers per second over the last refresh interval;
390the second row of the display shows the average
391number of pages transferred per second over the last refresh interval.
392.Pp
393Below the paging statistics is a column of lines regarding the virtual
394memory system.
395The first few lines describe,
396in units (except as noted below)
397of pages per second averaged over the sampling interval,
398pages copied on write (`cow'),
399pages zero filled on demand (`zfod'),
400pages optimally zero filled on demand (`ozfod'),
401the ratio of the (average) ozfod / zfod as a percentage (`%ozfod'),
402pages freed by the page daemon (`daefr'),
403pages freed by exiting processes (`prcfr'),
404total pages freed (`totfr'),
405pages reactivated from the free list (`react'),
406the average number of
407times per second that the page daemon was awakened (`pdwak'),
408pages analyzed by the page daemon (`pdpgs'),
409and
410in-transit blocking page faults (`intrn').
411Note that the units are special for `%ozfod' and `pdwak'.
412The next few lines describe,
413as amounts of memory in kilobytes,
414pages wired down (`wire'),
415active pages (`act'),
416inactive pages (`inact'),
417dirty pages queued for laundering (`laund'),
418and
419free pages (`free').
420Note that the values displayed are the current transient ones;
421they are not averages.
422.Pp
423At the bottom of this column is a line showing the
424amount of virtual memory, in kilobytes, mapped into the buffer cache (`buf').
425This statistic is not useful.
426It exists only as a placeholder for the corresponding useful statistic
427(the amount of real memory used to cache disks).
428The most important component of the latter (the amount of real memory
429used by the vm system to cache disks) is not available,
430but can be guessed from the `inact' amount under some system loads.
431.Pp
432Running down the right hand side of the display is a breakdown
433of the interrupts being handled by the system.
434At the top of the list is the total interrupts per second
435over the time interval.
436The rest of the column breaks down the total on a device
437by device basis.
438Only devices that have interrupted at least once since boot time are shown.
439.Pp
440The following commands are specific to the
441.Ic vmstat
442display; the minimum unambiguous prefix may be supplied.
443.Pp
444.Bl -tag -width Ar -compact
445.It Cm boot
446Display cumulative statistics since the system was booted.
447.It Cm run
448Display statistics as a running total from the point this
449command is given.
450.It Cm time
451Display statistics averaged over the refresh interval (the default).
452.It Cm zero
453Reset running statistics to zero.
454.El
455.It Ic zarc
456display arc cache usage and hit/miss statistics.
457.It Ic netstat
458Display, in the lower window, network connections.
459By default,
460network servers awaiting requests are not displayed.
461Each address
462is displayed in the format ``host.port'', with each shown symbolically,
463when possible.
464It is possible to have addresses displayed numerically,
465limit the display to a set of ports, hosts, and/or protocols
466(the minimum unambiguous prefix may be supplied):
467.Pp
468.Bl -tag -width Ar -compact
469.It Cm all
470Toggle the displaying of server processes awaiting requests (this
471is the equivalent of the
472.Fl a
473flag to
474.Xr netstat 1 ) .
475.It Cm numbers
476Display network addresses numerically.
477.It Cm names
478Display network addresses symbolically.
479.It Cm proto Ar protocol
480Display only network connections using the indicated
481.Ar protocol .
482Supported protocols are ``tcp'', ``udp'', and ``all''.
483.It Cm ignore Op Ar items
484Do not display information about connections associated with
485the specified hosts or ports.
486Hosts and ports may be specified
487by name (``vangogh'', ``ftp''), or numerically.
488Host addresses
489use the Internet dot notation (``128.32.0.9'').
490Multiple items
491may be specified with a single command by separating them with
492spaces.
493.It Cm display Op Ar items
494Display information about the connections associated with the
495specified hosts or ports.
496As for
497.Ar ignore ,
498.Op Ar items
499may be names or numbers.
500.It Cm show Op Ar ports\&|hosts
501Show, on the command line, the currently selected protocols,
502hosts, and ports.
503Hosts and ports which are being ignored
504are prefixed with a `!'.
505If
506.Ar ports
507or
508.Ar hosts
509is supplied as an argument to
510.Cm show ,
511then only the requested information will be displayed.
512.It Cm reset
513Reset the port, host, and protocol matching mechanisms to the default
514(any protocol, port, or host).
515.El
516.It Ic ifstat
517Display the network traffic going through active interfaces on the
518system.
519Idle interfaces will not be displayed until they receive some
520traffic.
521.Pp
522For each interface being displayed, the current, peak and total
523statistics are displayed for incoming and outgoing traffic.
524By default,
525the
526.Ic ifstat
527display will automatically scale the units being used so that they are
528in a human-readable format.
529The scaling units used for the current and
530peak
531traffic columns can be altered by the
532.Ic scale
533command.
534.Bl -tag -width ".Cm scale Op Ar units"
535.It Cm scale Op Ar units
536Modify the scale used to display the current and peak traffic over all
537interfaces.
538The following units are recognised: kbit, kbyte, mbit,
539mbyte, gbit, gbyte and auto.
540.It Cm pps
541Show statistics in packets per second instead of bytes/bits per second.
542A subsequent call of
543.Ic pps
544switches this mode off.
545.It Cm match Op Ar patterns
546Display only interfaces that match pattern provided as an argument.
547Patterns should be in shell syntax separated by whitespaces or commas.
548If this command is called without arguments then all interfaces are displayed.
549For example:
550.Pp
551.Dl match em0, bge1
552.Pp
553This will display em0 and bge1 interfaces.
554.Pp
555.Dl match em*, bge*, lo0
556.Pp
557This will display all
558.Ic em
559interfaces, all
560.Ic bge
561interfaces and the loopback interface.
562.El
563.El
564.Pp
565Commands to switch between displays may be abbreviated to the
566minimum unambiguous prefix; for example, ``io'' for ``iostat''.
567Certain information may be discarded when the screen size is
568insufficient for display.
569For example, on a machine with 10
570drives the
571.Ic iostat
572bar graph displays only 3 drives on a 24 line terminal.
573When
574a bar graph would overflow the allotted screen space it is
575truncated and the actual value is printed ``over top'' of the bar.
576.Pp
577The following commands are common to each display which shows
578information about disk drives.
579These commands are used to
580select a set of drives to report on, should your system have
581more drives configured than can normally be displayed on the
582screen.
583.Pp
584.Bl -tag -width Ar -compact
585.It Cm ignore Op Ar drives
586Do not display information about the drives indicated.
587Multiple
588drives may be specified, separated by spaces.
589.It Cm display Op Ar drives
590Display information about the drives indicated.
591Multiple drives
592may be specified, separated by spaces.
593.It Cm only Op Ar drives
594Display only the specified drives.
595Multiple drives may be specified,
596separated by spaces.
597.It Cm drives
598Display a list of available devices.
599.It Cm match Xo
600.Ar type , Ns Ar if , Ns Ar pass
601.Op | Ar ...
602.Xc
603Display devices matching the given pattern.
604The basic matching
605expressions are the same as those used in
606.Xr iostat 8
607with one difference.
608Instead of specifying multiple
609.Fl t
610arguments which are then ORed together, the user instead specifies multiple
611matching expressions joined by the pipe
612.Pq Ql \&|
613character.
614The comma
615separated arguments within each matching expression are ANDed together, and
616then the pipe separated matching expressions are ORed together.
617Any
618device matching the combined expression will be displayed, if there is room
619to display it.
620For example:
621.Pp
622.Dl match da,scsi | cd,ide
623.Pp
624This will display all SCSI Direct Access devices and all IDE CDROM devices.
625.Pp
626.Dl match da | sa | cd,pass
627.Pp
628This will display all Direct Access devices, all Sequential Access devices,
629and all passthrough devices that provide access to CDROM drives.
630.El
631.Sh FILES
632.Bl -tag -width /boot/kernel/kernel -compact
633.It Pa /boot/kernel/kernel
634For the namelist.
635.It Pa /dev/kmem
636For information in main memory.
637.It Pa /etc/hosts
638For host names.
639.It Pa /etc/networks
640For network names.
641.It Pa /etc/services
642For port names.
643.El
644.Sh SEE ALSO
645.Xr netstat 1 ,
646.Xr kvm 3 ,
647.Xr icmp 4 ,
648.Xr icmp6 4 ,
649.Xr ip 4 ,
650.Xr ip6 4 ,
651.Xr tcp 4 ,
652.Xr udp 4 ,
653.Xr gstat 8 ,
654.Xr iostat 8 ,
655.Xr vmstat 8
656.Sh HISTORY
657The
658.Nm
659program appeared in
660.Bx 4.3 .
661The
662.Ic icmp ,
663.Ic ip ,
664and
665.Ic tcp
666displays appeared in
667.Fx 3.0 ;
668the notion of having different display modes for the
669.Tn ICMP ,
670.Tn IP ,
671.Tn TCP ,
672and
673.Tn UDP
674statistics was stolen from the
675.Fl C
676option to
677.Xr netstat 1
678in Silicon Graphics'
679.Tn IRIX
680system.
681.Sh BUGS
682Certain displays presume a minimum of 80 characters per line.
683The
684.Ic vmstat
685display looks out of place because it is (it was added in as
686a separate display rather than created as a new program).
687