13be6ef06SEitan Adler.\" $FreeBSD$ 2ecc2b89fSHiroki Sato.Dd September 21, 2019 39d6cce02SEitan Adler.Dt TOP 1 49d6cce02SEitan Adler.Os 59d6cce02SEitan Adler.Sh NAME 69d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm top 79d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nd display and update information about the top cpu processes 89d6cce02SEitan Adler.Sh SYNOPSIS 99d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 109d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl CHIPSTabijnpqtuvxz 119d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl J Ar jail 129d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl U Ar uid 139d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl d Ar count 149d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl m Ar cpu|io 159d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl s Ar time 169d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl o Ar field 179d6cce02SEitan Adler.Op Fl p Ar pid 18*1a444441SDimitry Andric.Op Ar number 199d6cce02SEitan Adler.Sh DESCRIPTION 209d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 213be6ef06SEitan Adlerdisplays the top 223be6ef06SEitan Adlerprocesses on the system and periodically updates this information. 233be6ef06SEitan AdlerIf standard output is an intelligent terminal (see below) then 243be6ef06SEitan Adleras many processes as will fit on the terminal screen are displayed 259d6cce02SEitan Adlerby default. 269d6cce02SEitan AdlerOtherwise, a good number of them are shown (around 20). 279d6cce02SEitan AdlerRaw cpu percentage is used to rank the processes. 289d6cce02SEitan AdlerIf 299d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar number 303be6ef06SEitan Adleris given, then the top 319d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar number 323be6ef06SEitan Adlerprocesses will be displayed instead of the default. 339d6cce02SEitan Adler.Pp 349d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 353be6ef06SEitan Adlermakes a distinction between terminals that support advanced capabilities 369d6cce02SEitan Adlerand those that do not. 379d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis distinction affects the choice of defaults for certain options. 389d6cce02SEitan AdlerIn the remainder of this document, an \*(lqintelligent\*(rq terminal is one that 393be6ef06SEitan Adlersupports cursor addressing, clear screen, and clear to end of line. 403be6ef06SEitan AdlerConversely, a \*(lqdumb\*(rq terminal is one that does not support such 419d6cce02SEitan Adlerfeatures. 429d6cce02SEitan AdlerIf the output of 439d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 443be6ef06SEitan Adleris redirected to a file, it acts as if it were being run on a dumb 453be6ef06SEitan Adlerterminal. 469d6cce02SEitan Adler.Bl -tag -width indent -compact 479d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl C 483be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle CPU display mode. 493be6ef06SEitan AdlerBy default top displays the weighted CPU percentage in the WCPU column 503be6ef06SEitan Adler(this is the same value that 519d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr ps 1 523be6ef06SEitan Adlerdisplays as CPU). 533be6ef06SEitan AdlerEach time 548fb2c7acSTijl Coosemans.Fl C 553be6ef06SEitan Adlerflag is passed it toggles between \*(lqraw cpu\*(rq mode 563be6ef06SEitan Adlerand \*(lqweighted cpu\*(rq mode, showing the \*(lqCPU\*(rq or 573be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe \*(lqWCPU\*(rq column respectively. 589d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl S 599d6cce02SEitan AdlerShow system processes in the display. 609d6cce02SEitan AdlerNormally, system processes such as the pager and the swapper are not shown. 619d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis option makes them visible. 629d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl a 633be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay command names derived from the argv[] vector, rather than real 649d6cce02SEitan Adlerexecutable name. 659d6cce02SEitan AdlerIt it useful when you want to watch applications, that 669d6cce02SEitan Adlerputs their status information there. 679d6cce02SEitan AdlerIf the real name differs from argv[0], 683be6ef06SEitan Adlerit will be displayed in parenthesis. 69ecc2b89fSHiroki SatoNon-printable characters in the command line are 70ecc2b89fSHiroki Satoencoded in C-style backslash sequences or 71ecc2b89fSHiroki Satoa three digit octal sequences. 729d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl b 739d6cce02SEitan AdlerUse \*(lqbatch\*(rq mode. 749d6cce02SEitan AdlerIn this mode, all input from the terminal is 759d6cce02SEitan Adlerignored. 769d6cce02SEitan AdlerInterrupt characters (such as ^C and ^\e) still have an effect. 773be6ef06SEitan AdlerThis is the default on a dumb terminal, or when the output is not a terminal. 789d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl H 793be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay each thread for a multithreaded process individually. 803be6ef06SEitan AdlerBy default a single summary line is displayed for each process. 819d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl i 829d6cce02SEitan AdlerUse \*(lqinteractive\*(rq mode. 839d6cce02SEitan AdlerIn this mode, any input is immediately 849d6cce02SEitan Adlerread for processing. 859d6cce02SEitan AdlerSee the section on \*(lqInteractive Mode\*(rq 863be6ef06SEitan Adlerfor an explanation of 879d6cce02SEitan Adlerwhich keys perform what functions. 889d6cce02SEitan AdlerAfter the command is processed, the 893be6ef06SEitan Adlerscreen will immediately be updated, even if the command was not 909d6cce02SEitan Adlerunderstood. 919d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis mode is the default when standard output is an 923be6ef06SEitan Adlerintelligent terminal. 939d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl I 943be6ef06SEitan AdlerDo not display idle processes. 953be6ef06SEitan AdlerBy default, top displays both active and idle processes. 969d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl j 973be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay the 989d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr jail 8 993be6ef06SEitan AdlerID. 1009d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl T 101fc36f5a7SEitan AdlerToggle displaying thread ID (tid) instead of process id (pid). 1029d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl t 1033be6ef06SEitan AdlerDo not display the 1049d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 1059d6cce02SEitan Adlerprocess itself. 1069d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl display 1079d6cce02SEitan AdlerDisplay either 'cpu' or 'io' statistics. 1089d6cce02SEitan AdlerDefault is 'cpu'. 1099d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl n 1109d6cce02SEitan AdlerUse \*(lqnon-interactive\*(rq mode. 1119d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis is identical to \*(lqbatch\*(rq 1123be6ef06SEitan Adlermode. 1139d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl P 1143be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay per-cpu CPU usage statistics. 1159d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl q 1163be6ef06SEitan AdlerRenice 1179d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 1189d6cce02SEitan Adlerto -20 so that it will run faster. 1199d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis can be used when the system is 1203be6ef06SEitan Adlerbeing very sluggish to improve the possibility of discovering the problem. 1213be6ef06SEitan AdlerThis option can only be used by root. 1229d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl u 1239d6cce02SEitan AdlerDo not map uid numbers to usernames. 1249d6cce02SEitan AdlerNormally, 1259d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 1263be6ef06SEitan Adlerwill read as much of the file \*(lq/etc/passwd\*(rq as is necessary to map 1279d6cce02SEitan Adlerall the user id numbers it encounters into login names. 1289d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis option disables all that, while possibly decreasing execution time. 1299d6cce02SEitan AdlerThe uid numbers are displayed instead of the names. 1309d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl v 1313be6ef06SEitan AdlerWrite version number information to stderr then exit immediately. 1329d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl w 1333be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay approximate swap usage for each process. 1349d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl z 1353be6ef06SEitan AdlerDo not display the system idle process. 1369d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl d Ar count 1373be6ef06SEitan AdlerShow only 1389d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar count 1399d6cce02SEitan Adlerdisplays, then exit. 1409d6cce02SEitan AdlerA display is considered to be one update of the 1419d6cce02SEitan Adlerscreen. 1429d6cce02SEitan AdlerThe default is 1 for dumb terminals. 1439d6cce02SEitan AdlerNote that for 1449d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar count 145d4085250SEitan Adler= 1 146d4085250SEitan Adlerno information is available about the percentage of time spent by the CPU in every state. 1479d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl s Ar time 1483be6ef06SEitan AdlerSet the delay between screen updates to 1499d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar time 1509d6cce02SEitan Adlerseconds. 1519d6cce02SEitan AdlerThe default delay between updates is 1 second. 1529d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl o Ar field 1539d6cce02SEitan AdlerSort the process display area on the specified field. 1549d6cce02SEitan AdlerThe field name 1553be6ef06SEitan Adleris the name of the column as seen in the output, but in lower case: 1563be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(lqcpu\*(lq, \*(rqsize\*(lq, \*(rqres\*(lq, \*(rqtime\*(lq, 1573be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(rqpri\*(lq, \*(rqthreads\*(lq, \*(lqtotal\*(lq, \*(rqread\*(lq, 1583be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(rqwrite\*(lq, \*(rqfault\*(lq, \*(rqvcsw\*(lq, \*(rqivcsw\*(lq, 1593be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(lqjid\*(lq, \*(rqswap\*(lq or \*(rqpid\*(lq. 1609d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl p Ar pid 16151b29cb7SRoman BogorodskiyShow only the process 1629d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar pid . 1639d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl J Ar jail 1643be6ef06SEitan AdlerShow only those processes owned by 1659d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar jail . 1663be6ef06SEitan AdlerThis may be either the 1679d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar jid 1683be6ef06SEitan Adleror 1699d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar name 1703be6ef06SEitan Adlerof the jail. 1713be6ef06SEitan AdlerUse 1729d6cce02SEitan Adler0 1733be6ef06SEitan Adlerto limit to host processes. 1749d6cce02SEitan AdlerUsing this option implies 1759d6cce02SEitan Adler.Fl j . 1769d6cce02SEitan Adler.Pp 1779d6cce02SEitan Adler.It Fl U Ar username 1783be6ef06SEitan AdlerShow only those processes owned by 1799d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar username . 1803be6ef06SEitan AdlerThis option currently only accepts usernames and will not understand 1813be6ef06SEitan Adleruid numbers. 1829d6cce02SEitan Adler.El 1839d6cce02SEitan Adler.Pp 1843be6ef06SEitan AdlerBoth 1859d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar count 1863be6ef06SEitan Adlerand 1879d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar number 1883be6ef06SEitan Adlerfields can be specified as \*(lqinfinite\*(rq, indicating that they can 1899d6cce02SEitan Adlerstretch as far as possible. 1909d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis is accomplished by using any proper 1913be6ef06SEitan Adlerprefix of the keywords 1923be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(lqinfinity\*(rq, 1933be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(lqmaximum\*(rq, 1943be6ef06SEitan Adleror 1953be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(lqall\*(rq. 1969d6cce02SEitan AdlerBoolean flags are toggles. 1979d6cce02SEitan AdlerA second specification of any of these options will negate the first. 1989d6cce02SEitan Adler.Sh "INTERACTIVE MODE" 1993be6ef06SEitan AdlerWhen 2009d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 2013be6ef06SEitan Adleris running in \*(lqinteractive mode\*(rq, it reads commands from the 2029d6cce02SEitan Adlerterminal and acts upon them accordingly. 2039d6cce02SEitan AdlerIn this mode, the terminal is 2043be6ef06SEitan Adlerput in \*(lqCBREAK\*(rq, so that a character will be 2059d6cce02SEitan Adlerprocessed as soon as it is typed. 2069d6cce02SEitan AdlerAlmost always, a key will be 2073be6ef06SEitan Adlerpressed when 2089d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 2093be6ef06SEitan Adleris between displays; that is, while it is waiting for 2109d6cce02SEitan Adler.Ar time 2119d6cce02SEitan Adlerseconds to elapse. 2129d6cce02SEitan AdlerIf this is the case, the command will be 2133be6ef06SEitan Adlerprocessed and the display will be updated immediately thereafter 2149d6cce02SEitan Adler(reflecting any changes that the command may have specified). 2159d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis 2169d6cce02SEitan Adlerhappens even if the command was incorrect. 2179d6cce02SEitan AdlerIf a key is pressed while 2189d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 2193be6ef06SEitan Adleris in the middle of updating the display, it will finish the update and 2209d6cce02SEitan Adlerthen process the command. 2219d6cce02SEitan AdlerSome commands require additional information, 2229d6cce02SEitan Adlerand the user will be prompted accordingly. 2239d6cce02SEitan AdlerWhile typing this information 2243be6ef06SEitan Adlerin, the user's erase and kill keys (as set up by the command 2259d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr stty 1 ) 2263be6ef06SEitan Adlerare recognized, and a newline terminates the input. 2279d6cce02SEitan Adler.Pp 2283be6ef06SEitan AdlerThese commands are currently recognized (^L refers to control-L): 2299d6cce02SEitan Adler.Bl -tag -width indent 2309d6cce02SEitan Adler.It ^L 2313be6ef06SEitan AdlerRedraw the screen. 2329d6cce02SEitan Adler.It h 2339d6cce02SEitan AdlerDisplay a summary of the commands (help screen). 2349d6cce02SEitan AdlerVersion information 2353be6ef06SEitan Adleris included in this display. 2369d6cce02SEitan Adler.It q 2373be6ef06SEitan AdlerQuit 2389d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 2399d6cce02SEitan Adler.It d 2403be6ef06SEitan AdlerChange the number of displays to show (prompt for new number). 2413be6ef06SEitan AdlerRemember that the next display counts as one, so typing 2429d6cce02SEitan Adler.It d1 2433be6ef06SEitan Adlerwill make 2449d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 2453be6ef06SEitan Adlershow one final display and then immediately exit. 2469d6cce02SEitan Adler.It m 2473be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display between 'cpu' and 'io' modes. 2489d6cce02SEitan Adler.It n or # 2493be6ef06SEitan AdlerChange the number of processes to display (prompt for new number). 2509d6cce02SEitan Adler.It s 2513be6ef06SEitan AdlerChange the number of seconds to delay between displays 2523be6ef06SEitan Adler(prompt for new number). 2539d6cce02SEitan Adler.It S 2543be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of system processes. 2559d6cce02SEitan Adler.It a 2563be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of process titles. 2579d6cce02SEitan Adler.It k 2589d6cce02SEitan AdlerSend a signal (\*(lqkill\*(rq by default) to a list of processes. 2593be6ef06SEitan AdlerThis acts similarly to the command 2609d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr kill 1 . 2619d6cce02SEitan Adler.It r 2629d6cce02SEitan AdlerChange the priority (the \*(lqnice\*(rq) of a list of processes. 2639d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis acts similarly to 2649d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr renice 8 . 2659d6cce02SEitan Adler.It u 2663be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay only processes owned by a specific set of usernames (prompt for 2679d6cce02SEitan Adlerusername). 2689d6cce02SEitan AdlerIf the username specified is simply \*(lq+\*(rq or \*(lq-\*(rq, 2699d6cce02SEitan Adlerthen processes belonging to all users will be displayed. 2709d6cce02SEitan AdlerUsernames can be added 2713be6ef06SEitan Adlerto and removed from the set by prepending them with \*(lq+\*(rq and 2723be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(lq-\*(rq, respectively. 2739d6cce02SEitan Adler.It o 2749d6cce02SEitan AdlerChange the order in which the display is sorted. 2759d6cce02SEitan AdlerThe sort key names include 2769d6cce02SEitan Adler\*(lqcpu\*(rq, \*(lqres\*(rq, \*(lqsize\*(rq, 2779d6cce02SEitan Adler\*(lqtime\*(rq. 2789d6cce02SEitan AdlerThe default is cpu. 2799d6cce02SEitan Adler.It p 28051b29cb7SRoman BogorodskiyDisplay a specific process (prompt for pid). 28151b29cb7SRoman BogorodskiyIf the pid specified is simply \*(lq+\*(rq, then show all processes. 2829d6cce02SEitan Adler.It e 2833be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay a list of system errors (if any) generated by the last 2843be6ef06SEitan Adlercommand. 2859d6cce02SEitan Adler.It B H 2863be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of threads. 2879d6cce02SEitan Adler.It i or I 2883be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of idle processes. 2899d6cce02SEitan Adler.It j 2903be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of 2919d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr jail 8 2923be6ef06SEitan AdlerID. 2939d6cce02SEitan Adler.It J 2943be6ef06SEitan AdlerDisplay only processes owned by a specific jail (prompt for jail). 2953be6ef06SEitan AdlerIf the jail specified is simply \*(lq+\*(rq, then processes belonging 2963be6ef06SEitan Adlerto all jails and the host will be displayed. 2973be6ef06SEitan AdlerThis will also enable the display of JID. 2989d6cce02SEitan Adler.It P 2993be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of per-CPU statistics. 3009d6cce02SEitan Adler.It T 3019d6cce02SEitan AdlerToggle display of TID and PID 3029d6cce02SEitan Adler.It t 3033be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of the 3049d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm 3053be6ef06SEitan Adlerprocess. 3069d6cce02SEitan Adler.It w 3073be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of swap usage. 3089d6cce02SEitan Adler.It z 3093be6ef06SEitan AdlerToggle the display of the system idle process. 3109d6cce02SEitan Adler.El 3119d6cce02SEitan Adler.Sh "THE DISPLAY" 3123be6ef06SEitan AdlerThe top few lines of the display show general information 3133be6ef06SEitan Adlerabout the state of the system, including 3143be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe last process id assigned to a process (on most systems), 3153be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe three load averages, 3163be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe current time, 3173be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe number of existing processes, 3183be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe number of processes in each state 3193be6ef06SEitan Adler(sleeping, running, starting, zombies, and stopped), 3203be6ef06SEitan Adlerand a percentage of time spent in each of the processor states 3213be6ef06SEitan Adler(user, nice, system, and idle). 3223be6ef06SEitan AdlerIt also includes information about physical and virtual memory allocation. 3239d6cce02SEitan Adler.Pp 3243be6ef06SEitan AdlerThe remainder of the screen displays information about individual 3259d6cce02SEitan Adlerprocesses. 3269d6cce02SEitan AdlerThis display is similar in spirit to 3279d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr ps 1 3289d6cce02SEitan Adlerbut it is not exactly the same. 3299d6cce02SEitan AdlerPID is the process id, 3303be6ef06SEitan AdlerJID, when displayed, is the 3319d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr jail 8 3323be6ef06SEitan AdlerID corresponding to the process, 3333be6ef06SEitan AdlerUSERNAME is the name of the process's owner (if 3349d6cce02SEitan Adler.Fl u 3353be6ef06SEitan Adleris specified, a UID column will be substituted for USERNAME), 3363be6ef06SEitan AdlerPRI is the current priority of the process, 3379d6cce02SEitan AdlerNICE is the 3389d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr nice 1 3399d6cce02SEitan Adleramount, 3403be6ef06SEitan AdlerSIZE is the total size of the process (text, data, and stack), 3413be6ef06SEitan AdlerRES is the current amount of resident memory, 3423be6ef06SEitan AdlerSWAP is the approximate amount of swap, if enabled 3433be6ef06SEitan Adler(SIZE, RES and SWAP are given in kilobytes), 3443be6ef06SEitan AdlerSTATE is the current state (one of \*(lqSTART\*(rq, \*(lqRUN\*(rq 3453be6ef06SEitan Adler(shown as \*(lqCPUn\*(rq on SMP systems), \*(lqSLEEP\*(rq, \*(lqSTOP\*(rq, 3463be6ef06SEitan Adler\*(lqZOMB\*(rq, \*(lqWAIT\*(rq, \*(lqLOCK\*(rq or the event on which the 3473be6ef06SEitan Adlerprocess waits), 3483be6ef06SEitan AdlerC is the processor number on which the process is executing 3493be6ef06SEitan Adler(visible only on SMP systems), 3503be6ef06SEitan AdlerTIME is the number of system and user cpu seconds that the process has used, 3513be6ef06SEitan AdlerWCPU, when displayed, is the weighted cpu percentage (this is the same 3523be6ef06SEitan Adlervalue that 3539d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr ps 1 3543be6ef06SEitan Adlerdisplays as CPU), 3553be6ef06SEitan AdlerCPU is the raw percentage and is the field that is sorted to determine 3563be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe order of the processes, and 3573be6ef06SEitan AdlerCOMMAND is the name of the command that the process is currently running 3583be6ef06SEitan Adler(if the process is swapped out, this column is marked \*(lq<swapped>\*(rq). 3599d6cce02SEitan Adler.Pp 3603be6ef06SEitan AdlerIf a process is in the \*(lqSLEEP\*(rq or \*(lqLOCK\*(rq state, 3613be6ef06SEitan Adlerthe state column will report the name of the event or lock on which the 3623be6ef06SEitan Adlerprocess is waiting. 3633be6ef06SEitan AdlerLock names are prefixed with an asterisk \*(lq*\*(rq while sleep events 3643be6ef06SEitan Adlerare not. 365fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Sh DESCRIPTION OF MEMORY 366fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Bd -literal 367fab44dc3SMateusz PiotrowskiMem: 61M Active, 86M Inact, 368K Laundry, 22G Wired, 102G Free 368fab44dc3SMateusz PiotrowskiARC: 15G Total, 9303M MFU, 6155M MRU, 1464K Anon, 98M Header, 35M Other 369fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski 15G Compressed, 27G Uncompressed, 1.75:1 Ratio, 174M Overhead 370fab44dc3SMateusz PiotrowskiSwap: 4096M Total, 532M Free, 13% Inuse, 80K In, 104K Out 371fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Ed 372fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Ss Physical Memory Stats 373fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Bl -tag -width "Uncompressed" -compact 374fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Active 375fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of bytes active 376fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Inact 377fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of clean bytes inactive 378fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Laundry 379fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of dirty bytes queued for laundering 380fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Wired 381fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of bytes wired down, including IO-level cached file data pages 382fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Buf 383fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of bytes used for IO-level disk caching 384fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Free 385fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of bytes free 386fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.El 387fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Ss ZFS ARC Stats 388fab44dc3SMateusz PiotrowskiThese stats are only displayed when the ARC is in use. 3899d6cce02SEitan Adler.Pp 390fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Bl -tag -width "Uncompressed" -compact 391fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Total 392fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of wired bytes used for the ZFS ARC 393fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em MRU 394fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of ARC bytes holding most recently used data 395fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em MFU 396fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of ARC bytes holding most frequently used data 397fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Anon 398fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of ARC bytes holding in flight data 399fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Header 400fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskinumber of ARC bytes holding headers 401fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Other 402fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskimiscellaneous ARC bytes 403fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Compressed 404fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskibytes of memory used by ARC caches 405fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Uncompressed 406fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskibytes of data stored in ARC caches before compression 407fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Ratio 408fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskicompression ratio of data cached in the ARC 409fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.El 410fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Ss Swap Stats 411fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Bl -tag -width "Uncompressed" -compact 412fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Total 413fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskitotal available swap usage 414fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Free 415fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskitotal free swap usage 416fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Inuse 417fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskiswap usage 418fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em \&In 419fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskibytes paged in from swap devices (last interval) 420fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Em Out 421fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskibytes paged out to swap devices (last interval) 422fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.El 4239d6cce02SEitan Adler.Sh ENVIRONMENT 424fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Bl -tag -width "Uncompressed" 425fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.It Ev TOP 4269d6cce02SEitan AdlerDefault set of arguments to 4279d6cce02SEitan Adler.Nm . 428ecc2b89fSHiroki Sato.It Ev LC_CTYPE 429ecc2b89fSHiroki SatoThe locale to use when displaying the 430ecc2b89fSHiroki Sato.Va argv 431ecc2b89fSHiroki Satovector when 432ecc2b89fSHiroki Sato.Fl a 433ecc2b89fSHiroki Satoflag is specified. 4349d6cce02SEitan Adler.El 4359d6cce02SEitan Adler.Sh SEE ALSO 4369d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr kill 1 , 4379d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr ps 1 , 4389d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr stty 1 , 4399d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr getrusage 2 , 4409d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr humanize_number 3 , 4419d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr mem 4 , 4429d6cce02SEitan Adler.Xr renice 8 443fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Sh AUTHORS 444fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.An William LeFebvre, EECS Department, Northwestern University 445fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Sh BUGS 446fab44dc3SMateusz PiotrowskiThe command name for swapped processes should be tracked down, but this 447fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskiwould make the program run slower. 448fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Pp 449fab44dc3SMateusz PiotrowskiAs with 450fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Xr ps 1 , 451fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskithings can change while 452fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowski.Nm 453fab44dc3SMateusz Piotrowskiis collecting information for an update. 454fab44dc3SMateusz PiotrowskiThe picture it gives is only a close approximation to reality. 455