nvtop
nvtop | radeontop | |
---|---|---|
41 | 20 | |
7,401 | 777 | |
- | - | |
8.1 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
nvtop
- Nvtop: Linux Task Monitor for Nvidia, AMD and Intel GPUs
- NVTOP Release 3.0.2 is Out
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Power State management best practices?
If you're certain your GPU has deeper power saving states than P8, I would start by checking why it's not using them. Maybe tlp, powertop or nvtop (or their documentation) can help.
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MAXn power mode in production?
Did you run any of the "dashboards" while executing the test? Like [NvTop](https://github.com/Syllo/nvtop)
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Will Pop!_OS Cosmic have well integrated app suite like Elementary OS
If you plan on making a system monitor/task manager, could you please make it display actual useful information and not just extremely basic stats like most do now. GNOME and KDE both have overly simple applications for this, that just show the CPU and memory utilisation, and it makes finding information like the processor frequency and temperature so much more difficult. On Windows, for example, the task manager performance tab shows a much greater amount of information for each system component, not just total utilisation. GPU usage is also never shown in any of the popular system monitors, something that's probably important for a lot of users. It's not even necessarily impossible since projects such as nvtop are able to. I do hope we'll eventually get a much better GUI program for monitoring our system in Linux.
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If you dont complain you get nothing! What features/bug fixes you want to see in future Linux
Can't nvtop do that?
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Looking for a GPU monitoring tool on windows like nvtop to purge VRAM
I'm looking for an alternative to nvtop. It's a Ncidia monitoring tool for Linux. You can easily monitor or kill processes via terminal. I used the nvidia-smi command on windows commanline, but it gives very little information.
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[question]Training and embedding problem
Try monitoring your VRAM using nvtop (or something), then run training, if the VRAM maxed, training stopped, then VRAM dropped, then it's 100% not enough VRAM.
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Linux is not as smooth as windows
The "nv" in "nvtop" originally stood for NVidia, and was only changed to Neat Videocard last year when it added support for AMD cards (after having been "NVidia TOP" for 5 years!) https://github.com/Syllo/nvtop/commit/fe28a13c78ddb395245f86bc0a33e6a5978f594a
radeontop
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For AMD GPU owners - Check it's being used & VRam Usage (Guide Windows/Linux)
Linux - with Terminal, install Radeontop (https://github.com/clbr/radeontop) with sudo apt install radeontop , start with radeontop . It's not cutting edge graphics but it works for me as a tool. I'm experimenting with ai apps in Linux and I need to know what my gpu is doing.
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AMDGPU_TOP - tool to show AMDGPU usage
I am currently working on a tool that will be the successor to radeontop.
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Linux system monitor shows only 6gb of RAM out of 8gb and 3.2gb is already used by system. In Windows, 2gb was reserved for AMD Radon (TM) Graphic (integrated). How I can use all of RAM ?
There's radeontop, which can show some information. That's the only thing I'm aware of.
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Usage and monitoring of integrated GPU (AMD 7700X) - what do you recommend?
Take a look at radeontop: https://github.com/clbr/radeontop
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Watch out Nvidia
https://github.com/clbr/radeontop shows 70-85% usage when playing this 4k60FPS video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXb3EKWsInQ
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WSysMon - A windows task manager clone for Linux
No, it doesn't show encode/decode. Some people on this subreddit will tell you it does for whatever reason like they do every time I bring this up, they clearly never used it or something, but no it does not. There is no easy way to see it like on Intel and Nvidia.
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GNOME (Xorg & Wayland) slows down to an unusable extent after a while (Arch + Ubuntu 22.04)
radeon-top
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Issues involving Ubuntu 20.04 and the motherboard of my first build
AMD has like 2 or 3 different drivers on nix. The default one is the open source driver. If you see the desktop, it's working. Run a game, should perform decently. You don't see the GPU in performance monitor. That's because GPU metrics aren't standard. You'd need other tools to see GPU metrics.
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One small aspect where Linux is really lacking is GPU resource monitoring
It can get worse depending on what specific aspect of the GPU is being used. Want to check if your computer is properly using hardware encoding/decoding? Well, you're in luck (with CLI tools), nvidia-smi dmon and intel_gpu_top are really good. Unless you use AMD that is, since radeontop still doesn't have a way to expose GPU encoding/decoding.
- Moving from NVIDIA to AMD on Linux for the first time
What are some alternatives?
btop - A monitor of resources
corectrl
gpu_monitor - Monitor your GPUs whether they are on a single computer or in a cluster
radeon-profile - Application to read current clocks of ATi Radeon cards (xf86-video-ati, xf86-video-amdgpu)
gpustat - 📊 A simple command-line utility for querying and monitoring GPU status
amdgpu-clocks - Simple script to control power states of amdgpu driven GPUs
permon - A tool to monitor everything you want. Clean, simple, extensible and in one place.
LACT - Linux AMDGPU Controller
ksysguard-gpu - add gpu visualization for ksysguard
tuxclocker - Qt overclocking tool for GNU/Linux
nvidia-vaapi-driver - A VA-API implemention using NVIDIA's NVDEC
SysMonTask - Linux system monitor with the compactness and usefulness of windows task manager to allow higher control and monitoring.