sysstat
ytop
sysstat | ytop | |
---|---|---|
3 | 8 | |
2,881 | 2,016 | |
- | - | |
8.5 | 7.0 | |
3 months ago | over 3 years ago | |
C | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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.
sysstat
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How can my system load be so high if the CPUs are barely being used? Disk IO?
Well... What that's showing is that at some point in time you copied some pages into swap. Since there's no competition for that, they have just stayed there. It doesn't mean that you are seeing memory pressure now, only that at some point since the last reboot your memory usage passed the high water mark which encouraged the kernel to start thinking about swap. If you have sysstat installed you can run through sar to see when that was and even get some idea of whether or not any of those pages written to swap were ever read again, but just having some pages written to swap doesn't mean a whole lot on its own.
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How to do a hard reboot remotely on an Intel NUC
You can try sysstat/ iostat. https://github.com/sysstat/sysstat Have a cron or systemd process take periodic snapshots and log them or email them. The swordfish on paper looks fast enough, but it’s on the slow side for a NVMe. For reference I’m running a NUC8 i5 with 16GB of RAM, 1 TB Adata XPG SX8200 Pro and it’s been rock solid. Ubuntu 20.04LTS.
- I made a terminal utility to monitor some system stats. Was wondering if you guys know of anything better or if I should continue dev work on it since we need it?
ytop
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Top Productivity CLI Tools I Use on Linux
ytop - A TUI system monitor written in Rust.
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My Pop!_OS Desktop?
Looks like ytop or btm (bottom), cross-platform top alternatives written in Rust.
- Ytop -- the most underrated system monitor
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I made a terminal utility to monitor some system stats. Was wondering if you guys know of anything better or if I should continue dev work on it since we need it?
The most similar one I've used is ytop. You might be able to draw some inspiration from there.
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[Xmonad] Shakespeare would use Arch...
That would be ytop. :p
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[Xmonad] music recommendations...?
The program in the bottom left is called ytop but is no longer being maintained so it may or my not work. The alternative is called bottom.
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10 Great Homebrew formulas for Web Developers
HTOP is a great improvement of top, which I use everywhere, from DEV servers to my own laptop. I know it's not as modern as YTOP but I got used to it and can't get to change.
What are some alternatives?
Grafana - The open and composable observability and data visualization platform. Visualize metrics, logs, and traces from multiple sources like Prometheus, Loki, Elasticsearch, InfluxDB, Postgres and many more.
bottom - Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor.
atop - System and process monitor for Linux
xmobar - A minimalistic status bar
prometheus - The Prometheus monitoring system and time series database.
gotop - A terminal based graphical activity monitor inspired by gtop and vtop
xfce4-genmon-scripts - 🐭 XFCE panel generic monitor scripts
pfetch - 🐧 A pretty system information tool written in POSIX sh.
s-tui - Terminal-based CPU stress and monitoring utility
picom - A lightweight compositor for X11 (previously a compton fork)
archinstall - Arch Linux installer - guided, templates etc.
bpytop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor