@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agoI'm ditching htop for btop, look how cool it islemmy.mlimagemessage-square141fedilinkarrow-up1530arrow-down112
arrow-up1518arrow-down1imageI'm ditching htop for btop, look how cool it islemmy.ml@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agomessage-square141fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink18•1 year agoTeach me how to know which process is hogging my memory or CPU, in less than 5 steps without htop?
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•edit-21 year agoLol, top. Try that to figure out the load on a 256 core DGX slurm setup with that shit. Top is barely usable on consumer hardware…
minus-squareWuTang linkfedilinkEnglish-1•1 year agodo you experience that often ? anyway, the plain, basic ‘top’ command can provide it to you. There’s literally a column %CPU and %MEM
Teach me how to know which process is hogging my memory or CPU, in less than 5 steps without htop?
Launch top? Quick glance, type ‘q’, then kill
Just type
k
to kill.Lol, top. Try that to figure out the load on a 256 core DGX slurm setup with that shit. Top is barely usable on consumer hardware…
do you experience that often ? anyway, the plain, basic ‘top’ command can provide it to you. There’s literally a column %CPU and %MEM
This. Type
f
, select%MEM
, then types
andq
.