If you call the top command, you get all the running processes. But how can I limit the output only to a certain process name like "java"?
I've tried this top -l 2 | grep java but in this way you get only snapshots and not a continuously updated list. And top -l 0 | grep java is not really clear.
I prefer the following so I can still use top interactively without having to look up the pids each time I run it:
top -p `pgrep process-name | tr "\\n" "," | sed 's/,$//'`
Of course if the processes change you'll have to re-run the command.
Explanation:
pgrep process-name
returns a list of process ids which are separated by newlinestr "\\n" ","
translates these newlines into commas, because top wants a comma-separated list of process idssed
is a stream editor, andsed 's/,$//'
is used here to remove the trailing comma
Find the pids of the processes you want to monitor and then use the -p
option which allows you to provide a list of pids to the top
command.
Example:
top -p 18884 -p 18892 -p 18919
PID USER PRI NI SIZE RSS SHARE STAT %CPU %MEM TIME CPU COMMAND
18884 user 25 0 672M 95M 9476 S 0.0 1.1 0:02 1 java
18892 user 25 0 2280M 123M 12252 S 0.0 1.5 0:05 1 java
18919 user 22 0 1492M 198M 28708 S 0.0 2.4 0:07 1 java
(I believe you can also pass in a comma-separated list.)
how about top -b | grep java
Expanding on @dogbane's answer, you can get all the PIDs for a named process with pgrep
to do the following:
top -p "$(pgrep -d ',' java)"
Use the watch command
watch -d 'top -n1 | grep mysql'
Using the answer from here I was able to create a one liner
top -pid $(pgrep process_name | sed -e ':a' -e 'N' -e '$!ba' -e 's/\n/ -pid /g')
This works for me on MacOS 10.12 (Sierra)
I solved my problem using:
top -n1 -b | grep "proccess name"
in this case:
-n is used to set how many times top will what proccess
and -b is used to show all pids
it's prevents errors like : top: pid limit (20) exceeded
The following code updates a list of processes every 5 seconds via the watch command:
watch -n 5 -t top -b -n 1 -p$(pgrep java | head -20 | tr "\\n" "," | sed 's/,$//')
I run it (eg.): top -b | egrep -w 'java|mysqld'
Suppose .. if we have more than 20 process running on the server with the same name ... this will not help
top -p pgrep oracle | head -n 20 | tr "\\n" "," | sed 's/,$//'
It will try to list and provide real time output of 20 process where we have good chance of missing other prcesses which consumes more resource ....
I am still looking for better option on this
A more specific case, like I actually was looking for:
For Java processes you can also use jps -q
whereby jps is a tool from $JAVA_HOME/bin and hence should be in your $PATH.
I came here looking for the answer to this on OSX. I ended up getting what I wanted with bash and awk:
topfiltered() {
[[ -z "$1" ]] && return
dump="/tmp/top_dump"
rm -f "$dump"
while :; do
clear
[[ -s "$dump" ]] && head -n $(( $LINES - 1 )) "$dump"
top -l 1 -o cpu -ncols $(( $COLUMNS / 8 )) | awk -v p="$(pgrep -d ' ' $@)" '
BEGIN { split(p, arr); for (k in arr) pids[arr[k]]=1 }
NR<=12 || ($1 in pids)
' >"$dump"
done
}
I loop top in logging mode and filter it with awk, building an associative array from the output of pgrep. Awk prints the first 12 lines, where line 12 is the column headers, and then every line which has a pid that's a key in the array. The dump file is used for a more watchable loop.
just top -bn 1 | grep java
will do the trick for you
Running the below will give continuous update in console:
bcsmc2rtese001 [~]$ echo $SHELL
/bin/bash
bcsmc2rtese001 [~]$ top | grep efare or watch -d 'top | grep efare' or top -p pid
27728 efare 15 0 75184 3180 1124 S 0.3 0.0 728:28.93 tclsh
27728 efare 15 0 75184 3180 1124 S 0.7 0.0 728:28.95 tclsh
Here's the only solution so far for MacOS:
top -pid `pgrep java | awk 'ORS=" -pid "' | sed 's/.\{6\}$//'`
though this will undesirably report invalid option or syntax: -pid
if there are no java
processes alive.
EXPLANATION
The other solutions posted here use the format top -p id1,id2,id3
, but MacOS' top
only supports the unwieldy format top -pid id1 -pid id2 -pid id3
.
So firstly, we obtain the list of process ids which have process name "java":
pgrep java
and we pipe this to awk
which joins the results with delimitor " -pid "
| awk 'ORS=" -pid "'
Alas, this leaves a trailing delimitor! For example, we may so far have obtained the string "123 -pid 456 -pid 789 -pid "
.
We then just use sed
to shave off the final 6 characters of the delimitor.
| sed 's/.\{6\}$//'`
We're ready to pass the results to top
:
top -pid `...`
Using the approach mentioned in the answer by Rick Byers:
top -p `pgrep java | paste -sd "," -`
but I had more than 20 processes running so following command can be helpful for someone who encounter a similar situation.
top -p `pgrep java | head -n 20 | paste -sd "," -`
pgrep
gets the list of processes with given name - java in this case. head
is used to get first 20 pids because top cannot handle more than 20 pids when using -p argument. Finally paste
joins the list of pids with ','.
You can control the process name you are looking for in the above command and the number of processes with that name you are interested to watch. You can ignore the head -n 20
part if the number of your processes with the given name is less than 20.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3727793/limit-the-output-of-the-top-command-to-a-specific-process-name