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TOP(1)									TOP(1)

NAME
       top - display and update	information about the top cpu processes

SYNOPSIS
       top  [ -SbiInqutv ] [ -dcount ] [ -stime	] [ -ofield ] [	-Uusername ] [
       number ]

DESCRIPTION
       Top displays the	top processes on the system and	 periodically  updates
       this  information.   If standard	output is an intelligent terminal (see
       below) then as many processes as	will fit on the	 terminal  screen  are
       displayed  by  default.	 Otherwise,  a	good  number of	them are shown
       (around 20).  Raw cpu percentage	is used	to  rank  the  processes.   If
       number  is  given,  then	 the  top  number  processes will be displayed
       instead of the default.

       Top makes a distinction between terminals that support  advanced	 capa-
       bilities	and those that do not.	This distinction affects the choice of
       defaults	for certain options.  In the remainder of  this	 document,  an
       "intelligent"  terminal	is  one	that supports cursor addressing, clear
       screen, and clear to end	of line.  Conversely, a	"dumb" terminal	is one
       that  does  not	support	 such features.	 If the	output of top is redi-
       rected to a file, it acts as if it were being run on a dumb terminal.

OPTIONS
       -S     Show system processes in the  display.   Normally,  system  pro-
	      cesses  such  as	the pager and the swapper are not shown.  This
	      option makes them	visible.

       -b     Use "batch" mode.	 In this mode, all input from the terminal  is
	      ignored.	Interrupt characters (such as ^C and ^\) still have an
	      effect.  This is the default on a	dumb  terminal,	 or  when  the
	      output is	not a terminal.

       -i     Use  "interactive" mode.	In this	mode, any input	is immediately
	      read for processing.  See	the section on "Interactive Mode"  for
	      an  explanation of which keys perform what functions.  After the
	      command is processed, the	screen will  immediately  be  updated,
	      even  if	the  command  was  not	understood.   This mode	is the
	      default when standard output is an intelligent terminal.

       -I     Do not display idle processes.  By default,  top	displays  both
	      active and idle processes.

       -t     Do not display the top process.

       -n     Use  "non-interactive" mode.  This is identical to "batch" mode.

       -q     Renice top to -20	so that	it will	run faster.  This can be  used
	      when  the	system is being	very sluggish to improve the possibil-
	      ity of discovering the problem.  This option can only be used by
	      root.

       -u     Do not take the time to map uid numbers to usernames.  Normally,
	      top will read as much of the file	"/etc/passwd" as is  necessary
	      to  map  all the user id numbers it encounters into login	names.
	      This option disables all that, while possibly decreasing	execu-
	      tion  time.  The uid numbers are displayed instead of the	names.

       -v     Write version number information to  stderr  then	 exit  immedi-
	      ately.   No  other  processing  takes  place when	this option is
	      used.  To	see current revision information while top is running,
	      use the help command "?".

       -dcount
	      Show only	count displays,	then exit.  A display is considered to
	      be one update of the screen.  This option	 allows	 the  user  to
	      select  the  number of displays he wants to see before top auto-
	      matically	exits.	For intelligent	terminals, no upper  limit  is
	      set.  The	default	is 1 for dumb terminals.

       -stime Set  the	delay  between	screen	updates	 to time seconds.  The
	      default delay between updates is 2 seconds.

       -ofield
	      Sort the process display area on the specified field.  The field
	      name  is	the  name  of the column as seen in the	output,	but in
	      lower case.  Likely values are "cpu", "size", "res", and "time",
	      but  may vary on different operating systems.  Note that not all
	      operating	systems	support	this option.

       -Uusername
	      Show only	those processes	owned by username.  This  option  cur-
	      rently  only  accepts usernames and will not understand uid num-
	      bers.

       Both count and number fields can	be specified as	"infinite", indicating
       that  they  can	stretch	 as  far as possible.  This is accomplished by
       using any proper	prefix	of  the	 keywords  "infinity",	"maximum",  or
       "all".	The  default for count on an intelligent terminal is, in fact,
       infinity.

       The environment variable	TOP is examined	for options before the command
       line  is	 scanned.  This	enables	a user to set his or her own defaults.
       The number of processes to display can also be specified	in  the	 envi-
       ronment variable	TOP.  The options -I, -S, -u, and -t are actually tog-
       gles.  A	second specification of	any of these options will  negate  the
       first.	Thus  a	 user who has the environment variable TOP set to "-I"
       may use the command "top	-I" to see idle	processes.

INTERACTIVE MODE
       When top	is running in "interactive mode", it reads commands  from  the
       terminal	and acts upon them accordingly.	 In this mode, the terminal is
       put in "CBREAK",	so that	a character will be processed as soon as it is
       typed.	Almost	always,	a key will be pressed when top is between dis-
       plays; that is, while it	is waiting for time  seconds  to  elapse.   If
       this is the case, the command will be processed and the display will be
       updated immediately thereafter (reflecting any changes that the command
       may  have  specified).  This happens even if the	command	was incorrect.
       If a key	is pressed while top is	in the middle of updating the display,
       it  will	finish the update and then process the command.	 Some commands
       require additional information, and the user will be  prompted  accord-
       ingly.	While  typing  this  information in, the user's	erase and kill
       keys (as	set up by the command stty) are	recognized, and	a newline ter-
       minates the input.

       These commands are currently recognized (^L refers to control-L):

       ^L     Redraw the screen.

       h or ? Display a	summary	of the commands	(help screen).	Version	infor-
	      mation is	included in this display.

       q      Quit top.

       d      Change the number	of displays to show (prompt for	 new  number).
	      Remember	that the next display counts as	one, so	typing d1 will
	      make top show one	final display and then immediately exit.

       n or # Change the number	of processes to	display	(prompt	for  new  num-
	      ber).

       s      Change  the  number of seconds to	delay between displays (prompt
	      for new number).

       k      Send a signal ("kill" by default)	to a list of processes.	  This
	      acts similarly to	the command kill(1)).

       r      Change  the  priority (the "nice") of a list of processes.  This
	      acts similarly to	the command renice(8)).

       u      Display only processes owned by a	specific username (prompt  for
	      username).   If  the username specified is simply	"+", then pro-
	      cesses belonging to all users will be displayed.

       o      Change the order in which	the display is sorted.	 This  command
	      is  not  available on all	systems.  The sort key names vary fron
	      system to	system but usually  include:   "cpu",  "res",  "size",
	      "time".  The default is cpu.

       e      Display  a  list of system errors	(if any) generated by the last
	      kill or renice command.

       i      (or I) Toggle the	display	of idle	processes.

       t      Toggle the display of the	top process.

THE DISPLAY
       The actual display varies depending on the  specific  variant  of  Unix
       that  the  machine  is running.	This description may not exactly match
       what is seen by top running on this  particular	machine.   Differences
       are listed at the end of	this manual entry.

       The  top	 few  lines  of	the display show general information about the
       state of	the system, including  the  last  process  id  assigned	 to  a
       process	(on  most systems), the	three load averages, the current time,
       the number of existing processes, the number of processes in each state
       (sleeping,  running,  starting, zombies,	and stopped), and a percentage
       of time spent in	each of	the processor states (user, nice, system,  and
       idle).	It also	includes information about physical and	virtual	memory
       allocation.

       The remainder of	the screen displays information	about individual  pro-
       cesses.	 This  display	is  similar  in	 spirit	to ps(1) but it	is not
       exactly the same.  PID is the process id, USERNAME is the name  of  the
       process's  owner	 (if -u	is specified, a	UID column will	be substituted
       for USERNAME), PRI is the current priority of the process, NICE is  the
       nice  amount  (in  the  range -20 to 20), SIZE is the total size	of the
       process (text, data, and	stack),	RES is the current amount of  resident
       memory (both SIZE and RES are given in kilobytes), STATE	is the current
       state (one of "sleep", "WAIT", "run", "idl", "zomb", or	"stop"),  TIME
       is the number of	system and user	cpu seconds that the process has used,
       WCPU, when displayed, is	the weighted cpu percentage (this is the  same
       value that ps(1)	displays as CPU), CPU is the raw percentage and	is the
       field that is sorted to determine the order of the processes, and  COM-
       MAND  is	 the name of the command that the process is currently running
       (if the process is swapped out, this column is marked "<swapped>").

NOTES
       The "ABANDONED" state (known in the kernel as "SWAIT")  was  abandoned,
       thus the	name.  A process should	never end up in	this state.

AUTHOR
       William LeFebvre, EECS Department, Northwestern University

ENVIRONMENT
       TOP  user-configurable defaults for options.

FILES
       /dev/kmem      kernel memory
       /dev/mem	      physical memory
       /etc/passwd	   used	to map uid numbers to user names
       /boot/kernel/kernel system image

BUGS
       Don't shoot me, but the default for -I has changed once again.  So many
       people were confused by the fact	that top wasn't	showing	them  all  the
       processes  that	I  have	decided	to make	the default behavior show idle
       processes, just like it did in version 2.  But  to  appease  folks  who
       can't  stand  that  behavior, I have added the ability to set "default"
       options in the environment variable  TOP	 (see  the  OPTIONS  section).
       Those  who  want	 the  behavior	that version 3.0 had need only set the
       environment variable TOP	to "-I".

       The command name	for swapped processes should be	tracked	down, but this
       would make the program run slower.

       As  with	 ps(1),	 things	can change while top is	collecting information
       for an update.  The picture it gives is only a close  approximation  to
       reality.

SEE ALSO
       kill(1),	ps(1), stty(1),	mem(4),	renice(8)

FreeBSD	NOTES
DISPLAY	OF THREADS
       The  '-H'  option will toggle the display of kernel visible thread con-
       texts.  At runtime the 'H' key will toggle this mode.  The  default  is
       OFF.

DESCRIPTION OF MEMORY
       Mem:  9220K  Active, 1032K Inact, 3284K Wired, 1MB Cache, 2M Buf, 1320K
       Free Swap:   91M	Total, 79M Free, 13% Inuse, 80K	In, 104	K Out

       K: Kilobyte

       M:     Megabyte

       %:     1/100

       Active:
	      number of	pages active

       Inact: number of	pages inactive

       Wired: number of	pages wired down, including cached file	data pages

       Cache: number of	pages used for VM-level	disk caching

       Buf:   number of	pages used for BIO-level disk caching

       Free:  number of	pages free

       Total: total available swap usage

       Free:  total free swap usage

       Inuse: swap usage

       In:    pages paged in from swap devices (last interval)

       Out:   pages paged out to swap devices (last interval)

4th Berkeley Distribution	     Local				TOP(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | INTERACTIVE MODE | THE DISPLAY | NOTES | AUTHOR | ENVIRONMENT | FILES | BUGS | SEE ALSO | FreeBSD NOTES | DISPLAY OF THREADS | DESCRIPTION OF MEMORY

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