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TOP(1) General Commands Manual TOP(1)

topdisplay and update information about the top cpu processes

top [-CHIPSTabijnpqtuvxz] [-J jail] [-U uid] [-d count] [-m cpu|io] [-s time] [-o field] [-p pid] [count]

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 capabilities 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 redirected to a file, it acts as if it were being run on a dumb terminal.

Toggle CPU display mode. By default top displays the weighted CPU percentage in the WCPU column (this is the same value that ps(1) displays as CPU). Each time
flag is passed it toggles between “raw cpu” mode and “weighted cpu” mode, showing the “CPU” or the “WCPU” column respectively.
Show system processes in the display. Normally, system processes such as the pager and the swapper are not shown. This option makes them visible.
Display command names derived from the argv[] vector, rather than real executable name. It it useful when you want to watch applications, that puts their status information there. If the real name differs from argv[0], it will be displayed in parenthesis.
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.
Display each thread for a multithreaded process individually. By default a single summary line is displayed for each process.
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.
Do not display idle processes. By default, top displays both active and idle processes.
Display the jail(8) ID.
Toggle displaying thread ID (tid) instead of process id (pid).
Do not display the top process itself.
Display either 'cpu' or 'io' statistics. Default is 'cpu'.
Use “non-interactive” mode. This is identical to “batch” mode.
Display per-cpu CPU usage statistics.
Renice top to -20 so that it will run faster. This can be used when the system is being very sluggish to improve the possibility of discovering the problem. This option can only be used by root.
Do not 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 execution time. The uid numbers are displayed instead of the names.
Write version number information to stderr then exit immediately.
Display approximate swap usage for each process.
Do not display the system idle process.
count
Show only count displays, then exit. A display is considered to be one update of the screen. The default is 1 for dumb terminals. Note that for count = 1 no information is available about the percentage of time spent by the CPU in every state.
time
Set the delay between screen updates to time seconds. The default delay between updates is 1 second.
field
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: “cpu“, ”size“, ”res“, ”time“, ”pri“, ”threads“, “total“, ”read“, ”write“, ”fault“, ”vcsw“, ”ivcsw“, “jid“, ”swap“ or ”pid“.
pid
Show only the process pid.
jail
Show only those processes owned by jail. This may be either the jid or name of the jail. Use 0 to limit to host processes. Using this option implies -j.

username
Show only those processes owned by username. This option currently only accepts usernames and will not understand uid numbers.

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”. Boolean flags are toggles. A second specification of any of these options will negate the first.

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 displays; 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 accordingly. While typing this information in, the user's erase and kill keys (as set up by the command stty(1)) are recognized, and a newline terminates the input.

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

^L
Redraw the screen.
h
Display a summary of the commands (help screen). Version information 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.
m
Toggle the display between 'cpu' and 'io' modes.
n or #
Change the number of processes to display (prompt for new number).
s
Change the number of seconds to delay between displays (prompt for new number).
S
Toggle the display of system processes.
a
Toggle the display of process titles.
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 renice(8).
u
Display only processes owned by a specific set of usernames (prompt for username). If the username specified is simply “+” or “-”, then processes belonging to all users will be displayed. Usernames can be added to and removed from the set by prepending them with “+” and “-”, respectively.
o
Change the order in which the display is sorted. The sort key names include “cpu”, “res”, “size”, “time”. The default is cpu.
p
Display a specific process (prompt for pid). If the pid specified is simply “+”, then show all processes.
e
Display a list of system errors (if any) generated by the last command.
B H
Toggle the display of threads.
i or I
Toggle the display of idle processes.
j
Toggle the display of jail(8) ID.
J
Display only processes owned by a specific jail (prompt for jail). If the jail specified is simply “+”, then processes belonging to all jails and the host will be displayed. This will also enable the display of JID.
P
Toggle the display of per-CPU statistics.
T
Toggle display of TID and PID
t
Toggle the display of the top process.
w
Toggle the display of swap usage.
z
Toggle the display of the system idle process.

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 processes. This display is similar in spirit to ps(1) but it is not exactly the same. PID is the process id, JID, when displayed, is the jail(8) ID corresponding to the process, 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(1) amount, SIZE is the total size of the process (text, data, and stack), RES is the current amount of resident memory, SWAP is the approximate amount of swap, if enabled (SIZE, RES and SWAP are given in kilobytes), STATE is the current state (one of “START”, “RUN” (shown as “CPUn” on SMP systems), “SLEEP”, “STOP”, “ZOMB”, “WAIT”, “LOCK” or the event on which the process waits), C is the processor number on which the process is executing (visible only on SMP systems), 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 COMMAND is the name of the command that the process is currently running (if the process is swapped out, this column is marked “<swapped>”).

If a process is in the “SLEEP” or “LOCK” state, the state column will report the name of the event or lock on which the process is waiting. Lock names are prefixed with an asterisk “*” while sleep events are not.

Mem: 61M Active, 86M Inact, 368K Laundry, 22G Wired, 102G Free
ARC: 15G Total, 9303M MFU, 6155M MRU, 1464K Anon, 98M Header, 35M Other
     15G Compressed, 27G Uncompressed, 1.75:1 Ratio, 174M Overhead
Swap: 4096M Total, 532M Free, 13% Inuse, 80K In, 104K Out

number of bytes active
number of clean bytes inactive
number of dirty bytes queued for laundering
number of bytes wired down, including IO-level cached file data pages
number of bytes used for IO-level disk caching
number of bytes free

These stats are only displayed when the ARC is in use.

number of wired bytes used for the ZFS ARC
number of ARC bytes holding most recently used data
number of ARC bytes holding most frequently used data
number of ARC bytes holding in flight data
number of ARC bytes holding headers
miscellaneous ARC bytes
bytes of memory used by ARC caches
bytes of data stored in ARC caches before compression
compression ratio of data cached in the ARC

total available swap usage
total free swap usage
swap usage
bytes paged in from swap devices (last interval)
bytes paged out to swap devices (last interval)

Default set of arguments to top.

kill(1), ps(1), stty(1), getrusage(2), humanize_number(3), mem(4), renice(8)

William LeFebvre, EECS Department, Northwestern University

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.

October 2, 2018 FreeBSD-12.0