The following command is useful to capture the current processes that are taking up the most CPU and store to a file:
top -c -b -n 1 > top.log
The -c
flag is particularly useful because it gives you the command line arguments of each process rather than just the process name.
Without -c
:
2497 root 18 0 11264 5888 1524 S 0.0 0.1 0:03.31 miniserv.pl
With -c
(additional useful command info):
2497 root 18 0 11264 5888 1524 S 0.0 0.1 0:03.31 /usr/bin/perl /usr/libexec/webmin/miniserv.pl /etc/webmin/miniserv.conf
The problem is that each line of output is truncated to fit on the current terminal window. This is ok if you can have a wide terminal because you have a lot of the output but if your terminal is only 165 characters wide, you only get 165 characters of information per process and it is often not enough characters to show the full process command. This is a particular problem when the command is executed without a terminal, for example if you do it via a cron job.
Does anyone know how to stop top
truncating data or force top
to display a certain number of characters per line?
This is not urgent because there is an alternative method of getting the top 10 processes ordered by CPU usage:
ps -eo pcpu,pmem,user,args | sort -r -k1 | head -n 10
You can set
COLUMNS
environment variable to a large value. For example, to set it just fortop
invocation:At least it works in bash 4.0.33 on Ubuntu 9.10.