System Monintors

Forum Forums General Tips and Tricks System Monintors

  • This topic has 12 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated Dec 11-11:50 pm by ile.
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  • #47042
    Member
    manyroads

      Because the issue appeared in the antiX testing topic, I thought folks might like to add their thoughts to my little list. Here are the system monitors I find helpful/ interesting/ fun.

      — bashtop (deprecated in favor of bpytop)
      — bpytop
      — glances
      — htop
      — lxtask (antiX preferred?)
      — nmon

      Are there other system monitors out there that you like?

      Pax vobiscum,
      Mark Rabideau - http://many-roads.com
      "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong." H. L. Mencken
      dwm & i3wm ~Reg. Linux User #449130
      20 Jan 2021 ~ "End of an Error"

      #47047
      Moderator
      Brian Masinick
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        Because the issue appeared in the antiX testing topic, I thought folks might like to add their thoughts to my little list. Here are the system monitors I find helpful/ interesting/ fun.

        — bashtop (deprecated in favor of bpytop)
        — bpytop
        — glances
        — htop
        — lxtask (antiX preferred?)
        — nmon

        Are there other system monitors out there that you like?

        Of the ones you mentioned, htop is the only one I happen to frequently use.

        I’m sure that many tools are handy, but like everything else in the free software community, different people use different tools.

        --
        Brian Masinick

        #47061
        Anonymous
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          For the benefit of users on the systems I support, I install
          mate-system-monitor

          For my own use,
          sudo apt install qps
          It enables you to send a specific signal to a program (vs only “kill”)
          and you can peek the runtime environment variables (as seen from a given program’s point-of-view).
          You can also view the memory pages mapped by an app and similar tech-y details.

          #47063
          Member
          andyprough
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            For my own use,
            sudo apt install qps
            It enables you to send a specific signal to a program (vs only “kill”)
            and you can peek the runtime environment variables (as seen from a given program’s point-of-view).
            You can also view the memory pages mapped by an app and similar tech-y details.

            Wow, that’s quite a system monitor. That’s a lot of detail for each package and a lot of options.

            #47064
            Member
            ModdIt
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              skidoo, thanks another really useful tip,

              the coin miners and trojan droppers will not love you for spreading this tool.

              BTW: Since following your advice regarding firefox being remotely run in headless
              that has stopped. Hopefully long term.

              #47086
              Member
              manyroads
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                Something I have found very helpful and informative is to add the following line to your .bashrc (or .zshrc.

                neofetch

                On every terminal open I get a very quick “headsup on RAM use”

                EDIT: You need to install neofetch (btw. screenfetch does pretty much the same thing.)

                • This reply was modified 2 years, 4 months ago by manyroads.
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                Pax vobiscum,
                Mark Rabideau - http://many-roads.com
                "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong." H. L. Mencken
                dwm & i3wm ~Reg. Linux User #449130
                20 Jan 2021 ~ "End of an Error"

                #47103
                Member
                Xecure
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                  For RAM I use the included script in antiX ps_mem.py
                  To watch in “real time”, I do:
                  watch sudo ps_mem.py

                  antiX Live system enthusiast.
                  General Live Boot Parameters for antiX.

                  #47106
                  Member
                  ile
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                    hello manyroads
                    Yes i hit neofetch –stdout often, for a mem look, and it is one of few places outside synaptic that displays package count installed.
                    neofetch displays a lot of items that conky has special keywords to display. i have displayed neofetch in conky instead! not a hard hit at all. From antiX-goodies package is <env-info> catches similar out no need to install neofetch (?)

                    #47130
                    Member
                    Robin
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                      This is not a system monitor literally, but I like to use the combination of monitoring

                      cpu-frequency
                      cpu-load
                      cpu-temperature
                      and memory-usage

                      which conky presents at desktop, so I can see a program I’ve started is at the edge of overloading the system.

                      Most things are present already in antiX standard desktop setup (at least in 17.4, since 19.x I hadn’t got working on this laptop until now)

                      I just had to add one line to ~/.conkyrc
                      which runs

                      ${color}Temp:${alignr}${color3}${execi 30 sensors | grep 'temp2:' | cut -c15-22}

                      and is to be placed right beneath the lines for “CPU:” and “Freq:”
                      You will have to figure out the correct parameters for grepping and cutting, according to the output of sensors command in terminal window.

                      Windows is like a submarine. Open a window and serious problems will start.

                      #47137
                      Forum Admin
                      anticapitalista
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                        hello manyroads
                        Yes i hit neofetch –stdout often, for a mem look, and it is one of few places outside synaptic that displays package count installed.
                        neofetch displays a lot of items that conky has special keywords to display. i have displayed neofetch in conky instead! not a hard hit at all. From antiX-goodies package is <env-info> catches similar out no need to install neofetch (?)

                        Well spotted ile. We have lots of undiscovered goodies…

                        Philosophers have interpreted the world in many ways; the point is to change it.

                        antiX with runit - leaner and meaner.

                        #47139
                        Member
                        ile
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                          hello manyroads
                          ,
                          hello anticapitalista
                          You are custodian of the finest small-computer Desktop system on the planet. Thanks. ___ile

                          #47140
                          Forum Admin
                          rokytnji
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                            I used to gkrellm .https://packages.debian.org/buster/gkrellm It takes conky place on the desktop. Or. You can run both if screen space is spacious.

                            I liked all the monitors till my screens got too small. eeepc 701sd , ran wbar and horizontal conky instead.
                            Then tint2 entered the picture. That was fun netbook to play with in it;s day. Hated taking the left click tap padc switch apart and cleaning and bending it to make good contact again. Left click was weakness on those netbooks.

                            Plugins

                            • This reply was modified 2 years, 4 months ago by rokytnji.

                            Sometimes I drive a crooked road to get my mind straight.
                            Not all who Wander are Lost.
                            I'm not outa place. I'm from outer space.

                            Linux Registered User # 475019
                            How to Search for AntiX solutions to your problems

                            #47142
                            Member
                            ile
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                              hello manyroads, hi rokytnji
                              On fluxbox with gkrellm
                              gkrellm can run in the slit or not in the slit.

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