NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | ENVIRONMENT | EXAMPLES | BUGS | FILES | AUTHOR | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

PIDSTAT(1)                   Linux User's Manual                  PIDSTAT(1)

NAME         top

       pidstat - Report statistics for Linux tasks.

SYNOPSIS         top

       pidstat [ -d ] [ -h ] [ -I ] [ -l ] [ -R ] [ -r ] [ -s ] [ -t ] [ -U
       [ username ] ] [ -u ] [ -V ] [ -v ] [ -w ] [ -C comm ] [ -G
       process_name ] [ --human ] [ -p { pid [,...] | SELF | ALL } ] [ -T {
       TASK | CHILD | ALL } ] [ interval [ count ] ]

DESCRIPTION         top

       The pidstat command is used for monitoring individual tasks currently
       being managed by the Linux kernel.  It writes to standard output
       activities for every task selected with option -p or for every task
       managed by the Linux kernel if option -p ALL has been used. Not
       selecting any tasks is equivalent to specifying -p ALL but only
       active tasks (tasks with non-zero statistics values) will appear in
       the report.
       The pidstat command can also be used for monitoring the child
       processes of selected tasks.  Read about option -T below.
       The interval parameter specifies the amount of time in seconds
       between each report.  A value of 0 (or no parameters at all)
       indicates that tasks statistics are to be reported for the time since
       system startup (boot).  The count parameter can be specified in
       conjunction with the interval parameter if this one is not set to
       zero. The value of count determines the number of reports generated
       at interval seconds apart. If the interval parameter is specified
       without the count parameter, the pidstat command generates reports
       continuously.
       You can select information about specific task activities using
       flags.  Not specifying any flags selects only CPU activity.

OPTIONS         top

       -C comm
              Display only tasks whose command name includes the string
              comm.  This string can be a regular expression.
       -d     Report I/O statistics (kernels 2.6.20 and later only).  The
              following values may be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task being
                     monitored.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task being
                     monitored.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task being monitored.
              kB_rd/s
                     Number of kilobytes the task has caused to be read from
                     disk per second.
              kB_wr/s
                     Number of kilobytes the task has caused, or shall cause
                     to be written to disk per second.
              kB_ccwr/s
                     Number of kilobytes whose writing to disk has been
                     cancelled by the task. This may occur when the task
                     truncates some dirty pagecache. In this case, some IO
                     which another task has been accounted for will not be
                     happening.
              iodelay
                     Block I/O delay of the task being monitored, measured
                     in clock ticks. This metric includes the delays spent
                     waiting for sync block I/O completion and for swapin
                     block I/O completion.
              Command
                     The command name of the task.
       -G process_name
              Display only processes whose command name includes the string
              process_name.  This string can be a regular expression. If
              option -t is used together with option -G then the threads
              belonging to that process are also displayed (even if their
              command name doesn't include the string process_name).
       -h     Display all activities horizontally on a single line. This is
              intended to make it easier to be parsed by other programs.
       --human
              Print sizes in human readable format (e.g. 1k, 1.23M, etc.)
              The units displayed with this option supersede any other
              default units (e.g.  kilobytes, sectors...) associated with
              the metrics.
       -I     In an SMP environment, indicate that tasks CPU usage (as
              displayed by option -u ) should be divided by the total number
              of processors.
       -l     Display the process command name and all its arguments.
       -p { pid [,...] | SELF | ALL }
              Select tasks (processes) for which statistics are to be
              reported.  pid is the process identification number. The SELF
              keyword indicates that statistics are to be reported for the
              pidstat process itself, whereas the ALL keyword indicates that
              statistics are to be reported for all the tasks managed by the
              system.
       -R     Report realtime priority and scheduling policy information.
              The following values may be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task being
                     monitored.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task being
                     monitored.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task being monitored.
              prio
                     The realtime priority of the task being monitored.
              policy
                     The scheduling policy of the task being monitored.
              Command
                     The command name of the task.
       -r     Report page faults and memory utilization.
              When reporting statistics for individual tasks, the following
              values may be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task being
                     monitored.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task being
                     monitored.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task being monitored.
              minflt/s
                     Total number of minor faults the task has made per
                     second, those which have not required loading a memory
                     page from disk.
              majflt/s
                     Total number of major faults the task has made per
                     second, those which have required loading a memory page
                     from disk.
              VSZ
                     Virtual Size: The virtual memory usage of entire task
                     in kilobytes.
              RSS
                     Resident Set Size: The non-swapped physical memory used
                     by the task in kilobytes.
              %MEM
                     The tasks's currently used share of available physical
                     memory.
              Command
                     The command name of the task.
              When reporting global statistics for tasks and all their
              children, the following values may be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task which
                     is being monitored together with its children.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task which is
                     being monitored together with its children.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task which is being
                     monitored together with its children.
              minflt-nr
                     Total number of minor faults made by the task and all
                     its children, and collected during the interval of
                     time.
              majflt-nr
                     Total number of major faults made by the task and all
                     its children, and collected during the interval of
                     time.
              Command
                     The command name of the task which is being monitored
                     together with its children.
       -s     Report stack utilization.  The following values may be
              displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task being
                     monitored.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task being
                     monitored.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task being monitored.
              StkSize
                     The amount of memory in kilobytes reserved for the task
                     as stack, but not necessarily used.
              StkRef
                     The amount of memory in kilobytes used as stack,
                     referenced by the task.
              Command
                     The command name of the task.
       -T { TASK | CHILD | ALL }
              This option specifies what has to be monitored by the pidstat
              command. The TASK keyword indicates that statistics are to be
              reported for individual tasks (this is the default option)
              whereas the CHILD keyword indicates that statistics are to be
              globally reported for the selected tasks and all their
              children. The ALL keyword indicates that statistics are to be
              reported for individual tasks and globally for the selected
              tasks and their children.
              Note: Global statistics for tasks and all their children are
              not available for all options of pidstat.  Also these
              statistics are not necessarily relevant to current time
              interval: The statistics of a child process are collected only
              when it finishes or it is killed.
       -t     Also display statistics for threads associated with selected
              tasks.
              This option adds the following values to the reports:
              TGID
                     The identification number of the thread group leader.
              TID
                     The identification number of the thread being
                     monitored.
       -U [ username ]
              Display the real user name of the tasks being monitored
              instead of the UID.  If username is specified, then only tasks
              belonging to the specified user are displayed.
       -u     Report CPU utilization.
              When reporting statistics for individual tasks, the following
              values may be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task being
                     monitored.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task being
                     monitored.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task being monitored.
              %usr
                     Percentage of CPU used by the task while executing at
                     the user level (application), with or without nice
                     priority. Note that this field does NOT include time
                     spent running a virtual processor.
              %system
                     Percentage of CPU used by the task while executing at
                     the system level (kernel).
              %guest
                     Percentage of CPU spent by the task in virtual machine
                     (running a virtual processor).
              %wait
                     Percentage of CPU spent by the task while waiting to
                     run.
              %CPU
                     Total percentage of CPU time used by the task. In an
                     SMP environment, the task's CPU usage will be divided
                     by the total number of CPU's if option -I has been
                     entered on the command line.
              CPU
                     Processor number to which the task is attached.
              Command
                     The command name of the task.
              When reporting global statistics for tasks and all their
              children, the following values may be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task which
                     is being monitored together with its children.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task which is
                     being monitored together with its children.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task which is being
                     monitored together with its children.
              usr-ms
                     Total number of milliseconds spent by the task and all
                     its children while executing at the user level
                     (application), with or without nice priority, and
                     collected during the interval of time. Note that this
                     field does NOT include time spent running a virtual
                     processor.
              system-ms
                     Total number of milliseconds spent by the task and all
                     its children while executing at the system level
                     (kernel), and collected during the interval of time.
              guest-ms
                     Total number of milliseconds spent by the task and all
                     its children in virtual machine (running a virtual
                     processor).
              Command
                     The command name of the task which is being monitored
                     together with its children.
       -V     Print version number then exit.
       -v     Report values of some kernel tables. The following values may
              be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task being
                     monitored.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task being
                     monitored.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task being monitored.
              threads
                     Number of threads associated with current task.
              fd-nr
                     Number of file descriptors associated with current
                     task.
              Command
                     The command name of the task.
       -w     Report task switching activity (kernels 2.6.23 and later
              only).  The following values may be displayed:
              UID
                     The real user identification number of the task being
                     monitored.
              USER
                     The name of the real user owning the task being
                     monitored.
              PID
                     The identification number of the task being monitored.
              cswch/s
                     Total number of voluntary context switches the task
                     made per second.  A voluntary context switch occurs
                     when a task blocks because it requires a resource that
                     is unavailable.
              nvcswch/s
                     Total number of non voluntary context switches the task
                     made per second.  A involuntary context switch takes
                     place when a task executes for the duration of its time
                     slice and then is forced to relinquish the processor.
              Command
                     The command name of the task.

ENVIRONMENT         top

       The pidstat command takes into account the following environment
       variables:
       S_COLORS
              When this variable is set, display statistics in color on the
              terminal.  Possible values for this variable are never, always
              or auto (the latter is the default).
              Please note that the color (being red, yellow, or some other
              color) used to display a value is not indicative of any kind
              of issue simply because of the color. It only indicates
              different ranges of values.
       S_COLORS_SGR
              Specify the colors and other attributes used to display
              statistics on the terminal.  Its value is a colon-separated
              list of capabilities that defaults to
              H=31;1:I=32;22:M=35;1:N=34;1:Z=34;22.  Supported capabilities
              are:
              H=     SGR (Select Graphic Rendition) substring for percentage
                     values greater than or equal to 75%.
              I=     SGR substring for item values like PID, UID or CPU
                     number.
              M=     SGR substring for percentage values in the range from
                     50% to 75%.
              N=     SGR substring for non-zero statistics values and for
                     tasks names.
              Z=     SGR substring for zero values and for threads names.
       S_TIME_FORMAT
              If this variable exists and its value is ISO then the current
              locale will be ignored when printing the date in the report
              header.  The pidstat command will use the ISO 8601 format
              (YYYY-MM-DD) instead.  The timestamp will also be compliant
              with ISO 8601 format.

EXAMPLES         top

       pidstat 2 5
              Display five reports of CPU statistics for every active task
              in the system at two second intervals.
       pidstat -r -p 1643 2 5
              Display five reports of page faults and memory statistics for
              PID 1643 at two second intervals.
       pidstat -C "fox|bird" -r -p ALL
              Display global page faults and memory statistics for all the
              processes whose command name includes the string "fox" or
              "bird".
       pidstat -T CHILD -r 2 5
              Display five reports of page faults statistics at two second
              intervals for the child processes of all tasks in the system.
              Only child processes with non-zero statistics values are
              displayed.

BUGS         top

       /proc filesystem must be mounted for the pidstat command to work.

FILES         top

       /proc contains various files with system statistics.

AUTHOR         top

       Sebastien Godard (sysstat <at> orange.fr)

SEE ALSO         top

       sar(1), top(1), ps(1), mpstat(1), iostat(1), vmstat(8)
       http://pagesperso-orange.fr/sebastien.godard/ 

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the sysstat (sysstat performance monitoring
       tools) project.  Information about the project can be found at 
       ⟨http://sebastien.godard.pagesperso-orange.fr/⟩.  If you have a bug
       report for this manual page, send it to systat-AT-orange.fr.  This
       page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository 
       ⟨https://github.com/sysstat/sysstat.git⟩ on 2017-07-05.  If you dis‐
       cover any rendering problems in this HTML version of the page, or you
       believe there is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or
       you have corrections or improvements to the information in this
       COLOPHON (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail
       to man-pages@man7.org
Linux                             MAY 2017                        PIDSTAT(1)

Pages that refer to this page: cifsiostat(1)iostat(1)mpstat(1)nfsiostat-sysstat(1)pcp-pidstat(1)sar(1)