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PROCINFO(8)		      Linux System Manual		   PROCINFO(8)

NAME
       procinfo - display system status gathered from /proc

SYNOPSIS
       procinfo [ -fsmadiDSbrChv ] [ -nN ] [ -Ffile ]

DESCRIPTION
       procinfo	 gathers  some system data from the /proc directory and prints
       it nicely formatted on the standard output device.

       The meanings of the fields are as follows:

       Memory:
	      See the man page for free(1)  (preferably	 the  proc-version  of
	      free  (If	 you  weren't around during the Linux 1.x days, that's
	      the only version of free you'll have)).

       Bootup:
	      The time the system was booted.

       Load average:
	      The average number of jobs running, followed by  the  number  of
	      runnable	processes  and	the total number of processes (if your
	      kernel is recent enough),	 followed  by  the  PID	 of  the  last
	      process run (idem).

       user:  The amount of time spent running jobs in user space.

       nice:  The amount of time spent running niced jobs in user space.

       system:
	      The  amount  of  time  spent running in kernel space.  Note: the
	      time spent servicing interrupts is not  counted  by  the	kernel
	      (and nothing that procinfo can do about it).

       idle:  The amount of time spent doing nothing.

       uptime:
	      The time that the system has been up. The above four should more
	      or less add up to this one.

       page in:
	      The number of disk block paged into core from disk. (A block  is
	      almost always 1 kilobyte).

       page out:
	      The reverse of the above. (What does that mean, anyways?)

       swap in:
	      The number of memory pages paged in from swapspace.

       swap out:
	      The number of memory pages paged out to swapspace.

       context:
	      The total number of context switches since bootup.

       disk 1-4:
	      The  number  of  times  your hard disks have been accessed. This
	      won't work for 1.0.x/1.1.x kernels unless you have  applied  the
	      diskstat	patch  available  elsewhere  to your kernel, and might
	      give surprising results if all your hard disks are of  the  same
	      type (e.g. all IDE, all SCSI). [I'm not sure to what extend this
	      is still true with recent kernels, but I don't have a mixed sys‐
	      tem so I can't check.]

       Interrupts:
	      This  is either a single number for all IRQ channels together if
	      your kernel is older than version 1.0.5, or two rows of  numbers
	      for  each	 IRQ  channel  if  your	 kernel is at version 1.0.5 or
	      later. On Intel architecture there  are  sixteen	different  IRQ
	      channels, and their default meanings are as follows:

	      0	     Timer channel 0
	      1	     Keyboard
	      2	     Cascade for controller 2 (which controls IRQ 8-15)
	      3	     Serial Port 2
	      4	     Serial Port 1
	      5	     Parallel Port 2
	      6	     Floppy Diskette Controller
	      7	     Parallel Port 1
	      8	     Real-time Clock
	      9	     Redirected to IRQ2
	      10     --
	      11     --
	      12     --
	      13     Math Coprocessor
	      14     Hard Disk Controller
	      15     --

	      Note  that  the meanings of the IRQ channels for parallel ports,
	      serial ports and those left empty may have been changed  depend‐
	      ing  on your hardware setup. If that's the case on your machine,
	      you're probably aware of it. If you're not, upgrade to at	 least
	      Linux 1.1.43 and let procinfo enlighten you about who uses what.

       Modules:
	      The modules (loadable device drivers) installed on your machine,
	      with their sizes in kilobytes. (Only with -m or -a option). Mod‐
	      ules with a use count larger than 0 are marked with an asterisk.

       Character and Block Devices:
	      All available devices with their major numbers. (Only with -m or
	      -a option).

       File Systems:
	      All available file systems. (Only with -m or -a  option).	 Those
	      that  do	not  require an actual device (like procfs itself) are
	      noted between square brackets.

OPTIONS
       -f     Run procinfo continuously full-screen.

       -nN    Pause N second between updates. This option implies -f.  It  may
	      contain  a decimal point.	 The default is 5 seconds. When run by
	      root with a pause of 0 seconds, the  program  will  run  at  the
	      highest possible priority level.

       -m     Show  info  about	 modules and device drivers instead of CPU and
	      memory stats.

       -a     Show all information that procinfo knows how to find.

       -d     For memory, CPU  times,  paging,	swapping,  disk,  context  and
	      interrupt	 stats,	 display values per second rather than totals.
	      This option implies -f.

       -D     Same as -d, except that memory stats are displayed as totals.

       -S     When running with -d or -D, always show values per second,  even
	      when running with -n N with N greater than one second.

       -Ffile Redirect	output	to file (usually a tty). Nice if, for example,
	      you want to run procinfo permanently on a virtual console or  on
	      a terminal, by starting it from init(8) with a line like:

	      p8:23:respawn:/usr/bin/procinfo -biDn1 -F/dev/tty8

       -b     If  your	kernel	is  recent enough to display separate read and
	      write numbers for disk I/O, the -b flag makes  procinfo  display
	      numbers  of  blocks rather that numbers of I/O requests (neither
	      of which is, alas, reliably translatable into kilobytes).

       -i     Normally the IRQ portion of the display is squeezed to only dis‐
	      play non-zero IRQ channels. With this option you'll get the full
	      list, but on Alphas and on Intel boxen with 2.1.104  kernels  or
	      later procinfo won't fit inside a 80x24 screen anymore. Price of
	      progress, I suppose.

       -r     This option adds an extra line to the memory info showing 'real'
	      free memory, just as free(1) does.

       -h     Print a brief help message.

       -v     Print version info.

INTERACTIVE COMMANDS
       When  running  procinfo	fullscreen,  you  can  change its behaviour by
       pressing n, d, D, S, i, m, a, r and b, which have the  same  effect  as
       the  corresponding  command  line options.  In addition you can press q
       which quits the program; s which switches back to the main screen after
       pressing	 m  or	a;  t  which  switches back to displaying totals after
       pressing d or D; <space> which freezes  the  screen  untill  you	 press
       another	key  again;  C	and  R which sets and releases a checkpoint in
       totals mode; and finally Ctrl-L which refreshes the screen.

FILES
       /proc  The proc file system.

BUGS
       What, me worry?

SEE ALSO
       free(1), uptime(1), w(1), init(8), proc(5).

AUTHOR
       Sander van Malssen <svm@kozmix.cistron.nl>

18th Release			  2001-03-02			   PROCINFO(8)
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