enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. nice (Unix) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nice_(Unix)

    nice is a program found on Unix and Unix-like operating systems such as Linux.It directly maps to a kernel call of the same name. nice is used to invoke a utility or shell script with a particular CPU priority, thus giving the process more or less CPU time than other processes.

  3. ps (Unix) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ps_(Unix)

    Process ID number PPID: ID number of the process's parent process PRI: Priority of the process RSS: Resident set size: S or STAT: Process status code START or STIME: Time when the process started VSZ: Virtual memory usage TIME: The amount of CPU time used by the process TT or TTY: Terminal associated with the process UID or USER: Username of ...

  4. List of performance analysis tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_performance...

    Linux C, C++, Fortran/Fortran90 and Python applications. Performance profiler. Shows I/O, communication, floating point operation usage and memory access costs. Supports multi-threaded and multi-process applications - such as those with MPI or OpenMP parallelism and scales to very high node counts. Proprietary CodeAnalyst by AMD: Linux, Windows

  5. How to check the CPU usage on your computer to see how ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/check-cpu-usage-computer-see...

    For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us

  6. top (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_(software)

    The program produces an ordered list of running processes selected by user-specified criteria, and updates it periodically. Default ordering is by CPU usage, and only the top CPU consumers are shown. top shows how much processing power and memory are being used, as well as other information about the running processes.

  7. procfs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procfs

    The proc filesystem (procfs) is a special filesystem in Unix-like operating systems that presents information about processes and other system information in a hierarchical file-like structure, providing a more convenient and standardized method for dynamically accessing process data held in the kernel than traditional tracing methods or direct access to kernel memory.

  8. Process control block - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_control_block

    A process control block (PCB), also sometimes called a process descriptor, is a data structure used by a computer operating system to store all the information about a process. When a process is created (initialized or installed), the operating system creates a corresponding process control block, which specifies and tracks the process state (i ...

  9. cgroups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cgroups

    cgroups (abbreviated from control groups) is a Linux kernel feature that limits, accounts for, and isolates the resource usage (CPU, memory, disk I/O, etc. [1]) of a collection of processes. Engineers at Google started the work on this feature in 2006 under the name "process containers". [2]