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Re: What's that displayed on 'top'?



On Mon, 2005-11-28 at 14:36 +0000, Henrik Morsing wrote:
> On Mon, 28 Nov 2005, Tshepang Lekhonkhobe wrote:
> 
> > Hello,
> > On the CPU row of top, there's various stuff displayed:
> > 'us' (which I assume is CPU cycles consumed by processes owned by the
> > user running top), 'sy' (which I assume is those owned by root), 'id'
> > (which I assume means idle), and there is 'wa', 'hi', 'si' whose
> > meaning I don't know.
> > I checked on the manpage without success... Could anyone tell me what
> > these last 3 (wa, hi, si) mean.
> 
> us is 'user' meaning any process regardless of owner running in user 
> space. User space is unpriviledged processes without hardware access like 
> the kernel.
> 
> sy is system. Regardless of user it's CPU cycles used by threads inside 
> the kernel e.g. working for processes asking for hardware access.
> 
> id is idle
> 
> wa is wait which is CPU cycles wasted on waiting for hardware especially 
> disk, access.
> 
> hi I've never seen
> 
> si must be swap in? Meaning pages swapped in from swap space.
> 

no: soft interrupt, hard interrupt (see archives)



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