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Best linux process monitor utlity
Best linux process monitor utlity




best linux process monitor utlity
  1. #BEST LINUX PROCESS MONITOR UTLITY CODE#
  2. #BEST LINUX PROCESS MONITOR UTLITY WINDOWS#

Items 2-3 make it absolutely unusable, the only hack I found to prevent this is to put the leftmost monitor to be logically at bottom, not at the left, but I think such a workarounds must not be necessary to work with a descent operating system

#BEST LINUX PROCESS MONITOR UTLITY WINDOWS#

There is no "sticky cursor" option that prevents mouse cursor to accidently leave current monitor - a useful feature that is available to windows users via 3rd party utility. A combined and flexible tool which can be used to monitor memory, process, network or disk space performance, it is a good replacement of ifstat, iostat, dmstat etc.

#BEST LINUX PROCESS MONITOR UTLITY CODE#

  • Looks like Mint does not distinguish between primary/secondary monitor at all, because it just opens everything on the left, even code completion pop-ups in IDE! - that it absolutely insane.
  • If you are looking for a quick display of network bandwidth, a command-line monitoring tool will do the.

    best linux process monitor utlity

    A package manager tool (yum or apt) A terminal window/command line (Ctrl-Alt-T, Ctrl-Alt-F2) 9 Best Network Monitoring Tools For Linux.

    best linux process monitor utlity

  • The same problem is noticed in windows as well but at least it remembers which monitor is set to primary and opens apps there, while Linux Mint just puts them onto the leftmost one. For CentOS and RHEL Linux, the EPEL (Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux) repositories must be available.
  • I already know callgrind offering some basic profiling features but only with debugging information and lacking most of the other mentioned information.
  • Apps do not remember which monitor they belong to, so after I put my device/monitors to sleep and then wake up - all applications are on the same monitor and I have to start my day by sorting them back I am looking for a way to profile a single process including time spent for CPU, I/O, memory usage over time and optionally system calls.
  • I have been using Linux Mint for a couple of years, and everything was fine until I decided to plug in second monitor, that's when I discovered a lot of severe problems that made me to start thinking about switching back to windows.






    Best linux process monitor utlity