![]() When it start to get red, you should take a look at what is eating your CPU. ![]() On top of the screen you can observe CPU usage. You can find more details on the original project page find here:īelow is the main screen where you can see why Bashtop is so cool (it’s hard to believe it’s written in bash). ![]() In case of RHEL 7/CentOS 7 you need to perform the folowing tasks: sudo yum -y install git Sudo dnf config-manager -set-enabled PowerTools On the other side, one of the rerquirements is to have installed bash version 4.4 or higher, which means that if you are running RHEL/CentOS 8 you are fine, otherwise (RHEL7/CentOS 7) you’ll have to upgrade bash by using one of the many links, like this one:Īdditional requirements for RHEL 8/CentOS8 are to enable epel-release and PowerTools repos. Still, this one is quite special, and on the following screens you’ll see why.īashtop is created in bash which is a certanly good news since bash is present on all modern Linux systems. Quite recently I’ve discovered Bashtop utility – terminal based utility for real time monitoring of the Linux systems.Īt the first glance I thought It’s just another one top like utility among hunderds of similar utilities already available for a long time. ![]() Although the idea of the original top utility is follewed in many similar utilities for terminal based Linux monitoring, till now I’ve been using Htop, atop (which can monitor GPU on top of CPU/Mem/Net/Disk) and Nmon to do a job (later one, called „Topas on steroids” is ported from AIX to Linux). ![]()
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