Reputation:
Is there a command or any other way to get the current or average CPU utilization (for a multi-processor environment) in Linux?
I am using embedded Linux in a small system. Basically, I need to determine the CPU utilization, so that if it is high, I can instead divert a new process to another controller in the system, rather than executing on the main processor, which could be busy doing a more important process.
This question is not about merely prioritizing processes, the other controller can sufficiently handle the new process, just that when the main processor is not busy, I would prefer it to do the execution.
Upvotes: 17
Views: 32549
Reputation:
The answer to the question after much searching and tinkering:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(void)
{
long double a[4], b[4], loadavg;
FILE *fp;
char dump[50];
for(;;)
{
fp = fopen("/proc/stat","r");
fscanf(fp,"%*s %Lf %Lf %Lf %Lf",&a[0],&a[1],&a[2],&a[3]);
fclose(fp);
sleep(1);
fp = fopen("/proc/stat","r");
fscanf(fp,"%*s %Lf %Lf %Lf %Lf",&b[0],&b[1],&b[2],&b[3]);
fclose(fp);
loadavg = ((b[0]+b[1]+b[2]) - (a[0]+a[1]+a[2])) / ((b[0]+b[1]+b[2]+b[3]) - (a[0]+a[1]+a[2]+a[3]));
printf("The current CPU utilization is : %Lf\n",loadavg);
}
return(0);
}
I am getting the same values as those reported by the System Monitor.
Upvotes: 28
Reputation: 438
cat /proc/stat
you will see something like this
cpu 178877 11039 58012 5027374 22025 2616 1298 0 0
cpu0 122532 8808 34213 2438147 10881 1050 448 0 0
cpu1 56344 2230 23799 2589227 11143 1565 850 0 0
Simply take the sums of first three numbers and divide them with sums of first four integer
The first 4 numbers are user, nice, system, and idle times
note: This gives overall average. If you want to take spontaneous average, you should take two samples and subtract them from each other before the divide.
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 239341
You need to sample the values in /proc/stat
at two times, and calculate the average utilisation over that time. (Instantaneous utilisation doesn't make a whole lot of sense - it'll always be 100% on a single core machine, since your utilsation-measuring code is running whenever it looks).
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 3061
Just use top if it is available. You can use it in a non-interactive mode:
top -n 1
If you want something specific then just grep that output. The exact details will depend on how your top command formats its output, but for example:
top -n 1 | grep 'Load'
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 28932
The /proc filesystem has all kinds of interesting information. Look at man proc
for more information.
Upvotes: 3