Is there a tool that will run a command-line and report how much RAM was used total?
I'm imagining something analogous to /usr/bin/time
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Is there a tool that will run a command-line and report how much RAM was used total? I'm imagining something analogous to /usr/bin/time |
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(This is an already answered, old question.. but just for the record :) I was inspired by Yang's script, and came up with this small tool, named memusg. I simply increased the sampling rate to 0.1 to handle much short living processes. Instead of monitoring a single process, I made it measure rss sum of the process group. (Yeah, I write lots of separate programs that work together) It currently works on Mac OS X and Linux. The usage had to be similar to that of memusg ls -alR / >/dev/null It only shows the peak for the moment, but I'm interested in slight extensions for recording other (rough) statistics. It's good to have such simple tool for just taking a look before we start any serious profiling. |
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[Edit: well, this looked useful at first but always seems to return 0] Looks like
$ /usr/bin/time -v ls /
....
Command being timed: "ls /"
User time (seconds): 0.00
System time (seconds): 0.01
Percent of CPU this job got: 250%
Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.00
Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
Average stack size (kbytes): 0
Average total size (kbytes): 0
Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 0
Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 315
Voluntary context switches: 2
Involuntary context switches: 0
Swaps: 0
File system inputs: 0
File system outputs: 0
Socket messages sent: 0
Socket messages received: 0
Signals delivered: 0
Page size (bytes): 4096
Exit status: 0
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Valgrind one-liner:
Note use of --pages-as-heap to measure all memory in a process. More info here: http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/ms-manual.html |
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If the process runs for at least a couple seconds, then you can use the following bash script, which will run the given command line then print to stderr the peak RSS (substitute for
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Well, if you really want to show the memory peak and some more in-depth statistics i recommend using a profiler such as valgrind. A nice valgrind front-end is alleyoop. |
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/usr/bin/time maybe does what you want, actually. Something like. /usr/bin/time --format='(%Xtext+%Ddata %Mmax)' See time(1) for details... |
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You can use a tool like Valgrind to do this. |
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Perhaps time(1) already does what you want. For instance:
But other profiling tools may give more accurate results depending on what you are looking for. |
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Here is (based on the other answers) a very simple script that watches an already running process. You just run it with the pid of the process you want to watch as the argument:
Example usage:
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Use Massif: http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/ms-manual.html |
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