1

I am finding out the total ideal CPU by using the command

top -bn1 | grep Cpu | awk -F"," '{print $4}' | sed 's/[ \t]*//g' | sed 's/%id//'

Now I want to find out the CPU which is being used so I am trying to subtract the output of the command from 100

So the script looks like :

i=`top -bn1 | grep Cpu | awk -F"," '{print $4}' | sed 's/[ \t]*//g' | sed 's/%id//'`
j=100
k=$(( ${j}-${i} ))
echo $k

When executing this script the output gives an error:

100-93.0 : syntax error: invalid arithmetic operator (error token is ".0 ")

How should I proceed to subtract the derived decimal number from 100 ?

1 Answer 1

0

You are getting this error because BASH arithmetic cannot handle floating point numbers and you will get same error while running this command in bash:

((100-93.0))

But you can skip grep, sed and all bash directives. Just a single awk can handle this computation like this:

top -bn1 | awk -F, '/Cpu/ {print 100-$4}'
2
  • the given solution worked like a charm but, this is still situation specific as there was a work around this problem by avoiding grep, sed, etc. How would I subtract when faced with a situation where I have to subtract a floating point number from an integer ? Mar 8, 2017 at 8:28
  • 1
    As I wrote, you cannot do floating point math in BASH. Use bc -l OR awk for that.
    – anubhava
    Mar 8, 2017 at 8:30

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.