I'm using an single core small ARM processor running under Debian and have problems understanding the CPU utilisation output of top, see:
top - 15:31:54 up 30 days, 23:00, 2 users, load average: 0.90, 0.89, 0.87
Tasks: 44 total, 1 running, 43 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
Cpu(s): 65.0%us, 20.3%sy, 0.0%ni, 14.5%id, 0.0%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.3%si, 0.0%st
Mem: 61540k total, 40056k used, 21484k free, 0k buffers
Swap: 0k total, 0k used, 0k free, 22260k cached
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
26028 root 20 0 2536 1124 912 R 1.9 1.8 0:00.30 top
31231 root 19 -1 45260 964 556 S 1.9 1.6 1206:15 owserver
3 root 15 -5 0 0 0 S 0.3 0.0 0:08.68 ksoftirqd/0
694 root 20 0 28640 840 412 S 0.3 1.4 468:26.74 rsyslogd
The column %CPU is very low over all processes, in this example it is all together 4,4% (all other process below had been on 0%) But the allover CPU on line 3 shows 65%us and 20%sy, so for both a very high value - and by the way, this is how the system feels: very slow :-( The system is almost always in this condition: very low CPU for all processes, but high user+system CPU. Can anybody explain why there is such a high inconsistence within the top tool output? And what tool can I use to better find out what causes the high user+system CPU utilization - top seems to be useless here.
update: meanwhile I've found this thread here, which discusses a similiar question, but I can't verify what is written there:
- The command uptime shows the average CPU utilization per 1/5/15 minutes
- This is close to what the first line of top outputs as sum of %us+%sy. But this is changing much more, maybe it is an average per 10s?
- Even if looking longer time on the top output, the sum of %us+%sy is always several times higher than the summary of all %CPU
Thanks Achim