Provided by: topline_0.5-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       topline - a disk/per-core CPU grapher/logger

SYNOPSIS

       topline [ -l ] [ -i 1.0 ] [ -o logfile ] [ program arg1 arg2 ...  ]

DESCRIPTION

       While  programs  like  htop  can show per-core loads, they do so interactively.  There are
       loggers like dstat but, using numeric data, they have no chance to fit per-CPU information
       within a line on modern many-core processors.  Thus, topline uses Unicode graphing symbols
       to squash the data into a terse, two-hyperthreads-per-char, form.  This allows  eyeballing
       NUMA separation, CPU hopping, etc.

       Once per second, topline plots stats for that interval:

       per every disk,
              one  character  with  two  columns  of  dots  gives  that  disk's  utilization time
              percentage.  The left column shows reads, the right one shows  writes.   Disks  are
              grouped into parenthesised groups by interface type (NVMe, SATA, eMMC, ...).

       per every non-hyperthreaded CPU or a pair of hyperthreaded siblings,
              a  character with one or two columns is given.  Non-HT CPUS are drawn with bars, HT
              ones with dots, offline cores are marked with 'o'.  The parentheses group  CPUs  by
              their NUMA node.

OPTIONS

       <program> <arg1> <arg2> ...
              Runs  a  program  and terminates the graph once the program exits.  The graph still
              exhibits the global state of the system rather than just the program you chose  and
              its children.

       If  no  program  is  given,  topline  will keep logging forever (ie, until you press ^C or
       similar).

       -l, --line-output, --linearize
              Marshalls the program's output line-by-line, avoiding mix-ups with topline's  data.
              They will be interspersed in separate lines.
              The  program  will  know it is being piped; if you want it to believe it's ran on a
              terminal (to get colors, etc) you may use a tool like pipetty.

       -i <interval>
              Sets the interval between data samples; the default is 1s.   Floating-point  values
              are allowed; the number may be suffixed by a "s" (seconds, default), "m" (minutes),
              "h" (hours), "d" (days), "ms" (milliseconds), "us" or "µs" (microseconds).

       -o <file>, --output <file>
              Redirects topline's output to the given file.  The program being ran can  then  use
              stdout and stderr unimpeded.

CAVEATS

       If  the  machine's  CPUs  are  hyperthreaded with more than one or two per core, the graph
       won't make it  obvious  which  columns  share  a  core.   All  siblings  are  still  given
       consecutively, unless forced into separate NUMA nodes with fakenuma settings.

       Machines above 140-150 CPUs may not fit on an 80-column terminal.

SEE ALSO

       htop, dstat, VTUNE.

                                            2019-12-29                                 topline(1)