When I run gnome-system-monitor as my normal account I see only MY processes. I cannot change the selection under View to look at All Processes nor Active Processes. So in a shell I did su - and t... [by taylorkh]
Gnome System Monitor, an application that enables users to display basic system information and to monitor system processes, usage of system resources, and file systems, is now at version 3.7.5.
The application shows active processes and how processes are related to each other.
CentOS 6.2 64 bit with gnome-system-monitor 2.28.0I have used this handy application on Ubuntu for many years and on occasion refer to it on my CentOS machine. Nice graphics (I am easi... [by taylorkh]
If I leave the System Monitor (KSysGuard) open for too long, it begins to display in the Process Table processes that are no longer running. For some reason, if I start a process, the entry may not disappear from the Process Table even when I close it. I know they aren't zombie processes (at least, they're not marked as such).
My netbook is running slow, and System Monitor shows ~45% usage on each of two CPUs. However, the "Processes" tab of System Monitor shows all processes at 0% CPU usages.
Any ideas for tools to help me investigate this?
(Using UbuntuEEE on Asus EEE 900A)
I want to give Gnome-Shell the highest priority, but I couldn't change the priority on the System Monitor, an error messeage says: Can't change priority's process with pid 2841 to -5.
Anybody else notice this?
I noticed the "System" tab disappeared from Gnome System Monitor, after I upgraded to version 3.7.5.
Is there any way to retrive the "gnome-system-monitor" data in the terminal, including the cpu+memory etc. usage. Geting the list under the "Processes" of the application is the major requirement.
I know that you can connect to various background processes to watch their console output, but is there a way to view the output of all processes at once? Likely it would scroll quickly and be hard to read, but is it possible?