SYSTAT(1) OpenBSD Reference Manual SYSTAT(1)NAMEsystat - display system statistics
SYNOPSISsystat [-abiNn] [-d count] [-s delay] [-w width] [view] [delay]
DESCRIPTIONsystat displays various system statistics in a screen-oriented fashion
using the curses(3) screen display library.
While systat is running, the screen is divided into different areas. The
top line displays the current number of users, the three system load
average figures over the last 1, 5, and 15 minute intervals, and the
system time. The bottom line of the screen is reserved for user input
and error messages. The information displayed in the rest of the screen
comprises a view, and is the main interface for displaying different
types of system statistics. The vmstat view is the default.
Certain information may be discarded when the screen size is insufficient
for display. For example, on a machine with 10 drives the iostat bar
graph displays only 3 drives on a 24 line terminal.
The options are as follows:
-a Display all lines.
-b Raw, non-interactive mode.
-d count
Exit after count screen updates.
-i Interactive mode.
-N Resolve network addresses to names. This is the opposite of the
-n option.
-n Do not try to reverse map IP addresses. This is the default.
-s delay
Specifies the screen refresh time interval in seconds. This
option is overridden by the final delay argument, if given. The
default interval is 5 seconds.
-w width
Specifies the maximum width of the display.
view The view argument expects to be one of: vmstat, pigs, ifstat,
iostat, sensors, mbufs, netstat, swap, states, rules, queues, pf,
pool, malloc, buckets, nfsclient, or nfsserver. These displays
can also be requested interactively and are described in full
detail below. view may be abbreviated to the minimum unambiguous
prefix; for example, ``io'' for ``iostat''.
delay The delay argument specifies the screen refresh time interval in
seconds. This is provided for backwards compatibility, and
overrides any interval specified with the -s flag. The default
interval is 5 seconds.
Certain characters cause immediate action by systat. These are:
: Move the cursor to the command line and interpret the input
line typed as a command. While entering a command the
current character erase, word erase, and line kill characters
may be used.
o Select the next ordering which sorts the rows according to a
combination of columns. Available orderings depend on the
view. Not all views support orderings.
p Pause systat.
q Quit systat.
r Reverse the selected ordering if supported by the view.
^A | <Home>
Jump to the beginning of the current view.
^B | <right arrow>
Select the previous view.
^E | <End> Jump to the end of the current view.
^F | <left arrow>
Select the next view.
^G Print the name of the current view being shown and the
refresh interval.
^L Refresh the screen.
^N | <down arrow>
Scroll current view down by one line.
^P | <up arrow>
Scroll current view up by one line.
^V | <Page Down>
Scroll current view down by one page.
Alt-V | <Page Up>
Scroll current view up by one page.
^Z Suspend systat.
The following commands are interpreted by the ``global'' command
interpreter.
help Print the names of the available views on the command line.
quit Quit systat. (This may be abbreviated to q.)
stop Stop refreshing the screen.
[start] [number]
Start (continue) refreshing the screen. If a second,
numeric, argument is provided it is interpreted as a refresh
interval (in seconds). Supplying only a number will set the
refresh interval to this value.
view may be abbreviated to the minimum unambiguous prefix. The available
views are:
buckets Display kernel malloc(9) bucket statistics similar to the
output of vmstat -m.
ifstat Display interface statistics. The ``State'' column has the
format up|dn[:U|D]. `up' and `dn' represent whether the
interface is up or down. `U' and `D' represent whether the
interface is connected or not; in the case of carp(4)
interfaces, whether the interface is in master or backup
state, respectively.
iostat Display statistics about disk throughput. Statistics on disk
throughput show, for each drive, data transferred in
kilobytes, number of disk transactions performed, and time
spent in disk accesses (in fractions of a second).
malloc Display kernel malloc(9) type statistics similar to the
output of vmstat -m. Available orderings are: name, inuse,
memuse, and requests.
mbufs Display mbuf usage information from kernel pools and mbuf
cluster pool statistics of each network interface.
netstat Display network connections. By default, network servers
awaiting requests are not displayed. Each address is
displayed in the format ``host:port'', with each shown
symbolically, when possible.
nfsclient Display statistics about NFS client activity. Output
resembles nfsstat -c.
nfsserver Display statistics about NFS server activity. Output
resembles nfsstat -s.
pf Display filter information about pf(4), similar to the output
of pfctl -s info option.
pigs Display those processes resident in main memory and getting
the largest portion of the processor. When less than 100% of
the processor is scheduled to user processes, the remaining
time is accounted to the ``idle'' process.
pool Display kernel pool(9) statistics similar to the output of
vmstat -m. Available orderings are: name, requests, size,
and number of pages.
queues Display statistics about the active altq(9) queues, similar
to the output of pfctl -s queue.
rules Display pf rules statistics, similar to the output of pfctl
-s rules.
sensors Display the current values of available hardware sensors, in
a format similar to that of sysctl(8).
states Display pf states statistics, similar to the output of pfctl
-s states. Available orderings are: none, bytes, expiry,
packets, age, source address, source port, destination
address, destination port, rate, and peak columns.
swap Show information about swap space usage on all the swap areas
compiled into the kernel. The first column is the device
name of the partition. The next column is the total space
available in the partition. The Used column indicates the
total blocks used so far; the graph shows the percentage of
space in use on each partition. If there is more than one
swap partition in use, a total line is also shown. Areas
known to the kernel but not in use are shown as not
available.
vmstat Take over the entire display and show a (rather crowded)
compendium of statistics related to virtual memory usage,
process scheduling, device interrupts, system name
translation caching, disk I/O, etc. This view is the
default.
Below the top line are statistics on memory utilization. The
first row of the table reports memory usage only among active
processes, that is, processes that have run in the previous
twenty seconds. The second row reports on memory usage of
all processes. The first column reports on the amount of
physical memory claimed by processes. The second column
reports the same figure for virtual memory, that is, the
amount of memory that would be needed if all processes were
resident at the same time. Finally, the last column shows
the amount of physical memory on the free list.
Below the memory display is a list of the average number of
processes (over the last refresh interval) that are runnable
(`r'), in disk wait other than paging (`d'), sleeping (`s'),
and swapped out but desiring to run (`w'). Below the queue
length listing is a numerical listing and a bar graph showing
the amount of interrupt (shown as `|'), system (shown as
`='), user (shown as `>'), nice (shown as `-'), and idle time
(shown as ` ').
To the right of the Proc display are statistics about Context
switches (``Csw''), Traps (``Trp''), Syscalls (``Sys''),
Interrupts (``Int''), Soft interrupts (``Sof''), and Faults
(``Flt'') which have occurred during the last refresh
interval.
Below the CPU usage graph are statistics on name
translations. It lists the number of names translated in the
previous interval, the number and percentage of the
translations that were handled by the system wide name
translation cache, and the number and percentage of the
translations that were handled by the per process name
translation cache.
At the bottom left is the disk usage display. It reports the
number of seeks, transfers, number of kilobyte blocks
transferred per second averaged over the refresh period of
the display, and the time spent in disk accesses.
Under the date in the upper right hand quadrant are
statistics on paging and swapping activity. The first two
columns report the average number of pages brought in and out
per second over the last refresh interval due to page faults
and the paging daemon. The third and fourth columns report
the average number of pages brought in and out per second
over the last refresh interval due to swap requests initiated
by the scheduler. The first row of the display shows the
average number of disk transfers per second over the last
refresh interval. The second row of the display shows the
average number of pages transferred per second over the last
refresh interval.
Running down the right hand side of the display is a
breakdown of the interrupts being handled by the system. At
the top of the list is the total interrupts per second over
the time interval. The rest of the column breaks down the
total on a device by device basis. Only devices that have
interrupted at least once since boot time are shown.
Below the Interrupts display are the average number of input
and output packets per second for all interfaces over the
last refresh interval.
Below the SWAPPING display and slightly to the left of the
Interrupts display is a list of virtual memory statistics.
The abbreviations are:
forks process forks
fkppw forks where parent waits
fksvm forks where vmspace is shared
pwait fault had to wait on a page
relck fault relock called
rlkok fault relock is successful
noram faults out of ram
ndcpy number of times fault clears "need copy"
fltcp number of times fault promotes with copy
zfod fault promotes with zerofill
cow number of times fault anon cow
fmin min number of free pages
ftarg target number of free pages
itarg target number of inactive pages
wired wired pages
pdfre pages daemon freed since boot
pdscn pages daemon scanned since boot
pzidle number of zeroed pages
kmapent number of kernel map entries
The `%zfod' value is more interesting when observed over a
long period, such as from boot time.
FILES
/etc/hosts Host names.
/etc/networks Network names.
/etc/pf.conf pf(4) configuration.
/etc/services Port names.
SEE ALSOfstat(1), kill(1), netstat(1), nfsstat(1), ps(1), top(1), iostat(8),
pfctl(8), pstat(8), renice(8), sysctl(8), vmstat(8)HISTORY
The systat program first appeared in 4.3BSD.
BUGS
Certain displays presume a minimum of 80 characters per line. The vmstat
display looks out of place because it is (it was added in as a separate
display rather than created as a new program).
OpenBSD 4.9 January 18, 2011 OpenBSD 4.9