atoprc(5)



NAME

   atoprc - atop/atopsar related rcfile

DESCRIPTION

   This manual page documents the rcfile of the atop and atopsar commands.
   These commands can be used to monitor the system and process load on  a
   Linux system.

   The  atoprc file contains the default settings. These settings are read
   during startup, first from the system-wide rcfile /etc/atoprc and after
   that  from  the user-specific rcfile ~/.atoprc (so system-wide settings
   can be overruled by an individual user).  The options in  both  rcfiles
   are identical.

OPTIONS

   The rcfile contains keyword-value pairs, one on every line (blank lines
   and lines starting with a #-sign are ignored).
   The following keywords can be specified:

   flags
       A list of default flags for atop can be  defined  here.  The  flags
       which  are allowed are 'g', 'm', 'd', 'n', 'u', 'p', 's', 'c', 'v',
       'C', 'M', 'D', 'N', 'A', 'a', 'f', '1' and 'x'.

   interval
       The default interval value in seconds.

   linelen
       The length of a screen line when sending output to a file  or  pipe
       (default 80).

   username
       The  default  regular  expression  for  the  users for which active
       processes will be shown.

   procname
       The default regular expression for the process names to be shown.

   maxlinecpu
       The maximum number of active CPU's that will be shown.

   maxlinelvm
       The maximum number of active logical volumes that will be shown.

   maxlinemdd
       The maximum number of active multiple devices that will be shown.

   maxlinedisk
       The maximum number of active disks that will be shown.

   maxlineintf
       The maximum number of active network interfaces that will be shown.

   cpucritperc
       The busy  percentage  considered  critical  for  a  processor  (see
       section  COLORS  in  the  man-page  of  the  atop  command).   This
       percentage is used to determine  a  weighted  percentage  for  line
       coloring and sorting of active processes.  When this value is zero,
       no line  coloring  or  automatic  sorting  is  performed  for  this
       resource.

   dskcritperc
       The  busy  percentage  considered  critical for a disk (see section
       COLORS in the man-page of the atop command).   This  percentage  is
       used  to  determine  a  weighted  percentage  for line coloring and
       sorting of active processes.  When this  value  is  zero,  no  line
       coloring or automatic sorting is performed for this resource.

   netcritperc
       The  busy  percentage  considered  critical for a network interface
       (see section COLORS in the man-page of  the  atop  command).   This
       percentage  is  used  to  determine  a weighted percentage for line
       coloring and sorting of active processes.  When this value is zero,
       no  line  coloring  or  automatic  sorting  is  performed  for this
       resource.

   memcritperc
       The percentage considered  critical  for  memory  utilization  (see
       section  COLORS  in  the  man-page  of  the  atop  command).   This
       percentage is used to determine  a  weighted  percentage  for  line
       coloring and sorting of active processes.  When this value is zero,
       no line  coloring  or  automatic  sorting  is  performed  for  this
       resource.

   swpcritperc
       The  occupation  percentage considered critical for swap space (see
       section  COLORS  in  the  man-page  of  the  atop  command).   This
       percentage  is  used  to  determine  a weighted percentage for line
       coloring and sorting of active processes.  When this value is zero,
       no  line  coloring  or  automatic  sorting  is  performed  for this
       resource.

   swoutcritsec
       The number of pages swapped out per second considered critical  for
       for  memory  utilization (see section COLORS in the man-page of the
       atop  command).   This  threshold  is  used  in  combination   with
       'memcritperc'  to determine a weighted percentage for line coloring
       and sorting of active processes.  When this value is zero, no  line
       coloring or automatic sorting is performed for this resource.

   almostcrit
       A  percentage  of  the  critical  percentage  to  determine  if the
       resource is almost critical (see section COLORS in the man-page  of
       the  atop  command).  When this value is zero, no line coloring for
       `almost critical' is performed.

   atopsarflags
       A list of default flags for atopsar can be defined here. The  flags
       that  are  allowed  are  'S',  'x', 'C', 'M', 'H', 'a', 'A' and the
       flags to select one or more specific reports.

   An example of the /etc/atoprc or ~/.atoprc file:

           flags         Aaf
           interval      5
           username
           procname
           maxlinecpu    4
           maxlinedisk   10
           maxlineintf   5
           cpucritperc   80
           almostcrit    90
           atopsarflags  CMH
           ownprocline   PID:50 VGROW:40 RGROW:45 COMMAND-LINE:50
           ownpagline    PAGSCAN:3 BLANKBOX:0 PAGSWIN:3 PAGSWOUT:7

   The keywords  'ownprocline'  and  'ownpagline'  are  explained  in  the
   subsequent section.

OWN DEFINITION OF OUTPUT LINE

   Via  the rcfile it is possible to define the layout of the output lines
   yourself, i.e. you can define the  layout  of  one  line  with  process
   information with the keyword 'ownprocline' (to be selected with the key
   'o' or the flag  -o)  and  you  can  redefine  all  lines  with  system
   information.

   The  layout  of  an  output-line can be defined as follows (notice that
   this should be specified as one line in the rcfile):

      keyword   <columnid>:<prio> [<columnid>:<prio> ...]

   The columnid is the symbolic name of a column that should shown at this
   position in the output line.
   The prio is a positive integer value that determines which columns have
   precedence whenever not all specified  columns  fit  into  the  current
   screen-width.  The higher value, the higher priority.
   The  column-specifications should be separated by a space. The order in
   which columns have been specified is the order in which  they  will  be
   shown, with respect to their priority (columns that do not fit, will be
   dropped dynamically).

   A special columnid for system lines is 'BLANKBOX'. This indicates  that
   an  empty  column  is  required  at  this  position.  Also this special
   columnid is followed by a priority (usually low).

   The following definition can be specified for process information:

   ownprocline
       The columnid's are the names of the columns that are shown  in  the
       normal  output  of the process-related lines that are shown by atop
       such as 'PID', 'CMD', 'S', ....  The only exception is the  special
       columnid  'SORTITEM'  that  is  used  to  show  one  of the columns
       CPU%/DSK%/MEM%/NET%, depending on the chosen sort-criterium.
       An example of a user-defined process line:

           ownprocline   PID:20  PPID:10  SYSCPU:15   USRCPU:15   VGROW:14
           VSIZE:12 RGROW:14 RSIZE:12 ST:8 EXC:7 S:11 SORTITEM:18 CMD:20

   The  following  definitions  are used internally by atop as the default
   system lines (you can redefine each of them in the rcfile as one line):

   ownsysprcline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'PRC':

           ownsysprcline   PRCSYS:8   PRCUSER:8   BLANKBOX:0    PRCNPROC:7
           PRCNZOMBIE:5 PRCCLONES:4 BLANKBOX:0 PRCNNEXIT:6

   ownallcpuline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'CPU' for total CPU-utilization:

           ownallcpuline   CPUSYS:8    CPUUSER:7    CPUIRQ:4    BLANKBOX:0
           CPUIDLE:5 CPUWAIT:6 BLANKBOX:0 CPUSTEAL:1 CPUGUEST:3

   ownonecpuline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'CPU' for utilization of one CPU:

           ownonecpuline   CPUISYS:8   CPUIUSER:7   CPUIIRQ:4   BLANKBOX:0
           CPUIIDLE:5 CPUIWAIT:6 BLANKBOX:0 CPUISTEAL:1 CPUIGUEST:3

   owncplline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'CPL':

           owncplline   CPLAVG1:4 CPLAVG5:3 CPLAVG15:2 BLANKBOX:0 CPLCSW:6
           CPLINTR:5 BLANKBOX:0 CPLNUMCPU:1

   ownmemline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'MEM':

           ownmemline   MEMTOT:2    MEMFREE:5    MEMCACHE:3     MEMDIRTY:1
           MEMBUFFER:3    MEMSLAB:3   BLANKBOX:0   BLANKBOX:0   BLANKBOX:0
           BLANKBOX:0

   ownswpline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'SWP':

           ownswpline   SWPTOT:3    SWPFREE:4    BLANKBOX:0     BLANKBOX:0
           BLANKBOX:0   BLANKBOX:0  BLANKBOX:0  BLANKBOX:0  SWPCOMMITTED:5
           SWPCOMMITLIM:6

   ownpagline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'PAG':

           ownpagline   PAGSCAN:3    PAGSTALL:1    BLANKBOX:0    PAGSWIN:4
           PAGSWOUT:3

   owndskline
       Redefinition of lines labeled with 'LVM', 'MDD' and 'DSK':

           owndskline   DSKNAME:8    DSKBUSY:7    DSKNREAD:6   DSKNWRITE:6
           DSKKBPERRD:4   DSKKBPERWR:4   DSKMBPERSECRD:5   DSKMBPERSECWR:5
           DSKAVQUEUE:1 DSKAVIO:5

   ownnettrline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'NET' for transport:

           ownnettrline   NETTRANSPORT:9   NETTCPI:8  NETTCPO:8  NETUDPI:8
           NETUDPO:8  NETTCPACTOPEN:6   NETTCPPASVOPEN:5   NETTCPRETRANS:4
           NETTCPINERR:3 NETTCPORESET:20 NETUDPNOPORT:1 NETUDPINERR:3

   ownnetnetline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'NET' for network:

           ownnetnetline   NETNETWORK:5   NETIPI:4   NETIPO:4   NETIPFRW:4
           NETIPDELIV:4  BLANKBOX:0  BLANKBOX:0   BLANKBOX:0   NETICMPIN:1
           NETICMPOUT:1

   ownnetifline
       Redefinition of line labeled with 'NET' for interfaces:

           ownnetifline   NETNAME:8   NETPCKI:7   NETPCKO:7   NETSPEEDIN:6
           NETSPEEDOUT:6    NETCOLLIS:3    NETMULTICASTIN:2    NETRCVERR:5
           NETSNDERR:5 NETRCVDROP:4 NETSNDDROP:4

   The  lines above are shown in the order as shown by atop in combination
   with the -f flag (in a very wide window you should be able to  see  all
   of the columns).

SEE ALSO

   atop(1), atopsar(1), logrotate(8)
   http://www.atoptool.nl

AUTHOR

   Gerlof Langeveld (gerlof.langeveld@atoptool.nl)
   JC van Winkel (jc@ATComputing.nl)




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