How to see top processes sorted by actual memory usage?
use quick tip using top command in linux/unix
$ top
and then hit Shift+m (i.e. write a capital M
).
From man top
SORTING of task window
For compatibility, this top supports most of the former top sort keys.
Since this is primarily a service to former top users, these commands do
not appear on any help screen.
command sorted-field supported
A start time (non-display) No
M %MEM Yes
N PID Yes
P %CPU Yes
T TIME+ Yes
Or alternatively: hit Shift + f , then choose the display to order by memory usage by hitting key n then press Enter. You will see active process ordered by memory usage
First, repeat this mantra for a little while: "unused memory is wasted memory". The Linux kernel keeps around huge amounts of file metadata and files that were requested, until something that looks more important pushes that data out. It's why you can run:
find /home -type f -name '*.mp3'
find /home -type f -name '*.aac'
and have the second find
instance run at ridiculous speed.
Linux only leaves a little bit of memory 'free' to handle spikes in memory usage without too much effort.
Second, you want to find the processes that are eating all your memory; in top
use the M
command to sort by memory use. Feel free to ignore the VIRT
column, that just tells you how much virtual memory has been allocated, not how much memory the process is using. RES
reports how much memory is resident, or currently in ram (as opposed to swapped to disk or never actually allocated in the first place, despite being requested).
But, since RES
will count e.g. /lib/libc.so.6
memory once for nearly every process, it isn't exactly an awesome measure of how much memory a process is using. The SHR
column reports how much memory is shared with other processes, but there is no guarantee that another process is actually sharing -- it could be sharable, just no one else wants to share.
The smem
tool is designed to help users better gage just how much memory should really be blamed on each individual process. It does some clever work to figure out what is really unique, what is shared, and proportionally tallies the shared memory to the processes sharing it. smem
may help you understand where your memory is going better than top
will, but top
is an excellent first tool.
ps aux | awk '{print $2, $4, $11}' | sort -k2rn | head -n 10
(Adding -n numeric flag to sort command.)
First you should read an explanation on the output of free
. Bottom line: you have at least 10.7 GB of memory readily usable by processes.
Then you should define what "memory usage" is for a process (it's not easy or unambiguous, trust me).
Then we might be able to help more :-)