On Linux, top actually supports focusing on a single process, although it naturally doesn't have a history graph: top -p PID. This is also available on Mac OS X ...
You can use the ps command to check memory usage of all the processes on Linux. There is one problem with this procedure. ps don't really show you how much ...
note: gives completely different answer from gnome- system-monitor – ribamar Jul 6 '18 at 12:06
This should do what you need. It gets the information from /proc/$PID/statm and prints (from man procfs ): size total program size (same as ...
There are several commands for checking up on memory usage in a Linux system, and here are some of the better ones.
Know how much an individual process or system-wide consume CPU
How to Check Memory Usage in Linux, 5 Simple Commands
Often it's necessary to trace memory usage of the system in order to
Process names are not and should not be known in advance - the idea is to just let it monitor and then have a look at the top offenders. My system is Linux ( ...
To sort the programs in top by memory usage, press Shift+m while running top. This will allow you to see which processes are hogging the most ...