I'm not very familiar with gtop, but top gives you the data right at the top of its output (if display of memory information is enabled). It tells you how much of your memory and swap is in use and how much is used in buffers and caching.
You can also get all of this information (the Right Way) from /usr/bin/free. Vineet * Joerg Johannes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [010703 12:20]: > Hello List > > I've got 512MB of RAM, and I wanted to see how much of it is free. So I > ran gtop, which showed me that ~84MB are used (mainly X and apache-ssl). > OK so far, but cat /proc/meminfo tells me that ~480MB are in use, and > only 32MB free. So, which of both is right, and who is eating that much > memory?? > > thanks > joerg > > -- > Did you know that if you play a Windows 2000 cd backwards, you > will hear the voice of Satan? > > That's nothing! If you play it forward, it'll install Windows 2000. > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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