iotop-c does for I/O usage what top(1) does for CPU usage. It watches I/O
usage information output by the Linux kernel and displays a table of
current I/O usage by processes on the system. It is handy for answering
the question "Why is the disk churning so much?".
iotop-c requires a Linux kernel built with the CONFIG_TASKSTATS,
CONFIG_TASK_DELAY_ACCT, CONFIG_TASK_IO_ACCOUNTING and
CONFIG_VM_EVENT_COUNTERS config options on.
iotop-c is an alternative re-implementation of iotop in C, optimized for
performance. Normally a monitoring tool intended to be used on a system
under heavy stress should use the least additional resources as
possible.
* Tue Nov 26 2024 MSVSphere Packaging Team <packager@msvsphere-os.ru> - 1.26-3
- Rebuilt for MSVSphere 10
* Tue Oct 29 2024 Troy Dawson <tdawson@redhat.com> - 1.26-3
- Bump release for October 2024 mass rebuild:
Resolves: RHEL-64018
* Mon Jun 24 2024 Troy Dawson <tdawson@redhat.com> - 1.26-2
- Bump release for June 2024 mass rebuild