In Linux, how to tell how much memory processes are using?

Getting right memory usage is trickier than one may think. The best way I could find is:

echo 0 $(awk '/TYPE/ {print "+", $2}' /proc/`pidof PROCESS`/smaps) | bc

Where “PROCESS” is the name of the process you want to inspect and “TYPE” is one of:

  • Rss: resident memory usage, all memory the process uses, including all memory this process shares with other processes. It does not include swap;
  • Shared: memory that this process shares with other processes;
  • Private: private memory used by this process, you can look for memory leaks here;
  • Swap: swap memory used by the process;
  • Pss: Proportional Set Size, a good overall memory indicator. It is the Rss adjusted for sharing: if a process has 1MiB private and 20MiB shared between other 10 processes, Pss is 1 + 20/10 = 3MiB

Other valid values are Size (i.e. virtual size, which is almost meaningless) and Referenced (the amount of memory currently marked as referenced or accessed).

You can use watch or some other bash-script-fu to keep an eye on those values for processes that you want to monitor.

For more informations about smaps: http://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt.

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