<div>On 7/13/06, Roberto Ragusa <<a href="mailto:mail@robertoragusa.it">mail@robertoragusa.it</a>> wrote:<br>> Kaushal Shriyan wrote:<br>> <br>> > how to sort mem process using ps command<br>> ><br>
> > I am using ps auxw --sort %mem but its not helping me out<br>> <br>> I'm using this to detect memory consumers:<br>> <br>> ps ww -e k -rss o pid,pmem,command,rss,size,vsz|head -20<br>> <br>> It could be useful as a starting point.
<br>> <br>> Best regards.<br>> <br>> --<br>> Roberto Ragusa mail at <a href="http://robertoragusa.it">robertoragusa.it</a><br>> <br>> --<br>> fedora-list mailing list<br>> <a href="mailto:fedora-list@redhat.com">
fedora-list@redhat.com</a><br>> To unsubscribe: <a href="https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list">https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list</a><br>> <br><br>Hi Roberto<br><br>[root@e root]# ps ww -e k -rss o pid,pmem,command,rss,size,vsz|head -20
<br>ps: error: Obsolete k option not supported.<br>usage: ps -[Unix98 options]<br> ps [BSD-style options]<br> ps --[GNU-style long options]<br> ps --help for a command summary<br>[root@e root]#<br> </div>
<div>Kaushal</div>