How to get total cpu usage in Linux using C++ How to get total cpu usage in Linux using C++ linux linux

How to get total cpu usage in Linux using C++


cat /proc/stat

http://www.linuxhowtos.org/System/procstat.htm

I agree with this answer above. The cpu line in this file gives the total number of "jiffies" your system has spent doing different types of processing.

What you need to do is take 2 readings of this file, seperated by whatever interval of time you require. The numbers are increasing values (subject to integer rollover) so to get the %cpu you need to calculate how many jiffies have elapsed over your interval, versus how many jiffies were spend doing work.

e.g.Suppose at 14:00:00 you have

cpu 4698 591 262 8953 916 449 531

total_jiffies_1 = (sum of all values) = 16400

work_jiffies_1 = (sum of user,nice,system = the first 3 values) = 5551

and at 14:00:05 you have

cpu 4739 591 289 9961 936 449 541

total_jiffies_2 = 17506

work_jiffies_2 = 5619

So the %cpu usage over this period is:

work_over_period = work_jiffies_2 - work_jiffies_1 = 68

total_over_period = total_jiffies_2 - total_jiffies_1 = 1106

%cpu = work_over_period / total_over_period * 100 = 6.1%

Hope that helps a bit.


Try reading /proc/loadavg. The first three numbers are the number of processes actually running (i.e., using a CPU), averaged over the last 1, 5, and 15 minutes, respectively.

http://www.linuxinsight.com/proc_loadavg.html


Read /proc/cpuinfo to find the number of CPU/cores available to the systems.Call the getloadavg() (or alternatively read the /proc/loadavg), take the first value, multiply it by 100 (to convert to percents), divide by number of CPU/cores. If the value is greater than 100, truncate it to 100. Done.

Relevant documentation: man getloadavg and man 5 proc

N.B. Load average, usual to *NIX systems, can be more than 100% (per CPU/core) because it actually measures number of processes ready to be run by scheduler. With Windows-like CPU metric, when load is at 100% you do not really know whether it is optimal use of CPU resources or system is overloaded. Under *NIX, optimal use of CPU loadavg would give you value ~1.0 (or 2.0 for dual system). If the value is much greater than number CPU/cores, then you might want to plug extra CPUs into the box.

Otherwise, dig the /proc file system.