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VMSTAT(8)		    System Manager's Manual		     VMSTAT(8)

NAME
       vmstat -- report	virtual	memory statistics

SYNOPSIS
       vmstat  [--libxo]  [-afHhimoPsz]	 [-M  core  [-N	 system]]  [-c	count]
	      [-n devs]	[-p type,if,pass] [-w wait] [disks ...]	[wait [count]]

DESCRIPTION
       The  vmstat  utility  reports  certain  kernel  statistics  kept	 about
       process,	virtual	memory,	disk, trap and cpu activity.

       If  the	-M  option  is not specified, information is obtained from the
       currently running kernel	via the	sysctl(3) interface.   Otherwise,  in-
       formation  is  read  from  the specified	core file, using the name list
       from the	specified kernel image (or from	the default image).

       The options are as follows:

       --libxo
	       Generate	output via libxo(3) in a selection of different	 human
	       and machine readable formats.  See xo_parse_args(3) for details
	       on command line arguments.

       -a      When  used  with	 -i,  include statistics about interrupts that
	       have never been generated.

       -c      Repeat the display count	times.	The first display is  for  the
	       time  since a reboot and	each subsequent	report is for the time
	       period since the	last display.  If no repeat  count  is	speci-
	       fied,  and  -w is specified, the	default	is infinity, otherwise
	       the default is one.

       -f      Report on the number  fork(2),  vfork(2)	 and  rfork(2)	system
	       calls  since system startup, and	the number of pages of virtual
	       memory involved in each.

       -h      Changes memory columns into more	easily	human  readable	 form.
	       The default if standard output is a terminal device.

       -H      Changes	memory	columns	into straight numbers.	The default if
	       standard	output is not a	terminal device	(such as a script).

       -i      Report on the number of interrupts taken	by each	 device	 since
	       system startup.

       -M      Extract values associated with the name list from the specified
	       core.

       -N      If  -M is also specified, extract the name list from the	speci-
	       fied system instead of the default, which is the	 kernel	 image
	       the system has booted from.

       -m      Report  on  the	usage of kernel	dynamic	memory allocated using
	       malloc(9) by type.

       -n      Change the maximum number of disks to display from the  default
	       of 2.

       -o      Display	a list of virtual memory objects in the	system and the
	       resident	memory used by each object.

       -P      Report per-cpu system/user/idle cpu statistics.

       -p      Specify which types of devices to  display.   There  are	 three
	       different categories of devices:

	       device type:
		       da	  Direct Access	devices
		       sa	  Sequential Access devices
		       printer	  Printers
		       proc	  Processor devices
		       worm	  Write	Once Read Multiple devices
		       cd	  CD devices
		       scanner	  Scanner devices
		       optical	  Optical Memory devices
		       changer	  Medium Changer devices
		       comm	  Communication	devices
		       array	  Storage Array	devices
		       enclosure  Enclosure Services devices
		       floppy	  Floppy devices

	       interface:
		       IDE	  Integrated Drive Electronics devices
		       SCSI	  Small	Computer System	Interface devices
		       other	  Any other device interface

	       passthrough:
		       pass	  Passthrough devices

	       The user	must specify at	least one device type, and may specify
	       at  most	 one  device type from each category.  Multiple	device
	       types in	a single device	type statement must  be	 separated  by
	       commas.

	       Any  number  of	-p  arguments  may be specified	on the command
	       line.  All -p arguments are ORed	together to  form  a  matching
	       expression  against  which  all	devices	in the system are com-
	       pared.  Any device that fully matches any -p argument  will  be
	       included	 in the	vmstat output, up to two devices, or the maxi-
	       mum number of devices specified by the user.

       -s      Display the contents of the sum	structure,  giving  the	 total
	       number of several kinds of paging related events	which have oc-
	       curred since system startup.

       -w      Pause wait seconds between each display.	 If no repeat wait in-
	       terval  is specified, the default is 1 second.  The vmstat com-
	       mand will accept	and honor a non-integer	number of seconds.

       -z      Report on memory	used by	the kernel zone	allocator, uma(9),  by
	       zone.

       The  wait and count arguments may be given after	their respective flags
       at any point on the command line	before the disks argument(s), or with-
       out their flags,	as the final argument(s).  The latter form is accepted
       for backwards compatibility, but	it is preferred	to use the forms  with
       -w and -c to avoid ambiguity.

       By default, vmstat displays the following information:

       procs   Information about the number of threads in various states:

	       r       running or in run queue
	       b       blocked for resources (i/o, paging, etc.)
	       w       swapped out

       memory  Information about the usage of virtual and real memory.

	       Mapped  virtual memory is a sum of all of the virtual pages be-
	       longing to mapped virtual memory	objects.  Note that the	entire
	       memory object's size is considered mapped even if only a	subset
	       of the object's pages are currently mapped.  This statistic  is
	       not  related  to	 the  active page queue	which is used to track
	       real memory.

	       avm     mapped virtual  memory  (previously  called  active  in
		       vmstat output)
	       fre     size of the free	list

       page    Information  about  page	faults and paging activity.  These are
	       given in	units per second.

	       flt     total number of page faults
	       re      pages reactivated (found	in laundry or inactive queues)
	       pi      pages paged in
	       po      pages paged out
	       fr      pages freed
	       sr      pages scanned by	page daemon

       disks   Disk operations per second (this	field  is  system  dependent).
	       Typically  paging  will	be  split across the available drives.
	       The header of the field is the first two	characters of the disk
	       name and	the unit number.  If more than	two  disk  drives  are
	       configured  in  the  system, vmstat displays only the first two
	       drives, unless the user specifies the -n	argument  to  increase
	       the  number  of drives displayed.  This will probably cause the
	       display to exceed 80 columns, however.  To force	vmstat to dis-
	       play specific drives, their names may be	supplied on  the  com-
	       mand  line.   The  vmstat utility defaults to show disks	first,
	       and then	various	other random devices in	the system to  add  up
	       to  two	devices, if there are that many	devices	in the system.
	       If devices are specified	on the command line, or	 if  a	device
	       type  matching  pattern	is  specified (see above), vmstat will
	       only display the	given devices or the devices matching the pat-
	       tern, and will not randomly select other	devices	in the system.

       faults  Trap/interrupt rates per	second.

	       in      device interrupts (including clock interrupts)
	       sy      system calls
	       cs      cpu context switches

       cpu     Breakdown of percentage usage of	CPU time.

	       us      user time for normal and	low priority processes
	       sy      system and interrupt time
	       id      cpu idle

FILES
       /boot/kernel/kernel  default kernel namelist
       /dev/kmem	    default memory file

EXAMPLES
       The command:
	     vmstat -w 5
       will print what the system is doing every five seconds.

       The command:
	     vmstat -p da -p cd	-w 1
       will tell vmstat	to select the first two	direct access or CDROM devices
       and display statistics on those devices,	as well	as other systems  sta-
       tistics every second.

SEE ALSO
       fstat(1),  netstat(1),  nfsstat(1),  ps(1),  systat(1),	libmemstat(3),
       libxo(3), xo_parse_args(3), gstat(8), iostat(8),	 pstat(8),  sysctl(8),
       malloc(9), uma(9)

       The   sections	starting  with	``Interpreting	system	activity''  in
       Installing and Operating	4.3BSD.

HISTORY
       The vmstat utility first	appeared in 3BSD.

BUGS
       The -c and -w options are only available	with the default output.

FreeBSD	13.2			 June 21, 2021			     VMSTAT(8)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | BUGS

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