On Thu, May 17, 2012 at 7:13 AM, Michael Mol <mike...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, May 17, 2012 at 9:51 AM, Mark Knecht <markkne...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 6:04 PM, Michael Mol <mike...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 8:58 PM, Alex Schuster <wo...@wonkology.org> wrote:
>> <SNIP>
>>>>> sys-process/htop
>>>>
>>>> Huh? I only see the total amount of swap being used, but no entry per
>>>> process.
>>>
>>> Hit F2, and go down to 'columns'. Anything per-process found under
>>> /proc can be added as a column.
>
>> Anything in there show network through-put per process? I've been
>> looking for a way to monitor what's going to each of my VMs?
>
> NAFAIK. Though if you get a kernel patch that gets per-process socket
> auditing added, then it should show up. :)
>
> I usually use iftop for watching flows. There's another tool I
> installed which handles some things (such as IPv6) better, but inara
> and kaylee are still down, so I can't peek at their world files to
> find out what it was.
>
> --
> :wq
>

Thanks. iftop is interesting but seems more focused on the provider of
the media source and less on the sink. I also use nettop to watch
overall bitrates but I suspect you have that one also.

Assume I have 3 VMs running and they are all streaming media.
VM1->Netflix, VM2->Hulu, VM3->Amazon, etc. What I'm really interested
in is something that would tell me how much bandwidth each VM is
getting. Per-process would almost certainly do that, and maybe that's
what I'll eventually have to do, but I'm hoping to find some little
app that maybe someone has put together.

Thanks,
Mark

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