Hi Jerry, hmm, that's strange, since 'top' on our RHEL5.8 and RHEL6.3 machines understand '1' just fine and then show all the cors on the respective machine. We have procps-3.2.7-18.el5 installed on RHEL5.8 and procps-3.2.8-23.el6.x86_64 on RHEL6.3. What version do you have?
'grep -C processor /proc/cpuinfo' give me an error, since it's missing a number after the -C, but the number of cores of 'grep processor /proc/cpuinfo' agrees with that top's 1 toggle shows. By the way, since you are asking about a RHEL5 machine, maybe it would be better to ask the rhelv5-list -- although I'm sure there will be a lot of overlap there. :) Hope this helps, Horst "Tilsley, Jerry M." <jmtils...@st-claire.org> wrote: > All, > > I am using top to get basic server usage. I have seen some other posts on > the web to toggle the CPU's being show to press '1' after getting into top. > However I get "Command not understood". If I run 'grep -C processor > /proc/cpuinfo' it shows 4 which is correct. How can I get all the CPU's to > display in top on RHEL 5.7? > > Thanks, > > Jerry Tilsley > Sr Systems Analyst > St. Claire Regional Medical Center > > > ________________________________ > > Disclaimer**** > This email is confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual > to whom it is addressed. Any views or opinions presented are solely those of > the author and do not necessarily represent those of St. Claire Regional > Medical Center. If you are not the intended recipient, be advised that you > have received this email in error and that any use, dissemination, > forwarding, printing or copying of the email is strictly prohibited. If you > received this email in error please notify the St. Claire Regional Helpdesk > by telephone at 606-783-6565. _______________________________________________ rhelv6-list mailing list rhelv6-list@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv6-list