systat --help
systat -s 13 -n 5 This would give you 5 reports at 13-second intervals. The output of systat can vary depending on the system. A simple example might look something like this:
memory 8192K 4096K 4096K swap 16384K 8192K 8192K systat 13.2
man systat or check the help output with:
systat -s 13 And to get activity for a specified number of reports: systat --help systat -s 13 -n 5 This
systat 13 Or, to display activity at a 13-second interval indefinitely:
systat is a command-line utility on Unix-like operating systems, including Linux and macOS, that provides a system activity report. The 13.2 likely refers to a specific version or a specific set of data collection intervals (e.g., every 13.2 seconds). However, without more context, it's hard to provide a detailed report specific to "systat 13.2" as it might be interpreted in various ways. The 13
System: example-host up 3 days load 1.25, 1.30, 1.23 User 1, Load 1.25 Proc %cpu %mem time command 1234 0.3 0.2 00:00.03 firefox 5678 0.1 0.1 00:00.05 bash
cpu 30.2% user, 5.2% nice, 25.5% system, 39.1% idle This example shows a snapshot of system activity. The specifics of systat , such as supported options and output format, can vary depending on the operating system. This response assumes a generic Unix-like system.
For detailed information, consult the manual page of systat on your specific system with: