* Axel Braun <DocB@opensuse.org> [06-23-18 12:52]:
Am Samstag, 23. Juni 2018, 18:11:00 CEST schrieb Patrick Shanahan:
Hm, I though I have phrased that above, sorry itf that did not come through properly. So yes, it looks it is video/plasmashell. Even the text while typing is partly stalled for some seconds, until it arrives
and what does top show. what is consuming your cpu?
As written before, plasmashell, kwin_X11 and X
Additionally I have posted the output of iotop, maybe that helps as well: http://paste.opensuse.org/48571917
Each Thread shows 0 Disk write, but the summary line on top says 2.55 M/s. Thats strange, IMHO.
Additionally, how to interpret IO? Does it mean that the CPU is 99.99% of the time dedicated to that process busy waiting, not computing?
man iotop or man iotop Usage: /usr/sbin/iotop [OPTIONS] DISK READ and DISK WRITE are the block I/O bandwidth used during the sampling period. SWAPIN and IO are the percentages of time the thread spent respectively while swapping in and waiting on I/O more generally. PRIO is the I/O priority at which the thread is running (set using the ionice command). Controls: left and right arrows to change the sorting column, r to invert the sorting order, o to toggle the --only option, p to toggle the --processes option, a to toggle the --accumulated option, i to change I/O priority, q to quit, any other key to force a refresh. Options: --version show program's version number and exit -h, --help show this help message and exit -o, --only only show processes or threads actually doing I/O -b, --batch non-interactive mode -n NUM, --iter=NUM number of iterations before ending [infinite] -d SEC, --delay=SEC delay between iterations [1 second] -p PID, --pid=PID processes/threads to monitor [all] -u USER, --user=USER users to monitor [all] -P, --processes only show processes, not all threads -a, --accumulated show accumulated I/O instead of bandwidth -k, --kilobytes use kilobytes instead of a human friendly unit -t, --time add a timestamp on each line (implies --batch) -q, --quiet suppress some lines of header (implies --batch) -- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.org openSUSE Community Member facebook/ptilopteri Registered Linux User #207535 @ http://linuxcounter.net Photos: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/piwigo paka @ IRCnet freenode -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-support+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-support+owner@opensuse.org