How to Install and Uninstall ctop Package on Ubuntu 21.10 (Impish Indri)
Last updated: December 30,2024
1. Install "ctop" package
Here is a brief guide to show you how to install ctop on Ubuntu 21.10 (Impish Indri)
$
sudo apt update
Copied
$
sudo apt install
ctop
Copied
2. Uninstall "ctop" package
This guide let you learn how to uninstall ctop on Ubuntu 21.10 (Impish Indri):
$
sudo apt remove
ctop
Copied
$
sudo apt autoclean && sudo apt autoremove
Copied
3. Information about the ctop package on Ubuntu 21.10 (Impish Indri)
Package: ctop
Architecture: all
Version: 1.0.0-2.1
Multi-Arch: foreign
Priority: optional
Section: universe/admin
Origin: Ubuntu
Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers
Original-Maintainer: Python Applications Packaging Team
Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
Installed-Size: 67
Depends: python3:any (>= 3.4~)
Filename: pool/universe/c/ctop/ctop_1.0.0-2.1_all.deb
Size: 15944
MD5sum: 9f82dee314f0b4af8afc999d7f51137f
SHA1: fbad0def5879cb4212b0d82fa2e7d0aff0da8dd4
SHA256: ab6045b03a1ad18e1608237d7123740960fcfc0f4e49bd87185afe20c6825e20
SHA512: 3d4d2c0ba7f6e3711616d77518c7edeba5f325eb255da46067841487788577ee54af5c06a7b1be98b858daa7ea0ca43f8e3e4c4304dc92b65707b282f08c57aa
Homepage: https://github.com/yadutaf/ctop
Description-en: Command line / text based Linux Containers monitoring tool
ctop will help you see what's going on at the container level.
Basically, containers are a logical group of processes isolated using
kernel's cgroups and namespaces. Recently, they have been made popular
by Docker and they are also heavily used under the hood by systemd and a
load of container tools like lxc, rocket, lmctfy and many others.
.
Under the hood, ctop will collect all metrics it can from cgroups in
realtime and render them to instantly give you an overview of the global
system health.
.
It currently collects metrics related to cpu, memory and block IO usage
as well as metadata such as owning user (mostly for systemd based
containers), uptime and attempts to guess the container managing
technology behind.
Description-md5: 4daab9998e54481e116f13ad5920f517
Architecture: all
Version: 1.0.0-2.1
Multi-Arch: foreign
Priority: optional
Section: universe/admin
Origin: Ubuntu
Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers
Original-Maintainer: Python Applications Packaging Team
Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
Installed-Size: 67
Depends: python3:any (>= 3.4~)
Filename: pool/universe/c/ctop/ctop_1.0.0-2.1_all.deb
Size: 15944
MD5sum: 9f82dee314f0b4af8afc999d7f51137f
SHA1: fbad0def5879cb4212b0d82fa2e7d0aff0da8dd4
SHA256: ab6045b03a1ad18e1608237d7123740960fcfc0f4e49bd87185afe20c6825e20
SHA512: 3d4d2c0ba7f6e3711616d77518c7edeba5f325eb255da46067841487788577ee54af5c06a7b1be98b858daa7ea0ca43f8e3e4c4304dc92b65707b282f08c57aa
Homepage: https://github.com/yadutaf/ctop
Description-en: Command line / text based Linux Containers monitoring tool
ctop will help you see what's going on at the container level.
Basically, containers are a logical group of processes isolated using
kernel's cgroups and namespaces. Recently, they have been made popular
by Docker and they are also heavily used under the hood by systemd and a
load of container tools like lxc, rocket, lmctfy and many others.
.
Under the hood, ctop will collect all metrics it can from cgroups in
realtime and render them to instantly give you an overview of the global
system health.
.
It currently collects metrics related to cpu, memory and block IO usage
as well as metadata such as owning user (mostly for systemd based
containers), uptime and attempts to guess the container managing
technology behind.
Description-md5: 4daab9998e54481e116f13ad5920f517