SYNOPSIS
progress [ -qdwmM ] [ -W secs ] [ -c command ] [ -p pid ]progress -v | --version
progress -h | --help
DESCRIPTION
This manual page briefly documents the progress command.This tool can be described as a Tiny, Dirty, Linux-Only C command that looks for coreutils basic commands (cp, mv, dd, tar, gzip/gunzip, cat, etc.) currently running on your system and displays the percentage of copied data.
It can now also estimate throughput (using flag -w ).
OPTIONS
- -q (--quiet)
- hides all messages
- -d (--debug)
- shows all warning/error messages
- -w (--wait)
- estimate I/O throughput and estimated remaining time (slower display)
- -W (--wait-delay secs)
- wait 'secs' seconds for I/O estimation (implies -w )
- -m (--monitor)
- loop while monitored processes are still running
- -M (--monitor-continuously)
- like monitor but never stop (similar to watch progress )
- -c (--command cmd)
- monitor only this command name (ex: firefox). This option can be used multiple times on the command line.
- -p (--pid id)
- monitor only this numeric process ID (ex: `pidof firefox`). This option can be used multiple times on the command line.
- -i (--ignore-file file)
- do not report a process for 'file'. If the file does not exist yet, you must give a full and clean absolute path. This option can be used multiple times on the command line.
- -o (--open-mode {r|w})
- report only files opened for read or write by the process. This option is useful when you want to monitor only output files (or input ones) of a process.
- -v (--version)
- show program version and exit
- -h (--help)
-
display help message and exit
ENVIRONMENT
It's possible to give permanent options using PROGRESS_ARGS environment variable. See example below. Command line arguments take precedence over environment.
EXAMPLES
Continuously monitor all current and upcoming instances of coreutils commands
-
watch progress -q
-
watch progress -wc firefox
-
progress -c httpd
-
cp bigfile newfile & progress -mp $!
-
export PROGRESS_ARGS='-M --ignore-file ~/.xsession-errors'
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Thomas Zimmermann <[email protected]>, for the openSUSE project (and may be used by others).