This is a focused and fast library to get system information like:
- Memory (free, active, ...)
- Network Interfaces (name, in bytes, out bytes, ...)
- CPU (user, system, nice, idle)
- Load Average
- Disk (type, disk path, free bytes, total bytes, ...)
- Boot Time
- Current Task (used bytes and usage time MAC OS X / Linux ONLY)
It currently supports:
- FreeBSD
- MacOS X
- Linux (>= 2.6)
- OpenBSD
- NetBSD
- Solaris/SmartOS
It might support (but not tested):
- Older versions of linux
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'vmstat'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install vmstat
Just require the library and make a snapshot or use the distinct methods to just capture parts of the statistics. For further information have a look at the rdoc.
require "vmstat"
Vmstat.snapshot # => #<Vmstat::Snapshot:0x007fe5f22df660
# @at=2012-10-09 21:48:57 +0200,
# @boot_time=2012-10-09 18:42:37 +0200,
# @cpus=
# [#<struct Vmstat::Cpu
# num=0,
# user=187167,
# system=144466,
# nice=0,
# idle=786622>,
# #<struct Vmstat::Cpu num=1, user=2819, system=1641, nice=0, idle=1113782>,
# #<struct Vmstat::Cpu num=2, user=158698, system=95186, nice=0, idle=864359>,
# #<struct Vmstat::Cpu num=3, user=2702, system=1505, nice=0, idle=1114035>,
# #<struct Vmstat::Cpu num=4, user=140231, system=78248, nice=0, idle=899764>,
# #<struct Vmstat::Cpu num=5, user=2468, system=1314, nice=0, idle=1114460>,
# #<struct Vmstat::Cpu num=6, user=120764, system=66284, nice=0, idle=931195>,
# #<struct Vmstat::Cpu num=7, user=2298, system=1207, nice=0, idle=1114737>],
# @disks=
# [#<struct Vmstat::Disk
# type=:hfs,
# origin="/dev/disk0s2",
# mount="/",
# block_size=4096,
# free_blocks=51470668,
# available_blocks=51406668,
# total_blocks=61069442>],
# @load_average=
# #<struct Vmstat::LoadAverage
# one_minute=1.74072265625,
# five_minutes=1.34326171875,
# fifteen_minutes=1.1845703125>,
# @memory=
# #<struct Vmstat::Memory
# pagesize=4096,
# wired=1037969,
# active=101977,
# inactive=484694,
# free=470582,
# pageins=102438,
# pageouts=0>,
# @network_interfaces=
# [#<struct Vmstat::NetworkInterface
# name=:lo0,
# in_bytes=6209398,
# in_errors=0,
# in_drops=0,
# out_bytes=6209398,
# out_errors=0,
# type=24>,
# #<struct Vmstat::NetworkInterface
# name=:gif0,
# in_bytes=0,
# in_errors=0,
# in_drops=0,
# out_bytes=0,
# out_errors=0,
# type=55>,
# #<struct Vmstat::NetworkInterface
# name=:stf0,
# in_bytes=0,
# in_errors=0,
# in_drops=0,
# out_bytes=0,
# out_errors=0,
# type=57>,
# #<struct Vmstat::NetworkInterface
# name=:en0,
# in_bytes=1321276010,
# in_errors=0,
# in_drops=0,
# out_bytes=410426678,
# out_errors=0,
# type=6>,
# #<struct Vmstat::NetworkInterface
# name=:p2p0,
# in_bytes=0,
# in_errors=0,
# in_drops=0,
# out_bytes=0,
# out_errors=0,
# type=6>],
# @task=
# #<struct Vmstat::Task
# suspend_count=0,
# virtual_size=2551554048,
# resident_size=19628032,
# user_time_ms=28,
# system_time_ms=83>>
- Swap information
- Support more platforms (hp ux, aix, ...)
- Optimize performance for OpenBSD, NetBSD using
uvmexp
etc. directly - Optimize performance for solaris, smartos using
kstat
etc. directly - Server performance/system information (open file handles, cache sizes, number of inodes ...)
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request