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How can I add the current CPU usage to my menu bar as a percentage?


indicator-multiload - Always display cpu at least 2 digitsHow can I add the current GPU usage to my menu bar as a percentage?100% CPU usage in Ubuntu 11.10How to Limit the CPU usage for a process and its children whether there is another process demanding resources or notIs it possible to direct system monitor output to a file?Increase processor utilisation of one application/programIn need of cpu monitoring tool that logs activityWhy does memory usage shown in System Monitor differ from that in ps_mem?Equivalent of real-time disk usage feature of “Task Manager” for Windows?Is there any Widget that can show my CPU and other performances live?What does this system monitor readout say about my RAM?How can I add the current GPU usage to my menu bar as a percentage?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








38















I'm used to OS X and I use MenuMeters in my menu bar to monitor CPU usage as a percentage and memory as used/free totals. I really want to add this functionality in Ubuntu as I'm using it for development. I've seen that you can add graphs. Graphs mean nothing to me :). I need percentages. How can I add this functionality in Ubuntu?










share|improve this question






























    38















    I'm used to OS X and I use MenuMeters in my menu bar to monitor CPU usage as a percentage and memory as used/free totals. I really want to add this functionality in Ubuntu as I'm using it for development. I've seen that you can add graphs. Graphs mean nothing to me :). I need percentages. How can I add this functionality in Ubuntu?










    share|improve this question


























      38












      38








      38


      17






      I'm used to OS X and I use MenuMeters in my menu bar to monitor CPU usage as a percentage and memory as used/free totals. I really want to add this functionality in Ubuntu as I'm using it for development. I've seen that you can add graphs. Graphs mean nothing to me :). I need percentages. How can I add this functionality in Ubuntu?










      share|improve this question














      I'm used to OS X and I use MenuMeters in my menu bar to monitor CPU usage as a percentage and memory as used/free totals. I really want to add this functionality in Ubuntu as I'm using it for development. I've seen that you can add graphs. Graphs mean nothing to me :). I need percentages. How can I add this functionality in Ubuntu?







      software-recommendation cpu system-monitor






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Jan 16 '14 at 5:04









      daviesgeekdaviesgeek

      3201 gold badge3 silver badges11 bronze badges




      3201 gold badge3 silver badges11 bronze badges























          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          53
















          There is no need to add any extra repository, just install indicator-multiload from the default repos:



          sudo apt install indicator-multiload


          Then start it manually the first time by searching for "system load indicator" in the dashboard.



          Right click the indicator for preferences.



          example






          share|improve this answer
































            45
















            The system load indicator can be configured to display numeric values. First make sure that indicator-multiload is installed:



            sudo apt install indicator-multiload


            Do the following steps:



            1. Search for System Load Indicator in dash and launch it.enter image description here

            2. Right click on the indicator applet and choose Preferences.
              enter image description here

            3. A window will pop up. Click on the Indicator Items... button on the lower middle portion of the window.
              enter image description here

            4. Move the item CPU $(percent(cpu,inuse)) to the top of the list.
              enter image description here

            5. Close all opened windows and notice the numerical CPU load displayed in the panel.
              enter image description here

            6. Note that the entry is customizable. You can get creative and start mixing up different entries. For example, if you want to display memory usage as well, replace the entry with CPU $(percent(cpu.inuse)) Mem $(size(mem.user)), which will result in:
              enter image description here





            share|improve this answer



























            • If it's possible to fix it somehow? Because when, for example, cpu changes from 9% to 11% (one more digit) entire line is moved. I want labels, like "CPU", "Mem" be static.

              – javapowered
              May 14 '18 at 11:36



















            10
















            The "indicator multiload" is the one you are searching for. The commands to install:



            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:indicator-multiload/stable-daily 
            sudo apt-get update
            sudo apt-get install indicator-multiload


            Read more about it at this link : webupd8



            Update: Now indicator-multiload is available in the official PPA as suggested by other answers.
            However, if you want the latest version, install it from the PPA indicator-multiload/stable-daily.






            share|improve this answer


































              1
















              Use Gnome shell system monitor extension (works with Ubuntu 18.04LTS too). Install prerequisite:



              sudo apt-get install gir1.2-gtop-2.0, gir1.2-networkmanager-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-gst-3.0 gir1.2-gtkclutter-1.0 chrome-gnome-shell


              Then visit https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/120/system-monitor/, preferably in Firefox, and install by clicking the toggle button next to the extension's name.



              For more info on installation see: https://github.com/paradoxxxzero/gnome-shell-system-monitor-applet






              share|improve this answer



























              • Appears to not work in 19.04 (installed dependencies but still shows ERROR on going to extensions.gnome.org)

                – orangenarwhals
                Jul 25 at 16:19


















              0
















              For Xubuntu, right click on the top panel (the Ubuntu name for a menu bar) and choose Panel | Add New Items | System Load Monitor. For Unity, see What can replace system monitoring in the top Gnome Panel in Unity? for five different approaches.






              share|improve this answer



























              • I tried the answers in the question you linked to. I didn't try the long python script, but there's nothing that displays a percentage in the menu bar. All I can get is the graph. Is it that hard to get a percentage? I would think that the graph is harder.

                – daviesgeek
                Jan 16 '14 at 7:05














              Your Answer








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              5 Answers
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              5 Answers
              5






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              active

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              53
















              There is no need to add any extra repository, just install indicator-multiload from the default repos:



              sudo apt install indicator-multiload


              Then start it manually the first time by searching for "system load indicator" in the dashboard.



              Right click the indicator for preferences.



              example






              share|improve this answer





























                53
















                There is no need to add any extra repository, just install indicator-multiload from the default repos:



                sudo apt install indicator-multiload


                Then start it manually the first time by searching for "system load indicator" in the dashboard.



                Right click the indicator for preferences.



                example






                share|improve this answer



























                  53














                  53










                  53









                  There is no need to add any extra repository, just install indicator-multiload from the default repos:



                  sudo apt install indicator-multiload


                  Then start it manually the first time by searching for "system load indicator" in the dashboard.



                  Right click the indicator for preferences.



                  example






                  share|improve this answer













                  There is no need to add any extra repository, just install indicator-multiload from the default repos:



                  sudo apt install indicator-multiload


                  Then start it manually the first time by searching for "system load indicator" in the dashboard.



                  Right click the indicator for preferences.



                  example







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Dec 30 '16 at 23:31









                  Vincenzo PiiVincenzo Pii

                  1,06710 silver badges12 bronze badges




                  1,06710 silver badges12 bronze badges


























                      45
















                      The system load indicator can be configured to display numeric values. First make sure that indicator-multiload is installed:



                      sudo apt install indicator-multiload


                      Do the following steps:



                      1. Search for System Load Indicator in dash and launch it.enter image description here

                      2. Right click on the indicator applet and choose Preferences.
                        enter image description here

                      3. A window will pop up. Click on the Indicator Items... button on the lower middle portion of the window.
                        enter image description here

                      4. Move the item CPU $(percent(cpu,inuse)) to the top of the list.
                        enter image description here

                      5. Close all opened windows and notice the numerical CPU load displayed in the panel.
                        enter image description here

                      6. Note that the entry is customizable. You can get creative and start mixing up different entries. For example, if you want to display memory usage as well, replace the entry with CPU $(percent(cpu.inuse)) Mem $(size(mem.user)), which will result in:
                        enter image description here





                      share|improve this answer



























                      • If it's possible to fix it somehow? Because when, for example, cpu changes from 9% to 11% (one more digit) entire line is moved. I want labels, like "CPU", "Mem" be static.

                        – javapowered
                        May 14 '18 at 11:36
















                      45
















                      The system load indicator can be configured to display numeric values. First make sure that indicator-multiload is installed:



                      sudo apt install indicator-multiload


                      Do the following steps:



                      1. Search for System Load Indicator in dash and launch it.enter image description here

                      2. Right click on the indicator applet and choose Preferences.
                        enter image description here

                      3. A window will pop up. Click on the Indicator Items... button on the lower middle portion of the window.
                        enter image description here

                      4. Move the item CPU $(percent(cpu,inuse)) to the top of the list.
                        enter image description here

                      5. Close all opened windows and notice the numerical CPU load displayed in the panel.
                        enter image description here

                      6. Note that the entry is customizable. You can get creative and start mixing up different entries. For example, if you want to display memory usage as well, replace the entry with CPU $(percent(cpu.inuse)) Mem $(size(mem.user)), which will result in:
                        enter image description here





                      share|improve this answer



























                      • If it's possible to fix it somehow? Because when, for example, cpu changes from 9% to 11% (one more digit) entire line is moved. I want labels, like "CPU", "Mem" be static.

                        – javapowered
                        May 14 '18 at 11:36














                      45














                      45










                      45









                      The system load indicator can be configured to display numeric values. First make sure that indicator-multiload is installed:



                      sudo apt install indicator-multiload


                      Do the following steps:



                      1. Search for System Load Indicator in dash and launch it.enter image description here

                      2. Right click on the indicator applet and choose Preferences.
                        enter image description here

                      3. A window will pop up. Click on the Indicator Items... button on the lower middle portion of the window.
                        enter image description here

                      4. Move the item CPU $(percent(cpu,inuse)) to the top of the list.
                        enter image description here

                      5. Close all opened windows and notice the numerical CPU load displayed in the panel.
                        enter image description here

                      6. Note that the entry is customizable. You can get creative and start mixing up different entries. For example, if you want to display memory usage as well, replace the entry with CPU $(percent(cpu.inuse)) Mem $(size(mem.user)), which will result in:
                        enter image description here





                      share|improve this answer















                      The system load indicator can be configured to display numeric values. First make sure that indicator-multiload is installed:



                      sudo apt install indicator-multiload


                      Do the following steps:



                      1. Search for System Load Indicator in dash and launch it.enter image description here

                      2. Right click on the indicator applet and choose Preferences.
                        enter image description here

                      3. A window will pop up. Click on the Indicator Items... button on the lower middle portion of the window.
                        enter image description here

                      4. Move the item CPU $(percent(cpu,inuse)) to the top of the list.
                        enter image description here

                      5. Close all opened windows and notice the numerical CPU load displayed in the panel.
                        enter image description here

                      6. Note that the entry is customizable. You can get creative and start mixing up different entries. For example, if you want to display memory usage as well, replace the entry with CPU $(percent(cpu.inuse)) Mem $(size(mem.user)), which will result in:
                        enter image description here






                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Aug 22 '17 at 13:16









                      Community

                      1




                      1










                      answered Apr 22 '17 at 16:40







                      user596162






















                      • If it's possible to fix it somehow? Because when, for example, cpu changes from 9% to 11% (one more digit) entire line is moved. I want labels, like "CPU", "Mem" be static.

                        – javapowered
                        May 14 '18 at 11:36


















                      • If it's possible to fix it somehow? Because when, for example, cpu changes from 9% to 11% (one more digit) entire line is moved. I want labels, like "CPU", "Mem" be static.

                        – javapowered
                        May 14 '18 at 11:36

















                      If it's possible to fix it somehow? Because when, for example, cpu changes from 9% to 11% (one more digit) entire line is moved. I want labels, like "CPU", "Mem" be static.

                      – javapowered
                      May 14 '18 at 11:36






                      If it's possible to fix it somehow? Because when, for example, cpu changes from 9% to 11% (one more digit) entire line is moved. I want labels, like "CPU", "Mem" be static.

                      – javapowered
                      May 14 '18 at 11:36












                      10
















                      The "indicator multiload" is the one you are searching for. The commands to install:



                      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:indicator-multiload/stable-daily 
                      sudo apt-get update
                      sudo apt-get install indicator-multiload


                      Read more about it at this link : webupd8



                      Update: Now indicator-multiload is available in the official PPA as suggested by other answers.
                      However, if you want the latest version, install it from the PPA indicator-multiload/stable-daily.






                      share|improve this answer































                        10
















                        The "indicator multiload" is the one you are searching for. The commands to install:



                        sudo add-apt-repository ppa:indicator-multiload/stable-daily 
                        sudo apt-get update
                        sudo apt-get install indicator-multiload


                        Read more about it at this link : webupd8



                        Update: Now indicator-multiload is available in the official PPA as suggested by other answers.
                        However, if you want the latest version, install it from the PPA indicator-multiload/stable-daily.






                        share|improve this answer





























                          10














                          10










                          10









                          The "indicator multiload" is the one you are searching for. The commands to install:



                          sudo add-apt-repository ppa:indicator-multiload/stable-daily 
                          sudo apt-get update
                          sudo apt-get install indicator-multiload


                          Read more about it at this link : webupd8



                          Update: Now indicator-multiload is available in the official PPA as suggested by other answers.
                          However, if you want the latest version, install it from the PPA indicator-multiload/stable-daily.






                          share|improve this answer















                          The "indicator multiload" is the one you are searching for. The commands to install:



                          sudo add-apt-repository ppa:indicator-multiload/stable-daily 
                          sudo apt-get update
                          sudo apt-get install indicator-multiload


                          Read more about it at this link : webupd8



                          Update: Now indicator-multiload is available in the official PPA as suggested by other answers.
                          However, if you want the latest version, install it from the PPA indicator-multiload/stable-daily.







                          share|improve this answer














                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer








                          edited Jun 13 '17 at 11:59

























                          answered Jul 11 '15 at 4:04









                          GobinathGobinath

                          2,0341 gold badge14 silver badges29 bronze badges




                          2,0341 gold badge14 silver badges29 bronze badges
























                              1
















                              Use Gnome shell system monitor extension (works with Ubuntu 18.04LTS too). Install prerequisite:



                              sudo apt-get install gir1.2-gtop-2.0, gir1.2-networkmanager-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-gst-3.0 gir1.2-gtkclutter-1.0 chrome-gnome-shell


                              Then visit https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/120/system-monitor/, preferably in Firefox, and install by clicking the toggle button next to the extension's name.



                              For more info on installation see: https://github.com/paradoxxxzero/gnome-shell-system-monitor-applet






                              share|improve this answer



























                              • Appears to not work in 19.04 (installed dependencies but still shows ERROR on going to extensions.gnome.org)

                                – orangenarwhals
                                Jul 25 at 16:19















                              1
















                              Use Gnome shell system monitor extension (works with Ubuntu 18.04LTS too). Install prerequisite:



                              sudo apt-get install gir1.2-gtop-2.0, gir1.2-networkmanager-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-gst-3.0 gir1.2-gtkclutter-1.0 chrome-gnome-shell


                              Then visit https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/120/system-monitor/, preferably in Firefox, and install by clicking the toggle button next to the extension's name.



                              For more info on installation see: https://github.com/paradoxxxzero/gnome-shell-system-monitor-applet






                              share|improve this answer



























                              • Appears to not work in 19.04 (installed dependencies but still shows ERROR on going to extensions.gnome.org)

                                – orangenarwhals
                                Jul 25 at 16:19













                              1














                              1










                              1









                              Use Gnome shell system monitor extension (works with Ubuntu 18.04LTS too). Install prerequisite:



                              sudo apt-get install gir1.2-gtop-2.0, gir1.2-networkmanager-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-gst-3.0 gir1.2-gtkclutter-1.0 chrome-gnome-shell


                              Then visit https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/120/system-monitor/, preferably in Firefox, and install by clicking the toggle button next to the extension's name.



                              For more info on installation see: https://github.com/paradoxxxzero/gnome-shell-system-monitor-applet






                              share|improve this answer















                              Use Gnome shell system monitor extension (works with Ubuntu 18.04LTS too). Install prerequisite:



                              sudo apt-get install gir1.2-gtop-2.0, gir1.2-networkmanager-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-1.0 gir1.2-clutter-gst-3.0 gir1.2-gtkclutter-1.0 chrome-gnome-shell


                              Then visit https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/120/system-monitor/, preferably in Firefox, and install by clicking the toggle button next to the extension's name.



                              For more info on installation see: https://github.com/paradoxxxzero/gnome-shell-system-monitor-applet







                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Apr 15 at 9:43









                              gatorback

                              1,3113 gold badges14 silver badges29 bronze badges




                              1,3113 gold badges14 silver badges29 bronze badges










                              answered Sep 28 '18 at 20:16









                              lashgarlashgar

                              1115 bronze badges




                              1115 bronze badges















                              • Appears to not work in 19.04 (installed dependencies but still shows ERROR on going to extensions.gnome.org)

                                – orangenarwhals
                                Jul 25 at 16:19

















                              • Appears to not work in 19.04 (installed dependencies but still shows ERROR on going to extensions.gnome.org)

                                – orangenarwhals
                                Jul 25 at 16:19
















                              Appears to not work in 19.04 (installed dependencies but still shows ERROR on going to extensions.gnome.org)

                              – orangenarwhals
                              Jul 25 at 16:19





                              Appears to not work in 19.04 (installed dependencies but still shows ERROR on going to extensions.gnome.org)

                              – orangenarwhals
                              Jul 25 at 16:19











                              0
















                              For Xubuntu, right click on the top panel (the Ubuntu name for a menu bar) and choose Panel | Add New Items | System Load Monitor. For Unity, see What can replace system monitoring in the top Gnome Panel in Unity? for five different approaches.






                              share|improve this answer



























                              • I tried the answers in the question you linked to. I didn't try the long python script, but there's nothing that displays a percentage in the menu bar. All I can get is the graph. Is it that hard to get a percentage? I would think that the graph is harder.

                                – daviesgeek
                                Jan 16 '14 at 7:05
















                              0
















                              For Xubuntu, right click on the top panel (the Ubuntu name for a menu bar) and choose Panel | Add New Items | System Load Monitor. For Unity, see What can replace system monitoring in the top Gnome Panel in Unity? for five different approaches.






                              share|improve this answer



























                              • I tried the answers in the question you linked to. I didn't try the long python script, but there's nothing that displays a percentage in the menu bar. All I can get is the graph. Is it that hard to get a percentage? I would think that the graph is harder.

                                – daviesgeek
                                Jan 16 '14 at 7:05














                              0














                              0










                              0









                              For Xubuntu, right click on the top panel (the Ubuntu name for a menu bar) and choose Panel | Add New Items | System Load Monitor. For Unity, see What can replace system monitoring in the top Gnome Panel in Unity? for five different approaches.






                              share|improve this answer















                              For Xubuntu, right click on the top panel (the Ubuntu name for a menu bar) and choose Panel | Add New Items | System Load Monitor. For Unity, see What can replace system monitoring in the top Gnome Panel in Unity? for five different approaches.







                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24









                              Community

                              1




                              1










                              answered Jan 16 '14 at 5:21









                              K7AAYK7AAY

                              5,0155 gold badges18 silver badges48 bronze badges




                              5,0155 gold badges18 silver badges48 bronze badges















                              • I tried the answers in the question you linked to. I didn't try the long python script, but there's nothing that displays a percentage in the menu bar. All I can get is the graph. Is it that hard to get a percentage? I would think that the graph is harder.

                                – daviesgeek
                                Jan 16 '14 at 7:05


















                              • I tried the answers in the question you linked to. I didn't try the long python script, but there's nothing that displays a percentage in the menu bar. All I can get is the graph. Is it that hard to get a percentage? I would think that the graph is harder.

                                – daviesgeek
                                Jan 16 '14 at 7:05

















                              I tried the answers in the question you linked to. I didn't try the long python script, but there's nothing that displays a percentage in the menu bar. All I can get is the graph. Is it that hard to get a percentage? I would think that the graph is harder.

                              – daviesgeek
                              Jan 16 '14 at 7:05






                              I tried the answers in the question you linked to. I didn't try the long python script, but there's nothing that displays a percentage in the menu bar. All I can get is the graph. Is it that hard to get a percentage? I would think that the graph is harder.

                              – daviesgeek
                              Jan 16 '14 at 7:05



















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                              Where does the image of a data connector as a sharp metal spike originate from?Where does the concept of infected people turning into zombies only after death originate from?Where does the motif of a reanimated human head originate?Where did the notion that Dragons could speak originate?Where does the archetypal image of the 'Grey' alien come from?Where did the suffix '-Man' originate?Where does the notion of being injured or killed by an illusion originate?Where did the term “sophont” originate?Where does the trope of magic spells being driven by advanced technology originate from?Where did the term “the living impaired” originate?