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How to get system cpu/ram usage in c++ on Windows [duplicate]

Tags:

c++

c

memory

cpu

I once had the task of determining the following performance parameters from inside a running application:

  • Total virtual memory available
  • Virtual memory currently used
  • Virtual memory currently used by my process
  • Total RAM available
  • RAM currently used
  • RAM currently used by my process
  • % CPU currently used
  • % CPU currently used by my process

The code had to run on Windows and Linux. Even though this seems to be a standard task, finding the necessary information in the manuals (WIN32 API, GNU docs) as well as on the Internet took me several days, because there's so much incomplete/incorrect/outdated information on this topic to be found out there.

In order to save others from going through the same trouble, I thought it would be a good idea to collect all the scattered information plus what I found by trial and error here in one place.

like image 402
Lanzelot Avatar asked Sep 15 '08 14:09

Lanzelot


People also ask

How do I check my CPU and RAM utilization on Windows?

Press CTRL + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager. Click the Performance tab. This tab displays your system's RAM, CPU, GPU, and disk usage, along with network info. To view RAM usage, select the Memory box.

How do I check my current usage of CPU and RAM?

Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to launch Task Manager. Or, right-click the Taskbar and select Task Manager. Select the Performance tab and click Memory in the left panel. The Memory window lets you see your current RAM usage, check RAM speed, and view other memory hardware specifications.

How do I pull up CPU usage on Windows?

Start by pressing CTRL + Shift + Esc on your keyboard. In the following window, click Task Manager. While in Task Manager, click the Performance tab. Here in the Performance tab, you can see how much of the CPU the computer is currently using.

What causes high CPU usage C#?

May be your application runs multiple threads. I have same issue that runs multiple threads and in each thread there is continuous update which makes the application usage from 50% to 100%.


2 Answers

Windows

Some of the above values are easily available from the appropriate Win32 API, I just list them here for completeness. Others, however, need to be obtained from the Performance Data Helper library (PDH), which is a bit "unintuitive" and takes a lot of painful trial and error to get to work. (At least it took me quite a while, perhaps I've been only a bit stupid...)

Note: for clarity all error checking has been omitted from the following code. Do check the return codes...!

  • Total Virtual Memory:

    #include "windows.h"
    
    MEMORYSTATUSEX memInfo;
    memInfo.dwLength = sizeof(MEMORYSTATUSEX);
    GlobalMemoryStatusEx(&memInfo);
    DWORDLONG totalVirtualMem = memInfo.ullTotalPageFile;
    

    Note: The name "TotalPageFile" is a bit misleading here. In reality this parameter gives the "Virtual Memory Size", which is size of swap file plus installed RAM.

  • Virtual Memory currently used:

    Same code as in "Total Virtual Memory" and then

     DWORDLONG virtualMemUsed = memInfo.ullTotalPageFile - memInfo.ullAvailPageFile;
    
  • Virtual Memory currently used by current process:

    #include "windows.h"
    #include "psapi.h"
    
    PROCESS_MEMORY_COUNTERS_EX pmc;
    GetProcessMemoryInfo(GetCurrentProcess(), (PROCESS_MEMORY_COUNTERS*)&pmc, sizeof(pmc));
    SIZE_T virtualMemUsedByMe = pmc.PrivateUsage;
    
  • Total Physical Memory (RAM):

    Same code as in "Total Virtual Memory" and then

    DWORDLONG totalPhysMem = memInfo.ullTotalPhys;
    
  • Physical Memory currently used:

    Same code as in "Total Virtual Memory" and then

    DWORDLONG physMemUsed = memInfo.ullTotalPhys - memInfo.ullAvailPhys;
    
  • Physical Memory currently used by current process:

    Same code as in "Virtual Memory currently used by current process" and then

    SIZE_T physMemUsedByMe = pmc.WorkingSetSize;
    
  • CPU currently used:

    #include "TCHAR.h"
    #include "pdh.h"
    
    static PDH_HQUERY cpuQuery;
    static PDH_HCOUNTER cpuTotal;
    
    void init(){
        PdhOpenQuery(NULL, NULL, &cpuQuery);
        // You can also use L"\\Processor(*)\\% Processor Time" and get individual CPU values with PdhGetFormattedCounterArray()
        PdhAddEnglishCounter(cpuQuery, L"\\Processor(_Total)\\% Processor Time", NULL, &cpuTotal);
        PdhCollectQueryData(cpuQuery);
    }
    
    double getCurrentValue(){
        PDH_FMT_COUNTERVALUE counterVal;
    
        PdhCollectQueryData(cpuQuery);
        PdhGetFormattedCounterValue(cpuTotal, PDH_FMT_DOUBLE, NULL, &counterVal);
        return counterVal.doubleValue;
    }
    
  • CPU currently used by current process:

    #include "windows.h"
    
    static ULARGE_INTEGER lastCPU, lastSysCPU, lastUserCPU;
    static int numProcessors;
    static HANDLE self;
    
    void init(){
        SYSTEM_INFO sysInfo;
        FILETIME ftime, fsys, fuser;
    
        GetSystemInfo(&sysInfo);
        numProcessors = sysInfo.dwNumberOfProcessors;
    
        GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ftime);
        memcpy(&lastCPU, &ftime, sizeof(FILETIME));
    
        self = GetCurrentProcess();
        GetProcessTimes(self, &ftime, &ftime, &fsys, &fuser);
        memcpy(&lastSysCPU, &fsys, sizeof(FILETIME));
        memcpy(&lastUserCPU, &fuser, sizeof(FILETIME));
    }
    
    double getCurrentValue(){
        FILETIME ftime, fsys, fuser;
        ULARGE_INTEGER now, sys, user;
        double percent;
    
        GetSystemTimeAsFileTime(&ftime);
        memcpy(&now, &ftime, sizeof(FILETIME));
    
        GetProcessTimes(self, &ftime, &ftime, &fsys, &fuser);
        memcpy(&sys, &fsys, sizeof(FILETIME));
        memcpy(&user, &fuser, sizeof(FILETIME));
        percent = (sys.QuadPart - lastSysCPU.QuadPart) +
            (user.QuadPart - lastUserCPU.QuadPart);
        percent /= (now.QuadPart - lastCPU.QuadPart);
        percent /= numProcessors;
        lastCPU = now;
        lastUserCPU = user;
        lastSysCPU = sys;
    
        return percent * 100;
    }
    

Linux

On Linux the choice that seemed obvious at first was to use the POSIX APIs like getrusage() etc. I spent some time trying to get this to work, but never got meaningful values. When I finally checked the kernel sources themselves, I found out that apparently these APIs are not yet completely implemented as of Linux kernel 2.6!?

In the end I got all values via a combination of reading the pseudo-filesystem /proc and kernel calls.

  • Total Virtual Memory:

    #include "sys/types.h"
    #include "sys/sysinfo.h"
    
    struct sysinfo memInfo;
    
    sysinfo (&memInfo);
    long long totalVirtualMem = memInfo.totalram;
    //Add other values in next statement to avoid int overflow on right hand side...
    totalVirtualMem += memInfo.totalswap;
    totalVirtualMem *= memInfo.mem_unit;
    
  • Virtual Memory currently used:

    Same code as in "Total Virtual Memory" and then

    long long virtualMemUsed = memInfo.totalram - memInfo.freeram;
    //Add other values in next statement to avoid int overflow on right hand side...
    virtualMemUsed += memInfo.totalswap - memInfo.freeswap;
    virtualMemUsed *= memInfo.mem_unit;
    
  • Virtual Memory currently used by current process:

    #include "stdlib.h"
    #include "stdio.h"
    #include "string.h"
    
    int parseLine(char* line){
        // This assumes that a digit will be found and the line ends in " Kb".
        int i = strlen(line);
        const char* p = line;
        while (*p <'0' || *p > '9') p++;
        line[i-3] = '\0';
        i = atoi(p);
        return i;
    }
    
    int getValue(){ //Note: this value is in KB!
        FILE* file = fopen("/proc/self/status", "r");
        int result = -1;
        char line[128];
    
        while (fgets(line, 128, file) != NULL){
            if (strncmp(line, "VmSize:", 7) == 0){
                result = parseLine(line);
                break;
            }
        }
        fclose(file);
        return result;
    }
    
  • Total Physical Memory (RAM):

    Same code as in "Total Virtual Memory" and then

    long long totalPhysMem = memInfo.totalram;
    //Multiply in next statement to avoid int overflow on right hand side...
    totalPhysMem *= memInfo.mem_unit;
    
  • Physical Memory currently used:

    Same code as in "Total Virtual Memory" and then

    long long physMemUsed = memInfo.totalram - memInfo.freeram;
    //Multiply in next statement to avoid int overflow on right hand side...
    physMemUsed *= memInfo.mem_unit;
    
  • Physical Memory currently used by current process:

    Change getValue() in "Virtual Memory currently used by current process" as follows:

    int getValue(){ //Note: this value is in KB!
        FILE* file = fopen("/proc/self/status", "r");
        int result = -1;
        char line[128];
    
        while (fgets(line, 128, file) != NULL){
            if (strncmp(line, "VmRSS:", 6) == 0){
                result = parseLine(line);
                break;
            }
        }
        fclose(file);
        return result;
    }
    

  • CPU currently used:

    #include "stdlib.h"
    #include "stdio.h"
    #include "string.h"
    
    static unsigned long long lastTotalUser, lastTotalUserLow, lastTotalSys, lastTotalIdle;
    
    void init(){
        FILE* file = fopen("/proc/stat", "r");
        fscanf(file, "cpu %llu %llu %llu %llu", &lastTotalUser, &lastTotalUserLow,
            &lastTotalSys, &lastTotalIdle);
        fclose(file);
    }
    
    double getCurrentValue(){
        double percent;
        FILE* file;
        unsigned long long totalUser, totalUserLow, totalSys, totalIdle, total;
    
        file = fopen("/proc/stat", "r");
        fscanf(file, "cpu %llu %llu %llu %llu", &totalUser, &totalUserLow,
            &totalSys, &totalIdle);
        fclose(file);
    
        if (totalUser < lastTotalUser || totalUserLow < lastTotalUserLow ||
            totalSys < lastTotalSys || totalIdle < lastTotalIdle){
            //Overflow detection. Just skip this value.
            percent = -1.0;
        }
        else{
            total = (totalUser - lastTotalUser) + (totalUserLow - lastTotalUserLow) +
                (totalSys - lastTotalSys);
            percent = total;
            total += (totalIdle - lastTotalIdle);
            percent /= total;
            percent *= 100;
        }
    
        lastTotalUser = totalUser;
        lastTotalUserLow = totalUserLow;
        lastTotalSys = totalSys;
        lastTotalIdle = totalIdle;
    
        return percent;
    }
    
  • CPU currently used by current process:

    #include "stdlib.h"
    #include "stdio.h"
    #include "string.h"
    #include "sys/times.h"
    #include "sys/vtimes.h"
    
    static clock_t lastCPU, lastSysCPU, lastUserCPU;
    static int numProcessors;
    
    void init(){
        FILE* file;
        struct tms timeSample;
        char line[128];
    
        lastCPU = times(&timeSample);
        lastSysCPU = timeSample.tms_stime;
        lastUserCPU = timeSample.tms_utime;
    
        file = fopen("/proc/cpuinfo", "r");
        numProcessors = 0;
        while(fgets(line, 128, file) != NULL){
            if (strncmp(line, "processor", 9) == 0) numProcessors++;
        }
        fclose(file);
    }
    
    double getCurrentValue(){
        struct tms timeSample;
        clock_t now;
        double percent;
    
        now = times(&timeSample);
        if (now <= lastCPU || timeSample.tms_stime < lastSysCPU ||
            timeSample.tms_utime < lastUserCPU){
            //Overflow detection. Just skip this value.
            percent = -1.0;
        }
        else{
            percent = (timeSample.tms_stime - lastSysCPU) +
                (timeSample.tms_utime - lastUserCPU);
            percent /= (now - lastCPU);
            percent /= numProcessors;
            percent *= 100;
        }
        lastCPU = now;
        lastSysCPU = timeSample.tms_stime;
        lastUserCPU = timeSample.tms_utime;
    
        return percent;
    }
    

TODO: Other Platforms

I would assume, that some of the Linux code also works for the Unixes, except for the parts that read the /proc pseudo-filesystem. Perhaps on Unix these parts can be replaced by getrusage() and similar functions?

like image 185
Lanzelot Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 05:10

Lanzelot


For Linux

You can also use /proc/self/statm to get a single line of numbers containing key process memory information which is a faster thing to process than going through a long list of reported information as you get from proc/self/status

See proc(5)

/proc/[pid]/statm

    Provides information about memory usage, measured in pages.
    The columns are:

        size       (1) total program size
                   (same as VmSize in /proc/[pid]/status)
        resident   (2) resident set size
                   (same as VmRSS in /proc/[pid]/status)
        shared     (3) number of resident shared pages (i.e., backed by a file)
                   (same as RssFile+RssShmem in /proc/[pid]/status)
        text       (4) text (code)
        lib        (5) library (unused since Linux 2.6; always 0)
        data       (6) data + stack
        dt         (7) dirty pages (unused since Linux 2.6; always 0)
like image 44
Steven Warner Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 04:10

Steven Warner