This tool can be described as a Tiny, Dirty, Linux-and-OSX-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 also show estimated time and throughput, and provides a "top-like" mode (monitoring).
(After many requests: the colors in the shell come from powerline-shell. Try it, it's cool.)
Formerly known as cv (Coreutils Viewer).
make && make install
It depends on library ncurses, you may have to install corresponding packages (may be something like 'libncurses5-dev' or 'ncurses-devel').
Just launch the binary, progress
.
A few examples. You can:
-
monitor all current and upcoming instances of coreutils commands in a simple window:
watch progress -q
-
see how your download is progressing:
watch progress -wc firefox
-
look at your Web server activity:
progress -c httpd
-
launch and monitor any heavy command using
$!
:cp bigfile newfile & progress -mp $!
and much more.
It simply scans /proc
for interesting commands, and then looks at
directories fd
and fdinfo
to find opened files and seek positions,
and reports status for the largest file.
It's very light, and compatible with virtually any command.