whowatch – Monitor Linux Users and Processes in Real Time
whowatch is a simple, easy-to-use interactive who-like command line program for monitoring processes and users on a Linux system. It shows who is logged on
whowatch is a simple, easy-to-use interactive who-like command line program for monitoring processes and users on a Linux system. It shows who is logged on
In our previous article, we have covered some useful command line networking utilities for Sysadmin’s for network management, troubleshooting and debugging on Linux. We mentioned
Teleconsole is a free open source and powerful command-line tool for sharing your Linux terminal session with people you trust. Your friends or team members
ctop is a free open source, simple and cross-platform top-like command-line tool for monitoring container metrics in real-time. It allows you to get an overview
Zstandard (also known as zstd) is a free open source, fast real-time data compression program with better compression ratios, developed by Facebook. It is a
Fkill-cli is a free open source, simple and cross-platform command line tool designed to interactively kill processes in Linux, developed using Nodejs. It also runs
top is a traditional command-line tool for monitoring real-time processes in a Unix/Linux systems, it’s comes preinstalled on most if not all Linux distributions and
jm-shell is a free open source, small, highly informative and customized Bash shell, that gives you a great wealth of information about your shell activity
Bootiso is a powerful Bash script to easily and securely create a bootable USB device from one ISO file. It helps you create a bootable
In Unix-like systems such as Linux, everything is considered a file, and all information about a file (metadata or file attributes such as creation time,
Kurly is a free open source, simple but effective, cross-platform alternative to the popular curl command-line tool. It is written in Go programming language and
Recently, we have explained about how to randomly display predefined ASCII art on the Linux terminal, using a program called ASCII-Art-Splash-Screen. In this article, we