monitr
monitr is a lightweight macOS activity monitor for the terminal. It is built in Rust with Ratatui and focuses on a fast process table, low overhead sampling, and an Activity Monitor-style layout.
Features
- CPU, Memory, Energy, Disk, and Network views
- Movers view for CPU, memory, and disk-rate changes since the previous sample, each row annotated with the dominant change
- Inline CPU and memory sparklines in the overview, plus a per-process CPU trend in the inspector
- Sortable process table with fast keyboard navigation
- Process filter by PID, name, user, command, or status, with
cpu>50,mem<100mb, andfield:valuepredicates - Inspector panel for the selected process
- Open files and sockets overlay for the selected process, on demand
- Disk and Network tabs include system-level volume/interface totals in the inspector
- CPU, memory, virtual memory, runtime, status, user, parent PID, command, executable, and current working directory
- Disk read/write rates and totals
- macOS thread count for the selected process
- Open file counts where the OS exposes them
- Confirmed TERM and KILL actions
- Confirmed suspend, resume, and priority-adjust actions
- One-shot process snapshots with text or JSON output
- Port ownership lookup for TCP listeners or all TCP/UDP sockets
- One-shot process inspection with open files and sockets
- Small native release binary
Install
Install from crates.io:
Build from source:
Or install into ~/.local/bin from this checkout:
Usage
Start with a custom refresh interval:
Refresh intervals must be between 250 and 10000 milliseconds.
Start with a filter:
Filters also accept predicates, ANDed together:
Supported predicates are cpu, mem, and pid with >, <, >=, <=
(memory accepts size suffixes like 100mb), plus user:, name:, status:,
cmd:, and pid: substring fields. Anything else is a plain substring.
Print a one-shot process snapshot:
Print machine-readable JSON for scripts:
Find which process owns a listening port:
Inspect all TCP/UDP sockets, including established connections:
Inspect one process, including open files and sockets:
Controls
| Key | Action |
|---|---|
1-6, Tab |
Switch views |
j/k, arrows |
Move selection |
PageUp/PageDown, Home/End |
Jump in the process table |
/ |
Filter processes |
Ctrl-U |
Clear the active filter from anywhere |
s |
Cycle sort key |
S |
Reverse sort direction |
c, m, e, d, D, n, p, T, u |
Sort by CPU, memory, energy impact, disk write, disk read, name, PID, runtime, user |
i, Enter |
Toggle inspector |
o |
Show open files and sockets for the selected process |
t |
Send TERM after confirmation |
f |
Send KILL after confirmation |
z |
Suspend with STOP after confirmation |
g |
Resume with CONT after confirmation |
[ / ] |
Lower / raise process priority by 5 after confirmation |
+ |
Slow the refresh interval |
- |
Speed up the refresh interval |
r |
Refresh now |
? |
Help |
q, Esc, Ctrl-C |
Quit |
Scope
monitr is intended to be a faster, lighter terminal alternative to Activity Monitor for common process and system inspection. It does not use Apple's private Activity Monitor internals, so some values are approximations or interface-level summaries:
- Energy impact is a lightweight estimate based on CPU, memory share, I/O, and run state.
- Disk and Network tabs keep a process table for context, while the inspector shows system-level volumes or interfaces.
- Network throughput is interface-level, not per-process. The
portscommand identifies socket owners but does not attribute byte counts to each process. - Some process details depend on macOS permissions and may show
-for protected processes.
Roadmap
The strongest opportunities for monitr are features that lean into terminal-native workflows or expose macOS process details that Activity Monitor does not make easy to inspect.
- Per-process network attribution: show bytes in/out and active connections by PID, not only interface-level totals. macOS exposes no cheap syscall for this, so it is deferred to an on-demand path rather than the refresh loop; the
ooverlay andportscommand already identify socket owners. - Better energy and wakeup data: replace the current lightweight energy estimate with richer macOS-specific signals (idle/interrupt wakeups) where public APIs expose them.
- Longer timeline windows: the history buffer that drives sparklines is in place; extend the Movers view from previous-sample deltas to 10 second, 1 minute, and 5 minute windows on top of it.
- Wider sparklines: extend the existing CPU/memory sparklines to disk and network, and into the process table when the terminal has room.
- Record and replay: export sampled sessions as JSON or CSV, then replay or diff them later for performance investigations.
- Watch rules and alerts: notify when a process exceeds CPU, memory, disk, or network thresholds, or when a matching process spawns, exits, or changes state, including a scriptable
monitr watchfor pipelines. - Diagnostic capture: build on
monitr inspectto collect a targeted report for a process, including process tree, sample/spindump output, and recent metric history. - Process tree and rollups: group processes by parent tree, app bundle, launchd service, terminal session, cwd, or git repository.
- Smarter filtering: build on the new
field:valueand comparison predicates with fuzzy matching, regex, and saved filters. - Richer anomaly explanations: the Movers view already names the dominant change per row; extend this to swap churn, dominant disk writers, network spikes, FD exhaustion risk, and short-lived process churn.
Development
monitr uses Rust 2024 and requires Rust 1.88 or newer.
This runs formatting, clippy, unit tests, and a release build.