In this example, caps are defined for two projects associated with two users. user1 has a cap of 50 megabytes, and user2 has a cap of 10 megabytes.
The following command produces five reports at 5-second sampling intervals.
user1machine% rcapstat 5 5 id project nproc vm rss cap at avgat pg avgpg 112270 user1 24 123M 35M 50M 50M 0K 3312K 0K 78194 user2 1 2368K 1856K 10M 0K 0K 0K 0K id project nproc vm rss cap at avgat pg avgpg 112270 user1 24 123M 35M 50M 0K 0K 0K 0K 78194 user2 1 2368K 1856K 10M 0K 0K 0K 0K id project nproc vm rss cap at avgat pg avgpg 112270 user1 24 123M 35M 50M 0K 0K 0K 0K 78194 user2 1 2368K 1928K 10M 0K 0K 0K 0K id project nproc vm rss cap at avgat pg avgpg 112270 user1 24 123M 35M 50M 0K 0K 0K 0K 78194 user2 1 2368K 1928K 10M 0K 0K 0K 0K id project nproc vm rss cap at avgat pg avgpg 112270 user1 24 123M 35M 50M 0K 0K 0K 0K 78194 user2 1 2368K 1928K 10M 0K 0K 0K 0K |
The first three lines of output constitute the first report, which contains the cap and project information for the two projects and paging statistics since rcapd was started. The at and pg columns are a number greater than zero for user1 and zero for user2, which indicates that at some time in the daemon's history, user1 exceeded its cap but user2 did not.
The subsequent reports show no significant activity.