Activity Monitor, Battery Status Menu and top¶
This article describes the Activity Monitor, Battery Status Menu, and
top
— three related tools available on Mac OS X.
Note: The power profiling overview is worth reading at this point if you haven’t already. It may make parts of this document easier to understand.
Activity Monitor¶
This is a built-in OS X tool that shows real-time process measurements. It is well-known and its “Energy Impact” measure is likely to be consulted by users to compare the power consumption of different programs. (Apple support documentation specifically recommends it for troubleshooting battery life problems.) Unfortunately “Energy Impact” is not a good measure for either users or software developers and it should be avoided. Activity Monitor can still be useful, however.
Power-related measurements¶
Activity Monitor has several tabs. They can all be customized to show any of the available measurements (by right-clicking on the column strip) but only the “Energy” tab groups child processes with parent processes, which is useful, so it’s the best one to use. The following screenshot shows a customized “Energy” tab.
The power-related columns are as follows.
Energy Impact / Avg Energy Impact: See the separate section below.
% CPU: CPU usage percentage. This can exceed 100% if multiple cores are being used.
Idle wake Ups:
In Mac OS 10.9 this measured “package idle exit” wakeups. This is the same value as powermetrics’ “Pkg idle” measurement (i.e.
task_power_info::task_platform_idle_wakeups
obtained from thetask_info
function.)In Mac OS 10.10 it appears to have been changed to measure interrupt-level wakeups (a superset of idle wakeups), which are less interesting. This is the same value as powermetrics’ “Intr” measurement (i.e.
task_power_info::task_interrupt_wakeups
obtained from thetask_info
function.)
Requires High Perf GPU: Many Macs have two GPUs: a low-power, low-performance integrated GPU, and a high-power, high-performance external GPU. Using the high-performance GPU can greatly increase power consumption, and should be avoided whenever possible. This column indicates which GPU is being used.
Activity Monitor can be useful for cursory measurements, but for more precise and detailed measurements other tools such as powermetrics are better.
What does “Energy Impact” measure?¶
“Energy Impact” is a hybrid proxy measure of power consumption.
Careful
investigation
indicates that on Mac OS 10.10 and 10.11 it is computed with a formula
that is machine model-specific, and includes the following factors: CPU
usage, wakeup frequency, quality of service
class
usage, and disk, GPU, and network activity. The weightings of each
factor can be found in one of the the files in
/usr/share/pmenergy/Mac-<id>.plist
, where <id>
can be determined
with the following command.
ioreg -l | grep board-id
In contrast, on Mac OS 10.9 it is computed via a simpler machine model-independent formula that only factors in CPU usage and wakeup frequency.
In both cases “Energy Impact” often correlates poorly with actual power consumption and should be avoided in favour of direct measurements that have clear physical meanings.
What does “Average Energy Impact” measure?¶
When the Energy tab of Activity Monitor is first opened, the “Average
Energy Impact” column is empty and the title bar says “Activity
Monitor (Processing…)”. After 5–10 seconds, the “Average Energy
Impact” column is populated with values and the title bar changes to
“Activity Monitor (Applications in last 8 hours)”. If you have top
open during those 5–10 seconds you’ll see that systemstats
is
running and using a lot of CPU, and so presumably the measurements are
obtained from it.
systemstats
is a program that runs continuously and periodically
measures, among other things, CPU usage and idle wakeups for each
running process. Tests indicate that it is almost certainly using the
same “Energy Impact” formula to compute the “Average Energy Impact”,
using measurements from the past 8 hours of wake time (i.e. if a laptop
is closed for several hours and then reopened, those hours are not
included in the calculation.)
Battery status menu¶
When you click on the battery icon in the OS X menu bar you get a drop-down menu that includes a list of “Apps Using Significant Energy”. This is crude but prominent, and therefore worth understanding — even though it’s not much use for profiling applications.
When you open this menu for the first time in a while it says
“Collecting Power Usage Information” for a few seconds, and if you have
top
open during that time you’ll see that, once again, systemstats
is running and using a lot of CPU. Furthermore, if you click on an
application name in the menu Activity Monitor will be opened and that
application’s entry will be highlighted. Based on these facts it seems
reasonable to assume that “Energy Impact” is again being used to
determine which applications are “using significant energy”.
Testing shows that once an energy-intensive application is started it takes less than a minute for it to show up in the battery status menu. And once the application stops using high amounts of energy it takes a few minutes to disappear. The exception is when the application is closed, in which case it disappears immediately. And it appears that a program with an “Energy Impact” of roughly 20 or more will eventually show up as significant, and programs that have much higher “Energy Impact” values tend to show up more quickly.
All of these battery status menu observations are difficult to make reliably and so should be treated with caution. It is clear, however, that the window used by the battery status menu is measured in seconds or minutes, which is much less than the 8 hour window used for “Average Energy Impact” in Activity Monitor.
top
¶
top
is similar to Activity Monitor, but is a command-line utility. To
see power-related measurements, invoke it as follows.
top -stats pid,command,cpu,idlew,power -o power -d
Note: -a
and -e
can be used instead of -d
to get different
counting modes. See the man page for details.
It will show periodically-updating data like the following.
PID COMMAND %CPU IDLEW POWER
50300 firefox 12.9 278 26.6
76256 plugin-container 3.4 159 11.3
151 coreaudiod 0.9 68 4.3
76505 top 1.5 1 1.6
76354 Activity Monitor 1.0 0 1.0
The PID, COMMAND and %CPU columns are self-explanatory.
The IDLEW column is the number of “package idle exit” wakeups.
The POWER column’s value is computed by the same formula as the one used for “Energy Impact” by Activity Monitor in Mac OS 10.9, and should also be avoided.
top
is unlikely to be much use for power profiling.