Run in terminal,

gnome-system-monitor

This would open system monitor.

Answer from sourav c. on askubuntu.com
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Red Hat
docs.redhat.com › en › documentation › red_hat_enterprise_linux › 6 › html › performance_tuning_guide › s-analyzeperf-gnome
3.2. GNOME and KDE System Monitors | Performance Tuning Guide | Red Hat Enterprise Linux | 6 | Red Hat Documentation
The GNOME System Monitor displays basic system information and allows you to monitor system processes, and resource or file system usage. Open it with the gnome-system-monitor command in the Terminal, or click on the Applications menu, and select System Tools > System Monitor.
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Linux Hint
linuxhint.com › gnome_system_monitor
GNOME System Monitor – Linux Hint
Ubuntu and Ubuntu-based systems will have easier access as GNOME System Monitor is already a part of the Ubuntu software repository. In the case of other systems, the best way to enjoy the tool is installing the “snap” package. Run the following commands according to your Linux distro –
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GNOME
help.gnome.org › users › gnome-system-monitor › stable › commandline.html.en
Get the same information from the command line
Most of the information displayed by System Monitor can also be obtained using these command line tools.
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Linux Command Library
linuxcommandlibrary.com › man › gnome-system-monitor
gnome-system-monitor man | Linux Command Library
-h, --help Print command line options ... of the program · Gnome-system-monitor is a graphical utility for monitoring and managing system resources in the GNOME desktop environment....
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VITUX
vitux.com › how-to-install-and-use-gnome-system-monitor-and-task-manager-in-debian-10
How to Install and Use GNOME System Monitor and Task Manager in Debian 10 – VITUX
In this article, will explain how to install and uninstall GNOME System Monitor in a Debian system. We will describe the installation process both via GUI and the command line.
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AddictiveTips
addictivetips.com › home › how to use gnome system monitor on linux
How to use Gnome System Monitor on Linux
March 23, 2021 - There are two ways to install Gnome System Monitor on Linux. If you’re using Gnome Software on your GTK desktop, you can get it that way. It is also possible to install it via the command-line terminal.
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Ubuntu
manpages.ubuntu.com › manpages › noble › man1 › gnome-system-monitor.1.html
Ubuntu Manpage: gnome-system-monitor — view and control processes
In addition to those standard GNOME options, the gnome-system-monitor accepts the following options: -s, --simple Show a simple dialog to end processes and log out. The gnome-system-monitor was written by Kevin Vandersloot . This manual page was written by Colin Walters walters@debian.org for the Debian system (but may be used by others).
Find elsewhere
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GNOME
help.gnome.org › gnome-system-monitor › index.html
System Monitor
Refresh the information shown in the System Monitor with a longer or shorter interval.
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Ubuntu Manpages
manpages.ubuntu.com › focal › man(1)
Ubuntu Manpage: gnome-system-monitor - view and control processes
In addition, the gnome-system-monitor provides an overall view of the resource usage on your system, including memory and CPU allocation. This program accepts all the standard GNOME and GTK+ options, which follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-').
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TechSphinx
techsphinx.com › home › how to install and use gnome system monitor?
How to Install and Use GNOME System Monitor? - TechSphinx
January 8, 2021 - After installing this extension, you don’t have to open system monitor to find out what program is using up your resources, you can get all that info in gnome-shell status bar. ... You can also install this extension via browser by going to the gnome-system-extensions page and following the steps provided there. Here, I am going to install it using the source file. 1. Download the extension source code from GitHub using “wget” command.
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Linux Mint Forums
forums.linuxmint.com › board index › chat › forums feedback › suggestions & feedback archive
System Monitor - Linux Mint Forums
September 27, 2017 - If you would really like that key combination to work for you, go to "Menu", "Preferences", "Keyboard." At that pop-up, select the "Shortcuts" tab, then click on "Add Custom Shortcut." In that pop-up box, "Name" it System Monitor, in the "Command" box type gnome-system-monitor.
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H2S Media
how2shout.com › home › cpu monitor › how to open system monitor in ubuntu
How to open system monitor in Ubuntu - H2S Media
July 8, 2019 - You can run Ubuntu’s System Monitor using both GUI (Graphical user interface) and CLI (Command line interface). ... From Graphical user interface, first, go on Applications and then in the search box type system monitor. When the System Monitor icon will appear, click to open it. ... After opening the system monitor you will get a list of all process running on your Ubuntu system. If some of it not behaving well and you want to kill it; then simply select the process right click on it and select Kill option. Shortcuts for the Gnome system monitor options are as follow:
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GitHub
github.com › GNOME › gnome-system-monitor
GitHub - GNOME/gnome-system-monitor: Read-only mirror of https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-system-monitor · GitHub
To build the application, the following dependencies are required: Use the following command to install dependencies: sudo apt install meson gettext appstream-util catch2 itstool libglibmm-2.68-dev ...
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