

You can reach me and I will be delighted to exchange my views. Worked with Orascom Telecom- Banglalink, Network Elites as VAS partner, BTRC, BTT (Turkey), Mango Teleservices Limited and Access to Informaiton (A2I-UNDP) Currently working at Oracle Corporation as Principal Technology Solution and Cloud Architect. Also engaged with several Offshore Software Development Team. I have prior experience in managing numerous local and international projects in the area of Telco VAS & NMC, National Data Center & PKI Naitonal Root and CA Infrastructure. Emdad Rumi, an IT Project Manager & Consultant, Virtualization & Cloud Savvyfrom Dhaka, Bangladesh. Now that rpmforge repository has been setup we can install htop right away using yum.

Install the rpm rpm -i rpmforge-release-0.5.*.rpm Install htop Verify the downloaded rpm $ rpm -K rpmforge-release-0.5.*.rpmĤ. Make sure you download the correct rpm file matching your system architecture and centOS version.įor centOS 6.4 on 64bit machine I would download the following. Get the rpm installer for the rpmforge repository from. The steps to install are again quite simple. Htop and many other packages are available from the rpmforge repository for centOS. If you are running centos from the terminal then you can use the lynx browser to navigate to the website and download the file. Now launch htop and monitor the resources like a pro. I am using centos 6.4 so I would download ĭownload the rpm file on your centos machine and install with the rpm command # rpm -i htop-1.0.x86_64.rpm Download the one that is suitable for your os version. The url has rpm packages for various versions of redhat and centos and both 32bit and 64bit architectures.

But the rpm is easily available for download from here On centos/redhat, the htop tool is not available in the yum repository by default.
