linux-performance
Here are 8 public repositories matching this topic...
yc-360 Script is a lightweight diagnostic script that captures comprehensive troubleshooting artifacts like Application logs, GC logs, thread dumps, heap dumps, OS-level metrics across various environments (Linux, Windows, Max, Docker, k8, openshift, Fargate).
- Updated
Nov 29, 2025 - C
System reporting tool for Linux on Arm that shows how a server is configured, especially in relation to "perf" features.
- Updated
Sep 10, 2024 - Python
Linux ARM64 platform performance monitoring tools
- Updated
Nov 17, 2017 - Perl
Linuxar is a powerful bash script designed to help you optimize your Linux system effortlessly. It cleans out junk files, optimizes kernel parameters, and applies a range of performance tweaks to boost your computer’s responsiveness—all while ensuring your original settings are safely backed up and can be restored if needed.
- Updated
Apr 15, 2025 - Shell
An advanced automation daemon for X11 desktops and window managers. Designed to limit FPS/CPU usage and run commands on window focus and unfocus events. Provides gaming-oriented features. Written mostly in Bash and partially in C.
- Updated
Nov 28, 2025 - Shell
tools and C++ API to Linux performance and configuration data
- Updated
Dec 10, 2024 - C++
Linuxar is a powerful bash script designed to help you optimize your Linux system effortlessly. It cleans out junk files, optimizes kernel parameters, and applies a range of performance tweaks to boost your computer’s responsiveness—all while ensuring your original settings are safely backed up and can be restored if needed.
- Updated
Aug 26, 2025 - Shell
💀 Modular bash-scripts to install web-servers, different tools (db, monitoring, php, moodle etc.), settings the environment in Ubuntu or make audit the system.
- Updated
Aug 28, 2025 - Shell
Improve this page
Add a description, image, and links to thelinux-performance topic page so that developers can more easily learn about it.
Add this topic to your repo
To associate your repository with thelinux-performance topic, visit your repo's landing page and select "manage topics."