3 Dec 18, 2013 — https://sf.gl/902

Monitoring ’dd’ progress

You should in all likelyhood not be using dd to begin with. But here's how to monitor progress if you do.

On Linux, to view the progress of the file/disk copy tool dd, you could send the USR1 signal to get a progress output. This apparently doesn’t work on Apple’s OS.

However, with Activity Monitor, it's easy to see the progress of dd when, for example, copying an operating system image onto a USB (which can take a while...). Simply compare the size of the image with the "bytes written" column to get a good idea of how much progress it has done:

dd progress with Activity Monitor

If you need to view more detailed progress, or use dd lot, you can try installing pv, a utility which echoes the amount of data piped through it. One would use it with dd like this:

dd if=/file/image | pv | of=/dev/disk8

That would render something like this, letting you know the progress:

1,38MiB 0:00:08 [  144kiB/s]

Also, with pv, you could specify the --size parameter to get an estimation of the time it will take to finish. pv can be installed with, for example, Homebrew.


3 Responses to “Monitoring ’dd’ progress”

  1. sadads

    It’s very effortless to find out any topic on web as compared to
    textbooks, as I found this paragraph at this website.

  2. Justin

    You could also press Ctrl + T

  3. thePsguy

    ^ Justin FTW!

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