virt-top (but the column headers will stay the same, so you can use
those to process the CSV file).
-Not every version of virt-top supports CSV output - it depends how the
-program was compiled (see I<README> file in the source distribution
-for details).
-
To save space you can compress your CSV files (if your shell supports
this feature, eg. I<bash>):
Crashed.
+=item B<M>
+
+Suspended by guest power management.
+
=back
=item B<TIME>