+ --stream
+ Stream mode. All output is sent to stdout. This can be used from
+ shell scripts etc. There is no user interface.
+
+ --block-in-bytes
+ Show I/O statistics in Bytes. Default is shown in the number of
+ Requests.
+
+ --end-time time
+ The program will exit at the *time* given.
+
+ The time may be given in one of the following formats:
+
+ *YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS*
+ End time is the date and time given.
+
+ *HH:MM:SS*
+ End time is the time given, today.
+
+ *+HH:MM:SS*
+ End time is HH hours, MM minutes, SS seconds in the future
+ (counted from the moment that program starts).
+
+ *+secs*
+ End time is *secs* seconds in the future.
+
+ For example to run the program for 3 minutes you could do:
+
+ virt-top --end-time +00:03:00
+
+ or:
+
+ virt-top --end-time +180
+
+ Not every version of virt-top supports this option - it depends how
+ the program was compiled (see *README* file in the source
+ distribution for details).
+