For now, the semantics are mostly fit for Linux zswap subsystem. For
instance, we add the third swap usage metric that indicates the amount
of memory that is accounted to swap but in fact stored elsewhere. This
exactly matches the definition of frontswap/zswap, and is probably of
little use to all other platforms.
This removes the duplication of dynamic meter/column hashtable
pointers that has come in between the Settings and ProcessList
structures - only one copy of these is needed. With the future
planned dynamic screens feature adding another pointer, let us
first clean this up before any further duplication happens.
Add a process column for scheduling policy to show the current
scheduling policy of the process.
Add a the ability to change the scheduling policy of a process via the
key 'Y'.
Currently implemented on Linux and FreeBSD only but should be portable,
since sched_getscheduler(2) is part of POSIX.1-2001.
Closes: #1161
freebsd/Platform.c:151:23: error: a function declaration without a prototype is deprecated in all versions of C [-Werror,-Wstrict-prototypes]
int Platform_getUptime() {
^
void
It's an artefact of the previous implementation of
Platform_getProcessLocks for Linux, and is never used;
there's no reason for it to have ever been exported
This includes:
- Wrap function implementations
- Pointer alignment for function signatures
- Pointer alignment for variable declarations
- Whitespace after keywords
- Whitespace after comma
- Whitespace around initializers
- Whitespace around operators
- Code indentation
- Line break for single line statements
- Misleading alignment
Since commit edf319e[1], we're dynamically adjusting column width of
"CPU%", showing single digit precision also for values greater than
"99.9%" makes "CPU%" column consistent with all other values.
[1]: edf319e53d
Change "Process_printPercentage()" function's logic to always display
value (i.e. "val") with single precision. Except when value is greater
than "99.9%" for columns like "MEM%", whose width is fixed to "4" and
value cannot go beyond "100%".
Credits: @Explorer09, thanks for the patch[2] to fix title alignment
issue.
[2]: https://github.com/htop-dev/htop/pull/959#issuecomment-1092480951Closes: #957
This displays the same output as ps's -o emul, which is the system call
emulation environment, or ABI, in use. This will typically be FreeBSD
ELF32 or ELF64, but can also be Linux ELF32 or Linux ELF64 when running
Linux binaries under FreeBSD's Linuxulator binary compatibility layer.
The column width of 16 is chosen to match KI_EMULNAMELEN's value of 16,
most of which is normally used up as FreeBSD ELF32/64 is 13 characters.
While most Unix-like systems use 16-bit user IDs,
Linux supports 32-bit UIDs since version 2.6.
UIDs above 65535 are used for UID namespacing of containers,
where a container has its own set of 16-bit user IDs.
Processes in such containers will have (much) larger UIDs than 65535.
Because the current format strings for `ST_UID` and `USER`
are `%5d` and `%9d` respectively, processes with such UIDs
lead to misaligned columns.
Dynamically scale the `ST_UID` column and increase the size of `USER`
to 10 characters (length of UINT32_MAX) to ensure that the user ID always fits.
Additionally: clean up how the titlebuffer size calculation and ensure
the PID column has a minimum size of 5.
This closes a nasty memory leak. There is at least another leak looming somewhere when Disk I/O is shown in the header area. That could very well be an issue within libdevstat native to FreeBSD.
Implements support for arbitrary Performance Co-Pilot
metrics with per-process instance domains to form new
htop columns. The column-to-metric mappings are setup
using configuration files which will be documented via
man pages as part of a follow-up commit.
We provide an initial set of column configurations so
as to provide new capabilities to pcp-htop: including
configs for containers, open fd counts, scheduler run
queue time, tcp/udp bytes/calls sent/recv, delay acct,
virtual machine guests, detailed virtual memory, swap.
Note there is a change to the configuration file path
resolution algorithm introduced for 'dynamic meters'.
First, look in any custom PCP_HTOP_DIR location. Then
iterate, in priority order, users home directory, then
local sysadmins files in /etc/pcp/htop, then readonly
configuration files below /usr/share/pcp/htop. This
final location becomes the preferred place for our own
shipped meter and column files.
The Settings file (htoprc) writing code is updated to
not using the numeric identifier for dynamic columns.
The same strategy used for dynamic meters is used here
where we write Dynamic(name) so the name can be setup
once more at start. Regular (static) columns writing
to htoprc - i.e. numerically indexed - is unchanged.
Currently htop does not support offline CPUs and hot-swapping, e.g. via
echo 0 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu2/online
Split the current single cpuCount variable into activeCPUs and
existingCPUs.
Supersedes: #650
Related: #580
This commit is based on exploratory work by Sohaib Mohamed.
The end goal is two-fold - to support addition of Meters we
build via configuration files for both the PCP platform and
for scripts ( https://github.com/htop-dev/htop/issues/526 )
Here, we focus on generic code and the PCP support. A new
class DynamicMeter is introduced - it uses the special case
'param' field handling that previously was used only by the
CPUMeter, such that every runtime-configured Meter is given
a unique identifier. Unlike with the CPUMeter this is used
internally only. When reading/writing to htoprc instead of
CPU(N) - where N is an integer param (CPU number) - we use
the string name for each meter. For example, if we have a
configuration for a DynamicMeter for some Redis metrics, we
might read and write "Dynamic(redis)". This identifier is
subsequently matched (back) up to the configuration file so
we're able to re-create arbitrary user configurations.
The PCP platform configuration file format is fairly simple.
We expand configs from several directories, including the
users homedir alongside htoprc (below htop/meters/) and also
/etc/pcp/htop/meters. The format will be described via a
new pcp-htop(5) man page, but its basically ini-style and
each Meter has one or more metric expressions associated, as
well as specifications for labels, color and so on via a dot
separated notation for individual metrics within the Meter.
A few initial sample configuration files are provided below
./pcp/meters that give the general idea. The PCP "derived"
metric specification - see pmRegisterDerived(3) - is used
as the syntax for specifying metrics in PCP DynamicMeters.
Add process columns showing the elapsed time since the process was
started.
Similar to STARTTIME, but shows the time passed since the process start
instead of the fixed start time of the process.
Closes https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=782636