The commit referenced below claims to disable vertical
scrolling when idle tasks weren't being shown. However
it really addresses only a point in time when that 'i'
toggle is keyed. Left untouched were the up/down keys.
So this commit will simply finish the job of disabling
vertical scrolling whenever tasks which have used some
CPU are the only ones which are currently being shown.
Reference(s):
commit c07f6c5e6d
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This commit is just a cleanup of some extraneous cruft
left after the newlib migrations and summarized below:
. whack the 2nd line of what was an eliminated comment
. eliminated reference to NUM_NS and thus that need to
include the otherwise defunct 'readproc.h' header file
. reference to Frame_maxtask made properly generalized
. all former sort support #define's are now eliminated
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Summarized below, miscellany addressed in this commit:
. deleted extraneous newline(s) for consistent spacing
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Historically LFS mattered only to open/read large files. A few programs
here use open/seek, but not generally on files that are large. However,
LFS also applies to stat which procps does in a bunch of places -- some
filesystems have 64bit inodes and attempts to do a 32bit stat will throw
an error.
Enable transparent LFS everywhere to avoid this.
There is a need in some utilities to have a way of accepting both
types of decimal points "." and ",". The only way seems to be to
rebuild strtod().
This new function will accept "123.456" and "123,456" as 123.456
and considers them the same number. It means we lose thousands
separator, but this is rarely used.
test scripts are added to check the function returns the proper
values. There was simpler predecessor that got stuck on negative
0 or -0.123 which these tests flushed out.
References:
Commit 99fa7f removed watch crashing from having the null ANSI
sequence. However it just ignored that sequence instead of fixing it.
This change correctly checks buf (not undefined endptr) and sends
the reset attribute if found.
Closes: #12
It is documented behavior that when certain other keys
are active, sorts column highlighting will temporarily
be disabled. Among those keys is the 'L' (locate/find)
provision. The equals ('=') key can be used to restore
column highlighting by resetting other keys, except 1.
When a locate/find is active, the '=' key will have no
effect on 'x' column highlighting, which still remains
disabled. Further, when 'L' is active an 'x' keystroke
is processed changing the state of column highlighting
but without any visual clue (since it's yet disabled).
So this commit just extends the '=' key to embrace 'L'
processing resets, just like other highlight disabling
keys while avoiding 'x' state changes if approproiate.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
We'll following the newlib <pids> approach to hashing:
. a 'PIDs at max depth:' portion of that UNREF_RPTHASH
enabled #define is now published only when the maximum
depth of hash table entry chains exceed depths of one.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Craig's recent commit under that newlib branch dealing
with namespace support has prompted me to review top's
handling of those fields. Currently, when such a field
is zero, top displays a dash ('-'). This will mean the
justification toggles ('j/J') will behave incorrectly.
This patch simply allows the potential zero to display
or be suppressed with the already existing '0' toggle.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
A patch containing the following miscellaneous tweaks:
. remove a function that handled former library errors
[ that function should have gone bye-bye with 3.3.11 ]
[ when those 'wchan' provisions were much simplified ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
When reference counts were added to some string fields
the 3 true string vector fields were not duplicated as
were those other fields. Instead they were supposed to
disallow a duplicate stack reference beyond the first.
However, the actual implementation gave NULL for every
true vector field whenever such items were duplicated.
More importantly, such true string vector fields never
considered references to the shared proc_t source root
which would have forced the conversion of such vectors
into a single string form via the '_CVT' library flag.
So this commit restores the intended outcome with true
string vectors. There's only 1 valid reference allowed
and duplicates and converted fields will yield a NULL.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
While not changing generated code this commit corrects
one free reference from 'str' to a more proper 'strv'.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
ps previously followed the Unix98 standard when it comes to
user-defined output, sometimes. This meant you could have
user output format with a header that included commas and
equals signs. It was dependent on if ps thought you wanted
sysv or bsd format and THAT was dependent on things in previous
options.
It was very confusing to a user because
ps p $$ -o pid=,comm=
gave you a two-column output but
ps -p $$ -o pid=,comm=
would give you a one column output with the header ",comm="
The -p versus p means (to ps) you want sysv or bsd parsing.
Unix98 standard or not, this is plainly just silly.
The commit removes any of the quirks Unix98 has with user defined
output. If you really wanted a ps header with commas in the output,
today isn't your day.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
configure.ac: do not check for C++ compiler
We do not have any C++ code, so there is no point in checking for C++
tools in the configure script.
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
See merge request !8
Ok, here is that rather major internal redesign hinted
at in the three previous commits. Its need was quickly
revealed after adapting top then attempting to display
newly added 'CGNAME' fields and an existing 'CGROUPS'.
That very quickly generated a SEGV. And the reason was
just as quickly recognized. Both fields relied on that
proc_t.cgroup member yet whichever result structure is
first in a stack is the one which assumes ownership of
of the vectored sting by resetting its cgroup to NULL.
So this commit introduces reference counting for a few
of the fields in the proc_t. Specifically there are 17
entries in the Item_table dealing with strings/vectors
where ownership is transferred to newlib. Now whenever
such fields are represented more than once in a stack,
the strings will be duplicated instead of transferred.
In this way we can generally remain optimized avoiding
string copies, yet still accommodate them when needed.
There's an exception to this scheme: those true string
vectors (CGROUP_V, CMDLINE_V and ENVIRON_V). When such
fields are duplicated in a stack the result structures
beyond the first will be set to NULL, which the caller
will (should) already be equipped to deal with anyway.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
[ but stay tuned! there is a commit coming soon that ]
[ represents a rather major internal redesign, which ]
[ was prompted by the ps and top adaptation testing. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
[ but stay tuned! there is a commit coming soon that ]
[ represents a rather major internal redesign, which ]
[ was prompted by the ps and top adaptation testing. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
The ps program was modified to print the control group
names, based on the library provided list of all those
control groups to which a process belongs. But this is
probably something the newlib should be doing for all.
So this commit borrows the ps approach to cg names and
thus will make that available to all future consumers.
[ but stay tuned! there is a commit coming soon that ]
[ represents a rather major internal redesign, which ]
[ was prompted by the ps and top adaptation testing. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
The above function was the sole public function in the
<pids> interface to use the word 'stacks' in its name.
All of the others dealt exclusively with their duties,
So this commit normalizes that outlier by renaming it.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
The above function had been disabled via '#if 0' so as
to prevent a compiler warning. But it really should be
called by that 'procps_pids_read_shut' function rather
than it duplicating/reinventing the same logic itself.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
It is documented behavior that when certain other keys
are active, sorts column highlighting will temporarily
be disabled. Among those keys is the 'L' (locate/find)
provision. The equals ('=') key can be used to restore
column highlighting by resetting other keys, except 1.
When a locate/find is active, the '=' key will have no
effect on 'x' column highlighting, which still remains
disabled. Further, when 'L' is active an 'x' keystroke
is processed changing the state of column highlighting
but without any visual clue (since it's yet disabled).
So this commit just extends the '=' key to embrace 'L'
processing resets, just like other highlight disabling
keys while avoiding 'x' state changes if approproiate.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
The cgroup field while shown as a vector is a concatenated
string, so alot of the complexity of sorting and displaying
has gone.
This change simplifies the cgroup sorting and adds display
and sorting for the name attribute of the cgroup, if found.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
Ported-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
From original:
commit 0ee090ae16
w would error out if the window size was smaller than 71 or some
other fields through environment grew too big. The code was a little
convoluted as well. The minimum length for command was 3, which is
pretty useless.
This change does the following:
w doesn't care by default the window size
w will adjust the command length up and down, to a minimum of 7
characters.
if the fields don't fit, w will line-wrap each line.
The idea being its better the line-wrap than it is to error out.
References: https://bugs.debian.org/183394
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
Ported-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
From original:
commit 151c05b497
Previous commit fixed pkill for trailing garbage on pkill
signal when it was an integer. This check now ensures that
pkill complains about it.
References:
commit a3975a9c60
This commit prevents pkill from accepting something like `-1garbage` as
a SIGHUP. The previous code was using atoi() which does not check for
trailing garbage and would parse the above as 1.
Handling numeric signals in signal_option() is not really necessary,
since signal_name_to_number() will recognize numeric signals and parse
them properly using strtol() and checking for trailing garbage. It also
checks that the numeric signals are in the proper range. So all we need
to do is remove the buggy numeric signal handling here.
Tested with `pkill -1garbage sleep`, after this patch it will complain
that "1" is not a valid option, which is the expected.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
Ported-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
From original:
commit 9646f7cba4
Ever since top was adapted to the new <pids> interface
there has been a bug that would cause an abnormal exit
when the '-p' argument contained *no* valid pids. This
was never revealed until now since the QA folks tested
only with valid, existing pids. (bunch of morons, eh?)
And even though the program author is blameless he has
taken it upon himself to clean up after the QA jokers.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Gosh, just because nobody uses some newlib provision I
guess, since it is being offered, it ought to actually
be tested at some point. Well, that point just arrived
and guess what? A surprise: some bugs were discovered.
The procps_pids_select function established a for loop
wherein readproc is called until the passed 'maxthese'
limit. Unfortunately this was incorrect for 2 reasons:
1. For PROCPS_FILL_PID results are limited by what the
oldlib finds, having established the pid list at open.
Total found already cannot exceed a passed 'maxthese';
2. With PROCPS_FILL_UID, returned results could exceed
a 'maxthese' thus making the for loop incorrect again.
[ plus yours truly neglected to forward the required ]
[ UIDs total to our old library, another oops biggie ]
In summary: the loop should have been forever, exiting
only when all those identified procs had been located.
So, while addressing those bugs, I've consolidated all
the retrieval code (initialize, iterate, summarize) in
a single helper function which will now serve both the
procps_pids_reap and select functions. And as a result
those guys were reduced to quite trivial housekeeping.
This patch, hopefully, completes the normalization for
reap/select (fill), which began with references shown.
Reference(s):
commit 0c953eccc5
commit 747dfc5987
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
With the conversion to the new <pids> interface, a few
comments (only) are being adjusted, as detailed below.
. Escapes '\' crept into some comments containing '|'.
. For consistency, add '.' dot qualifier to a comment.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This patch contains the following minor modifications:
. When assigning to boot_seconds from a double, a cast
to 'unsigned long' was employed that in reality should
have been 'unsigned long long'. But, on second thought
it's probably best if the compiler makes the decision.
. Results for ID_TGID do not require an 'f_status' flg
since both tid and tgid will be available by virtue of
the 'simple_nextpid' function normal operations. Thus,
that flag has been removed from the <pids> Item_table.
. When the pids_stacks structure was eliminated with a
change to the alloc/dealloc functions in the reference
below, several casts became redundant and are removed.
Reference(s):
commit 747dfc5987.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This commit represents the ps transition to the <pids>
'stacks' interface. While an effort to minimize impact
on existing code was made (as with a disguised proc_t)
the changes were still extensive. Along the way, a few
modifications beyond simply conversion were also made.
------------------------------------------------------
Here's a brief overview the design of this conversion:
. The need to satisfy relative enum requirements could
not easily have been made table driven since any entry
in the format_array might require several <pids> items
in support. So I decided to allow every print function
to contribute its own relative enums once the decision
as to exactly what will be printed had been finalized.
. A similar approach was taken for sorting, since it's
possible to have sort keys that will not be displayed.
Here, I relied on the existing print extensions above.
. In summary, just prior to printing ps walks thru two
lists one time (the format_list & sort_list) and calls
each print function. That function does not print, but
sets its required enum if necessary. Later, when those
same functions are called repeatedly for every printed
line, the only overhead will be an if test and branch.
------------------------------------------------------
Below is a summary of major changes beyond conversion:
. Sorts are now the responsibility of the library. And
therefore the total # of sortable fields substantially
increased without effort. Additionally, several quirky
fields remain as sortable, even though they can't ever
be printed(?). Surely that must make sense to someone.
[ while on this subject of sort, please do *not* try ]
[ to sort old ps on 'args'. or better yet, if you do ]
[ try that sort, see if you can determine his order, ]
[ without peeking at the source. that one hurts yet! ]
. All logic dealing with the old openproc flags and ps
struct members known as 'need' have been whacked since
that entire area was solely the new library's concern.
. Remaining malloc/calloc calls to stdlib were changed
to xmalloc/xcalloc from our own include/xalloc.h file.
None of the replaced calls ever checked return values.
[ be aware that 2 minor potential memory leaks exist ]
[ depending on command line arguments. no attempt is ]
[ made to free dynamically acquired format/sort node ]
[ structures upon return; a conscious design choice. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
After simplifying that select/fill interface, there is
no longer a need for public 'alloc' & 'dealloc' stacks
functions. There is now only one instance of stacks as
an input parameter found in procps_pids_stacks_sort().
But sorting 'empty' stacks serves no possible purpose.
So this commit retains both functions, since they will
still be needed, but designates them private (static).
Additionally, with their demise we will eliminate that
pids_stacks structure from the header file, internally
using what always was the true 'stacks_extent' struct.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
After wrestling with the conversion of both top and ps
the differences between reap (all) & fill (select) has
become increasingly inconvenient. So this patch simply
normalizes that API making returned results identical.
The former procps_pids_stacks_fill identifier will now
be known as procps_pids_select which serves as logical
counterpart to the existing procps_pids_reap function.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Shoot, here's yet another bow to ps needs. But it's ok
because it makes a lot of sense. Rather than force all
users into their own calculations do but it once here.
As an aside this need arose during ps testing when the
sorts were using TIME_START or TICS_ALL. That was just
fine for almost every need except 'etime' plus 'time'.
That 'etime' was sorting the opposite of what's wanted
when using TIME_START (of course) while 'time' yielded
some weird ordering because TICS_ALL was too granular.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>