in include/c.h we check if HAVE___PROGNAME is defined, but the
corresponding macro for setting (or not setting) it is missing from
the configure script. This commit adds the missing macro, by
copying it from the macro in tmux.
The two special hugetlbfs items were misnamed. The TBL
reference (table) should be TLB (transaction lookaside
buffer). Besides, I never liked their position anyway!
[ and one macro argument tweak is being snuck in too ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
[ of course, we had to renumber most existing fields ]
[ with these additions. plus, some typos were fixed. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
My, how time flies. Here we are finally attending to a
2 year old issue at long last (well, at least top is).
In truth, this change was prompted by that more recent
issue #201 and simply represents my initial picks from
among those available with the new library provisions.
Note: we have to bump that rcfile version whenever new
fields are added. That will mean older top programs no
longer can read this top's rcfile. But that's Ok since
top offers a warning before replacing an older rcfile.
Doubtless, more smaps_rollup fields will be introduced
under top as we get more experience with this feature.
However, any such usage comes with tremendoud costs as
was reported for the previous patch and repeated here:
Here is a small preview of just what you will discover
when using this command line: time top/top -d0 -n1000.
------------------------------------ as a regular user
with only PID + RES (statm)
real 0m2.605s
user 0m1.060s
sys 0m1.377s
with only PID + RSS (smaps)
real 0m26.397s 10x more costly
user 0m1.253s
sys 0m24.915s
----------------- as a root (thus smaps for all tasks)
with only PID + RES (statm)
real 0m2.651s
user 0m1.177s
sys 0m1.286s
with only PID + RSS (smaps)
real 0m33.040s 12x more costly
user 0m1.256s
sys 0m31.533s
Reference(s):
. top/ps: add support for PSS reporting
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/-/issues/112
. ps: expose shared/private memory separately
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/-/issues/201
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
A couple of people have suggested that smaps_rollup be
added to the ps program and/or top program. This patch
is intended to set the stage for just such extensions.
There are currently 20 displayable items in the rollup
file. And newlib sometimes uses sscanf when populating
the target, sometimes hsearch and one customized gperf
approach. None of these fit well with the smaps items.
Thus, an approach using a simple table lookup was used
and, by disabling 1 code line, it could be made immune
from changes to the items order (unlike a sscanf call)
and doesn't carry the greater cost of a hsearch/gperf.
Note: The next patch will allow top to display some of
these new fields. Then, it'll be possible to determine
the colossal costs of accessing the smaps_rollup file.
Here is a small preview of just what you will discover
when using the command 'time top/top -d0 -n1000' while
configured with just two fields: PID + 1 memory field.
------------------------------------ as a regular user
with only PID + RES (statm)
real 0m2.605s
user 0m1.060s
sys 0m1.377s
with only PID + RSS (smaps)
real 0m26.397s 10x more costly
user 0m1.253s
sys 0m24.915s
----------------- as a root (thus smaps for all tasks)
with only PID + RES (statm)
real 0m2.651s
user 0m1.177s
sys 0m1.286s
with only PID + RSS (smaps)
real 0m33.040s 12x more costly
user 0m1.256s
sys 0m31.533s
Reference(s):
. ps: expose shared/private memory separately
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/-/issues/201
. top/ps: add support for PSS reporting
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/-/issues/112
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This commit is strictly cosmetic. It was an attempt to
normalize/standardize/alphabetize those #define/#undef
statements. Some missing #undef's were added plus some
comments regarding sources corrected/standardized too.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
In anticipation of adding some smaps_rollup stuff, our
end-of-job report will now offer some insight into the
current unused entries for a window's fieldscur array.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Since 2.6.24/33 the kernel knows about guest and guest nice time. That
is the time that is spend in KVM guests. To handle userspace programs
that do not know about this the guest time is also added to user.
Let us provide a guest time column in vmstat that collects both guest
and guest nice into a gu value.
We also subtract that value from the user time as we are now aware of
the guest value.
This commit is different to !113 in several ways:
* newlib already knows about these to values
* vmstat summary already shows these values
* non-wide vmstat squishes the values
So its around the wide vmstat output.
References:
procps-ng/procps!113
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
The commit referenced below was well done but needed a
small whitespace tweak to preserve existing alignment.
Reference(s):
. io accounting added
commit a7afe06e6f
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This is a modification of MR !122 by @renit1609 to fit the new
library.
Problem statement:
The procps library has no PROC_FILLIO flag to
fetch the proc field "/proc/[pid]/io" data
process-wise.
IO Accounting is not included as part of procps.
Requirement:
We have a requirement to fetch process wise
IO utilization which can be used for monitoring.
When looking through the procps library, I see
that IO Accounting (/proc/[pid]/io) is not being
included as part of procps. There is no such
flag like PROC_FILLIO being included in readproc.h .
Solution:
While looking at the implementation done for
other proc fields, I used the spare bits in app code.
I renamed PROC_SPARE_1 as PROC_FILLIO, the spare bit from
PROC_SPARE_* and used it for fetching /proc/[pid]/io
data as part of the procps library similar to other
fields. I moved the PROC_SPARE_* bits each by 1 bit
to retain the spare bits. Meanwhile added the IO fields
in proc_t structure.
References:
procps-ng/procps!122procps-ng/procps#184
The correct long option for -w is --no-wrap but the man page
said it was --no-linewrap
References:
procps-ng/procps#203
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
With 4e7f4237 and 5e73c832, systemd library detection through pkg-config
was changed to unconditionally look for unified libsystemd.
This adds a fallback to match the previous behavior and find the split
libs as well.
References:
procps-ng/procps!128
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
nl_langinfo and CODESET are undefined in a musl system. Instead of
uncondionally including langinfo.h, this change includes include/nls.h
which has the tests and work-arounds for systems that don't have these
features. This is similar to how other programs within procps include
langinfo.h via nls.h
References:
procps-ng/procps!130
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
This simple two line code change fixes an intermittent
bug whereby %CPU for parent(s) with collapsed children
could be vastly understated from those displayed under
the current 3.3.17 publicly available top & libprocps.
If one started several top instances in the background
using very a small delay interval (zero?), then if the
shell under which they were running was collapsed, you
would see similar %CPU results for both the libraries.
However, when running a demanding 'make' like a kernel
compile (especially if backed by fast processors and a
SSD), then newlib would generally show only 1/3 to 1/2
of the collapsed %CPU values that appeared for 3.3.17.
Of course, now that the bug has been swatted with this
commit the disparities between those results is easily
explained. Since newly created tasks never contributed
tics during the interval where they were created, only
with many short lived tasks would differences surface.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Rather than run risks of more expensive and repetitive
address resolution, we will establish this local index
for a one time cost and avoid any potential gcc bloat.
[ this commit was made in pursuit of a bug involving ]
[ the distortion of elapsed task tics. but, it turns ]
[ out these changes had nothing to do with that bug. ]
[ however, the patch is being retained as desirable. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
That old library defined this field as 'unsigned int'.
However, here it was known as a 'signed int'. Thus for
consistency we'll now also treat it as 'unsigned int'.
[ this commit was made in pursuit of a bug involving ]
[ the distortion of elapsed task tics. but, it turns ]
[ out these changes had nothing to do with that bug. ]
[ however, the patch is being retained as desirable. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
With that commit referenced below, which preserved the
'4' and + '!' toggles in the rcfile, this VER_J_RCFILE
macro was made superfluous. But, it was never removed.
Reference(s):
commit b46af6d213
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
The pgrep code checks to see if the program is run as pkill or pidwait
and changes its behaviour accordingly. Some older versions of libtool
run the programs as lt-pkill and lt-pidwait which means the tests fail.
We add these two program names to the checks.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
vmstat -d testsuite will fail if your /proc/diskstats is present
but zero length. While this seems buggy behaviour from lxcfs, its
there and its a simple matter to test for it and skip those tests
if we are run on a zero length /proc/diskstats system.
The ps.1 manpage incorrectly stated that psr field showed the
processor the process was assigned to. However if the assignment
has changed but the process has not run, then the field doesn't
change.
Some digging by @srikard showed it wasn't the processor assigned
but the last one it was run on. The man page now correctly
describes psr in that way.
References:
procps-ng/procps#187
The sysctl.8 manpage explained the directory order but not that the
files were then ordered and run in lexiographic order no matter
the directory name.
References:
procps-ng/procps#200
This patch is ported from a merge request shown below,
and the following represents the original commit text.
------------------------------------------------------
top: In the bye_bye function, replace fputs with the write interface.
When top calls malloc, if a signal is received, it will
call sig_endpgm to process the signal. In the bye_bye function, if the
-b option is enable, the Batch variable is set, the fputs function
will calls malloc at the same time. The malloc function is not reentrant, so
it will cause the program to crash.
Signed-off-by: Shaohua Zhan <shaohua.zhan@windriver.com>
------------------------------------------------------
Reference(s):
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/-/merge_requests/127
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
If you run slabtop with the -d option and then -o option the
delay gets set to zero and it runs forever. slabtop now checks
for this combination and errors.
Adding a DEJAGNU test also found that none of the slabtop
checks were running so they got added to the list and only the
ones that need /proc/slabinfo (if not readable) are skipped.
References:
#160
@ruihongw quite rightly pointed out we removed the l option
from the man page and getopt but the iunreachable case statement
remained.
References:
commit 94468ac0b3#162
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
That snowball, which began as a simple removal of some
brackets, now ends with this third patch restoring the
ability to build our project. It was made necessary by
the renaming (and rearranging) of several enumerators.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
After removing brackets from those 'derived' notations
I was surprised to discover that several origin/source
comments were wrong. So this patch fixes those errors.
[ along the way a couple enumerators were renamed to ]
[ better (i hope) reflect what they're representing. ]
[ that, in turn, also required a little rearranging. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
None of the other four new api headers use brackets on
derived items. With this patch we normalize the fifth.
[ it makes for a cleaner, less confusing, appearance ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
While experimenting with a new feature, wherein select
fields display the total upon request, the capacity of
the 'num' passed to some 'scale' guys became an issue.
So this commit will, with the compiler's help, put the
responsibility for converting the integer into a float
within the calling code (instead of the called logic).
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This small change was a result of some experimentation
trading our current 'hsearch' hash scheme for 'gperf'.
I discovered that when the ':' character was a part of
each 'gperf' key, that generated search logic was more
complicated and thus slower. But without a ':', it was
a little cleaner/leaner and therefore slightly faster.
Assuming that the same trailing ':' *might* affect the
current 'hsearch' logic, to be safe we will remove it.
[ while the 'gperf' version will slightly outperform ]
[ an 'hsearch', too many ugly implementation details ]
[ were exposed which complicates future maintenance. ]
[ thus, we'll retain our current 'hsearch' approach. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This patch will condense some logic in those functions
associated with the file input operations. The changes
will not, for the most part, alter any generated code.
More significantly (though not very) was the change to
two 'strtoul' calls. Since the returned 'endptr' value
isn't exploited, when that parm is set to NULL, we can
save one instruction on each side of such calls (wow).
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
If automake doesn't see a dist_man_MANS then there is no
uninstall-man target. This fix uses the main Makefile
targets.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
When #define QUICK_THREADS was introduced, for copying
some task data for a child thread, one proc_t pad byte
was used to mark, then later identify, those children.
Later the QUICK_THREADS was recycled as FALSE_THREADS,
and used for a different purpose, but a conditional in
the header file erroneously remained. Now, it is gone!
Reference(s):
. Jul, 2016 - QUICK_THREADS become FALSE_THREADS
commit c546d9dd44
. Aug, 2011 - QUICK_THREADS intruduced
commit bb4f08ba29
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
What to call the new library?
Keep using libprocps wouldn't do, its a very different library from
the programs' point of view. It would also mean we could have some
clashes around the packages (two package names, same library name).
The ancient procps used libproc or libproc-a.b.c where a.b.c was the
package version. Kept the revision numbers down (it was always 0.0.0)
but the name of the library changed.
So if we use libproc-2 is there a clash with an ancient procps?
procps v 2.0.0 was around in 1999 so it was 22 years ago, also the
name of the library would have been libproc-2.0.0.so not libproc-2.so
so we're fine with that.
libproc-2 seems to fit, our second major re-work of the procps
library.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@dropbear.xyz>
Maybe, the biggest obstacle to successfully exploiting
this new library is after those `stacks' are returned.
Unless a user requests all available `items', there is
always a need to translate an actual enumerator into a
relative position within returned stack(s) of results.
So, this patch attempts to bridge that gap by adding a
brief explanation to the existing discussion in Usage.
[ along the way, 'Usage' & 'Caveats' were refactored ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Since 'procps_uptime' will access the /proc filesystem
the <pids> 'new' guy should should protect against the
possibility /proc isn't mounted when 'boot_seconds' is
established. A zero is better than the negative value.
[ the only distortion would be to PIDS_TIME_ELAPSED. ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
With the way those 'extents_free_all' guys were coded,
there's no real need to check for a NULL this->extents
before calling 'em. That's how <stat> already does it.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>