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A lack of documentation seems to be the major obstacle to releasing this new library. So, in an effort to get the ball rolling again, this patch adds the origins of each item as a comment to six of the new header files. However, before reviewing how such changes may benefit that documentation objective, it seemed appropriate to first reflect on newlib's background & current status. ___________________________________________ BACKGROUND Discussions about and work on a new library began back in July 2012 but quickly died. After a lull of 2 years those discussions were resumed in August 2014 but soon died also (and no code survived the gitorious demise). With those early discussions, the recommended approach was to encapsulate all of the libprocps data offerings in individual functions. When it came to extensibility it was suggested we should rely on symbols versioning. Unfortunately that approach would have made for a huge Application Programming Interface virtually impossible to master or even document. And, runtime call overhead would have been substantial for ps and especially top. So, an alternative design was sought but there were no new suggestions/contributions via freelists or gitlab. Thus, in spite of a lack of library design experience, the procps-ng team (Craig & Jim) set out to develop an alternative API, more concise and with lower overhead. Reference(s): . 07/01/2012, begin library design discussion https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/Old-library-calls . 08/12/2014, revival of library design discussion https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/libprocs-redesign _____________________________________ DESIGN EVOLUTION Our newlib branch first appeared on June 14, 2015. And our current API actually represents the 4th generation during the past 3 years of evolution. First, there was a basic 'new', 'get' and 'unref' approach, using enums to minimize the proliferation of 'get' function calls. Then, in anticipation of other programs like ps, where multiple fields times multiple processes would greatly increase the number of 'get' function calls, a concept of 'chains' was introduced. This became generation #2. Such 'chains' proved unnecessarily complex so 'stacks' replaced them. This was considered the 3rd generation, but too many implementation details were still exposed requiring those users to 'alloc', 'read', 'fill', etc. Finally, a 4th generation emerged representing several refinements to standardize and minimize those exported functions, thus hiding all implementation details from the users. Lastly, handling of 'errno' was normalized. Reference(s): . 06/14/2015, revival of new API discussion https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/The-library-API-again . 06/24/2015, birth of the newlib branch https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/new-library . 06/29/2015, 2nd generation introduced 'chains' https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/new-library,8 . 07/22/2015, 3rd generation introduced 'stacks' https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/newlib-stacks-vs-chains . 06/18/2016, 4th generation refinements begin https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/newlib-generation-35 . 11/10/2017, 4th generation standardized 'errno' https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/some-more-master-newlib-stuff _______________________________________ CURRENT DESIGN Central to this new design is a simple 'result' struct reflecting an item plus its value (thanks to a union). As a user option, these item structures can be grouped into 'stacks', yielding many results with just 1 call. Such a 'stack' can be seen as a variable length record whose content/order is determined solely by the users. Within that 'result' structure, the union has standard C language types so there is never a doubt how a value should be used in a printf statement. Given that linux requires a least a 32-bit platform the only difference in capacity surrounds 'long' integers. And, where such types might be used, the 32-bit maximums are adequate. The items themselves are simply enumerators defined in the respective header files. A user can name any items of interest then the library magically provides result structure(s). The approach was proven to be extensible without breaking the ABI (in commit referenced below). The 6 major APIs each provide for the following calls: . 'new' ---------> always required as the first call . . 'ref' -------------------------> strictly optional . . 'unref' --------> optional, if ill-behaved program . . 'get' --------------------> retrieve a single item . . 'select' ----------------> retrieve multiple items . And the 'get' and 'select' functions provide for delta results representing the difference between successive get/select calls (or a 'new' then 'get/select' call). For the <diskstats>, <pids>, <slabinfo> & <stat> APIs, where results are unpredictable, a 'reap' function can return multiple result structures for multiple stacks. The <pids> API differs from others in that those items of interest must be provided at 'new' or 'reset' time, a function unique to this API. And the <pids> 'select' function requires PIDs or UIDs which are to be fetched which then operates as a subset of 'reap'. Lastly, the 'get' function is an iterator for successive PIDs/TIDs returning items previously identified via 'new/reset'. To provide assistance to users during development, the special header 'proc/xtra-procps-debug.h' is available to check type usage against library expectations. That check is activated by including this header explicitly or via build using: ./configure '-DXTRA_PROCPS_DEBUG'. Reference(s): . 08/05/2016, type validation introduced https://www.freelists.org/post/procps/newlib-types-validation commit |
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.. | ||
.gitignore | ||
COPYING | ||
devname.c | ||
devname.h | ||
diskstats.c | ||
diskstats.h | ||
escape.c | ||
escape.h | ||
libprocps.pc.in | ||
libprocps.sym | ||
meminfo.c | ||
meminfo.h | ||
namespace.c | ||
namespace.h | ||
numa.c | ||
numa.h | ||
pids.c | ||
pids.h | ||
procps-private.h | ||
procps.h | ||
pwcache.c | ||
pwcache.h | ||
readproc.c | ||
readproc.h | ||
slabinfo.c | ||
slabinfo.h | ||
stat.c | ||
stat.h | ||
sysinfo.c | ||
sysinfo.h | ||
test_namespace.c | ||
test_pids.c | ||
test_sysinfo.c | ||
test_uptime.c | ||
test_version.c | ||
uptime.c | ||
uptime.h | ||
version.c | ||
version.h | ||
vmstat.c | ||
vmstat.h | ||
wchan.c | ||
wchan.h | ||
xtra-procps-debug.h |