| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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* Dynamically adjust the size of line reads.
* Remove some more uses of fgets with arbitrary sizes.
* Fix reading of lines and width of n column.
Fixes #514.
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Display them properly. Not fully convinced of the "no perm" message...
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Once a process goes zombie on Linux, /proc/PID/cmdline
gets empty. So, when we detect it is a zombie we stop
reading this file.
For processes that were zombies before htop started,
there's no way to get the full name.
Closes #49.
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Issue noticed by GCC6 -Wmisleading-indentation.
Thanks @JIghtuse and @Explorer09!
Closes #409.
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Got a report in #397 that htop runs in NetBSD
masquerading as Linux and using a compatibility /proc
(like we used to in FreeBSD) and that it builds fine
apart from this syscall.
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With the CLAMP macro replacing the combination of MIN and MAX, we will
have at least two advantages:
1. It's more obvious semantically.
2. There are no more mixes of confusing uses like MIN(MAX(a,b),c) and
MAX(MIN(a,b),c) and MIN(a,MAX(b,c)) appearing everywhere. We unify
the 'clamping' with a single macro.
Note that the behavior of this CLAMP macro is different from
the combination `MAX(low,MIN(x,high))`.
* This CLAMP macro expands to two comparisons instead of three from
MAX and MIN combination. In theory, this makes the code slightly
smaller, in case that (low) or (high) or both are computed at
runtime, so that compilers cannot optimize them. (The third
comparison will matter if (low)>(high); see below.)
* CLAMP has a side effect, that if (low)>(high) it will produce weird
results. Unlike MIN & MAX which will force either (low) or (high) to
win. No assertion of ((low)<=(high)) is done in this macro, for now.
This CLAMP macro is implemented like described in glib
<http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Standard-Macros.html>
and does not handle weird uses like CLAMP(a++, low++, high--) .
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Apparently a line longer than 255 chars was spotted in the wild:
http://serverfault.com/questions/577939/linux-ps-htop-show-processes-running-for-hundreds-or-thousands-of-days-though-h#comment676098_577939
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- currently implemented for darwin and linux
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Thanks to @OmegaPhil for discussion and reviewing.
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reclaimable slab as cached memory.
Hopefully this presents a more truthful representation of
available vs. used memory on Linux.
See brndnmtthws/conky#82, #242, #67, #263.
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Fix a case where the usertime calculation can overflow (see issue #202)
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matches upstream
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FreeBSD
Linux
Other platforms will have it undefined for now.
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Implementations for Linux (tested) and FreeBSD (still untested, thanks to @etosan for providing the table).
Darwin and OpenBSD(ping @mmcco) builds should be broken now, pending their own tables.
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* size_t nmemb (number of elements) first, then size_t size
* do not assume char is size 1 but use sizeof()
* allocate for char, not pointer to char (found by Michael McConville,
fixes #261)
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Closes #228.
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Fixes building on case-insensitive filesystems where String.h gets confused with <string.h>.
From d734dacea0a10d0465dad4e95b3421511e7da112 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: David Hunt <dhunt@iolanthe.attlocal.net>
Date: Sat, 11 Jul 2015 20:56:31 -0500
Subject: [PATCH 1/8] Rename String to StringUtils
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Fix sort by cstime
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gcc gives warnings like this:
warning: ignoring return value of ‘fscanf’, declared with attribute
warn_unused_result
Assign value to a variable, cast to (void) to discard it.
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Closes #185.
Closes #190.
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Read OOM data only if column is enabled.
Make sort ordering more consistent. Closes #182.
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Conflicts:
Process.c
Process.h
htop.c
linux/LinuxProcess.c
linux/LinuxProcess.h
test_spec.lua
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Conflicts:
Process.c
Process.h
linux/LinuxProcess.c
linux/LinuxProcess.h
linux/LinuxProcessList.c
unsupported/Platform.c
unsupported/Platform.h
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Conflicts:
Process.c
Process.h
ProcessList.c
ScreenManager.c
linux/LinuxProcessList.c
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