one that is already there. This is consistent with GNU ps(1)'s BSD mode, and
POLA.
Reported by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
Tested by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
the LOMAC-specific interface (which is being deprecated). The
revised LOMAC using the MAC framework will export levels listable
using this mechanism.
Approved by: re
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
ps(1) formatting, using pgtok() to get the value in K, rather than printing
it in pages. This is consistent with behaviour before keyword.c:1.26 (et al)
which exists in STABLE today, and which uses the same metric as VSZ.
Submitted by: bde
again, but also allow it in the user-specified header, too. This is far more
backwards compatible and SUSv3-happy than allowing only comma to seperate the
keywords list.
Submitted by: tjr
override, seperate by comma (',') only, rather than any type of whitespace
(the literal space character (' ') had already been removed from this list).
This allows things like:
miamivice# ps -opid='Process
> Identifier'
Process
Identifier
1350
1445
1450
To work.
realloc(3)] happens to fail, everywhere in ps(1).
Discussed with: bde, charnier (a while ago)
fmt_argv() can no longer return NULL, so don't bother checking.
Submitted by: bde
so that multiple -ovar=header lines do not overwrite eachother.
This means that ps -ouser=USERNAME -ouser=WHO would now possibly print:
USERNAME WHO
juli juli
Whereas before it would be:
WHO WHO
juli juli
o Old-style K&R declarations have been converted to new C89 style
o register has been removed
o prototype for main() has been removed (gcc3 makes it an error)
o int main(int argc, char *argv[]) is the preferred main definition.
o Attempt to not break style(9) conformance for declarations more than
they already are.
no longer contains kernel specific data structures, but rather
only scalar values and structures that are already part of the
kernel/user interface, specifically rusage and rtprio. It no
longer contains proc, session, pcred, ucred, procsig, vmspace,
pstats, mtx, sigiolst, klist, callout, pasleep, or mdproc. If
any of these changed in size, ps, w, fstat, gcore, systat, and
top would all stop working. The new structure has over 200 bytes
of unassigned space for future values to be added, yet is nearly
100 bytes smaller per entry than the structure that it replaced.
This takes the conditionals out of the code that has been tested by
various people for a while.
ps and friends (libkvm) will need a recompile as some proc structure
changes are made.
Submitted by: "Richard Seaman, Jr." <dick@tar.com>
Submitted by: "Richard Seaman, Jr." <lists@tar.com>
Obtained from: linux :-)
Code to allow Linux Threads to run under FreeBSD.
By default not enabled
This code is dependent on the conditional
COMPAT_LINUX_THREADS (suggested by Garret)
This is not yet a 'real' option but will be within some number of hours.
appears, not the longest _maximum_ username (this should probably also go
into 2.2, for the day when we bump up the username length there too).
Submitted-By: Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>