1997-03-23 18:51:21 +00:00
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Instructions for porting top to other architectures.
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This is still a preliminary document. Suggestions for improvement are
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most welcome.
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2002-01-24 17:24:16 +00:00
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My address is now "wnl@groupsys.com".
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1997-03-23 18:51:21 +00:00
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Before you embark on a port, please send me a mail message telling me
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what platform you are porting top to. There are three reasons for
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this: (1) I may already have a port, (2) module naming needs to be
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centralized, (3) I want to loosely track the various porting efforts.
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You do not need to wait for an "okay", but I do want to know that you
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are working on it. And of course, once it is finished, please send me
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the module files so that I can add them to the main distribution!
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----------
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There is one set of functions which extract all the information that
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top needs for display. These functions are collected in to one file.
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To make top work on a different architecture simply requires a
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different implementation of these functions. The functions for a
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given architecture "foo" are stored in a file called "m_foo.c". The
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Configure script looks for these files and lets the configurer choose
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one of them. This file is called a "module". The idea is that making
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top work on a different machine only requires one additional file and
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does not require changes to any existing files.
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A module template is included in the distribution, called "m-template".
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To write your own module, it is a good idea to start with this template.
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If you architecture is similar to one for which a module already
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exists, then you can start with that module instead. If you do so,
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remember to change the "AUTHOR" section at the top!
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The first comment in a module contains information which is extracted
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and used by Configure. This information is marked with words in all
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capitals (such as "SYNOPSIS:" and "LIBS:"). Go look at m-template: it
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is fairly self-explanatory. The text after "LIBS:" (on the same line)
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is extracted and included in the LIBS definition of the Makefile so
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that extra libraries which may be necessary on some machines (such as
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"-lkvm") can be specified in the module. The text after "CFLAGS:"
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(on the same line) is extracted and included as flags in the "CFLAGS"
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definition of the Makefile (thus in every compilation step). This is
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used for rare circumstances only: please don't abuse this hook.
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Some operating systems have idiosyncrasies which will affect the form
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and/or content of the information top displays. You may wish to
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document such anomalies in the top man page. This can be done by adding
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a file called m_{modulename}.man (where {modulename} is replaced with
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the name of the module). Configure will automatically add this file to
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the end of the man page. See m_sunos4.man for an example.
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A module is concerned with two structures:
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The statics struct is filled in by machine_init. Each item is a
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pointer to a list of character pointers. The list is terminated
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with a null pointer.
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struct statics
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{
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char **procstate_names; /* process state names */
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char **cpustate_names; /* cpu state names */
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char **memory_names; /* memory information names */
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};
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The system_info struct is filled in by get_system_info and
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get_process_info.
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struct system_info
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{
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int last_pid; /* last pid assigned (0 means non-sequential assignment) */
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double load_avg[NUM_AVERAGES]; /* see below */
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int p_total; /* total number of processes */
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int p_active; /* number of procs considered "active" */
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int *procstates; /* array of process state counters */
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int *cpustates; /* array of cpustate counters */
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int *memory; /* memory information */
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};
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The last three pointers each point to an array of integers. The
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length of the array is determined by the length of the corresponding
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_names array in the statics structure. Furthermore, if an entry in a
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_names array is the empty string ("") then the corresponding value in
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the value array will be skipped over. The display routine displays,
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for example, the string procstate_names[0] then the number
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procstates[0], then procstate_names[1], procstates[1], etc. until
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procstate_names[N] == NULL. This allows for a tremendous amount of
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flexibility in labeling the displayed values.
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"procstates" and "memory" are displayed as straight integer values.
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Values in "cpustates" are displayed as a percentage * 10. For
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example, the (integer) value 105 is displayed as 10.5%.
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These routines must be defined by the machine dependent module.
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int machine_init(struct statics *)
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returns 0 on success and -1 on failure,
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prints error messages
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char *format_header(char *)
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Returns a string which should be used as the header for the
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process display area. The argument is a string used to label
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the username column (either "USERNAME" or "UID") and is always
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8 characters in length.
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void get_system_info(struct system_info *)
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caddr_t get_process_info(struct system_info *, int, int, int (*func)())
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returns a handle to use with format_next_process
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char *format_next_process(caddr_t, char *(*func)())
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returns string which describes next process
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int proc_compare(caddr_t, caddr_t)
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qsort comparison function
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uid_t proc_owner(pid_t)
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Returns the uid owner of the process specified by the pid argument.
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This function is VERY IMPORTANT. If it fails to do its job, then
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top may pose a security risk.
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get_process_info is called immediately after get_system_info. In
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fact, the two functions could be rolled in to one. The reason they
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are not is mostly historical.
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Top relies on the existence of a function called "setpriority" to
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change a process's priority. This exists as a kernel call on most 4.3
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BSD derived Unixes. If neither your operating system nor your C
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library supplies such a function, then you will need to add one to the
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module. It is defined as follows:
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int setpriority (int dummy, int who, int niceval)
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For the purposes of top, the first argument is meaningless.
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The second is the pid and the third is the new nice value.
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This function should behave just like a kernel call, setting
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errno and returning -1 in case of an error. This function MUST
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check to make sure that a non-root user does not specify a nice
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value less than the process's current value. If it detects such
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a condition, it should set errno to EACCES and return -1.
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Other possible ERRNO values: ESRCH when pid "who" does not exist,
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EPERM when the invoker is not root and not the same as the
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process owner.
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Note that top checks process ownership and should never call setpriority
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when the invoker's uid is not root and not the same as the process's owner
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uid.
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The file "machine.h" contains definitions which are useful to modules
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and to top.c (such as the structure definitions). You SHOULD NOT need
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to change it when porting to a new platform.
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Porting to a new platform should NOT require any changes to existing
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files. You should only need to add m_ files. If you feel you need a
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change in one of the existing files, please contact me so that we can
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discuss the details. I want to keep such changes as general as
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possible.
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