freebsd-nq/usr.bin/top/top.local.h
Joerg Wunsch 511d9c6565 This is the FreeBSD-specific files for top, plus the Makefile
that pulls all the files from contrib.

Obtained from:	The ports collection (mostly).
1997-03-23 18:55:20 +00:00

69 lines
2.4 KiB
C

/*
* Top - a top users display for Berkeley Unix
*
* Definitions for things that might vary between installations.
*/
/*
* The space command forces an immediate update. Sometimes, on loaded
* systems, this update will take a significant period of time (because all
* the output is buffered). So, if the short-term load average is above
* "LoadMax", then top will put the cursor home immediately after the space
* is pressed before the next update is attempted. This serves as a visual
* acknowledgement of the command. On Suns, "LoadMax" will get multiplied by
* "FSCALE" before being compared to avenrun[0]. Therefore, "LoadMax"
* should always be specified as a floating point number.
*/
#ifndef LoadMax
#define LoadMax 5.0
#endif
/*
* "Table_size" defines the size of the hash tables used to map uid to
* username. The number of users in /etc/passwd CANNOT be greater than
* this number. If the error message "table overflow: too many users"
* is printed by top, then "Table_size" needs to be increased. Things will
* work best if the number is a prime number that is about twice the number
* of lines in /etc/passwd.
*/
#ifndef Table_size
#define Table_size 20011
#endif
/*
* "Nominal_TOPN" is used as the default TOPN when Default_TOPN is Infinity
* and the output is a dumb terminal. If we didn't do this, then
* installations who use a default TOPN of Infinity will get every
* process in the system when running top on a dumb terminal (or redirected
* to a file). Note that Nominal_TOPN is a default: it can still be
* overridden on the command line, even with the value "infinity".
*/
#ifndef Nominal_TOPN
#define Nominal_TOPN 18
#endif
#ifndef Default_TOPN
#define Default_TOPN -1
#endif
#ifndef Default_DELAY
#define Default_DELAY 2
#endif
/*
* If the local system's getpwnam interface uses random access to retrieve
* a record (i.e.: 4.3 systems, Sun "yellow pages"), then defining
* RANDOM_PW will take advantage of that fact. If RANDOM_PW is defined,
* then getpwnam is used and the result is cached. If not, then getpwent
* is used to read and cache the password entries sequentially until the
* desired one is found.
*
* We initially set RANDOM_PW to something which is controllable by the
* Configure script. Then if its value is 0, we undef it.
*/
#define RANDOM_PW 1
#if RANDOM_PW == 0
#undef RANDOM_PW
#endif