It does not make sense to show a "thread count" column when displaying
threads separately. In fact we don't, but do show the header for this
column. Fix this.
The original intention was 4 columns but with a usable a result. In
practice this was not the case. Increase the number of columns to 5
until humanize_number learns alternative ways of presenting the number.
Requested by: many
Ref D15801
Encoding-specific processing introduced in r335836 is not recommended.
And doing getenv("LANG") and assuming an encoding based on it is a
very bad practice to internationalize software.
Submitted by: hrs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16203
2nd argument of vsnprintf() to get the strlen of next_msg so that the
appropriate size is used.
Found with gcc.
/usr.bin/top/display.c: In function 'new_message':
/usr.bin/top/display.c:963:31: error:
argument to 'sizeof' in 'vsnprintf' call is the same expression as the
destination; did you mean to provide an explicit length?
[-Werror=sizeof-pointer-memaccess]
vsnprintf(next_msg, sizeof(next_msg), msgfmt, args);
Reviewed by: daichi
args is empty.
Instead, use kvm_getargv() unconditionally to obtain the process
arguments. It means that one additional sysctl(2) is performed there.
Submitted by: Thomas Munro
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16111
mode to 'io' mode, an artifact remains because the buffer is not
"finished" with a NULL terminator using sbuf_finish().
An example of this is, when the "m" command is entered, the title line
will contain COMMANDND instead of COMMAND. This commit fixes this.
There isn't any need to limit the size of the screen. Utilities like
'less -S' don't have a (meaningful) limit anyways. This also makes the
way to dynamically changing the column widths based on the screen width.
This also fixes -mio with 'T' set (thread-id instead of process-id).
This can go further by removing the existing sprintf, and using sbuf
directly. This will be done in a followup commit.
There is no documented reason for this not to be shown on the first run.
I can't find any good reason, and it breaks batch mode.
PR: 218889
Submitted by: "Jeremy C. Reed" <reed@reedmedia.net>
When the load is "high" (an arbitrary value) top(1) previously moved the
cursor to the top-left of the screen as an acknowledgment. In practice,
on modern machines, even relatively slow ones, it looked more like a
glitch. Remove the logic.
The current header formatting is a giant format string that changes
global state during the format process.
Make the following changes:
- use sbuf to build up the header rather than use the above
pseudo-dynamic one
- Change name length to 10
- Reduce size of RES and SIZE by making humanize more aggressive
- Restore a version number line to the copyright. This may be required
by the copyright (and may not be; its unclear)
This is also a pre-req to implementing TOPCOLOR from newer versions of
top(1)
Discussed with: allanjude, rpolka, danfe, rgrimes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15801
Fix an oversight from r334869 which made the same change, but only for
SMP systems. This avoids a segfault while D15801 is being reviewed.
Reviewed by: kevans
Broken in r334514
sysctlbyname("vfs.zfs.compressed_arc_enabled", ...) would return ENOMEM
while trying to read the sysctl (a boolean_t) into a bool, which is too small.
Reviewed by: jhb (on irc)
Sponsored by: Klara Systems
- remove __pure annotations I added earlier for some functions. One
writes to the the arguments as "out" pointers. The
other reads from an array, which while const within the function might
be mutated externally.
- total_change is modified to be at 1, if previously 0, so no if check
is needed.
- initialize all maybe uninitialized vars with bogus values. This shuts
up the compiler, and causes crashes if it changes later.
- mark noreturn as noreturn
- removed unused macro
- handle x_procstate as runtime rather than pre-processor
- avoid using void functions in condtionals
Tested with clang, gcc 7, gcc 9
This eliminates the difficult to follow mapping of a string list. It
moves numbers from "#define" into (more) debuggable enums. More
generally, it follows the trend of moving more data into a more central
mechanism.
The help output is a little worse: " " is not rendered well, and there
are duplicate entries, but that will be fixed in a followup.