netbsd: update README.md (#694)

netbsd: update README.md
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NetBSD support in htop(1) NetBSD support in htop(1)
=== ===
This implementation makes NetBSD use htop(1) without the need of mount_procfs(8). This implementation utilizes kvm_getprocs(3), sysctl(3), etc, eliminating the
need for mount_procfs(8) with Linux compatibility enabled.
The implementation has been copied over and modified from the OpenBSD The implementation was initially based on the OpenBSD support in htop(1).
implementation in htop(1).
Current implementation mimics the procfs based implementation in stats Notes on NetBSD curses
collection.
Make NetBSD no longer masquerade as Linux.
What works
--- ---
* Builds in NetBSD without any additional patch NetBSD is one of the last operating systems to use and maintain its own
* Uses sysctl(3) and kvm(3) to get basic information implementation of Curses.
* Shows basic meters CPU / Memory / Swap
* Shows basic process listing
What needs to be tested htop(1) can be compiled against either ncurses or NetBSD's curses(3).
In order for NetBSD's libcurses to be used, htop(1) must be configured with
`--disable-unicode`. This is necessary because htop(1) with Unicode enabled
directly accesses ncurses's cchar_t struct, which has different contents
in NetBSD's curses.
Versions of libcurses in NetBSD 9 and prior have no mouse support
(this is an ncurses extension). Newer versions contain no-op mouse functions
for compatibility with ncurses.
What needs improvement
--- ---
* Memory being split into used/buffers/cache * Kernel and userspace threads are not displayed or counted -
* Basic features of htop(1) like kill / nice / sort / search works as expected maybe look at NetBSD top(1).
* If the meter displays are working as expected * Battery display - use envsys(4).
* If the process states are displayed correctly * Support for compiling using libcurses's Unicode support.
* If thread information and count are displayed correctly * Support for fstat(1) (view open files, like lsof(8) on Linux).
* Support for ktrace(1) (like strace(1) on Linux).