While most Unix-like systems use 16-bit user IDs,
Linux supports 32-bit UIDs since version 2.6.
UIDs above 65535 are used for UID namespacing of containers,
where a container has its own set of 16-bit user IDs.
Processes in such containers will have (much) larger UIDs than 65535.
Because the current format strings for `ST_UID` and `USER`
are `%5d` and `%9d` respectively, processes with such UIDs
lead to misaligned columns.
Dynamically scale the `ST_UID` column and increase the size of `USER`
to 10 characters (length of UINT32_MAX) to ensure that the user ID always fits.
Additionally: clean up how the titlebuffer size calculation and ensure
the PID column has a minimum size of 5.
Limit the maximum width (instead of only the minimum width), pad the
header width accordingly, and also remove extra stray spaces from the
format string (the main spacing should just come from the alignment of
the value).
Fixes#850.
This is real, physical memory available for applications to
use. We should not try to pretend otherwise; its confusing
for users and inconsistent with all other tools.
Add an explicit else clause so a following else branch for a prior if
condition does not get mixed up.
Also force a trailing semicolon and thereby silence current
-Wextra-semi-stmt warnings.
Improve readability of the hwloc_bitmap_foreach_begin loop macro.
A process, whose executable has been replaced and thus marked by htop,
can be re-executed with the replaced executable, with the same PID, in
two ways: the Linux feature checkpoint/restore or re-execution of PID 1.
The actual check is just a string comparison, like the dropped
condition, leading to (almost) no computation overhead.
Zero all the CPU data, like totalPeriod, after its memory allocation via
realloc(3).
Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
at 0x132A9B: LinuxProcessList_scanCPUTime (LinuxProcessList.c:1928)
by 0x1358C3: ProcessList_goThroughEntries (LinuxProcessList.c:2079)
by 0x12A79A: ProcessList_scan (ProcessList.c:627)
by 0x11CA67: CommandLine_run (CommandLine.c:357)
by 0x4A81E49: (below main) (libc-start.c:314)
Uninitialised value was created by a heap allocation
at 0x48396C5: malloc (in /usr/libexec/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
by 0x12F633: xRealloc (XUtils.c:64)
by 0x12F633: xReallocArray (XUtils.c:78)
by 0x1325A8: LinuxProcessList_updateCPUcount (LinuxProcessList.c:207)
by 0x134E0A: ProcessList_new (LinuxProcessList.c:284)
by 0x11C8D0: CommandLine_run (CommandLine.c:301)
by 0x4A81E49: (below main) (libc-start.c:314)
Generalize sub-diskname handling, like sdb1/sdb2, to not count the
usage twice with the aggregate top-diskname, like sdb.
Rely on /proc/diskstats being ordered, e.g. no sub-diskname precedes its
top-diskname.
Closes: #675
Use the color gray, similar to other process fields, if the delay
accounting value is either 0 (or very small) or cannot be accessed, e.g.
by an unprivileged user.
Update merged command-line when started with "Show custom thread names"
disabled and enabling at runtime.
Also only consider showThreadNames when working on userland threads.
Implements support for arbitrary Performance Co-Pilot
metrics with per-process instance domains to form new
htop columns. The column-to-metric mappings are setup
using configuration files which will be documented via
man pages as part of a follow-up commit.
We provide an initial set of column configurations so
as to provide new capabilities to pcp-htop: including
configs for containers, open fd counts, scheduler run
queue time, tcp/udp bytes/calls sent/recv, delay acct,
virtual machine guests, detailed virtual memory, swap.
Note there is a change to the configuration file path
resolution algorithm introduced for 'dynamic meters'.
First, look in any custom PCP_HTOP_DIR location. Then
iterate, in priority order, users home directory, then
local sysadmins files in /etc/pcp/htop, then readonly
configuration files below /usr/share/pcp/htop. This
final location becomes the preferred place for our own
shipped meter and column files.
The Settings file (htoprc) writing code is updated to
not using the numeric identifier for dynamic columns.
The same strategy used for dynamic meters is used here
where we write Dynamic(name) so the name can be setup
once more at start. Regular (static) columns writing
to htoprc - i.e. numerically indexed - is unchanged.
Adds AGRP (autogroup) and ANI (autogroup nice) columns that
report the information from /proc/PID/autogroup, as well as
handlers for '{' and '}' to change the autogroup nice value.
This is guarded by /proc/sys/kernel/sched_autogroup_enabled
such that sampling and/or changing values wont be attempted
unless the kernel feature is enabled.
Fixes: #720
Currently htop does not support offline CPUs and hot-swapping, e.g. via
echo 0 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu2/online
Split the current single cpuCount variable into activeCPUs and
existingCPUs.
Supersedes: #650
Related: #580
Before this change, the systemd meter was broken on distros like NixOS,
which have systemctl in PATH, but not at /bin/systemctl. After the
change, it works on all my NixOS machines.
This commit is based on exploratory work by Sohaib Mohamed.
The end goal is two-fold - to support addition of Meters we
build via configuration files for both the PCP platform and
for scripts ( https://github.com/htop-dev/htop/issues/526 )
Here, we focus on generic code and the PCP support. A new
class DynamicMeter is introduced - it uses the special case
'param' field handling that previously was used only by the
CPUMeter, such that every runtime-configured Meter is given
a unique identifier. Unlike with the CPUMeter this is used
internally only. When reading/writing to htoprc instead of
CPU(N) - where N is an integer param (CPU number) - we use
the string name for each meter. For example, if we have a
configuration for a DynamicMeter for some Redis metrics, we
might read and write "Dynamic(redis)". This identifier is
subsequently matched (back) up to the configuration file so
we're able to re-create arbitrary user configurations.
The PCP platform configuration file format is fairly simple.
We expand configs from several directories, including the
users homedir alongside htoprc (below htop/meters/) and also
/etc/pcp/htop/meters. The format will be described via a
new pcp-htop(5) man page, but its basically ini-style and
each Meter has one or more metric expressions associated, as
well as specifications for labels, color and so on via a dot
separated notation for individual metrics within the Meter.
A few initial sample configuration files are provided below
./pcp/meters that give the general idea. The PCP "derived"
metric specification - see pmRegisterDerived(3) - is used
as the syntax for specifying metrics in PCP DynamicMeters.
Reading and parsing /proc/<pid>/maps is quite expensive.
Do not check for deleted libraries if the main binary has been deleted;
in this case the deleted binary takes precedence.
Do not check in threads. The check is void for kernel threads and user-
land threads can just inherit the state from the main process structure.
O_PATH is available since Linux 2.6.39, but we are using fstat(2) on the
returned file descriptor in LinuxProcessList_statProcessDir(), which
is only supported since Linux 3.6.
Fixes#534
Shared libraries can be replaced by an upgrade, highlight processes
using deleted shared libraries.
Link with highlightDeletedExe setting, enabled by default.
Currently only checked on Linux.
Add process columns showing the elapsed time since the process was
started.
Similar to STARTTIME, but shows the time passed since the process start
instead of the fixed start time of the process.
Closes https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=782636