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
- fix header width of IO_READ_RATE
- save data in bytes (not kilobytes) to better compute rate
- fix rate data: multiply with 1000 to compensate time difference in
milliseconds
- rename unit less variable now into realtimeMs
- use Process_printBytes(..., data * pageSize, ...) instead of
Process_printKBytes(..., data * pageSizeKB, ...) to avoid wrapper
Make functions formatting data for a process field column less error
prone, unify interfaces and improve some internals.
* Process_printBytes
- rename from Process_humanNumber
- take number in bytes, not kilobytes
- handle petabytes
- increase buffer to avoid crashes when the passed value is
~ ULLONG_MAX
* Process_printKBytes
- add wrapper for Process_printBytes taking kilobytes keeping -1 as
special value
* Process_printCount
- rename from Process_colorNumber
* Process_printTime
- add coloring parameter as other print functions
- improve coloring and formatting for larger times
* Process_printRate
- rename from Process_outputRate
- use local buffer instead of passed one; this function prints to the
RichString after all
`RichString_appendWide()` is more expensive than
`RichString_appendAscii()` due to the calls to `mbstowcs(3)` and
`iswprint(3)`.
Use the latter to print the process field buffer by default.
For the following fields this theoretically can corrupt the output:
- SECATTR
- CGROUP
- CTID
* Rename internal identifier from TTY_NR to just TTY
* Unify column header on platforms
* Use devname(3) on BSD derivate to show the actual terminal,
simplifies current FreeBSD implementation.
* Use 'unsigned long int' as id type, to fit dev_t on Linux.
Only on Solaris the terminal path is not yet resolved.
- avoid UBSAN conversions
- print N/A on no data (i.e. as unprivileged user)
- fix rate calculation to show bytes (instead of a thousandth)
- print bytes as human number (i.e. 8MB) instead of 8388608
- stabilize sorting by adjusting NAN values to very tiny negative number
If no terminal name can be found, fall back to generic display method
with major and minor device numbers.
Print special value '(none)' in case both are zero.
Use only one enum instead of a global and a platform specific one.
Drop Platform_numberOfFields global variable.
Set known size of Process_fields array
This acheives two things:
- Allows for simple tie-breaking if values compare equal (needed to make sorting the tree-view stable)
- Allows for platform-dependent overriding of the sort-order for specific fields
Also fixes a small oversight on DragonFlyBSD when default-sorting.
* This removes duplicated code that adjusts the sort direction from every
OS-specific folder.
* Most fields in a regular htop screen are OS-independent, so trying
Process_compare first and only falling back to the OS-specific
compareByKey function if it's an OS-specific field makes sense.
* This will allow us to override the sortKey in a global way without having
to edit each OS-specific file.
Small cleanups - add error handling, remove a local static
variable and refactor LinuxProcess_adjustTime (also rename
it, as its in LinuxProcessList.c not LinuxProcess.c) - and
while there, move the related 'btime' global variable into
LinuxProcessList.c so it can be made static.
Resolves https://github.com/htop-dev/htop/issues/384
By storing the per-process m_resident and m_virt values in the form
htop wants to display them in (KB, not pages), we no longer need to
have definitions of pageSize and pageSizeKB in the common CRT code.
These variables were never really CRT (i.e. display) related in the
first place. It turns out the darwin platform code doesn't need to
use these at all (the process values are extracted from the kernel
in bytes not pages) and the other platforms can each use their own
local pagesize variables, in more appropriate locations.
Some platforms were actually already doing this, so this change is
removing duplication of logic and variables there.
RichString_writeFrom takes a top spot during performance analysis due to the
calls to mbstowcs() and iswprint().
Most of the time we know in advance that we are only going to print regular
ASCII characters.