Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zev Weiss a1a027b9bd Axe automated header generation.
Reasoning:
 - implementation was unsound -- broke down when I added a fairly
   basic macro definition expanding to a struct initializer in a *.c
   file.

 - made it way too easy (e.g. via otherwise totally innocuous git
   commands) to end up with timestamps such that it always ran
   MakeHeader.py but never used its output, leading to overbuild noise
   when running what should be a null 'make'.

 - but mostly: it's just an awkward way of dealing with C code.
2020-09-03 11:58:58 -05:00
Ross Williams 613556faeb Support for ZFS Compressed ARC statistics 2019-09-03 18:44:19 +00:00
Ross Williams a93edde1a2 Support ZFS ARC stats on FreeBSD
New meter displays same ARC stats as FreeBSD top(1).
Can be extended to other platforms that support ZFS.

Pulling kstat.zfs.misc.arcstats.c_max as the meter
total, so the meter has a meaningful value to work
up to.

The Text meter displays, first, the maximum
ARC size (Meter.total), then second, the total
ARC used, using the difference between Meter.maxItems
and Meter.curItems to "hide" the used value from the
Bar and Graph drawing functions by using an index
in Meter.values[] that is beyond curItems - 1, but
less than maxItems - 1.
2019-07-07 22:52:04 -04:00
Explorer09 1f3d85b617 Mark signal tables 'const'
Specifically, Platform_signals[] and Platform_numberOfSignals. Both are
not supposed to be mutable. Marking them 'const' puts them into rodata
sections in binary. And for Platform_numberOfSignals, this aids
optimization (aids only Link Time Optimization for now). :)

Signed-off-by: Kang-Che Sung <explorer09@gmail.com>
2016-08-30 20:41:17 +08:00
Explorer09 6dae8108f8 Introduce CLAMP macro. Unify all MIN(MAX(a,b),c) uses.
With the CLAMP macro replacing the combination of MIN and MAX, we will
have at least two advantages:
1. It's more obvious semantically.
2. There are no more mixes of confusing uses like MIN(MAX(a,b),c) and
   MAX(MIN(a,b),c) and MIN(a,MAX(b,c)) appearing everywhere. We unify
   the 'clamping' with a single macro.
Note that the behavior of this CLAMP macro is different from
the combination `MAX(low,MIN(x,high))`.
* This CLAMP macro expands to two comparisons instead of three from
  MAX and MIN combination. In theory, this makes the code slightly
  smaller, in case that (low) or (high) or both are computed at
  runtime, so that compilers cannot optimize them. (The third
  comparison will matter if (low)>(high); see below.)
* CLAMP has a side effect, that if (low)>(high) it will produce weird
  results. Unlike MIN & MAX which will force either (low) or (high) to
  win. No assertion of ((low)<=(high)) is done in this macro, for now.

This CLAMP macro is implemented like described in glib
<http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Standard-Macros.html>
and does not handle weird uses like CLAMP(a++, low++, high--) .
2016-01-15 20:26:01 +08:00
Hisham Muhammad 78f2933e2b Regenerate platform-dependent headers.
Closes #293.
2015-10-19 17:22:54 -02:00
Hisham Muhammad adbfe3c3f1 Get FreeBSD tree to compile again with latest changes. 2015-03-16 03:14:20 -03:00
Hisham Muhammad c29e53c5d5 Add a stub for the battery meter. 2014-11-27 21:07:42 -02:00
Hisham Muhammad f4c49ff92e "get max pid" for FreeBSD 2014-11-27 20:18:01 -02:00
Hisham Muhammad 6d92d7f73d Load averages for FreeBSD! 2014-11-27 20:03:29 -02:00
Hisham Muhammad 3ba3d6fa6f Add uptime calculation code. 2014-11-27 19:44:20 -02:00
Hisham Muhammad a9f05c2a8b Uptime meter for FreeBSD.
This will produce too much replicated code.
I think I'll use a lighter abstraction in things like this.
2014-11-27 19:33:37 -02:00
Hisham Muhammad 8915b29395 Beginnings of FreeBSD port! 2014-11-27 16:27:34 -02:00