For a process with a very long command, especially with many long
command line arguments, inspecting the command and its arguments could
become inconvenient.
Meanwhile htop supports the concept of "screen", or window, which is
extended here to create a dedicated "CommandScreen", making it possible
to display the command of the selected process in a separate window
meanwhile being wrapped into multiple lines.
Another benefit of using a command screen is, the user can navigate
through the wrapped lines of the command and perform actions like
searching and filtering.
`-m` was added as short option for `--no-mouse`, this is inconsistence
to the rest of the cli since otherwise the short options to disable a
feature are capital letters. Therefore this commit renames the option to
`-M`.
This commit also documents the option in the man page.
Adds support for showing columns with linux delay accounting.
This information can be read from the netlink interface, and thus we set up a socket to read from that when initializing the LinuxProcessList (LinuxProcessList_initNetlinkSocket). After that, for each process we call LinuxProcessList_readDelayAcctData, which sends a message thru the socket after setting up a callback to get the answer from the Kernel. That callback sets the process total delay time attribute. We then set the delay percent as the percentage of time process cpu time since last scan.
Rewrite the scrolling part in the man page so that each key become clearer on
what it does. Also officially document the Alt+{h,j,k,l} key alternatives and
Ctrl+A, Ctrl+E, '^', '$' keys (see issue #508).
It is now accessible via F6 when on tree view (as a bonus, it is
now also reachable via the mouse). The function bar now dynamically
changes to reflect the toggle nature of the tree-view mode (F5)
and the F6 key serves as expand/collapse when on tree mode,
and its previous behavior of bringing up the "Sort By" menu
(which only made sense on non-tree mode). Users wishing to go to
the "Sort By" menu straight from Tree View can still do so with the
"<" and ">" keys (the top-compatible keys for sort selection).