htop/netbsd
Christian Göttsche 5bc988ad6d Use correct command field as default field
The default htop command process field has the enum identifier `COMM`
but the name `Command` (`COMM` is the field name for /proc/<PID>/comm).
2021-12-17 14:45:15 +01:00
..
NetBSDProcess.c Correct the order of xCalloc parameters in a couple of places 2021-11-05 09:22:09 +11:00
NetBSDProcess.h Update license headers to explicitly say GPLv2+ 2021-09-22 14:28:19 +02:00
NetBSDProcessList.c Introduce screen tabs 2021-12-07 17:04:49 +11:00
NetBSDProcessList.h Update license headers to explicitly say GPLv2+ 2021-09-22 14:28:19 +02:00
Platform.c Use correct command field as default field 2021-12-17 14:45:15 +01:00
Platform.h Mark ScreenDefaults const 2021-12-17 14:45:15 +01:00
ProcessField.h Update license headers to explicitly say GPLv2+ 2021-09-22 14:28:19 +02:00
README.md netbsd: Add battery support 2021-08-05 10:47:14 +02:00

README.md

NetBSD support in htop(1)

This implementation utilizes kvm_getprocs(3), sysctl(3), etc, eliminating the need for mount_procfs(8) with Linux compatibility enabled.

The implementation was initially based on the OpenBSD support in htop(1).

Notes on NetBSD curses

NetBSD is one of the last operating systems to use and maintain its own implementation of Curses.

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

  • Kernel and userspace threads are not displayed or counted - maybe look at NetBSD top(1).
  • Support for compiling using libcurses's Unicode support.
  • Support for fstat(1) (view open files, like lsof(8) on Linux).
  • Support for ktrace(1) (like strace(1) on Linux).