top: exploited the newly added field 'executable path'
[ along the way we'll shorten some of the repetitive ] [ variable width field narratives in top's man page. ] Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This commit is contained in:
parent
ad4269f118
commit
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117
top/top.1
117
top/top.1
@ -693,31 +693,40 @@ This is especially true for this field.
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any truncated data.
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any truncated data.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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9.\fB Flags \*(Em Task Flags \fR
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9.\fB EXE \*(Em Executable Path \fR
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Where available, this is the full path to the executable,
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including the program name.
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\*(NT The EXE field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
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When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be allocated
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all remaining screen width (up to the maximum \*(WX characters).
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.TP 4
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10.\fB Flags \*(Em Task Flags \fR
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This column represents the task's current scheduling flags which are
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This column represents the task's current scheduling flags which are
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expressed in hexadecimal notation and with zeros suppressed.
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expressed in hexadecimal notation and with zeros suppressed.
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These flags are officially documented in <linux/sched.h>.
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These flags are officially documented in <linux/sched.h>.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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10.\fB GID \*(Em Group Id \fR
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11.\fB GID \*(Em Group Id \fR
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The\fI effective\fR group ID.
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The\fI effective\fR group ID.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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11.\fB GROUP \*(Em Group Name \fR
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12.\fB GROUP \*(Em Group Name \fR
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The\fI effective\fR group name.
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The\fI effective\fR group name.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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12.\fB LOGID \*(Em Login User Id \fR
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13.\fB LOGID \*(Em Login User Id \fR
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The user ID used at\fI login\fR.
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The user ID used at\fI login\fR.
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When -1 is displayed it means this information is not available.
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When -1 is displayed it means this information is not available.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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13.\fB LXC \*(Em Lxc Container Name \fR
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14.\fB LXC \*(Em Lxc Container Name \fR
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The name of the lxc container within which a task is running.
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The name of the lxc container within which a task is running.
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If a process is not running inside a container, a dash (`\-') will be shown.
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If a process is not running inside a container, a dash (`\-') will be shown.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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14.\fB NI \*(Em Nice Value \fR
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15.\fB NI \*(Em Nice Value \fR
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The nice value of the task.
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The nice value of the task.
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A negative nice value means higher priority, whereas a positive nice value
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A negative nice value means higher priority, whereas a positive nice value
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means lower priority.
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means lower priority.
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@ -725,26 +734,26 @@ Zero in this field simply means priority will not be adjusted in determining
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a task's dispatch-ability.
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a task's dispatch-ability.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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15.\fB NU \*(Em Last known NUMA node \fR
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16.\fB NU \*(Em Last known NUMA node \fR
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A number representing the NUMA node associated with the last used processor (`P').
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A number representing the NUMA node associated with the last used processor (`P').
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When -1 is displayed it means that NUMA information is not available.
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When -1 is displayed it means that NUMA information is not available.
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\*(XC `'2' and `3' \*(CIs for additional NUMA provisions affecting the \*(SA.
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\*(XC `'2' and `3' \*(CIs for additional NUMA provisions affecting the \*(SA.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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16.\fB OOMa \*(Em Out of Memory Adjustment Factor \fR
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17.\fB OOMa \*(Em Out of Memory Adjustment Factor \fR
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The value, ranging from -1000 to +1000, added to the current out of memory
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The value, ranging from -1000 to +1000, added to the current out of memory
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score (OOMs) which is then used to determine which task to kill when memory
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score (OOMs) which is then used to determine which task to kill when memory
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is exhausted.
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is exhausted.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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17.\fB OOMs \*(Em Out of Memory Score \fR
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18.\fB OOMs \*(Em Out of Memory Score \fR
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The value, ranging from 0 to +1000, used to select task(s) to kill when memory
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The value, ranging from 0 to +1000, used to select task(s) to kill when memory
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is exhausted.
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is exhausted.
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Zero translates to `never kill' whereas 1000 means `always kill'.
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Zero translates to `never kill' whereas 1000 means `always kill'.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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18.\fB P \*(Em Last used \*(PU (SMP) \fR
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19.\fB P \*(Em Last used \*(PU (SMP) \fR
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A number representing the last used processor.
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A number representing the last used processor.
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In a true SMP environment this will likely change frequently since the kernel
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In a true SMP environment this will likely change frequently since the kernel
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intentionally uses weak affinity.
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intentionally uses weak affinity.
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@ -753,7 +762,7 @@ processes to change \*(PUs more often (because of the extra demand for
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\*(Pu time).
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\*(Pu time).
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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19.\fB PGRP \*(Em Process Group Id \fR
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20.\fB PGRP \*(Em Process Group Id \fR
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Every process is member of a unique process group which is used for
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Every process is member of a unique process group which is used for
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distribution of signals and by terminals to arbitrate requests for their
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distribution of signals and by terminals to arbitrate requests for their
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input and output.
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input and output.
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@ -763,7 +772,7 @@ By convention, this value equals the process ID (\*(Xa PID) of the first
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member of a process group, called the process group leader.
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member of a process group, called the process group leader.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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20.\fB PID \*(Em Process Id \fR
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21.\fB PID \*(Em Process Id \fR
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The task's unique process ID, which periodically wraps, though never
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The task's unique process ID, which periodically wraps, though never
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restarting at zero.
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restarting at zero.
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In kernel terms, it is a dispatchable entity defined by a task_struct.
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In kernel terms, it is a dispatchable entity defined by a task_struct.
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@ -774,11 +783,11 @@ a thread group ID for the thread group leader (\*(Xa TGID);
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and a TTY process group ID for the process group leader (\*(Xa TPGID).
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and a TTY process group ID for the process group leader (\*(Xa TPGID).
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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21.\fB PPID \*(Em Parent Process Id \fR
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22.\fB PPID \*(Em Parent Process Id \fR
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The process ID (pid) of a task's parent.
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The process ID (pid) of a task's parent.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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22.\fB PR \*(Em Priority \fR
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23.\fB PR \*(Em Priority \fR
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The scheduling priority of the task.
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The scheduling priority of the task.
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If you see `rt' in this field, it means the task is running
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If you see `rt' in this field, it means the task is running
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under real time scheduling priority.
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under real time scheduling priority.
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@ -788,7 +797,7 @@ the operating itself was not preemptible.
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And while the 2.6 kernel can be made mostly preemptible, it is not always so.
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And while the 2.6 kernel can be made mostly preemptible, it is not always so.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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23.\fB RES \*(Em Resident Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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24.\fB RES \*(Em Resident Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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A subset of the virtual address space (VIRT) representing the non-swapped
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A subset of the virtual address space (VIRT) representing the non-swapped
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\*(MP a task is currently using.
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\*(MP a task is currently using.
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It is also the sum of the RSan, RSfd and RSsh fields.
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It is also the sum of the RSan, RSfd and RSsh fields.
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@ -803,35 +812,35 @@ modified, act as a dedicated \*(MS and thus will never impact SWAP.
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\*(XX.
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\*(XX.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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24.\fB RSan \*(Em Resident Anonymous Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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25.\fB RSan \*(Em Resident Anonymous Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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A subset of resident memory (RES) representing private pages not
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A subset of resident memory (RES) representing private pages not
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mapped to a file.
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mapped to a file.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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25.\fB RSfd \*(Em Resident File-Backed Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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26.\fB RSfd \*(Em Resident File-Backed Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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A subset of resident memory (RES) representing the implicitly shared
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A subset of resident memory (RES) representing the implicitly shared
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pages supporting program images and shared libraries.
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pages supporting program images and shared libraries.
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It also includes explicit file mappings, both private and shared.
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It also includes explicit file mappings, both private and shared.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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26.\fB RSlk \*(Em Resident Locked Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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27.\fB RSlk \*(Em Resident Locked Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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A subset of resident memory (RES) which cannot be swapped out.
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A subset of resident memory (RES) which cannot be swapped out.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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27.\fB RSsh \*(Em Resident Shared Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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28.\fB RSsh \*(Em Resident Shared Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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A subset of resident memory (RES) representing the explicitly shared
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A subset of resident memory (RES) representing the explicitly shared
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anonymous shm*/mmap pages.
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anonymous shm*/mmap pages.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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28.\fB RUID \*(Em Real User Id \fR
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29.\fB RUID \*(Em Real User Id \fR
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The\fI real\fR user ID.
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The\fI real\fR user ID.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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29.\fB RUSER \*(Em Real User Name \fR
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30.\fB RUSER \*(Em Real User Name \fR
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The\fI real\fR user name.
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The\fI real\fR user name.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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30.\fB S \*(Em Process Status \fR
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31.\fB S \*(Em Process Status \fR
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The status of the task which can be one of:
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The status of the task which can be one of:
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\fBD\fR = uninterruptible sleep
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\fBD\fR = uninterruptible sleep
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\fBI\fR = idle
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\fBI\fR = idle
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@ -847,7 +856,7 @@ Even without a true SMP machine, you may see numerous tasks in this state
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depending on \*(We's delay interval and nice value.
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depending on \*(We's delay interval and nice value.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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31.\fB SHR \*(Em Shared Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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32.\fB SHR \*(Em Shared Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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A subset of resident memory (RES) that may be used by other processes.
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A subset of resident memory (RES) that may be used by other processes.
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It will include shared anonymous pages and shared file-backed pages.
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It will include shared anonymous pages and shared file-backed pages.
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It also includes private pages mapped to files representing
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It also includes private pages mapped to files representing
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@ -856,7 +865,7 @@ program images and shared libraries.
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\*(XX.
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\*(XX.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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32.\fB SID \*(Em Session Id \fR
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33.\fB SID \*(Em Session Id \fR
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A session is a collection of process groups (\*(Xa PGRP),
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A session is a collection of process groups (\*(Xa PGRP),
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usually established by the login shell.
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usually established by the login shell.
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A newly forked process joins the session of its creator.
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A newly forked process joins the session of its creator.
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@ -865,11 +874,11 @@ member of the session, called the session leader, which is usually the
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login shell.
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login shell.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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33.\fB SUID \*(Em Saved User Id \fR
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34.\fB SUID \*(Em Saved User Id \fR
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The\fI saved\fR user ID.
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The\fI saved\fR user ID.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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34.\fB SUPGIDS \*(Em Supplementary Group IDs \fR
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35.\fB SUPGIDS \*(Em Supplementary Group IDs \fR
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The IDs of any supplementary group(s) established at login or
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The IDs of any supplementary group(s) established at login or
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inherited from a task's parent.
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inherited from a task's parent.
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They are displayed in a comma delimited list.
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They are displayed in a comma delimited list.
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@ -877,12 +886,9 @@ They are displayed in a comma delimited list.
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\*(NT The SUPGIDS field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
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\*(NT The SUPGIDS field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
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When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be allocated
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When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be allocated
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all remaining screen width (up to the maximum \*(WX characters).
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all remaining screen width (up to the maximum \*(WX characters).
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Even so, such variable width fields could still suffer truncation.
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\*(XT 5c. SCROLLING a Window for additional information on accessing
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any truncated data.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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35.\fB SUPGRPS \*(Em Supplementary Group Names \fR
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36.\fB SUPGRPS \*(Em Supplementary Group Names \fR
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The names of any supplementary group(s) established at login or
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The names of any supplementary group(s) established at login or
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inherited from a task's parent.
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inherited from a task's parent.
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They are displayed in a comma delimited list.
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They are displayed in a comma delimited list.
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@ -890,29 +896,26 @@ They are displayed in a comma delimited list.
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\*(NT The SUPGRPS field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
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\*(NT The SUPGRPS field, unlike most columns, is not fixed-width.
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When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be allocated
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When displayed, it plus any other variable width columns will be allocated
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all remaining screen width (up to the maximum \*(WX characters).
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all remaining screen width (up to the maximum \*(WX characters).
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Even so, such variable width fields could still suffer truncation.
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\*(XT 5c. SCROLLING a Window for additional information on accessing
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any truncated data.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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36.\fB SUSER \*(Em Saved User Name \fR
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37.\fB SUSER \*(Em Saved User Name \fR
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The\fI saved\fR user name.
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The\fI saved\fR user name.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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37.\fB SWAP \*(Em Swapped Size (KiB) \fR
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38.\fB SWAP \*(Em Swapped Size (KiB) \fR
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The formerly resident portion of a task's address space written
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The formerly resident portion of a task's address space written
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to the \*(MS when \*(MP becomes over committed.
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to the \*(MS when \*(MP becomes over committed.
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\*(XX.
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\*(XX.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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38.\fB TGID \*(Em Thread Group Id \fR
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39.\fB TGID \*(Em Thread Group Id \fR
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The ID of the thread group to which a task belongs.
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The ID of the thread group to which a task belongs.
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It is the PID of the thread group leader.
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It is the PID of the thread group leader.
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In kernel terms, it represents those tasks that share an mm_struct.
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In kernel terms, it represents those tasks that share an mm_struct.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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39.\fB TIME \*(Em \*(PU Time \fR
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40.\fB TIME \*(Em \*(PU Time \fR
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Total \*(PU time the task has used since it started.
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Total \*(PU time the task has used since it started.
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When Cumulative mode is \*O, each process is listed with the \*(Pu
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When Cumulative mode is \*O, each process is listed with the \*(Pu
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time that it and its dead children have used.
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time that it and its dead children have used.
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@ -920,19 +923,19 @@ You toggle Cumulative mode with `S', which is both a \*(CO and an \*(CI.
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\*(XC `S' \*(CI for additional information regarding this mode.
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\*(XC `S' \*(CI for additional information regarding this mode.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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40.\fB TIME+ \*(Em \*(PU Time, hundredths \fR
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41.\fB TIME+ \*(Em \*(PU Time, hundredths \fR
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The same as TIME, but reflecting more granularity through hundredths
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The same as TIME, but reflecting more granularity through hundredths
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of a second.
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of a second.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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41.\fB TPGID \*(Em Tty Process Group Id \fR
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42.\fB TPGID \*(Em Tty Process Group Id \fR
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The process group ID of the foreground process for the connected tty,
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The process group ID of the foreground process for the connected tty,
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or \-1 if a process is not connected to a terminal.
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or \-1 if a process is not connected to a terminal.
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By convention, this value equals the process ID (\*(Xa PID) of the
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By convention, this value equals the process ID (\*(Xa PID) of the
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process group leader (\*(Xa PGRP).
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process group leader (\*(Xa PGRP).
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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42.\fB TTY \*(Em Controlling Tty \fR
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43.\fB TTY \*(Em Controlling Tty \fR
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The name of the controlling terminal.
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The name of the controlling terminal.
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This is usually the device (serial port, pty, etc.) from which the
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This is usually the device (serial port, pty, etc.) from which the
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process was started, and which it uses for input or output.
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process was started, and which it uses for input or output.
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@ -940,22 +943,22 @@ However, a task need not be associated with a terminal, in which case
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you'll see `?' displayed.
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you'll see `?' displayed.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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43.\fB UID \*(Em User Id \fR
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44.\fB UID \*(Em User Id \fR
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The\fI effective\fR user ID of the task's owner.
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The\fI effective\fR user ID of the task's owner.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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44.\fB USED \*(Em Memory in Use (KiB) \fR
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45.\fB USED \*(Em Memory in Use (KiB) \fR
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This field represents the non-swapped \*(MP a task is using (RES) plus
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This field represents the non-swapped \*(MP a task is using (RES) plus
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the swapped out portion of its address space (SWAP).
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the swapped out portion of its address space (SWAP).
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\*(XX.
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\*(XX.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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45.\fB USER \*(Em User Name \fR
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46.\fB USER \*(Em User Name \fR
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The\fI effective\fR user name of the task's owner.
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The\fI effective\fR user name of the task's owner.
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.TP 4
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.TP 4
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46.\fB VIRT \*(Em Virtual Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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47.\fB VIRT \*(Em Virtual Memory Size (KiB) \fR
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The total amount of \*(MV used by the task.
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The total amount of \*(MV used by the task.
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It includes all code, data and shared libraries plus pages that have been
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It includes all code, data and shared libraries plus pages that have been
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swapped out and pages that have been mapped but not used.
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swapped out and pages that have been mapped but not used.
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@ -963,13 +966,13 @@ swapped out and pages that have been mapped but not used.
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\*(XX.
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\*(XX.
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|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
47.\fB WCHAN \*(Em Sleeping in Function \fR
|
48.\fB WCHAN \*(Em Sleeping in Function \fR
|
||||||
This field will show the name of the kernel function in which the task
|
This field will show the name of the kernel function in which the task
|
||||||
is currently sleeping.
|
is currently sleeping.
|
||||||
Running tasks will display a dash (`\-') in this column.
|
Running tasks will display a dash (`\-') in this column.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
48.\fB nDRT \*(Em Dirty Pages Count \fR
|
49.\fB nDRT \*(Em Dirty Pages Count \fR
|
||||||
The number of pages that have been modified since they were last
|
The number of pages that have been modified since they were last
|
||||||
written to \*(AS.
|
written to \*(AS.
|
||||||
Dirty pages must be written to \*(AS before the corresponding physical
|
Dirty pages must be written to \*(AS before the corresponding physical
|
||||||
@ -978,7 +981,7 @@ memory location can be used for some other virtual page.
|
|||||||
This field was deprecated with linux 2.6 and is always zero.
|
This field was deprecated with linux 2.6 and is always zero.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
49.\fB nMaj \*(Em Major Page Fault Count \fR
|
50.\fB nMaj \*(Em Major Page Fault Count \fR
|
||||||
The number of\fB major\fR page faults that have occurred for a task.
|
The number of\fB major\fR page faults that have occurred for a task.
|
||||||
A page fault occurs when a process attempts to read from or write to a
|
A page fault occurs when a process attempts to read from or write to a
|
||||||
virtual page that is not currently present in its address space.
|
virtual page that is not currently present in its address space.
|
||||||
@ -986,7 +989,7 @@ A major page fault is when \*(AS access is involved in making that
|
|||||||
page available.
|
page available.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
50.\fB nMin \*(Em Minor Page Fault count \fR
|
51.\fB nMin \*(Em Minor Page Fault count \fR
|
||||||
The number of\fB minor\fR page faults that have occurred for a task.
|
The number of\fB minor\fR page faults that have occurred for a task.
|
||||||
A page fault occurs when a process attempts to read from or write to a
|
A page fault occurs when a process attempts to read from or write to a
|
||||||
virtual page that is not currently present in its address space.
|
virtual page that is not currently present in its address space.
|
||||||
@ -994,50 +997,50 @@ A minor page fault does not involve \*(AS access in making that
|
|||||||
page available.
|
page available.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
51.\fB nTH \*(Em Number of Threads \fR
|
52.\fB nTH \*(Em Number of Threads \fR
|
||||||
The number of threads associated with a process.
|
The number of threads associated with a process.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
52.\fB nsIPC \*(Em IPC namespace \fR
|
53.\fB nsIPC \*(Em IPC namespace \fR
|
||||||
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate interprocess communication (IPC)
|
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate interprocess communication (IPC)
|
||||||
resources such as System V IPC objects and POSIX message queues.
|
resources such as System V IPC objects and POSIX message queues.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
53.\fB nsMNT \*(Em MNT namespace \fR
|
54.\fB nsMNT \*(Em MNT namespace \fR
|
||||||
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate filesystem mount points thus
|
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate filesystem mount points thus
|
||||||
offering different views of the filesystem hierarchy.
|
offering different views of the filesystem hierarchy.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
54.\fB nsNET \*(Em NET namespace \fR
|
55.\fB nsNET \*(Em NET namespace \fR
|
||||||
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate resources such as network devices,
|
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate resources such as network devices,
|
||||||
IP addresses, IP routing, port numbers, etc.
|
IP addresses, IP routing, port numbers, etc.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
55.\fB nsPID \*(Em PID namespace \fR
|
56.\fB nsPID \*(Em PID namespace \fR
|
||||||
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate process ID numbers
|
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate process ID numbers
|
||||||
meaning they need not remain unique.
|
meaning they need not remain unique.
|
||||||
Thus, each such namespace could have its own `init/systemd' (PID #1) to
|
Thus, each such namespace could have its own `init/systemd' (PID #1) to
|
||||||
manage various initialization tasks and reap orphaned child processes.
|
manage various initialization tasks and reap orphaned child processes.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
56.\fB nsUSER \*(Em USER namespace \fR
|
57.\fB nsUSER \*(Em USER namespace \fR
|
||||||
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate the user and group ID numbers.
|
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate the user and group ID numbers.
|
||||||
Thus, a process could have a normal unprivileged user ID outside a user
|
Thus, a process could have a normal unprivileged user ID outside a user
|
||||||
namespace while having a user ID of 0, with full root privileges, inside
|
namespace while having a user ID of 0, with full root privileges, inside
|
||||||
that namespace.
|
that namespace.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
57.\fB nsUTS \*(Em UTS namespace \fR
|
58.\fB nsUTS \*(Em UTS namespace \fR
|
||||||
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate hostname and NIS domain name.
|
The Inode of the namespace used to isolate hostname and NIS domain name.
|
||||||
UTS simply means "UNIX Time-sharing System".
|
UTS simply means "UNIX Time-sharing System".
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
58.\fB vMj \*(Em Major Page Fault Count Delta\fR
|
59.\fB vMj \*(Em Major Page Fault Count Delta\fR
|
||||||
The number of\fB major\fR page faults that have occurred since the
|
The number of\fB major\fR page faults that have occurred since the
|
||||||
last update (see nMaj).
|
last update (see nMaj).
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
.TP 4
|
.TP 4
|
||||||
59.\fB vMn \*(Em Minor Page Fault Count Delta\fR
|
60.\fB vMn \*(Em Minor Page Fault Count Delta\fR
|
||||||
The number of\fB minor\fR page faults that have occurred since the
|
The number of\fB minor\fR page faults that have occurred since the
|
||||||
last update (see nMin).
|
last update (see nMin).
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
@ -1651,7 +1651,8 @@ static struct {
|
|||||||
{ -1, -1, A_left, -1, PIDS_CGNAME }, // str EU_CGN
|
{ -1, -1, A_left, -1, PIDS_CGNAME }, // str EU_CGN
|
||||||
{ 0, -1, A_right, -1, PIDS_PROCESSOR_NODE }, // s_int EU_NMA
|
{ 0, -1, A_right, -1, PIDS_PROCESSOR_NODE }, // s_int EU_NMA
|
||||||
{ 5, -1, A_right, -1, PIDS_ID_LOGIN }, // s_int EU_LID
|
{ 5, -1, A_right, -1, PIDS_ID_LOGIN }, // s_int EU_LID
|
||||||
#define eu_LAST EU_LID
|
{ -1, -1, A_left, -1, PIDS_EXE }, // str EU_EXE
|
||||||
|
#define eu_LAST EU_EXE
|
||||||
// xtra Fieldstab 'pseudo pflag' entries for the newlib interface . . . . . . .
|
// xtra Fieldstab 'pseudo pflag' entries for the newlib interface . . . . . . .
|
||||||
#define eu_CMDLINE eu_LAST +1
|
#define eu_CMDLINE eu_LAST +1
|
||||||
#define eu_TICS_ALL_C eu_LAST +2
|
#define eu_TICS_ALL_C eu_LAST +2
|
||||||
@ -5640,6 +5641,7 @@ static const char *task_show (const WIN_t *q, struct pids_stack *p) {
|
|||||||
case EU_CGN:
|
case EU_CGN:
|
||||||
case EU_CGR:
|
case EU_CGR:
|
||||||
case EU_ENV:
|
case EU_ENV:
|
||||||
|
case EU_EXE:
|
||||||
case EU_SGD:
|
case EU_SGD:
|
||||||
makeVAR(rSv(i, str));
|
makeVAR(rSv(i, str));
|
||||||
break;
|
break;
|
||||||
|
@ -184,6 +184,7 @@ enum pflag {
|
|||||||
EU_CGN,
|
EU_CGN,
|
||||||
EU_NMA,
|
EU_NMA,
|
||||||
EU_LID,
|
EU_LID,
|
||||||
|
EU_EXE,
|
||||||
#ifdef USE_X_COLHDR
|
#ifdef USE_X_COLHDR
|
||||||
// not really pflags, used with tbl indexing
|
// not really pflags, used with tbl indexing
|
||||||
EU_MAXPFLGS
|
EU_MAXPFLGS
|
||||||
|
@ -308,6 +308,9 @@ static void build_two_nlstabs (void) {
|
|||||||
/* Translation Hint: maximum 'LOGID' = 5 + */
|
/* Translation Hint: maximum 'LOGID' = 5 + */
|
||||||
Head_nlstab[EU_LID] = _("LOGID");
|
Head_nlstab[EU_LID] = _("LOGID");
|
||||||
Desc_nlstab[EU_LID] = _("Login User Id");
|
Desc_nlstab[EU_LID] = _("Login User Id");
|
||||||
|
/* Translation Hint: maximum 'EXE' = variable */
|
||||||
|
Head_nlstab[EU_EXE] = _("EXE");
|
||||||
|
Desc_nlstab[EU_EXE] = _("Executable Path");
|
||||||
}
|
}
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Loading…
x
Reference in New Issue
Block a user