With this patch, all of the modules which offer a reap
function (pids, diskstats, slabinfo and stat too) will
now also provide for sorting whatever had been reaped.
It was easy to overlook a sort function for our <STAT>
guy given the paucity of CPUs on your typical personal
desktop or laptop. However, out in the world one might
find boxes with hundreds of CPUs plus many NUMA nodes.
Hey, who are we to disallow sorts on something another
person might see as useful under the above conditions?
And, there's always something to be said for symmetry.
[ of course, several minor tweaks were also included ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
. a more appropriate error return code was substituted
. a safer form of comparison is utilized in two places
. a STAT_VAL macro replaced by more proper MEMINFO_VAL
. several of the silly 'xerrx' formats had been missed
. a few whitespace changes have also been incorporated
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
With this patch we've completed a progression toward a
standard approach to naming conventions which follows:
* Only functions will begin with that 'procps_' prefix
. ........................................... examples
. procps_vmstat_get ()
. procps_diskstats_select ()
- ----------------------------------------------------
* Exposed structures begin with the module/header name
. ........................................... examples
. struct pids_info
. struct stat_reaped
- ----------------------------------------------------
* Item enumerators begin like structs, but capitalized
. ........................................... examples
. VMSTAT_COMPACT_FAIL
. MEMINFO_DELTA_ACTIVE
[ slabinfo varies slightly due to some item variants ]
. SLABINFO_extra
. SLABS_SIZE_ACTIVE
. SLABNODE_OBJS_PER_SLAB
[ could cure with a prefix of SLABINFO, but too long ]
- ----------------------------------------------------
* Other enumerators work exactly like item enumerators
. ........................................... examples
. PIDS_SORT_ASCEND
. STAT_REAP_CPUS_AND_NODES
- ----------------------------------------------------
* Macros and constants begin just like the enumerators
. ........................................... examples
. #define SLABINFO_GET
. #define DISKSTATS_TYPE_DISK
- ----------------------------------------------------
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Many of our item enumerator identifiers are very long,
especially in that <VMSTAT> module. Additionally, they
all contain the exact same universal 'PROCPS_' prefix.
The origins for this are likely found in the desire to
avoid name clashes with other potential include files.
But with procps-ng newlib, we've probably gone way too
far. Did 'PROCPS_PIDS_TICS_SYSTEM' actually offer more
protection against clash than 'PIDS_TICS_SYSTEM' does?
I don't think so. Besides, no matter how big that name
becomes, one can never guarantee they'll never be some
clash. And, conversely, extremely short names will not
always create conflict. Of course, in either case when
some clash occurs, one can always #undef that problem.
Thus, this commit will eliminate that 'PROCPS_' prefix
making all of those enum identifiers a little shorter.
And, we'll still be well above some ridiculously short
(criminally short) names found in some common headers:
- - - - - - - - - - <term.h>
- 'tab', 'TTY', etc
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - <search.h>
- 'ENTER', ENTRY', 'FIND', etc
------------------------------------------------------
Finally, with this as a last of the wholesale changes,
we will have established the naming conventions below:
. only functions will begin with that 'procps_' prefix
. exposed structures begin with the module/header name
. item enumerators begin like structs, but capitalized
. other enumerators work exactly like item enumerators
. macros and constants begin just like the enumerators
------------------------------------------------------
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This patch attempts to standardize the naming of those
most important (declared not defined) context structs.
The present practice represents a hodge podge of names
only some of which reflect the source /proc file name.
And 2 of those file names embed a literal 'info' which
is likely the origin of that required parm identifier.
Now we'll append a universal '_info' to such structure
names, while including the names of those /proc pseudo
files where possible. In any case, that context struct
will *always* begin with the actual module/header file
name. And only the following two sound a little weird!
---------> 'meminfo_info' + 'slabinfo_info' <---------
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This patch is a response to changes to the <diskstats>
interface. And the following represents the summary of
significant unrelated alterations that were also made.
+ corrected that 'milli weighted IO' output, which has
been wrong since that original patch referenced below.
as implemented, it duplicated 'milli spent IO' output.
+ restored original commit intent regarding disks with
a partition switch as represented in references below.
+ moved all item enumerators up near the source start.
+ removed all remaining tabs and inconsistent indents.
+ reformatted the silly style applied to 'xerrx' uses.
Reference(s):
. disallowed 'disks' under 'partition' switch
commit 7df7795b92
. original commit with disk/partition rational
commit e445f7e6c5
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This patch will bring this interface up to our 3rd gen
standards. The following summarizes the major changes.
* New delta provisions have been added to most fields.
There are, of course, some fields for which a delta is
inappropriate. They include the identifying items such
as name, type, major and minor. Plus the io_inprogress
field which already acts, in effect, as a delta value.
* To provide delta support, dev_node historical values
have become persistent. By the same token, the library
must provide for future removal of disks/partitions. A
timestamp is used to detect 'stale' data which will be
deleted so as not to satisfy some get, select or reap.
* Such persistent support is provided by a linked list
which, by default, grows from the bottom down so as to
maintain compatibility with the /proc/diskstats order.
Initially, I was tempted to use the GNU tsearch (tree)
provisions until I discovered the overhead of building
that tree plus costs of a subsequent 'twalk'. Besides,
walking such a tree means retrieval order would differ
from an order required/expected by the vmstat program.
* The '/sys/block' directory is no longer scanned with
every refresh cycle. Rather, it's only accessed when a
node is first encountered. Then, that node's 'type' is
persistent for its lifetime like several other fields.
* A sort provision was included, at virtually no cost,
even though such a provision was not currently needed.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Where possible, libprocps files convey the name of the
actual source pseudo file under the '/proc' directory.
This brings diskstats into line with such an approach.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
[ plus we also play catch up on some earlier changes ]
[ that impacted skill.c, after using --enable-skill! ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Whoa, I had never considered an alternative to ncurses
until the issue referenced below was raised. Thus, I'm
surprised to find that 'tparm' was the only impediment
to ultimately utilizing this alternate curses library.
And, while we could have substituted that non-standard
'tiparm' with only 2 arguments, we'll utilize the full
parms compliment in the spirit of that original patch.
Frankly, the task of developing an alternative library
to that ncurses implementation really boggles my mind.
Congratulations to rofl0r, whoever that masked man is.
Reference(s):
. issue raised
https://gitlab.com/procps-ng/procps/issues/38
. netbsd-curses home
https://github.com/sabotage-linux/netbsd-curses
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
A collection of miscellaneous code and comment tweaks.
[ such changes will stop when desk checking ends too ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
So as to avoid that potential (and inappropriate) numa
library spew to stderr, plus some resulting corruption
of top's display, top buffered stderr output until the
program ended. However, under our new library, timings
have changed meaning the corruption could occur again.
So this patch just relocates the stderr redirect to an
earlier startup point ahead of the 1st call to <STAT>.
[ plus we also fiddle just a tad with a few comments ]
Reference(s):
. original libnuma fix
commit 35dc6dcc49
. original redhat discussion
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=998678
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Emulating the presumed proper behavior of the original
program, when the -p switch is used we will now report
an error if that provided name matches some disk name.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Back in July of last year, when vmstat was modified to
exploit the 2nd gen <slabinfo> alloc & sort provision,
yours truly introduced this bug (in the commit below).
Reference(s):
commit 8d9612f782
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
That #define QUICK_THREADS was impossible to implement
under the new <pids> interface. Plus it was also found
to distort some thread information (referenced below).
So, it's always been inactive under the newlib branch.
However, it will (with small changes) still serve some
useful purpose in our library. Now, when the redefined
FALSE_THREADS is active, those special strings showing
"[ duplicate ENUM ]" will appear for any child thread.
Note: the real reason for such strings appearing isn't
being exercised, only their mechanics. In actual usage
they are substituted when a user duplicates such items
in a results stack & only the 1st instance can own it.
With this patch, we are simply fooling the <pids> code
into thinking an item was duplicated via a NULL value.
Reference(s):
. from master branch
commit 25a6ecdbfb
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
If process_ansi encountered an unknown character when processing an ANSI
escape sequence, it would ungetc all the characters read so far, except
for the character just read, and the opening '\033['. ungetting the
middle of the escape sequence does not produce useful results, and also
relies on the unportable assumption that ungetc works on multiple
characters (which glibc does not support). Discard the characters
instead.
Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
process_ansi stopped processing an ANSI escape sequence if
(c < '0' && c > '9' && c != ';'), which will never happen. Fix the
range check to use || instead.
Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
process_ansi assumed all numbers in a color control sequence correspond
to colors or attributes, which breaks badly if it encounters a
ISO-8613-3 escape sequence (such as for truecolor RGB). For instance,
the sequence "\x1b[38;2;10;20;30m" sets the foreground color to
rgb(10,20,30), but watch will interpret all five numbers in the sequence
as colors or attributes themselves.
Stop processing the entire escape sequence if watch encounters any
number it doesn't understand, as that number may change the meaning of
the rest of the sequence.
Previously there was a commit to change all noinst_PROGRAMS into
check_PROGRAMS. This was not a good idea.
check_PROGRAMS are built before TESTS are run. However they are
NOT build before the dejagnu tests are run, causing those tests
to fail.
So:
If the program is required for dejagnu, it needs to go into
noinst_PROGRAMS
If the program is required for TESTS or is one of those TESTS,
it needs to go into check_PROGRAMS
For some unknown reason, check_PROGRAMS are not built before check.
They are built before recheck and after check, which isn't very
useful.
This means any tests by dejagnu that need those programs will fail.
On my console I get a build error, the CI merrily reports the error
but considers the build OK; go figure.
The kludge adds check_PROGRAMS to be a dependency to check.
Note, TESTS don't need to be included in this, because they are
properly compliled after the dejagnu tests but before they are
run.
As part of the fix to truncate the command in non-8bit, watch had
the function for output_header changed (much for scope cleanliness
and cohesiveness than anything; so I'm going to blame Meyer)...
Anyhow the 8bit enabled version did not have that update which
meant watch failed to compile. Thanks to @asavah for issue #37
and the patch.
References:
commit 5a40c7970d
Yes, all of these changes are strictly cosmetic. It is
likely symptomatic of some deep-seated character flaw.
[ or, it might be because of a certain pride in this ]
[ new library and the desire to make it even better! ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Ever since their introduction, plus continuing through
several evolutions, both the meminfo and vmstat 'read'
functions employed a 'do while' loop for /proc access.
However, that loop construct was wrong since identical
tests were already done (twice!) within each loop body
itself, then accompanied by its own 'break' statement.
So, we will now transform them both into forever loops
which will help us to emphasize such break statements.
[ plus, let's return an error should nothing be read ]
[ lastly, eliminate 1 erroneous PROCPS_EXPORT prefix ]
Reference(s):
. original meminfo introduction
commit a20e88e4e7
. original vmstat introduction
commit a410e236ab
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
We'll follow Craig's lead and whack some author stuff.
[ and we'll honor the SEE ALSO guideline for periods ]
[ but essentially ignore all the other busybody crap ]
[ which, to be honest, we pretty much follow already ]
[ actually, if you're told to follow a certain style ]
[ in program examples, you've gone way past busybody ]
[ crap and have entered the realm of anal retentive! ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Added locale details and fixed this manual page to follow standards
including ordering it the right way, keeping the names of things
consistent and removing authors section.
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
Both watch and free used the locale to determine the required delay
interval for subsequent updates. It's preferable to not care about
locale and accept both 12.34 and 12,34 as meaning 12 seconds and
340 microseconds.
References:
https://bugs.debian.org/692113
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
Minor tweaks in the free manual page
* Removed author section. It's wrong and strongly discouraged
by the man page standards.
* Moved note about shared not in old kernels into bugs sections
as this is not relevant for most people and declutters the top
sections.
References:
https://bugs.debian.org/755233
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
The procps library attempts to work out the tty of a process
through several methods. For things like /dev/tty123 or
/dev/foo it works fine.
For tty devices that put the minor number in a directory
of the major name this fails. So then we have to fallback
to stating things like the processes STDERR and try again.
Considering a lot of processes sit on ttys such as
/dev/pts/3 this is a lot of wasted time. At the point of
entering driver_name we know "/dev/pts" and we know "3"
we just didn't join them up the right way as this is old
code.
This change now looks for /dev/pts/3 as well. It does it
after looking for /dev/pts3 so the behaviour is the same.
References:
https://bugs.debian.org/770215
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
This commit brings all of those 'fetch' type functions
(supporting some form of 'reap') into closer alignment
with one another. The biggest impact is to be found in
the <stat> module, which now provides for the separate
copy of stack pointers which will be exposed to users.
The reason such a copy was not employed initially with
<stat>, unlike those for <pids> and <slabinfo>, is due
to the fact that such stacks were never sortable. Thus
the original raw consolidated extent pointers wouldn't
have been disturbed. But that meant no NULL delimiter.
So with this commit, all reap/fetch operations now use
pointer copies when returning results to callers. And,
all such arrays are now NULL delimited meaning callers
can choose their own access fencepost: totals or NULL.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This commit will consolidate the three separate copies
of the item enumerators currently supporting that reap
function (summary, cpus & nodes) into one shared copy.
That select function will continue to maintain its own
dedicated items copy, albeit via a new item structure.
[ and while we're at it, we'll move the 'select' guy ]
[ to its proper alphabetical place, after our 'reap' ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
Unlike other cached string fields (such as USER name),
that lxcname field was defined as 'const char *'. This
required a custom 'set' function using a cast in order
to avoid a compiler warning regarding that assignment.
So this commit brings lxcname into line with all those
other cached string fields. And while we're at it, the
reason some string fields have no 'freefunc' will also
be explained with some new comments in the Item_table.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
As those 3rd generation newlib APIs evolved so too did
the extents_free_all() function. Most versions of this
function required the callers to first verify that the
extents anchor wasn't empty, which was poor etiquette.
This simple function should have been much more robust
and forgiving. With this commit, it fnally becomes so.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
When the screen width is not long enough to display the entire
command, watch puts three dots ... like elipses at the end of
the truncated line.
It's been like that for years, perhaps noone uses non 8-bit
watch?
References:
commit 367b8bb616
Signed-off-by: Craig Small <csmall@enc.com.au>
Shell kill would report a problem if you tried to kill a process
while procps kill was silent. This meant it looked like kill worked
when it actually failed.
References:
commit 07642b8ea6https://bugs.debian.org/733172
With the change to struct pids_fetch, we'll just trade
some dot ('.') code for some pointer to ('->') syntax.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
With all our 3rd generation interfaces, we're now well
positioned to preserve binary compatibility should new
fields be added to any public structure (assuming that
the 'result' union already contains its largest type).
This remains true even for the <pids> interface, which
unlike the others, has one structure embedded within a
separate struct rather than declaring a pointer to it.
The counts struct was positioned after the stacks ptrs
array so as to preserve that ABI if ever new ints were
added. Logically, however, the counts (especially that
total) should precede the stacks array if we wished to
properly place a horse (total) before a cart (stacks).
So to enable relocating those counts we will no longer
embed that structure, but provide a pointer to it. And
this will make accessing syntax feel more natural too.
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This patch represents the partial revert of the commit
referenced below. And, so that yours truly (the author
for goodness sake) doesn't shoot his tootsies again in
the future, a cautionary programmer comment was added.
Reference(s):
commit dea4033418
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
This patch represents the following minor adjustments:
. old PROCTAB used with select & reap more descriptive
. reformatted PROCPS_PIDS_VAL macro like other 3rd gen
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
The following commit message is shared with 4 patches.
------------------------------------------------------
Under the newlib interface most of our 'get' functions
represent a bit of a compromise in that the actual raw
values are coerced into one (probably ok) return type.
That approach creates the possibility of truncation at
best, and wouldn't serve future needs should something
other than numeric data be added to the 'get' results.
This commit trades the current compromise for a return
value guaranteed to satisfy all future needs, namely a
pointer to a particular api's specific results struct.
The impact on existing programs is minimal, especially
when using a new supplied macro. Otherwise, native 'C'
syntax could be used, but may feel somewhat unnatural.
[ as an aside, this new approach allows us to delete ]
[ all 'getsfunc' table entries & the supporting code ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>
The following commit message is shared with 4 patches.
------------------------------------------------------
Under the newlib interface most of our 'get' functions
represent a bit of a compromise in that the actual raw
values are coerced into one (probably ok) return type.
That approach creates the possibility of truncation at
best, and wouldn't serve future needs should something
other than numeric data be added to the 'get' results.
This commit trades the current compromise for a return
value guaranteed to satisfy all future needs, namely a
pointer to a particular api's specific results struct.
The impact on existing programs is minimal, especially
when using a new supplied macro. Otherwise, native 'C'
syntax could be used, but may feel somewhat unnatural.
[ as an aside, this new approach allows us to delete ]
[ all 'getsfunc' table entries & the supporting code ]
Signed-off-by: Jim Warner <james.warner@comcast.net>