commit | 69993b6d68dfce1a357f589c4544fe8be84e8e03 | [log] [download] |
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author | Calvin Buckley <calvin@cmpct.info> | Fri Aug 24 19:45:34 2018 -0400 |
committer | Calvin Buckley <calvin@cmpct.info> | Fri Aug 24 19:45:34 2018 -0400 |
tree | 63a82f4d7aebeb472bf09d76fb2d20f760a8c9ff | |
parent | da99eaa7136a1735e4ff784b16d5e826ec71527c [diff] |
Generalize timeradd change timeradd is a macro everywhere I've seen it, so it should be fine. Maybe not as scaleable if more usage of timeradd is employed, but oh well. I tried adding the OpenBSD definition for timeradd and using ifdefs for it, but bizarrely, even after defining timeradd, it refused to use the definition, instead trying an implicit function declaration instead. (???) This should work in the meantime.
by Hisham Muhammad hisham@gobolinux.org (2004 - 2016)
This is htop
, an interactive process viewer. It requires ncurses
. It is developed primarily on Linux, but we also have code for running under FreeBSD and Mac OS X (help and testing are wanted for these platforms!)
This software has evolved considerably over the years, and is reasonably complete, but there is always room for improvement.
htop
and classic top
htop
you can scroll the list vertically and horizontally to see all processes and full command lines.top
you are subject to a delay for each unassigned key you press (especially annoying when multi-key escape sequences are triggered by accident).htop
starts faster (top
seems to collect data for a while before displaying anything).htop
you don't need to type the process number to kill a process, in top
you do.htop
you don't need to type the process number or the priority value to renice a process, in top
you do.htop
you can kill multiple processes at once.top
is older, hence, more tested.This program is distributed as a standard autotools-based package. See the INSTALL file for detailed instructions.
When compiling from a release tarball, run:
./configure && make
For compiling sources downloaded from the Git repository, run:
./autogen.sh && ./configure && make
By default make install
will install into /usr/local
, for changing the path use ./configure --prefix=/some/path
.
See the manual page (man htop
) or the on-line help (‘F1’ or ‘h’ inside htop
) for a list of supported key commands.
If not all keys work check your curses configuration.
GNU General Public License, version 2 (GPL-2.0)