Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Based on GNOME/gnome-system-monitor@60a787b
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This (optionally) hooks up the system monitor with systemd, adding
four new columns to the process view:
1. Unit (i.e. the service name a system process belongs to)
2. Session (i.e. the login session a user process belongs to)
3. Seat (i.e. the physical seat the session of the process belongs to,
only for multi-seat environments)
4. Owner (i.e. the user a process belongs to, which is not influenced
by temporary UID changes like sudo/su/suid.
This patch also enables that the Unit column is shown by default.
If systemd is not around at runtime or at compile time none of the
four new columns are shown.
Taken from GSM commit: df292c0fb07d73448fe26048118b127719750729
From: Lennart Poettering <[email protected]>
Gnome bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=667829
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Taken from GSM commit: 6fcbf5aaa65d63dd751c812c3ac05a937b50450d
From: Robert Roth <[email protected]>
Gnome bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=131802
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Add a new 'Control Group' column to the process view tab.
The format for the column is:
<path name> (controller name), <path name> (controller name)...
Processes that share the same path name across controllers
are colesced. For example if a process is in the /foo cgroup
for both the memory and cpu controllers, it would display as:
/foo (memory,cpu), ...
Taken from GSM commits:
2d33adcbc4347c112d57082956b4e199ff7132db Add cgroup support in the process view
645d38a218fedcbf9c7b674740bf213e02933820 Optimize cgroup updating
From: Jason Baron <[email protected]>
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No more tabs, 4 spaces instead. And remove trailing whitespace.
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