This is only the beginning of the ipv6 support,
This var isn't documented and only works on Linux.
It should also be patched to show the addresses in compressed format
Some other vars should also be added to see things like netmask, scope, routes, ...
From the 2.6.36 changelog (http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/ChangeLog-2.6.36):
Mark the ACPI thermal procfs I/F deprecated, because /sys/class/thermal/ is already available and has been working for years w/o any problem.
The ACPI thermal procfs I/F will be removed in 2.6.37
This fixes a bug occurred with 0b3e3c637e.
Dead processes still appeared in ${top} under FreeBSD and OpenBSD. This was
because I forgot to update the g_time variable which is used as time stamp in
the process list.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@znc.in>
Linux-specific code in top.cc was moved to linux.cc.
Redundant code (e.g. the parts sorting by CPU usage, CPU time or memory
usage) was removed. Sorting etc. happens in top.cc, whilst
platform-dependent code in linux.cc, freebsd.cc or openbsd.cc just
builds up the process table.
In the Linux code, some functions had a return value which was never
evaluated. They return void now.
I tested it on FreeBSD and Linux; The OpenBSD port does not compile
anyway. I changed the OpenBSD parts, too, so that it will be less
effort to get conky working under OpenBSD.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@znc.in>
I've added $memwithbuffers to complement $mem, $memeasyfree, etc. This
variable indicates the used system memory, regardless of buffers/caches. If
the "no_buffers" option is set to "no", it will be the same as $mem. The
reason I find this change useful is that I like to display both the total
used system memory and the memory being used by applications.
I've also included a memwithbuffersbar, which is the same as membar except
that it uses $memwithbuffers as the size instead of $mem.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Labath <pavelo@centrum.sk>