From 4a3dd74d828eeefed69e53e628086912ef88c324 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Colin Booth
Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2020 17:19:45 +0000
Subject: s6-linux-utils: fix html errors
Signed-off-by: Colin Booth
---
doc/s6-ps.html | 67 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-----------------------------
1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 34 deletions(-)
(limited to 'doc/s6-ps.html')
diff --git a/doc/s6-ps.html b/doc/s6-ps.html
index 710b94e..5e1887f 100644
--- a/doc/s6-ps.html
+++ b/doc/s6-ps.html
@@ -69,57 +69,56 @@ recognized field keywords and the corresponding field they display.
- - pid : the process id number.
- - comm : the command name as known by the kernel.
- - s : the one-character state of the process, then s
+
- pid : the process id number.
+ - comm : the command name as known by the kernel.
+ - s : the one-character state of the process, then s
if the process is a session leader or + if it is a foreground
process group leader, then N if
the process is niced or < if it is anti-niced. Unlike ps, s6-ps
cannot tell whether a process has locked memory pages or not.
- - ppid : the parent process' pid.
- - pgrp : the process group number.
- - sess : the session leader's pid.
- - tty : the name of the process's controlling terminal.
- - tpgid : the pid of the foreground process group.
- - utime : the time the process spent in user mode.
- - stime : the time the process spent in kernel mode.
- - cutime : the time spent in user mode by the process and
+
- ppid : the parent process' pid.
+ - pgrp : the process group number.
+ - sess : the session leader's pid.
+ - tty : the name of the process's controlling terminal.
+ - tpgid : the pid of the foreground process group.
+ - utime : the time the process spent in user mode.
+ - stime : the time the process spent in kernel mode.
+ - cutime : the time spent in user mode by the process and
all its dead children.
- - cstime : the time spent in kernel mode by the process and
+
- cstime : the time spent in kernel mode by the process and
all its dead children.
- - prio : the process' priority as computed by the kernel.
- - nice : the process' nice value.
- - thcount : the number of threads in the process.
- - start : the start time of the process.
- - vsize : the virtual memory size of the process.
- - rss : the resident set size of the process.
- - rsslimit : the maximum rss allowed for the process.
- - psr : the number of the CPU the process is running on.
- - rtprio : the real-time priority of the process.
- - policy : the real-time policy of the process - a symbolic name.
- - user : the user the process is running as.
- - group : the group the process is running as.
- - pmem : the percentage of the available virtual memory the process
+
- prio : the process' priority as computed by the kernel.
+ - nice : the process' nice value.
+ - thcount : the number of threads in the process.
+ - start : the start time of the process.
+ - vsize : the virtual memory size of the process.
+ - rss : the resident set size of the process.
+ - rsslimit : the maximum rss allowed for the process.
+ - psr : the number of the CPU the process is running on.
+ - rtprio : the real-time priority of the process.
+ - policy : the real-time policy of the process - a symbolic name.
+ - user : the user the process is running as.
+ - group : the group the process is running as.
+ - pmem : the percentage of the available virtual memory the process
is using. Be aware that it is a very rough estimate: determining exactly how much memory
a process is using is a complex task.
- - wchan : the name or address of the kernel function where the
+
- wchan : the name or address of the kernel function where the
proces is sleeping. It is actually very rare that a kernel is configured to properly
export that value, because it incurs a small performance cost.
- - args : the command line of the process.
- - env : the process environment. s6-ps can normally only print
+
- args : the command line of the process.
+ - env : the process environment. s6-ps can normally only print
the environment for processes running as the same user, or if it is run as root.
Be aware that the environment is usually quite large, and will create very long
lines, likely to mess up the display on a standard terminal.
-
- - pcpu : the percentage of CPU used by the process (total cpu time
+
- pcpu : the percentage of CPU used by the process (total cpu time
divided by total running time). It is a mean value and does not reflect current CPU
usage.
- - ttime : total CPU time used by the process (user + kernel mode).
- - cttime : total CPU time used by the process and all its dead
+
- ttime : total CPU time used by the process (user + kernel mode).
+ - cttime : total CPU time used by the process and all its dead
children (user + kernel mode).
- - tstart : the start time of the process as a
+
- tstart : the start time of the process as a
TAI64N value.
- - cpcpu : the percentage of CPU used by the process and its dead
+
- cpcpu : the percentage of CPU used by the process and its dead
children (total cpu time
divided by total running time). It is a mean value and does not reflect current CPU
usage.
--
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