Commit graph

10 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jperkin
49b4a26e1d Enable build on SunOS if /system/lxproc is available. 2015-08-20 13:38:25 +00:00
wiz
0eb141f110 Bump PKGREVISION for ncurses shlib bump. 2015-08-17 17:11:19 +00:00
asau
54c5cd959e Drop superfluous PKG_DESTDIR_SUPPORT, "user-destdir" is default these days. 2012-10-23 19:50:50 +00:00
drochner
f8c5eef4e1 update to 1.0.1
changes:
-UI improvements, UTF-8/wcurses support
-Performance improvements
-XDG compliance
-bugfixes
2012-03-21 18:28:40 +00:00
cheusov
d9584262ed Remove useless .include "../../mk/bsd.prefs.mk" 2011-12-10 14:36:38 +00:00
cheusov
89e0a2226a Unconditionally pass ac_cv_file__proc_stat=yes and
ac_cv_file__proc_meminfo=yes to "configure" script. As a result htop
   will be built regardless of /proc is mounted or not (bulk builds).
Enable htop PR 39881 on NetBSD, Linux and FreeBSD only where
  Linux-compatible procfs is available.
2011-12-10 13:28:43 +00:00
cheusov
b742beedd2 Update to version 0.9. This fixes build failures on Linux (PR 44001).
Support for NetBSD was added.
Fixes for pkglint warnings. Oked by wiz@
2011-08-06 16:36:41 +00:00
joerg
f605fec2db Mark as destdir ready. 2008-07-14 12:55:56 +00:00
xtraeme
d5da34baf3 Update to 0.6.6:
* Add support of NLWP field
  (thanks to Bert Wesarg)
* BUGFIX: Fix use of configurable /proc location
  (thanks to Florent Thoumie)
* Fix memory percentage calculation and make it saner
  (thanks to Olev Kartau for the report)
* Added display of DRS, DT, LRS and TRS
  (thanks to Matthias Lederhofer)
* BUGFIX: LRS and DRS memory values were flipped
  (thanks to Matthias Lederhofer)
* BUGFIX: Don't crash on very high UIDs
  (thanks to Egmont Koblinger)
2007-06-03 12:53:59 +00:00
agc
55bb2351bc Initial import of htop-0.6.5 into the Packages Collection.
htop is an enhanced version of top, the interactive process viewer,
which can display the list of processes in a tree form, like pstree.

	This is htop, an interactive process viewer.

	Comparison between 'htop' and 'top'
	~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

	 * In 'htop' you can scroll the list vertically and horizontally
	   to see all processes and full command lines.
	 * In '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).
	 * In 'htop' you don't need to type the process number to
	   kill a process, in 'top' you do.
	 * In 'htop' you don't need to type the process number or
	   the priority value to renice a process, in 'top' you do.
	 * In 'htop' you can kill multiple processes at once.
	 * 'top' is older, hence, more tested.
2007-05-25 19:30:21 +00:00