>From top in pkgsrc, one can know that a certain process has some number of LWP in it. load averages: 1.89, 1.72, 1.68; up 119+05:28:10 13:30:48 154 processes: 152 sleeping, 1 running, 1 on cpu CPU states: % idle, % user, % kernel, % iowait, % swap Memory: 1024M real, 414M free, 841M swap in use, 1956M swap free PID USERNAME LWP PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE TIME CPU COMMAND 21891 bond 1 4 2 19M 1864K run 31.7H 77.04% upd_twd_15min 17153 bond 1 50 2 82M 6164K sleep 37:37 12.98% dataserver.tsk 17151 bond 1 53 2 82M 81M sleep 41:57 0.96% dataserver.tsk 13742 otc 1 53 2 30M 21M sleep 3:31 0.89% dataserver.tsk 17204 mtrs 1 53 2 82M 6144K sleep 2:47 0.67% dataserver.tsk 17321 mtrs 1 53 2 25M 7908K sleep 2:21 0.49% otcmgr.tsk 16250 root 1 59 0 4136K 2224K sleep 0:00 0.47% sshd 13745 otc 1 53 2 30M 2496K sleep 2:55 0.36% dataserver.tsk 3821 jessica 1 59 0 31M 4816K sleep 6:25 0.34% dataserver.tsk 17227 bond 1 53 2 25M 7908K sleep 2:46 0.31% otcmgr.tsk 17553 otc 1 53 2 17M 1208K sleep 0:46 0.18% icbc_pricing 16269 leafy 1 45 0 3360K 1688K sleep 0:00 0.13% bash 17202 mtrs 1 53 2 82M 19M sleep 1:08 0.12% dataserver.tsk 17154 bond 1 53 2 82M 8004K sleep 0:35 0.12% dataserver.tsk 13746 otc 1 53 2 30M 5136K sleep 0:37 0.11% dataserver.tsk In our top, show threads does not tell you how many threads exactly exists in a process, is there any way to imitate the other top's behaviour? Jiawei -- "Without the userland, the kernel is useless." --inspired by The Tao of ProgrammingReceived on Wed Apr 13 2005 - 03:32:56 UTC
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