📄 m_sunos5.man
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.SH "SUNOS 5 NOTES"CPU percentage is calculated as a fraction of total available computingresources. Hence on a multiprocessor machine a single threaded process can never consume cpu time in excess of 1 divided by the number of processors.For example, on a 4 processor machine, a single threaded process will never show a cpu percentage higher than 25%. The CPU percentage columnwill always total approximately 100, regardless of the number of processors.The memory summary line displays the following: "real" is the totalamount of physical memory that can be allocated for use by processes(it does not include memory reserved for the kernel's use), "free" isthe amount of unallocated physical memory, "swap in use" is the amountof swap area on disk that is being used, "swap free" is the amount ofswap area on disk that is still available. The swap figures will differ from the summary output of.IR swap (1M)since the latter includes physical memory as well.The column "THR" indicates the number of execution threads in the process.In BSD Unix, process priority was represented internally as a signedoffset from a zero value with an unsigned value. The "zero" valuewas usually something like 20, allowing for a range of prioritiesfrom -20 to 20. As implemented on SunOS 5, older version of topcontinued to interpret process priority in this manner, even thoughit was no longer correct. Starting with top version 3.5, this waschanged to agree with the rest of the system.The SunOS 5 (Solaris 2) port was oroginally written by Torsten Kasch,<torsten@techfak.uni-bielefeld.de>. Many contributions have beenprovided by Casper Dik <Casper.Dik@sun.com>.Support for multi-cpu, calculation of CPU% and memory stats provided byRobert Boucher <boucher@sofkin.ca>, Marc Cohen <marc@aai.com>, Charles Hedrick <hedrick@geneva.rutgers.edu>, andWilliam L. Jones <jones@chpc>.
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