.SH "SUNOS 4 DIFFERENCES" On multiprocessor machines, the amount of time the processors spend in a spin lock is displayed along with the other processor state percentages. The percentages shown for processor states are averages across all processors. A process in run state also has its current processor displayed in the STATE column, for example "run/2" indicates running on processor 2. There is an extra column in the process display indicating which processor each running process is assigned to. Information about physical memory is displayed on the memory status line, but information about virtual memory is not available. Due to incompatabilities in kernel data structures, a top executable compiled on a Sun 4 multiprocessor architecture machine (sun4m) will not run correctly on a uniprocessor architecture machine (sun4), and vice versa. You will have to compile and maintain separate executables for these architectures. Yeah, I don't like it either. Some processes may show up with a resident set size (RES column) larger than total virtual memory size (SIZE column). This seems odd at first, but is a consequence of shared libraries: shared memory is counted as resident but is not counted in total size. The SunOS 4 port was written by William LeFebvre. |