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2020-12-06Introduce METER_BUFFER_CHECK and METER_BUFFER_APPEND_CHR to cleanup writing ↵Christian Göttsche
to bar buffers Closes: #294
2020-12-06Use size_t as len type for Meter_UpdateValuesChristian Göttsche
Most of the time the parameter is passed to snprintf type functions
2020-12-06IWYU updateChristian Göttsche
2020-12-05Meter: fix bar coloring without wide ncurses supportChristian Göttsche
attrset() seems to not work with mvaddchnstr()
2020-12-05Resolve conversion from int to charChristian Göttsche
2020-12-05Resolve conversion from int to unsigned and backChristian Göttsche
2020-11-28Update even more snprintfsChristian Göttsche
Use size of actual buffers instead of magic numbers
2020-11-25Add support to change numeric options in settings screenChristian Göttsche
Like delay or highlightDelaySecs
2020-11-25Fully support non-ascii characters in Meter-BarChristian Göttsche
Currently the code does not handle multi-byte characters, so length- computations take the raw count of C characters and not the to displayed size into account. An example is the degree sign for temperatures. Closes: #329
2020-11-02Embracing branchesBenny Baumann
2020-11-02Spacing around operatorsBenny Baumann
2020-11-02Spacing after keywords (for)Benny Baumann
2020-10-31Use integer type for item count instead of charChristian Göttsche
2020-10-26Hold only a const version of the ProcessList in MetersChristian Göttsche
2020-10-19Assert allocating non-zero size memoryChristian Göttsche
Allocating zero size memory results in implementation-defined behavior: man:malloc(3) : If size is 0, then malloc() returns either NULL, or a unique pointer value that can later be successfully passed to free().
2020-10-18Make all required includes explicitBenny Baumann
Information as seen by IWYU 0.12 + clang 9 on Linux
2020-10-16Rename StringUtils.[ch] to XUtils.[ch]Benny Baumann
2020-10-12Meter: use explicit type for drawDataChristian Göttsche
2020-10-10Mark Object pointer to _display function constChristian Göttsche
2020-10-07Mark Object instances constChristian Göttsche
2020-10-07Mark Object classes and Object class fields constChristian Göttsche
2020-10-05Update License consistently to GPLv2 as per COPYING fileDaniel Lange
2020-09-29Covert Meter attributes to file-local constant arraysChristian Göttsche
2020-09-29Drop redundant casts to the same typeChristian Göttsche
2020-09-24Drop unused macrosChristian Göttsche
2020-09-12Clean up some code duplication in the header filesHugo Musso Gualandi
PR htop-dev/htop#70 got rid of the infrastructure for generating header files, but it left behind some code duplication. Some of cases are things that belong in the header file and don't need to be repeated in the C file. Other cases are things that belong in the C file and don't need to be in the header file. In this commit I tried to fix all of these that I could find. When given a choice I preferred keeping things out of the header file, unless they were being used by someone else.
2020-09-09Consolidate repeated macro definitions into one headerNathan Scott
The MIN, MAX, CLAMP, MINIMUM, and MAXIMUM macros appear throughout the codebase with many re-definitions. Make a single copy of each in a common header file, and use the BSD variants of MINIMUM/MAXIMUM due to conflicts in the system <sys/param.h> headers.
2020-09-03Axe automated header generation.Zev Weiss
Reasoning: - implementation was unsound -- broke down when I added a fairly basic macro definition expanding to a struct initializer in a *.c file. - made it way too easy (e.g. via otherwise totally innocuous git commands) to end up with timestamps such that it always ran MakeHeader.py but never used its output, leading to overbuild noise when running what should be a null 'make'. - but mostly: it's just an awkward way of dealing with C code.
2020-08-20Merge branch 'hishamhm-pull-960'Nathan Scott
2020-08-18fixed display of blank barsJonischkeit Clemens
The buffer for blank bars was left uninitialized resulting in random looking characters sometimes even overwriting the end of the bar.
2019-10-31Clean up existing whitespaceDaniel Flanagan
2018-02-18Fix out-of-bounds readHisham Muhammad
Detected by Coverity: https://scan8.coverity.com/reports.htm#v13252/p10402/fileInstanceId=22093847&defectInstanceId=7543344&mergedDefectId=174181
2018-02-18Fix indentationHisham Muhammad
2018-02-13Fix issue with small terminals.Hisham Muhammad
Fixes #733.
2018-02-04Clarify we are looking for the null terminationcoypoop
Not for a comparison to zero
2017-07-27Security review: check results of snprintf.Hisham Muhammad
Calls marked with xSnprintf shouldn't fail. Abort program cleanly if any of them does.
2017-07-26Merge pull request #651 from Explorer09/graph-mode-drawHisham Muhammad
Round values in graph drawing (instead of implicit truncate)
2017-07-22Mark some things as constRichard
Several string pointer arrays pointed to const strings but were not const themselves. A few various structures and arrays were also marked const.
2017-07-15Round values in graph drawing (instead of implicit truncate)Explorer09
2016-07-22Let BarMeterMode_characters[] be const array.Explorer09
2016-05-27Remove redundant is-null checks on free(Meter.drawData)Explorer09
2016-05-04Rename Meter.setValues() functions to updateValues()Explorer09
Rationale (copied from htop issue #471): The function name "setValues" is misleading. For most OOP (object- oriented programming) contexts, setXXX functions mean they will change some member variables of an object into something specified in function arguments. But in the *Meter_setValues() case, the new values are not from the arguments, but from a hard-coded source. The caller is not supposed to change the values[] to anything it likes, but rather to "update" the values from the source. Hence, updateValues is a better name for this family of functions.
2016-03-22BarMeterMode_draw minor code improvementExplorer09
Removed a loop that sets the bar[] buffer with spaces and merged that task to the snprintf() call just below. No need for the barOffset variable. Display behavior is unchanged. Size comparision (when compiled on Ubuntu 14.04 64-bit): $ size htop.old htop.new text data bss dec hex filename 137312 15112 3776 156200 26228 htop.old 137216 15112 3776 156104 261c8 htop.new
2016-03-11Explicit "maxItems" property of metersExplorer09
Two changes in this commit: - All meters now explicitly specify "maxItems" property, even for just 1 item. (Exception is "container" CPU meter classes, which use CUSTOM_METERMODE.) - "maxItems" being 0 is now allowed. This will let bar meters and graph meters render an empty meter.
2016-02-02Avoid crash on huge screens.Hisham
Fix by @Explorer09 (see discussion on #355).
2016-02-02Check for failure in allocations.Hisham
2016-01-21Change variable 'dot' to avoid division by reciprocal.Explorer09
(Cherry-picked from d56bcd8e0d8d6a177fc2e40db32fc73ea4588684, the experimental graph coloring branch) The variable 'dot' in GraphMeterMode_draw now means "maximum number of dots per value (column) in graph". The old meaning was "amount of value that is to be represented by a dot" and was always a fraction. Due to a limitation in floating point computing, if GRAPH_HEIGHT were not a power of 2, then rounding errors will occur on numbers like (1.0/3). (Currently GRAPH_HEIGHT is 4 and so no precision loss.) 'dot' was used as a divisor, and it's "division by a reciprocal". We change that to simple multiplication.
2016-01-21New macro GRAPH_HEIGHT for Graph Meter heightExplorer09
(Cherry-picked from e93028d7fa0c5f00b5dc3336fd28abaf905cd572, the experimental graph coloring branch) Currently GRAPH_HEIGHT=4 . This prevents hard-coding the height of the graph meters, and allows user to change it at compile-time.
2016-01-15Introduce CLAMP macro. Unify all MIN(MAX(a,b),c) uses.Explorer09
With the CLAMP macro replacing the combination of MIN and MAX, we will have at least two advantages: 1. It's more obvious semantically. 2. There are no more mixes of confusing uses like MIN(MAX(a,b),c) and MAX(MIN(a,b),c) and MIN(a,MAX(b,c)) appearing everywhere. We unify the 'clamping' with a single macro. Note that the behavior of this CLAMP macro is different from the combination `MAX(low,MIN(x,high))`. * This CLAMP macro expands to two comparisons instead of three from MAX and MIN combination. In theory, this makes the code slightly smaller, in case that (low) or (high) or both are computed at runtime, so that compilers cannot optimize them. (The third comparison will matter if (low)>(high); see below.) * CLAMP has a side effect, that if (low)>(high) it will produce weird results. Unlike MIN & MAX which will force either (low) or (high) to win. No assertion of ((low)<=(high)) is done in this macro, for now. This CLAMP macro is implemented like described in glib <http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Standard-Macros.html> and does not handle weird uses like CLAMP(a++, low++, high--) .
2016-01-11Present IO-Wait as a dot in monochrome. Fixes #345.Hisham Muhammad
Thank you @Explorer09 for the report!