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110 of 31 results
13.
The priority with which this process is being run. For the normal scheduler, this ranges from 19 (very nice, least priority) to -19 (top priority).
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Located in ProcessModel.cpp:954
19.
<qt>This is the amount of real physical memory that this process is using by itself, and approximates the Private memory usage of the process.<br>It does not include any swapped out memory, nor the code size of its shared libraries.<br>This is often the most useful figure to judge the memory use of a program. See What's This for more information.</qt>
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Located in ProcessModel.cpp:970
27.
<qt><i>Technical information: </i>The kernel process name is a maximum of 8 characters long, so the full command is examined. If the first word in the full command line starts with the process name, the first word of the command line is shown, otherwise the process name is used.
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Located in ProcessModel.cpp:993
28.
<qt>The user who owns this process. If the effective, setuid etc user is different, the user who owns the process will be shown, followed by the effective user. The ToolTip contains the full information. <p><table><tr><td>Login Name/Group</td><td>The username of the Real User/Group who created this process</td></tr><tr><td>Effective User/Group</td><td>The process is running with privileges of the Effective User/Group. This is shown if different from the real user.</td></tr><tr><td>Setuid User/Group</td><td>The saved username of the binary. The process can escalate its Effective User/Group to the Setuid User/Group.</td></tr><tr><td>File System User/Group</td><td>Accesses to the filesystem are checked with the File System User/Group. This is a Linux specific call. See setfsuid(2) for more information.</td></tr></table>
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Located in ProcessModel.cpp:995
29.
<qt>This is the size of allocated address space - not memory, but address space. This value in practice means next to nothing. When a process requests a large memory block from the system but uses only a small part of it, the real usage will be low, VIRT will be high. <p><i>Technical information: </i>This is VmSize in proc/*/status and VIRT in top.
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Located in ProcessModel.cpp:1005
30.
<qt><i>Technical information: </i>This is an approximation of the Private memory usage, calculated as VmRSS - Shared, from /proc/*/statm. This tends to underestimate the true Private memory usage of a process (by not including i/o backed memory pages), but is the best estimation that is fast to determine. This is sometimes known as URSS (Unique Resident Set Size). For an individual process, see "Detailed Memory Information" for a more accurate, but slower, calculation of the true Private memory usage.
(no translation yet)
Located in ProcessModel.cpp:1007
32.
<qt>The total system and user time that a process and all of its threads have been running on the CPU for. This can be greater than the wall clock time if the process has been across multiple CPU cores.
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Located in ProcessModel.cpp:1011
33.
<qt><i>Technical information: </i>This is an approximation of the Shared memory, called SHR in top. It is the number of pages that are backed by a file (see kernel Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt). For an individual process, see "Detailed Memory Information" for a more accurate, but slower, calculation of the true Shared memory usage.
(no translation yet)
Located in ProcessModel.cpp:1013
35.
<qt><i>Technical information: </i>This is the amount of memory used by the Xorg process for images for this process. This is memory used in addition to Memory and Shared Memory.<br><i>Technical information: </i>This only counts the pixmap memory, and does not include resource memory used by fonts, cursors, glyphsets etc. See the <code>xrestop</code> program for a more detailed breakdown.
(no translation yet)
Located in ProcessModel.cpp:1017
36.
<qt><i>Technical information: </i>For each X11 window, the X11 property _NET_WM_PID is used to map the window to a PID. If a process' windows are not shown, then that application incorrectly is not setting _NET_WM_PID.
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Located in ProcessModel.cpp:1019
110 of 31 results

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Contributors to this translation: A S Alam.