eventstat 0.03.01-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

eventstat (0.03.01-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Makefile: bump version
  * Update manual to reflect -l -s mode on tty output
  * Show long or short command line info in tty output and not just in CSV
  * Add smart column resizing based on variable tty width
  * Add some small ncurses helpers for top only mode
  * Clean up -h info, make it 80 column friendly
  * Remove a few empty lines in source
  * Re-align global vars so there is less wasted padding
  * Make source 80 column friendly
  * es_printf: emit curses output if curses_init is true
  * Reformat overly long function declarations
  * Minor code improvement in set_timer_stat
  * check for failed sigaction on SIGWINCH
  * Improve error handling with some error message and clean up helpers
  * Call endwin() only in top mode

 -- Colin King <email address hidden>  Thu, 11 Feb 2016 11:09:11 +0000

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Colin Ian King
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Colin Ian King
Architectures:
linux-any
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Xenial release universe admin

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
eventstat_0.03.01-1.dsc 1.8 KiB 0b392de82946b9a2a8b66fdd8cfecaeaf84d07ee5a1c292f09f87752de72f649
eventstat_0.03.01.orig.tar.gz 20.4 KiB 2b8219f4bfbef7a1f2134cf4a0fbcc13bee2e6a689c4f9a4415768969c4d7921
eventstat_0.03.01-1.debian.tar.xz 4.6 KiB 7aa2b908e7fb672d622d7fb705caf97e3689d138010bd1e81fc09a30ccdfbc6f

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

eventstat: kernel event states monitoring tool

 Eventstat periodically dumps out the current kernel event state.
 It keeps track of current events and outputs the change in events
 on each output update. The tool requires sudo to run since it
 needs to write to /proc/timer_stats to start and stop the event
 monitoring.

eventstat-dbgsym: debug symbols for package eventstat

 Eventstat periodically dumps out the current kernel event state.
 It keeps track of current events and outputs the change in events
 on each output update. The tool requires sudo to run since it
 needs to write to /proc/timer_stats to start and stop the event
 monitoring.