On 18 Sep, Bruce Evans wrote:
> dnetc presumably blocks occasionally, giving other processes a chance to
> run.
I've started dnetc without idprio (with build in "nice"), it also
displays 100% system.
And with a closer look (stopped dnetc): 0% user, 0% nice... ?
---snip---
last pid: 36437; load averages: 0.68, 1.44, 1.41 up 0+06:53:18 17:23:03
73 processes: 1 running, 70 sleeping, 1 stopped, 1 zombie
CPU states: 0.0% user, 0.0% nice, 30.2% system, 5.2% interrupt, 64.6% idle
Mem: 63M Active, 13M Inact, 33M Wired, 5644K Cache, 22M Buf, 6580K Free
Swap: 266M Total, 43M Used, 223M Free, 15% Inuse, 8K In
kill
PID USERNAME PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE TIME WCPU CPU COMMAND
35709 netchild 2 0 10956K 6736K poll 1:48 8.94% 8.94% xmms
732 netchild 2 0 3224K 1048K select 0:05 5.81% 5.81% xterm
658 root 2 0 80016K 33516K select 10:48 4.98% 4.98% XF86_SVGA
457 netchild -6 0 2856K 512K pcmwr 0:46 2.49% 2.49% esd
---snip---
Bye,
Alexander.
--
I believe the technical term is "Oops!"
http://www.Leidinger.net Alexander @ Leidinger.net
GPG fingerprint = 7423 F3E6 3A7E B334 A9CC B10A 1F5F 130A A638 6E7E
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message