Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Stephen Smith
* Package name: phyutility
Version : 2.7.3-1
Upstream Author : Stephen Smith
* URL : https://github.com/blackrim/phyutility/
* License : GPL
Programming Lang: Java
Description : Phyutility (fyoo-til
Package: general
Severity: important
Dear Maintainer,
Downloading a large torrent (30GB, 1 files) using transmission-gtk
onto a btrfs filesystem (mounted as the root filesystem) causes the system to
become unresponsive after a very short period of time. Tried marking the
torrent direc
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Ross Vandegrift
* Package name: python-pyinsane
Version : 1.3.5
Upstream Author : Jerome Flesch
* URL : https://github.com/jflesch/pyinsane
* License : GPL-3
Programming Lang: Python
Description : Python impleme
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Ross Vandegrift
* Package name: python-pyocr
Version : 0.2.2
Upstream Author : Jerome Flesch
* URL : https://github.com/jflesch/pyocr
* License : GPL-3
Programming Lang: Python
Description : python-pyocr -- Pytho
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Paul Brossier
* Package name: yaafe
Version : 0.64
Upstream Author : Institut Télécom - Télécom Paristech
* URL : http://yaafe.sourceforge.net
* License : LGPL-3
Programming Lang: C++, Python
Description : audio f
GALAMBOS Daniel writes:
> Are there any way to acquire the signal sender's PID?
stap -x $pid /usr/share/doc/systemtap-doc/examples/process/sigmon.stp SIGTERM
shows you the process that sends SIGTERM to the process whose PID is
$pid.
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Hi,
I currently debugging a system which recieves SIGTERM from unspecified
source.
Under Ubuntu if I attach an strace -e trace=signal to the process, it
prints out the signal sender's UID and PID like: '--- SIGTERM
{si_signo=SIGTERM, si_code=SI_USER, si_pid=3469, si_uid=0} ---'
Under Debian I can
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