On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 2:39 PM, Ralf Mardorf <ralf.mardorf@rocketmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, 19 Nov 2014 13:54:42 +0100 Michael Alt <micha.developing@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 1:36 PM, Vladimir Nikšić <vniksic@gmail.com> wrote:
I noticed that after a last "$pacman -Syu" that I got a pretty different version of the utility top in the package procps-ng. What exactly happened, how can I get the old-style one back?
https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1474872#p1474872
Thank you Micha,
too funny, I didn't noticed it myself, I seemingly didn't run top since $ grep procps-ng /var/log/pacman.log [snip] [2014-11-14 09:06] [PACMAN] upgraded procps-ng (3.3.9-3 -> 3.3.10-1)
For my needs, on my dual-core machine, I first thought I'll stay with the new design, excepted of the grotesque colour theme, so I followed this advice: "fwiw, just disabling colors with "z" and writing config with "W" seems enough to stop the eye cancer for me."
What ever kind of colour theme is chosen, after following this advice the theme is monochrome again, black on white or white on black etc..
Then I noticed that the resourced hungriest process wasn't listet when I run top, but a bunch of irrelevant systemd process were shown, so I installed procps-ng-classic, but this alone didn't bring back the old useful top, I needed to remove ~/.toprc too and now the resource hungriest process is shown again.
What exactly is the new style good for, if it can happen, that the resource hungriest process isn't listed, while absolutely irrelevant processes are listed?
IMO Arch Linux shouldn't follow upstream, if upstream decide to do something that idiotic for a much used command line tool.
2 Cents, Ralf
I followed procps-ng-sucks suggestions and my procps-ng top works for me - shows the resource hogs just fine. You can use htop if you want.