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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users retrieve process state programatically Post 302388844 by Andre_Merzky on Thursday 21st of January 2010 03:28:10 PM
Old 01-21-2010
Hi Loic, thanks for your answer!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Loic Domaigne
Hello Andre,

The two ideas that come to my mind:

1) You create a process responsible for spawing your applications to monitor. That way, you create the parent-child relationship that you need for using waitpaid() with the options WUNTRACED and WCONTINUED.
Alas, this is not a viable option in my use case: I have no control over the original parent, nor over spawning process. Well, in those cases where I do have that control, waitpid works nicely of course. The other cases (no control) cause the headache ;-)

Quote:
2) You use the appropriate popen("ps...") code depending on which platform you are running. This can be achieved using old plain #ifdef, or using a strategy pattern.
That is what I do right now, but its ugly, and broken. For example:

Code:
> sleep 1000 &

> ps -ewwo pid=,uid=,state=,command= | grep 1000
16027   501 S    sleep 1000

> fg
sleep 1000
^Z
[1]  + 16027 Suspended                     sleep 1000

> ps -ewwo pid=,uid=,state=,command= | grep 1000
16027   501 S    sleep 1000

So, the process 'sleep' is active in the first case, and suspended in the second. PS reports the same state - I have no means to distinguish. This seems to be valid for all apps which are sleeping or blocking in any way (which are many in our environment, mostly waiting for IO).

FWIW: the above is on MacOS.

Best, Andre
 

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bup-margin(1)						      General Commands Manual						     bup-margin(1)

NAME
bup-margin - figure out your deduplication safety margin SYNOPSIS
bup margin [options...] DESCRIPTION
bup margin iterates through all objects in your bup repository, calculating the largest number of prefix bits shared between any two entries. This number, n, identifies the longest subset of SHA-1 you could use and still encounter a collision between your object ids. For example, one system that was tested had a collection of 11 million objects (70 GB), and bup margin returned 45. That means a 46-bit hash would be sufficient to avoid all collisions among that set of objects; each object in that repository could be uniquely identified by its first 46 bits. The number of bits needed seems to increase by about 1 or 2 for every doubling of the number of objects. Since SHA-1 hashes have 160 bits, that leaves 115 bits of margin. Of course, because SHA-1 hashes are essentially random, it's theoretically possible to use many more bits with far fewer objects. If you're paranoid about the possibility of SHA-1 collisions, you can monitor your repository by running bup margin occasionally to see if you're getting dangerously close to 160 bits. OPTIONS
--predict Guess the offset into each index file where a particular object will appear, and report the maximum deviation of the correct answer from the guess. This is potentially useful for tuning an interpolation search algorithm. --ignore-midx don't use .midx files, use only .idx files. This is only really useful when used with --predict. EXAMPLE
$ bup margin Reading indexes: 100.00% (1612581/1612581), done. 40 40 matching prefix bits 1.94 bits per doubling 120 bits (61.86 doublings) remaining 4.19338e+18 times larger is possible Everyone on earth could have 625878182 data sets like yours, all in one repository, and we would expect 1 object collision. $ bup margin --predict PackIdxList: using 1 index. Reading indexes: 100.00% (1612581/1612581), done. 915 of 1612581 (0.057%) SEE ALSO
bup-midx(1), bup-save(1) BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite. AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>. Bup unknown- bup-margin(1)
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