Mark Pictor wrote:
Mmm, think I heard something about this. Expect - as
in tcl, right? I think that the debian version of tcl
is compiled with a unusual option which causes it to
always have several threads. I didn't know that it
cause instabilities; how I heard about it was that a
script was fa
On Fri, 2004-07-02 at 16:50, jono wrote:
> Thanks Simon, that makes a lot of sense. I've just read the ps man page
> but cant find out if I can show only processes not threads. Any idea if
> this is possible or any another tool that could do it?
I'm not personally aware of any easy way to tell
Thanks Simon, that makes a lot of sense. I've just read the ps man page
but cant find out if I can show only processes not threads. Any idea if
this is possible or any another tool that could do it?
Other than that I suppose a kernel patch or upgrade would do it.
Regards, Jono
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On Fri, 2004-07-02 at 16:09, jono wrote:
> testing/unstable 2.4.25 i686
>
> When I run a daemon (written for a telephony card) or the expect
> application which uses the daemon, they both start with 3 processes.
> I've noticed the same behavior with S20xprint and nautilus.
>
> The same daemon a
testing/unstable 2.4.25 i686
When I run a daemon (written for a telephony card) or the expect
application which uses the daemon, they both start with 3 processes.
I've noticed the same behavior with S20xprint and nautilus.
The same daemon and application on redhat9 (2.4.20-8 i686) starts with
o
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