Author: Description: ps.1 normal indent widths pri field explained --no-heading comment is an alias for --no-headers Removed setproctitle(1) reference Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/465761 Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/529045 Index: b/ps/ps.1 =================================================================== --- a/ps/ps.1 2009-11-24 20:53:06.000000000 +1100 +++ b/ps/ps.1 2009-11-24 21:00:31.000000000 +1100 @@ -18,19 +18,13 @@ .nh .if n .ss 12 0 .\" -.\" See /usr/share/groff/current/tmac/an-old.tmac for what these do. -.\" Setting them to zero provides extra space, but only do that for -.\" plain text output. PostScript and such will remain indented. -.if n .nr IN 0n -.if n .nr an-prevailing-indent 0n -.\" .\" .\" ColSize is used for the format spec table. .\" It's the left margin, minus the right, minus .\" the space needed for the 1st two columns. .\" Making it messy: inches, ens, points, scaled points... .\" -.nr ColSize ((\n(.lu-\n(.iu/\n(.Hu-20u)n) +.nr ColSize ((\n(.lu-\n(.iu/\n(.Hu-26u)n) .\" .\" This is for command options .nr OptSize (16u) @@ -499,7 +493,7 @@ .opt c Show the true command name. This is derived from the name of the executable file, rather than from the argv value. Command arguments -and any modifications to them (see\ \fIsetproctitle\fR(3)) are +and any modifications to them are thus not shown. This option effectively turns the \fBargs\fR format keyword into the \fBcomm\fR format keyword; it is useful with the \fB\-f\fR format option and with @@ -588,7 +582,8 @@ repeat header lines, one per page of output .opt \-\-no\-headers -print no header line at all +print no header line at all. \-\-no\-heading is an alias for this +option. .opt \-\-lines \ n set screen height @@ -1159,6 +1154,10 @@ parent process ID. T} +pri PRI T{ +priority of the process. Higher number means lower priority +T} + psr PSR T{ processor that process is currently assigned to. T}