Commit 03826fbc authored by Tomasz Kramkowski's avatar Tomasz Kramkowski
Browse files

Added information about memory sizes to man page

The man page now contains the section "MEMORY SIZES" which talks about
the convention used for representing memory sizes and why it was chosen.
parent 16d8cc7c
...@@ -353,6 +353,15 @@ You may override the location of the configuration file using the $HTOPRC ...@@ -353,6 +353,15 @@ You may override the location of the configuration file using the $HTOPRC
environment variable (so you can have multiple configurations for different environment variable (so you can have multiple configurations for different
machines that share the same home directory, for example). machines that share the same home directory, for example).
.SH "MEMORY SIZES"
.LP
Memory sizes in htop are displayed as they are in tools from the GNU Coreutils
(when ran with the --human-readable option). This means that sizes are printed
in powers of 1024. (e.g., 1023M = 1072693248 Bytes)
.LP
The decision to use this convention was made in order to conserve screen space
and make memory size representations consistent throughout htop.
.SH "SEE ALSO" .SH "SEE ALSO"
proc(5), top(1), free(1), ps(1), uptime(1) proc(5), top(1), free(1), ps(1), uptime(1)
......
Markdown is supported
0% or .
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment