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Bug#311323: marked as done (RFP: gnopstree -- Display running processes as a tree or forest (GTK+))



Your message dated Thu, 01 Jun 2006 11:59:55 -0600
with message-id <E1FlrSd-0007l5-Nj@merkel.debian.org>
and subject line WNPP bug closing
has caused the attached Bug report to be marked as done.

This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with.
If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the
Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith.

(NB: If you are a system administrator and have no idea what I am
talking about this indicates a serious mail system misconfiguration
somewhere.  Please contact me immediately.)

Debian bug tracking system administrator
(administrator, Debian Bugs database)

--- Begin Message ---
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist

* Package name    : gnopstree
  Version         : 0.76
  Upstream Author : Rocky Bernstein <rockyb@users.sourceforge.net
* URL             : http://sourceforge.net/projects/gnopstree
* License         : GPL
  Description     : Display running processes as a tree or forest (GTK+)

(Include the long description here.)

See picture at http://gnopstree.sourceforge.net/screenshot.jpg

The gnopstree is a program to display via GNOME/GTK the Unix processes
as a tree or forest; the roots of the tree are on the left-hand side
and the leaf processes (with no children) are on the right-hand
side. The status of each process (running, sleeping, stopped, etc.)
can be indicated by a color. Different users can appear as different
colors too.

Within each level, processes are grouped so that those with the same
parent process id are grouped together. Within this, processes are
arranged by userid with lower number uid's appearing towards the
top. In general, the order of children is the order in which they were
spawned, with the older processes appearing towards towards the top.

In contrast to pstree and many tree-widget based programs, the overall
tree display uses diagonal lines; some effort is made to effectively
use the full 2-dimensional area of the screen by balancing levels and
centering the children of a node between their parent. A goal of the
program is to give a picture of what's going on. When possible,
processes are kept close to their parents so one needn't scroll around
too much and so that there isn't a lot of redrawing as processes are
created or destroyed.

One can click on a process to get more information (via ps) about that
process, send a signal to the process, or set its priority, assuming
you have the permission to do so. Since programs of this ilk can
consume a bit of CPU on their own, some effort has been made to turn
off the update process when the program is iconified or not visible.

-- System Information:
Debian Release: 3.1
  APT prefers unstable
  APT policy: (500, 'unstable'), (1, 'experimental')
Architecture: i386 (i686)
Shell:  /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash
Kernel: Linux 2.6.11-1-686
Locale: LANG=C, LC_CTYPE=C (charmap=ISO-8859-1) (ignored: LC_ALL set to en_US)


--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Hello,

This is an automatic mail sent to close the RFP you have reported or 
are involved with.

Your RFP wnpp bug is being closed because of the following reasons:
- It is, as of today, older than 365 days.
- It hasn't had any activity recently.

As this is an automatic procedure, it could of course have something
wrong and probably it would be closing some bugs that are not 
intended by owners and submitters (like you) to be closed, for
example if the RFP is still of your interest, or there has been 
some kind of activity around it. In that case, please reopen the
bug, do it, DO IT NOW! (I don't want to be blamed because of
mass closing and not let people know that they can easily reopen
their bugs ;-).

To re-open it, you simply have to mail control@bugs.debian.org
with a body text like this:

reopen 311323
thanks bts

Further comments on the work done in the bug sent to
311323@bugs.debian.org would be truly welcomed.
Anyway, if you have any kind of problems when dealing with
the BTS, feel free to contact me and I'd be more than happy to help
you on this: <damog@debian.org>.

A similar process is being applied to other kind of wnpp bugs.

Thanks for your cooperation,

 -- David Moreno Garza <damog@debian.org>.
 

--- End Message ---

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