Since the headers for cpu, memory and load functions are virtually the same for
all platforms, I've decided to move them into common/ dir and do some
refacotring:
* removed per-platform header files
* implemented get_cpu_count() function across all platforms. We are using it cpu
on every platform, yet not on every one this was implemented as a separate
function.
* removed platform detection through preprocessor from main: we don't need this
there anymore, since the headers are common for all platforms. CMake will
handle setting of correct source files for us now.
* Unified used defines for CPU states across all platforms and made linux use
them. Added some platform detection to cpu.h in order to set them correctly
across the platforms.
* moved getsysctl.h to common/ dir, since it's used on Net and Free BSD, and
thus become a common include.
As suggested to me by "Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse" in an email:
On 2015-02-16 09:02 Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse <jasper@openbsd.org> wrote:
> You can actually use 'long' instead of juggling between 64 and 32 bit return
> types. I've impemented something similiar for libgtop years ago and never had
> any issues when using 'long' for both 64 and 32 platforms. Here's the
> refernce: https://git.gnome.org/browse/libgtop/tree/sysdeps/openbsd/cpu.c#n62
This is a better idea than what I've implemented. Also this should resolve
eventual occurrence of "unable to get cpu stats" problem on 64bit platforms we
do not detect.
On 64bit system KERN_CPTIME systctl gets returned as 64bit uint.
On 32bit system it's returned as 32bit uint. This is not documented anywhere
(or maybe I've missed it). I've added preprocessor test for 64bit system.
- Removed OpenBSD stuff from freebsd port
- Renamed bsd folder to freebsd since now it contains only
freebsd-relevant files.
- Changed CMake instructions to account for bsd port changes
- modified main source file to account for openbsd port