> From MilkyWay:
> [root@clutterbuck ~]# ps -p 23780 -o etime
> ELAPSED
> 78-14:14:25
>
> Hope that helps.
Thanks Alan. All of those are indeed what Stem expects. If you run the
Nyx codebase instead does the uptime show up? Please note you'll need
to fetch both it and stem from the git
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 10:43:25AM -0800, Damian Johnson wrote:
> > Does it use `ps -o etime`? If so it should work in the latest OpenBSD
> > release.
>
> Yup, I use...
>
> ps -p -o etime
>
> Glad to hear it should now work on OpenBSD! To confirm would you mind
> providing me the output of
>> Damian,
>> Milkyway (which is working) is using Centos 6
>> Andromeda is using Centos 7
>> and TheCosmos uses a raspberry pi 2, so Raspbian
>
> Interesting. Maybe that platform has a subtly different format than
> what I expect. Mind running the following for an arbitrary process and
> telling
> but I think it's not maintained anymore (?).
Hi mistral. That is incorrect, I'm the maintainer. arm's last release
was a long time ago and it indeed has quite a few issues. I've been
rewriting it from the ground up and that's Nyx...
https://gitweb.torproject.org/nyx.git
Nyx is feature
> Damian,
> Milkyway (which is working) is using Centos 6
> Andromeda is using Centos 7
> and TheCosmos uses a raspberry pi 2, so Raspbian
Interesting. Maybe that platform has a subtly different format than
what I expect. Mind running the following for an arbitrary process and
telling me the
> arm does not show uptime and the average bandwidth rate is way to high.
This is because tor changed the format of its state file since arm's
last release, causing the prepopulated values to be inaccurate. The
current codebase (nyx) uses a new capability of tor's control port to
provide much
I just installed theonionbox again yesterday. What I think could be done
easier is the actual installtion - just via apt so e.g. updates are
applied automatically. Would be also great to have it set-up as daemon
via apt or otherwise easily (I didn't managed to do so yet). For a quick
check I