sebastia adde12d203 import timemon: CPU load monitor
pkg/DESCR
TimeMon gives a graphical representation of where the CPU cycles are going.
It's coarse, but better than nothing. The best feature is that it runs in
an icon on your dock, so that you never lose it.

OK landry@
2010-10-26 17:41:55 +00:00

18 lines
811 B
Plaintext

@comment $OpenBSD: PLIST,v 1.1.1.1 2010/10/26 17:41:55 sebastia Exp $
bin/TimeMon
libexec/GNUstep/
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/Info-gnustep.plist
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/README.rtf
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMon.desktop
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMon.gorm/
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMon.gorm/data.classes
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMon.gorm/data.info
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMon.gorm/icon.png
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMon.gorm/objects.gorm
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMon.tiff
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/Resources/TimeMonP.tiff
@bin libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/TimeMon
libexec/GNUstep/TimeMon.app/stamp.make