Included in the HTTPD package is a simple System Monitor that is intended to act as a test and an example of how to produce servers. It is also hoped that it might be of some use in and of itself.
The System Monitor is intended to work in the background of any application. Adding the network stack and the HTTPD package to any configuration will enable the monitor by default. It may be disabled by disabling the CYGPKG_HTTPD_MONITOR option.
The monitor is intended to be simple and self-explanatory in use. It consists of four main pages. The thread monitor page presents a table of all current threads showing such things as id, state, priority, name and stack dimensions. Clicking on the thread ID will link to a thread edit page where the thread's state and priority may be manipulated. The interrupt monitor just shows a table of the current interrupts and indicates which are active. The memory monitor shows a 256 byte page of memory, with controls to change the base address and display element size. Note: Accessing invalid memory locations can cause memory exceptions and the program to crash. The network monitor page shows information extracted from the active network interfaces and protocols. Finally, if kernel instrumentation is enabled, the instrumentation page provides some controls over the instrumentation mechanism, and displays the instrumentation buffer.