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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-09-16 18:18:14 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-09-16 18:18:14 +0000 |
commit | 67c5de60daa85b91fa68be4157e248fa31e75316 (patch) | |
tree | 7d567f3360f705ac21600343ef7f7cea645a9222 /docs/MEMORY_PRESSURE.md | |
parent | Adding upstream version 256.1. (diff) | |
download | systemd-upstream/256.2.tar.xz systemd-upstream/256.2.zip |
Adding upstream version 256.2.upstream/256.2
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/MEMORY_PRESSURE.md')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/MEMORY_PRESSURE.md | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/docs/MEMORY_PRESSURE.md b/docs/MEMORY_PRESSURE.md index da1c9b2..532f894 100644 --- a/docs/MEMORY_PRESSURE.md +++ b/docs/MEMORY_PRESSURE.md @@ -227,7 +227,7 @@ handling, it's typically sufficient to add a line such as: Other programming environments might have native APIs to watch memory pressure/low memory events. Most notable is probably GLib's -[GMemoryMonitor](https://developer-old.gnome.org/gio/stable/GMemoryMonitor.html). It +[GMemoryMonitor](https://docs.gtk.org/gio/iface.MemoryMonitor.html). It currently uses the per-system Linux PSI interface as the backend, but operates differently than the above: memory pressure events are picked up by a system service, which then propagates this through D-Bus to the applications. This is |