Allan, care to share how you got pacman to echo the units with binary prefixes?
Is it a pacman or a locale setting I'm missing?
It is the latest developmental build.
]]>> pacman -Syu
:: Synchronizing package databases...
testing 21.8 KiB 7.09 MiB/s 00:00 [######################] 100%
core 133.8 KiB 257 KiB/s 00:01 [######################] 100%
extra 1629.5 KiB 1045 KiB/s 00:02 [######################] 100%
]]>As a general rule K means Kilobyte, k means kilobit
I know that the rule is b=bit, B=byte
]]>When I had a ~3mbps connection pacman would show 300K/s. Do the math
That would suggest K stands for Kilobytes.
]]>Opening a system monitor will quickly answer the OP's question.
]]>As a general rule K means Kilobyte, k means kilobit
Do you have examples of this? I've only every seen an upper-case K in Kbps.
]]>currently have no way to measure it.
How about
pacman -Si gkrellm
pacman -Si iftop
As a general rule K means Kilobyte, k means kilobit
]]>