Sure. The last column are the series of commands to produce the outputs. This is coming from pgadmin3. I should have mentioned before that this is running windows but that shouldn't matter for this particular sense I hope.
The first column is the PID, the last column is the command running. The dates are the start time of the operations. The YES/NO is the running state of the process. In the activity section the 2nd to last column is the process blocking the executing process.
Thanks,
~Ben
On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 2:54 PM, Kevin Grittner
<Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote:
> [wrapped text without column headers]
Could you try that as an attachment, to avoid wrapping? Also, the
column headers, and/or the query used to generate those results
would be helpful.
-Kevin