738 lines
26 KiB
Groff
738 lines
26 KiB
Groff
i3status(1)
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===========
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Michael Stapelberg <michael@i3wm.org>
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v2.12, May 2018
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== NAME
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i3status - Generates a status line for i3bar, dzen2, xmobar or lemonbar
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== SYNOPSIS
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i3status [-c configfile] [-h] [-v]
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== OPTIONS
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-c::
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Specifies an alternate configuration file path. By default, i3status looks for
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configuration files in the following order:
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1. ~/.config/i3status/config (or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/i3status/config if set)
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2. /etc/xdg/i3status/config (or $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/i3status/config if set)
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3. ~/.i3status.conf
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4. /etc/i3status.conf
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== DESCRIPTION
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i3status is a small program for generating a status bar for i3bar, dzen2,
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xmobar, lemonbar or similar programs. It is designed to be very efficient by
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issuing a very small number of system calls, as one generally wants to update
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such a status line every second. This ensures that even under high load, your
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status bar is updated correctly. Also, it saves a bit of energy by not hogging
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your CPU as much as spawning the corresponding amount of shell commands would.
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== CONFIGURATION
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The basic idea of i3status is that you can specify which "modules" should
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be used (the order directive). You can then configure each module with its
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own section. For every module, you can specify the output format. See below
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for a complete reference.
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.Sample configuration
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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general {
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output_format = "dzen2"
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colors = true
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interval = 5
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}
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order += "ipv6"
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order += "disk /"
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order += "run_watch DHCP"
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order += "run_watch VPNC"
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order += "path_exists VPN"
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order += "wireless wlan0"
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order += "ethernet eth0"
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order += "battery 0"
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order += "cpu_temperature 0"
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order += "memory"
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order += "load"
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order += "tztime local"
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order += "tztime berlin"
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wireless wlan0 {
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format_up = "W: (%quality at %essid, %bitrate) %ip"
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format_down = "W: down"
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}
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ethernet eth0 {
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format_up = "E: %ip (%speed)"
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format_down = "E: down"
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}
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battery 0 {
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format = "%status %percentage %remaining %emptytime"
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format_down = "No battery"
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status_chr = "⚡ CHR"
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status_bat = "🔋 BAT"
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status_unk = "? UNK"
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status_full = "☻ FULL"
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path = "/sys/class/power_supply/BAT%d/uevent"
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low_threshold = 10
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}
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run_watch DHCP {
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pidfile = "/var/run/dhclient*.pid"
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}
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run_watch VPNC {
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# file containing the PID of a vpnc process
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pidfile = "/var/run/vpnc/pid"
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}
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path_exists VPN {
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# path exists when a VPN tunnel launched by nmcli/nm-applet is active
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path = "/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/tun0"
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}
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tztime local {
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format = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
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}
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tztime berlin {
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format = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %Z"
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timezone = "Europe/Berlin"
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}
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load {
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format = "%5min"
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}
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cpu_temperature 0 {
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format = "T: %degrees °C"
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path = "/sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp1_input"
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}
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memory {
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format = "%used"
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threshold_degraded = "10%"
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format_degraded = "MEMORY: %free"
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}
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disk "/" {
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format = "%free"
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}
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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=== General
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The +colors+ directive will disable all colors if you set it to +false+. You can
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also specify the colors that will be used to display "good", "degraded" or "bad"
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values using the +color_good+, +color_degraded+ or +color_bad+ directives,
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respectively. Those directives are only used if color support is not disabled by
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the +colors+ directive. The input format for color values is the canonical RGB
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hexadecimal triplet (with no separators between the colors), prefixed by a hash
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character ("#").
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*Example configuration*:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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color_good = "#00FF00"
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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Likewise, you can use the +color_separator+ directive to specify the color that
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will be used to paint the separator bar. The separator is always output in
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color, even when colors are disabled by the +colors+ directive. This option has
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no effect when +output_format+ is set to +i3bar+ or +none+.
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The +interval+ directive specifies the time in seconds for which i3status will
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sleep before printing the next status line.
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Using +output_format+ you can choose which format strings i3status should
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use in its output. Currently available are:
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i3bar::
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i3bar comes with i3 and provides a workspace bar which does the right thing in
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multi-monitor situations. It also comes with tray support and can display the
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i3status output. This output type uses JSON to pass as much meta-information to
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i3bar as possible (like colors, which blocks can be shortened in which way,
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etc.).
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dzen2::
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Dzen is a general purpose messaging, notification and menuing program for X11.
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It was designed to be scriptable in any language and integrate well with window
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managers like dwm, wmii and xmonad though it will work with any window manager
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xmobar::
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xmobar is a minimalistic, text based, status bar. It was designed to work
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with the xmonad Window Manager.
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lemonbar::
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lemonbar is a lightweight bar based entirely on XCB. It has full UTF-8 support
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and is EWMH compliant.
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term::
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Use ANSI Escape sequences to produce a terminal-output as close as possible to
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the graphical outputs. This makes debugging your config file a little bit
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easier because the terminal-output of i3status becomes much more readable, but
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should only used for such quick glances, because it will only support very
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basic output-features (for example you only get 3 bits of color depth).
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none::
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Does not use any color codes. Separates values by the pipe symbol by default.
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This should be used with i3bar and can be used for custom scripts.
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It's also possible to use the color_good, color_degraded, color_bad directives
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to define specific colors per module. If one of these directives is defined
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in a module section its value will override the value defined in the general
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section just for this module.
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If you don't fancy the vertical separators between modules i3status/i3bar
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uses by default, you can employ the +separator+ directive to configure how
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modules are separated. You can also disable the default separator altogether by
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setting it to the empty string. You might then define separation as part of a
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module's format string. This is your only option when using the i3bar output
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format as the separator is drawn by i3bar directly otherwise. For the other
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output formats, the provided non-empty string will be automatically enclosed
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with the necessary coloring bits if color support is enabled.
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i3bar supports Pango markup, allowing your format strings to specify font,
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color, size, etc. by setting the +markup+ directive to "pango". Note that the
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ampersand ("&"), less-than ("<"), greater-than (">"), single-quote ("'"), and
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double-quote (""") characters need to be replaced with "`&`", "`<`",
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"`>`", "`'`", and "`"`" respectively. This is done automatically
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for generated content (e.g. wireless ESSID, time).
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*Example configuration*:
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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general {
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output_format = "xmobar"
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separator = " "
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}
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order += "load"
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order += "disk /"
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load {
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format = "[ load: %1min, %5min, %15min ]"
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}
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disk "/" {
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format = "%avail"
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}
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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=== IPv6
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This module gets the IPv6 address used for outgoing connections (that is, the
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best available public IPv6 address on your computer).
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*Example format_up*: +%ip+
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*Example format_down*: +no IPv6+
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=== Disk
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Gets used, free, available and total amount of bytes on the given mounted filesystem.
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These values can also be expressed in percentages with the percentage_used,
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percentage_free, percentage_avail and percentage_used_of_avail formats.
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Byte sizes are presented in a human readable format using a set of prefixes
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whose type can be specified via the "prefix_type" option. Three sets of
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prefixes are available:
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binary::
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IEC prefixes (Ki, Mi, Gi, Ti) represent multiples of powers of 1024.
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This is the default.
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decimal::
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SI prefixes (k, M, G, T) represent multiples of powers of 1000.
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custom::
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The custom prefixes (K, M, G, T) represent multiples of powers of 1024.
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It is possible to define a low_threshold that causes the disk text to be
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displayed using color_bad. The low_threshold type can be of threshold_type
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"bytes_free", "bytes_avail", "percentage_free", or "percentage_avail", where
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the former two can be prepended by a generic prefix (k, m, g, t) having
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prefix_type. So, if you configure low_threshold to 2, threshold_type to
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"gbytes_avail", and prefix_type to "binary", and the remaining available disk
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space is below 2 GiB, it will be colored bad. If not specified, threshold_type
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is assumed to be "percentage_avail" and low_threshold to be set to 0, which
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implies no coloring at all. You can customize the output format when below
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low_threshold with format_below_threshold.
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You can define a different format with the option "format_not_mounted"
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which is used if the path does not exist or is not a mount point. Defaults to "".
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*Example order*: +disk /mnt/usbstick+
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*Example format*: +%free (%avail)/ %total+
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*Example format*: +%percentage_used used, %percentage_free free, %percentage_avail avail+
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*Example prefix_type*: +custom+
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*Example low_threshold*: +5+
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*Example format_below_threshold*: +Warning: %percentage_avail+
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*Example threshold_type*: +percentage_free+
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=== Run-watch
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Expands the given path to a pidfile and checks if the process ID found inside
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is valid (that is, if the process is running). You can use this to check if
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a specific application, such as a VPN client or your DHCP client is running.
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There also is an option "format_down". You can hide the output with
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+format_down=""+.
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*Example order*: +run_watch DHCP+
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*Example format*: +%title: %status+
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=== Path-exists
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Checks if the given path exists in the filesystem. You can use this to check if
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something is active, like for example a VPN tunnel managed by NetworkManager.
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There also is an option "format_down". You can hide the output with
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+format_down=""+.
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*Example order*: +path_exists VPN+
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*Example format*: +%title: %status+
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=== Wireless
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Gets the link quality, frequency and ESSID of the given wireless network
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interface. You can specify different format strings for the network being
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connected or not connected. The quality is padded with leading zeroes by
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default; to pad with something else use +format_quality+.
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The special interface name `_first_` will be replaced by the first wireless
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network interface found on the system (excluding devices starting with "lo").
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*Example order*: +wireless wlan0+
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*Example format_up*: +W: (%quality at %essid, %bitrate / %frequency) %ip+
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*Example format_down*: +W: down+
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*Example format_quality*: +"%03d%s"+
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=== Ethernet
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Gets the IP address and (if possible) the link speed of the given ethernet
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interface. If no IPv4 address is available and an IPv6 address is, it will be
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displayed.
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The special interface name `_first_` will be replaced by the first non-wireless
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network interface found on the system (excluding devices starting with "lo").
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*Example order*: +ethernet eth0+
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*Example format_up*: +E: %ip (%speed)+
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*Example format_down*: +E: down+
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=== Battery
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Gets the status (charging, discharging, unknown, full), percentage, remaining
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time and power consumption (in Watts) of the given battery and when it's
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estimated to be empty. If you want to use the last full capacity instead of the
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design capacity (when using the design capacity, it may happen that your
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battery is at 23% when fully charged because it’s old. In general, I want to
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see it this way, because it tells me how worn off my battery is.), just specify
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+last_full_capacity = true+. You can show seconds in the remaining time and
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empty time estimations by setting +hide_seconds = false+.
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If you want the battery percentage to be shown without decimals, add
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+integer_battery_capacity = true+.
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If your battery is represented in a non-standard path in /sys, be sure to
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modify the "path" property accordingly, i.e. pointing to the uevent file on
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your system. The first occurrence of %d gets replaced with the battery number,
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but you can just hard-code a path as well.
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It is possible to define a low_threshold that causes the battery text to be
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colored red. The low_threshold type can be of threshold_type "time" or
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"percentage". So, if you configure low_threshold to 10 and threshold_type to
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"time", and your battery lasts another 9 minutes, it will be colored red.
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To show an aggregate of all batteries in the system, use "all" as the number. In
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this case (for Linux), the /sys path must contain the "%d" sequence. Otherwise,
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the number indicates the battery index as reported in /sys.
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Optionally custom strings including any UTF-8 symbols can be used for different
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battery states. This makes it possible to display individual symbols
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for each state (charging, discharging, unknown, full)
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Of course it will also work with special iconic fonts, such as FontAwesome.
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If any of these special status strings are omitted, the default (CHR, BAT, UNK,
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FULL) is used.
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*Example order (for the first battery)*: +battery 0+
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*Example order (aggregate of all batteries)*: +battery all+
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*Example format*: +%status %remaining (%emptytime %consumption)+
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*Example format_down*: +No battery+
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*Example status_chr*: +⚡ CHR+
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*Example status_bat*: +🔋 BAT+
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*Example status_unk*: +? UNK+
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*Example status_full*: +☻ FULL+
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*Example low_threshold*: +30+
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*Example threshold_type*: +time+
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*Example path (%d replaced by title number)*: +/sys/class/power_supply/CMB%d/uevent+
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*Example path (ignoring the number)*: +/sys/class/power_supply/CMB1/uevent+
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=== CPU-Temperature
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Gets the temperature of the given thermal zone. It is possible to
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define a max_threshold that will color the temperature red in case the
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specified thermal zone is getting too hot. Defaults to 75 degrees C. The
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output format when above max_threshold can be customized with
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format_above_threshold.
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*Example order*: +cpu_temperature 0+
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*Example format*: +T: %degrees °C+
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*Example max_threshold*: +42+
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*Example format_above_threshold*: +Warning T above threshold: %degrees °C+
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*Example path*: +/sys/devices/platform/coretemp.0/temp1_input+
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=== CPU Usage
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Gets the percentual CPU usage from +/proc/stat+ (Linux) or +sysctl(3)+
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(FreeBSD/OpenBSD).
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It is possible to define a max_threshold that will color the load
|
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value red in case the CPU average over the last interval is getting
|
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higher than the configured threshold. Defaults to 95. The output
|
||
format when above max_threshold can be customized with
|
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format_above_threshold.
|
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It is possible to define a degraded_threshold that will color the load
|
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value yellow in case the CPU average over the last interval is getting
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higher than the configured threshold. Defaults to 90. The output format
|
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when above degraded threshold can be customized with
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format_above_degraded_threshold.
|
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For displaying the Nth CPU usage, you can use the %cpu<N> format string,
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starting from %cpu0. This feature is currently not supported in FreeBSD.
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*Example order*: +cpu_usage+
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*Example format*: +all: %usage CPU_0: %cpu0 CPU_1: %cpu1+
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*Example max_threshold*: +75+
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*Example format_above_threshold*: +Warning above threshold: %usage+
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*Example degraded_threshold*: +25+
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*Example format_above_degraded_threshold*: +Warning above degraded threshold: %usage+
|
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=== Memory
|
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|
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Gets the memory usage from system on a Linux system from +/proc/meminfo+. Other
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systems are currently not supported.
|
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|
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As format placeholders, +total+, +used+, +free+, +available+ and +shared+ are
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available. These will print human readable values. It's also possible to prefix
|
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the placeholders with +percentage_+ to get a value in percent.
|
||
|
||
It's possible to define a +threshold_degraded+ and a +threshold_critical+ to
|
||
color the status bar output in yellow or red, if the available memory falls
|
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below the given threshold. Possible values of the threshold can be any integer,
|
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suffixed with an iec symbol (+T+, +G+, +M+, +K+). Alternatively, the integer
|
||
can be suffixed by a percent sign, which then rets evaluated relatively to
|
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total memory.
|
||
|
||
If the +format_degraded+ parameter is given and either the critical or the
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degraded threshold applies, +format_degraded+ will get used as format string.
|
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It acts equivalently to +format+.
|
||
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||
As Linux' meminfo doesn't expose the overall memory in use, there are multiple
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methods to distinguish the actually used memory.
|
||
|
||
*Example memory_used_method*: +memavailable+ ("total memory" - "MemAvailable", matches +free+ command)
|
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|
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*Example memory_used_method*: +classical+ ("total memory" - "free" - "buffers" - "cache", matches gnome system monitor)
|
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|
||
*Example order*: +memory+
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||
*Example format*: +%free %available (%used) / %total+
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|
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*Example format*: +%percentage_used used, %percentage_free free, %percentage_shared shared+
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*Example threshold_degraded*: +10%+
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*Example threshold_critical*: +5%+
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*Example format_degraded*: +Memory LOW: %free+
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||
|
||
=== Load
|
||
|
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Gets the system load (number of processes waiting for CPU time in the last
|
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1, 5 and 15 minutes). It is possible to define a max_threshold that will
|
||
color the load value red in case the load average of the last minute is
|
||
getting higher than the configured threshold. Defaults to 5. The output
|
||
format when above max_threshold can be customized with
|
||
format_above_threshold.
|
||
|
||
*Example order*: +load+
|
||
|
||
*Example format*: +%1min %5min %15min+
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||
|
||
*Example max_threshold*: +"0,1"+
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||
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||
*Example format_above_threshold*: +Warning: %1min %5min %15min+
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||
|
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=== Time
|
||
|
||
Outputs the current time in the local timezone.
|
||
To use a different timezone, you can set the TZ environment variable,
|
||
or use the +tztime+ module.
|
||
See +strftime(3)+ for details on the format string.
|
||
|
||
*Example order*: +time+
|
||
|
||
*Example format*: +%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S+
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||
|
||
=== TzTime
|
||
|
||
Outputs the current time in the given timezone.
|
||
If no timezone is given, local time will be used.
|
||
See +strftime(3)+ for details on the format string.
|
||
The system's timezone database is usually installed in +/usr/share/zoneinfo+.
|
||
Files below that path make for valid timezone strings, e.g. for
|
||
+/usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Berlin+ you can set timezone to +Europe/Berlin+
|
||
in the +tztime+ module.
|
||
To override the locale settings of your environment, set the +locale+ option.
|
||
|
||
*Example order*: +tztime berlin+
|
||
|
||
*Example format*: +%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %Z+
|
||
|
||
*Example timezone*: +Europe/Berlin+
|
||
|
||
*Example locale*: +de_DE.UTF-8+
|
||
|
||
If you would like to use markup in this section, there is a separate
|
||
+format_time+ option that is automatically escaped. Its output then replaces
|
||
%time in the format string.
|
||
|
||
*Example configuration (markup)*:
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
tztime berlin {
|
||
format = "<span foreground='#ffffff'>time:</span> %time"
|
||
format_time = "%H:%M %Z"
|
||
timezone = "Europe/Berlin"
|
||
}
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
=== DDate
|
||
|
||
Outputs the current discordian date in user-specified format. See +ddate(1)+ for
|
||
details on the format string.
|
||
*Note*: Neither *%.* nor *%X* are implemented yet.
|
||
|
||
*Example order*: +ddate+
|
||
|
||
*Example format*: +%{%a, %b %d%}, %Y%N - %H+
|
||
|
||
=== Volume
|
||
|
||
Outputs the volume of the specified mixer on the specified device. PulseAudio
|
||
and ALSA (Linux only) are supported. If PulseAudio is absent, a simplified
|
||
configuration can be used on FreeBSD and OpenBSD due to the lack of ALSA, the
|
||
+device+ and +mixer+ options can be ignored on these systems. On these systems
|
||
the OSS API is used instead to query +/dev/mixer+ directly if +mixer_idx+ is
|
||
-1, otherwise +/dev/mixer++mixer_idx+.
|
||
|
||
To get PulseAudio volume information, one must use the following format in the
|
||
device line:
|
||
|
||
device = "pulse"
|
||
|
||
or
|
||
|
||
device = "pulse:N"
|
||
|
||
where N is the index or name of the PulseAudio sink. You can obtain the name of
|
||
the sink with the following command:
|
||
|
||
$ pacmd list-sinks | grep name:
|
||
name: <alsa_output.pci-0000_00_14.2.analog-stereo>
|
||
|
||
The name is what's inside the angle brackets, not including them. If no sink is
|
||
specified the default sink is used. If the device string is missing or is set
|
||
to "default", PulseAudio will be tried if detected and will fallback to ALSA
|
||
(Linux) or OSS (FreeBSD/OpenBSD).
|
||
|
||
*Example order*: +volume master+
|
||
|
||
*Example format*: +♪: %volume+
|
||
|
||
*Example format_muted*: +♪: 0%%+
|
||
|
||
*Example configuration*:
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
volume master {
|
||
format = "♪: %volume"
|
||
format_muted = "♪: muted (%volume)"
|
||
device = "default"
|
||
mixer = "Master"
|
||
mixer_idx = 0
|
||
}
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
*Example configuration (PulseAudio)*:
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
volume master {
|
||
format = "♪: %volume"
|
||
format_muted = "♪: muted (%volume)"
|
||
device = "pulse:1"
|
||
}
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
volume master {
|
||
format = "♪: %volume"
|
||
format_muted = "♪: muted (%volume)"
|
||
device = "pulse:alsa_output.pci-0000_00_14.2.analog-stereo"
|
||
}
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
== Universal module options
|
||
|
||
When using the i3bar output format, there are a few additional options that
|
||
can be used with all modules to customize their appearance:
|
||
|
||
align::
|
||
The alignment policy to use when the minimum width (see below) is not
|
||
reached. Either +center+ (default), +right+ or +left+.
|
||
min_width::
|
||
The minimum width (in pixels) the module should occupy. If the module takes
|
||
less space than the specified size, the block will be padded to the left
|
||
and/or the right side, according to the defined alignment policy. This is
|
||
useful when you want to prevent the whole status line from shifting when
|
||
values take more or less space between each iteration.
|
||
The option can also be a string. In this case, the width of the given text
|
||
determines the minimum width of the block. This is useful when you want to
|
||
set a sensible minimum width regardless of which font you are using, and at
|
||
what particular size. Please note that a number enclosed with quotes will
|
||
still be treated as a number.
|
||
separator::
|
||
A boolean value which specifies whether a separator line should be drawn
|
||
after this block. The default is true, meaning the separator line will be
|
||
drawn. Note that if you disable the separator line, there will still be a
|
||
gap after the block, unless you also use separator_block_width.
|
||
separator_block_width::
|
||
The amount of pixels to leave blank after the block. In the middle of this
|
||
gap, a separator symbol will be drawn unless separator is disabled. This is
|
||
why the specified width should leave enough space for the separator symbol.
|
||
|
||
*Example configuration*:
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
disk "/" {
|
||
format = "%avail"
|
||
align = "left"
|
||
min_width = 100
|
||
separator = false
|
||
separator_block_width = 1
|
||
}
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
== Using i3status with dzen2
|
||
|
||
After installing dzen2, you can directly use it with i3status. Just ensure that
|
||
+output_format+ is set to +dzen2+.
|
||
|
||
*Example for usage of i3status with dzen2*:
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
i3status | dzen2 -fg white -ta r -w 1280 \
|
||
-fn "-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--13-120-75-75-C-70-iso8859-1"
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
== Using i3status with xmobar
|
||
|
||
To get xmobar to start, you might need to copy the default configuration
|
||
file to +~/.xmobarrc+. Also, ensure that the +output_format+ option for i3status
|
||
is set to +xmobar+.
|
||
|
||
*Example for usage of i3status with xmobar*:
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
i3status | xmobar -o -t "%StdinReader%" -c "[Run StdinReader]"
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
== What about CPU frequency?
|
||
|
||
While talking about specific things, please understand this section as a
|
||
general explanation why your favorite information is not included in i3status.
|
||
|
||
Let’s talk about CPU frequency specifically. Many people don’t understand how
|
||
frequency scaling works precisely. The generally recommended CPU frequency
|
||
governor ("ondemand") changes the CPU frequency far more often than i3status
|
||
could display it. The display number is therefore often incorrect and doesn’t
|
||
tell you anything useful either.
|
||
|
||
In general, i3status wants to display things which you would look at
|
||
occasionally anyways, like the current date/time, whether you are connected to
|
||
a WiFi network or not, and if you have enough disk space to fit that 4.3 GiB
|
||
download.
|
||
|
||
However, if you need to look at some kind of information more than once in a
|
||
while, you are probably better off with a script doing that, which pops up.
|
||
After all, the point of computers is not to burden you with additional boring
|
||
tasks like repeatedly checking a number.
|
||
|
||
== External scripts/programs with i3status
|
||
|
||
In i3status, we don’t want to implement process management again. Therefore,
|
||
there is no module to run arbitrary scripts or commands. Instead, you should
|
||
use your shell, for example like this:
|
||
|
||
*Example for prepending the i3status output*:
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
#!/bin/sh
|
||
# shell script to prepend i3status with more stuff
|
||
|
||
i3status | while :
|
||
do
|
||
read line
|
||
echo "mystuff | $line" || exit 1
|
||
done
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Put that in some script, say +.bin/my_i3status.sh+ and execute that instead of i3status.
|
||
|
||
Note that if you want to use the JSON output format (with colors in i3bar), you
|
||
need to use a slightly more complex wrapper script. There are examples in the
|
||
contrib/ folder, see https://github.com/i3/i3status/tree/master/contrib
|
||
|
||
== SIGNALS
|
||
|
||
When receiving +SIGUSR1+, i3status’s nanosleep() will be interrupted and thus
|
||
you will force an update. You can use killall -USR1 i3status to force an update
|
||
after changing the system volume, for example.
|
||
|
||
== SEE ALSO
|
||
|
||
+strftime(3)+, +date(1)+, +glob(3)+, +dzen2(1)+, +xmobar(1)+
|
||
|
||
== AUTHORS
|
||
|
||
Michael Stapelberg and contributors
|
||
|
||
Thorsten Toepper
|
||
|
||
Baptiste Daroussin
|
||
|
||
Axel Wagner
|
||
|
||
Fernando Tarlá Cardoso Lemos
|