1XOSVIEW(1) General Commands Manual XOSVIEW(1)
2
3
4
6 xosview - X based system monitor
7
9 xosview [options]
10
11
12
13
15 xosview is a monitor which displays the status of several system param‐
16 eters. These include CPU usage, load average, memory, swap space, net‐
17 work usage and more. Each resource is displayed as a horizontal bar
18 which is separated into color coded regions showing how much of the
19 resource is being put to a particular use.
20
21 xosview runs on several platforms (Linux, NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD,
22 DragonflyBSD, some Solaris systems, IRIX 6.5, HPUX and GNU). Not all
23 of the meters described below are supported on all platforms. Some of
24 the meters may appear different depending upon the platform xosview is
25 running on. Note that *BSD is used as an abbreviation for all the sup‐
26 ported BSD operating systems (NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, DragonflyBSD).
27
28 Load: Kernel reported load average
29 all platforms : load
30 Linux : load | CPU frequency
31 *BSD : load | CPU frequency
32 SunOS5 : load | CPU frequency
33
34 CPU Usage
35 Linux : user | nice | system | soft-interrupt | interrupt | io-wait
36 |
37 guest | niced guest | stolen | idle
38 *BSD : user | nice | system | interrupt | idle
39 SunOS5 : user | system | wait | idle
40 IRIX : user | system | interrupt | wait | idle
41 HPUX : user | nice | system | interrupt | idle
42
43 Memory Usage
44 Linux : used | buffers | slab | map | cache | free
45 FreeBSD: active | inactive | wired | cache | free
46 DFBSD : active | inactive | wired | cache | free
47 OpenBSD: active | inactive | wired | free
48 NetBSD : active | inactive | wired | free
49 SunOS5 : kernel | zfs | other | free
50 IRIX : kernel | fs | user | free
51 HPUX : text | used | other | free
52 GNU : active | inactive | wired | free
53
54 Swap Usage
55 Linux : used | free
56 *BSD : used | free
57 SunOS5 : used | free
58 HPUX : used | free
59 GNU : used | free
60
61 Disk Usage: Throughput to/from local disk, per second
62 Linux : in | out | idle
63 *BSD : in | out | idle
64 SunOS5 : in | out | idle
65
66 Page Swapping: Pages to/from swap, per second
67 Linux : in | out | idle
68 *BSD : in | out | idle
69 SunOS5 : in | out | idle
70 HPUX : in | out | idle
71 GNU : in | out | idle
72
73 Network Usage
74 Linux : in | out | idle
75 *BSD : in | out | idle
76 SunOS5 : in | out | idle
77
78 GFX Usage: Framebuffer exchanges, per second
79 IRIX : swapbuffers
80
81 Interrupts: "leds" which blink when an interrupt occurs
82 Linux : IRQs
83 *BSD : IRQs
84
85 Interrupt Rate: Per second
86 Linux : interrupts | free
87 *BSD : interrupts | free
88 SunOS5 : interrupts | free
89
90 Serial Port Status: "leds" which show the serial port parameters
91 Linux : LSR and MSR
92
93 Battery Level: charge and status of batteries
94 Linux : available | used
95 *BSD : available | used
96
97 RAID: State of disks in a software RAID array
98 Linux : disk0 disk1 disk2 ... diskN | rebuild
99
100 Wireless Link
101 Linux : quality
102
103 Sensors: Readings from sensors
104 Linux : I2C/hwmon sensors (lmstemp)
105 Intel Core/AMD K8+/VIA C7 temperature (coretemp)
106 ACPI thermal zones (acpitemp)
107 *BSD : I2C sensors (bsdsensor)
108 Intel Core/AMD K8+ temperature (coretemp)
109
110 Typing a 'q' in the window will terminate xosview.
111
112
114 Most of these command line options are just a convenient way to set one
115 or more of xosview's resources. Please see the RESOURCES section for
116 more details on what the resource is for.
117
118 -v
119 Displays the version number.
120
121 -name name
122 Sets the Resource name xosview will use (same as the -name
123 option for typical X applications like xterm). When performing
124 resource lookups, xosview will look under name, and then under
125 ``xosview''. For an example, perform the following (as docu‐
126 mented in README.netbsd):
127 xrdb -merge Xdefaults.stipple
128 xosview -name xosvstipple &
129 xosview -name xosvstipplebw &
130
131 -display display
132 Sets the X display to display. This option overrides the
133 xosview*display resource.
134
135 -font font
136 Specifies the font xosview will use for labels. This option
137 overrides the xosview*font resource.
138
139 -title title
140 This option sets the name xosview will tell the window manager
141 to use for the X window and icon. This option overrides the
142 xosview*title resource.
143
144 -geometry geometry_string
145 Sets the X geometry to geometry_string. This option overrides
146 the xosview*geometry resource.
147
148 -captions
149 This option overrides the xosview*captions resource. It is
150 equivalent to setting xosview*captions to "False".
151
152 +captions
153 This option overrides the xosview*captions resource. It is
154 equivalent to setting xosview*captions to "True".
155 -labels
156 This option overrides the xosview*labels resource. It is equiv‐
157 alent to setting xosview*labels to "False".
158
159 +labels
160 This option overrides the xosview*labels resource. It is equiv‐
161 alent to setting xosview*labels to "True".
162 -usedlabels
163 This option overrides the xosview*usedlabels resource. It is
164 equivalent to setting xosview*usedlabels to "False".
165
166 +usedlabels
167 This option overrides the xosview*usedlabels resource. It is
168 equivalent to setting xosview*usedlabels to "True".
169 -cpu
170 This option overrides the xosview*cpu resource. It is equiva‐
171 lent to setting xosview*cpu to "False".
172
173 +cpu
174 This option overrides the xosview*cpu resource. It is equiva‐
175 lent to setting xosview*cpu to "True".
176
177 -cpus
178 Force the display of a single meter for all CPUs in the system.
179 This option is equivalent to setting xosview*cpuFormat to "sin‐
180 gle".
181
182 +cpus
183 Force the display of all CPUs in the system. This option is
184 equivalent to setting xosview*cpuFormat to "all".
185
186 -load
187 This option overrides the xosview*load resource. It is equiva‐
188 lent to setting xosview*load to "False".
189
190 +load
191 This option overrides the xosview*load resource. It is equiva‐
192 lent to setting xosview*load to "True".
193 -mem
194 This option overrides the xosview*mem resource. It is equiva‐
195 lent to setting xosview*mem to "False".
196
197 +mem
198 This option overrides the xosview*mem resource. It is equiva‐
199 lent to setting xosview*mem to "True".
200 -swap
201 This option overrides the xosview*swap resource. It is equiva‐
202 lent to setting xosview*swap to "False".
203
204 +swap
205 This option overrides the xosview*swap resource. It is equiva‐
206 lent to setting xosview*swap to "True".
207 -battery
208 This option overrides the xosview*battery resource. It is
209 equivalent to setting xosview*battery to "False".
210
211 +battery
212 This option overrides the xosview*battery resource. It is
213 equivalent to setting xosview*battery to "True".
214 -gfx
215 This option overrides the xosview*gfx resource. It is equiva‐
216 lent to setting xosview*gfx to "False".
217
218 +gfx
219 This option overrides the xosview*gfx resource. It is equiva‐
220 lent to setting xosview*gfx to "True".
221 -wireless
222 This option overrides the xosview*wireless resource. It is
223 equivalent to setting xosview*wireless to "False".
224
225 +wireless
226 This option overrides the xosview*wireless resource. It is
227 equivalent to setting xosview*wireless to "True".
228 -net
229 This option overrides the xosview*net resource. It is equiva‐
230 lent to setting xosview*net to "False".
231
232 +net
233 This option overrides the xosview*net resource. It is equiva‐
234 lent to setting xosview*net to "True".
235
236 -network maxbandwidth
237 -networkBW maxbandwidth
238 -networkBandwidth maxbandwidth
239 These options override the xosview*netBandwidth resource. They
240 cause xosview to display a meter that will shows network usage,
241 with a maximum bandwidth of maxbandwidth. Notice that setting
242 the bandwidth to 0 no longer disables the meter -- use the
243 ``-net'' option instead.
244
245 -page
246 This option overrides the xosview*page resource. It is equiva‐
247 lent to setting xosview*page to "False".
248
249 +page
250 This option overrides the xosview*page resource. It is equiva‐
251 lent to setting xosview*page to "True".
252
253 -pagespeed val
254 This option overrides the xosview*pageBandWidth resource. The
255 resource xosview*pageBandWidth will be set to val.
256
257 -disk
258 This option overrides the xosview*disk resource. It is equiva‐
259 lent to setting xosview*disk to "False".
260
261 +disk
262 This option overrides the xosview*disk resource. It is equiva‐
263 lent to setting xosview*disk to "True".
264 -int
265 This option overrides the xosview*int resource. It is equiva‐
266 lent to setting xosview*int to "False".
267
268 +int
269 This option overrides the xosview*int resource. It is equiva‐
270 lent to setting xosview*int to "True".
271
272 -ints +ints
273 -interrupts +interrupts
274 Equivalent to -int and +int.
275
276 -irqrate
277 This option overrides the xosview*irqrate resource. It is
278 equivalent to setting xosview*irqrate to "False".
279
280 +irqrate
281 This option overrides the xosview*irqrate resource. It is
282 equivalent to setting xosview*irqrate to "True".
283
284 -intrate +intrate
285 Equivalent to -irqrate and +irqrate.
286
287 -lmstemp
288 This option overrides the xosview*lmstemp resource. It is
289 equivalent to setting xosview*lmstemp to "False".
290
291 +lmstemp
292 This option overrides the xosview*lmstemp resource. It is
293 equivalent to setting xosview*lmstemp to "True".
294 -coretemp
295 This option overrides the xosview*coretemp resource. It is
296 equivalent to setting xosview*coretemp to "False".
297
298 +coretemp
299 This option overrides the xosview*coretemp resource. It is
300 equivalent to setting xosview*coretemp to "True".
301 -acpitemp
302 This option overrides the xosview*acpitemp resource. It is
303 equivalent to setting xosview*acpitemp to "False".
304
305 +acpitemp
306 This option overrides the xosview*acpitemp resource. It is
307 equivalent to setting xosview*acpitemp to "True".
308 -bsdsensor
309 This option overrides the xosview*bsdsensor resource. It is
310 equivalent to setting xosview*bsdsensor to "False".
311
312 +bsdsensor
313 This option overrides the xosview*bsdsensor resource. It is
314 equivalent to setting xosview*bsdsensor to "True".
315
316 -xrm resource_string
317 This switch allows any of xosview's resources to be set on the
318 command line. An example of how the xosview*memFreeColor could
319 be set using this option is shown below (Note the use of " to
320 prevent the shell from expanding ´*´ or from creating two sepa‐
321 rate arguments, ´xosview*memfreeColor:´ and ´purple´):
322 -xrm "xosview*memFreeColor: purple"
323
324
326 The following is a list of X resources supported by xosview. Each has
327 a default value assigned to it. These values can be found in the file
328 Xdefaults which can be obtained in the source distribution of xosview.
329 They can be overridden in the usual places (/usr/lib/X11/app-
330 defaults/XOsview, $HOME/.Xdefaults, etc.).
331
332 It should be noted that it is OK to have a resource defined for a port
333 of xosview that does not support the feature the resource configures.
334 Xosview will simply ignore the resources that are set for it but not
335 supported on a given platform.
336
337
338 General Resources
339
340 xosview*title: name
341 The string that xosview will use for the X window title. Nor‐
342 mally xosview will use 'xosview@machine_name' for a title. This
343 resource overrides the default behavior.
344
345 xosview*geometry: geometry_string
346 This is a standard X geometry string that defines the size and
347 location of the X window used by xosview.
348
349 xosview*display: name
350 The name of the display where xosview will contact the X server
351 for drawing its window.
352
353 xosview*pixmapName: name
354 The filename of an X pixmap (xpm) file for use as a background
355 image.
356
357 xosview*captions: (True or False)
358 If True then xosview will display meter captions.
359
360 xosview*labels: (True or False)
361 If True then xosview will display meter labels.
362
363 xosview*meterLabelColor: color
364 The color to use for the meter labels.
365
366 xosview*usedlabels: (True or False)
367 If True then xosview will display labels that show the percent‐
368 age of the resource (or absolute amount, depending on the meter)
369 being used. This option requires that the labels option also be
370 set to True.
371
372 xosview*usedLabelColor: color
373 The color to use for "used" labels.
374
375 xosview*borderwidth: width
376 The width of the border for the xosview window.
377
378 xosview*font: font
379 This is the font that xosview will use.
380
381 xosview*background: color
382 This is the color that will be used for the background.
383
384 xosview*foreground: color
385 This is the color that will be used for the foreground.
386
387 xosview*enableStipple: (True or False)
388 Change to true to try stipple support. This is primarily for
389 users stuck with 1-bit monitors/display cards. Try setting
390 enableStipple true. Please give us feedback on this, if you use
391 it. It needs some more work, but no one has given us any feed‐
392 back so far.
393
394 xosview*graphNumCols: number
395 This defines the number of sample bars drawn when a meter is in
396 scrolling graph mode. This also has the side-effect of defining
397 the width of the graph columns. This is only used by meters
398 which have graph mode enabled.
399
400
401 Load Meter Resources
402
403 xosview*load: (True or False)
404 If True then xosview will display a load meter.
405
406 xosview*loadProcColor: color
407 This is the color that the load meter will use to display the
408 load average when it is below the warning threshold.
409
410 xosview*loadWarnColor: color
411 This is the color that the load meter will use once the load
412 average is above the warning but below the critical load thresh‐
413 old.
414
415 xosview*loadCritColor: color
416 This is the color that the load meter will use once the load
417 average is above critical load threshold.
418
419 xosview*loadIdleColor: color
420 The load meter will use this color to display the idle field.
421
422 xosview*loadPriority: priority
423 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
424 tenths of a second that the load meter waits between updates. A
425 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
426 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
427 meter once a minute.
428
429 xosview*loadWarnThreshold: int
430 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the value at
431 which the loadmeter changes its status and color from "normal"
432 to "warning". The default value is the number of processors.
433
434 xosview*loadCritThreshold: int
435 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the value at
436 which the loadmeter changes its status and color from "warning"
437 to "critical". The default value is four times the warning
438 threshold.
439
440 xosview*loadDecay: (True or False)
441 You should probably leave this at the default value (False).
442 The load is already a time-averaged value!
443
444 xosview*loadGraph: (True or False)
445 If this is set to True then the load meter will be drawn as a
446 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
447 time.
448
449 xosview*loadUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
450 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
451 formats work as follows:
452
453 float:
454 Display the value as a floating point number.
455 percent:
456 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
457 autoscale:
458 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
459 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
460
461 xosview*loadCpuSpeed: (True or False)
462 Display the current CPU speed in the load meter.
463
464
465 CPU Meter Resources
466
467 xosview*cpu: (True or False)
468 If True then xosview will display a cpu meter. On Linux, *BSD,
469 Solaris and IRIX SMP machines, the resource cpuFormat defines
470 how meters are created for multiple CPUs.
471
472 xosview*cpuUserColor: color
473 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu user time
474 field.
475
476 xosview*cpuNiceColor: color
477 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu nice time
478 field.
479
480 xosview*cpuSystemColor: color
481 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu system time
482 field.
483
484 xosview*cpuInterruptColor: color
485 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu hard inter‐
486 rupt time field.
487
488 xosview*cpuSInterruptColor: color
489 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu soft inter‐
490 rupt time field.
491
492 xosview*cpuWaitColor: color
493 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu IO waiting
494 time field.
495
496 xosview*cpuGuestColor: color
497 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu virtualiza‐
498 tion guest time field.
499
500 xosview*cpuNiceGuestColor: color
501 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu niced vir‐
502 tualization guest time field.
503
504 xosview*cpuStolenColor: color
505 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu involuntary
506 wait time field.
507
508 xosview*cpuFreeColor: color
509 The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu idle time
510 field.
511
512 xosview*cpuPriority: priority
513 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
514 tenths of a second that the cpu meter waits between updates. A
515 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
516 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
517 meter once a minute.
518
519 xosview*cpuDecay: (True or False)
520 If True then the cpu meter will be split vertically in two. The
521 top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
522 half will display a decaying average of the state.
523
524 xosview*cpuGraph: (True or False)
525 If this is set to True then the cpu meter will be drawn as a
526 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
527 time.
528
529 xosview*cpuUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
530 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
531 formats work as follows:
532
533 float:
534 Display the value as a floating point number.
535 percent:
536 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
537 autoscale:
538 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
539 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
540
541 xosview*cpuFormat: (single, all, both or auto)
542 If `single', only a cumulative meter for all CPU usage is cre‐
543 ated. `all' creates a meter for each CPU, but no cumulative
544 meter. `both' creates one cumulative meter and one for each CPU.
545 `auto' makes a choice based on the number of CPUs found.
546
547 xosview*cpuFields: USED/USR/NIC/SYS/INT/SI/HI/WIO/GST/NGS/STL/IDLE
548 The set of fields to show in Linux CPU meter instead of the
549 default. Possible fields are:
550
551 USED:
552 Combine all used CPU time into one field. This is the sum
553 of user, nice, system, soft and hard interrupts, guest,
554 niced guest and stolen times. None of these, except
555 stolen, may be defined together with `USED'.
556 IDLE:
557 Time spent doing nothing. Includes I/O wait if it is not
558 defined separately.
559 USR:
560 Time spent in user mode processes. Includes nice, guest
561 and niced guest if those are not defined separately.
562 NIC:
563 Time spent in niced user mode processes. Includes niced
564 guest if neither it nor guest is not defined separately.
565 SYS:
566 Time spent in kernel code. Includes soft and hard inter‐
567 rupt as well as stolen time if those are not defined sep‐
568 arately.
569 INT:
570 Combines soft and hard interrupt handling times into one
571 field.
572 SI:
573 Time the kernel used to handle soft interrupts. Available
574 on Linux kernel 2.6.0 and higher.
575 HI:
576 Time the kernel used to handle hard interrupts. Available
577 on Linux kernel 2.6.0 and higher.
578 WIO:
579 Time spent waiting for I/O to complete. Available on
580 Linux kernel 2.6.0 and higher.
581 GST:
582 Time spent running guest OS in virtual machine. Includes
583 niced guest if it is not defined separately. Available on
584 Linux kernel 2.6.24 and higher.
585 NGS:
586 Time spent running niced guest OS in virtual machine.
587 Available on Linux kernel 2.6.32 and higher.
588 STL:
589 Involuntary wait time when running as guest in virtual
590 machine. Available on Linux kernel 2.6.11 and higher.
591
592 Most combinations are possible (see above for restrictions), but
593 at least `USED' or `USR' and `SYS' need to be defined. `IDLE'
594 field is added automatically.
595
596
597 Memory Meter Resources
598
599 xosview*mem: (True or False)
600 If True then xosview will display a mem meter.
601
602 xosview*memUsedColor: color
603 The mem meter will use this color to display the used memory
604 field.
605
606 xosview*memSharedColor: color
607 The mem meter will use this color to display the shared memory
608 field.
609
610 xosview*memBufferColor: color
611 The mem meter will use this color to display the buffer memory
612 field.
613
614 xosview*memCacheColor: color
615 The mem meter will use this color to display the cache memory
616 field.
617
618 xosview*memFreeColor: color
619 The mem meter will use this color to display the free memory
620 field.
621
622 xosview*memKernelColor: color
623 The mem meter will use this color to display the kernel memory
624 field.
625
626 xosview*memSharedColor: color
627 The mem meter will use this color to display the shared memory
628 field.
629
630 xosview*memTextColor: color
631 The mem meter will use this color to display the HP text memory
632 field.
633
634 xosview*memOtherColor: color
635 The mem meter will use this color to display the HP ``other''
636 memory field.
637
638 xosview*memActiveColor: color
639 The mem meter will use this color to display the *BSD active
640 memory field.
641
642 xosview*memInactiveColor: color
643 The mem meter will use this color to display the *BSD inactive
644 memory field.
645
646 xosview*memWiredColor: color
647 The mem meter will use this color to display the *BSD wired mem‐
648 ory field.
649
650 xosview*memSlabColor: color
651 The mem meter will use this color to display the Linux in-kernel
652 data structures field.
653
654 xosview*memMapColor: color
655 The mem meter will use this color to display the Linux memory
656 mapped files field.
657
658 xosview*memPriority: priority
659 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
660 tenths of a second that the mem meter waits between updates. A
661 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
662 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
663 meter once a minute.
664
665 xosview*memDecay: (True or False)
666 If True then the mem meter will be split vertically in two. The
667 top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
668 half will display a decaying average of the state.
669
670 xosview*memGraph: (True or False)
671 If this is set to True then the mem meter will be drawn as a
672 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
673 time.
674
675 xosview*memUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
676 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
677 formats work as follows:
678
679 float:
680 Display the value as a floating point number.
681 percent:
682 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
683 autoscale:
684 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
685 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
686
687
688 Swap Meter Resources
689
690 xosview*swap: (True or False)
691 If True then xosview will display a swap meter.
692
693 xosview*swapUsedColor: color
694 The swap meter will use this color to display the used swap
695 field.
696
697 xosview*swapFreeColor: color
698 The swap meter will use this color to display the free swap
699 field.
700
701 xosview*swapPriority: priority
702 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
703 tenths of a second that the swap meter waits between updates. A
704 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
705 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
706 meter once a minute.
707
708 xosview*swapDecay: (True or False)
709 If True then the swap meter will be split vertically in two.
710 The top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
711 half will display a decaying average of the state.
712
713 xosview*swapGraph: (True or False)
714 If this is set to True then the swap meter will be drawn as a
715 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
716 time.
717
718 xosview*swapUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
719 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
720 formats work as follows:
721
722 float:
723 Display the value as a floating point number.
724 percent:
725 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
726 autoscale:
727 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
728 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
729
730
731 Page Swapping Meter Resources
732
733 xosview*page: (True or False)
734 If True then xosview will display a page meter.
735
736 xosview*pageBandWidth: maxEvents
737 This number is used to specify the expected maximum bandwidth
738 (in events / sec) for the page meter. When the expected maximum
739 bandwidth (maxEvents) is exceeded then the page meter will dis‐
740 play the relative percentage of page swapping (25% in, 75% out).
741
742 xosview*pageInColor: color
743 The page meter will use this color to display the page-in field.
744
745 xosview*pageOutColor: color
746 The page meter will use this color to display the page-out
747 field.
748
749 xosview*pageIdleColor: color
750 The page meter will use this color to display the idle field.
751
752 xosview*pagePriority: priority
753 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
754 tenths of a second that the page meter waits between updates. A
755 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
756 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
757 meter once a minute.
758
759 xosview*pageDecay: (True or False)
760 If True then the page meter will be split vertically in two.
761 The top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
762 half will display a decaying average of the state.
763
764 xosview*pageGraph: (True or False)
765 If this is set to True then the page meter will be drawn as a
766 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
767 time.
768
769 xosview*pageUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
770 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
771 formats work as follows:
772
773 float:
774 Display the value as a floating point number.
775 percent:
776 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
777 autoscale:
778 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
779 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
780
781
782 Gfx Meter Resources
783
784 xosview*gfx: (True or False)
785 If True xosview will display the GfxMeter. The value is sampled
786 once per second, due to the usage of sadc to sample data.
787
788 xosview*gfxWarnColor: color
789 This is the color that the gfx meter will use once the warn
790 state is reached.
791
792 xosview*gfxAlarmColor: color
793 This is the color that the gfx meter will use once the alarm
794 state is reached.
795
796 xosview*gfxSwapColor: color
797 This is the color that the gfx meter will use in normal state
798
799 xosview*gfxIdleColor: color
800 The gfx meter will use this color to display the idle field.
801
802 xosview*gfxPriority: priority
803 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
804 tenths of a second that the gfx meter waits between updates. A
805 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
806 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
807 meter once a minute.
808
809 xosview*gfxWarnThreshold: int
810 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) of swapbuffers per
811 second and pipe at which the gfxmeter changes its status and
812 color from "normal" to "warn". The default value is 60.
813
814 xosview*gfxAlarmThreshold: int
815 This number (which must be an integer >= gfxWarnThreshold) of
816 swapbuffers per second and pipe at which the gfxmeter changes
817 its status and color from "warn" to "alarm". The default value
818 is 120.
819
820 xosview*gfxDecay: (True or False)
821 You should probably leave this at the default value (False).
822 The gfx does not work in decay mode.
823
824 xosview*gfxGraph: (True or False)
825 If this is set to True then the gfx meter will be drawn as a
826 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
827 time.
828
829 xosview*gfxUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
830 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
831 formats work as follows:
832
833 float:
834 Display the value as a floating point number.
835 percent:
836 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
837 autoscale:
838 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
839 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
840
841
842 Network Meter Resources
843
844 xosview*net: (True or False)
845 If True xosview will display the NetMeter. Linux users will
846 have to configure their kernels and setup some ip accounting
847 rules to make this work. See the file README.linux which comes
848 with the xosview distribution for details.
849
850 xosview*netBandwidth: maxBytes
851 This number is used to specify the expected maximum bandwidth
852 (in bytes / sec) for the meter. When the expected maximum band‐
853 width (maxBytes) is exceeded then the network meter will display
854 the relative percentage of network usage (25% incoming, 75% out‐
855 going).
856
857 xosview*netIface: interface
858 If False, xosview will display the data received/transmitted by
859 any of the network interfaces. Otherwise, xosview will only dis‐
860 play the data received/transmitted by the specified network
861 interface. If the name is prepended with '-' sign, the data in
862 that interface is ignored.
863
864 xosview*netInColor: color
865 The net meter will use this color to display the incoming field.
866
867 xosview*netOutColor: color
868 The net meter will use this color to display the outgoing field.
869
870 xosview*netBackground: color
871 This is the color that the network meter will use for the "idle"
872 field.
873
874 xosview*netPriority: priority
875 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
876 tenths of a second that the net meter waits between updates. A
877 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
878 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
879 meter once a minute.
880
881 xosview*netDecay: (True or False)
882 If True then the net meter will be split vertically in two. The
883 top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
884 half will display a decaying average of the state.
885
886 xosview*netGraph: (True or False)
887 If this is set to True then the net meter will be drawn as a
888 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
889 time.
890
891 xosview*netUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
892 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
893 formats work as follows:
894
895 float:
896 Display the value as a floating point number.
897 percent:
898 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
899 autoscale:
900 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
901 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
902
903
904 NFSStats (Client) Resources
905
906 xosview*NFSStats: (True or False)
907 If True then xosview will display a meter to monitor NFS client
908 stats.
909
910 xosview*NFSStatReTransColor: color
911 The color to be used for retransmit stats.
912
913 xosview*NFSStatAuthRefrshColor: color
914 The color to be used for auth refresh stats.
915
916 xosview*NFSStatCallsColor: color
917 The color to be used for call stats.
918
919 xosview*NFSStatIdleColor: color
920 The color to be used for idle stats.
921
922
923 NFSDStats (Server) Resources
924
925 xosview*NFSDStats: (True or False)
926 If True xosview will display a meter for NFS server/daemon
927 stats.
928
929 xosview*NFSDStatCallsColor: color
930 The color to be used for call stats.
931
932 xosview*NFSDStatBadCallsColor: color
933 The color to be used for bad stats.
934
935 xosview*NFSDStatUDPColor: color
936 The color to be used for UDP stats.
937
938 xosview*NFSDStatTCPColor: color
939 The color to be used for TCP stats.
940
941 xosview*NFSDStatIdleColor: color
942 The color to be used for idle stats.
943
944
945 Serial Meter Resources
946
947 xosview*serial(0-9): (True, False, or portBase)
948 If True then xosview will display a serial meter for ttySx. The
949 portbase will be autodetected. Because autodetection can fail,
950 (if the port is locked by ppp/slip for example) you can specify
951 the portbase instead of "True". If a portBase is used then
952 xosview will use it instead of trying to autodetect.
953
954 For this to work on Linux xosview needs to be suid root in order
955 to have access to the ports. See the file README.linux which
956 comes with the xosview distribution for more details.
957
958 xosview*serialOnColor: color
959 This is the color the serial meter will use for bits that are
960 set.
961
962 xosview*serialOffColor: color
963 This is the color the serial meter will use for bits that are
964 not set.
965
966 xosview*serialPriority: priority
967 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
968 tenths of a second that the serial meter waits between updates.
969 A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second
970 (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
971 meter once a minute.
972
973
974 Interrupt Meter Resources
975
976 xosview*interrupts: (True or False)
977 If True then xosview will display an interrupt meter.
978
979 xosview*intSeparate: (True of False)
980 If True then xosview will display one interrupt meter per CPU on
981 SMP machines. If False only one meter is displayed. Default:
982 True.
983
984 xosview*intOnColor: color
985 This is the color that will be used to show "active" interrupts.
986
987 xosview*intOffColor: color
988 This is the color that will be used to show "inactive" inter‐
989 rupts.
990
991 xosview*intPriority: priority
992 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
993 tenths of a second that the int meter waits between updates. A
994 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
995 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
996 meter once a minute.
997
998
999 Interrupt Rate Meter Resources
1000
1001 xosview*irqrate: (True or False)
1002 If True then xosview will display an interrupt rate meter.
1003
1004 xosview*irqrateUsedColor: color
1005 This is the color that will be used to show the interrupt rate.
1006
1007 xosview*irqrateIdleColor: color
1008 The irqrate meter will use this color to display the idle field.
1009
1010 xosview*irqratePriority: priority
1011 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1012 tenths of a second that the irqrate meter waits between updates.
1013 A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second
1014 (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
1015 meter once a minute.
1016
1017 xosview*irqrateDecay: (True or False)
1018 If True then the irqrate meter will be split vertically in two.
1019 The top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
1020 half will display a decaying average of the state.
1021
1022 xosview*irqrateGraph: (True or False)
1023 If this is set to True then the irqrate meter will be drawn as a
1024 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
1025 time.
1026
1027 xosview*irqrateUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1028 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1029 formats work as follows:
1030
1031 float:
1032 Display the value as a floating point number.
1033 percent:
1034 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1035 autoscale:
1036 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1037 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1038
1039
1040 Lm Sensors Resources
1041
1042 xosview*lmstemp: (True or False)
1043 If True then xosview will display a lmstemp meter.
1044
1045 xosview*lmstempHighest: number
1046 Highest value displayed. If not given, or too small, the meter
1047 will adjust to fit actual and alarm values. Can be overridden
1048 for any meter with lmstempHighestN.
1049
1050 xosview*lmstempActColor: color
1051 Color of actual value.
1052
1053 xosview*lmstempHighColor: color
1054 Color above high alarm value, also used to indicate alarm.
1055
1056 xosview*lmstempLowColor: color
1057 Color of actual value, when it is below low alarm value.
1058
1059 xosview*lmstempIdleColor: color
1060 Color between actual and high alarm values.
1061
1062 xosview*lmstempN: filename
1063 Name of input file from /proc/sys/dev/sensors/*/* or
1064 /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/, N=1,2,3,... Can also be absolute
1065 path. For example,
1066 xosview*lmstemp1: temp1
1067 xosview*lmstemp2: temp2_input
1068
1069 Note: Many sensors have the value and alarm threshold in files
1070 named "*_input" and "*_max"/"*_min", respectively. In such case,
1071 specifying the base name such as "temp1" here will be enough for
1072 having both files used.
1073
1074 Note: If the same file name as lmstempN, lmshighN or lmslowN
1075 exists in other sensor directories, then lmsnameN needs to be
1076 specified, or absolute path used, to find the correct one.
1077
1078 xosview*lmshighN: filename or number
1079 Optional high alarm value or name of file from
1080 /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/, N=1,2,3,... Can also be absolute
1081 path. If not given, lmstempHighest is used as both maximum and
1082 high alarm. For example,
1083 xosview*lmshigh1: 70
1084 xosview*lmshigh2: temp1_crit_hyst
1085
1086 xosview*lmslowN: filename or number
1087 Optional low alarm value or name of file from
1088 /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/, N=1,2,3,... Can also be absolute
1089 path. Default is 0. For example,
1090 xosview*lmslow1: 1.5
1091 xosview*lmslow2: fan1_min
1092
1093 xosview*lmsnameN: name
1094 Optional name of the sensor device to use when finding the file‐
1095 name(s) given in lmstempN, lmshighN and lmslowN. See
1096 /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/name for the names of your sensors.
1097 This has no effect to files given as absolute paths. For exam‐
1098 ple,
1099 xosview*lmsname1: nct6779
1100 xosview*lmsname2: radeon
1101
1102 xosview*lmstempLabelN: string
1103 N-th label for above values, default is TMP.
1104
1105 xosview*lmstempHighestN: number
1106 Override default lmstempHighest for meter N.
1107
1108 xosview*lmstempUsedFormatN: (float, percent or autoscale)
1109 Override default lmstempUsedFormat for meter N.
1110
1111 xosview*lmstempPriority: priority
1112 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1113 tenths of a second that the lmstemp meter waits between updates.
1114 A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second
1115 (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
1116 meter once a minute.
1117
1118 xosview*lmstempUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1119 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1120 formats work as follows:
1121
1122 float:
1123 Display the value as a floating point number.
1124 percent:
1125 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1126 autoscale:
1127 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1128 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1129
1130
1131 ACPI Temperature Resources
1132
1133 xosview*acpitemp: (True or False)
1134 If True then xosview will display a acpitemp meter.
1135
1136 xosview*acpitempHighest: 100
1137 Highest temp value displayed, default 100. If acpihighN is
1138 given, the value is read from there instead.
1139
1140 xosview*acpitempActColor: color
1141 Color of actual temperature.
1142
1143 xosview*acpitempHighColor: color
1144 Color above alarm temperature, also used to indicate alarm.
1145
1146 xosview*acpitempIdleColor: color
1147 Color between actual and alarm temperatures.
1148
1149 xosview*acpitempN: filename
1150 Name of temperature file from /proc/acpi/thermal_zone or
1151 /sys/devices/virtual/thermal. Note that the last directory part
1152 must be given, e.g. TZ0/temperature. Absolute path can also be
1153 used.
1154
1155 xosview*acpihighN: filename
1156 Name of high value/trip point file from /proc/acpi/thermal_zone
1157 or /sys/devices/virtual/thermal, or an absolute path to one.
1158
1159 xosview*acpitempLabelN: Labelstring
1160 N-th label for above temperatures, default is TMP.
1161
1162 xosview*acpitempPriority: priority
1163 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1164 tenths of a second that the acpitemp meter waits between
1165 updates. A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per
1166 second (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to
1167 update the meter once a minute.
1168
1169 xosview*acpitempUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1170 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1171 formats work as follows:
1172
1173 float:
1174 Display the value as a floating point number.
1175 percent:
1176 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1177 autoscale:
1178 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1179 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1180
1181
1182 Intel Core / AMD K8+ / VIA C7 Temperature Sensor Resources
1183
1184 xosview*coretemp: (True or False)
1185 If True then xosview will display a coretemp meter.
1186
1187 xosview*coretempHighest: 100
1188 Highest temp value displayed, default 100. If CPU throttling
1189 temperature (tjMax) is supplied by the operating system, it is
1190 used instead.
1191
1192 xosview*coretempHigh: number
1193 Value to use as alarm temperature, default is coretempHighest.
1194 If a usable value, such as the temperature for which maximum
1195 cooling is required, is supplied by the operating system, it is
1196 used instead.
1197
1198 xosview*coretempActColor: color
1199 Color of actual temperature.
1200
1201 xosview*coretempHighColor: color
1202 Color above alarm temperature, also used to indicate alarm.
1203
1204 xosview*coretempIdleColor: color
1205 Color between actual and alarm temperatures.
1206
1207 xosview*coretempDisplayType: (separate, average or maximum)
1208 This resource tells xosview how to display the CPU temperature.
1209 The formats work as follows:
1210
1211 separate:
1212 Display one meter for each CPU core of a multi-core CPU.
1213 This is the default.
1214 average:
1215 Display the average of core temperatures of a multi-core
1216 CPU. On multi-socket machines, one meter per physical CPU
1217 is displayed.
1218 maximum:
1219 Display the highest core temperature of a multi-core CPU.
1220 On multi-socket machines, one meter per physical CPU is
1221 displayed.
1222
1223 xosview*coretempPriority: priority
1224 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1225 tenths of a second that the coretemp meter waits between
1226 updates. A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per
1227 second (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to
1228 update the meter once a minute.
1229
1230 xosview*coretempUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1231 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1232 formats work as follows:
1233
1234 float:
1235 Display the value as a floating point number.
1236 percent:
1237 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1238 autoscale:
1239 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1240 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1241
1242
1243 *BSD Sensor Resources
1244
1245 xosview*bsdsensor: (True or False)
1246 If True then xosview will display a bsdsensor meter.
1247
1248 xosview*bsdsensorHighest: number
1249 Highest value displayed. If not given, or too small, the meter
1250 will adjust to fit actual and alarm values. Can be overridden
1251 for any meter with bsdsensorHighestN.
1252
1253 xosview*bsdsensorActColor: color
1254 Color of actual value.
1255
1256 xosview*bsdsensorHighColor: color
1257 Color above high alarm value, also used to indicate alarm.
1258
1259 xosview*bsdsensorLowColor: color
1260 Color of actual value, when it is below low alarm value.
1261
1262 xosview*bsdsensorIdleColor: color
1263 Color between actual and high alarm values.
1264
1265 xosview*bsdsensorN: name.type
1266 xosview*bsdsensorHighN: name.type
1267 xosview*bsdsensorLowN: name.type
1268 These define where the actual value, high alarm value and low
1269 alarm value for meter N=1,2,3,... will be read from. The name is
1270 the sensor driver, and type is the wanted value. Both alarm val‐
1271 ues are optional, and can also be given as static numerical val‐
1272 ues.
1273
1274 You can find the correct pair for OpenBSD and DragonFly BSD with
1275 systat command, e.g.
1276 xosview*bsdsensor1: it0.temp1
1277 xosview*bsdsensorHigh1: 100
1278
1279 On NetBSD, you can find the driver name with envstat command.
1280 Value name for the actual reading is typically 'cur-value' and
1281 for high alarm 'critical-max' and for low alarm 'critical-min',
1282 e.g.
1283 xosview*bsdsensor2: coretemp0.cur-value
1284 xosview*bsdsensorHigh2: coretemp0.critical-max
1285
1286 For all possible NetBSD value names, refer to envstat source
1287 code.
1288
1289 FreeBSD has no usable sensor drivers as of version 9.0. However,
1290 ACPI thermal zones can be used by defining the sysctl node below
1291 hw.acpi.thermal, e.g.
1292 xosview*bsdsensor1: tz0.temperature
1293 xosview*bsdsensorHigh1: tz0._CRT
1294
1295 ACPI thermal zones can be used like this on DragonFly BSD as
1296 well.
1297
1298 xosview*bsdsensorLabelN: string
1299 N-th label for above meters, default is SENN.
1300
1301 xosview*bsdsensorHighestN: number
1302 Override default bsdsensorHighest for meter N.
1303
1304 xosview*bsdsensorUsedFormatN: (float, percent or autoscale)
1305 Override default bsdsensorUsedFormat for meter N.
1306
1307 xosview*bsdsensorPriority: priority
1308 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1309 tenths of a second that the bsdsensor meter waits between
1310 updates. A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per
1311 second (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to
1312 update the meter once a minute.
1313
1314 xosview*bsdsensorUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1315 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1316 formats work as follows:
1317
1318 float:
1319 Display the value as a floating point number.
1320 percent:
1321 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1322 autoscale:
1323 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1324 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1325
1326
1327 Battery Meter Resources
1328
1329 xosview*battery: (True or False)
1330 If True then xosview will display a battery meter. Linux users
1331 will need to have APM or ACPI support in their kernels for this
1332 to work. For both APM and ACPI, xosview shows the status/sum of
1333 all batteries. Additionally - the legend text gets
1334 changed/adjusted to reflect the current state (charg‐
1335 ing/low/critical/etc.) of the battery/batteries.
1336
1337 xosview*batteryLeftColor: color
1338 This is the color that will be used to show the amount of bat‐
1339 tery power left.
1340
1341 xosview*batteryUsedColor: color
1342 This is the color that will be used to show the amount of bat‐
1343 tery power used.
1344
1345 xosview*batteryChargeColor: color
1346 This is the color that will be used as 'left' - if the batteries
1347 get charged.
1348
1349 xosview*batteryFullColor: color
1350 This is the color that will be used as 'left' - if the batteries
1351 are fully charged. APM and ACPI does provide this info, but not
1352 all machines actually do so.
1353
1354 xosview*batteryLowColor: color
1355 APM only - the 'left' color that will indicate a low battery.
1356 Depends on the machine - e.g. below 25% remaining capacity.
1357
1358 xosview*batteryCritColor: color
1359 APM case: the 'left' color if APM indicates 'critical' state.
1360 (less than 5%) ACPI case: the 'left' color if the remaining
1361 capacity is below the alarm value. (which can be set by the
1362 user in /proc/acpi/battery/BAT[01]/alarm )
1363
1364 xosview*batteryNoneColor: color
1365 If no battery is present - or all batteries get removed (while
1366 on AC).
1367
1368 xosview*batteryPriority: priority
1369 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1370 tenths of a second that the battery meter waits between updates.
1371 A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second
1372 (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
1373 meter once a minute.
1374
1375 xosview*batteryUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1376 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1377 formats work as follows:
1378
1379 float:
1380 Display the value as a floating point number.
1381 percent:
1382 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1383 autoscale:
1384 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1385 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1386
1387
1388 Wireless Meter Resources
1389
1390 xosview*wireless: (True or False)
1391 If True then xosview will display the link quality of each wire‐
1392 less connection. Note that the graph will *never* show up, if
1393 you don't have any wireless devices, or no wireless extensions
1394 in the kernel (/proc/net/wireless). Default is true.
1395
1396 xosview*PoorQualityColor: color
1397 This is the color for the quality field when between 0 and 6.
1398
1399 xosview*FairQualityColor: color
1400 This is the color for the quality field when between 7 and 14.
1401
1402 xosview*GoodQualityColor: color
1403 This is the color for the quality field when higher than 14.
1404
1405 xosview*wirelessUsedColor: color
1406 This is the background color.
1407
1408 xosview*wirelessPriority: priority
1409 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1410 tenths of a second that the wireless meter waits between
1411 updates. A value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per
1412 second (the fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to
1413 update the meter once a minute.
1414
1415 xosview*wirelessDecay: (True or False)
1416 If True then the wireless meter will be split vertically in two.
1417 The top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
1418 half will display a decaying average of the state.
1419
1420 xosview*wirelessUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1421 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1422 formats work as follows:
1423
1424 float:
1425 Display the value as a floating point number.
1426 percent:
1427 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1428 autoscale:
1429 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1430 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1431
1432
1433 Disk Meter Resources
1434
1435 xosview*disk: (True or False)
1436 If True then xosview will display a disk meter.
1437
1438 xosview*diskInColor: color
1439 The disk meter will use this color to display the reads field.
1440
1441 xosview*diskOutColor: color
1442 The disk meter will use this color to display the writes field.
1443
1444 xosview*diskIdleColor: color
1445 The disk meter will use this color to display the idle field.
1446
1447 xosview*diskBandwidth: bandwidth
1448 This number is used to specify the expected maximum bandwidth in
1449 bytes per second for the disk meter.
1450
1451 xosview*diskWriteColor: color
1452 This color will be used for the linux meter to show writes.
1453
1454 xosview*diskReadColor: color
1455 This color will be used for the linux meter to show reads.
1456
1457 xosview*diskPriority: priority
1458 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1459 tenths of a second that the disk meter waits between updates. A
1460 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
1461 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
1462 meter once a minute.
1463
1464 xosview*diskDecay: (True or False)
1465 If True then the disk meter will be split vertically in two.
1466 The top half will show the instantaneous state, while the bottom
1467 half will display a decaying average of the state.
1468
1469 xosview*diskGraph: (True or False)
1470 If this is set to True then the disk meter will be drawn as a
1471 horizontally scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses
1472 time.
1473
1474 xosview*diskUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1475 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1476 formats work as follows:
1477
1478 float:
1479 Display the value as a floating point number.
1480 percent:
1481 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1482 autoscale:
1483 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1484 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1485
1486
1487 RAID Meter Resources
1488
1489 xosview*RAID: (True or False)
1490 If True then xosview will display a RAID meter.
1491
1492 xosview*RAIDdevicecount: int
1493 Please enter your RAID device count (n) here or 0 if you don't
1494 have any supported RAID devices. xosview then will display n
1495 RAID state displays.
1496
1497 xosview*RAIDdiskOnlineColor: color
1498
1499 xosview*RAIDdiskFailureColor: color
1500 These colors will be used for indicating working/online or
1501 failed/offline disks. The order (from left to right) is the same
1502 as in /proc/mdstat.
1503
1504 xosview*RAIDresyncdoneColor: color
1505
1506 xosview*RAIDresynctodoColor: color
1507
1508 xosview*RAIDresynccompleteColor: color
1509 If a resync/rebuild of the RAID array is in progress, the "done"
1510 and "todo" colors will be used. If no rebuild/resync is running,
1511 then the "complete" color will be shown.
1512
1513 xosview*RAIDPriority: priority
1514 This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of
1515 tenths of a second that the RAID meter waits between updates. A
1516 value of 1 has xosview update the meter 10 times per second (the
1517 fastest). A value of 600 would cause xosview to update the
1518 meter once a minute.
1519
1520 xosview*RAIDUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
1521 This resource tells xosview how to display "used" labels. The
1522 formats work as follows:
1523
1524 float:
1525 Display the value as a floating point number.
1526 percent:
1527 Display the value as a percentage of the total.
1528 autoscale:
1529 Display the absolute value and automatically print the
1530 units (K, M, or G) as appropriate.
1531
1532
1534 This version of xosview is distributed from the following site:
1535
1536 http://www.pogo.org.uk/~mark/xosview/
1537
1538
1540 Mike Romberg <mike.romberg@noaa.gov>
1541 Original author, Linux and HPUX ports.
1542
1543 Brian Grayson <bgrayson@netbsd.org>
1544 NetBSD port and most of the nice enhancements for version 1.4,
1545 initial work on FreeBSD port.
1546
1547 Scott McNab <jedi@tartarus.uwa.edu.au>
1548 Added the scrolling graph mode.
1549
1550 Tom Pavel <pavel@slac.stanford.edu>
1551 Most of the FreeBSD support, more resource-handling improve‐
1552 ments.
1553
1554 Greg Onufer <exodus@cheers.bungi.com>
1555 SunOS port.
1556
1557 Stefan Eilemann <eilemann@gmail.com>
1558 IRIX 6.5 port.
1559
1560 Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
1561 FreeBSD libdevstat-based diskmeter support.
1562
1563 David W. Talmage <talmage@jefferson.cmf.nrl.navy.mil>
1564 Added battery-meter support to NetBSD.
1565
1566 Oleg Safiullin <form@openbsd.org>
1567 OpenBSD interrupt-meter support.
1568
1569 Werner Fink <werner@suse.de>
1570 Originator of the loadmeter.
1571
1572 Massimiliano Ghilardi <ghilardi@cibs.sns.it>
1573 Linux pagemeter.
1574
1575 Carsten Schabacker <cschaba@spock.central.de>
1576 Made extensions to the serial-meter.
1577
1578 Paal Beyer <pbeyer@online.no>
1579 Ported the linux memstat kernel module to linux-2.1
1580
1581 Jerome Forissier <forissier@isia.cma.fr>
1582 Author of the Linux SMP kernel patch which xosview uses to dis‐
1583 play meters for each CPU.
1584
1585 Tomer Klainer <mandor@cs.huji.ac.il>
1586 Initial port to BSDI.
1587
1588 Arno Augustin <Arno.Augustin@3SOFT.de>
1589 Solaris disk and network meters.
1590
1591 Alberto BARSELLA <ishark@lsh01.univ-lille1.fr>
1592 Fixes for linux diskmeter + ip_chains support
1593
1594 Thomas Waldmann <ThomasWaldmann@gmx.de>
1595 Linux raid meter, bitfieldmeter. Many cosmetic fixes.
1596
1597 Leopold Toetsch <lt@toetsch.at>
1598 Linux lms temp meter.
1599
1600 David O'Brien <obrien@nuxi.com>
1601 FreeBSD 4.* updates, and a few other suggestions.
1602
1603 Christos Zoulas <christos@netbsd.org>
1604 C++ standard compliance and other NetBSD fixes.
1605
1606 Tim Ehlers <tehlers@gwdg.de>
1607 Wireless Link-Meter for Linux.
1608
1609 Mark Hills <mark@pogo.org.uk>
1610 Bug fixes and general caretaking.
1611
1612 Tomi Tapper <tomi.o.tapper@student.jyu.fi>
1613 Temperature sensor, and FreeBSD updates.
1614
1615 Raymond S Brand (rsbx@acm.org)
1616 Misc fixes.
1617
1618 And many others who have sent in small fixes and improvements.
1619
1620
1621
16223rd Berkeley Distribution XOSVIEW(1)