inxi/inxi

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2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
#!/bin/bash
########################################################################
#### Script Name: inxi
#### version: 0.8.11
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#### Date: December 16 2008
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########################################################################
#### inxi is a fork of infobash 3.02, the original bash sys info script by locsmif
#### As time permits functionality improvements and recoding will occur.
####
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#### inxi, the universal, portable, system info script for irc.
#### Tested with Irssi, Xchat, Konversation, BitchX, KSirc, ircII,
#### Gaim/Pidgin, Weechat, KVIrc and Kopete.
2008-10-29 03:03:18 +00:00
#### Original infobash author and copyright holder:
#### Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Michiel de Boer a.k.a. locsmif
#### inxi version: Copyright (C) 2008 Warren Scott Rogers & Harald Hope
#### Further fixes (listed as known): Horst Tritremmel <hjt at sidux.com>
####
#### Current script home page: http://techpatterns.com/forums/about1131.html
#### Script svn: http://code.google.com/p/inxi
####
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#### This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
#### it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
#### the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
#### (at your option) any later version.
####
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#### This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
#### but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
#### MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
#### GNU General Public License for more details.
####
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#### You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
#### along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
####
#### If you don't understand what Free Software is, please read (or reread)
#### this page: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html
########################################################################
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#### DEPENDENCIES
#### bash >=2.05b(bash), df;readlink;stty;tr;uname;wc(coreutils),
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#### gawk(gawk), grep(grep), hostname(hostname), lspci(pciutils),
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#### ps;uptime(procps), glxinfo;xdpyinfo;xrandr(xbase-clients)
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#### Also the proc filesystem should be present and mounted
####
#### RECOMMENDS (Needed to run certain features)
#### For local interfaces/IP test: ifconfig (in net-tools for Debian systems)
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#### runlevel(sysvinit: to view current runlevel while not in X window system
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########################################################################
#### CONVENTIONS:
#### Indentation: TABS
#### Do not use `....`, those are totally non-reabable, use $(....)
#### Do not use one liner flow controls. The ONLY time you should use ; is in
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#### this single case: if [[ condition ]];then (ie, never: [[ condition ]] && statement)
####
#### All new code/methods must be in a function.
#### For all boolean tests, use 'true' / 'false'. Do NOT use 0 or 1 unless
#### it's a function return. Avoid complicated tests in the if condition itself.
####
#### VARIABLE/FUNCTION NAMING:
#### All variables should explain what they are, except counters like i, j
#### All variables MUST be initialized / declared explicitly
####, globals UPPER CASE, at top of script, SOME_VARIABLE='' (words separated by _ ).
#### Locals always with: local some_variable= (lower case, words separated by _ )
#### and at the top of the function.
####
#### Booleans should start with b_ or B_ and state clearly what is being tested
#### Arrays should start with a_ or A_
#### All functions should follow standard naming, ie, verb adjective noun, get_cpu_data
####
#### SPECIAL NOTES:
#### The color variable ${C2} must always be followed by a space unless you know what
#### character is going to be next for certain. Otherwise irc color codes can be accidentally
#### activated or altered.
####
#### For native script konversation support (check distro for correct konvi scripts path):
#### ln -s <path to inxi> /usr/share/apps/konversation/scripts/inxi
#### DCOP doesn't like \n, so avoid using it for most output unless required, as in error messages.
########################################################################
#### TESTING FLAGS
#### inxi supports advanced testing triggers to do various things, using -! <arg>
#### -! 1 - triggers default B_TESTING_1='true' to trigger some test or other
#### -! 2 - triggers default B_TESTING_2='true' to trigger some test or other
#### -! 3 - triggers B_TESTING_1='true' and B_TESTING_2='true'
#### -! 10 - triggers an update from the primary dev download server instead of svn
#### -! 11 - triggers an update from svn branch one - if present, of course
#### -! 12 - triggers an update from svn branch two - if present, of course
#### -! <http://......> - Triggers an update from whatever server you list.
########################################################################
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#### VARIABLES
########################################################################
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## NOTE: we can use hwinfo if it's available in all systems, or most, to get
## a lot more data and verbosity levels going
### Variable initializations: null values
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CMDL_MAX=''
COLOR_SCHEME=''
COLOR_SCHEME_SET=''
IRC_CLIENT=''
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=''
### primary data array holders
A_AUDIO_DATA=''
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A_CMDL=''
A_CPU_CORE_DATA=''
A_CPU_DATA=''
A_DEBUG_BUFFER=''
A_GFX_CARD_DATA=''
A_GLX_DATA=''
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A_HDD_DATA=''
A_INTERFACES_DATA=''
A_NETWORK_DATA=''
A_PARTITION_DATA=''
A_X_DATA=''
### Boolean true/false globals
# flag to allow distro maintainers to turn off update features. If false, turns off
# -U and -! testing/advanced update options, as well as removing the -U help menu item
B_ALLOW_UPDATE='true'
# triggers full display of cpu flags
B_CPU_FLAGS_FULL='false'
# Debug flood override: make 'true' to allow long debug output
B_DEBUG_FLOOD='false'
# show extra output data
B_EXTRA_DATA='false'
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
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B_SHOW_DISK='false'
# override certain errors due to currupted data
B_HANDLE_CORRUPT_DATA='false'
# Running in a shell? Defaults to false, and is determined later.
B_RUNNING_IN_SHELL='false'
# this sets the debug buffer
B_SCRIPT_UP='false'
# Show sound card data
B_SHOW_AUDIO='false'
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
B_SHOW_CPU='false'
# Show full hard disk output
B_SHOW_FULL_HDD='false'
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
B_SHOW_GRAPHICS='false'
# Set this to 'false' to avoid printing the hostname
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B_SHOW_HOST='true'
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
B_SHOW_INFO='false'
B_SHOW_IP='false'
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
B_SHOW_NETWORK='false'
# either -v > 3 or -P will show partitions
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B_SHOW_PARTITIONS='false'
B_SHOW_PARTITIONS_FULL='false'
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# triggers only short inxi output
B_SHOW_SHORT_OUTPUT='false'
B_SHOW_SYSTEM='false'
# triggers various debugging and new option testing
B_TESTING_1='false'
B_TESTING_2='false'
# Test for X running
B_X_RUNNING='false'
if [[ -n $DISPLAY ]];then
B_X_RUNNING='true'
fi
### Variable initializations: constants
DCOPOBJ="default"
DEBUG=0 # Set debug levels from 1-10
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# Debug Buffer Index, index into a debug buffer storing debug messages until inxi is 'all up'
DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX=0
## note: the debugger rerouting to /dev/null has been moved to the end of the get_parameters function
## so -@[number] debug levels can be set if there is a failure, otherwise you can't even see the errors
2008-10-31 20:20:44 +00:00
# Defaults to 2, make this 1 for normal, 0 for no colorcodes at all. Set to any other valid scheme you like.
# Same as runtime parameter.
DEFAULT_SCHEME=2
# Default indentation level
INDENT=10
# default to false, no konversation found, 1 is /cmd inxi start, 2 is native konvi script mode
KONVI=0
# NO_CPU_COUNT=0 # Wether or not the string "dual" or similar is found in cpuinfo output. If so, avoid dups.
# This is a variable that controls how many parameters inxi will parse in a /proc/<pid>/cmdline file before stopping.
PARAMETER_LIMIT=30
2008-10-29 21:47:13 +00:00
SCHEME=0 # set default scheme
# SHOW_IRC=1 to avoid showing the irc client version number, or SHOW_IRC=0 to disable client information completely.
SHOW_IRC=2
2008-11-01 23:29:22 +00:00
# Verbosity level defaults to 0, this can also be set with -v0, -v2, -v3, etc as a parameter.
VERBOSITY_LEVEL=0
2008-11-01 23:29:22 +00:00
# Supported number of verbosity levels, including 0
VERBOSITY_LEVELS=5
# Clear nullglob, because it creates unpredictable situations with IFS=$'\n' ARR=($VAR) IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
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# type constructs. Stuff like [rev a1] is now seen as a glob expansion pattern, and fails, and
# therefore results in nothing. Tricky as fuck.
shopt -u nullglob
## info on bash built in: $IFS - http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/internalvariables.html
# Backup the current Internal Field Separator
ORIGINAL_IFS="$IFS"
# These two determine separators in single line output, to force irc clients not to break off sections
FL1='-'
FL2=''
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### Script names/paths
SCRIPT_NAME="inxi"
SCRIPT_PATH=$( dirname $0 )
SCRIPT_VERSION_NUMBER=$( grep -im 1 'version:' $SCRIPT_PATH/$SCRIPT_NAME | gawk '{print $3}' )
SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD='http://inxi.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/'
SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD_BRANCH_1='http://inxi.googlecode.com/svn/branches/one/'
SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD_BRANCH_2='http://inxi.googlecode.com/svn/branches/two/'
SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD_DEV='http://smxi.org/test/'
KONVI_CFG="konversation/scripts/$SCRIPT_NAME.conf" # relative path to $(kde-config --path data)
### Script Localization
# Make sure every program speaks English.
LC_ALL="C"
export LC_ALL
### Output Colors
# A more elegant way to have a scheme that doesn't print color codes (neither ANSI nor mIRC) at all. See below.
unset EMPTY
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# DGREY BLACK RED DRED GREEN DGREEN YELLOW DYELLOW
ANSI_COLORS="       "
IRC_COLORS=" \x0314 \x0301 \x0304 \x0305 \x0309 \x0303 \x0308 \x0307"
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# BLUE DBLUE MAGENTA DMAGENTA CYAN DCYAN WHITE GREY NORMAL
ANSI_COLORS="$ANSI_COLORS         "
IRC_COLORS=" $IRC_COLORS \x0312 \x0302 \x0313 \x0306 \x0311 \x0310 \x0300 \x0315 \x03"
#ANSI_COLORS=($ANSI_COLORS); IRC_COLORS=($IRC_COLORS)
A_COLORS_AVAILABLE=( DGREY BLACK RED DRED GREEN DGREEN YELLOW DYELLOW BLUE DBLUE MAGENTA DMAGENTA CYAN DCYAN WHITE GREY NORMAL )
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
# See above for notes on EMPTY
A_COLOR_SCHEMES=( EMPTY,EMPTY,EMPTY NORMAL,NORMAL,NORMAL BLUE,NORMAL,NORMAL GREEN,YELLOW,NORMAL DYELLOW,NORMAL,NORMAL CYAN,BLUE,NORMAL RED,NORMAL,NORMAL GREEN,NORMAL,NORMAL YELLOW,NORMAL,NORMAL GREEN,DGREEN,NORMAL BLUE,RED,NORMAL BLUE,NORMAL,RED YELLOW,WHITE,GREEN BLUE,NORMAL,GREEN DCYAN,NORMAL,DMAGENTA )
2008-10-31 20:20:44 +00:00
## Actual color variables
C1=''
C2=''
CN=''
### Distro Data
# In cases of derived distros where the version file of the base distro can also be found under /etc,
# the derived distro's version file should go first. (Such as with Sabayon / Gentoo)
DISTROS_DERIVED="antix-version kanotix-version knoppix-version redhat-release sabayon-release sidux-version turbolinux-release zenwalk-version"
# debian_version excluded from DISTROS_PRIMARY so Debian can fall through to /etc/issue detection. Same goes for Ubuntu.
DISTROS_EXCLUDE_LIST="debian_version ubuntu_version"
DISTROS_PRIMARY="gentoo-release mandrake-release redhat-release slackware-version SuSE-release"
### Bans Data
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# Precede a banword with $'\2' to prevent it from being subject to automated escaping by the make_ban_lists routine
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# $'\1' gets weird results :
# user@host $ ARR=($'\x01'"one two" three four); echo ${ARR[0]} | hd -v
# 00000000 01 01 6f 6e 65 20 74 77 6f 0a |..one two.|
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A_NORMAL_BANS=( corporation communications gmbh technologies technology group $'\2'"\<ltd\>" ltd. $'\2'"\<inc\>" inc. $'\2'\<co\> co. "(tm)" "(r)" $'\2'"\(rev ..\)" )
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A_CPU_BANS=( @ cpu deca 'dual core' 'tri core' 'quad core' ennea genuine hepta hexa multi octa penta 'processor' processor single triple $'\2'"[0-9.]+ *[MmGg][Hh][Zz]" )
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# after processing, the ban arrays will be put into these:
BAN_LIST_NORMAL=''
BAN_LIST_CPU=''
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### Source global config overrides
if [[ -s /etc/$SCRIPT_NAME.conf ]];then
source /etc/$SCRIPT_NAME.conf
fi
# Source user config overrides
if [[ -s $HOME/.$SCRIPT_NAME ]];then
source $HOME/.$SCRIPT_NAME
fi
# WARNING: In the main part below (search for 'KONVI')
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# there's a check for Konversation-specific config files.
# Any one of these can override the above if inxi is run
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# from Konversation!
########################################################################
#### UTILITY FUNCTIONS
########################################################################
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### error handler and debugger
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
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# Error handling
# args: $1 - error number; $2 - optional, extra information
error_handler()
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{
local error_message=''
# assemble the error message
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case $1 in
2) error_message="large flood danger, debug buffer full!"
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;;
3) error_message="unsupported color scheme number: $2"
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;;
4) error_message="unsupported verbosity level: $2"
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;;
5) error_message="dependency not met: $2 not found in path"
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;;
6) error_message="/proc not found! Quitting..."
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;;
7) error_message="One of the options you entered in your script parameters: $2\nIs not supported. For supported options, check the help menu: $SCRIPT_NAME -h"
;;
8) error_message="the self-updater failed, wget exited with error: $2.\nYou probably need to be root.\nHint, to make for easy updates without being root, do: chown <user name> $SCRIPT_PATH/$SCRIPT_NAME"
;;
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
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9) error_message="unsupported debugging level: $2"
;;
10)
error_message="the alt download url you provided: $2\nappears to be wrong, download aborted. Please note, the url\nneeds to end in /, without $SCRIPT_NAME, like: http://yoursite.com/downloads/"
;;
11)
error_message="unsupported testing option argument: -! $2"
;;
12)
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error_message="the svn branch download url: $2\nappears to be empty currently. Make sure there is an actual svn branch version\nactive before you try this again. Check http://code.google.com/p/inxi\nto verify the branch status."
;;
*) error_message="error unknown: $@"
set -- 99
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;;
esac
# then print it and exit
print_screen_output "Error $1: $error_message"
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exit $1
}
# prior to script up set, pack the data into an array
# then we'll print it out later.
# args: $1 - $@ debugging string text
script_debugger()
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{
if [[ $B_SCRIPT_UP == 'true' ]];then
# only return if debugger is off and no pre start up errors have occured
if [[ $DEBUG -eq 0 && $DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX -eq 0 ]];then
return 0
# print out the stored debugging information if errors occured
elif [[ $DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX -gt 0 ]];then
for (( DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX=0; DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX < ${#A_DEBUG_BUFFER[@]}; DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX++ ))
do
print_screen_output "${A_DEBUG_BUFFER[$DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX]}"
done
DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX=0
fi
# or print out normal debugger messages if debugger is on
if [[ $DEBUG -gt 0 ]];then
print_screen_output "$1"
fi
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else
if [[ $B_DEBUG_FLOOD == 'true' && $DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX -gt 10 ]];then
error_handler 2
# this case stores the data for later printout, will print out only
# at B_SCRIPT_UP == 'true' if array index > 0
else
A_DEBUG_BUFFER[$DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX]="$1"
# increment count for next pre script up debugging error
(( DEBUG_BUFFER_INDEX++ ))
fi
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fi
}
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### print / output cleaners
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
# inxi speaks through here. When run by Konversation script alias mode, uses DCOP
# for dcop to work, must use 'say' operator, AND colors must be evaluated by echo -e
# note: dcop does not seem able to handle \n so that's being stripped out and replaced with space.
print_screen_output()
{
# the double quotes are needed to avoid losing whitespace in data when certain output types are used
local print_data="$( echo -e "$1" )"
if [[ $DEBUG -gt 5 ]];then
if [[ $KONVI -eq 1 ]];then
# konvi doesn't seem to like \n characters, it just prints them literally
print_data="$( tr '\n' ' ' <<< "$print_data" )"
dcop "$DCPORT" "$DCOPOBJ" say "$DCSERVER" "$DCTARGET" "konvi='$KONVI' saying : '$print_data'"
elif [[ $KONVI -eq 2 ]];then
echo "konvi='$KONVI' saying : '$print_data'"
else
echo "printing out: '$print_data'"
fi
fi
if [[ $KONVI -eq 1 ]];then
print_data="$( tr '\n' ' ' <<< "$print_data" )"
dcop "$DCPORT" "$DCOPOBJ" say "$DCSERVER" "$DCTARGET" "$print_data"
else
# the -n is needed to avoid double spacing of output in terminal
echo -ne "$print_data\n"
fi
}
## this handles all verbose line construction with indentation/line starter
## args: $1 - null (, actually: " ") or line starter; $2 - line content
create_print_line()
{
printf "${C1}%-${INDENT}s${C2} %s" "$1" "$2"
}
# this removes newline and pipes.
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# args: $1 - string to clean
remove_erroneous_chars()
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{
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## RS is input record separator
## gsub is substitute;
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gawk '
BEGIN { RS="" } {
gsub(/\n$/,"") ## (newline; end of string) with (nothing)
gsub(/\n/," "); ## (newline) with (space)
gsub(/^ *| *$/, "") ## (pipe char) with (nothing)
gsub(/ +/, " ") ## ( +) with (space)
gsub(/ [ ]+/, " ") ## ([ ]+) with (space)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "") ## (pipe char) with (nothing)
printf $0
}' "$1" ## prints (returns) cleaned input
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}
## note: this is now running inside each gawk sequence directly to avoid exiting gawk
## looping in bash through arrays, then re-entering gawk to clean up, then writing back to array
## in bash. For now I'll leave this here because there's still some interesting stuff to get re methods
# Enforce boilerplate and buzzword filters
# args: $1 - BAN_LIST_NORMAL/BAN_LIST_CPU; $2 - string to sanitize
sanitize_characters()
{
# Cannot use strong quotes to unquote a string with pipes in it!
# bash will interpret the |'s as usual and try to run a subshell!
# Using weak quotes instead, or use '"..."'
echo "$2" | gawk "
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 } {
gsub(/${!1}/,\"\")
gsub(/ [ ]+/,\" \") ## ([ ]+) with (space)
gsub(/^ +| +$/,\"\") ## (pipe char) with (nothing)
print ## prints (returns) cleaned input
}"
}
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### basic tests
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
# Determine if any of the absolutely necessary tools are absent
check_script_depends()
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{
local app_name='' app_data=''
# bc removed from deps for now
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local depends="df free gawk grep hostname lspci ps readlink tr uname uptime wc"
if [[ ! -d /proc/ ]];then
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error_handler 6
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fi
if [[ $B_X_RUNNING == 'true' ]];then
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for app_name in xrandr xdpyinfo glxinfo
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do
app_data=$( type -p $app_name )
if [[ -z $app_data ]];then
script_debugger "Resuming in non X mode: $app_name not found in path"
B_X_RUNNING='false'
break
fi
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done
fi
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app_name=''
for app_name in $depends
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do
app_data=$( type -p $app_name )
if [[ -z $app_data ]];then
error_handler 5 "$app_name"
fi
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done
}
# Filter boilerplate & buzzwords.
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# args: $1 - quoted: "$@" array of ban terms
make_ban_lists()
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{
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local ban_list=''
# Iterate over $@
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## note: this is a weird, non-intuitive method, needs some documentation or rewriting
## if you declare ban_string it stops working, have to read up on this
for ban_string
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do
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# echo "term=\"$ban_string\"" # >&2
if [[ ${ban_string:0:1} = $'\2' ]];then
ban_list="${ban_list}${ban_list+|}${ban_string:1:${#ban_string}-1}"
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else
# Automatically escapes [ ] ( ) . and +
ban_list="${ban_list}${ban_list+|}$( echo "$ban_string" | gawk '{
gsub(/([\[\]+().])/,"\\\\&")
print
}' )"
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fi
done
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echo "$ban_list"
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}
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# make_ban_lists "${A_CPU_BANS[@]}";exit
# Set the colorscheme
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# args: $1 = <scheme number>|<"none">
set_color_scheme()
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{
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local i='' script_colors='' color_codes=''
if [[ $1 -ge ${#A_COLOR_SCHEMES[@]} ]];then
set -- 1
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fi
# Set a global variable to allow checking for chosen scheme later
SCHEME="$1"
if [[ $B_RUNNING_IN_SHELL == 'true' ]];then
color_codes=( $ANSI_COLORS )
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else
color_codes=( $IRC_COLORS )
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fi
for (( i=0; i < ${#A_COLORS_AVAILABLE[@]}; i++ ))
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do
eval "${A_COLORS_AVAILABLE[i]}=\"${color_codes[i]}\""
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done
IFS=","
script_colors=( ${A_COLOR_SCHEMES[$1]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
# then assign the colors globally
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C1="${!script_colors[0]}"
C2="${!script_colors[1]}"
CN="${!script_colors[2]}"
# ((COLOR_SCHEME++)) ## note: why is this? ##
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}
# Parse the null separated commandline under /proc/<pid passed in $1>/cmdline
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# args: $1 - $PPID
get_cmdline()
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{
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local i=0 ppid=$1
if [[ ! -e /proc/$ppid/cmdline ]];then
echo 0
return
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fi
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##print_screen_output "Marker"
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##print_screen_output "\$ppid='$ppid' -=- $(< /proc/$ppid/cmdline)"
unset A_CMDL
## note: need to figure this one out, and ideally clean it up and make it readable
while read -d $'\0' L && [ "$i" -lt 32 ]
do
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A_CMDL[i++]="$L" ## note: make sure this is valid - What does L mean? ##
done < /proc/$ppid/cmdline
##print_screen_output "\$i='$i'"
if [[ $i -eq 0 ]];then
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A_CMDL[0]=$(< /proc/$ppid/cmdline)
if [[ -n ${A_CMDL[0]} ]];then
i=1
fi
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fi
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CMDL_MAX=$i
}
# Get the parameters. Note: standard options should be lower case, advanced or testing, upper
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# args: $1 - full script startup args: $@
get_parameters()
{
local opt='' wget_test='' update_flags='U!:'
local use_short='true' # this is needed to trigger short output, every v/d/F/line trigger sets this false
if [[ $B_ALLOW_UPDATE == 'false' ]];then
update_flags=''
fi
# the short form only runs if no args output args are used
# no need to run through these if there are no args
if [[ -n $1 ]];then
while getopts Ac:CdDfFGhHiINpPSv:Vx%@:${update_flags} opt
do
case $opt in
A) B_SHOW_AUDIO='true'
use_short='false'
;;
c) if [[ -n $( egrep '^[0-9][0-9]?$' <<< $OPTARG ) ]];then
COLOR_SCHEME_SET='true'
## note: not sure about this, you'd think user values should be overridden, but
## we'll leave this for now
if [[ -z $COLOR_SCHEME ]];then
set_color_scheme "$OPTARG"
fi
else
error_handler 3 "$OPTARG"
fi
;;
C) B_SHOW_CPU='true'
use_short='false'
;;
d) VERBOSITY_LEVEL=1
use_short='false'
;;
D) B_SHOW_DISK='true'
use_short='false'
;;
f) B_SHOW_CPU='true'
B_CPU_FLAGS_FULL='true'
use_short='false'
;;
F) VERBOSITY_LEVEL=$VERBOSITY_LEVELS
B_EXTRA_DATA='true'
B_SHOW_DISK='true'
B_SHOW_PARTITIONS='true'
B_SHOW_AUDIO='true'
use_short='false'
;;
G) B_SHOW_GRAPHICS='true'
use_short='false'
;;
i) B_SHOW_IP='true'
B_SHOW_NETWORK='true'
use_short='false'
;;
I) B_SHOW_INFO='true'
use_short='false'
;;
N) B_SHOW_NETWORK='true'
use_short='false'
;;
p) B_SHOW_PARTITIONS_FULL='true'
B_SHOW_PARTITIONS='true'
use_short='false'
;;
P) B_SHOW_PARTITIONS='true'
use_short='false'
;;
S) B_SHOW_SYSTEM='true'
use_short='false'
;;
v) if [[ -n $( egrep "^[0-9][0-9]?$" <<< $OPTARG ) && $OPTARG -le $VERBOSITY_LEVELS ]];then
VERBOSITY_LEVEL="$OPTARG"
if [[ $OPTARG -gt 0 ]];then
use_short='false'
fi
else
error_handler 4 "$OPTARG"
fi
;;
U) script_self_updater "$SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD" 'svn server'
;;
V) print_version_info
exit 0
;;
x) B_EXTRA_DATA='true'
;;
h) show_options
exit 0
;;
H) show_options 'full'
exit 0
;;
## debuggers and testing tools
%) B_HANDLE_CORRUPT_DATA='true'
;;
@) if [[ -n $( egrep "^([1-9]|10)$" <<< $OPTARG ) ]];then
DEBUG=$OPTARG
exec 2>&1
else
error_handler 9 "$OPTARG"
fi
;;
!) # test for various supported methods
case $OPTARG in
1) B_TESTING_1='true'
;;
2) B_TESTING_2='true'
;;
3) B_TESTING_1='true'
B_TESTING_2='true'
;;
10) script_self_updater "$SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD_DEV" 'dev server'
;;
11) script_self_updater "$SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD_BRANCH_1" 'svn: branch one server'
;;
12) script_self_updater "$SCRIPT_DOWNLOAD_BRANCH_2" 'svn: branch two server'
;;
http*)
script_self_updater "$OPTARG" 'alt server'
;;
*) error_handler 11 "$OPTARG"
;;
esac
;;
*) error_handler 7 "$1"
;;
esac
done
fi
## this must occur here so you can use the debugging flag to show errors
## Reroute all error messages to the bitbucket (if not debugging)
if [[ $DEBUG -eq 0 ]];then
exec 2>/dev/null
fi
#((DEBUG)) && exec 2>&1 # This is for debugging konversation
# after all the args have been processed, if no long output args used, run short output
if [[ $use_short == 'true' ]];then
B_SHOW_SHORT_OUTPUT='true'
fi
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}
## print out help menu, not including Testing or Debugger stuff because it's not needed
2008-10-29 03:22:16 +00:00
show_options()
{
local color_scheme_count=${#A_COLOR_SCHEMES[@]}
print_screen_output "$SCRIPT_NAME supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them"
print_screen_output "one by one: Examples: $SCRIPT_NAME -v4 -c6 OR $SCRIPT_NAME -dDc 6"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_screen_output ""
print_screen_output "If you start $SCRIPT_NAME with no arguments, it will show the short form."
print_screen_output "The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line:"
print_screen_output "A,C,D,G,I,N,P,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see."
print_screen_output "If you use them with a -v level (or -d), it will show the full output for that line "
print_screen_output "along with the output for the chosen verbosity level."
2008-10-31 04:31:56 +00:00
print_screen_output "- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -"
print_screen_output "Output Control Options:"
print_screen_output "-A Show audio/sound card information."
print_screen_output "-c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required."
print_screen_output " Supported schemes: 0-$color_scheme_count Example: $SCRIPT_NAME -c 11"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_screen_output "-C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed."
print_screen_output "-d Default output verbosity level, same as: $SCRIPT_NAME -v 1"
print_screen_output "-D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda ST380817AS 80.0GB."
print_screen_output "-f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. Not shown with -F to avoid spamming."
print_screen_output "-F Show Full, all possible, output for $SCRIPT_NAME."
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_screen_output "-G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers)."
print_screen_output "-i Show Wan IP address, and shows local interfaces (requires ifconfig network tool)."
print_screen_output " Not shown with -F for user security reasons, you shouldn't paste your local/wan IP."
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_screen_output "-I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version."
print_screen_output "-N Show network card information."
print_screen_output "-p Show full partition information (-P plus all other detected partitions)."
print_screen_output " If any of your partitions have spaces in their names, they will not show with -p"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_screen_output "-P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data)."
print_screen_output " Shows, if detected: / /boot /home /tmp /usr /var. Use -p for All partitions."
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_screen_output "-S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro"
2008-11-01 21:45:17 +00:00
print_screen_output "-v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required."
print_screen_output " Supported levels: 0-${VERBOSITY_LEVELS} Example: $SCRIPT_NAME -v 4"
print_screen_output " 0 - short output, same as: $SCRIPT_NAME"
print_screen_output " 1 - basic verbose, same as: $SCRIPT_NAME -d"
print_screen_output " 2 - Also show networking card data"
print_screen_output " 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected."
print_screen_output " 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot"
print_screen_output " 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds; shows audio card."
print_screen_output "-x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu; driver version (if available) for network/audio."
print_screen_output " Only works with verbose or line output."
print_screen_output ""
print_screen_output "Additional Options:"
print_screen_output "-h - this help menu."
if [[ $B_ALLOW_UPDATE == 'true' ]];then
print_screen_output "-U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you"
fi
print_screen_output " must be root to update, otherwise user is fine."
print_screen_output "-V $SCRIPT_NAME version information. Prints information then exits."
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_screen_output "-% Overrides defective or corrupted data."
print_screen_output "-@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10."
if [[ $1 == 'full' ]];then
print_screen_output ""
print_screen_output "Developer and Testing Options (Advanced):"
print_screen_output "-! 1 - Sets testing flag B_TESTING_1='true' to trigger testing condition 1."
print_screen_output "-! 2 - Sets testing flag B_TESTING_2='true' to trigger testing condition 2."
print_screen_output "-! 3 - Sets flags B_TESTING_1='true' and B_TESTING_2='true'."
print_screen_output "-! 10 - Triggers an update from the primary dev download server instead of svn."
print_screen_output "-! 11 - Triggers an update from svn branch one - if present, of course."
print_screen_output "-! 12 - Triggers an update from svn branch two - if present, of course."
print_screen_output "-! <http://......> - Triggers an update from whatever server you list."
print_screen_output ""
2008-11-19 19:59:05 +00:00
fi
print_screen_output ""
2008-10-29 03:22:16 +00:00
}
## print out version information for -V/--version
print_version_info()
{
local last_modified=$( grep -im 1 'date:' $SCRIPT_PATH/$SCRIPT_NAME | gawk '{print $3,$4,$5}' )
2008-10-31 04:27:00 +00:00
print_screen_output "$SCRIPT_NAME - the universal, portable, system info script for irc."
print_screen_output "Version: $SCRIPT_VERSION_NUMBER"
print_screen_output "Script Last Modified: $last_modified"
print_screen_output "Script Location: $SCRIPT_PATH"
print_screen_output ""
print_screen_output "Tested with Irssi, Xchat, Konversation, BitchX, KSirc, ircII,"
print_screen_output "Gaim/Pidgin, Weechat, KVIrc and Kopete."
print_screen_output ""
print_screen_output "This script is a fork of Infobash 3.02, which is:"
print_screen_output "Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Michiel de Boer a.k.a. locsmif"
print_screen_output "Subsequent changes and modifications (after Infobash 3.02) are:"
print_screen_output "Copyright (C) 2008 Scott Rogers, Harald Hope, aka trash80 & h2"
print_screen_output ""
print_screen_output "This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify"
print_screen_output "it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by"
print_screen_output "the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or"
print_screen_output "(at your option) any later version."
}
# args: $1 - download url, not including file name; $2 - string to print out
# note that $1 must end in / to properly construct the url path
script_self_updater()
{
local wget_error=0
2008-11-04 20:09:09 +00:00
print_screen_output "Starting $SCRIPT_NAME self updater."
print_screen_output "Currently running $SCRIPT_NAME version number: $SCRIPT_VERSION_NUMBER"
print_screen_output "Updating $SCRIPT_NAME in $SCRIPT_PATH using $2 as download source..."
# first test if path is good, need to make sure it's good because we're -O overwriting file
wget -q --spider $1$SCRIPT_NAME || wget_error=$?
# then do the actual download
if [[ $wget_error -eq 0 ]];then
wget -q -O $SCRIPT_PATH/$SCRIPT_NAME $1$SCRIPT_NAME || wget_error=$?
if [[ $wget_error -eq 0 ]];then
SCRIPT_VERSION_NUMBER=$( grep -im 1 'version:' $SCRIPT_PATH/$SCRIPT_NAME | gawk '{print $3}' )
print_screen_output "Successfully updated to $2 version: $SCRIPT_VERSION_NUMBER"
print_screen_output "To run the new version, just start $SCRIPT_NAME again."
exit 0
fi
fi
# now run the error handlers on any wget failure
if [[ $wget_error -gt 0 ]];then
if [[ $2 == 'svn server' ]];then
error_handler 8 "$wget_error"
elif [[ $2 == 'alt server' ]];then
error_handler 10 "$1"
else
error_handler 12 "$1"
fi
fi
}
########################################################################
#### MAIN FUNCTIONS
########################################################################
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### initial startup stuff
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
# Determine where inxi was run from, set IRC_CLIENT and IRC_CLIENT_VERSION
get_start_client()
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
{
local irc_client_path='' irc_client_path_lower='' non_native_konvi='' i=''
local b_non_native_app='false' pppid='' app_working_name=''
if tty >/dev/null;then
IRC_CLIENT='Shell'
unset IRC_CLIENT_VERSION
B_RUNNING_IN_SHELL='true'
elif [[ -n $PPID && -f /proc/$PPID/exe ]];then
irc_client_path=$( readlink /proc/$PPID/exe )
irc_client_path_lower=$( tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' <<< $irc_client_path )
app_working_name=$( basename $irc_client_path_lower )
# handles the xchat/sh/bash/dash cases, and the konversation/perl cases, where clients
# report themselves as perl or unknown shell. IE: when konversation starts inxi
# from inside itself, as a script, the parent is konversation/xchat, not perl/bash etc
# note: perl can report as: perl5.10.0, so it needs wildcard handling
case $app_working_name in
bash|dash|sh|perl*) # We want to know who wrapped it into the shell or perl.
pppid="$( ps -p $PPID -o ppid --no-headers | sed 's/ //g' )"
if [[ -n $pppid && -f /proc/$pppid/exe ]];then
irc_client_path="$( readlink /proc/$pppid/exe )"
irc_client_path_lower="$( tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' <<< $irc_client_path )"
app_working_name=$( basename $irc_client_path_lower )
b_non_native_app='true'
fi
;;
esac
# replacing loose detection with tight detection, bugs will be handled with app names
# as they appear.
case $app_working_name in
irssi-text|irssi)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk 'NR == 1 { print $2 }' )"
IRC_CLIENT="Irssi"
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;;
konversation)
# this is necessary to avoid the dcop errors from starting inxi as a /cmd started script
if [[ $b_non_native_app == 'true' ]];then
KONVI=2
else
KONVI=1
fi
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk '
/Konversation:/ {
for ( i=2; i<=NF; i++ ) {
if (i == NF) {
print $i
}
else {
printf $i" "
}
}
exit
}' )"
T=($IRC_CLIENT_VERSION)
if [[ ${T[0]} == *+* ]];then
# < Sho_> locsmif: The version numbers of SVN versions look like this:
# "<version number of last release>+ #<build number", i.e. "1.0+ #3177" ...
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
# for releases we remove the + and build number, i.e. "1.0" or soon "1.0.1"
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" CVS $IRC_CLIENT_VERSION"
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T2="${T[0]/+/}"
else
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" ${T[0]}"
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
T2="${T[0]}"
fi
# Remove any dots except the first, and make sure there are no trailing zeroes,
T2=$( echo "$T2" | gawk '
{
sub(/\./, " ")
gsub(/\./, "")
sub(/ /, ".")
printf("%g\n", $0)
}' )
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
# Since Konversation 1.0, the DCOP interface has changed a bit: dcop "$DCPORT" Konversation ..etc
# becomes : dcop "$DCPORT" default ... or dcop "$DCPORT" irc ..etc. So we check for versions smaller
# than 1 and change the DCOP parameter/object accordingly.
if [[ ${T2} -lt 1 ]];then
DCOPOBJ="Konversation"
fi
IRC_CLIENT="Konversation"
;;
xchat-gnome)
2008-11-09 03:59:27 +00:00
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk 'NR == 1 { print $2 }' )"
IRC_CLIENT="X-Chat-Gnome"
;;
xchat)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk 'NR == 1 { print $2 }' )"
IRC_CLIENT="X-Chat"
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
;;
bitchx)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk '
/Version/ {
a=tolower($2)
gsub(/[()]|bitchx-/,"",a)
print a
exit
}
$2 == "version" {
a=tolower($3)
sub(/bitchx-/,"",a)
print a
exit
}' )"
IRC_CLIENT="BitchX"
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
;;
ircii)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk 'NR == 1 { print $3 }' )"
IRC_CLIENT="ircII"
;;
gaim)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk 'NR == 1 { print $2 }' )"
IRC_CLIENT="Gaim"
;;
pidgin)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v | gawk 'NR == 1 { print $2 }' )"
IRC_CLIENT="Pidgin"
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
;;
weechat-curses)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v) "
IRC_CLIENT="Weechat"
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
;;
kvirc)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( $irc_client_path -v 2>&1 | gawk '{
for ( i=2; i<=NF; i++) {
if (i==NF) {
print $i
}
else {
printf $i" "
}
}
exit
}' )"
IRC_CLIENT="KVIrc"
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;;
kopete)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( kopete -v | gawk '
/Kopete:/ {
print $2
exit
}' )"
IRC_CLIENT="Kopete"
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;;
perl*|ksirc|dsirc)
unset IRC_CLIENT_VERSION
# KSirc is one of the possibilities now. KSirc is a wrapper around dsirc, a perl client
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get_cmdline $PPID
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for (( i=0; i <= $CMDL_MAX; i++ ))
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do
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case ${A_CMDL[i]} in
*dsirc*)
IRC_CLIENT="KSirc"
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# Dynamic runpath detection is too complex with KSirc, because KSirc is started from
# kdeinit. /proc/<pid of the grandparent of this process>/exe is a link to /usr/bin/kdeinit
# with one parameter which contains parameters separated by spaces(??), first param being KSirc.
# Then, KSirc runs dsirc as the perl irc script and wraps around it. When /exec is executed,
# dsirc is the program that runs inxi, therefore that is the parent process that we see.
# You can imagine how hosed I am if I try to make inxi find out dynamically with which path
2008-10-28 02:07:37 +00:00
# KSirc was run by browsing up the process tree in /proc. That alone is straightjacket material.
# (KSirc sucks anyway ;)
IRC_CLIENT_VERSION=" $( ksirc -v | gawk '
/KSirc:/ {
print $2
exit
}' )"
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break
;;
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esac
done
if [[ -z $IRC_CLIENT_VERSION ]];then
IRC_CLIENT="Unknown Perl client"
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fi
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;;
bash|dash|sh)
unset IRC_CLIENT_VERSION
IRC_CLIENT="Shell wrapper"
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;;
*)
IRC_CLIENT="Unknown : ${irc_client_path##*/}"
unset IRC_CLIENT_VERSION
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;;
esac
if [[ $SHOW_IRC -lt 2 ]];then
unset IRC_CLIENT_VERSION
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fi
else
IRC_CLIENT="PPID=\"$PPID\" - empty?"
unset IRC_CLIENT_VERSION
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fi
}
## this is a mishmash and will be mostly moved to other places over time, for now
## it's just a holder for some misc stuff that has to happen
set_calculated_variables()
{
local path='' sys_path='' added_path='' b_path_found=''
2008-10-29 03:03:18 +00:00
# Extra path variable to make execute failures less likely, merged below
local extra_paths="/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin"
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# Fallback paths put into $extra_paths; This might, among others, help on gentoo.
# Now, create a difference of $PATH and $extra_paths and add that to $PATH:
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IFS=":"
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for path in $extra_paths
do
b_path_found='false'
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for sys_path in $PATH
do
if [[ $path == $sys_path ]];then
b_path_found='true'
fi
done
if [[ $b_path_found == 'false' ]];then
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added_path="$added_path:$path"
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fi
done
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
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PATH="${PATH}${added_path}"
##echo "PATH='$PATH'"
##/bin/sh -c 'echo "PATH in subshell=\"$PATH\""'
# Do this after sourcing of config overrides so user can customize banwords
BAN_LIST_NORMAL=$( make_ban_lists "${A_NORMAL_BANS[@]}" ) # Contrary to my previous belief, "${ARR[@]}" passes a quoted list, not one string
BAN_LIST_CPU=$( make_ban_lists "${A_CPU_BANS[@]}" )
##echo "BAN_LIST_NORMAL='$BAN_LIST_NORMAL'"
}
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#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### get data types
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
## create array of sound cards installed on system, and if found, use asound data as well
get_audio_data()
{
local i='' alsa_data='' alsa_driver='' device_count=''
2008-11-06 21:18:11 +00:00
IFS=$'\n'
# this first step handles the drivers for cases where the second step fails to find one
device_count=$( egrep -ic '(multimedia audio controller|audio device)' <<< "$lspci_data" )
if [[ $device_count -eq 1 && -f /proc/asound/cards ]];then
alsa_driver=$( gawk -F ']: ' '
{ IGNORECASE=1 }
# filtering out modems and usb devices like webcams, this might get a
# usb audio card as well, this will take some trial and error
$0 !~ /modem/ || $0 !~ /usb/ {
driver=gensub( /^(.+)( - )(.+)$/, "\\1", 1, $2 )
gsub(/^ +| +$/,"",driver)
if ( driver != "" ){
print driver
}
}' /proc/asound/cards )
fi
# this is to safeguard against line breaks from results > 1, which if inserted into following
# array will create a false array entry. This is a hack, not a permanent solution.
alsa_driver=$( echo $alsa_driver )
# now we'll build the main audio data, card name, driver, and port. If no driver is found,
# and if the first method above is not null, and one card is found, it will use that instead.
A_AUDIO_DATA=( $( echo "$lspci_data" | gawk -F ': ' -v alsaDriver="$alsa_driver" '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/multimedia audio controller|audio device/ {
audioCard=gensub(/^[0-9a-f:.]+ [^:]+: (.+)$/,"\\1","g",$0)
# The doublequotes are necessary because of the pipes in the variable.
gsub(/'"$BAN_LIST_NORMAL"'/, "", audioCard)
gsub(/,/, " ", audioCard)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", audioCard)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", audioCard)
cards[audioCard]++
# loop until you get to the end of the data block
while (getline && !/^$/) {
if (/driver in use/) {
drivers[audioCard] = drivers[audioCard] gensub(/(.*): (.*)/,"\\2","g",$0) ""
}
else if (/kernel modules:/) {
modules[audioCard] = modules[audioCard] gensub(/(.*): (.*)/,"\\2","g",$0) ""
}
else if (/I\/O/) {
portsTemp = gensub(/\t*I\/O ports at (.*) \[.*\]/,"\\1","g",$0)
ports[audioCard] = ports[audioCard] portsTemp " "
}
}
}
END {
j=0
for (i in cards) {
useDrivers=""
useModules=""
usePorts=""
if (cards[i]>1) {
a[j]=cards[i]"x "i
if (drivers[i] != "") {
useDrivers=drivers[i]
}
if (ports[i] != "") {
usePorts = ports[i]
}
if (modules[i] != "" ) {
useModules = modules[i]
}
}
else {
a[j]=i
# little trick here to try to catch the driver if there is
# only one card and it was null, from the first test of asound/cards
if (drivers[i] != "") {
useDrivers=drivers[i]
}
else if ( alsaDriver != "" ) {
useDrivers=alsaDriver
}
if (ports[i] != "") {
usePorts=ports[i]
}
if (modules[i] != "" ) {
useModules = modules[i]
}
}
# create array primary item for master array
print a[j] "," useDrivers "," usePorts "," useModules
j++
}
}') )
# in case of failure of first check do this instead
if [[ ${#A_AUDIO_DATA[@]} -eq 0 && -f /proc/asound/cards ]];then
A_AUDIO_DATA=( $( gawk -F ']: ' '
{ IGNORECASE=1 }
$1 !~ /modem/ && $2 !~ /modem/ {
card=gensub( /^(.+)( - )(.+)$/, "\\3", 1, $2 )
driver=gensub( /^(.+)( - )(.+)$/, "\\1", 1, $2 )
if ( card != "" ){
print card","driver
}
}' /proc/asound/cards ) )
fi
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
# handle cases where card detection fails, like in PS3, where lspci gives no output, or headless boxes..
if [[ ${#A_AUDIO_DATA[@]} -eq 0 ]];then
A_AUDIO_DATA[0]='Failed to Detect Sound Card!'
fi
}
get_audio_alsa_data()
{
local alsa_data=''
# now we'll get the alsa data if the file exists
if [[ -e /proc/asound/version ]];then
alsa_data=$( gawk '
{ IGNORECASE=1 }
# some alsa strings have the build date in (...)
# remove trailing . and remove possible second line if compiled by user
$0 !~ /compile/ {
gsub( "Driver | [(].*[)]|\.$","",$0 )
gsub(/,/, " ", $0)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $0)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", $0)
if ( $0 != "" ){
print $0
}
}' /proc/asound/version )
fi
echo "$alsa_data"
}
## create A_CPU_CORE_DATA, currently with two values: integer core count; core string text
## return value cpu core count string, this helps resolve the multi redundant lines of old style output
get_cpu_core_count()
{
## Because of the upcoming release of cpus with core counts over 6, a count of cores is given after Deca (10)
# count the number of processors given
local cpu_core_count=$(grep -ic "cpu cores" /proc/cpuinfo| cut -d':' -f2)
if [[ $cpu_core_count -eq 0 ]];then
cpu_core_count=$(grep -ic "^processor" /proc/cpuinfo| cut -d':' -f2)
fi
local cpu_alpha_count=''
if [[ $cpu_core_count -lt 2 ]]; then
cpu_core_count=1
fi
# match the numberic value to an alpha value
case $cpu_core_count in
1) cpu_alpha_count='Single';;
2) cpu_alpha_count='Dual';;
3) cpu_alpha_count='Triple';;
4) cpu_alpha_count='Quad';;
5) cpu_alpha_count='Penta';;
6) cpu_alpha_count='Hexa';;
7) cpu_alpha_count='Hepta';;
8) cpu_alpha_count='Octa';;
9) cpu_alpha_count='Ennea';;
10) cpu_alpha_count='Deca';;
*) cpu_alpha_count='Multi';;
esac
# create array, core count integer; core count string
A_CPU_CORE_DATA=( "$cpu_core_count" "$cpu_alpha_count Core" )
}
## main cpu data collector
get_cpu_data()
{
local i='' j='' cpu_array_nu='' a_cpu_working='' multi_cpu='' bits=''
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IFS=$'\n'
2008-12-17 04:16:30 +00:00
A_CPU_DATA=($(gawk -F': ' '
{ IGNORECASE=1 }
# TAKE NOTE: \t+ will work for /proc/cpuinfo, but SOME ARBITRARY FILE used for TESTING might contain SPACES!
# Therefore PATCH to use [ \t]+ when TESTING!
/^processor\t+:/ { nr = $NF }
/^model name|^cpu\t+:/ {
gsub(/'"$BAN_LIST_NORMAL"'/, "", $NF )
gsub(/'"$BAN_LIST_CPU"'/, "", $NF )
gsub(/,/, " ", $NF)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", $NF)
cpu[nr, "model"] = $NF
}
/^cpu MHz|^clock\t+:/ {
if (!min) {
min = $NF
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
}
else {
if ($NF < min) {
min = $NF
}
}
if ($NF > max) {
max = $NF
}
gsub(/MHZ/,"",$NF) ## clears out for cell cpu
gsub(/.00[0]+$/,".00",$NF) ## clears out excessive zeros
cpu[nr, "speed"] = $NF
}
/^cache size/ { cpu[nr, "cache"] = $NF }
/^flags/ { cpu[nr, "flags"] = $NF }
/^bogomips/ { cpu[nr, "bogomips"] = $NF }
/vendor_id/ {
gsub(/genuine|authentic/,"",$NF)
cpu[nr, "vendor"] = tolower( $NF )
}
END {
#if (!nr) { print ",,,"; exit } # <- should this be necessary or should bash handle that
for ( i = 0; i <= nr; i++ ) {
print cpu[i, "model"] "," cpu[i, "speed"] "," cpu[i, "cache"] "," cpu[i, "flags"] "," cpu[i, "bogomips"] "," cpu[nr, "vendor"]
}
if (!min) {
print "not found"
exit
}
if (min != max) {
printf("Min:%s%s Max:%s%s\n", min, "Mhz", max, "Mhz")
}
else {
printf("%s %s\n", max, "Mhz")
}
}' /proc/cpuinfo))
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
}
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# for more on distro id, please reference this python thread: http://bugs.python.org/issue1322
## return distro name/id if found
get_distro_data()
{
local i='' distro='' distro_file='' a_distro_glob=''
# get the wild carded array of release/version /etc files if present
shopt -s nullglob
cd /etc
a_distro_glob=(*[-_]{release,version})
cd "$OLDPWD"
shopt -u nullglob
if [[ ${#a_distro_glob[@]} -eq 1 ]];then
distro_file="${a_distro_glob}"
# use the file if it's in the known good lists
elif [[ ${#a_distro_glob[@]} -gt 1 ]];then
for i in $DISTROS_DERIVED $DISTROS_PRIMARY
do
# Only echo works with ${var[@]}, not print_screen_output() or script_debugger()
# This is a known bug, search for the word "strange" inside comments
# echo "i='$i' a_distro_glob[@]='${a_distro_glob[@]}'"
if [[ " ${a_distro_glob[@]} " == *" $i "* ]];then
distro_file="${i}"
break
fi
done
fi
# first test for the legacy antiX distro id file
if [[ -e /etc/antiX ]];then
distro="$( egrep -oi 'antix.*\.iso' <<< $( remove_erroneous_chars '/etc/antiX' ) | sed 's/\.iso//' )"
# this handles case where only one release/version file was found, and it's lsb-release. This would
# never apply for ubuntu or debian, which will filter down to the following conditions. In general
# if there's a specific distro release file available, that's to be preferred, but this is a good backup.
elif [[ $distro_file == 'lsb-release' ]];then
distro=$( get_distro_lsb_data )
# then if the distro id file was found and it's not in the exluded primary distro file list, read it
elif [[ -n $distro_file && -s /etc/$distro_file && " $DISTROS_EXCLUDE_LIST " != *" $distro_file "* ]];then
distro=$( remove_erroneous_chars "/etc/$distro_file" )
# otherwise try the default debian/ubuntu /etc/issue file
elif [[ -f /etc/issue ]];then
# lsb gives more manageable and accurate output than issue, but mint should use issue for now
if [[ -f /etc/lsb-release && -z $( grep -i 'mint' /etc/issue ) ]];then
distro=$( get_distro_lsb_data )
else
distro=$( gawk '
BEGIN { RS="" } {
gsub(/\\[a-z]/, "")
gsub(/,/, " ")
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "")
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ")
print
}' /etc/issue )
fi
fi
if [[ ${#distro} -gt 80 && $B_HANDLE_CORRUPT_DATA != 'true' ]];then
distro="${RED}/etc/${distro_file} corrupted, use -% to override${NORMAL}"
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fi
## note: would like to actually understand the method even if it's not used
# : ${distro:=Unknown distro o_O}
## test for /etc/lsb-release as a backup in case of failure, in cases where > one version/release file
## were found but the above resulted in null distro value
if [[ -z $distro && -f /etc/lsb-release ]];then
distro=$( get_distro_lsb_data )
fi
## finally, if all else has failed, give up
if [[ -z $distro ]];then
distro='Unknown distro o_O'
fi
# this handles an arch bug where /etc/arch-release is empty and /etc/issue is corrupted
if [[ -n $( grep -i 'arch linux' <<< $distro ) ]];then
distro='Arch Linux'
fi
echo "$distro"
}
# args: $1 - optional, app, uses the app test, not being used now
get_distro_lsb_data()
{
local distro=''
if [[ -f /etc/lsb-release && $1 != 'app' ]];then
distro=$( gawk -F '=' '
{ IGNORECASE=1 }
# note: adding the spacing directly to variable to make sure distro output is null if not found
/^DISTRIB_ID/ {
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
# this is needed because grep for "arch" is too loose to be safe
if ( $NF == "arch" ) {
distroId = "Arch Linux"
}
else if ( $NF != "n/a" ) {
distroId = $NF " "
}
}
/^DISTRIB_RELEASE/ {
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
if ( $NF != "n/a" ) {
distroRelease = $NF " "
}
}
/^DISTRIB_CODENAME/ {
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
if ( $NF != "n/a" ) {
distroCodename = $NF " "
}
}
END {
print distroId distroRelease distroCodename
}' /etc/lsb-release )
fi
# this is HORRIBLY slow, but I don't know why, it runs fast in shell
# if [[ -n $( which lsb_release ) && $1 == 'app' ]];then
# distro=$( echo "$( lsb_release -irc )" | gawk '
# { IGNORECASE=1 }
# /^Distributor ID/ {
# gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
# distroId = $NF
# }
# /^Release/ {
# gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
# distroRelease = $NF
# }
# /^Codename/ {
# gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
# distroCodename = $NF
# }
# END {
# print distroId " " distroRelease " (" distroCodename ")"
# }' )
# fi
echo $distro
}
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
## create array of gfx cards installed on system
get_graphics_card_data()
{
local i=''
IFS=$'\n'
A_GFX_CARD_DATA=( $( echo "$lspci_data" | gawk -F': ' '
{ IGNORECASE=1 }
/vga compatible controller/ {
gsub(/'"$BAN_LIST_NORMAL"'/, "", $NF)
gsub(/,/, " ", $NF)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $NF)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", $NF)
print $NF
}' ) )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
# for (( i=0; i < ${#A_GFX_CARD_DATA[@]}; i++ ))
# do
# A_GFX_CARD_DATA[i]=$( sanitize_characters BAN_LIST_NORMAL "${A_GFX_CARD_DATA[i]}" )
# done
# handle cases where card detection fails, like in PS3, where lspci gives no output, or headless boxes..
if [[ ${#A_GFX_CARD_DATA[@]} -eq 0 ]];then
A_GFX_CARD_DATA[0]='Failed to Detect Video Card!'
fi
# GFXMEM is UNUSED at the moment, because it shows AGP aperture size, which is not necessarily equal to GFX memory..
2008-10-31 20:20:44 +00:00
# GFXMEM="size=[$(echo "$lspci_data" | gawk '/VGA/{while (!/^$/) {getline;if (/size=[0-9][0-9]*M/) {size2=gensub(/.*\[size=([0-9]+)M\].*/,"\\1","g",$0);if (size<size2){size=size2}}}}END{print size2}')M]"
}
## create array of glx data
get_graphics_glx_data()
{
if [[ $B_X_RUNNING == 'true' ]];then
IFS=$'\n'
A_GLX_DATA=( $( glxinfo | gawk -F ': ' '
function join(arr, sep) {
s=""
i=flag=0
for (i in arr) {
if (flag++) {
s = s sep
}
s = s i
}
return s
}
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/opengl renderer/ {
if ($2 ~ /mesa/) {
# Allow r300 et al, but not the rest
if ($2 ~ / r[3-9][0-9][0-9] /) {
a[$2]
f++
}
next
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
}
$2 && a[$2]
}
/opengl version/ && (f || $2 !~ /mesa/) { $2 && b[$2] }
/direct rendering/ { $2 && c[$2] }
END {
printf("%s\n%s\n%s\n", join(a,", "), join(b,", "), join(c,", "))
}' ) )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
# GLXR=$(glxinfo | gawk -F ': ' 'BEGIN {IGNORECASE=1} /opengl renderer/ && $2 !~ /mesa/ {seen[$2]++} END {for (i in seen) {printf("%s ",i)}}')
# GLXV=$(glxinfo | gawk -F ': ' 'BEGIN {IGNORECASE=1} /opengl version/ && $2 !~ /mesa/ {seen[$2]++} END {for (i in seen) {printf("%s ",i)}}')
fi
}
## return screen resolution / tty resolution
get_graphics_res_data()
{
local screen_resolution=''
if [[ $B_X_RUNNING == 'true' ]];then
# Added the two ?'s , because the resolution is now reported without spaces around the 'x', as in
# 1400x1050 instead of 1400 x 1050. Change as of X.org version 1.3.0
screen_resolution=$( xrandr | gawk '
/\*/ { res[++m] = gensub(/^.* ([0-9]+) ?x ?([0-9]+)[_ ].* ([0-9\.]+)\*.*$/,"\\1x\\2@\\3hz","g",$0) }
END {
for (n in res) {
if (res[n] ~ /^[[:digit:]]+x[[:digit:]]+/)
line = line ? line ", " res[n] : res[n]
}
if (line)
print(line)
}' )
if [[ -z $screen_resolution ]];then
screen_resolution=$( xdpyinfo | gawk '/dimensions/ { print $2 }' )
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
fi
else
screen_resolution=$( stty -F $( readlink /proc/$PPID/fd/0 ) size | gawk '{ print $2"x"$1 }' )
fi
echo "$screen_resolution"
}
## for possible future data, not currently used
get_graphics_agp_data()
{
local agp_module=''
## not used currently
agp_module=$( gawk '/agp/ && !/agpgart/ && $3 > 0 { print(gensub(/(.*)_agp.*/,"\\1","g",$1)) }' /proc/modules )
}
## create array of x vendor/version data
get_graphics_x_data()
{
local x_vendor='' x_version=''
if [[ $B_X_RUNNING == 'true' ]];then
# X vendor and version detection.
x_vendor=$( xdpyinfo | gawk -F': +' '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/vendor string/ {
2008-11-06 21:33:14 +00:00
gsub(/the|inc|foundation|project|corporation/, "", $2)
gsub(/,/, " ", $2)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $2)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", $2)
print $2
}' )
# new method added since radeon and X.org and the disappearance of <X server name> version : ...etc
# Later on, the normal textual version string returned, e.g. like: X.Org version: 6.8.2
# A failover mechanism is in place. (if $x_version is empty, the release number is parsed instead)
x_version=$( xdpyinfo | gawk '/version:/ { print $NF }' )
if [[ -z $x_version ]];then
x_version=$(xdpyinfo | gawk -F': +' '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/vendor release number/ {
gsub(/0+$/, "", $2)
gsub(/0+/, ".", $2)
print $2
}' )
fi
A_X_DATA[0]="$x_vendor"
A_X_DATA[1]="$x_version"
#X -version 2>&1 | gawk '/^X Window System Version/ { print $5 }'
#This method could be used in the future to detect X when X is not running,
#however currently inxi ignores X checks when X is not found.
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
fi
}
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# this gets just the raw data, total space/percent used and disk/name/per disk capacity
get_hdd_data_basic()
{
local hdd_used=''
hdd_used=$( df | gawk '
p {
if (/^\/dev\/(mapper\/|[hs]d[a-z][0-9]+)/) {
if (NF == 1) {
getline
if (NF == 5) {
c += $2
}
else {
next
}
}
else if (NF == 6) {
c += $3
}
}
}
/^Filesystem/ { p++ }
END {
print c
}' )
if [[ -z $hdd_used ]];then
hdd_used='na'
fi
# create the initial array strings:
# disk-dev, capacity, name, usb or not
# final item is the total of the disk
IFS=$'\n'
A_HDD_DATA=( $( gawk -v hddused="$hdd_used" '
/[hs]d[a-z]$/ {
driveSize = $(NF - 1)*1024/1000**3
gsub(/,/, " ", driveSize)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", driveSize)
printf( $NF",%.1fGB,,\n", driveSize )
}
# See http://lanana.org/docs/device-list/devices-2.6+.txt for major numbers used below
# $1 ~ /^(3|22|33|8)$/ && $2 % 16 == 0 {size+=$3}
# special case from this data: 8 0 156290904 sda
$1 ~ /^(3|22|33|8)$/ && $NF ~ /[hs]d[a-z]$/ && ( $2 % 16 == 0 || $2 % 16 == 8 ) {size+=$3}
END {
size = size*1024/1000**3 # calculate size in GB size
workingUsed = hddused*1024/1000**3 # calculate workingUsed in GB used
# this handles a special case with livecds where no hdd_used is detected
if ( size > 0 && hddused == "na" ) {
size = sprintf( "%.1f", size )
print size "GB,-"
}
else if ( size > 0 && workingUsed > 0 ) {
diskUsed = workingUsed*100/size # calculate used percentage
diskUsed = sprintf( "%.1f", diskUsed )
size = sprintf( "%.1f", size )
print size "GB," diskUsed "% used"
}
else {
print "NA,-" # print an empty array, this will be further handled in the print out function
}
}' /proc/partitions ) )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
}
## fills out the A_HDD_DATA array with disk names
get_hard_drive_data_advanced()
{
local a_temp_working='' a_temp_scsi='' temp_holder='' temp_name='' i='' j=''
local sd_ls_by_id='' ls_disk_by_id=''
## check for all ide type drives, non libata, only do it if hdx is in array
if [[ -n $( egrep 'hd[a-z]' <<< ${A_HDD_DATA[@]} ) ]];then
# remember, we're using the last array item to store the total size of disks
for (( i=0; i < ${#A_HDD_DATA[@]} - 1; i++ ))
do
IFS=","
a_temp_working=( ${A_HDD_DATA[i]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
if [[ -n $( egrep '^hd[a-z]' <<< ${a_temp_working[0]} ) ]];then
if [[ -e /proc/ide/${a_temp_working[0]}/model ]];then
a_temp_working[2]="$( remove_erroneous_chars /proc/ide/${a_temp_working[0]}/model )"
else
a_temp_working[2]="Name n/a"
fi
# these loops are to easily extend the cpu array created in the awk script above with more fields per cpu.
for (( j=0; j < ${#a_temp_working[@]}; j++ ))
do
if [[ $j -gt 0 ]];then
A_HDD_DATA[i]="${A_HDD_DATA[i]},${a_temp_working[$j]}"
else
A_HDD_DATA[i]="${a_temp_working[$j]}"
fi
done
fi
done
fi
## then handle libata names
# first get the ata device names, put them into an array
IFS=$'\n'
if [[ -e /proc/scsi/scsi ]]; then
a_temp_scsi=( $( gawk '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/host/ {
getline a[$0]
getline b[$0]
}
END {
for (i in a) {
if (b[i] ~ / *type: *direct-access.*/) {
#c=gensub(/^ *vendor: (.+) +model: (.+) +rev: (.+)$/,"\\1 \\2 \\3","g",a[i])
#c=gensub( /^ *vendor: (.+) +model: (.+) +rev:.*$/,"\\1 \\2","g",a[i] )
# the vendor: string is useless, and is a bug, ATA is not a vendor for example
c=gensub( /^ *vendor: (.+) +model: (.+) +rev:.*$/, "\\2", "g", a[i] )
gsub(/,/, " ", c)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", c)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", c)
#print a[i]
# we actually want this data, so leaving this off for now
# if (c ~ /\<flash\>|\<pendrive\>|memory stick|memory card/) {
# continue
# }
print c
}
}
}' /proc/scsi/scsi) )
fi
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
## then we'll loop through that array looking for matches.
if [[ -n $( egrep 'sd[a-z]' <<< ${A_HDD_DATA[@]} ) ]];then
# first pack the main ls variable so we don't have to keep using ls /dev...
ls_disk_by_id="$( ls -l /dev/disk/by-id )"
for (( i=0; i < ${#A_HDD_DATA[@]} - 1; i++ ))
do
if [[ -n $( egrep '^sd[a-z]' <<< ${A_HDD_DATA[$i]} ) ]];then
IFS=","
a_temp_working=( ${A_HDD_DATA[$i]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
if [[ ${#a_temp_scsi[@]} -gt 0 ]];then
for (( j=0; j < ${#a_temp_scsi[@]}; j++ ))
do
## ok, ok, it's incomprehensible, search /dev/disk/by-id for a line that contains the
# discovered disk name AND ends with the correct identifier, sdx
# get rid of whitespace for some drive names and ids, and extra data after - in name
temp_name=$( tr ' ' '_' <<< ${a_temp_scsi[$j]} | cut -d '-' -f 1 )
sd_ls_by_id=$( egrep -m1 ".*$temp_name.*${a_temp_working[0]}$" <<< "$ls_disk_by_id" )
if [[ -n $sd_ls_by_id ]];then
a_temp_working[2]=${a_temp_scsi[$j]}
if [[ -n $( grep 'usb-' <<< $sd_ls_by_id ) ]];then
a_temp_working[3]='USB'
fi
break
else
a_temp_working[2]="Name n/a"
fi
done
else
a_temp_working[2]="Name n/a"
fi
# these loops are to easily extend the cpu array created in the awk script above with more fields per cpu.
for (( j=0; j < ${#a_temp_working[@]}; j++ ))
do
if [[ $j -gt 0 ]];then
A_HDD_DATA[i]="${A_HDD_DATA[i]},${a_temp_working[$j]}"
else
A_HDD_DATA[i]="${a_temp_working[$j]}"
fi
done
fi
done
unset ls_disk_by_id # and then let's dump the data we don't need
fi
}
2008-10-31 20:20:44 +00:00
get_lspci_data()
{
echo "$( lspci -v | gawk '{
2008-11-06 21:18:11 +00:00
gsub(/\(prog-if[^)]*\)/,"")
print
}' )"
}
## return memory used/installed
get_memory_data()
{
local memory=''
memory=$( gawk '
/^MemTotal:/ { tot = $2 }
/^(MemFree|Buffers|Cached):/ { notused+=$2 }
END {
used = tot-notused
printf("%.1f/%.1fMB\n", used/1024, tot/1024)
}' /proc/meminfo )
echo "$memory"
}
# process and return module version data
get_module_version_number()
{
local module_version=''
if [[ -n $( which modinfo ) ]];then
module_version=$( modinfo $1 | gawk '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/^version/ {
gsub(/,/, " ", $2)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", $2)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", $2)
print $2
}
' )
fi
echo "$module_version"
}
## create array of network cards
get_networking_data()
{
IFS=$'\n'
2008-11-05 22:48:56 +00:00
A_NETWORK_DATA=( $( echo "$lspci_data" | gawk '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/^[0-9a-f:.]+ (ethernet|network) (controller|bridge)/ || /^[0-9a-f:.]+ [^:]+: .*(ethernet|network).*$/ {
nic=gensub(/^[0-9a-f:.]+ [^:]+: (.+)$/,"\\1","g",$0)
gsub(/realtek semiconductor/, "Realtek", nic)
gsub(/davicom semiconductor/, "Davicom", nic)
2008-11-06 23:08:34 +00:00
# The doublequotes are necessary because of the pipes in the variable.
gsub(/'"$BAN_LIST_NORMAL"'/, "", nic)
gsub(/,/, " ", nic)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", nic)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", nic)
eth[nic]++
while (getline && !/^$/) {
if (/I\/O/) {
ports[nic] = ports[nic] $4 " "
}
if (/driver in use/) {
drivers[nic] = drivers[nic] gensub(/(.*): (.*)/,"\\2","g",$0) ""
}
else if (/kernel modules/) {
modules[nic] = modules[nic] gensub(/(.*): (.*)/,"\\2","g",$0) ""
}
}
}
END {
j=0
for (i in eth) {
useDrivers=""
usePorts=""
useModules=""
if (eth[i]>1) {
a[j]=eth[i]"x "i
## note: this loses the plural ports case, is it needed anyway?
if (ports[i] != "") {
usePorts=ports[i]
}
if (drivers[i] != "") {
useDrivers=drivers[i]
}
if (modules[i] != "" ) {
useModules = modules[i]
}
}
else {
a[j]=i
if (ports[i] != "") {
usePorts=ports[i]
}
if (drivers[i] != "") {
useDrivers=drivers[i]
}
if (modules[i] != "" ) {
useModules = modules[i]
}
}
# create array primary item for master array
print a[j] "," useDrivers "," usePorts "," useModules
j++
}
}') )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
}
get_networking_wan_ip_data()
{
local ip=''
# get ip using wget redirect to stdout. This is a clean, text only IP output url.
ip=$( wget -q -O - http://smxi.org/opt/ip.php | awk -F 'is: ' '{
#gsub("\n","",$2")
print $2
}' )
if [[ -z $ip ]];then
ip='None Detected!'
fi
echo "$ip"
}
get_networking_local_ip_data()
{
if [[ -n $( which ifconfig ) ]];then
IFS=$'\n'
A_INTERFACES_DATA=( $( ifconfig | gawk '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
$0 !~ /^lo/ {
# not clear on why inet is coming through, but this gets rid of it
# as first line item.
interface = $1
gsub(/,/, " ", interface)
gsub(/^ +| +$/, "", interface)
gsub(/ [ \t]+/, " ", interface)
aInterfaces[interface]++
while (getline && !/^$/) {
if (/inet addr:/) {
ipAddresses[interface] = gensub( /addr:([0-9\.]+)/, "\\1", "g", $2 )
}
}
}
END {
j=0
for (i in aInterfaces) {
useInterfaceIp = ""
a[j] = i
if (ipAddresses[i] != "") {
useInterfaceIp = ipAddresses[i]
}
# create array primary item for master array
# tested needed to avoid bad data from above, if null it is garbage
# this is the easiest way to handle junk I found, improve if you want
if ( useInterfaceIp != "" ) {
print a[j] "," useInterfaceIp
}
j++
}
}') )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
else
A_INTERFACES_DATA=( "Interfaces tool requires missing app: ifconfig" )
fi
}
get_partition_data()
{
IFS=$'\n'
# sample line: /dev/sda2 ext3 15G 8.9G 4.9G 65% /home
# $NF = partition name; $(NF - 4) = partition size; $(NF - 3) = used, in gB; $(NF - 1) = percent used
## note: by subtracting from the last field number NF, we avoid a subtle issue with LVM df output, where if
## the first field is too long, it will occupy its own line, this way we are getting only the needed data
A_PARTITION_DATA=( $( df -h -T --exclude-type=aufs --exclude-type=tmpfs --exclude-type=iso9660 | gawk '
BEGIN { IGNORECASE=1 }
/\/$|\/boot$|\/var$|\/home$|\/tmp$|\/usr$/ && ! /aufs/ {
print $NF "," $(NF - 4) "," $(NF - 3) "," $(NF - 1) ",main"
}
# skip all these, including the first, header line. Use the --exclude-type
# to handle new filesystems types we do not want listed here
! /\/$|\/boot$|\/var$|\/home$|\/tmp$|\/usr$|^filesystem/ {
# this is to avoid file systems with spaces in their names, that will make
# the test show the wrong data in each of the fields, if no x%, then do not use
if ( $(NF - 1) ~ /[0-9]+\%/ ) {
# cleaning up user name here to avoid showing too much info on irc
partitionName=gensub( /^\/home\/(.*)\/(.*)/, "/home/###/\\2", 1, $NF )
print partitionName "," $(NF - 4) "," $(NF - 3) "," $(NF - 1) ",secondary"
}
}
' )
2008-11-10 01:49:56 +00:00
# now add the swap partition data, doesn't show percent used, someone can figure that in the future
# don't want to show swap files, just partitions
$( swapon -s | gawk '
2008-11-10 01:49:56 +00:00
/^\/dev\/[hs]d[a-z]/ {
size = sprintf( "%.2f", $3*1024/1000**3 )
print $1 "," size "GB,,,swap"
}' ) )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
}
## return uptime string
get_uptime()
{
## note: removing gsub(/ /,"",a); to get get space back in there, goes right before print a
echo $( uptime | gawk '{
a = gensub(/^.*up *([^,]*).*$/,"\\1","g",$0)
print a
}' )
}
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### special data handling for specific options and conditions
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
## multiply the core count by the data to be calculated, bmips, cache
# args: $1 - string to handle; $2 - cpu count
calculate_multicore_data()
{
local string_number=$1 string_data=''
if [[ -n $( egrep -i '( mb| kb)' <<< $1 ) ]];then
string_data=" $( gawk '{print $2}' <<< $1 )" # add a space for output
string_number=$( gawk '{print $1}' <<< $1 )
fi
# handle weird error cases where it's not a number
if [[ -n $( egrep '^[0-9\.,]+$' <<< $string_number ) ]];then
string_number=$( echo $string_number $2 | gawk '{total = $1*$2; print total}' )
elif [[ $string_number == '' ]];then
string_number='Not Available'
else
# I believe that the above returns 'unknown' by default so no need for extra text
string_number="$string_number "
fi
echo "$string_number$string_data"
}
# prints out shortened list of flags, the main ones of interest
# args: $1 - string of cpu flags to process
process_cpu_flags()
{
local cpu_flags="$1"
# nx = AMD stack protection extensions
# lm = Intel 64bit extensions
# sse, sse2, pni = sse1,2,3 gfx extensions
# svm = AMD pacifica virtualization extensions
# vmx = Intel IVT (vanderpool) virtualization extensions
cpu_flags=$( echo "$cpu_flags" | gawk '
BEGIN {
RS=" "
ssel["sse"] = 1
ssel["sse2"] = 2
ssel["pni"] = 3
sses[1] = "sse"
sses[2] = "sse2"
sses[3] = "sse3"
}
/^(nx|lm|svm|vmx)$/ {
if (s) {
s = s " " $0
}
else {
s = $0
}
}
/^(sse2?|pni)$/ {
if (ssel[$0] > sse) {
sse = ssel[$0]
}
}
END {
if (sse) {
if (s) {
s = sses[sse] " " s
}
else {
s = sses[sse]
}
}
print s
}' )
#grep -oE '\<(nx|lm|sse[0-9]?|pni|svm|vmx)\>' | tr '\n' ' '))
if [[ -z $cpu_flags ]];then
cpu_flags="-"
fi
echo "$cpu_flags"
}
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### print and processing of output data
#### -------------------------------------------------------------------
#### MASTER PRINT FUNCTION - triggers all line item print functions
## main function to print out, master for all sub print functions.
## note that it passes local variable values on to its children,
## and in some cases, their children, with lspci_data
print_it_out()
{
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
local lspci_data='' # only for verbose
if [[ $B_SHOW_SHORT_OUTPUT == 'true' ]];then
print_short_data
else
lspci_data="$( get_lspci_data )"
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 1 || $B_SHOW_SYSTEM == 'true' ]];then
print_system_data
fi
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 1 || $B_SHOW_CPU == 'true' ]];then
print_cpu_data
fi
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 1 || $B_SHOW_GRAPHICS == 'true' ]];then
print_gfx_data
fi
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 5 || $B_SHOW_AUDIO == 'true' ]];then
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_audio_data
fi
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 2 || $B_SHOW_NETWORK == 'true' ]];then
print_networking_data
fi
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 1 || $B_SHOW_DISK == 'true' ]];then
print_hard_disk_data
fi
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 4 || $B_SHOW_PARTITIONS == 'true' ]];then
print_partition_data
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
fi
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 1 || $B_SHOW_INFO == 'true' ]];then
print_info_data
fi
fi
}
#### SHORT OUTPUT PRINT FUNCTION, ie, verbosity 0
# all the get data stuff is loaded here to keep execution time down for single line print commands
# these will also be loaded in each relevant print function for long output
print_short_data()
{
local current_kernel=$( uname -a | gawk '{print $1,$3,$(NF-1)}' )
local processes="$(( $( ps aux | wc -l ) - 1 ))"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
local short_data='' i='' b_background_black='false'
local memory=$( get_memory_data )
local up_time="$( get_uptime )"
# set A_CPU_CORE_DATA
get_cpu_core_count
local cpu_core_count_string="${A_CPU_CORE_DATA[1]}"
local cpu_core_count=${A_CPU_CORE_DATA[0]}
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# load A_HDD_DATA
get_hdd_data_basic
## note: if hdd_model is declared prior to use, whatever string you want inserted will
## be inserted first. In this case, it's desirable to print out (x) before each disk found.
local a_hdd_data_count=$(( ${#A_HDD_DATA[@]} - 1 ))
IFS=","
local a_hdd_basic_working=( ${A_HDD_DATA[$a_hdd_data_count]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
local hdd_capacity=${a_hdd_basic_working[0]}
local hdd_used=${a_hdd_basic_working[1]}
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# load A_CPU_DATA
get_cpu_data
IFS=","
local a_cpu_working=(${A_CPU_DATA[0]})
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
local cpu_model="${a_cpu_working[0]}"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
## assemble data for output
local cpu_clock="${a_cpu_working[1]}" # old CPU3
# this gets that weird min/max final array item
local min_max_clock_nu=$(( ${#A_CPU_DATA[@]} - 1 ))
local min_max_clock=${A_CPU_DATA[$min_max_clock_nu]}
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
#set_color_scheme 12
if [[ $B_RUNNING_IN_SHELL == 'false' ]];then
for i in $C1 $C2 $CN
do
case "$i" in
"$GREEN"|"$WHITE"|"$YELLOW"|"$CYAN")
b_background_black='true'
;;
esac
done
if [[ $b_background_black == 'true' ]];then
for i in C1 C2 CN
do
## these need to be in quotes, don't know why
if [[ "${!i}" == "$NORMAL" ]];then
declare $i="${!i}15,1"
else
declare $i="${!i},1"
fi
done
#C1="${C1},1"; C2="${C2},1"; CN="${CN},1"
fi
fi
short_data="${C1}CPU${CN}[${C2}${cpu_core_count_string} ${cpu_model} ${C1}clocked at${C2} ${min_max_clock}${CN}] ${C1}Kernel${CN}[${C2}${current_kernel}${CN}] ${C1}Up${CN}[${C2}${FL2}${FL1}${up_time}${FL1}${CN}] ${C1}Mem${CN}[${C2}${FL2}${FL1}${memory}${FL1}${CN}] ${C1}HDD${CN}[${C2}${FL2}${FL1}${hdd_capacity}($hdd_used)${FL1}${CN}] ${C1}Procs${CN}[${C2}${FL2}${FL1}${processes}${FL1}${CN}]"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
if [[ $SHOW_IRC -gt 0 ]];then
short_data="${short_data} ${C1}Client${CN}[${C2}${IRC_CLIENT}${IRC_CLIENT_VERSION}${CN}]"
fi
short_data="${short_data} ${CN}:: ${C1}$SCRIPT_NAME${C2} $SCRIPT_VERSION_NUMBER${CN}"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
if [[ $SCHEME -gt 0 ]];then
short_data="${short_data} $NORMAL"
fi
print_screen_output "$short_data"
}
#### LINE ITEM PRINT FUNCTIONS
# print sound card data
print_audio_data()
{
local i='' card_one='Card-1 ' audio_data='' a_audio_data='' port_data=''
local a_audio_working='' alsa_driver='' alsa_data='' port_plural='' module_version=''
# set A_AUDIO_DATA and get alsa data
get_audio_data
alsa_data=$( get_audio_alsa_data )
IFS=","
a_audio_working=(${A_AUDIO_DATA[0]})
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
if [[ -n ${A_AUDIO_DATA[@]} ]];then
# slightly complicated because 2nd array item could be the alsa data
if [[ ${#A_AUDIO_DATA[@]} -le 1 ]];then
card_one='Card '
fi
# if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[2]} ]];then
# port_data=" ${C1}at port${C2} ${a_audio_working[2]}"
# fi
# this should only trigger if the /proc/asound/cards data is used, not lspci -nn
if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[3]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
module_version=$( print_module_version "${a_audio_working[3]}" )
fi
if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[1]} ]];then
alsa_driver=" ${C1}driver${C2} ${a_audio_working[1]}$module_version"
fi
if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[2]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
if [[ $( wc -w <<< ${a_audio_working[2]} ) -gt 1 ]];then
port_plural='s'
fi
port_data=" ${C1}at port$port_plural${C2} ${a_audio_working[2]}"
fi
audio_data="${C1}$card_one${C2}${a_audio_working[0]}$alsa_driver$port_data"
audio_data=$( create_print_line "Audio:" "$audio_data" )
print_screen_output "$audio_data"
i=0 ## loop starts with 1 by auto-increment so it only shows cards > 1
while [[ -n ${A_AUDIO_DATA[++i]} ]]
do
IFS=","
a_audio_working=( ${A_AUDIO_DATA[i]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
port_data=''
alsa_driver=''
port_plural=''
module_version=''
if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[3]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
module_version=$( print_module_version "${a_audio_working[3]}" )
fi
# we're testing for the presence of the 2nd array item here, which is the driver name
if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[1]} ]];then
alsa_driver="${C1}driver${C2} ${a_audio_working[1]}"
fi
if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[2]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
if [[ $( wc -w <<< ${a_audio_working[2]} ) -gt 1 ]];then
port_plural='s'
fi
port_data=" ${C1}at port$port_plural${C2} ${a_audio_working[2]}"
fi
if [[ -n ${a_audio_working[0]} ]];then
audio_data="${C1}Card-$(( $i + 1 )) ${C2}${a_audio_working[0]}$alsa_driver$port_data"
fi
if [[ -n $audio_data ]];then
audio_data=$( create_print_line " " "$audio_data" )
print_screen_output "$audio_data"
fi
done
# alsa driver data only prints out if sound card data is found
if [[ -n $alsa_data ]];then
audio_data="${C1}Sound: ${C2}$alsa_data"
audio_data=$( create_print_line " " "$audio_data" )
print_screen_output "$audio_data"
fi
fi
}
print_cpu_data()
{
local cpu_data='' i='' cpu_clock_speed='' cpu_multi_clock_data=''
local bmip_data='' cpu_cache='' cpu_vendor='' cpu_flags=''
##print_screen_output "A_CPU_DATA[0]=\"${A_CPU_DATA[0]}\""
# Array A_CPU_DATA always has one extra element: max clockfreq found.
# that's why its count is one more than you'd think from cores/cpus alone
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# load A_CPU_DATA
get_cpu_data
IFS=","
local a_cpu_working=(${A_CPU_DATA[0]})
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
local cpu_model="${a_cpu_working[0]}"
## assemble data for output
local cpu_clock="${a_cpu_working[1]}"
cpu_vendor=${a_cpu_working[5]}
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# set A_CPU_CORE_DATA
get_cpu_core_count
local cpu_core_count_string="${A_CPU_CORE_DATA[1]}"
local cpu_core_count=${A_CPU_CORE_DATA[0]}
# Strange (and also some expected) behavior encountered. If print_screen_output() uses $1
# as the parameter to output to the screen, then passing "<text1> ${ARR[@]} <text2>"
# will output only <text1> and first element of ARR. That "@" splits in elements and "*" _doesn't_,
# is to be expected. However, that text2 is consecutively truncated is somewhat strange, so take note.
# This has been confirmed by #bash on freenode.
# The above mentioned only emerges when using the debugging markers below
## print_screen_output "a_cpu_working=\"***${a_cpu_working[@]} $hostName+++++++\"----------"
if [[ -z ${a_cpu_working[2]} ]];then
a_cpu_working[2]="unknown"
fi
cpu_data=$( create_print_line "CPU:" "${C1}${cpu_core_count_string}${C2} ${a_cpu_working[0]}" )
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 3 || $B_SHOW_CPU == 'true' ]];then
# update for multicore, bogomips x core count.
if [[ $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
# if [[ $cpu_vendor != 'intel' ]];then
bmip_data=$( calculate_multicore_data "${a_cpu_working[4]}" "$cpu_core_count" )
# else
# bmip_data="${a_cpu_working[4]}"
# fi
bmip_data=" ${C1}bmips${C2} $bmip_data"
fi
## note: this handles how intel reports L2, total instead of per core like AMD does
if [[ $cpu_vendor != 'intel' ]];then
cpu_cache=$( calculate_multicore_data "${a_cpu_working[2]}" "$cpu_core_count" )
else
cpu_cache="${a_cpu_working[2]}"
fi
# only print shortened list
if [[ $B_CPU_FLAGS_FULL != 'true' ]];then
cpu_flags=$( process_cpu_flags "${a_cpu_working[3]}" )
cpu_flags=" ${C1}flags${C2} ($cpu_flags)"
fi
cpu_data="$cpu_data${C2} ${C1}cache${C2} $cpu_cache$cpu_flags$bmip_data${CN}"
fi
# we don't this printing out extra line unless > 1 cpu core
if [[ ${#A_CPU_DATA[@]} -gt 2 ]] && [[ $B_SHOW_CPU == 'true' || $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 5 ]];then
cpu_clock_speed='' # null < verbosity level 5
else
cpu_data="$cpu_data ${C1}clocked at${C2} ${a_cpu_working[1]} MHz${CN}"
fi
cpu_data="$cpu_data $cpu_clock_speed"
print_screen_output "$cpu_data"
# we don't this printing out extra line unless > 1 cpu core
if [[ ${#A_CPU_DATA[@]} -gt 2 ]] && [[ $B_SHOW_CPU == 'true' || $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 5 ]];then
for (( i=0; i < ${#A_CPU_DATA[@]}-1; i++ ))
do
IFS=","
a_cpu_working=(${A_CPU_DATA[i]})
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
cpu_multi_clock_data="$cpu_multi_clock_data ${C1}($(( i + 1 )))${C2} ${a_cpu_working[1]} MHz${CN}"
if [[ $i -gt 10 ]];then
break
fi
done
if [[ -n $cpu_multi_clock_data ]];then
cpu_multi_clock_data=$( create_print_line " " "${C1}Clock Speeds:${C2}$cpu_multi_clock_data" )
print_screen_output "$cpu_multi_clock_data"
fi
fi
if [[ $B_CPU_FLAGS_FULL == 'true' ]];then
print_cpu_flags_full "${a_cpu_working[3]}"
fi
}
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# takes list of all flags, split them and prints x per line
# args: $1 - cpu flag string
print_cpu_flags_full()
{
local cpu_flags_full="$1" a_cpu_flags='' line_starter=''
local i=0 counter=0 max_length=18 max_length_add=18 flag='' flag_data=''
# build the flag line array
for flag in $cpu_flags_full
do
a_cpu_flags[$counter]="${a_cpu_flags[$counter]}$flag "
if [[ $i -ge $max_length ]];then
(( counter++ ))
max_length=$(( $max_length + $max_length_add ))
fi
((i++))
done
# then print it out
for (( i=0; i < ${#a_cpu_flags[@]};i++ ))
do
if [[ $i -eq 0 ]];then
line_starter="${C1}CPU Flags${C2} "
else
line_starter=''
fi
flag_data=$( create_print_line " " "$line_starter${a_cpu_flags[$i]}" )
print_screen_output "$flag_data"
done
}
print_gfx_data()
{
local gfx_data='' i='' card_one='Card '
local screen_resolution="$( get_graphics_res_data )"
local b_is_mesa='false'
# set A_GFX_CARD_DATA
get_graphics_card_data
# set A_X_DATA
get_graphics_x_data
local x_vendor=${A_X_DATA[0]}
local x_version=${A_X_DATA[1]}
# set A_GLX_DATA
get_graphics_glx_data
local glx_renderer="${A_GLX_DATA[0]}"
local glx_version="${A_GLX_DATA[1]}"
local glx_direct_render="${A_GLX_DATA[2]}"
if [[ ${#A_GFX_CARD_DATA[@]} -gt 1 ]];then
i=1
while [[ -n ${A_GFX_CARD_DATA[i]} && $i -le 3 ]]
do
gfx_data=" ${C1}Card-$(($i+1))${C2} ${A_GFX_CARD_DATA[i]}"
((i++))
done
card_one='Card-1 '
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
fi
gfx_data=$( create_print_line "Graphics:" "${C1}$card_one${C2}${A_GFX_CARD_DATA[0]}${gfx_data}" )
if [[ $B_X_RUNNING == 'true' ]];then
gfx_data="${gfx_data} ${C1}$x_vendor${C2} $x_version ${C1}Res${C2} ${screen_resolution}"
else
gfx_data="${gfx_data} ${C1} tty resolution ${CN}(${C2} ${screen_resolution} ${CN})"
fi
print_screen_output "$gfx_data"
if [[ -z $glx_renderer || -z $glx_version ]];then
b_is_mesa='true'
fi
## note: if glx render or version have no content, then mesa is true
if [[ $B_X_RUNNING == 'true' && $b_is_mesa != 'true' ]];then
gfx_data=$( create_print_line " " "${C1}GLX Renderer${C2} ${glx_renderer} ${C1}GLX Version${C2} ${glx_version}${CN}" )
if [[ $B_HANDLE_CORRUPT_DATA == 'true' ]];then
gfx_data="${gfx_data} ${C1}Direct rendering${C2} ${glx_direct_render}${CN}"
fi
print_screen_output "$gfx_data"
fi
}
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
print_hard_disk_data()
{
local hdd_data='' hdd_data_2='' a_hdd_working=''
local dev_data='' size_data='' hdd_model='' hdd_model_2='' hdd_model_3='' usb_data=''
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# load A_HDD_DATA
get_hdd_data_basic
## note: if hdd_model is declared prior to use, whatever string you want inserted will
## be inserted first. In this case, it's desirable to print out (x) before each disk found.
local a_hdd_data_count=$(( ${#A_HDD_DATA[@]} - 1 ))
IFS=","
local a_hdd_basic_working=( ${A_HDD_DATA[$a_hdd_data_count]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
local hdd_capacity=${a_hdd_basic_working[0]}
local hdd_used=${a_hdd_basic_working[1]}
if [[ $VERBOSITY_LEVEL -ge 3 || $B_SHOW_DISK == 'true' ]];then
## note: the output part of this should be in the print hdd data function, not here
get_hard_drive_data_advanced
for (( i=0; i < ${#A_HDD_DATA[@]} - 1; i++ ))
do
# this adds the (x) numbering in front of each disk found, and creates the full disk string
IFS=","
a_hdd_working=( ${A_HDD_DATA[i]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
if [[ $B_SHOW_DISK == 'true' ]];then
if [[ -n ${a_hdd_working[3]} ]];then
usb_data="${a_hdd_working[3]} "
else
usb_data=''
fi
dev_data="/dev/${a_hdd_working[0]} "
size_data=" ${a_hdd_working[1]}"
fi
# wrap to avoid long lines
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
if [[ $i -gt 1 && $B_SHOW_DISK == 'true' ]] || [[ $i -gt 3 ]];then
hdd_model_2="${hdd_model_2}${hdd_model_2+${C1}$(($i+1)):${C2}} $usb_data$dev_data${a_hdd_working[2]}$size_data "
else
hdd_model="${hdd_model}${hdd_model+ ${C1}$(($i+1)):${C2}} $usb_data$dev_data${a_hdd_working[2]}$size_data"
fi
done
if [[ -z $hdd_model ]];then
2008-11-08 06:43:30 +00:00
hdd_model=' None Detected'
fi
if [[ -n $hdd_model_2 ]];then
hdd_data=$( create_print_line "Disks:" "${C1}HDD${C2} ${C1}Total Size:${C2} ${hdd_capacity} (${hdd_used})${hdd_model}" )
hdd_data_2=$( create_print_line " " "${hdd_model_2}${CN}" )
else
hdd_data=$( create_print_line "Disks:" "${C1}HDD${C2} ${C1}Total Size:${C2} ${hdd_capacity} (${hdd_used})${hdd_model}${CN}" )
fi
else
hdd_data=$( create_print_line "Disks:" "${C1}HDD Total Size:${C2} ${hdd_capacity} (${hdd_used})${CN}" )
fi
print_screen_output "$hdd_data"
if [[ -n $hdd_model_2 ]];then
print_screen_output "$hdd_data_2"
fi
}
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
print_info_data()
{
2008-12-16 23:12:27 +00:00
local suggested_app="runlevel"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
local info_data=''
2008-12-16 23:12:27 +00:00
local runlvl=''
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
local memory="$( get_memory_data )"
local processes="$(( $( ps aux | wc -l ) - 1 ))"
local up_time="$( get_uptime )"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# Some code could look superfluous but BitchX doesn't like lines not ending in a newline. F*&k that bitch!
# long_last=$( echo -ne "${C1}Processes${C2} ${processes}${CN} | ${C1}Uptime${C2} ${up_time}${CN} | ${C1}Memory${C2} ${MEM}${CN}" )
info_data=$( create_print_line "Info:" "${C1}Processes${C2} ${processes} ${C1}Uptime${C2} ${up_time} ${C1}Memory${C2} ${memory}${CN}" )
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
# this only triggers if no X data is present
if [[ $B_X_RUNNING != 'true' ]];then
2008-12-16 23:12:27 +00:00
if [[ -a $suggested_app ]];then
runlvl="$( runlevel | gawk '{ print $2 }' )"
info_data="${info_data} ${C1}Runlevel${C2} ${runlvl}${CN}"
fi
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
fi
if [[ $SHOW_IRC -gt 0 ]];then
info_data="${info_data} ${C1}Client${C2} ${IRC_CLIENT}${IRC_CLIENT_VERSION}${CN}"
fi
info_data="${info_data} ${C1}$SCRIPT_NAME${C2} $SCRIPT_VERSION_NUMBER${CN}"
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
if [[ $SCHEME -gt 0 ]];then
info_data="${info_data} ${NORMAL}"
fi
print_screen_output "$info_data"
}
# args: $1 - module name (could be > 1, so loop it )
print_module_version()
{
local module_versions='' module='' version=''
for module in $1
do
version=$( get_module_version_number $module )
if [[ -n $version ]];then
module_versions="$module_versions $version"
fi
done
if [[ -n $module_versions ]];then
echo " ${C1}v:${C2}$module_versions"
fi
}
print_networking_data()
{
local i='' card_one='Card-1' network_data='' a_network_working='' port_data='' driver_data=''
local card_string='' port_plural='' module_version=''
# set A_NETWORK_DATA
get_networking_data
IFS=","
a_network_working=(${A_NETWORK_DATA[0]})
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
# will never be null because null is handled in get_network_data, but in case we change
# that leaving this test in place.
if [[ -n ${A_NETWORK_DATA[@]} ]];then
if [[ ${#A_NETWORK_DATA[@]} -le 1 ]];then
card_one='Card'
fi
if [[ -n ${a_network_working[3]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
module_version=$( print_module_version "${a_network_working[3]}" )
fi
if [[ -n ${a_network_working[1]} ]];then
driver_data=" ${C1}driver${C2} ${a_network_working[1]}$module_version"
fi
if [[ -n ${a_network_working[2]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
if [[ $( wc -w <<< ${a_network_working[2]} ) -gt 1 ]];then
port_plural='s'
fi
port_data=" ${C1}at port$port_plural${C2} ${a_network_working[2]}"
fi
card_string=''
network_data="${C1}$card_one${C2} ${a_network_working[0]}$driver_data$port_data"
network_data=$( create_print_line "Network:" "$network_data" )
print_screen_output "$network_data"
2008-11-04 05:39:26 +00:00
i=0 ## loop starts with 1 by auto-increment so it only shows cards > 1
while [[ -n ${A_NETWORK_DATA[++i]} ]]
do
IFS=","
a_network_working=( ${A_NETWORK_DATA[i]} )
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
port_data=''
driver_data=''
port_plural=''
module_version=''
if [[ -n ${a_network_working[3]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
module_version=$( print_module_version "${a_network_working[3]}" )
fi
if [[ -n ${a_network_working[1]} ]];then
driver_data=" ${C1}driver${C2} ${a_network_working[1]}$module_version"
fi
if [[ -n ${a_network_working[2]} && $B_EXTRA_DATA == 'true' ]];then
if [[ $( wc -w <<< ${a_network_working[2]} ) -gt 1 ]];then
port_plural='s'
fi
port_data=" ${C1}at port$port_plural${C2} ${a_network_working[2]}"
fi
network_data="${C1}Card-$(( $i + 1 )) ${C2}${a_network_working[0]}$driver_data$port_data"
network_data=$( create_print_line " " "$network_data" )
print_screen_output "$network_data"
done
fi
if [[ $B_SHOW_IP == 'true' ]];then
print_networking_ip_data
fi
}
print_networking_ip_data()
{
local ip=$( get_networking_wan_ip_data )
local ip_data='' a_interfaces_working='' interfaces='' interfaces_2='' i=''
# set A_INTERFACES_DATA
get_networking_local_ip_data
# first print output for wan ip line. Null is handled in the get function
ip_data=$( create_print_line " " "${C1}Wan IP:${C2} $ip" )
# then create the list of local interface/ip
interfaces=" ${C1}Interface:${C2}"
i=0 ## loop starts with 1 by auto-increment so it only shows cards > 1
while [[ -n ${A_INTERFACES_DATA[i]} ]]
do
IFS=","
a_interfaces_working=(${A_INTERFACES_DATA[i]})
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
if [[ $i -lt 3 ]];then
if [[ -n ${a_interfaces_working[0]} ]];then
interfaces="$interfaces ${C1}${a_interfaces_working[0]}${C2} ${a_interfaces_working[1]}"
fi
else
if [[ -n ${a_interfaces_working[0]} ]];then
# space on end here for lining up with line starter
interfaces_2="$interfaces_2${C1}${a_interfaces_working[0]}${C2} ${a_interfaces_working[1]} "
fi
fi
((i++))
done
print_screen_output "$ip_data$interfaces"
# then wrap it if needed
if [[ -n $interfaces_2 ]];then
interfaces_2=$( create_print_line " " "$interfaces_2" )
print_screen_output "$interfaces_2"
fi
}
print_partition_data()
{
local a_partition_working='' partition_used='' swap='' partition_data=''
local counter=0 line_max=160 i=0 a_partition_data='' line_starter=''
# this handles the different, shorter, irc colors strings embedded in variable data
if [[ $B_RUNNING_IN_SHELL != 'true' ]];then
line_max=130
fi
# and no color string data at all
if [[ $SCHEME -eq 0 ]];then
line_max=75
fi
# set A_PARTITION_DATA
get_partition_data
for (( i=0; i < ${#A_PARTITION_DATA[@]}; i++ ))
do
IFS=","
a_partition_working=(${A_PARTITION_DATA[i]})
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
if [[ $B_SHOW_PARTITIONS_FULL == 'true' ]] || [[ ${a_partition_working[4]} == 'swap' || ${a_partition_working[4]} == 'main' ]];then
if [[ -n ${a_partition_working[2]} ]];then
partition_used=" ${C1}used:${C2} ${a_partition_working[2]} (${a_partition_working[3]})"
else
partition_used='' # reset partition used to null
fi
if [[ ${a_partition_working[4]} == 'swap' ]];then
swap=" ${C1}swap:${C2}"
else
swap=''
fi
# because these lines can vary widely, using dynamic length handling here
a_partition_data[$counter]="${a_partition_data[$counter]}${C1}ID:${C2}$swap${a_partition_working[0]} ${C1}size:${C2} ${a_partition_working[1]}$partition_used "
if [[ $( wc -c <<< ${a_partition_data[$counter]} ) -gt $line_max ]];then
((counter++))
fi
fi
done
# print out all lines, line starter on first line
for (( i=0; i < ${#a_partition_data[@]};i++ ))
do
if [[ $i -eq 0 ]];then
line_starter='Partition:'
else
line_starter=' '
fi
partition_data=$( create_print_line "$line_starter" "${a_partition_data[$i]}" )
print_screen_output "$partition_data"
done
}
print_system_data()
{
local system_data='' bits=''
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
local host_name=$( hostname )
local current_kernel=$( uname -a | gawk '{print $1,$3,$(NF-1)}' )
local distro="$( get_distro_data )"
# check for 64 bit first
if [ -n "$( uname -m | grep -o 'x86_64' )" ];then
bits="(64 bit)"
else
bits="(32 bit)"
fi
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
if [[ $B_SHOW_HOST == 'true' ]];then
system_data=$( create_print_line "System:" "${C1}Host${C2} $host_name ${C1}running${C2}" )
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
else
system_data=$( create_print_line "System:" "${C1}running${C2} ${CN}" )
fi
system_data="$system_data ${C2}$current_kernel $bits ${C1}Distro${C2} $distro"
print_screen_output "$system_data"
}
########################################################################
#### SCRIPT EXECUTION
########################################################################
# first two functions must be set first for colors etc. Remember, no debugger
# stuff works on these first two functions unless you set the debugging flag
# manually. Debugging flag -@ [number] will not work until get_parameters runs.
2008-10-28 05:18:25 +00:00
set_calculated_variables
(Change Version) This is a major version upgrade. Fresh option set, totally upgraded, now supports per line print control. Each line now has a flag to switch it on or off, and those flags will also control full line output with verbosity levels to keep it cleaner. Since this is a core change, the new version is 0.5.0 Also moved all debugging and testing overrides to use characters, not letters: -% - override corrupted data -@ [number 1-10] - Triggers debugging levels 1 - 10 -! - triggers Testing data or functions New option list and menu: ======================================================================================= inxi -h inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dc 6 Note: extra output options (eg -f,-H,-p,-s,-x) require a verbosity level of 1 or higher. In other words, they only work if you use either -d or -v1 (or higher) If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form. The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line: C,f,D,G,I,N,P,s,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see. If you use them with a -v level, it will show the full output for that line. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required. Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11 -C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed. -d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1 -f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. -F Show Full, all possible, output for inxi. -D Show full hard disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda - ST380817AS - 80.0GB. -G Show graphic card information (+ glx driver and version for non free video drivers). -I Show information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version. -N Show network card information. -P Show partition information (shows what -v4 would show, but without extra data). -s Show sound card information. -S Show system information: host name, kernel, distro -U Auto-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to update, otherwise user is fine. -v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required. Supported levels: 1-5 Example: inxi -v 4 1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d 2 - Also show networking card data 3 - Also show hard disk names as detected. 4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot 5 - For multicore systems, also show per core clock speeds. -V inxi version information. Prints information then exits. -x Show extra data: bogomips on cpu. -% Overrides defective or corrupted data. -@ Triggers debugger output. Requires debugging level 1-10.
2008-11-10 22:41:58 +00:00
## this needs to run before the KONVI stuff is set below
get_start_client
# Check for dependencies before running anything else except above functions
check_script_depends
# note: this only works if it's run from inside konversation as a script builtin or something
# only do this if inxi has been started as a konversation script, otherwise bypass this
if [[ $KONVI -eq 1 ]];then
DCPORT="$1"
DCSERVER="$2"
DCTARGET="$3"
shift 3
# The section below is on request of Argonel from the Konversation developer team:
# it sources config files like $HOME/.kde/share/apps/konversation/scripts/inxi.conf
IFS=":"
for kde_config in $( kde-config --path data )
do
if [[ -r ${kde_config}${KONVI_CFG} ]];then
source "${kde_config}${KONVI_CFG}"
break
fi
done
IFS="$ORIGINAL_IFS"
fi
## leave this for debugging dcop stuff if we get that working
# print_screen_output "DCPORT: $DCPORT"
# print_screen_output "DCSERVER: $DCSERVER"
# print_screen_output "DCTARGET: $DCTARGET"
# "$@" passes every parameter separately quoted, "$*" passes all parameters as one quoted parameter.
# must be here to allow debugger and other flags to be set.
get_parameters "$@"
# If no colorscheme was set in the parameter handling routine, then set the default scheme
if [[ $COLOR_SCHEME_SET != 'true' ]];then
set_color_scheme "$DEFAULT_SCHEME"
fi
# all the pre-start stuff is in place now
B_SCRIPT_UP='true'
script_debugger "Debugger: $SCRIPT_NAME is up and running..."
# then create the output
print_it_out
## last steps
if [[ $B_RUNNING_IN_SHELL == 'true' && $SCHEME -gt 0 ]];then
2008-10-28 00:40:43 +00:00
echo -n ""
fi
# weechat's executor plugin forced me to do this, and rightfully so, because else the exit code
# from the last command is taken..
exit 0
## note: this EOF is needed for smxi handling, this is what triggers the full download ok
###**EOF**###