experiment, just to get it running, so you can all ignore this release.
Added in darwin cpu, init, distro version support, and updated inxi to support
darwin/osx without exiting.
No linux changes.
used percentage, there are too many possible remote file systems to safely exclude, so
sticking with using the test that partition is /dev mounted.
Howeve, did add excludes of nfs/smbfs types, as well as future bsd excludes of those.
particularly with fringe or broken sensors outputs. See inxi issue 58 for details.
http://code.google.com/p/inxi/issues/detail?id=58
Added temp3, and an override to capture cases where temp3 is the actual cpu temp.
Added PECI overrides for cases like msi/asus mobos have defective CPUTIN return data.
Added core0 overrides as well, for cases where the temp returned is too low.
It is absolutely 100% guaranteed that these changes will break some outputs that were
working, but it's also certain that I believe that more wrong outputs will be corrected.
With sensors, really the only way you can get reliable sensors is to use the lm-sensors
config files for your motherboard, then set: CPU: temp and MB: temp explicitly.
inxi will always use CPU: or MB: to override anything found.
It turns out I'd neglected to include /dev/disk partitions, oops, in the df data.
Since this is a long time bug, it warrants a new release even though I just did
2.1.22.
disk used percentage as well. Since swap space is not available as disk space, it
makes sense to me to count it as used. -P/-p show the percent of swap used as well.
to identify a partition, but rather the basic /dev/sdc for example.
This made -D show wrong disk used percentage.
Also, I added --total for df that have that supported, there is however an oddity which you
can see here:
df --total -P -T --exclude-type=aufs --exclude-type=devfs --exclude-type=devtmpfs \
--exclude-type=fdescfs --exclude-type=iso9660 --exclude-type=linprocfs --exclude-type=procfs \
--exclude-type=squashfs --exclude-type=sysfs --exclude-type=tmpfs --exclude-type=unionfs | \
awk 'BEGIN {total=0} !/total/ {total = total + $4 }END {print total}'
result:
614562236
df --total -P -T --exclude-type=aufs --exclude-type=devfs --exclude-type=devtmpfs \
--exclude-type=fdescfs --exclude-type=iso9660 --exclude-type=linprocfs --exclude-type=procfs \
--exclude-type=squashfs --exclude-type=sysfs --exclude-type=tmpfs --exclude-type=unionfs | \
awk 'BEGIN {total=0} /^total/ {total = total + $4 }END {print total}'
result:
614562228
df -P -T --exclude-type=aufs --exclude-type=devfs --exclude-type=devtmpfs \
--exclude-type=fdescfs --exclude-type=iso9660 --exclude-type=linprocfs --exclude-type=procfs \
--exclude-type=squashfs --exclude-type=sysfs --exclude-type=tmpfs --exclude-type=unionfs | \
awk 'BEGIN {total=0} {total = total + $4 }END {print total}'
result:
614562236
In my tests, using --total gives a greater disk user percentage than adding the results
up manually, as inxi did before, and still does for systems without --total for df.
df --total -P -T --exclude-type=aufs --exclude-type=devfs --exclude-type=devtmpfs \
--exclude-type=fdescfs --exclude-type=iso9660 --exclude-type=linprocfs \
--exclude-type=procfs --exclude-type=squashfs --exclude-type=sysfs --exclude-type=tmpfs \
--exclude-type=unionfs
Filesystem Type 1024-blocks Used Available Capacity Mounted on
/dev/disk/by-label/root-data ext3 12479556 12015624 335816 98% /
/dev/sdc9 ext3 20410156 18013360 1979432 91% /home
/dev/sdc7 ext3 4904448 3785460 1016672 79% /media/sdb2
/dev/sdc5 ext3 30382896 27467220 2295720 93% /var/www/m
/dev/sdc8 ext3 61294356 41849300 18196972 70% /home/me/1
/dev/sdb1 ext3 307532728 285159432 20810456 94% /home/me/2
/dev/sdd1 ext3 26789720 18153076 7542620 71% /home/me/3
/dev/sdd2 ext3 213310776 206932912 2040960 100% /home/me/4
/dev/sda7 ext3 10138204 1185772 8434348 13% /home/me/5
total - 687242840 614562156 62652996 91% -
Strange, no? the data is in blocks, and it should of course in theory add up to exactly the
same thing. However, because --total lets df do the math, I'm going to use that for now,
unless someone can show it's not good.
inxi still falls back for bsds and older df to the standard method.
of disk drive lists. Was showing USB ID-1: /dev/sde now shows: ID-1: USB /dev/sde
that is more intuitive and keeps the columns in alignment more or less, easier
to read.
Second, fixes a bug with some file systems / usb drives
where they do not use usb- in the /dev/disk/by-id line but only wwn-
https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/en
-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/5/html/Online_Storage_Reconfiguration_Guide/persistent_naming.html
explains it somewhat.
the fix is adding a second if null test of the device /dev/sdx in by-path, that seems
to fix the issue. by-path does have the usb- item, though it does not have the name
so it's not as reliable in absolute terms, but it's fine as a second step fallback
option.
for the next major feature, -m / memory, so there is no particular reason to package
this release. There is a new development option, -! 33, which lets me override /sys
data use for -M, which is useful to debug dmidecode output for -m and other features.
No new version, new man. There may be a few more of these releases, but functionally
there is no particular reason to make a new package if you are a maintainer, so there
is no new version number. This release is a preparation for some branches/one/inxi
tests that will be run in the future.
The man/help document -! 33 just to have it there, but it should make no difference
to anyone but me at this stage.
way to handle bad ARM data, when bogomips are too low, < 50, we try to get the data
from /sys, but now this runs on all the cores, so it may work as well on the multicore
arm if the /proc/cpuinfo has bogomip that is too low and no cpu frequency.
kde-config rather than the current: kde4-config, so now it tests if the commands exist, tries kde4, then kde5 then kde
this is probably not used by any distro so it does not matter, but it was wrong so it's fixed now.
unmounted drives.
IMPORTANT: some distros use inxi for detecting partitions, the syntax on the following
have changed slightly:
HDD: per drive changes from: 1: id: to ID-1:
Partitions: per partition changes from ID: to ID-1:
Unmounted partitions: per unmounted changes from ID: to ID-1
You see the pattern, they are all the same now, and they are all numbered. I think this
is easier to read when scanning long lines of drives/partitions, or even short ones.
Also fixed a long standing oddity, not a bug, but for some weird reason, -p did not
include the location, like /dev/sda1, unless -l or -u were used. That makes no sense
so I have moved the dev/remote location output to standard -p/-P
Except for bug fixes, this completes the overally line wrap update, all lines wrap,
you can set widths with -y now, and the old issue of not fitting nicely into 80 column
wide widths is solved. Note that in some areas, p/P for example, at times if the mount
point or remote location is very long the line may still wrap, but making this perfect
is too convoluted so I'm calling it good enough now, all lines are handled reasonably well,
certainly radically better than before 2.1.0.