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1963 commits
Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
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Harald Hope | 4d7d43580a | bug fix, corner case, undefined array ref test in disks. | ||
Harald Hope | 354c44eb76 | bug fix for openbsd -i | ||
Harald Hope | 35e8a95055 |
Rollout of advanced microarchitecture info continues, added AMD/Intel gfx
devices, CPU built dates, process nodes, generation (in some cases, where it makes sense), etc. Please note: the 3.3.16 > 17 releases require manual matching table updates. If you think disk or ram vendor, CPU or GPU process, release date, generation, etc, information is not correct: * FIRST: do the research, confirm it's wrong, using wikichips, techpowerup, wikipedia links, but also be aware, sometimes these slightly contradict each- other, so research. Don't make me do all your work for you. * Show the relelevant data, like cpu model/stepping, to correct the issue, or model name string. * There are 4 main manually updated matching tables, which use either raw regex to generate the match based on the model name (ram, disk vendors), or vendor id matching (ram vendors), product id matching (gpu data), or cpu family / model / stepping id matching. Each of these has its own matching tool at: inxi-perl/tools/[tool-name].pl which is used to generate either raw data used by the functions (ids for gpu data), or which contains the master copy of the function used to generate the regex matches (cp_cpu_arch/set_ram_vendors/set_disk_vendors). * Please use pinxi and inxi-perl branch for this data, inxi is only released when next stable is done, all development is done in inxi-perl branch. All development for the data or functions these tools are made for occurs in the tools, not in pinxi, and those results are moved into pinxi from the tools. * Saying something "doesn't work" is not helpful, provide the required data for the feature that needs updating, or ideally, find the correct answer yourself and do the research and then provide the updated data for matching. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. GPU/CPU process node sizes are marketing, not engineering, terms, but work-around is to list the fab too so you at least know which set of marketing terms you're dealing with. As of around 7nm, most of the fabs are not using nm in their names anymore, TSMC is using n7, Intel 7, for example. While these marketing terms do reflect changes from the previous process node, more efficient, faster, faster per watt, and so on, and these changes are often quite significant, 10-30%, or more, they do not reflect the size of the transistor gate like they used to up until about 350nm. Intel will move to A20 for the node after 4 or 5, 2nm, meaning 20 angstroms. Intel suggested million transistors per mm^2 as an objective measure (currently around 300+ million!! as of ~7nm), but TSMC didn't take them up on it. GlobalFoundries (GF) stepped away from these ultra small processes at around 14nm, so you won't see GF very often in the data. AMD spun off its chip fabs to GF aound 2009, so you don't see AMD as foundry after GF was formed. ATI always used TSMC so GPU data for AMD/ATI is I think all TSMC. Intel has always been its own foundry. 2. Wayland drops all its data and can't be detected if sudo or su is used to run inxi. That's unfortunate, but goes along with their dropping support for > 1 user, which was one of the points of wayland, same reason you can do desktop sharing or ssh desktop forwarding etc. This means inxi doesn't show wayland as Display protocol, it is just blank, if you use su, or sudo start. This makes some internal inxi wayland triggers then fail. Still looking to see if there is a fix or workaround for this. 3. In sensors, a new syntax for k10-pci temp, Tctl, which unfortunately is the only temp type present for AMD family 17h (zen) and newer cpus, but that is not an actual cpu temp, it's: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v5.12/hwmon/k10temp.html "Tctl is the processor temperature control value, used by the platform to control cooling systems. Tctl is a non-physical temperature on an arbitrary scale measured in degrees. It does _not_ represent an actual physical temperature like die or case temperature." Even worse, it replaced Tdie, which was, correctly, temp1_input, and, somewhat insanely, the non real cpu temp is now temp1_input, and if present, the real Tdie cpu temp is temp2_input. I don't know how to work around this problem. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Fallback test for Intel cpu arch was not doing anything, used wrong variable name. 2. A very old bug, thanks mrmazda for spotting this one, runlevel in case of init 3 > init 5 showed 35, not 5. Doesn't show on systemd stuff often since it doesn't use runlevels in this way, but this bug has been around a really long time. 3. SensorItem::gpu_data was always logging its data, missing the if $b_log. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. Fixed some disk vendor detection rules. 2. Failing to return default target for systemd/systemctl when no: /etc/systemd/system/default.target file exists. Corrected to use systemctl get-default as fallback if file doesn't exist. 3. Fixed indentation for default: runlevel, should be child of runlevel: / target: 4. Fixed corner case where systemd has no /proc/1/comm file but is still the init system. Added fallback check for /run/systemd/units, if that exists, safe to assume systemd is running init. 5. Fixed subtle case, -h/--recommends/--version/--version-short should not print to -y1 width, but rather to the original or modified widths >= 80 cols. Corrected this in print_basic() by using max-cols-basic. 6. Forgot to add --pkg, --edid, and --gpu to debugger run_self() tool. 7. Fixed broken sandisk vendor id. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Added AMD and Intel GPU microarchitecture detections for -Gx. These are not as easy as Nvidia because there is no one reliable data source for product ids. 2. Going with the -Ga process: .. built: item, -Ca will show process: [node] and built: years and sometimes gen: if available. Geeky, sure, not always perfect, or correct, but will generally be close. Due to difficultly in finding reliable release > build end years for example, not all cpus have all this data. Using CPU generation,where that data is available and makes sense. Like AMD Zen+ is zen gen: 2, for example,. Because Intel microarch names are often marketing driven, not engineering, it's too difficult to assign gen consistently based only on model names. Shows for Core intels like: gen: core 3 That will cover most consumer Intel CPU users currently. 3. Added initial Zen 3+ and Zen 4 ids for cp_cpu_arch(). There is very little info on these yet, so I'm going on what may prove to be incomplete or wrong data. 4. Added GPU process, build years for -Ga. 5. Added fallback test for gpus that we don't have product IDs for yet because dbs have not been updated. Only used for cases where it's the newest gpu series and no prodoct IDs have been found. 6. Added AMD am386 support to cp_cpu_arch... ok ok, inxi takes 9 minutes to execute on that, but there you have it. 7. Added unverified Hyprland wayland compositor detection. 8. By request, added --version-short/--vs, which outputs version info in one line if used together with other options and if not short form. With any normal line option, will output version (date) info first line, without any other option, will output 1 line version info and exit. 9. More disk vendors, ids! Much easier with new tool disk_vendors.pl. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. Deprecated --nvidia/--nv in favor of more consistent --gpu, that's easier to work with multiple vendors for advanced gpu architecture. Note for non nvidia, --gpu only adds codename, if available and different from arch name. For nvidia, it adds a lot more data. 2. Changed inxi-perl/tools tool names to more clearly reflect what function they serve. 3. Going with runlevel fixes, changed 'runlevel:' to be 'target:' if systemd. Also changed incorrect 'target:' for 'default:'. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Updated man, help, docs/inxi-data.txt for new gpu data and tools, and to indicate switch to more generic --gpu trigger for advanced gpu data, instead of the now deprecated --nvidia/--nv, which probably will go down as the shortest lasting option documented, though of course inxi always keeps legacy syntax working, behind the scenes, it's just removed from the -h and man page in favor of --gpu. Also updated to show AMD/Intel/Nvidia now, since the data now roughly works for all three main gpus. 2. Updated pinxi README.txt to reflect the tools and how to use them and what they are for. 3. --help, man, updated for target/runlevel, default: changes for init data. 4. Updated configuration html and man for --fake-data-dir. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Upgraded tools/gpu_ids.pl to handle nvidia, intel, or amd data, added data files in tools/lists/ for amd. First changed name from ids.pl to gpu_ids.pl 2. New data files added for amd/intel pci ids, and a new tool to merge them and prep them for gpu_ids.pl -j amd|intel handling. All work. Took a while to get these things sorted, but don't want to get stuck in future with manual updates, it needs to be automated as much as possible, same as with disk_vendors.pl etc, if I'm going to try to maintain this over time. 3. Made all gpu data file names use consistent formats, and made disk data files also follow this format. 4. Changed raw_ids.pl to gpu_raw.pl, trying to keep things easy to remember and consistent here. 5. Refactored core gpu data logic, now all types use the same sub, and just assign various data depending on the type. 6. Changed vendors.pl name to disk_vendors.pl 7. Big redo of array/hash handling in OutputHandler, was partially by reference, now is completely by reference. All Items now use and return $rows array ref as well, from start to finish, unlike previously, where @rows was copied repeatedly. 8. Going along with 7, made most internal passing of hash/arrays use hash/array references instead, where it makes sense, and doesn't make the code harder to work with. 9. Refactored WeatherItem, split apart the parts from output to be more like normal Items in terms of error handling etc. 10. Added 'ref' return option for reader() and grabber(). Only useful for very large data sets, added also default 'arr' if no value is provided for that argument. 11. Switched some features to use grabber/reader by ref on the off chance that will dump some execution time. 12. A few places added qr/.../ precompiled regex, in simple form, for loops, maybe it helps a little. I don't know. 13. Added global $fake_data_dir, this can be changed via configuration item: FAKE_DATA_DIR or one time by --fake-data-dir. 14. Created data directory, and initial data items. cpu is the fake data used to test CPU info. More will be added as data is checked and sanitized. |
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Harald Hope | 7245e42aa2 | changelog fix | ||
Harald Hope | 1684c6e172 | changelog edits | ||
Harald Hope | 2934175b34 | last vendor bug fixes | ||
Harald Hope | 87bc34da8b | vendors bug fix | ||
Harald Hope | cce18d8564 | vendor bug fix | ||
Harald Hope | 6023702097 |
A nice release, some good corner case bug and glitch fixes, along with some much
needed documentation fixes to bring inxi-values.txt up to date for changes that have been evolving steadily. And a useful option for nvidia legacy card info. I'm hoping that will help support people and users as nvidia open source driver gets more usable in the future, since that will never support legacy cards, only the current series supported by 510/515 drivers. Also, in inxi-perl/tools, new tools and data so you can reproduce certain arcane data assembly features like disk vendors and nvidia product ids. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Not known yet if you can get Wayland display drivers along with kernel gpu drivers. In other words, is a similar use of kernel/display driver as in Xorg found with Wayland? Hard to dig up actual answers to questions like this. 2. Similarly, unknown if it's possible to get current active xorg display driver, not just the list from Xorg.0.log file. No idea how to discover that, there are cases where past use of Xorg leaves log file present, but drivers are not used with Wayland, leading to confusing driver reports. Issues 1 and 2 are similar but probably have similar solutions. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Very subtle failure caused by odd mount point in partitions: a too loose regex rule designed to capture spaces in device names was running loose to the end of the string, where it was triggered by a number in the mount point. Fix was to make rule much more strict, now needs to match 3 number space in a row after the initial part, and then a number% 2. Bug in corner case, with Monitors, if > 2 connected monitors, and 1 disabled, inxi was trying to test numeric position values for the disabled monitor, which with xrandr, has no position values, thus tripping undefined pos-x and pos-y errors. Thanks to fourtysixandtwo for spotting this corner case. 3. Bug in wan IP, if dig failed, set_dowloader() is not set unless other parameters were used, which results in failing to set parameters for downloader, which leads to screen errors spraying out. Thanks to Manjaro user exaveal for posting this issue, with error outputs, which helped pinpoint the cause. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. More absurd xorg port ID variations: DP-1 kernel, DP1-1 X driver. Wny? Trying to add in XX-?\d+-\d+ variation, which I think will be safe, made the first - optional, though it's just idiotic for this amount of randomness to be allowed to exist in the 21st century. If this reflects other discipline failures in Xorg, it starts to get somewhat more obvious why Wayland was considered as the only forward path, though that's just as chaotic and disorganized... but in different ways. 2. Removed darwin distro version detection, which of course broke, and using standard fallback for BSD made out of uname array bits. If it works, it works, if not, who cares. This should handle issue #267 hopefully. 3. Trying for more monitor matches, now in cases where 1 monitor display ID remained unmatched, and 1 sys kms id remains unused, assume the remaining nonitor ID is a match and overwrite the unmatched message for that ID. This will cover basically all single monitor match failure cases, and many multi monitor failures with only 1 out of x monitor ids unmatched. While guessing a bit, it's not a bad guess, and will slightly expand the number of matched monitor ids. This extends the previous guess where if single monitor and unmatched, use it to cover > 1 monitors, with 1 unmatched. 4. LINES_MAX configuration item did not assign to right variable when -1 value. Used non-existing $size{'output-block'} instead of correct $use{'output-block'} 5. Forgot to add pkg to --force, goes with --pkg. 6. Finally! Added in busybox shell detection, it's not of course reliable if they change internal light shells, but all the docs say they use ash, so now it will show shell: ash (busybox) to make it clear. Hurray!! This means that tinycore users will get this long awaited feature! Ok, ok, long awaited by probably only me, but since I package inxi for busybox, it was on my todo list. 7. Cleaned up and re-organized many disk vendor matching rules, made them easier to read and debug, going along with Code 3, vendors.pl development and release. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. New feature: in -Ga, if Nvidia card, shows last supported nvidia legacy series driver (like 304.xx), status, microarch. If --nvidia and EOL, shows last-supported: kernel: xorg: info. This should be useful for support people, we'll see. -Gx shows nvidia microarchitecture, if it was found. This is based on matching tables so will go out of date if you have non current inxi's, but that's life. If --nvidia or --nv shortcut is used instead, triggers -Ga and shows much more nvidia driver data for legacy, and for EOL drivers, last supported kernel, xorg, and last release version. --nvidia also adds process node if available. More important perhaps is the fact that as of May 2022, nvidia is starting the process of open sourcing its current latest driver (515, but Turning, Ampere architectures only so far), which will only support non legacy nvidia cards, making detection of legacy cards even more important to support people and end users, since that will be a common question support people will have: does my card support the open source driver?" Read about the new open sourcing of the 515 nvidia module: https://developer.nvidia.com/blog/nvidia-releases-open-source-gpu-kernel-modules/ https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=nvidia-open-kernel&num=1 2. Going along with new and upgraded tools in Code 3, massive, huge, upgrade to disk vendors, 100s of new matches, biggest upgrade ever for disk vendors. This feature should work much better now with the new backend tools. 3. Added shortcuts: --mm for --memory-modules, --ms for --memory-short. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. None. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Big update to docs/inxi-values.txt. This had gotten really out of date, with incorrect hash and other internal data assignments, all updated to be current, along with sample greps to make it easier to locate changes in the future as well. This makes this document fairly up to date and useful again for dev reference purposes, should such a dev ever appear, lol. Many values had not been updated after global refactors, like switching to the %risk data for all arm/mips/ppc platform types, and making %load, %use, %force, %fake uses more consistent. Doing this helped expose some subtle bugs and failure cases in inxi as well. 2. Added to -h and man -Ga Nvidia option info. Fixed some typos and glitches. Includes new --nvidia / --nv options for full data. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Changed $dl{'no-ssl-opt'} to $use{'no-ssl'} and $dl{'no-ssl'}, that was a confusing inconsistency. 2. Added comma separated list of --dbg numbers, since often > 1 is used. Saves some debugging time, otherwise nothing changes. 3. Huge new public release of some back end tools in new section: inxi-perl/tools * vendors.pl - disk vendors tool, with data in lists/disks*.txt * ids.pl - nvidia product id generator tool, with data in lists/nv_* 4. While doing vendors.pl, I noticed that the use of array ref for $vendors was not done correctly, that's fixed now, simplifies it slightly. |
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Harald Hope | f3f7dec169 |
bug fix, strange mount point name tripped output errors for partitions,
that name exposed some weak/greedy regex that didn't do what it was intended to do in such cases. Solution was to tighten the regex and make it much more explicit. |
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Harald Hope | 2801b1d1e2 | edit | ||
Harald Hope | 8e0b7b5ccf |
Bug fix, it's a bad edid data bug, rare, but when it trips, kills inxi execution
dead right before -G/Graphics shows. Also some nice fixes and enhancements. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Possible case of Gnome Wayland failing to set any gnome environmental variables, making wayland detection not possible. This was in anonymous dataset inxi-proBook4540s dataset. Person never appeared in real life so can't follow up on it. This cascaded down to other failures in display detection, and desktop detection, though in theory much of the data needed was present. I expect similar issues may appear with kde wayland. This is/was probably a configuration or build error I believe, though not enough data yet. It appears that sudo start disabled the display environmental variable detections, which is unfortunate, and the fallback loginctl tests do not appear to work for unknown reasons. I've confirmed this on Fedora stock Gnome as well. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Forgot to test that return from get_display_manager is array ref, this impacts only a tiny handful of distros probably, TinyCore was one, but it is a fatal failure, so fixed it. Also fixed in 3.3.14 inxi branch. Never trips in console, only on tiny linux where no dm is used at all, I think Xvesa might be the only case this would have tripped. 2. EDID errors and warnings had several bugs, errors a fatal critical bug which made execution stop. Had forgotten to pass the $edid hash reference to the error constructor. Also had used wrong hash key in output so would never have shown. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. Corrected ram device indentation levels. 2. Made memory width more clear with: width: data: total: which more accurately reflects the source data. Also in cases where no data or total values, only show width: N/A, not the data: total: sub items. 3. Made edid errors/warnings output to numbered list of warnings/errors instead of using join() to made one long list. Much more consistent that way. This fixes issue #266 - thanks SheridanOAI for finding this bug. 4. In --slots, -x wasn't loading the bus ID so it showed N/A, unnecessary data collection granularity, removed. 5. For Display, if no X or gpu driver, show: driver: N/A. Showed driver: gpu: N/A before. 6. For Display, remove filters for Xwayland tests, we always want to see xwayland data if it's installed. This was actually an error to not show it since display_server_data already had the correct tests to not redo Xorg data if found previously, which would be glxinfo based data. This is a partial fix also for Known Issue 1, at least we'll see Xwayland is present even if Wayland detections failed for unkonwn reasons. 7. Added some ram value dmi filters, found some that had 'none' or 'unknown'. 8. Show display protocol out of display!! Also handles most common root use cases as well, so in most cases, if the initial protocol detections failed, this will result in a decent attempt, though if root it is less reliable. sudo or regular user will be fine since looks for not tty/pts TTY type and username. This should also help narrow down Known Issue 1 failures, though there are more cases to be dealt with, but can only chip away since not enough data. 9. Made info: item in slots more robust, and able to handle more diverse scenarios. 10. Added alternate syntaxes for dmidecode permissions errors. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Added brzdm clogin mlogind xlogin display managers. Not verified. Version for brzdm is probably like slim since brzdm is a fork of slim. 2. Added voltages to ram module report, that had been left out. Note that it's common for voltages to be either 'unknown' or not present at all. This is as close as inxi can get to handling issue #265 since there is no other source for the requested data type (show DDR3L, low voltage DDR3, which doesn't exist as a type in dmidecode). 3. Added voltages to --slots report, --slots -xx. Only shows if present. 4. Added for --slots -a for Linux, if detected, the PCI children of the bus ID of the slot. This is recursive, so supports as many levels as are present, though it would be rare for there to be more than one level of children. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. In -m ram report, moved ram type before size/speed/voltage, that makes more sense. 2. Also in -m ram report, make type: the default value (was an -x options before), which contains the no module found messages etc, making the order: Device-1: DIMM 0 type: no module installed Device-2: DIMM 1 type: DDR4 size: 16 GiB speed: 2400 MT/s This puts all the speed/size/voltage data together, and stops putting the no module found message in speed, which never made any sense. 2. In -m, changed width data to more clearly reflect the data source: width (bits): data: 64 total: 72 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Man page, added a TABLE OF CONTENTS section which lists all the primary sections. Can help since the man page has gotten so darned long and man doesn't as far as I know support clickable internal links, sadly. 2. For -m, updated for revised output syntax and -x levels. Note that the help and man actually had the type: as default for -m, not -mx, but for some reason, the code had it wrong. Oops. 3. For -m, fixed some legacy output syntax in the examples. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Some refactors of slots, ram, as well as a bit more refactoring of edid stuff for graphics. 2. Added $ENV{'DISPLAY'} to debugger data collector, no idea why that was left out. |
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Harald Hope | 29e241dc0f | tiny bug fix for tinycore/xvesa, other distros can ignore this. | ||
Harald Hope | b3cdcd979a |
New version, man. Continuing development of EDID and monitor features, bug
fixes, normal fixes. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Failed to handle case for monitor positions of array type: 2-2, 3-1, 1-3, 4-4. I'm not sure what structure those are really arranged in, but might be worth adding in the x+y pos values along with the row-col values. 2. For Monitors and graphics Device ports, if using non free nvidia driver and: nvidia-drm.modeset=1 not set in grub kernel boot parameters, there will be no /sys/class/drm data for the nvidia device, and thus no ports data, and no monitor data. 3. A class of high count DP or DVI port IDs are changed by Xorg drivers to for example: DP-6 > DP-2-3. This is very difficult to handle and will in general probably fail unfortunately because that level of port ID abstraction is just reazlly hard to deal with dynamically. 4. A to-do item: add bus ID children on --slots. This will probablby be in next inxi. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. None outside of the various fixes. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. In sensors, failed to pull out BAT sensor data. In most cases, this would not lead to any issues, but it could have. 2. This one just slipped my mind, I'd meant to do it, but in Montitor-x:, the primary ID should have been the 'real' kernel ID, not the mapped: ID, which is the X.org ID when different from the kernel ID. So mapped should be the Xorg version when they are different from the kernel version. 3. In Graphics, monitors can show > 1 ratio, failed to set all to :, resulting in: ratio: 3:2 or 16/10 modes:. Also fixed ParseEDID to output an array of ratios, which can then be processed as wanted. 4. Monitor map fixes: * Handle case in monitors where display ID: eDP and sys ID: eDP-1, this only works if 1 monitor in array. There's a variety of this type of failure, when X.org or its drivers decide to call the port ID XYZ with no number at all. All those possible cases are now handled, like eDP > eDP-1, VGA > VGA-1, and so on. * Added fallback, if no match, and if only 1 monitor, just map them to eachother if other mappings failed. Prompted by things like: s: DP-6 > d: DP-2-3; s: eDP-1 > d: DP-4, which are just impossible to create logic to map. 5. Removed 'ati' driver from xorg drivers list, it's simply a wrapper for r128, mach64, or radeon (and maybe amdgpu), and shows as failed, unloaded, or loaded, because of this. ati basically assigns the correct driver, that is, but is not itself a driver. Thanks mrmazda for spotting this issue. 6. Typo on QDI => Quantum Data. 7. Added fallback for monitor model, now using vendor code plus product code if nothing found for vendor nice name or model. This will show as 'model-id:' instead of model: to help differentiate the two. 8. Added Monitor product_code to manufacturer if no model name is found. 9. get_pci_vendor was trimming at ' / ' if the product string also contained ' / '. Fix is to ignore 1 character 'words' in the logic. 10. In Slots, failed to remove_duplicates in the slot info field, leading to redundant output strings. See Enhancement 3 and Code 4. 11. See Change 3, finally made -S section use full key: value pair, which makes stuff more explicit, like: System: Host: yawn Kernel: 5.16.0-11.1-liquorix-amd64 arch: x86_64 bits: 64 compiler: gcc v: 11.2.0 Desktop: Xfce v: 4.16.0 tk: Gtk v: 3.24.24 info: xfce4-panel wm: xfwm v: 4.16.1 vt: 7 dm: 1: LightDM v: 1.26.0 2: SDDM note: stopped Distro: Debian GNU/Linux bookworm/sid 12. Fix for mageia and lsb distro data, force use of os-release for mageia if detected. That overrides the forced use of lsb release for mandrake/mandriva, because for some reason mageia has decided to carry ALL the legacy distro files: '/etc/lsb-release', '/etc/lsb-release.d', '/etc/mageia-release', '/etc/mandrake-release', '/etc/mandrakelinux-release', '/etc/mandriva-release', '/etc/os-release', '/etc/redhat-release', '/etc/system-release' which is really not what this stuff is intended for, if it's an actual derived distro from a living base, then yes, include the base file, but all these have the same distro id data for mageia, none for the derived distros. Also, fixed an lsb release thing to avoid using codename if codename contains release number as well. Since lsb_release is totally legacy at this point, who cares if we might miss a specific codename here and there on legacy system. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Added Color Characteristics to EDID parser, for some reason that had been left out. 2. Added advanced EDID output option --edid, that allows for showing more advanced EDID data than is appropriate for most users cases. Ihcludes errors, color characteristics chroma: (chromacity), full modes, not just min/max. 3. In --slots, added bus-ID. Also extended report quality, made more granular, got rid of single blob from Type and Designation and now get more accurate and useful data. 4. In cases with > 1 DM, check to see if one or more are stopped or disabled, = and add (stopped) if it was detected in running service as stopped. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. Reversed monitor ID and mapped: ID values, that was a mistake, the mapped: item was supposed to contain the X.org mapped name, and the primary ID was supposed to be the actual real ID the kernel uses. Not a huge deal either way, but there it is. 2. Include disabled but connected Monitors. This works around nvidia bug showing monitors disabled when they are enabled, but also allows for showing connected monitors, though without as much data. 3. Made the last holdout -S > -Sa use strict full key: value pair output, like Desktop: XFCE v: 4.14.12 and so on. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Added help/man for --edid info. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. In ParseEDID: made new key: edid_error, which contains an array ref of 1 or more edid errors. The previous version did a poor job and returned only the first error found, so there could have been > 1 error, and you'd never know it. This changes check_parsed_edid to _check_parsed_edid(). and adds a utility tool _edid_error, which grabs the message from main::message, giving better output integration. This also allows for future error handling expansion quite easily. 2. In map_monitor_ids() fixed matching pattern, made more robust and explicit, to catch things like s: eDP-1 d: eDP or eDP-1-1, both have been seen. Also added fallback for single monitor, just map them to eachother if mapping failed. 3. get_pci_vendor() added test for using anything that is 1 character length, to not break on 1 character length string matches. 4. Fully refactored --slots, that was originally written purely as a proof of concept in terms of adding a new feature during the original inxi 2.9 rewrite, and was never actually touched after that. |
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Harald Hope | 7ba2e0220f | readme update | ||
Harald Hope | 8b5fefed22 | version fix | ||
Harald Hope | cd1e29b0af |
Just as 3.3.10 > 3.3.11 were a huge set of CPU upgrades, including significant
internal refactors, so too is 3.3.13 a significant Graphics upgrade, featuring significant upgrades to Wayland (and Xvesa/TinyX!) support, and allowing for much more granular output controls. The legacy -Ga showing Display/Screen/Monitors is now split apart, and can now work for some features in and out of display. This upgrade should be of significant interest to any Wayland using distro, as well as the tiny Xvesa based distros like TinyCore, Slitaz, and Puppy. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE TO MAINTAINERS AND PACKAGERS: If you had Cpanel::JSON::XS or JSON::XS Perl modules as dependencies, you can remove those, inxi now can use JSON::PP, which is in Core Modules since Perl 5.14 (unless for some reason your distro removed that module from Core Modules). Basically inxi will simply look for whichever of the 3 is installed, and use that one. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. The free drivers for xorg like amdgpu, modesetting, alter the the internal kernel IDs for monitors/gfx device ports, which is somewhat bizarre since the ideal role of any ID is to be an identifier that always works. Due to this situation, inxi has to map the kernel ids to the x driver monitor IDs in order to show the advanced monitor data, like model: mapped: and modes:. This may not always work as expected since if the mapping fails, the data will fail to match to the monitors. While not enough data is in to make any conclusions, hoping that this issue does not exist on Wayland compositors. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Not sure if this was a bug, but I believe RAM vendor ID matches would never have generated results, and might have generated errors. That's corrected as part of Code fix 1. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. Tiny indentation level issue, for -Ga, Monitor was not set to be a container for its data. This would only impact -y 1 or json and xml output cases, and would be subtle, but it was an oversight. 2. Small fix for monitor dimensions, failed to switch the mm dimensions for monitors placed in a vertical, portait mode, instead of standard landscape mode. Now switches mm x and y if that is detected, which corrects dpi as well. 3. For Xvesa: * Show vesa as display driver, Xvesa == vesa, dugh,lol. * Show better Interface and Screen resolution data missing messages. * See FIX 5 for adding in display-ID:. * Show TinX Xvesa string for server data, not just Xvesa. 4. For Wayland, which currently has no EGL support in inxi, if no glxinfo present, show EGL Wayland specific Messsage: for advanced EGL data, not the generic glxinfo that were shown previously. 5. Display was relying on xdpyinfo or a Wayland environmental variable to set display-ID:, now falls back always to $ENV{DISPLAY} if nothing else was found and that exists. I hadn't realized how much was depending on those x tools, which many people never had installed in the first place. This also supplies that for Xvesa as well, which has features that need the Display-ID to use. 6. Intel family 6, model 17h, supposed to be yorkfield, was penryn, fixed. 7. Small fix for remove_duplicates, it was not case insensitive so missed things like DELL Dell in strings. 8. Failed to detect or get Xfree86 X server version number. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Extensive Graphics Upgrades: * -Gxx Devices: For some gpus / drivers, show vram total and used for -Gxx. amdgpu supports this, I believe it's the only one, but don't know for sure. * -Gxx Devices: (Linux only): Show active, off (connected but disabled, like a closed laptop screen with attached moniitor), and empty ports on devices. Not tested for USB yet. * -Gxx Devices: Show device ports (like VGA-1, DVI-I-1, HDMI-A-1), active, off (off is connected but disabled) and empty (linux only). * -G Display/Screen: Removed strict dependency on xdpyinfo to show advanced xorg screen and display data. Now it will show most of the data if xrandr is available, and all if xrandr and xdpyinfo are installed. More granular error messages as well. * -G Wayland Display: new type, d-rect: for > 1 monitor Wayland display layouts. Works roughly the same as Screen: s-res: does, except since Wayland has no 'Screen' concept, that goes into Display. This is sort of a rough algo, basically it takes either the dimensions of the total of x and y resolutions, or the greatest x or y resolution found for any monitor, whichever is greater, and uses that to create the display rectangle resolution composite value. * -G Display, Monitors: Extended display tool options from just xrandr to swaymsg, wlr-xrandr, weston-info, wayland-info. Still nothing on kwin_wayland or gnome-shell and mutter data. *. -S, -G: compositors, full redo of list, now supported: asc awc cage cagebreak cardboard chameleonwm clayland comfc dwc dwl epd-wm fireplace feathers fenestra glass gamescope greenfield grefson hikari hopalong inaban japokwm kiwmi kwinft labwc laikawm lipstick liri mahogany marina maze motorcar newm nucleus orbital perceptia phoc pywm qtile river rustland simulavr skylight sommelier sway swc swvkc tabby taiwins tinybox tinywl trinkster velox vimway vivarium wavy waybox way-cooler wayfire wayhouse waymonad westeros westford weston wio+ wio wxrc wxrd xuake * -G Enhanced Interfaces/GL item, previously only type OpenGL forX, now has: * X - OpenGL, requires glxinfo , same as before. * Wayland - EGL, currently no tool available, stub in place. Allegedly this data can be found but have no idea how or if a tool does that yet * Xvesa - Interface: interface type (VBE/GOP). GOP not confirmed, no data samples; v:, source:, dac: (no idea what it is, show it though), controller:, and ram: items. This is based on TinyX/Xvesa as found in TinyCore, but should work in Slitaz and Puppy TinyX as well if those projects are still around. * -G Display/Screen/Monitor data: Created structures and abstractions that allow for Wayland/Xorg/Xvesa data, most new features will work with any of these. Or Arcan, if that actually makes it, and we get data for it. We'll wait on Arcan, heh. * -G Display server: For Xvesa, added type TinyX to server if detected. Added Xwayland, which was not handled previously. For Xwayland, if wayland running, and if Xorg also installed, shows: server: X.org v: 1.20.14 with: Xwayland v: 21.01 Otherwise shows: server: Xwayland v: 21.01 * -G Compositors: fixed a long standing weak spot, if > 1 compositor detected running, not common, but could happen, shows all detected compositors. Display: x11 server: X.Org v: 1.20.13 compositors: 1: Mutter v: 41.1 2: xfwm v: 4.16.1 driver: X: loaded: modesetting gpu: radeon * -G drivers: now shows if X or gpu driver, in each its own section. This makes it more obvious what is going on: Display: x11 server: X.Org v: 1.20.13 driver: X: loaded: modesetting gpu: radeon resolution: * -Gxx Monitors: Show primary monitor with pos: primary,right. Uses either xrandr 'primary' value, or if no 'primary' found in an Xorg Screen, uses +0+0 positioned monitor. Position is based on the row and column number in the rectangular grid of monitors when monitors per Xorg Screen are > 1. For most common multi-monitor layouts, text positions are used, which are in general more clear and easy to understand than their internal numeric counterparts, that is, unless the layout is too complicated, it will show left, or top-left, instead of 1-1, and so on. Text mode positions are available for the following grid styles currently: 1x2, 1x3, 1x4, 2x1, 2x2, 2x3, 3x1, 3x2, 3x3. 'top' means the top row if > 1 row, 'bottom' means the bottom row, 'middle' is the middle row if 3 rows, 'left' is the first column, 'right' the last, 'center' if 3 columns, and 'center-l' (1-2), 'center-r' (1-3) are the 2 center columns if 4 columns. 'bottom-l', 'bottom-c', 'bottom-r'; 'middle-l', 'middle-c', 'middle-r'; 'top-left', 'top-center', 'top-right' complete the possible values. If the grid of monitors is greater than the supported rows or columns, it will switch to numeric row-column mode, with column-row numbering starting at 1-1, top left. * -Gxx Monitors: show (if detected, Linux only) monitor model, and if the display ID (from Xorg or Wayland) is different from the /sys monitor ID, show mapped: to show the /sys id. * -Gxxx Monitors: show modes: max: XxY min: XxY, or mode: XxY (if only 1 mode found). Shows hz: * -Ga Monitors: shows serial, built year, gamma, ratio, if detected. 2. Added impish 21-10 and jammy 22-04 to ubuntu id. That's for Mint base ID. Not huge point in updating if Mint doesn't update inxi, but there it is. 3. For -Axx, -Exx, -Gxx, -Nxx, shows PCIe speed and lanes. With -a, shows max speed / lanes if different than current speeds/lanes. Note that for unknown reasons not all devices in a PCIe slot show this data. 4. -Ixx: terminals added: foot, ate 5. -Sxx: login/display managers added: emptty, greetd, qingy, tbsm. See CODE 5 for more info on how this change was done. 6. -Sxxx: status/dock/panel bars added: i3-status-rs, luastatus, nwg-bar, nwg-dock, nwg-panel, rootbar, sfwbar, wapanel, waybar, yambar 7. Added a Tyan board IPMI sensor data set. 8. Added support for fruid_print for Elbrus -M Machine data. Those boards don't have dmi tables, but do ship with Elbrus OS which has fruid_print. 9. More disk vendors! Yes, you know the drill, the world turns, and with every turn, a flock of new vendors appears, like baby rabbits emerging from their warren, endlessly, a stream that is the life essence itself... or something. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. When xdpyinfo is not installed, user will still see advanced -Ga Monitor and Screen data as long as xrandr at least is installed. Better error messages as well now to explain which tool or tools missing caused the missing data. 2. -Gxx will show basic Screen and Monitors, id, mapped, pos:, model, res, dpi, diag; -Gxxx adds Monitor modes; --Ga adds screen/monitor size, Screen diag. 3. -ba/-v2 no longer show the full screens/monitor report, now it remains basic mode output, which it should have always done, unless -G is also explicitly added. 4. Split apart x-server version to v:, which should always have been the case. 5. Xvesa and Wayland no longer show glxinfo messages for no glxinfo for GL data. Now they show their own custom messages, appropriate to the case. 6. json features now test for JSON::PP, JSON::XS, or Cpanel::JSON::XS modules, and use whichever is found. Note I did not realize JSON::PP was in core modules as of 5.14 so that makes sense to use, and will allow inxi to start using json data sources, which are a lot easier to parse. 7. Changed -G drivers to show subsections for X and gpu drivers, and updated missing driver messages to account for this change. X drivers now show the sub sets of loaded/unloaded/failed/alternate, and gpu shows active gpu drivers, assuming such are detected. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Help and man page updates for -G Display/Screen/Monitor changes. Redid -G, -Gx, -Gxx, -Gxxx, -Ga. Added monitor layout position feature. 2. Updated -Ga for xrandr/xdpyinfo changes. 3. Updated --recommends to more accurately show function of xdpyinfo and xrandr for -G and -Ga. 4. Reorganized and added complete table of contents to docs/inxi-data.txt -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Slightly optimized use of array loads on disk_vendor() and ram_vendor() based on how it's now done for monitor layouts, which is more efficient, use a scalar to hold a reference to the array, that avoids having the array ever exist in more than 1 place. Part of the ongoing process of avoiding extra hash and array copies globally. 2. Moved to consistent undef behaviors. * For lists of variables use () to undefine, changed all of the the following: 1. (@a,$b,$c,%d) = (undef,undef,undef,undef); 2. (@a,$b,$c,%d) = (undef); 3. (@a,$b,$c,%d) = undef; to use: (@a,$b,$c,%d) = (); This undefines all the variables in the list. Note that assigning undef to @a in the first example creates an array of 1 key, with the value undef, and (@a,@b) = (undef,undef) creates arrays of 2 indexes, or something like that. Not what was wanted. Examples 2 and 3 assign undef to @a: an array of 1 index, value undef, and undefine the others variables in the list. This was not the desired behavior! * For most scalars, arrays, and hashes, use: undef @a; undef $s; undef %h. * For some hash and array index values, use $h{a} = undef. These cases may want the key itself to exist, with the value of undef, though I believe: undef $h{a}; is synonymous, but still have to verify that. I did some testing, and realized that some of the undef I had used in the various previous ways of using undef were not actually resulting in the expected behaviors. 3. Refactored display_data_x into 3 functions, added display_data_xdpyinfo and display_data_xrandr, which allows for more granular handling of those dependencies, now inxi can show most advanced display data with only xrandr installed. 4. Significantly improved all error handling and missing data for Wayland/Xorg. 5. Refactored get_display_manager() to better handle corner case dm file or directory names, and to avoid endless loops. Much cleaner now. Required because greetd had varying file names, greetd.run, or just greet-546.sock. With some other dm's that use similar, or unreadable directories in /run, now just doing a glob of /run/ /var/run, /var/run/rc.d as detected and checking for the dms in the names, then just using the dms that were found. Simpler. 6. Massively simplified and integrated compositor logic in Graphics, now using program_values() and program_data() as appropriate, and simple matching list to ps_gui data to get detected compositor[s], much simpler, far more efficient code, less to maintain. Also fixed long-standing weak spot of exiting on first detected compositor, now shows all detected, with version etc for each if available. 7. With 6. also significantly simplified and optimized get_ps_de_data() for desktop data, that's the ps aux fallback case for wm desktop detections. 8. Made $wl compositors list global to avoid having to update each section, that's now used in -G compositor, -S desktop/wm, and wm sections. It is set in ps_gui() on initial load. 7. Settled on one and only way to do multiline conditionals, now use no space, use same indent level as starting if/elsif etc. I've been debating this one, but can't find any real way to handle that elegantly so I think best to just not try, and leave it up the code flow to show when it's wrapped condition tests. 8. Refactored previous gl_output, expanded it to handle all interface types, OpenGL, EGL (not currently active due to no known tool to get EGL data for Wayland, and Interface: VBE type data for Xvesa. This roughly completed the breaking apart of the X.org centric logic for Display, Monitors, and GL data, and make all sections now fully agnostic to display server or protocol type. Should new display servers appear, it will now be far more simple to add support for them, since they would just plug into the existing abstraction layers. 9. Added --debug-arg to allow for passing specific custom args to the debugger. 10. Refactored display_server version, now works much better, creates lists of server/version, and xwayland as well if found. |
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Harald Hope | 87ebdfff2a | readme update | ||
Harald Hope | 1da75146cc |
Small point release with some useful fixes, some bugs corrected, small
enhancement. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Note on KNOWN ISSUES 2 from 3.3.10, I realized that the second level indentation actually takes care of that hanging parent, since now it's quite clear that its children are indented on the following line. So that issue took care of itself. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. In $bsd_type cases, specifically SunOS triggered this, where sysctl was not present (which it always is in all other BSD types), it tripped an error due to failure to update to revised $alerts{'sysctl'}->{'message'}, instead was using the old method. Failed to update that in refactor of CheckTools logic. Would impact no supported operating systems, but is a bug. 2. Corner case, a combination I never used, inxi -a, triggers error in the RAID logic because the mdadm test was not run, generating an undefined eq error. Only happened when mdraid was present and used on system. 3. Tiny bug, for st+mt cpus, like alder lake, was printing out second tpc by accident which made it look like it said st: 4 tpc: 2. Just a small output glitch. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. Added some fallback 32 bit system tests, [2345]86, like i386, i686. 2. Changed shell: Unknown Shell to shell: N/A, that was a legacy use, and was obviously redundant. N/A is more consistent with rest of output no value found handling. Due to requirement of doing empty tests, this is set in the data, not output, generator component. 3. Refactored partition data logic to get rid of bsd tests for df -kTP, -kT, -k. Now tests only to see if returns data, cascades down until it gets something. Now will attempt to reconnect hanging lines when no -P feature available prior to main partition data processing. This makes it agnostic to os issues, and it just pays attention to feature support. Also adds in dynamic column count instead of hard-coded, this avoids oddities and future proofs to some degree. Now systems will adapt seamlessly if support for -P appears, or -T, or whatever. 4. Partitions corner case, where has zram, but has no partitions, failed to show partitions no data found message since @partitions had data in it, but nothing for partitions output to print. Seen in TinyCore for example, but might happen in other ram based systems. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Added Slint to distro ID, and slint/slackware to system base. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. None -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Typo in man page fixed. 2. A few more edits and corrections on 3.3.10 changelong. That thing was written concurrently with the development, and thus had lingering errors when things were changed in midstream. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Added --cygwin and --android fake system type flag. Switches on $b_android/ $b_cygwin flags. |
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Harald Hope | f36cc33077 | small fix for scaling min/max key | ||
Harald Hope | ec8ab3c213 |
Quick bug fix release. With as many changes as we got in 3.3.10, there were
bound to be a handful of oversights that were not caught in testing simply because those hardware scenarios were not present in the tested systems. Also minor feature enhancement for CPU scaling min/max speeds. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Due to the huge amount of changes, and the speed of change, while the new code is working as intended, it's somewhat lacking in coding elegance since a lot of it was hacked out very quickly, in near real time. This will get cleaned up and refactored to be less redundant if it does not impact execution speed, but is not pressing since there should be no functional difference. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Tiny oversight, in single case CPU model id would fail because it was using an undefined test from previous tests, not the right test, that is. Tripped error on Elbrus for example. 2. Typo in battery secondary type status, created undefined value error. This was I believe an older bug. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. PPC revision change broke Elbrus revision test for stepping. Added in more tests to show stepping for elbrus revision. 2. Single core Elbrus in cpuinfo fallback mode failed to assign core multiplier so L1 cache failed. 3. In cpuinfo fallback mode, Elbrus E2C3 cache data failed to appear, that data in not per block in cpuinfo, but is the last block, so those tests had to run on each block, not just the first one. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Show for -Ca scaling min/max speeds if different from CPU min/max speeds. 2. If no cpuinfo_min/max_freq speeds found, and scaling_min/max_freq found, set overall min/max to use scaling min/max instead of cpuinfo min/max. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. None. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Cleaned up and proofread better 3.3.10 changelog, it had a lot of errors because stuff kept changing. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Small code optimizations. |
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Harald Hope | c3d0e551a4 | lintian edit | ||
Harald Hope | 4c3ab65d46 |
Huge refactor of CPU physical/core/cache logic. That was some very old logic
with a lot of hacks and patches, but it had never been actually rewritten to take advantage of Perl's far more powerful and robust data structures and logic. This caused a continuous stream of error cases in subtle ways, or not so subtle, and fixes were just changing how the errors manifested. Tnanks very much to linuxquestions.org Slackware forum people for massive help, and also to linux.org forum members for ongoing help and data and debugging. Note Changes 5, change of default widths in display to 80 columns, and out (aka, console, or ssh into remote system), 100. You can still use other widths if you like something wider using the configuration options shown. Also upped max columns wrapping line starters to own rows to 110 columns from 90, again the idea being to make output more readable to other users when posted in public. I've been thinking of this change for a long time, but was hoping -y would register with users, but it hasn't gained enough traction, so the result is way too many super hard to read issue reports, forum posts, linux kernel issues, etc, it's honestly gotten sort of embarrassing because they make it look like inxi has bad output. Sidescrolling code blocks in forums in particular are absurdly hard to read and scan rapidly for data. Going along with the width and indentation changes, for most main row types, if they wrap to a second row, they are further indented 2 column2, to make it easier to see what they belong to. The two levels of indentation contain more useful visual cues as to what belongs to what. There was a temptation to release this as either 3.4.00 or 4.0.00 but in the end, I decided to follow the numbering rules, and to just roll it to 3.3.10 since there aren't really any primary new features even though CPU was basically rewritten in large part, and big parts of inxi were also changed, upgraded, and enhanced. But no truly new features, just some display control items like -Y, --indent, --indents. I hope this refactor meets its primary goals, and that the new defaults for display help resolve public posting issues which have grown increasingly annoying for anyone trying to read those pasted in too long outputs. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Android seems to have CPU cache data, but does not show any 'size' item. But it does have the other data for each cache type internally, which is odd. 2. In some instances, the parent key:value pairs with '' as value, those are parents of children key:value pairs, are left hanging at end of line, with the children on the following line. This can look awkward, but in other cases, actually looks very good, it depends if it's at the start or end of the line. I won't say this is not correctable, but it would be very difficult, and outside the scope of this release, but that is something that I may look at for a future release now that the output generator logic was reworked slightly for Change 5b. It's tricky though, because in cases where it's the first item on the line, you want that behavior, but when it's last, you don't. But this may be worth revisiting in the future. 3. In some cases, -Y + -y1 may lead to the start of the block scrolling off the top of the visible screen. This isn't really correctable, so if that's an issue for you, just don't use -y1 with -Y and all the output will wrap nicely. 4. There is an unaccountable ~10-20ms delay reading cpufreq/scaling_cur_freq, per thread/core, which really adds up on high thread count CPUs. There is a workaround in inxi to use cpufreq_cur_freq if it is readable, ie, if you are root or use sudo, but to fallback to scaling_cur_freq if can't read cpuinfo_... This is a drag, and really looks like a kernel bug, or a frequency driver bug. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. 3.3.09 and 3.3.10 CPU bug fixes: * Failed to filter out certain virtual machine CPU core speeds, and showed more speeds than the instance actually has. Noticed this with KVM running on Xeon CPUs. * For many cases, L2 cache, particularly for Intel, was completely wrong, it was showing L3 caches, or L3+L2. Failed to handle cases where L2 cache belongs to more than 1 core, except for using a crude hack for AMD Bulldozer microarch. Older Intel Core 4 core CPUs would sometimes be 1 L2 per die, and the 4 cores were actually 2 core duo cpu dies, with one L2 cache per die. * Shows wrong core count for complex core complexes like those found in Intel Alder Lake, now shows correct count of actual cores, regardless of the MT or ST state of each core. * Showed invalid L3 cache values in some legacy cpus that had no L3 cache, that is due to a bug in the dmidecode data itself. Solution is to never use dmidecode cache data if any other valid L1, L2, or L3 cache data found for Linux, and to only use dmidecode data for bsds if no L1, or L2, or L3 data found. Or if forced with --dmidecode. 2. An unfortunately long standing bug found and fixed, thanks slackware users! cp_cpu_arch was, and has been for a while, failing to convert hex stepping to decimal, or test if the string it gets is even a possible hex value, this resulted in all Intel CPUs with stepping > 9 failing to ID correctly for cpu arch. 3. In a related bug, hex to decimal tool used to create --admin hex/decimal output for family/model/stepping was also not testing if the string was an actual valid hex number. Case in particular, power pc with revision field contained a long string, which was of course not a valid hex number, and that tripped a Perl error when it was asked to convert a non hex string to decimal. 4. Long standing bug found while doing Change 5: inxi actually never applied separate in/out of dispay to widths because using a legacy boolean that was not updated, so it was always using out of display widths. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. Incorrectly calling PowerPC 'revision' 'stepping' for -Ca, that is now stored as $cpu{'revision'} to avoid mixing up the logics there. For PowerPC shows as rev: [string]. 2. Microarch: * AMD family 15, model 2 as bulldozer, actually piledriver. * AMD family 17, model 18, was supposed to be zen/zen+, since I can't tell those apart, seen stepping 1 is zen+, but had incorrect match. * Intel family 6, model 25, stepping 2 as nehalem, should have been westmere. * Changed Penryn to Core Penryn, intel family 6, model 17 * misc other micro arch fine tunings. 3. Code fix 8, switched to global %risc for arm, mips, ppc, riscv, sparc. This corrects many sloppy handlers, and makes all risc processing the same, and calls device tree readers for all risc systems, not just arm or arm and mips. 4. In cases where bogomips were 0 due to false values in risc results, show N/A. 5. Removed all attempts to guess at what /proc/cpuinfo cache size: refers to, it can literally be anything, a per core L1, a per core or cpu L2, or an L3. So applying any math to it is just a random guess at that point. If any L1,2,3 cache data is found, don't use the cache: value at all, but that will only be present if no /sys data was found anyway, and if cpuinfo had no specific cache type fields, only generic cache. 6. Added failsafe tests for stepping and model id before doing conversion to hex. Make sure integer! 7. Added L1 D cache, was only using I cache for BSDs. Output will show total for L1 A + L1 D. No idea why I didn't use L1 D, makes little sense, but that's how it goes. 8. Made bogomips tests more granular, now only rejects low sub 50 bogomips values if %risc cpu type. Legacy ancient cpus like 486 could and did have bogomip counts below 50. https://tldp.org/HOWTO/BogoMips/bogo-list.html 9. See Enhancement 12 as well. If OpenBSD, which has no per core data or physical cpu data, is running on MT capable cpu, but for security OpenBSD has disabled MT, will now force MT to be not shown via the hw.smt value. This removes a small glitch that would have bothered OpenBSD users who know that OpenBSD has disabled MT for security purposes. 10. Changed BSD hack to use L2 cache totals to deduce > 1 physical cpus, that was flat out dumb, since we can just use dmidecode type 4 to iterate physical cpu counts and skip the pointless logic. Thus, if dmidecode, and if > 1 dmidecode type 4 found, and if physical cpu counts equal 1, then replace the found counts with the dmidecode physical cpu counts. 11. Corrected bad assumption that threads would always be 2 per core for MT tests. Still no way to reliably determine threads per core for non x86 cpus like powerpc however, but those are very fringe and should rarely be an issue since that data is only missing on very old linux now I think. 12. Fixed 'parameters:' going to its own line with -Sa, that wasn't supposed to. -S is two lines, the kernel / host stuff, and the desktop/console/distro stuff. 13. Fixed case when key: value first word plus other parts of line longer than max width, failed to wrap as expected. 14. Added start/end ' and " start / end \s to main filters. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. CPU: most Linux will now show L1 and L3 cache with -Cx without needing sudo/root, and it will be more accurate than ever before. 2. CPU: shows per CPU L1/L2/L3 totals, and shows actual full system physical processor count * L1/L2/L3 total in parentheses, like: L2: 1.5 MiB (3 MiB). 3. CPU: A long standing annoyance, previously for main CPU 'Speed:' item, showed the fastest core speed found, now shows avg: [speed] and with -Cx, shows the 'high:' as well if > 1 cores, and if 1 or more cores have a higher speed than the other(s). 4. CPU: Handles advanced cases of new architectures, like Alder Lake with Performance and Efficiency cores, future Zen, and existing ARM CPUs with 2 or more different core sets, with different max/min frequencies. Previously a hack was used to handle only ARM CPUs with this type of architecture. Will show correct CPU core counts, which previous inxi versions would fail to do for Alder Lake type scenarios of 8 single threaded CPUs and 4-8 multithreaded )MT) perforance cores. This should also in theory show different the different min/max speeds if they were detected. Those did not seem to be set correctly in Alder Lake sample data I saw however, P and E cores were set to the same min/max speeds. 5. Added CPU types MST (Multi+Single Thread), AMP (Asymmetric Multi Processing), and AMCP (Asymmetrical Multi Core Processor). This will be applied to any CPU that has this type of complex topology that has been dynamically detected, like Alder Lake or different core count or min/max speed RISC CPUs. 6. CPU: shows with -Ca for cases where different L1/L2/L3 caches found per physical CPU, as with Alder Lake, but also many other variants that were poorly or not at all handled before, how many of each cache type (L1 Data, instruction) were found, otherwise will show how many of each cache were found. 7. CPU: shows with -Ca in Topology: report, for cases like Alder Lake with different core types in one physical CPU (type: MST AMCP), the number that are single threaded (st) and number that are multi-threaded (mt). 8. Basic support for rsyc-v systems, going along with code fix 8, fix 3, now it's easy to add this type of support. 9. Added shortcut options for --filter-label (--zl), --filter-uuid (--zu), and andded new filter option, --filter-vulnerabilities (--zv). The latter is added by request, a decent idea to have option to not show cpu vulnerabilities. 10. Going with fix 7, switched to a sort of pseudo L1 d/i with desc report for any BSD with L1 I/D cache found, or elbrus cache0 (icache) / cache1 (d cache). Elbrus should hopefully be handled by the /sys tool. Guesses on the L1 are ok, since those are almost always per core, so it's fine. Didn't expect to enhance any BSD cpu data this time around, but there you go!! If they have the data, then it will be used. Not going to go overboard though in that, quite useless overall since usually can't see how many CPUs are present, at least not usually. 11. For -Ca, full CPU topology report if any complex topogy is detected, otherwise shows the same basic Info: 2x 6-core or Info: dual core as before, no point in wasting a line for something with no more data than the short string. Complex types include MT CPUs since they will have different thread counts etc, and will have 2 or more threads per core, which will also be listed. 12. If smt status is defined (0/1), shows smt: enabled|disabled in Topology section, can be useful for systems with disabled MT, but supporting it. If no topology data found (OpenBSD for example), for -C shows 'smt: disabled' after 'type:' section, and enabled if -Cxxx (since MT really already tells you that). 13. For -Ca Speed: report, added 'governor:' item, if found. Can show 1 or more active governors. 14. Output height (in lines) control: -Y [-2|-1|0|1-xxx]]. This lets you break up any of the output into whatever number of lines you want. Also useful out of DISPLAY for reading -h options menu items etc. It came tp my attention that the long standing shift+pgup/pgdown (aka 'softscrollback) behavior had stopped working, and in fact has been removed from the current Linux kernel, at least until it is rewritten to be more clean and understandable. Read more about it in these kernel post/commit messages: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=50145474f6ef4a9c19205b173da6264a644c7489 https://lwn.net/ml/linux-kernel/CAHk-=whe4ZdTdCebneWqC4gSQZwsVJ5-Emg0BucOGCwPhOAJpw@mail.gmail.com/ Options for -Y are: * -Y 0 or -Y: Set maximum block height to terminal line height. * -Y [1-xxx]: Set maximum block line height to given integer. * -Y -1: Print out one primary data block item at a time, with -F for example. * -Y -2: Restore default unlimited height if LINES_MAX configuration item used. 15. And finally, more disk vendors/vendor ids. As usual. As expected. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. If /sys or /proc/cpuinfo speed data available: * For -b CPU item: speed: [speed MHz] min/max: [min]/[max] MHz becomes: speed (MHz): avg: [speed] min/max: [min]/[max] * For -C, Speed item Speed: [speed MHz] min/max: [min]/[max] MHz Cores (MHz): ... becomes: Speed (MHz): avg: [speed] min/max: [min]/[max] cores: ... * For short form, shows speed/min/max but uses average speed if available. For -b and -C, only shows one MHz in Speed line starter, which slightly shortens the line even with the added 'avg:' item since 3 MHz are replaced with 1. 2. Going with change 1, now the 'avg:' item shows not the fastest cpu speed found, which was the case before, but shows an average of all cpu speeds found. Showing the fastest made some sense back in the days of single core, or even dual core CPUs, but makes little sense today with many core/threaded cpus. With -x, it will show the high: [speed] item as well, after 'avg:'. 3. By suggestion, wrapped first Type item in Vulnerabilities to its own line, that's a verbose --admin option after all, no need to save lines! 4. Going along with Fix 5, give up on trying to pretend we can guess at L2 cache, now if only 'cache' data was available from cpuinfo, will just say: cache: [cache size] note: check and call it a day. 5a. Change default width to 80 columns, in and out of display. Too many users are posting horribly wrapping inxi output in forums, issue trackers, etc, and it frankly makes inxi look really bad, creates awful side scrolling code boxes, etc. So now default widths in and out of console are 80 (since often data is generated in SSH or out of X/Wayland) for issues. This essentially makes -y 80/-y the default width. This is what I've been using for a few years now, and after seeing far too many side scrolling or badly wrapping inxi outputs online, I think it's probably time to just force 80 column widths as default and call it a day. You can change these new defaults using configuration options (these are the previous options, though due to a bug, COLS_MAX_CONSOLE was never being used): COLS_MAX_CONSOLE=115 # in display, terminal client max width COLS_MAX_IRC=100 COLS_MAX_NO_DISPLAY=130 # not in display, no X/Wayland running 5b. Changed output wrapped indent to 1 column from 2, and make second and greater rows of a line indent +1 to make it more clear that it is a child row of its parent row. Note that because no arg short form, -S, and -I are special types of rows, this behavior is not used, they just print out as usual. This 1 column indent also applies to -y1, making for a little more data per line but more readable and easy to follow. 6. If > 1 physical cpu detected, no longer uses single/dual/triple/quad core strings, rather uses: 2x 2-core. Also uses lower case -core, not -Core. 7. Only show die counts for CPU (on rare occasions > 1 found) with -xx. Not particularly important bit of data afterall. 8. Make L1, L3 cache data show with -Cx, not -Cxx, now that it's working well. 9. Removed CPU die for -Cxx, that's only going to show with -Ca now. 10. If -Ca, and if certain complexity conditions are met, shows a separate Topology line rather than the Info: 6-core type item. For -b, short, -Cx, -Cxxx shows the Info: topology short form. 11. Bogomips always shows before flags data, whether -f or just -Cx trips flag output. 12. Flags/Features now shows in the same place, under Speeds: always, whether -Cx shortlist, or -Cf full list. Makes more sense that way, and code is much cleaner too. 13. Bogomips, being essentially bogus units of speed for cpu, are moved into Speed: report. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Updated man/help for new CPU extra data options and output changes. 2. Cleaned up and added sample outputs for man CPU items. 3. Now that doas is getting into Linux distros, removed all mentions of doas as a BSD option, and made it a general doas/sudo item. Glad to see doas making it into linux distros, it's a good tool, much easier to configure and use than sudo. Good job OpenBSD guys. Note that inxi already has had full doas support for a while now, but this finalizes it, and makes it fully agnostic. Internally doas is actually preferred over sudo, by the way. 4. Added documention items for INDENT (--indent), INDENT_MIN (--inident-min). 5. Re-ordered help menu and man page, created new Filters and Output Controls sections to make stuff easier to find. In man page, also added on top a list of OPTIONS sections to make finding stuff easier. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Removed legacy /sys cpu functions: cpu_bugs_sys(); get_boost_status(); set_cpu_speeds_sys(). cpu_speeds() is deprecated and now will only be used for legacy Linux and BSDs if they had any per core speeds found; get_caches() was only a placeholder for the full featured cpu_sys data source, and was removed; cpu_speeds() no longer needed, integrated into other logic; cpu_dies_sys() removed, integrated into other logic. This logic is now integrated into cpu_data_sys() data generator. 2. Changed the main CpuItems functions to use array/hash references, not passing full hashes or arrays in most cases now. 3. For machine_data_soc(), switched to CpuItem::cpuinfo_grabber() which then sets the global @cpuinfo and %cpuinfo_machine items, which will be used again in Cpu if cpu data is requested. This gets rid of a full parsing of cpuinfo just to get the machine data section, and also makes it so cpuinfo in cpu does not need to worry about the machine data block, which is not related to the processor blocks anyway, that was always a hack done by the kernel guys to toss that SOC data somewhere as far as I can tell. 4. New tools: * either_or() - takes a list, and returns the first defined element of list. * regex_range() - generate ranges from comma, space, or ranges like 2-29, or any combination of those, like 3,6,12-29 5. Added --force cpuinfo to bypass all /sys based cpu logic, useful for testing to see what would have happened using old logic. 6. Added --dbg switches 39, 40, 41, for the new cpu sys data features, also made more consistent --dbg 8 and --dbg 38 switches. 7. Added sys/cpuinfo pair debugger to support debugging complex sys/cpuinfo issues. 8. Got rid of $b_arm,$b_mips,$b_ppc,$b_sparc, replaced with global %risc, also added $risc{'riscv'} type. this makes general risc type feature testing a lot easier since inxi can either test for %risc defined, or for a specific type of risc cpu. This is much cleaner, and use $risc{'id'} for print purposes, which got rid of a lot of tests. Also made all risc tests consistent, some were ARM only, or arm/mips, but were supposed to be for all risc cpus. 9. Set help menu code to roughly 80 columns width assuming 2 space tab indentation. 10. Changed all xxx_cleaner subs to clean_xxx, all filter subs to filter_xxx, and row_defaults() to message(). 11. Dumped redundant fallback logic in get_kernel_bits, if first getconf method fails, use $sys_bits, and call it good, it was repeating the 32/64 bit tests pointlessly. 12. Cleaned up print_data() to allow for more fine tuned indentation for the new 2 indent levels. 13. Made help menu code more or less wrap to 80 columns, or close. Ongoing to bring to 80 columns where practical, but never at expense of clarity or logic. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Harald Hope - Tue, 13 Dec 2021 10:25:49 -0800 |
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Harald Hope | 2feaf0b853 |
Thanks manjaro user alven for finding a bunch of corner and not so corner case
errors, glitches, documentation oversights, etc. This is a point release between the coming full CPU refactor and the current set of bug fixes and issue handlings. This release also contains the debuggers for the new CPU data logic, which are important to get this CPU refactor stable and reliable across old/new systems, different operating systems and platforms. Wanted to do this intermediate releaase to get the current fixes out, which make inxi overall better for CPU issues, but do not handle the core requirement to do a full refactor. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CORRECTION: 1. On release notes for 3.3.08: due to a long delay to get real debugger data from the person who had the issue, but finally getting it after the release of 3.3.08, there was NO bug in ps wwaux output. Something else was creating the linewraps, maybe the subshell, it's basically impossible to know since we never got a real debugger data set, which is the only real way to get the actual same data inxi will see. Was it a subshell wrapping the output? We just can't know, nor are we likely to ever find out. This highlights very well however why some issues are essentially impossible to ever fully resolve without the --debug 22 dataset. This bug/fix is definitely in that class of issues. It's never good to accuse another program of having a bug when it doesn't, so sorry to ps authors, no bug or issue exists for ps in this area. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. wiryonolau issue #259 points out that if --tty is used, default IRC filter rule is still active and on. Because his case appears to be from an autostart using Bash, which then gives up to find the parent at dash, which then makes inxi believe it's in an IRC shell client, that issue doesn't appear to be resolvable. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Documentation, help menu and man page showed wmctl instead of wmctrl, which for someone who reads the help man, leads to command --fake wmctl failing. Thanks manjaro user alven for finding this typo. 2. For dmidecode cpu data, had global total values for cache that could result in wrong output values, 2x or more wrong for L1 / L3 cache on linux. Difficulty is preserving that data for bsd, which in general do not show phys cpu counts, and thus make showing totals off. Created new '-total' item for each L cache type, which will handle > 1 cpus, and also can be used to determine if > 1 cpus present!. 3. Manjaro user pointed out that hub types were wrong, this is because inxi was using the INTERFACE ID values for hubs instead of the TYPE values. For all other device types, INTERFACE is correct, but for hubs, we needed TYPE, so fix is to detect INTERFACE 9/0/0 and if TYPE present for that, swap. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. For > 1 cpu systems, with dmidecode sourced cpu cache data, can now determine physical cpu count based on comparing L2 and L2-total values. This means that when dmidecode is used on BSD for CPU data, inxi may now be able to deduce that it is a > 1 cpu system. 2. Forgot to set $run{'filter'} to 0 for whitelist start client detection. 3. Going along with bug 3, changed 'Full speed (or root) hub' to: Full speed or root hub, to make more clear that it's one or the other, or both. 4. For apply_filter(), added test if <superuser required> just return the string. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Going with bug 1, and fix 1, for > 1 cpu systems, will now show for all cache: items L1: 2x 1.5 MiB (3 MiB), same for L2 and L3. This is far less confusing than showing the totals without explaining what they are. 2. Going along with 1, now root is not required to show L1 and L3 -Cxx on Linux as long as the system is reasonably new, about after 2008, and has getconf -a supported. That support is came in somewhere around 2.10, not sure exactly when. Debian Etch had it, Sarge did not, Ubuntu 9.10 had it. Tinycore does not have getconf at all. This will probably be replaced by a more robust full cpu /sys data tool. 3. Added ht to default short -Cx flag list, that should show, and it's short. 4. Added --no-filter to activate -Z, --filter-override isn't consistent with other --no-xxx options, even I forgot it. No changes, just another way to use -Z. 5. For issue #260 added pch as a new sensor output type, it's kind of a builtin southbridge / northbridge in the CPU die, but it's not a core, and has a different temp. Will anyone even know what pch is? probably not, but who cares. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. No longer showing for > 1 physical cpu systems the sum total of L1/2/3 cache data. Now shows per cpu L1/L2/L3, and if > 1 cpu, shows for example: cache: L1: 2x 512 KiB (1024 KiB) L2: 2x 2 MiB (4 MiB) L3: 2x 20 MiB (40 MiB) For single physical cpu output remains the same: cache: L1: 576 KiB L2: 3 MiB L3: 16 MiB -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Updated help/man for L1/L3 cache -Cxx changes. 2. Updated man and help to suggest -Z for --tty. 3. Forgot to note -v 7 adds -f, added to man/help. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: * Added 'getconf -a' to debugger, that may be usable for cpu cache data, need to gather data on that to confirm. that's regading issue #257 cache glitches. 2. Removed all * $physical_count for cache data in cpu_properties, that is now handled by creating string with cpu count, per cpu caches, and total in parens. 3. Added in fallback failure case for the ZFS file system issue exposed by accident in issue #258 - will now log in debugger the error, so we can try to find what is going on there, impossible to reproduce until we find what zfs or more likely, freebsd, changed there. Could be hyper specific, some weird thing like a person making a zfs device name with space, impossible to guess. Note that since the freebsd user declined to supply any data to help resolve this issue, then closed it, we're back where we usually end up with FreeBSD issues, either a Linux user (or worse, me) willing and able to find the issue and supply the debugger data required shows up, OR the issue is ignored as valid but impossible to resolve. RANT: Note that this also confirmed to me that in order to preserve my own sanity and not waste endless hours trying to get data, from now on, unless utterly trivial, if a FreeBSD user refuses to promptly supply the required data, the issue will be closed with a freebsd-closed-no-data-supplied label, which means, valid but not possible to solve due to user refusing to help me help them. Come on FreeBSD users!! If you want help, and inxi to support your distro, help me help you!! If not, then why are you even filing an issue in the first place? Do you expect faeries to spread magic bug / issue fixing faerie dust over inxi and then activate it with their little wands? This is growing tiresome to be honest because it's so utterly predictable. 4. Shuffled order of sensor type detections, there was a slim chance that a non gpu sensor type could have string intel in it, so put the gpu sensors second to last, before 'main'. 5. Started refactor of cpu core/cache logic. Added feature to cpu_arch, and changed it to cpu_info since now it gives by vendor/family/model/stepping both micorarch and cache/core math array returns. Also started refactor to make more predictable, with increased comments, about what is going on in cpu_properties to avoid breaking existing correct results. 6. Added to --debug /sys cpu data globber tool, that will help debugging the new /sys cpu data feature, will let me insert the file data directly into the logic. 7. Added CpuItem::cpu_data_sys() with debuggers, that will now start collecting user cpu data whenever the debugger is run, though it's not active yet. 8. Set $Data::Dumper::SortKeys = 1; dugh, could have saved big headaches if had found this before. Makes all keys sorted cleanly, gets rid of random hash sorts. |
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Harald Hope | a36210924e | changelog tweak | ||
Harald Hope | 385e91e602 |
Bug fix release. 2 bugs that can impact all users under the right circumstances
were detected and fixed. Thanks manjaro users there for finding and reporting those. No other changes. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Manjaro user ben81 located a critical bug in hardware raid output, this bug impacts ALL users of hwraid that run inxi with -xx option. Bug was a bad copy paste, the classic, had updated all the pci type data blocks at once, and hw raid unfortunately had a slightly different logic due to being part of the more complex RAID block of logic. Was trying to use an array, not a hash, reference. Thanks ben81, I would never have spotted this one, and it would impact 100% of all inxi users with hwraid on their machine who ran inxi with -xx option. 2. Also, ps wwaux parser was spitting out an undefined index error. This is caused by one of two things: * ps has an issue, and is apparently at times failing to respect ww, unlimited line length, and wrapping anyway. This is the likely cause. * the user terminal for some inexpicable reason has decided to hard wrap long lines. This is very unlikely, but has to be considered as a possible cause. Since these commands run in a subshell, this is VERY unlikely. Workaround this failure by double checking that line split item is defined, if not, next row. Thanks Carpenter for finding that one. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Added workarounds for bug 2. Corrected silly copy/paste error for bug 1. |
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Harald Hope | a6c1c46db2 |
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RELEASE NOTES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Some very nice issue reports have helped correct various corner case issues. Mint users helped find a big one with lspci. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Unsure how to handle Android case where inxi correctly does -r test, see bug 3 fixes 6, but android incorrectly claims it is readable when it is not readable, then the reader tool can't read the file and fails with permissions error. This is one of those weird android errors that are pretty much impossible to fully work around, but we can get rid of the readline() errors when reader() was trying to work on a file handle that did not exist, that part was an inxi bug. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. dm detection was not using case sensitive search for duplicates, leading to cases where dm like slim / SLiM failed to get detected and then repeated in output. Anonymous BSD debugger dataset exposed this issue, thanks. 2. In certain corner cases, like ARM Android, sub reader got passed a file that had passed the is readable -r test, but it still failed with permissions error, which then led reader to try to keep working with a null $fh. While in theory nothing non readable should be passed to reader(), that fails when the OS fails to actually follow correct readable rules, as in this case. Added protections in reader() to handle this case, now will show error, but will not try to work with $fh, that is how it should have been all along, but this is a very corner case. Exposed by an anoymous ARM debugger dataset. Thanks Termux user for creating the debugger dataset that exposed this issue. 3. lspci parser didn't null port value each iteration, resulting in all pci items getting port values. Not a big deal, port is only used one place, but good to find and correct that error. 4. Not an inxi bug, but would appear so to end users: lspsci -nnv implements a truncating routine and breaks the first line for each bus id. See Fix 6 and Code fix 3. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. -S and -I would show Console: tty pts/3 even though pts device is a pty, not a tty. The only time this happened was when connecting to a remote system using ssh or something like that. Local console still shows Console: tty 2 since that was correct, but Console: tty pts/2 was confusing since technically it's not a tty, it's a pty, pseudo terminal. Now shows, when relevant: Console: tty 2 OR Console: pty pts/2. 2. Issue #252 notes that Emacs (and possibly other code/text editors with native embedded terminals) includes a native virtual terminal that also follows configuration rules from the editor to highlight trailing spaces. This created odd looking screen output in Emacs vt mode since inxi always sets key/value pairs with a white space ending as separator for next key value pair for screen output mode, resulting always in a trailing space on each vt screen line. Fix was to remove the last trailing space just prior to the print line point to avoid this issue. As a general thing, I'm curious to learn if any editor other than Emacs actually contains its own virtual terminal that also follows the editor rules for output. Or if any virtual terminal has such a highlight trailing space rule, which would be imo so annoying it's hard to understand why a vt would implement it. Easy to understand why Emacs (or any editor) does it, but an editor also being a vt AND applying certain editor display configurations to the vt is a very specific and unique circumstance I'd say. Odd, historical, but there it is, why not handle it? 3. ARM / Android case where certain files passed the read -r test, but failed with permission denied error. This tripped a further glitch where reader() would then try to work with the failed $fh, see bug 2. This was really more a fix than a bug, since the bug in this case was in android permissions tests, not inxi, but it appears to be a bug to end users, so it's handled now. 4. Another ARM/Android, there was a voltage regulator IP that contained the term wlan so it tripped false positive for network match. Added a new type, regulator, to filter out those, like codec and dummy do already. 5. For issue #254, fix for cygwin ERR-102 in partitions, add cygwin test, new dev type, 'windows', dev base then becomes E: or whatever. To avoid confusing D: for a key: with no value, added D:/ slash. 6. Mint people discovered lspci issue, lspci -nnv has a bug where it will truncate the output of the first line per bus ID if it's over some arbitrary amount, then tack on rev and other items to end of that string, which leads to the block: [vendorID:productID] getting truncated or removed altogether. Clearly an oversight, at least I hope it's an oversight on lspci's part, but have to work around the issue anyway since it may never get fixed, and has been around a long time. Bug is in lspci 3.7, 3.6.4, and probably earlier. Also added in a fillin tool for this rare case, lspci -n data is used to replace the missing values. Note that while lspci recommends using -mmv, for machine parsing, apparently nobody noticed that -mmv doesn't have the same data items as -nnv, sigh. 7. Issue #255 noted that the combination of: GoogleDrive Hogne: fuse.rclone 15728640 which is two word remote fs AND a fs type with a '.' in it would fail to trip the handler for that multi word remote mount name. Also failed to detect as remote fs, added fs specific test since the actual mount name doesn't permit reliable detection as remote type. Testing for trailing ':' isn't safe since ':' alone is not an invalid character in a file system name as far as I know. Further, this exposed that the ^^ space replacements for $row[0] fs > 1 word name were not being reset soon enough in the logic, that's also corrected. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Neglected to support standard package config file override /etc/inxi.d/inxi.conf item. This is mainly useful for packaged inxi's who want to override the distro maintainer /etc/inxi.conf file. Test priority is the same except /etc/inxi.d/inxi.conf comes right after /etc/inxi.conf now in the test sequence. 2. Added basic cygwin id, yes, inxi works in cygwin, apparently, with some issues. Added cygwin os id to distro ids. 3. Added --version info for debugger, sometimes we want to know what verion of a tool, like lspci, in case it has a bug or something. 4. Added exfat and apfs to unmounted fs types. 5. More disk vendors!! New vendor ID matches!! Yes, yes, you've heard it all before, the list never ends!! The eternal chaos of existence manifested in just how many IDs can be generated for new and old disk vendors alike!!! -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. No changes this release. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Pull request #253 corrected typos, urls, and other errors in man page, inxi/pinxi comments, pinxi.1/inxi.1, README.txt, and updated LICENSE.txt to current gnu wording. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Forgot to add lspci debugger fake data option, that's corrected. That's --fake lspci, now works, didn't before, only the bsd pci tools had fake switches previously, since lspci never needs debugging really, but did now to test an issue report. 2. Added -CYGWIN to debugger file name. Added -ANDROID if ARM and if android. 3. With Fix 6, refactored entire lspci_data block, added lspci_n_data item, which matches bus id of lspci -nnv when corruption occurs and replaces vendor, product, and if also missing, rev version. I kind of knew I'd have to do this fix one day, that was the same fix logic used on the BSD pci tools, which have similar issues with consistency in output, or lack thereof. This refactor is long term very good because it avoids an entire class of possible errors, and makes pci detections far more robust. 4. Created new repo, for legacy code, inxi-legacy. Moved branch inxi-c to inxi-legacy/xorg-c, moved branch xiin to /xiin, moved branch inxi-legacy (binxi) to inxi-legacy/inxi-legacy. Those directories each contain all the files each branch had in it. This gets rid of some branches clutter, and nobody needs to see those anymore, but if they care, they can look at them. Note that to do this, I had to merge their histories, which was not that nice, but git is just really bad at this type of stuff, so that's how it goes. Times like this really make me miss svn's directory based branch approach... 5. Simplified sub fs_excludes, simplified regex constructors for all function that use this data, made list more fault tolerate by adding global (fs)?(\d{0,2} which means all file systems can have or not have 'fs' at end, and all can have or not have a version number in string. 6. Exposed by issue #255, refactored slightly ordering of partition filter logics and variable resets in the df output processing loop. 7. Added --fake partitions, to help debug odd corner cases like cygwin glitches. |
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Harald Hope | 1e2bef0163 | readme update for move of binxi to inxi-legacy repo | ||
Harald Hope | 73d9643907 | redid patches, I think | ||
Harald Hope | b737838957 | small fix | ||
Harald Hope | 8d7b06ef88 | Merge branch 'a1346054-fixes' | ||
a1346054 | 06aba8cd5a | fix whitespace alignment in manpage | ||
a1346054 | e09ec42630 | fix spelling | ||
a1346054 | d6b01b07b1 | use https instead of http | ||
a1346054 | d03e50d4b7 |
use identical license file as provided by gnu.org
File was retrieved from: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt |
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Harald Hope | a4a420edf7 | wrong date on changelog, oops | ||
Harald Hope | f571b45973 |
New version! Fixes!! Bug fixes! More bug fixes!! Cleanups!
Most of these were exposed by issue #251 filed by LukasNickel, then further revealed via his debugger data set, which showed two more bugs. Well, bugs, changed syntaxes, same difference to end users. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES: 1. Work is ongoing to add btrfs support to -R (similar to softraid or zfs), basic stubs and debuggers added, but reporting tools are not as robust (and often require sudo/root for reasons that escape me) as I would have hoped, so it's slow. One of these days... Normally would not release with working stubs, but there were enough real issues/bugs to warrant just getting 3.3.06 out the door, then going on with the btrfs feature for -R. But so far I view the reporting tools as inadequate, unfortunately. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. As initially discovered in issue #251 there are alternate syntaxes which had never been seen before for remote mounts, fuse mounts, etc. In this case, it was fuse.sshfs that was not removed from the Disk total:... used: leading to silly 1000+% used percentage. Note that while technically inxi could try to be clever about reporting impossible percentages, so far those have led to bugs getting reported, then fixed, so I think it worth leaving it as is. 2. When --swap/-j is used with no other arguments, failed to show uuid or label. Discovered this while testing fix 2. 3. Bug which is not a bug but will appear as such to users, nvme temps were failing in -Dx due to a change in how those values are located in /sys. See fix 3. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. Going along with Bug 1, and considering that only in 3.3.05 was the nfs4 remote fs failure to identify/exclude, the entire section involving remote/ fuse etc file systems was refactored, and extended to add many more previously non-handled remote and fuse type file systems. Significant extension of known remote filesystem types, distributed file systems, overlay file systems, all to try to avoid having more distributed/remote/fuse file system issues. Also added test to support fuse. or fuseblk. type prefixes for any of these. Hopefully there will be fewer issues related to distributed and remote and overlay type file systems in the future. 2. Made all label/uuid triggers global, that is, -ol shows unmounted with labels, -ju shows swap with uuid, and so on. This may require a bit more tweaks to get exactly right, but in general, this is a purely cosmetic fix, that is, try not to show label/uuid for partition/mounts that probably can't have those values. 3. There was a change in the way nvme /sys temperature paths were handled, an actually understandable, albeit as always annoying, one, because inxi actually had to do a sort of convoluted hack to get the nvme block devices temperatore paths before, now that hack is not required for newer kernels (5.12+), though for kernels that had the old paths (5,8, 5.9 at least, don't know when paths changed) left in the old method. Now tests are more granular, and inxi should find temperatures regardless of which method is used for nvme and sd type drives. 4. Another somewhat irksome random change, again, understandable since the new syntax is more consistent in output than the previous one, but still breaks all existing parsers that use the changed field names. Lsblk did NOT change the -o input field names, but DID change the output field names, which broke the internal inxi parser, and led to null lsblk data. Changes were - or : separators in input values are output as _ always. that is, MAJ:MIN becomes MAJ_MIN. Also corrected the debugger lsblk to use the same output fields for -P -o as the actual lsblk parser uses internally so these failures can be spotted more readily, as it was, it was literally only because someone submitted the debugger dataset, and was running lsblk 2.37, where I believe this behavior change happened. Solution was to just use regex patterns instead, [:_-], in the parser. Big fear now is that they will randomly stop supporting the -o input field names that contain - or : and change that too without any real warning or deprecation notice. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Going with bug and fix 1, added avfs, afs, archivemount, avfs, ceph, gfs, glusterfs, gmailfs, hdfs, ipfs, kosmos/kfs, lafs, mergerfs, mhddfs, moosefs, ocfs, openafs, orangefs, overlayfs, pvfs, s3fs, sheepdog, vmfs, and several others to the exclude list for disk used and show label/uuids for partitions. 2. A smattering of disk vendors added. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHANGES: 1. Going with fix 2, -l and -u no longer will trigger -P by default, now if -l or -u are used without -j, -o, -p, -P, an error will explain that you must use one of those together with -l or -u. This was the only way to get the -l and -u switches to turn off/on label/uuid reports in swap, unmounted, and partitions consistently. Triggering -P was really a legacy behavior from when the only options were -p or -P, and --swap and --unmounted did not exist. I found it increasingly odd that unmounted would show label/uuid always but partitions only with -l/-u. 2. This was a pet peeve, sometimes field names just bug me (like 'Topology: did for CPU, now corrected to Info:), the Drive: rotation: was one such annoyance. I had recycled that to indicate SSD, which was a feature request, but that was always a sloppy solution, and made no sense, since SSD isn't a rotation speed. Now it reports a much more logical: ID-1:...... type: HDD rpm: 7200 or ID-1:...... type: SSD or ID-1:...... type: N/A This also corresponds to the intended meaning much better. The HDD type was always present internally if rotation speed is detected, but was not used. Now will also show type: N/A if reliable type detection failed, which will also be more consistent. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Brought most of inxi.changelog (this file) into a consistent state, re whitespaces, readability, consistent use of various header / section names. Ideally while I don't expect anyone to ever sit down and read this changelog, it will be now much easier to scan to find whatever interests you. This change goes along with ongoing changes in docs to in general try to be usually 80 columns wide. 2. inxi-resources.txt, inxi-data.txt are updated with more raid, partition, file system values and data to go along with bug, fix, enhancement 1. 3. Man and help updated to indicate -u and -l no longer trigger -P by default. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE: 1. Ongoing refactors, bringing the codebase to the point that matches current coding styles. Removed remainder of whitespaces in conditions and for/while loops, for example: if ( condition ) { becomes: if (condition){ and if ( ( test set 1 ) && ( test set 2 ) ) { becomes: if ((test set 1) && (test set 2)){ and so on. That dropped over 2 KiB of whitespaces. This went along with fixes that have been ongoing to change to this whitespace use style, but previously it was only being done when that situation was hit in a local block, now it's been completed globally. This continues the style refactor that has been ongoing for a while now, to bring inxi into a consistent state, since when it started, it was more pressing to get the bash/gawk mess translated to Perl than it was to get the Perl itself to be as good/consistent as possible, so now those issues are being slowly unravelled, and hopefully will set inxi on course for its next 10 years. It was starting to get annoying, because some parts of inxi used those spaces, and all newer ones didn't in general. Now it's one behavior throughout the whole program file. 2. Refactored the entire fs exclude for disk used data, and integrated those values into a global tool that is used either to exclude file systems from disk used totals, or to not show uuid/labels for the excluded remote/distributed/overlay type file systems, which in general don't have uuid or labels. |
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Harald Hope | 30e5bdf563 | changed CHANGES: to UPDATES: and ALTERATIONS: to CHANGES: | ||
Harald Hope | 27dcadde46 | last cleanups | ||
Harald Hope | ea19edaa1f | more cleanups | ||
Harald Hope | f6f7b744eb | more changelog cleanups, now it's all consistent! | ||
Harald Hope | 6b3c4c6517 | more changelog updates/cleanups | ||
Harald Hope | efe175fc9f |
Updated/cleaned up inxi.changelog to make it more consistent and
easier to locate change types etc. |
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Harald Hope | 994ab96b7a |
bug fix: long standing issue, if mobo temp undefined, was showing
temp 0, not N/A as intended. |
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Harald Hope | 9ff2bd262f | more changelog cleanups, why not, spring cleaning! | ||
Harald Hope | 452a19eb41 | changelog edits/cleanups | ||
Harald Hope | 84d3c866ae | changelog edits | ||
Harald Hope | 70b381fb24 | changelog cleanups | ||
Harald Hope | 55ca175e5a |
Many small updates, enhancements, bug fixes!!! We've been saving them up!! Here
they are!! Don't wait!! Thanks mr. mazda for many issue finds, and suggestions. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KNOWN ISSUES BUT CAN'T OR WON'T BE FIXED: 1. Due to unfixable rpm slowdowns, removed package counts for default output for rpm based systems. We were seeing delays of up to 30+ seconds just to list the rpm package count, which is absurd, even after the rpm optimizations inxi already runs. To allow rpm users to get excluded by default for rpm package list counts, added --pkg flag plus a short message telling them to use that flag to get the installed package count if they want it. Changes like this are very unfortunate, but in 2021 for a package manager at times to require over 30 seconds to generate a trivial installed package list is just not acceptable. One of the reasons this release was delayed was this was not an easy decision to make, it's very rare support for a feature is removed for specific tools due to how badly the tools may perform. Note that whatever higher level tool is used, like dnf, zypp, it's still the same speed, they all appear to use the same core engine. Basically this decision was forced since either inxi looks really bad and slow, when it's not, or the actual cause was removed from default outputs. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BUGS: 1. Small bug in nfs blacklist for disk used led to nfs used being added, which leads to silly used percents. This is corrected. 2. If ram vendor ID failed, inxi would delete the part number. Oops. This was related to the Mushkin failures. 3. Close to a bug, though not one internally, but to users would appear as one: ZFS does not act as expected, zpool list did not in fact return the pool size, which I had always assumed to be the case, but in a very strange decision, does return something very close to the pool size for mirrors, but NOT for z1 or z2 pools, then it returns the total size of the drives that make up the pool. To call this strange behavior would be an understatement. The fix was to modify the logic to use zfs list instead to get the size data. This also makes the drive total report far more accurate, since it lists usable space now for ZFS as was always intended. The cause of this was simply that I'd always had access to zfs mirrors, not z1 or z2 arrays. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIXES: 1. OpenSuse and maybe others use kdm3 for Trinity, not kdm, so dm was failing. 2. Going along with fix 1, made kde version detection more robust so may catch more fringe / corner cases for kde desktops. These were mainly added to correct Trinity desktop version detections. 3. Mushkin ram vendor ID was failing, that is or should be corrected. 4. Added in /dev/disk/by-id handlers for zpool components, there are several variants, wwn-, pci-, scsi-, ata-, but they all map to the real /dev drive IDs. Failure to unmap these led to failing to match components and get size info etc for zfs. 5. See DOCUMENTATION: 2, language changes for weather feature abuse. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENHANCEMENTS: 1. Going along with the rpm issues, added dnf.conf support to yum/dnf repo types. Not sure how that one was missed, but there it is. This should tighten repo reports for dnf/yum/zypp types. 2. Added LeftWM. LeftWM confirmed working. Added unverifed detections for: penrose, 2bwm, 5dwm, catwm, mcwm, monsterwm, snapwm, uwm, wingo, wmfs, wmfs2. 3. Added xfwm as a compositor type, that had bee left out, somewhat on purpose, since xfwm can run in compositing or non compositing mode. But should show since many users use compositing mode now. 4. Added OpenMediaVault distro ID and systembase handlers. 5. Going along with zfs bug fix 3, using zfs list data for free, size, allocated. Trying to understand how zfs developers actually thought about this is nearly impossible so just used what seems to correspond to reality most. Also shows raw values for zfs data in RAID along with regular ones to make clear which is which value. 6. Added more CPU architecture ID matches for AMD Zen and a variety of Intel. Both vendors finally released some new CPUs and the data became available, which doesn't always happen quickly. 7. A bunch of new disk vendors and vendor IDs added. Never stops, like the sands of time, like the ocean waves, like the scuttling crabs scrounding around in the seaweed in the foam where the outgoing wave left its mark... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOCUMENTATION: 1. Added leftwm keybindinigs to inxi-data.txt desktop/wm section. Updated more wm in that section as well, and list more info on wms for future reference etc. Also reorganized and more more readable wm section. 2. Help/Man now make more clear that automated requests or excessive use of the inxi weather feature are not under any circumstance permitted. There had been some ambiguity and lack of clarity about what abuse is, now it should be more clear. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CODE CHANGES: 1. Refactored uptime parser logic, the code and regex was just getting too messy and difficult to work with and debug, now it works similar to how the revised BSD parsers run, the regex are pulled apart and made more granular so a small syntax change ideally won't break the detections as easily. 2. Cleaned up sub cpu_arch() and made all the arch values line up nicely, over time I notice that almost invariably stuff done to save lines of code makes code harder to read as the feature expands, so it's generally worth just unravelling it so it all stacks and is easy to scan/read. Also removed extra white space in parens, which is something I'm leaning more towards but it's not worth fixing all at once so it's just done where it's noticed. That's using: if ( /test/ ){ rather than: if (/test){ I believe using more white space helped with Perl comprehension in the intermediate stages, but is not required anymore and just looks like extra whitespace now. |
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Harald Hope | 0bf234846f |
Readme cleanup, fixed widths, wraps, so it's following the same rules
as inxi.changelog. |