mirror of
https://github.com/smxi/inxi.git
synced 2024-11-16 16:21:39 +00:00
169 commits
Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Harald Hope | 4e7a20a4b4 | man edit | ||
Harald Hope | 95cf1aaed9 |
New version, new man.
Bugs: 1. If you consider failure to identify a mounted yet hidden partition a bug, then that bug is fixed, but I consider that as more of a fix than a bug. Fixes: 1. Added more device pattern ID for odroid C1 and C2, these are now pretty well supported. 2. inxi failed to handle a certain type of hidden partition, so far only seen with udiskctl mounted TimeShift partitions, but this may be a more general udisk issue, but so far not enough information. The fix is to use the lsblk data to build up missing partitions, so this fix is for non legacy Linux systems only. The fix works pretty well, but it's hard to know until we get a lot more real world data, but given so far I've received only one issue report on it, I suspect this is not a common situation, but you never know, it would never have shown up in datasets unless I had looked specifically for it, so it may be more common than I think. 3. Cleaned up and simplified new --admin -p and -d logic. Enhancements: 1. For debugging, renamed all user debugger switches to have prefix --debug. These options are to help debug debugger failures, and so far have been tested and solved the failures, so I'm adding them all to the main man and help menu, thus raising them to the level of supported tools. These were enormously helpful in solving proc or sys debugger hangs. * --debug-proc * --debug-proc-print * --debug-no-sys * --debug-sys * --debug-sys-print 2. Added findmnt output to debugger, that may be useful in the future. Also added df -kTPa to also catch hidden partitions in debugger. 3. Added in another user level debugger, triggered with --debug-test-1 flag. This will do whatever operation is needed at the time for that user. Some issues can only be resolved by the user on their machine. 4. More disk vendors and matches!!! Thanks linuxlite/linux hardware database! |
||
Harald Hope | 894c5fe925 |
New version, new man. Huge set of changes. Excitement!! Thrills! Spills?
Bugs: 1. There was a missing main::is_int test that in some instances triggered error. This is corrected. 2. More of a fix, but legacy devices were not matching NIC to IF because the /sys path was not a link as it is now. I made a separate function to handle that match test so it could be more readily be worked with. Fixes: 1. Arch/Manjaro presented yet another Xorg.wrapper path, this time /usr/lib. Why? who knows. That to me is a bug, but since if it's not handled in inxi, it makes it look like inxi has a server: -G bug, I worked around it. Again. This creates the bug when you do not use the actual true path of Xorg where Xorg.wrapper complains and will not show -version data. Why move this? why use that wrapper thing? I don't know, makes no sense to me. 2. More MIPS data, thanks manjaro ARM people. This made MIPS much better, though it will certainly need more work. 3. Better ARM support, added in devicetree strings, which helps pad out the Devices IDs, albeit with very little data, but at least the devices are detected. Thanks Manjaro ARM people there again. 4. Removed Upstart init test for arm/mips/sparc devices. This test made MIPS device totally puke and die, killed networking, so since very few upstart running systems will be arm/mips devices, I decided there better safe than sorry. 5. Found another uptime syntax case, MIPS as root does not have the users item. 6. Many tweaks to SOC data generators, will catch more categories, but the lists will never be done since each device can be, and often is, random re the syntax. 7. USB networking failed to test usb type for 'network', which led to failed ids on some device strings. SOC types are now filtered through a function to create consistent device type strings for the per device tool to use to assign each to its proper @device_<type> array. 8. For pciconf/FreeBSD, cleaned up device class strings to get rid of 0x and trailing subsubclass values, this converts it into the same hex 4 item string that is used by GNU/Linux/lspci so I can apply consistent rules to all pci types, no matter what the generator source is, lspci, pcidump, pciconf, and eventually pcictl if I can get netbsd running. 9. Fixed internal --dbg counts for various features, and updated docs for that. 10. Fixed ARM / MIPS missing data messages, they were redundant. 11. Ongoing, moving excessive source comments to inxi-values.txt and inxi-data.txt. 12. Added unity-system-compositor as mir detection, who knew? I guess that was its production application name all along? Oh well. Enhancements: 1. Added basic support for OpenIndiana/Solaris/SunOS as a bsd type. Just enough to make errors not happen.-repos 2. future proofed unix/bsd detections just to avoid the unset $bsd_type of non BSD unix. 3. Added S6 init system to init tool. 4. Added OpenBSD pcidump to new DeviceData feature. Includes now <root required> message on Device-x: lines if not root. All working. 5. Fully refactored the old pci stuff to DeviceData package/class, due to adding so many types to that, it made sense to make it a single class. 6. Did the same to USBData, because of lsusb, usbdevs, and /sys usb, made sense to integrate the data grabber into one package/class 7. Added speed: item to USB:, it shows in Mb/s or Gb/s 8. Added Odroid C1/C2 handling, which is one big reason I opted to refactor the devices data logic into DeviceData. 9. Added ash shell, not sure if that detection will work, but if it does, it will show. 10. As part of the overall DeviceData refactor, I moved all per type data into dedicated arrays, like @device_graphics, @device_audio, @device_network, etc, which lets me totally dump all the per device item tests, and just check the arrays, which have already been tested for on the construction of the primary DeviceData set. Moved all per type detections into DeviceData so that is now one complete logic block, and the per type data generators don't need to know about any of that logic at all anymore. 11. Added sway, swaybar, way-cooler as window managers, info items. Not 100% positive about the --version, their docs weren't very consistent, but I think the guess should be right if their docs weren't incorrect. 12. Added vendor: item to network, not sure why I kept that off when I added vendor: to audio and graphics. It made sense at the time, but not now, so now -GNA all have vendor: if detected. 13. More device vendors!! The list never ends. Thanks linuxlite/linux hardware database, somehow you have users that manage to use every obscure usb/ssd/hdd known to humanity. 14. Big update to --admin, now has the following: A: partitions: shows 'raw size: ' of partition, this lets users see the amount of file system overhead, along with the available size as usual. B: partitions: show percent of raw in size: C: partitions: show if root, block size of partition file system. Uses blockdev --getbsz <part> D: partition: swap: show swappiness and vfs cache pressure, with (default) or (default <default value) added. This apparently can help debugging some kernel issues etc. Whatever, I'll take someone's word for that. E: Disks: show block size: logical: physical: 15. New option and configuration item: --partition-sort / PARTITION_SORT This lets users change default mount point sort order to any available ordering in the partition item. Man page and help menu show options. 16. Going along with the MIPS fixes, added basic support for OpenWRT, which uses an immensely stripped down busybox (no ps aux, for example), maybe because it only runs as root user/ not sure, anyway, took many fixes. Changes: 1. Changed usb: 1.1 to rev: 1.1 because for linux, we have the USB revision number, like 3.1. Note that this is going to be wrong for BSDs, but that's fine. 2. Changed slightly the output of Memory item, now it follows the following rules: A: if -m/--memory is triggered (> -v4, or -m) Memory line always shows in Memory: item, which makes sense. Note that -m overrides all other options of where Memory minireport could be located. B: if -tm is triggered, and -I is not triggered, Memory shows in in -tm C: if -I is triggered, and -m is not triggered, Memory: shows in -I line. D: no change in short form inxi no arg output, Memory is there. |
||
Harald Hope | 9046b7873d |
New version, new man page. Bug fix, enhancements, fixes.
Bugs: 1. Big bug found on certain systems, they use non system memory memory arrays, inxi failed to anticipate that situation, and would exit with error when run as root for -m when it hit those array types. These arrays did not have modules listed, so the module array was undefined, which caused the failure. Thanks Manjaro anonymous debugger dataset 'loki' for finding this failure. This is literally the first dataset I've seen that had this issue, but who knows how many other system boards will show something like that as well. Fixes: 1. Related to bug 1, do not show the max module size item if not system memory and size is less than 10 MiB. Assuming there that it's one of these odd boards. Enhancements: 1. For bug 1, extended Memory: report to include array type if not system memory. That instance had Video Memory, Flash Memory, and Cache Memory arrays along with the regular System Memory array. Now shows: use: Video Memory for example if not System Memory to make it clear what is going on. 2. Added basic Parrot system base, but for some inexplicable reason, Parrot changed the /etc/debian_version file to show 'stable' instead of the release number. Why? Who knows, it would be so much easier if people making these derived distros would be consistent and not change things for no good reason. 3. Added a few more pattern matches to existing vendors for disks. As usual, thanks linuxlite/linux hardware database for the endless lists of disk data. 4. Added internal dmidecode debugger switches, that makes it much easier to inject test dmidecode data from text files using debugger switches internally. 5. Added -Cxx item, which will run if root and -C are used, now grabs L1 and L3 cache data from dmidecode and shows it. I didn't realize that data was there, not sure how I'd missed it all these years, I guess pinxi really is much easier to work on! This only runs if user has dmidecode permissions from root or sudo. |
||
Harald Hope | e08d828056 |
pre tag last fix, added -a to trigger --admin, that makes it easier
for forum output, like: inxi -Fxxxaz |
||
Harald Hope | e78e37a1e1 |
New version, man page. Fixes, enhancements, changes.
Thanks: 1. AntiX forums, for testing -C --admin, suggestions, always helpful. Bugs: 1. Added switch to set @ps_gui, I forgot case where info block was only thing that used ps_gui (Nitrux kde nomad latte case). This led to no info: data if other ps_gui switches not activated. Now each block that can use it activates it. Fixes: 1. To clarify issue #161 added help/man explanation on how to get colors in cases where you want to preserve colors for piped or redirected output. Thanks fugo. 2. LMDE 3.0 released, slightly different system base handling, so refactored to add Debian version, see enhancement 2. Tested on some old vm instances, improved old system Debian system base id, but it's empirical, distro by distro, there is no rule I can use to automatically do it, sadly. 3. 'Motherboard' sensors field name added, a few small tweaks to sensors. This was in response to issue #159, which also raised a problem I was not really aware of, user generated sensor config files, that can have totally random field names. Longer term solution, start getting data from sys to pad out lm-sensors data, or to handle cases where no lm-sensors installed. 4. Fixed kwin_11 and kwin_wayland compositor print names, I'd left out the _, which made it look strange, like there were two compositors or something. 5. Fixed latte-dock ID, I thought the program name when running was latte, not latte-dock. inxi checks for both now. Thanks Nitrux for exposing that in vm test. 6. Sensors: added in a small filter to motherboard temp, avoid values that are too high, like SYSTIN: 118 C, filters out to only use < 90 C. Very unlikely a mobo would be more than 90C unless it's a mistake or about to melt. This may correct anoymous debugger dataset report from rakasunka. Enhancements: 1. Added --admin to -v 8 and to --debugger 2x 2. Expanded system base to use Debian version tool, like the ubuntu one, that lets me match version number to codename. The ubuntu one matches code names to release dates. Added Neptune, PureOS, Sparky, Tails, to new Debian system base handler. 3. Big enhancement: --admin -C now shows a nice report on cpu vulnerabilities, and has a good error message if no data found. Report shows: Vulnerabilities: Type: [e.g. meltdown] status/mitigation: text explanation. Note: 'status' is for when no mitigation, either not applicable, or is vulnerable. 'mitigation' is when it's handled, and how. Thanks issue #160 Vascom from Fedora for that request. 4. The never-ending saga of disk vendor IDs continues. More obscure vendors, more matches to existing vendors. Thanks linuxlite/linux hardware database Changes: 1. Reordered usb output, I don't know why I had Hubs and Devices use different ordering and different -x switch priorities, that was silly, and made it hard to read. Now shows: Device/Hub: bus-id-port-id[.port-id]:device-id info: [product info] type/ports: [devices/hubs] usb: [type, speed] -x adds drivers for devices, and usb: speed is now default for devices, same as Hubs. Why I had those different is beyond me. The USB ordering is now more sensible, the various components of each matching whether hub or device. Unfixable or Won't Fix: 1. Unable to detect Nomad desktop. As far as I can tell, Nomad is only a theme applied to KDE Plasma, there is no program by that name detectable, only a reference in ps aux to a theme called nomad. 2. Nitrux system base ID will not work until they correct their /etc/os-release file. 3. Tails live cd for some inexplicable reason uses non standard /etc/os-release field names, which forces me to either do a custom detection just for them, or for them to fix this bug. I opted for ignoring it, if I let each distro break standard formats then try to work around it, the distro ID will grow to be a 1000 lines long easily. Will file distro bug reports when I find these from now on. Samples: This shows the corrected, cleaned up, consistent usb output: inxi -y80 --usb USB: Hub: 1-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 14 usb: 2.0 Hub: 1-3:2 info: Atmel 4-Port Hub ports: 4 usb: 1.1 Device-1: 1-3.2:4 info: C-Media Audio Adapter (Planet UP-100 Genius G-Talk) type: Audio,HID usb: 1.1 Device-2: 1-4:3 info: Wacom Graphire 2 4x5 type: Mouse usb: 1.1 Device-3: 1-10:5 info: Tangtop HID Keyboard type: Keyboard,Mouse usb: 1.1 Device-4: 1-13:7 info: Canon CanoScan LiDE 110 type: <vendor specific> usb: 2.0 Device-5: 1-14:8 info: Apple Ethernet Adapter [A1277] type: Network usb: 2.0 Hub: 2-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 8 usb: 3.1 Hub: 3-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 2 usb: 2.0 Hub: 4-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 2 usb: 3.1 Hub: 5-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 usb: 2.0 Hub: 6-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 usb: 3.0 inxi -y80 --usb -xxxz USB: Hub: 1-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 14 usb: 2.0 chip ID: 1d6b:0002 Hub: 1-3:2 info: Atmel 4-Port Hub ports: 4 usb: 1.1 chip ID: 03eb:0902 Device-1: 1-3.2:4 info: C-Media Audio Adapter (Planet UP-100 Genius G-Talk) type: Audio,HID driver: cm109,snd-usb-audio interfaces: 4 usb: 1.1 chip ID: 0d8c:000e Device-2: 1-4:3 info: Wacom Graphire 2 4x5 type: Mouse driver: usbhid,wacom interfaces: 1 usb: 1.1 chip ID: 056a:0011 Device-3: 1-10:5 info: Tangtop HID Keyboard type: Keyboard,Mouse driver: hid-generic,usbhid interfaces: 2 usb: 1.1 chip ID: 0d3d:0001 Device-4: 1-13:7 info: Canon CanoScan LiDE 110 type: <vendor specific> driver: N/A interfaces: 1 usb: 2.0 chip ID: 04a9:1909 Device-5: 1-14:8 info: Apple Ethernet Adapter [A1277] type: Network driver: asix interfaces: 1 usb: 2.0 chip ID: 05ac:1402 serial: <filter> Hub: 2-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 8 usb: 3.1 chip ID: 1d6b:0003 Hub: 3-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 2 usb: 2.0 chip ID: 1d6b:0002 Hub: 4-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 2 usb: 3.1 chip ID: 1d6b:0003 Hub: 5-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 usb: 2.0 chip ID: 1d6b:0002 Hub: 6-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 usb: 3.0 chip ID: 1d6b:0003 |
||
Harald Hope | 59e988c9e2 | man edits | ||
Harald Hope | ae238fb24b | small man page bug fix | ||
Harald Hope | b0392e23ff |
New version, man page. Bug fixes, enhancements.
Bugs: 1. A long standing bug was finally identified and fixed. -n/-i would fail to match a Device to the right IF in cases where they had the same chip / vendor IDs. Added busID for non Soc type devices to fix that. I hope. This fix has been tested on a machine that had this bug, and it is now corrected. Thanks skynet for the dataset. 2. deepin-wm was failing to get listed correctly with new fixes, this is corrected. Fixes: 1. mate version was depending on two tools, mate-about and mate-session, which somewhat randomly vary in which has the actual highest version number. Fix was to run both in MATE for version, and run those through a new version compare tool. Thanks mint/gm10 for reporting that bug. 2. -Gxx compositors: added some missing ones that were being checked for in- correctly. 3. For distro id, fixed a glitch in the parser for files, now correctly removes empty () with or without spaces in it. 4. Got rid of ' SOC?' part of no data for ram or slots, that also triggers in non SOC cases, so best to not guess if I can't get it right. Enhancements: 1. More disk vendor ID matches, also, somehow missed QEMU as vendor, thanks to linux hardware database (linuxlite) for great samples of vendor/product strings. 2. Added a bunch of compositors, found a new source that listed a lot inxi did not have already. 3. Added version v: for some compositors in -Gxxx. 4. New program_data() tool provides an easier to use simple program version/print name generator, including extra level tests, to get rid of some code that repeats. 5. Found some useful QEMU virtual machines for ARM, MIPS, PPC, and SPARC, so made initial debugging for each type, so basic working error free support is well on its way for all 4 architectures, which was unexpected. More fine tunings to all of them to avoid bugs, and to catch more devices, as well. Note that QEMU images are hard to make, and they were not complete in terms of what you would see on physical hardware, so I don't know what features will work or not work, there may be further variants in audio/network/graphics IDs that remain unhandled, new datasets always welcome for such platforms! 6. Found yet another desktop! Added Manokwari support, which is at this point a reworking of gnome, but it was identifiable, minus a version number. 7. Added deepin and blankon to system base supported list, these hide their debian roots, so I had to use the manual method to provide system base. |
||
Harald Hope | c69f9d701b |
New version, man page. Big set of changes. Full USB refactor, plus added features.
Bugs: 1. A result of the issue #156 USB refactor, I discovered that the --usb sort order, which was based on Bus+DeviceID, in fact is wrong, pure and simple. This was exposed by using a second USB hub on a bus, the Device IDs are not really related in any clearly logical way to the actual position on the bus. The solution was to fully refactor the entire USB logic and then use generated alpha sorters based on the full bus-port[.port] ID. Device ID is now printed last in the ID string, like so: 1-4:1. Note that Device IDs start at 1 for each bus, regardless of how many hubs you have attached to that port. 2. Certain situations triggered a bug in Optical devices, I'd forgotten to change $_ to $key in two places. Since that part didn't normally get triggered, I'd never noticed that bug before. Thanks TinyCore for exposing that glitch! Fixes: 1. On legacy systems, fluxbox --version does not work, -v does. Corrected. 2. for --usb, network devices should now show the correct 'type: Network'. For some weird reason, the people who made the usb types didn't seem to consider many key devices, scanners, wifi/ethernet adapters, and those are almost always "Vendor defined class". 3. A really big fix, for instances where system is using only Busybox, like TinyCore, or booting into any system running busybox for whatever reason, now avoids the various errors when using busybox ps, which only for example outputs 3, not 11, default columns for ps aux, and which does not support ps -j, which is used in the start/shell client information. This gets rid of a huge spray of errors, and actually allows for pretty complete output from systems that only have busybox tools installed. This should cover everything from TinyCore to MIPS to ARM systems that run minimalist Linux. Note that this fix goes along with the /sys based USB parser, since such systems may have USB, but are unlikely to have lsusb installed, but do have /sys USB data. 4. In some cases, strings /sbin/init would trigger a false version result, fixed that logic so now it rarely will do that. Enhancements: 1. Added Mosksha desktop, that's a Bodhi fork of Enlightenment E17; added qtile window manager (no version info). 2. Added Bodhi detection; Salix + base slackware; kde neon system base; 3. Added support for slaptget repos, basic, it may not be perfecct. 4. More disk vendors, and matches for existing vendors. 5. Full rewrite of USB data, in --usb, -A, and -N, along with core usb data engines. This makes lsusb optional, though recommended (because it has a better vendor/ product ID to string internal database) than /sys data. This was in response to a second set of issues in #156 by gm10, USB drivers. Depending on the system, using only /sys data, while slightly less informative, is between 20 and 2000 milliseconds faster, so if you want speed, either use the new --usb-sys option, or the configuration file USB_SYS=[true|false] option. 1. switched to cleaner more efficient data structures 2. added ports count to hub report, linux and bsd. 3. added [--usb|-A|-N] -xxx serial for Device items, if present. 4. added --usb -xx drivers, per interface, can be 1 or more drivers. 5. fully refactored -A and -N usb device logic, far cleaner and simple now, much easier to work with, no more hacks to find things and match them. 6. USB type: now comes from /sys, and is in general going to be more accurate than the lsusb -v based method, which was always an ugly and incomplete hack. As with drivers, it also now lists all the interface types found per device, not just the first one as with the previous method. Note that HID means the more verbose: Human Interface Device, but I shortened it. Now that the type: data is created by inxi reading the class/subclass/protocal IDs, and then figuring out what to do itself, I can have quite a bit more flexibility in terms of how type is generated. 7. added --usb -xxx interfaces: [count] for devices, which lists the device interface count. This can be useful to determine if say, a usb/keyboard adapter is a 2 interface device. Note that Audio devices generally have many interfaces, since they do more than 1 thing (audio output, microphone input, etc.). 8. Support for user configuration file item: USB_SYS=[true|false]. This is useful if you want to see only the /sys version of the data, or if you want the significant speed boost not using lsusb offers, particularly on older systems with a complex USB setup, many buses, many devices, etc. New option --usb-tool overrides USB_SYS value, and forces lsusb use. 9. New options: --usb-sys - forces all usb items to use /sys data, and skip lsusb. Note that you still have to use the feature options, like --usb, -A, or -N. This can lead to a significant improvement in execution time for inxi. 10. Rather than the previous bus:device ID string, to go along with the internal sorting strings used, inxi now shows the real Bus / port /port ids, like: 1-3.2.1:3 - Bus-Port[.port]:device id. 6. Added support for Xvesa display server. Thanks for exposing that one, TinyCore! 7. Added tce package manager to repos. That's the tinycore package manager. Changes: 1. big one, after 10 plus years, the venerable 'Card-x:' for -A,-N, and -G has been replaced by the more neutral 'Device-x:'. This was a suggestion by gm10 from Mint in issue #156 This makes sense because for a long time, most of these devices are not cards, they are SOC, motherboard builtin, USB devices, etc, so the one thing they all are are some form of a device, and the one thing that they are all not is a Card. Along with the recent change from HDD: to Local Storage in Disks: this brings inxi terminology out of the ancient times and into the present. Thanks for the nudge gm10. Removed: See inxi-perl/docs/inxi-fragments.txt for removed blocks. 1. Entire parser for lsusb -v, now it all runs either usbdevs or lsusb, and if Linux and not lsusb, it will use /sys exclusively, otherwise it uses /sys data to complete the lsusb vendor/product strings. 2. Two functions that were used by -A and -N to match usb devices and get their /sys data, that became redundant since it all now goes through the /sys parser already, so those features can get the data pre-parsed from the @usb arrays. Output Examples: Sort by DeviceID failures in 3.0.20 using Device ID: inxi --usb USB: Hub: 1:1 usb: 2.0 type: Full speed (or root) hub Device-1: Wacom Graphire 2 4x5 bus ID: 1:2 type: Mouse Device-2: Tangtop HID Keyboard bus ID: 1:3 type: Keyboard Device-3: Verbatim bus ID: 1:11 type: Mass Storage Device-4: Apple Ethernet Adapter [A1277] bus ID: 1:13 type: Vendor Specific Class Hub: 1:85 usb: 1.1 type: Atmel 4-Port Hub Device-5: C-Media Audio Adapter (Planet UP-100 Genius G-Talk) bus ID: 1:86 type: Audio Device-6: Canon CanoScan LiDE 110 bus ID: 1:112 type: Vendor Specific Protocol Device-7: ALi M5621 High-Speed IDE Controller bus ID: 1:113 type: Mass Storage Hub: 2:1 usb: 3.1 type: Full speed (or root) hub Hub: 3:1 usb: 2.0 type: Full speed (or root) hub Hub: 4:1 usb: 3.1 type: Full speed (or root) hub Hub: 5:1 usb: 2.0 type: Full speed (or root) hub Hub: 6:1 usb: 3.0 type: Full speed (or root) hub Corrected: sort by BusID in 3.0.21: inxi --usb USB: Hub: 1-0:1 usb: 2.0 type: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 14 Hub: 1-3:85 usb: 1.1 type: Atmel 4-Port Hub ports: 4 Device-1: C-Media Audio Adapter (Planet UP-100 Genius G-Talk) type: Audio,HID bus ID: 1-3.2:86 Device-2: ALi M5621 High-Speed IDE Controller type: Mass Storage bus ID: 1-3.4:113 Device-3: Wacom Graphire 2 4x5 type: Mouse bus ID: 1-4:2 Device-4: Verbatim type: Mass Storage bus ID: 1-7:11 Device-5: Tangtop HID Keyboard type: Keyboard,Mouse bus ID: 1-10:3 Device-6: Canon CanoScan LiDE 110 type: <vendor specific> bus ID: 1-13:112 Device-7: Apple Ethernet Adapter [A1277] type: Network bus ID: 1-14:13 Hub: 2-0:1 usb: 3.1 type: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 8 Hub: 3-0:1 usb: 2.0 type: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 2 Hub: 4-0:1 usb: 3.1 type: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 2 Hub: 5-0:1 usb: 2.0 type: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 Hub: 6-0:1 usb: 3.0 type: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 |
||
Harald Hope | 8b2259e455 |
New version, new man. ARM enhancements and updates, -S data ongoing enhancements.
Fixes: 1. Added support for new ARM SOC types, including chromebook ARM. Note that so far I have been unable to find a way to detect MMC networking, at least in a meaningful way. I know where the data is, but I can't figure out how to reasonably integrate it into the main ARM soc/device generator logic because it's fundamentally different from most platform or devicetree data. 2. Added alternate battery tests, this should cover a wide range of alternate battery IDs, while still preserving the distinction between system power batteries, and device batteries. The detection is now far more dynamic, and can handle unknown syntax for battery ID, while not losing the ability to correctly identify device batteries (like mice, keyboards, etc). 3. Trying a somewhat unreliable hack to get cpu variant for arm devices where the current method fails. this may be removed if it causes false ID in the future. 4. Excluded all /driver/ paths from ARM SOC @pci generation, those give read errors even as root. 5. Fixed a few defective wm version detections. Enhancements: The -S line continues to see many improvements. 1. Greatly expanded the set of info: items, now it covers all the toolbars, panels, and docks that I could find, plus a few things like icewmtray, where the wm has a built in panel. While there are probably more bar/panel/dock tools out there, and more will get added if or when they are encountered, now info: shows far more variants than ever before, and covers the range of options simpler wm users have for bars, trays, and panels. If I missed one that is detectable, by all means show how to detect it! 2. Fine tuned and added a few more window managers, and added version for some that were not showing versions. 3. Added 3 more dm version handlers, slim, gdm, gdm3, and refactored that code to use the same program_values/program_version logic that the other tools use. 4. A few more obscure and usb stick vendor IDs added. |
||
Harald Hope | 3cfa00fde7 | a few more man/help fixes | ||
Harald Hope | b7692190c2 | fixed man glitch | ||
Harald Hope | c048ce4903 |
New version, new man. Fixes, glitches, and stitches!
Fixed some subtle and not subtle issues that I've noticed recently. Bugs: 1. The color scheme selector failed to remove the global value when a non global setting was used. This led to global values never getting removed, even though the text output said it would be, which is confusing, obviously, and always overriding the color selected. Thanks CentOS for helping find that one. Fixes: 1. Fixed possible corrupted user inxi.conf values. Now skips null values, and fully validates as integer integer values. 2. Fixed fvwm-crystal detections, integrated it into new refactored desktop logic. 3. For systems without glxinfo or running inxi out of gui/desktop, Xorg was in many cases failing to show version, which made it not show anything for server: except N/A. This is caused by a relatively recent change in behaviors in xorg, where you have to run it directly from it's true path, which is something like /usr/lib/xorg or /usr/lib/server-xorg at which point the error: /usr/lib/xorg-server/Xorg.wrap: Only console users are allowed to run the X server Figuring this out was tricky, and who the heck knows why Xorg -version would even return such a silly error in the first place, but there you have it. Next time you wonder why inxi is so long, this is why, endless churn in basic and complex things! The fix is injecting the optional xorg paths into @paths right before, and removing them right after, which avoids adding clutter to the @paths. 4. A ZFS fix, I'd noticed this one a while back, but after looking at the zfs Ubuntu tutorial page, I realized that this is the norm now, which is building zfs with /dev/sda (no partitions). This lead to failing to detect the zfs components, and reporting a bunch of partitions as unmounted which were part of that /dev/sdb type component array. By allowing /dev/sd[a-z] I fixed both errors at the same time, but I don't know if this syntax extends to say, nvme zfs as well. Note that when you build zfs arrays with say, /dev/sdb /dev/sdc you'll see two partitions per disk, /dev/sdx1 which is the main data, and /dev/sdx2, which is a tiny 8mB partition, no idea what it's for. 5. Fixed missing konversation and hexchat version numbers in -I, finally found what was going on there. Note that hexchat --version used to pop up a gui, but I guess he finally fixed that, I am hoping. 6. Fixed some gentoo repo detections, but also found more variants. Not sure what exactly is going on with repos there, will wait for gentoo user issue reports to really lock those down. 7. BSD fixes, turns out FreeBSD uses that same map ... syntax in df -kT as OSX... Also made sure to load sysctl data for -S row, I'd forgotten about the compiler test there which needs that data. 8. Fixed herbstluftwm version detection, turns out it's another one of those that passes the entire path to the version program, so it shows: /sbin/herbsuftwm 0.22.0 which broke the regex, easy fix. 9. Completed refactoring of DesktopData, now it's all data array driven for most wm, desktops, etc, which makes adding/removing one very easy. All core data is now in program_values to allow for automated detections. Enhancements: 1. With fix 1, added check_int and check_number utilities, these validate that inxi internal numeric or integer values actually are what they are supposed to be. This uses a neat Perl trick that makse the checks super fast and super accurate. Moved all internal int/numeric test regex to use these. 2. Added file based version number detection, that was done for Deepin, which uses /etc/deepin-version for its version number, but it can be used for anything. 3. Added Deepin and deepin window managers, Lumina, added bspwm wm, fixed muffin detections. Note that lumina has a weird behavior where when run outside of pinxi, it outputs to stdout, but inside of pinxi, to stderr, who the heck knows how that happens! 4. Added zorin to supported base: distros. 5. Even more disk vendors added! The list of no-name off brand chinese ssd vendors appears to be endless! Added some more specific ids to capture unique strings that can be linked to a vendor. 6. Added /usr/home to default -P paths, that's used instead of /home in the real world, so why not show it? 7. Because qt detection is possible, I've extended qt toolkit detection, but it's also not super accurate, but it's far better than gtk tk was, so I'm leaving that in. I also extended it to more wm/desktops since more are using qt now. Note: budgie 11 is going to be qt, but there's no way to distinguish between 11 and gtk 10 without doing a bunch of hacks so I'm leaving that alone. 8. Found a possible distro id source, added /etc/calamares detections to debugger, I'll see if that shows some consistent patterns before I implement a last fallback test for distro IDs. It may work. Removed: 1. Giving up on fake/slow/inaccurate GTK toolkit detections, removed the entire codeblock and stored in docs/inxi-fragments.txt, but I'm not going to do package manager type version tests anymore, if we can't get the data directly from a program or file, it's not going to happen, plus the gtk installed on the system means nothing in relation to the gtk version used to build the desktop. |
||
Harald Hope | 94b1315b91 |
New version, new man. Fixes, a few changes, enhancements.
Fixes: 1. Removed /dev/zram type data from swap partitions, since that's ram, it's not a partition, obviously. 2. More alternate IPMI syntax found, that's clearly going to take a while to have most syntaxes handled. 3. Small lm-sensors adjustment, fringe cases might scramble up hwmon and gpu temps, this is now handled. Enhancements: 1. Added disk vendors, udinfo. 2. Exciting! New Architecture: MIPS! First datasets, confirmed working. This led to more abstracting of the previously ARM specific logic to be for SOC in general. 3. Related to 2, added in fallback busybox cases for partition data without fs. 4. Added window managers, xmonad, ratpoison, 9dm, gala (for Pantheon), notion, windowlab 5. Added Pantheon desktop detection. Note, unable to find a way to get version number. 6. IMPI sensors: added in psu fans, dimm temp. 7. New -Cxxx option: cpu boost (aka turbo), state enabled / disabled, only shows if system has that option. Changes: 1. Made toolkit for -S be -xx instead of -x, only Trinity/KDE and XFCE have that data. |
||
Harald Hope | faead0eb54 | man edit, forgot to note apt rpm support | ||
Harald Hope | aad0f48aef | A few minor edits and corrections in man and inxi | ||
Harald Hope | 75b50f9204 |
New version, new man. Changes, bug fixes, enhancements! Don't delay!
Bugs: 1. A real bug, the detection for true path of /dev/root had a mistake in it and would only have worked in half the cases. This was an easy fix, but a significant but since it also would lead to the actual root / partition showing in Unmounted. 2. Related to the item Fixes-2, if two USB networking devices were attached, the second one's bus and chip ID would go on the wrong line of data if -n or -i option were used. Since that would be the line belonging to the one above, that obviously was weird and wrong. 3. NEW: latest kernel can show hwmon data in sensors, for example from wifi chip. This broke CPU temp detection and showed way too high cpu temp, so this fix is fairly important since new kernels may have this new sensors hwmon syntax. 4. Sensors: IPMI alternate syntax found, also case with no data in expected columns, just N/A, so now the ipmi sensor logic skips all lines with non numeric values in the values column. This is what it should have done all along, it was trusting that values would always exist for the field names it looks for. Fixes: 1. ARM networking fix. ARM devices like rasberry pi that use usb bus for networking showed the no data message even though usb networking was right below it. This is corrected, and now that only shows if both main and usb networking failed for ARM. 2. Big repo fix: while testing distro and Trinity live cds, I discovered that apt is sometimes used with rpms, which made PCLinuxOS and ALT-Linux Repos item show the apt files but no data since the pattern was looking for start with deb. Added rpm to pattern, so all distros that use apt running rpms should now 'just work'. 3. Fixed more distro id things, PCLinuxOS should now show its full distro string. 4. Debugger: Filtered out more blocks of /proc, that data is bloated and messy, found another case where it collected a vast amount of junk system data from zfs in that case, just blocked the entire range. I had no idea /proc had so much junk data in it! 5. As noted above, IPMI, yet another alternate syntax for field names. My hope that IPMI software and sensors will be more logical and consistent than lm-sensors output is proving to be merely wishful thinking, I think now out of 3 datasets I've gotten, I've seen 3 variants for syntax, not to mention the ipmi-tool vs ipmi-sensors differences. So IPMI will be like all sensors stuff, a work in progress, to be updated with every newly discovered alternate syntax and data set. Enhancements: 1. Disk vendors, added some, improved pattern detections for others. This feature is getting better all the time. Thanks linuxlite hw db, easy to scan for missing vendors in their inxi data. 2. Added more wm, budgie-wm, mwm, variants of kwin and Trinity's Twin, several others, more refactoring of core wm/desktop code. 3. Added gpu ram and reworked memory logic for rasberry pi, which is the only SBC I am aware of that uses that tool. Now reports the actual total, and also gpu: for ram data, so you can tell that the gpu is using part of the total. Again, this comes from issue #153. Also added that info to man page for -I part. 4. Added more ARM and PCI cleaners for neater and more concise ARM/PCI output. 5. Added Trinity support to Desktop section, this had at least two different detection methods, but since the first just shows KDE original data, only the second one proved to be Trinity specific. Happily, the full data is available, toolkit, desktop version, and wm (Twin). 6. New -G,-A,-R -xxx feature: vendor:. Note that vendor data is very bloated and messy so it's trimmed down substantially, using a series of filters and rules, and thus it can contain the following: the actual vendor, like Dell, nothing, the motherboard vendor/product for board based PCI items, or a complete vendor/product string if it's unique. I couldn't think of a clean field name that meant: vendor OR vendor + basic product info OR motherboard + board version OR full product name, including vendor, so in the end, I just used vendor: but it's not quite the right term, but nothing else seemed to work better. Testers responded very enthusiastically about this feature so I guess the vendor: name is ok. Changes: 1. Biggest change: Drives: HDD: total: the HDD: is now changed to: Local Storage: This was part of issue #153 and is a good suggestion because HDD generally was used to refer to hard disks, spinning, but with nvme, m.2, ssd, etc, that term is a bit dated. 'Local' is because inxi does not include detected remote storage in the totals. 2. The recent --wm option which forced ps as data source for window manager detection has been reversed, now --wm forces wmctrl and ps aux is preferred. Still falls back to wm ctrl in case the ps test is null, this is better because I have to add the wm data manually for each one, whereas wmctrl has an unknown set and probably variable set of wm. Note that I reversed this because I saw several cases where wmctrl was wrong, and reported a generic source wm instead of the real one. Since most uses are not going to even be aware of the wm: feature as enhanced with --wm switch, this should have no impact on users in general. Since the detected wm name needs to be know to get assigned to wm: and wm version data, I think it will work better to have the known variants match with the wm data values, then just fallback to unknown ones that can get fille in over time as we find wm that people actually use and that you can get version info on and detect. Removed: 1. Got rid of tests for GTK compiled with version for many desktops, that test was always wrong because it did not have any necessary relation to the actual gtk version the desktop was built out of, and it also almost always returned no data. Since this is an expensive and slow test, and is always going to be wrong or empty anyway, I've removed it. My tests showed it taking about 300ms or so to generate no data, heh. That's the tk: feature in -S. Note I also found that gnome-shell takes an absurdly long time to give --version info, the slowest of all such things, 300ms again, just to show version? Someone should fix that, there's no possible reason why it should take 300 milliseconds to give a simple version string. Note that this returns tk: to only returning real data, which in this case means only xfce, kde, and trinity, which are the only desktops that actually report their toolkit data. I'll probably remove that code in the future unless I can think of some real use for gtk version elsewhere, but it's just junk data which doesn't even work. In the future, I will not try to emulate or guess at desktop toolkits, either they show the data in a direct form like XFCE or Trinity or KDE do, or I won't waste resources and execution time making bad guesses using inefficient code and logic. QT desktops like LXQt I'm leaving in because I believe those will tend to track more closely the QT version on the system, and the tests for QT version aren't huge ugly hacks the way they are for GTK, so they aren't as slow or intrusive, but those may also get removed since they almost never work either. But they are also slowing down the -Sx process so maybe they should be removed as well, I'll think about it. Since they only are used on LXQt and razer-qt, it probably isn't a big deal overall. |
||
Harald Hope | 8f509b3dac |
New version, new man. Several bug fixes, enhancements, options.
Bugs: 1. In some cases, -S Desktop showed xfce when it wasn't xfce. This should be largely corrected now. 2. Big bug: using lxqt-about for lxqt --version, now opens a dialog box, gui, so removed that, and now checking lxqt-session for version info instead. Fixes: 1. Now calling hitachi hgst drives vendor: HGST (Hitachi) to differentiate between regular Hitachi and HGST hitachi. Added a few more disk vendors. 2. Distro base and core: added linuxlite, elementary. Some distros use: /etc/upstream-release/lsb-release so testing for that and os-release now too. 3. Extended qt detections, may catch a few stray ones now in non kde qt desktops. 4. Complete refactor of desktop, desktop info, wm, and -G compositor, now much easier to extend each feature and add detections, move order around, etc. Also moved wm to -Sxx now that I use fallback ps aux tests, which were themselves also totally refactored and optimized. Fixed WindowMaker id, which is made more annoying because they are the only upper/lower case program name, but in at least debian, the actual program name is wmaker internally. Also tightened in particular gnome-shell, which was failing to show due to too restrictive filtering of desktop/vm repeats. Most wm do not contain the desktop name in the string, gnome-shell does, only one I'm aware of. 5. Removed N/A from wmctrl output, which just means null, which is what we want. 6. Removed gnome-shell from info: since it will now appear in wm: if found. Added a few -panel items to info: Enhancements: 1. Showing type: network bridge for -N when it's type 0680, which is an odd pci type, generally it's a network bridge, but I figured it's best to show that explicitly to avoid confusion. This extends the 'type:' from just USB. 2. Added more window managers to wm, matchbox, flwm, fvwm2 (used to just use fvwm, this was wrong, it's its own thing), a few others. 3. Added a few more compositors to -Gxx. kwin_x11 should be the most noticeable, but added some more obscure ones too. This feature requires more work. 4. Extended ARM syntax to support a new one, path to /sys/device... has an extra /soc/ in it, that is now handled, all are tested for. Confirmed working. Note that ARM has to be confirmed fixed on a device by device basis, since there are key syntax differences in the paths, but it will get easier the more variants that are discovered. Added another trimmer to cut off \x00|01|02|03 special non printing characters which show as weird jibbberish in output, for model/serial number. 5. Refactored wm, info, desktop, compositor, now all use @ps_gui, which is all that is tested against, not the entire ps_cmd array. This drops the possible tests down massively since the only things in ps_gui will be the actual stuff found that matches all the patterns required for that system, not all ps items. Added marco, muffin fixes. Was showing wm: Metacity (Marco) that is not correct, now shows marco, which then allows to get version too. 5. -Sxxx now shows wm: version as well, which can be of use now and then. 6. --wm added to trip force using of ps data for wm, this can be useful because I don't know all variants of wmctrl output, so that makes it easier to test. 7. Added finally support for --debug 3, which now shows timers, functions, and args printed to screen. 8. Added qmake --version to fallback qt detection. |
||
Harald Hope | f81aeda4e5 |
New version, new man. Big bug fix, new features.
Bugs: 1. Finally tracked down and solved the Xorg drivers bug which was caused by Xorg checking its list of defaults 2 times, not 1, which resulted in failed status on second try since it was already loaded. Secondary bug was found that resulted in failing to show the failed, and only showing unloaded, which was also wrong. This finally fixes issue #134 item 5. Thanks Mint users for the help on that one. 2. Small bug in Openbox version detection, typo. 3. fixed a small glitch in the dm: detection that on systems where /var/run exists but is not linked to /run, the dm would fail to get detected. Fixes: 1. Xfce when defaulting to no version found goes to 4, this is a bad idea, it's better to not show any version, since xfcie could one day be 5. 2. Fixed Blackbox fallback detection, there were cases where Blackpox not found in xprop -root, now it falls back to ps aux detection. 3. For wm: tested all known variants, added support for things like Mutter (Marco) syntax. Note that bunsenlab uses XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP=XFCE to work around some glitches, but it's actually Openbox. If run as root, it will show openbox correctly, otherwise -Sxxx will show wm: openbox, but that's due to bunsenlabs choices there. 4. Rewrote a lot of DistroData to handle more dynamic testing of values, it's sad that at almost 2020 we are still stumbling around trying to find a consistent way to identify distros, and derived distros. 5. Added more debugger data collectors in the logging, some data was not being tracked well during log process which made debugging harder. Enhancements: 1. New feature, -Gxx now shows for Xorg drivers alternate: which are drivers that Xorg auto checks but which are not installed. Those were ignored in the past. This can be useful to see for example that there are other driver install options available. Thanks gm10 for that suggestion. 2. Tested and added the following explicit handlers for Distros: and base: in some cases: grml, peppermint, kali, siduction, aptosid, arco, manjaro, chakra, antergos, bunsenlabs, and a few others. These are a pain to add and test, basically I have to boot a live cd of each one, then test the files and ID methods, but the ID methods must also be as dynamic as possible because you never know when a distro is going to change how they use os-release vs issue vs lsb-release vs <name>-release. I would have tested a few more but their livecds failed to properly run on vbox. 3. Added a few more disk vendor IDs. 4. Added some more programs to debugger data collector for future feature vdpau, but that needs more data because we don't really know the variants for example for dual card systems. 5. Man page: changed extra options to use only one option name per list of options for that feature, each separe item is started as a new paragraph with - This makes it a bit more consistent and maybe slightly easier to read the man. Added -Gxx item, updated -Sx item. |
||
Harald Hope | 2830c98935 |
New version, man page. New features and fixes!
Bugs: 1. -I line, sometimes running in showed sudo. This is hopefully now corrected. Fixes: 1. CPU architectures, small reordering based on hopefully more reliable data source, but these are hard to find conclusively. 2. -S Distro id: switched ordering of prefered os-release sources, PRETTY_NAME is not being used consistently, too many distros leave out the distro id found in VERSION, so now it uses NAME + VERSION if both are there, then PRETTY_NAME as a fallback. That reverses how it was, but it will provide better results for most distros. Distros that did this properly to begin with should see no change. 3. Now that inxi is basically debugged and working, I've removed the output of 'inxi' from the -t lines. It remains for the pinxi branch however so you can see how many resources pinxi uses to run. 4. ipmi sensors data are proving to be as random as lm-sensors. Added another alternate syntax for sensors. 5. CPU: found an alternate syntax, again, for IPMI and sensors data, added support, I hope, for that. Enhancements: 1. Added /proc debugger tool to debugger. Due to oddities with how the /proc file system is created, it will only run as user, not root, unless the --proc flag is used. More programs added to debugger commands. 2. More disk vendor strings added, fine tuning of vendor detections. There is a tendency in NVMe disk names to put the vendor name in the middle of the string. That is now handled for a few key vendors. 3. Added basic ARM SOC and server support. This will require more work in the future because the syntax used varies significantly device to device, but the featuers are now in place to add that support. Most SBC ARM devices should now at least show the model and details data in machine data, and some will show -G -A -N data as well. 4. ARM CPU: added first attempt to show the cpu variant as well as the more generic ARM data. This shows 1 or more variants, some ARM devices have two different cpu cores running at different speeds. Odroid for example. 5. Added system 'base:' data for -Sx, that modifies Distro: in supported cases. Currently only Mint and MX/AntiX supported because each specific distro must be handled explicitly using empirical file based data tests. I decided against showing this for rolling release, since really everyone knows that Antergos is made from Arch Linux, so showing that does not provide much useful information, whereas showing the Ubuntu version Mint was made from does. Note that several derived distros are changing how they use os-release, so the tools had to be revised to be more dynamic, which is a pain, and makes it even more empirical and less predictable to print what should be trivially easy to gather distro and derived source data. If your distro is not in this list and you want the base data to be present, please supply a --debug 22 dataset so I can check all the files required to make the detection work. If your distro has changed methods, please note which methods were used in the past, and which are used now. 6. Added Armbian distro detection, that's tricky. Added Rasbpian detections. Added improved Antergos, Arco, and maybe Chakra, Arch detections. 7. Big one: Hardware RAID basic support added. Note that each vendor, and unfortunatley, often each product line, has its own raid status and drive reporting tools, which makes adding the actual drive/raid/status report part very time consuming to add. I may only support this if a certain software maker's raid tools are installed because they are much simpler to parse, but for now, it only shows the presence of the raid device itself, not disks, raid status, etc. |
||
Harald Hope | 1030b77d2e |
New version, man page. Features, bugs, fixes!
Bugs: 1. Color selector accepted '' as a value, which it would then write to config file, creating errors since it's not an integer value. 2. Corrected distro id error for last fallback case, making the distro ID out of the filename itself, that was missing the assignment to $distro. 3. mmcblk0 was showing up as an unmounted partition, due to failing to filter mmcblk[0-9] in unmounted. Fixes: 1. Added missing compositor kwin_wayland to compositor detections 2. For -M, on laptops, sometimes Type: would duplicate in Chassis: type: which looks silly, so now it checks to make sure the two values are different before using the Chassis: type: data. 3. -D disk vendor, added GALAX, fixed Toshiba, which sometimes occurs other than start of disk id string, so now it checks the whole string. This seems particularly common in nvme devices from Toshiba. This is the only vendor I have found that puts the vendor string later in the device id string. 4. Added protection against unreadable but present /etc/issue. This was caused by a now fixed bug in OpenSuSe, which symbolically linked to create /etc/issue from /var/run/issue, but with 600 permissions, root read only, that is. Note that this bug has since been fixed (now has the correct 644 permissions), but I figured better safe than sorry in case anyone else decides that's a good idea in the future. Now only sends to reader if readable. 5. Related to 4, made reader not exit on failure, now just prints error message and keeps going. 6. Upped maximum distro string length to 60, from 50. AntiX for example was coming in at 48, so I decided to add some safe room now that inxi does dynamic sizing, it is not a big problem having very long distro id strings. Enhancements: 1. Added basic /proc data parser to debugger. Can't get all the data or files because it's simply too big, but grabs the basics. 2. Added vcgencmd for some ARM rasberry pi debugging. 3. ARM: add model if not found in /proc/cpuinfo, or if different. 4. Added Tdie cpu sensor type, this is coming soon in latest kernels, so catching it early. Tdie will replace k10-temp sensor item temp1. 5. Added --admin extra data option, and first set of extra data, -C, which will show CPU Errata (bugs), family, model-id, stepping (as hex (decimal) or hex if less than or equal to 9), microcode (as hex). 6. Battery: added with -x option, if found, attached battery driven devices, like wifi keyboard, mouse. If upower is present, will also try to show battery charge percent for those devices. Note that -B only shows the Device-X items if -x is used, and will not show anything in -F unless there is a system, not device, battery present, or if -Fx is used and there is a Device battery detected. Added upower to recommends. 7. Basic -Dxxx disk rotation speeds added. Requires udevadm. Not all spinning disks show rotation speeds, and it depends on udevadm, so if no rotation found, it shows nothing. 8. Added explicit Arco Linux and Antergos distro ID support. This requires more checks, but in theory, both should now show Arco Linux or Antergos instead of default 'Arch Linux' as before, plus extra data if found, like version. |
||
Harald Hope | 2364629135 | fixed weather unit man | ||
Harald Hope | 0739e956b9 |
New version, new tarball.
This version is very peaceful, no big changes, just a few fixes and small new features added. This version corrects a few small glitches reported by users, and adds basic support for disk speed report. Note that this is not as accurate as I'd like, it tries, but there is not a lot of data to be had. Limits of disk speed seems to be, roughly: 1. most speed is reported as max board can do, not max drive can support 2. usually when speed is reported as lower than max board speed, it's correct, but, as usual, exceptions to this were found during testing. 3. usually if drive is faster than board speed, it reports board speed, but, again, exceptions to this rule were found during testing. However, with this said, it's usually more or less right, at least right in terms of the fastest speed you can expect to get with your board. NVMe was also supported, that's much more complicated because NVMe has >= 1 lane, and each lane has up and down data. The reported speed is max in one direction, and is a function of the PCIe 1,2 20% overhead, and PCIe 3,4,5 ~1.5% overhead. inxi shows the actual usable data rate, not the GT/s rate, which is the total transfers per second the unit supports. So due to the unreliable nature of the data, this is only a -xx option. There is also in general no data for USB, and none for mmcblk (sd cards usually). This feature may be enhanced with a C Perl XS library in the future, we'll see how that goes. FIXES: 1. corrected an issue where a networking card of type Bridge failed to be detected. This is now handled. This was a PCI type I'd never seen before, but it exists, and a user had it, so now it will work as expected for this type. 2. changed the default units in weather to be m (metric) imperial (i). While this is not very intuitive for me, it's easier to explain I think. The previous c / f syntax is supported internally, and inxi will just translate c to m and f to i, so it doesn't matter which is or was used on a config file or with the --weather-unit option. 3. BSD uptime had a parsing glitch, there was a spelling variant I'd never seen in GNU/Linux that broke the regex. This is corrected now. 4. Fixed a few small man page glitches, some ordering stuff, nothing major. 5. Fixed BSD hostname issues. There was a case where a setup could have no hostname, inxi did not handle that correctly. This fix would have applied to gnu/linux as well. 6. Fixed a few bsd, openbsd mostly, dm detections, there is a secondary path in OpenBSD that was not checked. This also went along with refactoring the dm logic to be much more efficient and optimized. 7. Fine tuned dmidecode error message. 8. Fixed PCI ID issue, it was failing to catch a certain bridged network type. 9. A more global fix for unhandled tmpfs types, in this case, shm, but added a global test that will handle all tmpfs from now on, and exclude that data from -p reports. NEW FEATURES: 1. First attempt to add basic disk speed (Gb/s). Supported types: ATA, NVMe. No speed data so far handled or found: mmcblk; USB. Also possibly older /dev/hda type devices (IDE bus) may not get handled in all cases. This may get more work in the future, but that's a long ways off. This case oddly was one where BSDs had support for basic disk speed reports before GNU/Linux, but that was really just because it was part of a single data line that inxi parsed for disk data anyway with BSDs. 2. Man items added for -Dxx disk speed options. |
||
Harald Hope | ed4aa77afd | tiny man glitch, fixed | ||
Harald Hope | 5ea6a66474 | fixed order of man | ||
Harald Hope | 8ac5067bbb |
New version, new man. Bug fixes, feature updates.
The main reason to release this earlier than I had hoped was because of the /sys permission change for serial/uuid file data. The earlier we can get this fix out, the better for end users, otherwise they will think they have no serial data when they really do. FIXES: 1. this bug just came to my attention, apparently the (I assume) kernel people decided for us that we don't need to see our serial numbers in /sys unless we are root. This is an unfortunate but sadly predictable event. To work around this recent change (somewhere between 4.14 and 4.15 as far as I can tell), inxi -M and -B now check for root read-only and show <root required> if the file exists but is not user readable. I wish, I really wish, that people could stop changing stuff for no good reason, but that's out of my control, all I can do is adjust inxi to this reality. But shame on whoever decided that was a good idea. This is not technically an inxi bug, but rather a regression, since it's caused by a change in /sys permissions, but users would see it as a bug so I consider this an important fix. Note that the new /sys/class/dmi/id permissions result in various possible things: 1. serial/uuid file is empty but exists and is not readable by user 2. serial/uuid file is not empty and exists and is not readable by user 3. serial/uuid file does not exist 4. serial/uuid file exists, is not empty, and is readable by root Does this change make your life better? It doesn't make mine better, it makes it worse. Consider filing a bug report against whoever allowed this regression is my suggestion. BUGS: 1. A weather bug could result in odd or wrong data showing in weather output, this was due to a mistake in how the weather data was assembled internally. This error could lead to large datastore files, and odd output that is not all correct. 2. More of an enhancement, but due to the way 'v' is used in version numbers, the program_version tool in some cases could have sliced out a 'v' in the wrong place in the version string, and also could have sliced out legitimate v values. This v issue also appeared in bios version, so now the new rule for program_version and certain other version results is to trim off starting v if and only if it is followed by a number. FEATURES: 1. Added in OpenBSD support for showing machine data without having to use dmidecode. This is a combination of systcl -a and dmesg.boot data, not very good quality data sources, but it is available as user, and it does work. Note that BIOS systems are the only ones tested, I don't know what the syntax for UEFI is for the field names and strings. Coming soon is Battery and Sensors data, from the same sources. Sadly as far as I know, OpenBSD is the only BSD that has such nice, usable (well, ok, dmesg.boot data is low quality strings, not really machine safe) data. I have no new datasets from the other BSDs so I don't know if they have decided to copy/emulate this method. 2. By request, and this was listed in issue #134, item no. 1, added in weather switchable metric/imperial output. Also added an option, --weather-unit and configuration item: WEATHER_UNIT with possible values: cf|fc|c|f. The 2nd of two in cf/fc goes in () in the output. Note that windspeed is m/s or km/h as metric, inxi shows m/s as default for metric and (km/h as secondary). Also fixed -w observation date to use local time formatting. That does not work in -W so it shows the default value. 3. Updated man to show new WEATHER_UNIT config option, and new --weather-unit option. Also fixed some other small man glitches that I had missed. |
||
Harald Hope | b4339731ba |
New version, new tarball. New features, bug fixes.
This is a big one. NEW FEATURES: 1. By Request: Disk vendor is now generally going to be shown. Since this uses empirical data to grab the vendor name, from the model string, it will not always find anything. When it fails to find vendor data, no vendor: item will show. Note that some MMC devices will probably not show vendor data, but that's due to there being no data that reveals that. 2. Extended -sx volts to also show voltage from lm-sensors if present. Many systems show no voltage data with lm-sensors, but now if any is found, it will show, same as impi. 3. Moved to lsblk as primary source for partition/unmounted filesystem, uuid, and label data. Falls back to previous methods if lsblk does not return data. Some lsblk do not show complete data unless super user as well. 4. Refactored code to be more logical and clear. 5. Added for OpenBSD -r: /etc/installurl file. BUG FIXES: 1. CRITICAL: /sys/block/xxx/device/model is in some cases truncating the disk model name to 16 characters. This is not an inxi bug, it's a bug with /sys itself. To fix this, inxi now uses for GNU/Linux /dev/disk/by-id data which does not ever do this truncation. It's also faster I believe to read that directory once, filter the results, then use the data for vendor/model/serial. this was also part of the disk vendor data feature. 2. Openbsd networking fix. Was not showing IF data, now it does. 3. Fixed bug with unmounted where sometimes md0 type partitions would show even though they are in a raid array. 4. Fixed disk rev, now it searches for 3 different files in /sys to get that data. 5. Fixed bug with very old systems, with sudo 1.6 or older, for some reason that error did not get redirected to /dev/null, so now only using sudo -n after explicit version test, only if 1.7 or newer. 6. Fixed a few null results in fringe cases for graphics. Resolution now shows NA for Hz if no hz data found. This was only present on a fringe user case which is unlikely to ever impact normal X installations. 7. Fixed BSD L2 cache, was showing MiB instead of KiB, wrong math. |
||
Harald Hope | 7e84bbaebc | man typo fix | ||
Harald Hope | 03d5395a06 |
New version, new man. Bug fixes. BSD fixes.
Bugs fixed: 1. CPU: MT/HT was wrong for old xeon, made mt detection more robust and hopefully more reliable, removed all explicit b_xeon based tests. 2. fixed /dev/mapper glitch, that make /dev/mapper links fail to get id'ed. 3. openbsd: fixed memory handler; fixed cpu flags, fixed partitions handling. 4. freebsd: fixed similar partition bugs, these were caused by the darwin patch. 5. man page: fixed top synopis syntax, thanks ESR. 6. partitions fs: fixed possible failures with lsblk fs. lsblk: added debuggers so we can track down this failure in the future. 7. added sshfs filter for disk used output, note, there is a possible syntax for remote fs that isn't handled: AAA:BBB that is, no :/, only the :. This makes explicit detection of still unknown remote fs very difficult since : is a legal nix filename character. |
||
Harald Hope | 824dab4b77 |
New version, new man. Small new enhancements.
1. Added to -s for ipmi, with -x: voltage 12v,5v,3.3v,vbat; for -xx, dimm/soc p1/p2 voltages 2. enhanced wm: feature, needed more filters and protection against redundant data 3. basic apple osx fixes to keep it from crashing, but I'm not spending any more time on apple junk unless someone pays me for my time, I can't stand the product or company, it's the total antitheses of freedom or free software, or even openness. 4. openbsd/bsd fixes: openbsd was failing to get cpu flags due to a small oversight 5. -C now shows bits: for the true bits of cpu, not the kernel bits. This is not a reliable measurement but should be right about 95+ percent of the time, and basically all of the time for GNU/Linux on Intel/AMD, most of the time for ARM. When it doesn't know it does not guess, and shows N/A. 6. bsd fix for usb, was running numeric action on string value 7. fixed stderr tool for program_version, now it's hard-coded in program_values which removes an unneded regex search for every program version test. 8. Mate detection, switched to using mate-sesssion instead of mate-about, the latter is not getting updated and has the wrong version number on it. |
||
Eric S. Raymond | ac2dfac713 | Fix some slightly broken man-page markup. | ||
Harald Hope | 8d060c8cb4 | added tiny tweak, showing protocol out of x if possible. | ||
Harald Hope | a978bb3729 |
New version, new man. Fine tunings.
New features: 1. for a very few systems that have wmctrl installed, will shows -xxx wm if present Enhancements: 1. made xorg display server and protocols show more consistently with other layout: Display: x11 server: X.org 1.9.12 drivers: loaded: ... if no display protocol found: Display: server: X.org 1.9.12 drivers: loaded: ... This brings the -G in line with the other lines, of not putting different data types inside of parentheses as much as possible. -I still has two of these, but so far it's not clear how to otherwise show SSH or su/sudo/login in their respective spaces. Debugger data collector also has something I should have added ages ago, gz filename now includes the basic 2 digit inxi version number, like 3.0 at end, so I can readily determine the debugger inxi version, and thus avoid having to root through lots of versions to find new stuff. These are all largely cosmetic improvements, or debugger adjustments, except for -Sxxx now offering wm: if present. Also changed Desktop: name... (toolkit data) to: Desktop: name... tk: toolkit data to be more consistent, while not adding great length to the output. These two changes should also help export to json/xml since that puts unique key/values back into key value pairs, not merging two together. |
||
Harald Hope | 16e70f6eb1 |
New version, new man. Beta / 2.9 testing completed.
inxi 3.0 is now ready for prime time. No substantial issues have been found over the past week. All outstanding issues and bugs have been corrected. The man page and help page have been edited fairly heavily to improve usability and readablity. All work and development and support for inxi 2.3.56 is ended. No issues for 2.3.56 will be accepted since there is no way to support that version, it being in a different set of languages (Gawk/Bash) than inxi 2.9/3.0 (Perl 5). So the sooner you move your distro package pool to new inxi, the sooner your users can get support for any issues with current inxi. Beta and 2.9 prerelease testing is completed, and has resulted in a much better inxi than I could have hoped for. There are so many new features and enhancements in the new inxi that it's hard to list them all. See previous commits for a more in depth record. 1. New options: --slots (PCI Slots); --usb 2. Exports to json/xml with --output options 3. Every line has been enhanced, with tighter output control, better key / value pairings, more accurate values. 4. Line wrapping is now fully dynamic, which means inxi works down to 80 columns and should basically never wrap (except for very long repo lines, but that's not really fixable). 5. More controls, more user configuration options (see man page). 6. So many small new features that it's hard to list them all. Shows SSH in -I if SSH. Shows sudo/su/login in -I if relevant and detectable. Shows disk partioning scheme in some cases (more coming). Removes color codes if piped or redirected to file. 7. All sizes are now shown in standardized KiB/MiB/GiB/TiB/PiB format, to avoid ambiguity about whether M or MB or MiB is meant. All internal size math is done using KiB, which further avoids confusion and error. Note that many disk makers like using MB or GB instead of MiB or GiB because it makes their disks seem 'bigger'. 8. Sensors -s now supports IPMI sensors, in tandem with lm-sensors. Anyway, the changelog will show better all the new features etc, I can't remember them all. All current issues and glitches have been fixed, any remaining are simply new issues, just as they would be in old inxi. Note that in the second and third weeks of beta testing a significant number of bugs that are in inxi 2.3.56 were fixed. 2.3.56 has been moth-balled into the inxi-legacy branch as binxi, to avoid mixing it up with inxi. The development branch is now permanently inxi-perl, aka, pinxi, since that worked so well for beta and pre-3.0 2.9 testing and development. This ends the pinxi/inxi development stage. All future development will proceed using the inxi-perl branch, and will be the same in terms of new features as pre inxi 2.9 was, they will be added, enhanced, as seems appropriate. Remember, inxi is a rolling release program, like Arch Linux, Gentoo, Debian Testing/Sid, and has no frozen release points, so this is simply the beginning of the 3.0 line of Perl inxi. Thanks to everyone who contributed time, energy, effort, ideas, testing, debugging, patience - inxi would not work without you. |
||
Harald Hope | e43933452f |
New version, man page. Finished up main man edits. Set new defaults for some options,
like --sleep and -t. Edits to layout and language, removed some legacy options and language from man and inxi. Added partition table detections, rough initial stage. Only works on systems with udev present currently, will be expanded as we find fast tools. Since the systemd method is literally up to 25x slower than the udev method, it's not being considered except maybe as a last, last resort, and probably will never be used. |
||
Harald Hope | 35d5acfcae |
New version, new man. Completed man edits.
Many small bugs fixed. Enhancements: 1. in some cases, will detect partition table type (GTP,MBR) either with or without root. Uses fast method, which is not available on all systems. 2. Added IPMI sensors tools ipmitool and ipmi-sensors to -s for systems that use IPMI. 3. Finished man page edits and corrections. Thanks Pete. 4. Added doubled word filter for main -NGA lines, only for Card items. 5. Gave more granular uptime output: like: uptime: 23d 5h 34m |
||
Harald Hope | c4bc0ff282 |
New version, man page. Major man page edits. Bug fixes.
Bugs fixed: 1. RAID - both mdraid and zfs bugs corrected. Issue #135 2. EPYC cpu wrong die count corrected, and also added support for the EPYC type. Issue #135 3. Possible ARM data glitch that made reader fail on a non-existent file. Man: Ongoing updates and edits and corrections and cleanup. Slowly but surely. |
||
Harald Hope | 4a1a0b2eeb |
New version, new man. Bug fixes, new features, enhancements
1. Bug: cause unknown, but crashes on null file sent to reader, but all those files have been checked. For now added return if file null. 2. Features: with -Ixxx: show Shell: csh (sudo|su|login) status; show running in: xfce-terminal (SSH) ssh session active on remote system. Various help and man cleanups and additions. |
||
Harald Hope | 9e9a67168d |
New version, new man page. Bug fixes, feature/output tweaks.
Bugs fixed: 1. stray undefined value corrected 2. fixed BSD no pkg server case, now shows correctly that no pkg server files were found, not that the OS is not supported. Features: 1. -t c and m headers cleaned up and simplified 2. man page edits. 3. more standarization of key names for fields, some spelling and upper/lower case corrections. |
||
Harald Hope | 0f0433dc9a | edit man page, made mistake, this is the real 2.9.07 release | ||
Harald Hope | 84677f17ee |
New version, new man. Bug fixes, feature tweaks.
Bugs fixed: 1. json/xml outputter had a bug in it that made it validate path wrong. 2. -G -xx option: compositor: for gnome-shell had a bug that would make it show as running when it wasn't, other strings were tripping the match on systems with gnome-shell installed but not running, 3. Finally fixed bug with manjaro full version distro string, and tweaked output to show Manjaro Linux instead of given string. Features added: 1. --no-man - this lets users turn off man installs. Only really useful for -U from master, since default is off for pinxi and dev 3 branch. Man page/help updated to add this option. |
||
Harald Hope | 4af90c3406 |
New version, new man. Very new man.
Man features new section, configuration options, which lists the main config options users would be likely to use. This should help users who will never check the actual documentation web page realize that there are many internal configuration options available. Many edits in man, more to come I suspect. Bug fixes in inxi: 1. removed a few stray debuggers that were creating debugging output 2. fixed a usb driver bug that would create warning messages from Perl (thanks Manjaro for finding that one) New Option: 1. Added: --indent-min - goes with the user configuration option: INDENT_MIN and allows users to experiment with different indent settings. This is what trips the auto line wrap of line starters. This may be revisited, and this switch will make it easier for users to see for themselves which they prefer, what trip point, etc. This will help determine pre 3.0.0 what the default auto wrap trip point, if any, will be. Added more data to debugger tool, more lsblk, which is going to need a lot more data to solve a new issue with dm/encrypt/lvm, initial $MANPAGE data, to see if anyone actually ever uses that environmental variable. Special thanks to Manjaro for being as far as I know the first to package Perl inxi. |
||
Harald Hope | 51da186c9d |
New version, new man. Options changes
To get rid of some non-intuitive options, I've changed some of the --alt values to more obvious argument names; --dmidecode --no-ssl --no-host --host This makes them easier to remember, hopefully. Updated help, man pages to cover this change as well. Added some more lsblk debugger output to try to start building enough information to really figure out dm/encrypted/lvm and how those are actually handled internally in the system in terms of partitions, filesystems, etc. |
||
Harald Hope | b9b10e55a5 |
New version, new man. Big update, corrects many small typos, adds some good new
features. So now inxi and pinxi will grab the inxi.1 or pinxi.1 man file and install it on systems that do not have -U blocked. The -U block of course remains the same. New features: 1. now does not require root or 'file' to get unmounted fs type. Also, for many mounted partitions, rather than showing the meaningless fuseblock it will usually get the filesystem right. 2. -U now works with optional --man option to download man page for pinxi and -U 3 dev server updates. This gets around the fact I had to remove the gz files from master to get the size small enough to make maintainers happy. Non branch inxi master works as before, updates both from github or from dev server, depending on your selection. 3. Thanks very much to the people who have been contributing in a positve way, helping to make inxi better. The untold number of small and large new features, small glitches, etc, that have been fixed this week are simply too many too list. Many to most were inxi bugs or weaknesses, now corrected. 4. binxi branch has now been made fully operational, though I do not plan on doing any work beyond the mothballing of that venerable program (gawk->bash inxi), it's fully operational, it updates, it gets its man page, but all as binxi, so you can, as with pinxi, run all of them separately. This officially terminates my support for Gawk/Bash inxi, which can be found as binxi in the inxi-legacy branch. 5. pinxi has been promoted to permanent development branch, where bug fixes, new features, etc, will be tested, along with man page updates etc. This will help reduce the number of commits to master branch. 6. Audio / Network usb cards now show the true driver(s). There are often more than one for audio, that's a nice enancement. 7. inxi outputs to json / xml, which will probably interest some developers eventually, well it already did, that was going to wait, but someone wanted it. 8. Apt repo handler now supports DEB822 format, which is not an easy format to parse. ========================================================== MAINTAINERS: Note the following: despite my strong dislike for tags, every commit that touches either inxi or inxi.1 man page will be tagged if I think they would be something relevant to distro packagers. While github insists on calling my tags releases, I want to be crystal clear: inxi has one and only one 'release', the current master branch version. The tagged commits that github calls releases are NOT releases, they are just tagged commits. The version I release tomorrow will be the current master, and all previous versions will be obsolete and will not be supported. The .gz files have been removed from the master branch history, thus shrinking it a lot. I have removed for this reason the master-plain branch, which mirrored master and provided a gz free branch, but apparently this was simply ignored so there's no reason to keep it going. If you insist on grabbing all the branches and find more data in there, then please correct your practices, you are only getting the data from the master branch. inxi is rolling release software and has no releases, so the tags are supposed to create some illusion that a tag actually means something. Since it doesn't, I decided to take the path of least resistance and just add an auto tagging tool to my commit scripts and use it when it seems appropriate, like on this commit. All development work now will happen via the pinxi branch, so that makes the process a lot cleaner, since I can now basically beta test all new commmits to master. pinxi and binxi are both standalone versions of inxi, they have their own config and data directories, config files, man pages, etc. ----------------------------------------------------- New Perl inxi is already way ahead of Gawk/Bash inxi, more features, more accurate, and most bugs being fixed now are because a lot of people are contributing eyes and testing, and are finding stuff that was wrong, or simply missing, on old inxi as well as on Perl inxi. Fixes to Perl inxi (>2.9) will not be rolled into to binxi since the entire reason I spent over 4 months on this project was to never have to touch Gawk/Bash inxi again. Most imporant, however, is that the simple fact was, Gawk/Bash inxi has been nearly impossible to work on despite my following rigorous practices in coding, and I simply won't work with that type of stuff anymore. Perl 5.x is a true delight in comparison, and makes adding new features, enhancing others, far easier, or even possible, where it wasn't before. On a technical level, I have tested Perl inxi heavily, and it will run on all Perl 5.x versions back to 5.008, which is the cutoff point. This was not that hard to do, which is why I picked Perl 5.x as the language. This means that you can drop, just as with binxi, Perl inxi onto a 10 year old system, or older, and it will run fine, albeit a touch slowly, but must faster than binxi. ----------------------------------------------------- So far users are really liking the new one, it's usually faster in most cases, the output is cleaner, there's more data, more options, and basically it's gotten the thumbs up from all the testers, and there have been a LOT, who have helped. I want to give a special thanks to the following distros for their exceptional support and testing: 0. the people who hang out on irc.oftc.net #smxi. Very patient, will test things with astounding patience, so thanks to them. Archerseven, iotaka and KittyKatt have been been incredibly helpful when it comes to testing and debugging, and finding corner cases that I would never have found. 1. AntiX: they were the first to beta test pinxi, and found massive numbers of bugs, and stuck with the testing for a long time. They made testing possible for the next wave of testers, my hats off to them, I've always liked them. 2. Manjaro also was very helpful, and found more issues and enhancements. 3. Ubuntu forums users found more, and helped enhance many faetures 4. Mint users have been very helpful, and were the impetus for some nifty new features, ilke switching all color codes off when output is piped or sent to file. They have reminded me of how valuable people's views can be who may not share the same tech world view as you, but are still very talented and observant individuals. 5. Slackware users provided some very thoughtful feedback, which was no surprise but welcome nonetheless, thanks. 6. Same with Debian forums, again, some very useful and constructive ideas and observations, and some very arcane and odd hardware that exposed even more corner case bugs. And several other distros were also helpful, each in their own way. Solus for example now has their package manager added in repos. |
||
Harald Hope | 67bfb595d6 |
New version, new man page. Updates:
1. added tool lsblk, recommends, for -p and -o, shows better partition data than df does. First choice for -p and -o, -p fall back df, -o fallback file. 2. fixed a big bug with user configs, that would make the configs break every time the color editor was used. 3. Some smaller bugs. |
||
Harald Hope | 6aace06af4 |
New inxi, new man, new tarball.
It's here! Perl inxi, first official release. So many changes, really too many to list. But here's a few: 1. of course, full rewrite to Perl 5.x. Supports as old as 5.008, as new as current. 2. Better line length nandlers. Fully dynamic, robust, shrinks and expands to fit either taste or viewport. 3. Long options for all options now, plus of course the short options everyone is used to. 4. New options: --usb; --slots (pci slot report); --sleep (change cpu sleep time); and many more. Check --help or man page for details. 5. Vastly improved --recommends, now does per distro package recommends, and shows only Linux data to Linux systems, and BSD data to BSD systems. 6. Hugely improved debugger as well. 7. Far more accurate output, most output is now in key/value pairs, because: 8. inxi now exports to json and xml! See --output/--output-file for info. 9. Enhancedd repo output, added deb822 type, solus 10. Radically enhanced network data, now shows all IP / IF devices connected to each nic, not just one, both IP v4 and v6. 11. USB audio and network device actual drivers 12. better handling of compiler data. 13. Basic ARM machine data now, if present to inxi 14. Graphics: per card driver info alongside the original xorg drivers. 15. Better integration of partitions, RAID, unmounted partitions, and HDD data. 16. Better sensors handling of free video driver sensor data, well, not better, it's now there, along with fan speeds for gpus. 17. RAID is enhanced, and now can show > 1 RAID type on a system, and the RAID is improved. 18. Much improved disk/partition/memory sizing, inxi now always works internally with KB units, and changes them on output to the appropriate units. 19. Fully redone man page for all the new options and the long options. And so much more. Anyway, here it is, the first release. |
||
Harald Hope | b4605fe1dc |
New version, new tarball, new man page. This should fix the Rizen multithreaded
cpu output issues. Now inxi handles > 8 cores in terms of output filters, descriptions, correctly noting that it's multithreaded. Because AMD has entered the Multithreading game, I've changed the trade term: HT - HyperThreading to MT - MultiThreading to support both Intel and AMD variants. Updated CPU output filters to also account for these very large core counts. I believe this commit now adds full support for the new Ryzen series, but I'll have to see when it comes to other variants that may appear. I've tried to future proof the MT tests, but I won't know of those are fully functional and accurate until inxi sees the real data. |
||
Harald Hope | 0f3f0393c3 | Small glitch on man page, that's fixed. | ||
Harald Hope | ffd52bfe73 |
New version, new tarball, new man page. This is the first attempt to correct an
issue a forum poster raised, which is the fact that despite the fact that GNU/Linux has had reasonably ok zfs support for years now, inxi only tested for zfs on bsd systems. This has been corrected. Due to the complexity of handling software raid, inxi will now test first for ZFS data, if none is found, it will then test for /proc/mdstat. In a perfect world I'd like to have full dynamic Raid support, but I'm missing all the key ingredients required to add that: 1. systems to test on 2. software raid, I don't use it 3. data collection for non mdraid and zfs software raid, including the values possible to gather from all non software raid. Basically, the only way I'd extend -R raid option is if I get direct ssh access to a machine that uses the alternate software raid type, otherwise it would take forever to figure out the options. Since the number of people who might be actually running zfs and mdraid and using inxi probably numbers in the 10 globally, I figured this solution was a fine way to handle adding zfs without messing up mdraid, which is more common on linux. It also does not break BSDs, since bsds as far as I know don't use mdraid, and don't have /proc/mdraid in the first place. Also redid the man page to add -! 41, -! 42, -! 43, -! 44 options, which bypass curl, fetch, wget, and all of them, respectively. Plus making the lines less wide. That should make those people who actually use 80 column wide vi as an editor happy, lol. |