1. Fixed undefined error that could happen, in rare cases, in hdd_temp logic.
Fixes:
1. Fixed Elbrus cpu nazming, model 9 is 8CV, not 8CB (Cyrillic error)
2. Preventitive, was not using '-' quite correctly in all regex ranges.
3. Had wrong desktop string listed in Unity
4. Reordered Family/Drive model in usb drive reports, it's to make it
more obvious what is what.
5. Adjusted indexing of splits to get better results in corner cases.
6. Fixed some numbering issues.
7. Added trimming n1 from nvme0 type names for nvme, this corrects some
issues users were having.
8. Fixed a division by 0 error in smartctl data grabber.
9. Fixed a Perl issue, didn't realize perl treats 000 as a string, not 0.
10. Another Perl fix, int() only wants to get numeric values sent to it,
I'd assumed a different behavior, non numerics get converted to 0, but that's
not how Perl sees things. Things like this, by the way, are why Perl is so
absurdly fast.
Enhancements:
1. More disk vendors. The list will never be complete!! We have found eternal
churn!! Thanks to linux lite hardware database as always.
2. Big one!!! Now inxi uses smartctl data, if installed, for getting advanced
drive information (with -a). See man and help for details. Will show failing drives,
etc. Lots of info can be available, but sometimes data is not in smartctl db,
so inxi can't find it, that's not an inxi bug, it's just how it is.
3. Made hours on more human readable, into days/hours, for -a smartctl disk
report.
4. Added $test[12] for smartctl data printout, and $test[13] for disk array print out.
Note that advanced debugger outputs can change or vary depending on what is being
worked on so don't in general rely on these always being around. But they do
tend to say stuck in place once I add them.
5. Added some nvme stuff, spare reserve, if you need it, you'll appreciate it,
if not, you'll never know it's there.
6. By request from some forum issue thread: made --host only be shown onif not
--filter or not --host. This makes -z remove hostname, but retains ability to
do absolute overrides. Hostname should have always been filtered out like that,
it was an oversight. I think that was Manjaro who asked that, but I forget.
Note that this change, as usual, will not alter expected behaviors if users
have config item for hostname set.
7. Added support for picom compositor, thanks user codebling for that, I think
that's compiz fork, the real branch that is that is being developed.
Bugs:
1. issue #200 - forgot to add all variants for -p, now works with --partition-full
and --partitions-full
2. issue #199 - another one, forgot to add --disk to -D for long version. Thanks
adrian15 for both of these, he was testing something and discovered these were
missing.
3. Issue #187 an issue with RAID syntax not being handled in a certain case,
thanks EnochTheWise for following through on this one. This turned out to be
a bad copy paste, a test pattern did not match the match pattern.
Fixes:
1. Fixed some docs typos.
2. Issue #188 fixed protections and filters for some glxinfo output handlers.
3. Issue #195, for Elbrus bit detection.
4. Added filter to cpu data, was not skipping if arm, so Model string
was treated numerically.
Enhancements:
1. Added rescatux to Debian system base detections. This closes issue #202, again
from adrian15, thanks.
2. For cpu architecture, updated for latest AMD ryzen and other families, like
Zen 3, which is just coming out re available data. Also latest Intel, which are
trickier to ID right now, but I think I got the latest ones right,
That's things like coffee lake, amber lake, comet lake, etc.
3. Huge one, full (hopefully out of the box) Russian Elbrus CPU support. Thanks
to the alt-linux and the others who helped provide data and feedback to get support.
Note that this was also part of correcting 64 bit detection for e2k type, which
is how Elbrus IDs internally. See issue #197 which I've left open for the time
being for more information on this CPU and how it's now handled by inxi.
Note all available data should now work for Elbrus, including physical cpu/core
counts etc. Elbrus do not show flag information, nor do they use min/max speed,
so that data isn't available, but everything else seems to work well.
4. Eternal disk vendors. Thanks linux lite hardware database, you continue to
help make the disk vendor feature work by supplying every known vendor ever seen.
5. To close debian bug report https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=942194
Note that the fix is simply to give the user the option to disable this behavior
with the new --no-sudo and NO_SUDO configuration file options. This issue should
never have been filed as a bug since even the poster admitted it was a wishlist
item, but because of how debian bug tracker works, it's hard to get rid of
invalid bugs. Note that this is the internal use of sudo for hddtemp and file,
not starting inxi with sudo, so using this option or configuration item just
removes sudo from the command. Note that because the user did not do as
requested, and never actually filed a github wishlist issue, and since his
request was vague and basically pointless, the fix is just to let you switch
off sudo, that's all.
Bugs:
1. Issue #188 exposed a situation in glxinfo where the required opengl fields are
present but contain null data. This happens when a system does not have the required
opengl drivers, which was the case here. inxi failed to handle that. Thanks
LinuxMonger for posting the required data to figure this corner case out.
2. Fixed a long time bug in Disk vendor ID, there was an eq (string equals)
where it was supposed to use regex pattern match. Oops. Would have led to
disk vendor id failures in several cases.
Fixes:
1. help, man updates for RAM/Memory data, more clarifications.
2. Refactored RepoData class/package, to make it easier to handle repo string
data, and make it all overall cleaner internally, and enable future extensions
to certain features in inxi that may or may not one day become active.
3. Added to some regex compares \Q$VAR\E to disable regex characters in strings.
I should have used that a long time ago, oh well, better late than never!
4. Found a horrible case were xdpyinfo uses 'preferred' instead of the actual
pixel dimensions, shame on whoever allowed that output!!! shame! Had to add
a workaround to make sure numeric values are present, if not, then use the
fallback, which means, 2x more data parsing to get data that should not
require that, but in this example, it did (an Arch derivative, but it could
be xdpyinfo itself, don't know)>
Enhancements:
1. More fixes on issue #185. Thanks tubecleaner for finding and provding required
data to really solve a set of RAM issues that apply particularly in production
systems. This issue report led to 2 new options: --memory-short, which only
shows a basic RAM report.
Memory: RAM: total: 31.43 GiB used: 14.98 GiB (47.7%)
Report: arrays: 1 slots: 4 modules: 2 type: DDR4
And a 2nd, --memory-modules, only shows the occupied slots. This can be
useful in situations where it's a server or vm with a lot of slots, most empty:
Memory: RAM: total: 31.43 GiB used: 15.44 GiB (49.1%)
Array-1: capacity: 256 GiB slots: 4 EC: None
Device-1: DIMM 1 size: 16 GiB speed: 2400 MT/s
Device-2: DIMM 1 size: 16 GiB speed: 2400 MT/s
Note that both of these options trigger -m, so -m itself is not required.
2. More disk vendors!! The list never ends! Thanks linux-lite hardware database
and users for supplying, and buying/obtaining, apparently every disk known to
mankind.
3. Added fallback XFCE detection, in cases were the system does not have xprop
installed, it's still possible to do a full detection of xfce, including toolkit,
so now inxi does that, one less dependency to detect one more desktop.
4. Added vmwgfx driver to xorg drivers list. Note, I've never actually seen this
in the wild, but I did see it as the kernel reported driver from lspci, so it
may exist.
Unfixed:
1. Issue #187 EnochTheWise (?) did not supply the required debugger data so there
is a RAID ZFS issue that will not get fixed until the required debugger data is
supplied. Please do not waste all our time filing an issue if you have no
intention of actually following through so we can get it fixed.
Note that a key way we get issues here is from Perl errors on the screen, which are
a frequent cause of someone realizing something is wrong. This is why I'm not going
to do a hack fix for the RAID ZFS issue, then the error messages will go away, and
it will likely never get handled. For examples of good, useful, productive issue
reports, and how to do them right: #188 and #185, both of which led to good
improvements in how inxi handles corner cases in those areas.
Bugs:
1. Issue #185 exposed a small long standing bug in ram max module size logic.
Was not retaining the value each loop iteration, which could lead to way off
max module size guesses. Note that this could lead to a VERY wrong max module size
report.
2. Issue #185 also exposed a rarely seen undefined value for ram reports, was
not tested for undefined, now is.
Fixes:
1. cleanup of comments in start client debugger that made it unclear.
2. Got rid of all the legacy development modules that were in inxi-perl/modules.
These were totally out of date and pointless to retain.
Enhancements:
1. Added eoan ubuntu 19-10 release name
2. Added zen cpu model ID.
3. Disk vendors and new vendor IDs added. Thanks linuxlite hardware database.
4. Made a backend tool to check for new unhandled disks, this makes updating
disk/vendor IDs a lot easier.
5. Updated inxi-perl/docs with new links etc.
Bugs:
1. issue #182 - in freebsd, there was an oversight in the pciconf parser, it
was using unfiltered strings as regex pattern, and of course, a string flipped
an error. Fix was to add the regex cleaner to the string before it's used in test.
2. NOTE: issue #182 had a second bug, but the issue poster didn't follow up with
data or output so it couldn't be fixed. This was related to a syntax change in
usbdevs -v output in FreeBSD. Such changes are too common, but it might also
simply be a variant I have not seen or handled, but so far no data, so can't fix.
Don't blame me if you get this bug, but do post requested debugger data if you
want it fixed!
Fixes:
1. Updated man for weather, explained more clearly how to use country codes for
weather output. More clarifying in general about weather location, and weather
restrictions.
Enhancements:
1. Added avx/avx2 to default flag list in -C short form. Thanks damentz from
liquorix for clarifying why that was a good idea. Note the initial issue came up
in a Debian issue report, not here. People!! please post issues here, and don't bug
maintainers with feature requests! Maintainers aren't in a position to add a feature,
so you should go straight to the source.
1.a. Created in inxi-perl/docs new doc file: cpu-flags.txt, which explains all
the flags, and also covers the short form flags and explains why they are used.
2. To resolve another issue, I made a new documentation file:
inxi-perl/docs/inxi-custom-recommends.txt
This is instructions for maintainers of distros who do not use rpm/apt/pacman but
still want the --recommends feature to output their package pool package names for
missing packages. I decided to not allow more than the default 3 package managers
because no matter what people say, if I allow in more, the maintainer will vanish
or lose interest, and I'll be stuck having to maintain their package lists forever.
Also, it's silly to even include that package list for any distro that does not
use rpm/apt/pacman, since the list is just wasted lines. Instructions in doc file
show what to change, and how, and has an example to make it clear. Odds of this
actually being used? Not high, lol, but that's fine, if people want it done, they
can do it, if not, nothing bad happens, it just won't show any suggested install
package, no big deal.
3. Using the new disk vendor method, added even more disk vendors. Thanks
linux litet hardware database!!
4. EXCITING!! A new --admin/-a option, suggested by a user on techpatterns.com/forums/
Now -S or -b or -F with -a option for GNU/Linux shows the kernel boot parameters,
from /proc/cmdline. Didn't find anything comparable for BSDs, if you can tell me
where to look, I'll add it for those too, but wasn't anywhere I looked. Do the
BSDs even use that method? Don't know, but the logic is there, waiting to be used
if someone shows me how to get it cleanly. The 'parameters:' item shows in the main
'System:' -S output, and will just show the entire kernel parameters used to boot.
This could be very helpful to distros who often have to determine if for example
graphics blacklists are correctly applied for non free drivers, like nomodeset etc,
or if the opposite is present.
For forum/distro support, they just have to ask for: inxi -ba and they will see t
the relevant graphics info, for instance, or -SGaxxx, or -Faxxx, whatever is used
to trigger in this case the graphics and system lines.
5. Updated man/help for 4 as well, now explains what they will see with --admin/
-a options and -S. Good user suggestion, I wish all new features were this easy,
heh.
Bugs:
1. For sensors, in some cases, gpu failed to show correctly. This
should be corrected.
Fixes:
1. Made help/man explanations of weather changes more clear.
Particularly in regards to no automated query info. But also for supported
location syntaxes.
2. Some corner cases of null weather data return null and tripped
a null data error. This is corrected.
3. Added city duplicate filter to weather output, this hopefully will
in some cases avoid printing city name twice, depends on weather source.
4. Removed --weather-source option 0, that no longer works so all code was
removed.
5. More deb822 fixes, loosened up even more syntax. That's a poorly designed
config syntax, hard to work with.
Enhancements:
1. Lots of new disk vendors. So many!! Thanks linux-lite hardware database!
switched to a new method of getting disk name/vendor data, now it's a lot easier
to check for new ones.
2. Added fancybar to desktop info.
Fixes:
1. In case with zero wind speed, it now shows zero, not N/A, as expected.
Enhancements:
1. Depending on weather source used:
* Shows precipitation, not rain/snow.
* Adds Sunrise/sunset (most sources do not have this)
Bugs:
1. Maybe the vendor/product regex, which when + was used, would put out
errors.
2. Maybe Fix 4, since that could lead to incorrect behavior when sudo
is involved depending on sudo configuration.
3. BIG: current inxi weather will probably fail if not updated to this or
newer versions!! Not an inxi bug per se, but your users will see it as one.
Fixes:
1. Fixed Patriot disk ID.
2. Fixes for PPC board handling.
3. Regex cleaner fixes, this could lead to error in special cases of product
vendor names.
4. crazy from frugalware pointed out that $b_root detection was flawed, and
relied on a bad assumption, particularly for sudo. As usual, he's right, that
is now corrected, and uses $< Perl native to determine UID.
Enhancements:
1. Added septor to Debian system base.
2. Removed quiet filters for downloaders when using --dbg 1, now you see the
entire download action for curl/wget downloads. This went along with
issue # 174
3. New feature: --wan-ip-url. This closed issue #174. Also has user config
option: WAN_IP_URL as well to make changes permanent.
4. Added --dbg 1 to man and help. The other --dbg options are random and can
change, but --dbg 1 is always for downloading, so might as well tell people
about it.
5. To anticipate the loss of a major weather API, inxi is redone to use smxi.org
based robust API. This also allows for a new switch, --weather-source (or --ws
for shorter version), options 0-9, which will trigger different APIs on smxi.org.
Added WEATHER_SOURCE configuration option as well. Note that 4-9 are not
currently active. Also added in better error handling for weather.
The main benefit here is that inxi is now largely agnostic to the weather APIs
used, and those can be changed with no impact to inxi users who are running
frozen pool inxi's, or who have not updated their inxi versions.
NOTE: all inxi versions older than 3.0.31 will probably fail for weather
quite soon. So update your inxi version in your repos!!
6. More disk vendors IDs and matches. Thanks linuxlite hardware database.
7. Going along with weather changes, added, if present, cloud cover, rain, and
snow reports. Those are for previously observed hour.
8. Small change to Intel CPU architecture, taking a guess on stepping for
skylake/Cascade lake ID. Guessing if stepping is > 4, it's cascade lake. But
could not find this documented, so it's a guess. At worst, it means that Cascade
lake, which must be a later steppingi than 4, will not be ID'ed as skylake.
9. Documentation updates for data sources.
Changes:
1. inxi now uses a new system to get weather data. There is no longer a risk
of weather failing if the API used locally in inxi fails or goes away. This
change should be largely invisible to casual users.
2. In weather, moved dewpoint to be after humidity, which makes a little more
sense.
Bugs:
1. Both a fix and a bug, in that inxi had an out of date list of Xorg drivers.
This led to all the newer Intel devices failing to show their drivers in the
Xorg driver lines, like i915, i965, and so on. Updated to full current list of
Xorg drivers. This is not technically a bug since it's simply things that came
into existence after that logic was last updated. But it looks like a bug.
Fixes:
1. Issues #170 and #168 showed a problem with inxi believing it was running in IRC
when Ansible or MOTD started inxi. This is because they are not tty so trip the
non tty flag, which assumes it's in IRC in that case. The fix was to add a
whitelist of known clients based on the parent name inxi discovers while running
inside that parent. MOTD confirmed fixed, Ansible not confirmed. Why do people file
issue reports then not follow them? Who knows.
Note that this issue is easy to trip by simply doing this: echo 'fred' | inxi
which disables the tty test as well. To handle that scenario, that is, when inxi is
not first in the pipe, I added many known terminal client names to the whitelists.
This works in my tests, though the possible terminals, or programs with embedded
terminals, is quite large, but inxi handles most of them automatically. When it
doesn't, file an issue and I'll add your client ID to the whitelist, and use --tty
in the meantime.
2. Issue #171 by Vascom finally pinned down the wide character issue which manifests
in some character sets, like greek or russian utf8. The fix was more of a work-around
than a true fix, but inxi now simply checks the weather local time output for wide
characters, and if detected, switches the local date/time format to iso standard,
which is does not contain non ascii characters as far as I can tell. This seemed to
fix the issue.
3. Added iso9660 from excluded file systems for partitions, not sure how inxi
missed that one for so long.
4. See bug 1, expanded and made current supported intel drivers, and a few other
drivers, so now inxi has all the supported xorg drivers again. Updated docs as well
to indicate where to get that data.
Enhancements:
1. As usual, more disk vendor/product ID matches, thanks to linuxlite hardware
database, which never stops providing new or previously unseen disk ids. Latest
favorite? Swissarmy knife maker victorinox Swissflash usb device.
2. Added Elive system base ID.
3. Added Nutyx CARDS repo type.
Bugs:
1. See fix 4, incorrect positioning of Trinity desktop detection logic.
Fixes:
1. Vascom reports in issue #169 that some systems are making the /sys cpu
vulnerability data root read only. Added <root required> test and output.
2. A while back, they added several chassis types in the smbios
specifications. I used an older specification pdf file, this is now corrected.
Note that realworld use of the new types exists, like tablet, mini pc, and so
on. This missing data caused Machine report to list N/A as machine type when
it was actually known. I'd been using an older specification PDF, and had
failed to look at the actual spec download page, where you could clearly see
the newer spec file. Corrected this in the inxi docs as well.
3. Made gentoo repo reader check for case insensitive values for enabled.
Also extended that to other repo readers that use similar syntax, they are
all now case insensitive (Yes/yes/YES, that is)
4. Fixed incorrect handling of Trinity desktop ID, that needed to happen in
the kde ID block, as first test, not after it. Caused failure in Q4OS trinity,
and maybe others. I'm not sure why inxi had the detection where it was, it
made no real sense, so that's now nicely integrated, so these types of
failures should not happen again. Thanks Q4OS for exposing that issue.
Enhancements:
1. Added TDM and CDM display managers. Never seen either (Q4OS uses TDM), TDM
corrected. CDM not confirmed, don't know if it's still around, but if it is
similar to TDM re cdm.pid in /run, it should be detected fine.
2. Added more disk vendors/ids, the list never stops!! Thanks LinuxLite
Hardware database, your users seem to use every disk known to humanity.
3. Added Debian derived Q4OS distro ID and system base handler.
Bugs:
1. ARM fix, odroid > 1 cpu speeds not showing correctly.
2. Ansible start fixes.
3. Fringe Battery failures, see Pinebook.
Fixes:
1. Removed null data message 'old system' since that's not always the case.
2. Added support for > 1 CPU speeds in systems with > 1 CPU.
3. Added is_numeric test for sudo version tests, that was tripping errors in
rare cases.
4. Fine tuned terminal size setting to check that is int to correct the
Ansible problem.
5. ARM Pinebook fixes, battery, cpu. This also fixes corner cases where
the battery charge state is missing but it is a systme battery.
Enhancments:
1. Added more disk ID matches/vendors. Thanks LinuxLite Hardware database!!
2. UKUI, ukwm, ukui-panel added to desktop data.
3. Added PopOS to system base.
4. Ansible/Chef user noted that inxi believes that it is running in IRC when
started by Ansible / Chef (not sure about Chef but assuming it's the same).
Added flag --tty flag to force inxi to believe it's running in shell no matter
what starts it. Note that this fix is not confirmed because the person didn't
confirm the fix. Annoying.
5. Added Ubuntu disco to ubuntu_id.
Bugs:
1. As a fix (3), failure to handle spaces in mount source names. More of a fix than
a bug, since it was an old issue #63.
2. OSX errors, BSD errors, but not really inxi errors or bugs, more weird data
tripping null data or unreadable file errors, but I'll call those bugs since they
look like bugs to end users. See Fixes for more.
3. See Fix 4, this is sort of a bug, inxi failed to return expected values on
success/failure.
Fixes:
1. One of the documented config items, COLS_MAX_NO_DISPLAY had not been implemented
internally. This is now corrected.
2. Apple OSX was returning errors, those were fixed.
3. Finally handled ancient issue #63, support now there for spaces in remote source
name. This means that both spaces in source block name, and mount point name, are
in theory both handled now. This was also to fix an osx issue #164 despite the
fact that technically I do not support osx beyond fixing errors, but since in this
case the issue was a long standing one, I fixed it for everything.
4. Big fix, I'd completely left undone proper unix type error number returns in
inxi, oops. Thanks Unit193 for noticing that and prompting me to fix it. Now inxi
returns integer success/error numbers as expected.
5. OSX xml based version info broke, of course, naturally it would, so I added in
an osx fallback where if no distro version detected, use fallback unix method, which
is what all the other unices use.
6. Along with space in source name, fixed mapped handling a bit more too for
partitions.
6. Added cifs remote file system to disk size used blacklist, and iso9660. Not sure
how I'd missed those for so long.
7. OpenBSD vmstat in 6.3 changed the column order for avm/fre, and changed to a,
sigh, human readable default format, in M, so to handle this for all bsds, I had
to make a dynamic column detection for avm and fre, and use those after, and also
i had to add in a M detection, if found, *1024 and strip out M, sigh.
8. OpenBSD, another alternate ordering/syntax issue, the dmesg.boot data for disks
does not always use the same order in comma separated list, saw user case where
the first item after : was the MB size, not the second. Made detection dynamic.
9. Due to Android case, found types where no cpu speed data was found, no max speed
at least, which tripped an error due to null data for ARM, this is now handled,
now cpu speed min/max read permissions in /sys are checked first before trying to
read, and default failures are better handled.
10. On man page, added in clarification of the moving of Memory: item from Info:
line to ram Memory: line, explaining when it appears where. I do not removing the
item from -I, I may revert that change, I find it non-intuitive to move that
around.
Enhancements:
1. Added display manager Ly, plus Ly version number. Thanks NamedKitten, this
closes issues #166#165#162
2. Improved documentation a bit to avoid ambiguity re how to get colors in output.
That handles issue #161, thanks fugo for the nudge to improve the documentation.
3. First inxi on Android tests, using termux, which has a debian based apt
type installer, got inxi running on at least two devices, including pixel2, but
discovered that apparently as of android 5, /sys is now locked up in terms of
wildcard reads, but further analysis is required, but as of now, inxi works in
termux, but fails to get any Device data for A, G, or N. Thus it also fails to match
IF to Device, so none of the IP data shows up. The latter will probably be fixed
since Android has ip and ifconfig already, or termux does, but so far I found no
way to get device data for ARM in Android 5.x and greater (checked on
android 7 and 9 in real phones).
4. More disk vendors!! thanks linuxlite / linux hardware database for offering an
apparently never ending list of obscure and not so obscure disk vendors and
products.
5. While I was unable to get confirmation or documentation on file names for
tce repo files, I guessed that localmirrors would be used, but this may be
any random text file in /opt at all, no extensions, I'd have to test to confirm
or deny possible values.
6. To handle more complex debugger failures, added --debug-no-proc,
--debug-no-exit, to skip or enable completion where proc or sys debugger is hanging.
Changes:
1. Changed vendor in A, G, and N to -x, not -xxx, this data seems much more useful
and reliable than I'd first expected when I made the feature, the -xxx was more
an indication of my lack of trust in the method and source, but so far it seems
pretty good, so I bumped it up to an -x option. Note that also, it's quite useful
to know the vendor of, say, your network or graphics card, not just the actual
device internal data, which is all inxi has ever shown previously.
2. Small change, if no partition type data is found, dev, remote, mapped, default
now says 'source:' instead of 'dev:' which makes more sense. Note that df calls
that column 'source', so I decided to go with their language for the default not
found case. Also changed mapped to say mapped. This was part of a bit of a
refactor of the partition type logic, enhanced by adding mapped to existing types,
and moved the entire type detection block into the main data generator, and out
of the data line constructor.
Optimizations:
1. Tested, and dumped, List::Util first() as a possible way to speed up grep
searches of arrays, where the goal is just to see if something is in an array. My
expectation was that first(), returning the first found instance of the search term,
would of course be faster since it will always exit the search loop was met with
the sad fact that first() is about 2 to 4 times SLOWER than grep() native builtin.
I tested this fairly carefully, and used NYTProf optimizer tool and the results were
totally consistent, first() was always much slower than grep(), no matter what size
the array is. I assume this means the core C programming that makes grep is simply
much better than the File::Util module programming that makes first(). Removed
first() and now know that nothing will be faster than grep so no need to look there
for speed improvements.
The moral of the story: just because something should in theory be faster, does
sadly not mean it will be faster, for there are bigger things at work, skill of
the programmers who made the logic, how perl handles external vs internal tools,
and so on. As an aside, this forms a fairly consistent pattern where I've found
Perl by itself to be faster than modules in many cases, that is, it's faster to
write the code out than to use a module in many cases that I have tested, so I
will always test such ideas and dump every one that is in fact slower than native
Perl builtins.
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!
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.
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.
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
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.
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The 3.0.13 system base feature had a small bug in the logic that was supposed to
get the version id from codename, the bug made it never work. This is only relevant
for Ubuntu based distros, so if you are on some other base like Debian or Arch, you
can ignore this one, 3.0.13 will work fine.
No other changes, this was mainly for Mint, and other Ubuntu derived distros in
the future.