inxi/inxi.1
Harald Hope f571b45973 New version! Fixes!! Bug fixes! More bug fixes!! Cleanups!
Most of these were exposed by issue #251 filed by LukasNickel, then further
revealed via his debugger data set, which showed two more bugs. Well, bugs,
changed syntaxes, same difference to end users.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
KNOWN ISSUES:

1. Work is ongoing to add btrfs support to -R (similar to softraid or zfs),
basic stubs and debuggers added, but reporting tools are not as robust (and
often require sudo/root for reasons that escape me) as I would have hoped, so
it's slow. One of these days... Normally would not release with working stubs,
but there were enough real issues/bugs to warrant just getting 3.3.06 out the
door, then going on with the btrfs feature for -R. But so far I view the
reporting tools as inadequate, unfortunately.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BUGS:

1. As initially discovered in issue #251 there are alternate syntaxes which had
never been seen before for remote mounts, fuse mounts, etc. In this case, it was
fuse.sshfs that was not removed from the Disk total:... used: leading to silly
1000+% used percentage. Note that while technically inxi could try to be clever
about reporting impossible percentages, so far those have led to bugs getting
reported, then fixed, so I think it worth leaving it as is.

2. When --swap/-j is used with no other arguments, failed to show uuid or label.
Discovered this while testing fix 2.

3. Bug which is not a bug but will appear as such to users, nvme temps were
failing in -Dx due to a change in how those values are located in /sys. See fix
3.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FIXES:

1. Going along with Bug 1, and considering that only in 3.3.05 was the nfs4
remote fs failure to identify/exclude, the entire section involving remote/ fuse
etc file systems was refactored, and extended to add many more previously
non-handled remote and fuse type file systems. Significant extension of known
remote filesystem types, distributed file systems, overlay file systems, all to
try to avoid having more distributed/remote/fuse file system issues. Also added
test to support fuse. or fuseblk. type prefixes for any of these. Hopefully
there will be fewer issues related to distributed and remote and overlay type
file systems in the future.

2. Made all label/uuid triggers global, that is, -ol shows unmounted with
labels, -ju shows swap with uuid, and so on. This may require a bit more tweaks
to get exactly right, but in general, this is a purely cosmetic fix, that is,
try not to show label/uuid for partition/mounts that probably can't have those
values.

3. There was a change in the way nvme /sys temperature paths were handled, an
actually understandable, albeit as always annoying, one, because inxi actually
had to do a sort of convoluted hack to get the nvme block devices temperatore
paths before, now that hack is not required for newer kernels (5.12+), though
for kernels that had the old paths (5,8, 5.9 at least, don't know when paths
changed) left in the old method. Now tests are more granular, and inxi should
find temperatures regardless of which method is used for nvme and sd type
drives.

4. Another somewhat irksome random change, again, understandable since the new
syntax is more consistent in output than the previous one, but still breaks all
existing parsers that use the changed field names. Lsblk did NOT change the -o
input field names, but DID change the output field names, which broke the
internal inxi parser, and led to null lsblk data.

Changes were - or : separators in input values are output as _ always. that is,
MAJ:MIN becomes MAJ_MIN. Also corrected the debugger lsblk to use the same
output fields for -P -o as the actual lsblk parser uses internally so these
failures can be spotted more readily, as it was, it was literally only because
someone submitted the debugger dataset, and was running lsblk 2.37, where I
believe this behavior change happened. Solution was to just use regex patterns
instead, [:_-], in the parser. Big fear now is that they will randomly stop
supporting the -o input field names that contain - or : and change that too
without any real warning or deprecation notice.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ENHANCEMENTS:

1. Going with bug and fix 1, added avfs, afs, archivemount, avfs, ceph, gfs,
glusterfs, gmailfs, hdfs, ipfs, kosmos/kfs, lafs, mergerfs, mhddfs, moosefs,
ocfs, openafs, orangefs, overlayfs, pvfs, s3fs, sheepdog, vmfs, and several
others to the exclude list for disk used and show label/uuids for partitions.

2. A smattering of disk vendors added.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CHANGES:

1. Going with fix 2, -l and -u no longer will trigger -P by default, now if -l
or -u are used without -j, -o, -p, -P, an  error will explain that you must use
one of those together with -l or -u. This was the only way to get the -l and -u
switches to turn off/on label/uuid reports in swap, unmounted, and partitions
consistently. Triggering -P was really a legacy behavior from when the only
options were -p or -P, and --swap and --unmounted did not exist. I found it
increasingly odd that unmounted would show label/uuid always but partitions only
with -l/-u.

2. This was a pet peeve, sometimes field names just bug me (like 'Topology: did
for CPU, now  corrected to Info:), the Drive: rotation: was one such annoyance.
I had recycled that to indicate SSD, which was a feature request, but that was
always a sloppy solution, and made no sense, since SSD isn't a rotation speed.

Now it reports a much more logical:

ID-1:...... type: HDD rpm: 7200
or
ID-1:...... type: SSD
or
ID-1:...... type: N/A

This also corresponds to the intended meaning much better. The HDD type was
always present internally if rotation speed is detected, but was not used. Now
will also show type: N/A if reliable type detection failed, which will also be
more consistent.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DOCUMENTATION:

1. Brought most of inxi.changelog (this file) into a consistent state, re
whitespaces, readability, consistent use of various header / section names.
Ideally while I don't expect anyone to ever sit down and read this changelog, it
will be now much easier to scan to find whatever interests you. This change goes
along with ongoing changes in docs to in general try to be usually 80 columns
wide.

2. inxi-resources.txt, inxi-data.txt are updated with more raid, partition, file
system values and data to go along with bug, fix, enhancement 1.

3. Man and help updated to indicate -u and -l no longer trigger -P by default.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CODE:

1. Ongoing refactors, bringing the codebase to the point that matches current
coding styles. Removed remainder of whitespaces in conditions and for/while
loops, for example:

if ( condition ) {
becomes:
if (condition){
and
if ( ( test set 1 ) && ( test set 2 ) ) {
becomes:
if ((test set 1) && (test set 2)){

and so on. That dropped over 2 KiB of whitespaces. This went along with fixes
that have been ongoing to change to this whitespace use style, but previously it
was only being  done when that situation was hit in a local block, now it's been
completed globally.

This continues the style refactor that has been ongoing for a while now, to
bring inxi into a consistent state, since when it started, it was more pressing
to get the bash/gawk mess translated to Perl than it was to get the Perl itself
to be as good/consistent as possible, so now those issues are being slowly
unravelled, and hopefully will set inxi on course for its next 10 years.

It was starting to get annoying, because some parts of inxi used those spaces,
and all newer ones didn't in general. Now it's one behavior throughout the whole
program file.

2. Refactored the entire fs exclude for disk used data, and integrated those
values into a global tool that is used either to exclude file systems from disk
used totals, or to not show uuid/labels for the excluded
remote/distributed/overlay type file systems, which in general don't have uuid
or labels.
2021-07-21 20:30:58 -07:00

2368 lines
84 KiB
Groff

.\" inxi.1 - manpage for inxi system information tool
.\" Copyright (C) 2021 Harald Hope
.\"
.\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
.\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
.\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
.\" (at your option) any later version.
.\"
.\" This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
.\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
.\" GNU General Public License for more details.
.\"
.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
.\" with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
.\" 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
.\"
.TH INXI 1 "2021\-07\-21" "inxi" "inxi manual"
.SH NAME
inxi \- Command line system information script for console and IRC
.SH SYNOPSIS
\fBinxi\fR
\fBinxi\fR [\fB\-AbBCdDEfFGhiIjJlLmMnNopPrRsSuUVwzZ\fR]
\fBinxi\fR [\fB\-c NUMBER\fR]
[\fB\-\-sensors\-exclude SENSORS\fR] [\fB\-\-sensors\-use SENSORS\fR]
[\fB\-t\fR [\fBc\fR|\fBm\fR|\fBcm\fR|\fBmc\fR][\fBNUMBER\fR]]
[\fB\-v NUMBER\fR] [\fB\-W LOCATION\fR]
[\fB\-\-weather\-unit\fR {\fBm\fR|\fBi\fR|\fBmi\fR|\fBim\fR}] [\fB\-y WIDTH\fR]
\fBinxi\fR [\fB\-\-memory\-modules\fR] [\fB\-\-memory\-short\fR]
[\fB\-\-recommends\fR] [\fB\-\-sensors\-default\fR] [\fB\-\-slots\fR]
\fBinxi\fB [\fB\-x\fR|\fB\-xx\fR|\fB\-xxx\fR|\fB\-a\fR] \fB\-OPTION(s)\fR
All short form options have long form variants \- see below for these and more
advanced options.
.SH DESCRIPTION
\fBinxi\fR is a command line system information script built for console and
IRC. It is also used a debugging tool for forum technical support to quickly
ascertain users' system configurations and hardware. inxi shows system
hardware, CPU, drivers, Xorg, Desktop, Kernel, gcc version(s), Processes, RAM
usage, and a wide variety of other useful information.
\fBinxi\fR output varies depending on whether it is being used on CLI or IRC,
with some default filters and color options applied only for IRC use.
Script colors can be turned off if desired with \fB\-c 0\fR, or changed
using the \fB\-c\fR color options listed in the STANDARD OPTIONS section below.
.SH PRIVACY AND SECURITY
In order to maintain basic privacy and security, inxi used on IRC automatically
filters out your network device MAC address, WAN and LAN IP, your \fB/home\fR
username directory in partitions, and a few other items.
Because inxi is often used on forums for support, you can also trigger this
filtering with the \fB\-z\fR option (\fB\-Fz\fR, for example). To override
the IRC filter, you can use the \fB\-Z\fR option. This can be useful in
debugging network connection issues online in a private chat, for example.
.SH USING OPTIONS
Options can be combined if they do not conflict. You can either group the
letters together or separate them.
Letters with numbers can have no gap or a gap at your discretion, except when
using \fB \-t\fR. Note that if you use an option that requires an additional
argument, that must be last in the short form group of options. Otherwise
you can use those separately as well.
For example:
\fBinxi \-AG\fR | \fBinxi \-A \-G\fR | \fBinxi \-b\fR | \fBinxi \-c10\fR
| \fBinxi \-FxxzJy90\fR | \fBinxi \-bay\fR
Note that all the short form options have long form equivalents, which are
listed below. However, usually the short form is used in examples in order to
keep things simple.
.SH STANDARD OPTIONS
.TP
.B \-A\fR,\fB \-\-audio\fR
Show Audio/sound device(s) information, including device driver. Show running
sound server(s). See \fB\-xxA\fR to show all sound servers detected.
.TP
.B \-b\fR,\fB \-\-basic\fR
Show basic output, short form. Same as: \fBinxi \-v 2\fR
.TP
.B \-B\fR,\fB \-\-battery\fR
Show system battery (\fBID\-x\fR) data, charge, condition, plus extra
information (if battery present). Uses \fB/sys\fR or, for BSDs without systctl
battery data, use \fB\-\-dmidecode\fR to force its use. \fBdmidecode\fR does
not have very much information, and none about current battery
state/charge/voltage. Supports multiple batteries when using \fB/sys\fR or
\fBsysctl\fR data.
Note that for \fBcharge:\fR, the output shows the current charge, as well as
its value as a percentage of the available capacity, which can be less than
the original design capacity. In the following example, the actual current
available capacity of the battery is \fB22.2 Wh\fR.
\fBcharge: 20.1 Wh (95.4%)\fR
The \fBcondition:\fR item shows the remaining available capacity / original
design capacity, and then this figure as a percentage of original capacity
available in the battery.
\fBcondition: 22.2/36.4 Wh (61%)\fR
With \fB\-x\fR, or if voltage difference is critical, \fBvolts:\fR item shows
the current voltage, and the \fBmin:\fR voltage. Note that if the current is
below the minimum listed the battery is essentially dead and will not charge.
Test that to confirm, but that's technically how it's supposed to work.
\fBvolts: 12.0 min: 11.4\fR
With \fB\-x\fR shows attached \fBDevice\-x\fR information (mouse, keyboard,
etc.) if they are battery powered.
.TP
.B \-\-bluetooth\fR \- See \fB\-E\fR
.TP
.B \-c\fR,\fB \-\-color\fR \fR[\fB0\fR\-\fB42\fR]
Set color scheme. If no scheme number is supplied, 0 is assumed.
.TP
.B \-c \fR[\fB94\fR\-\fB99\fR]
These color selectors run a color selector option prior to inxi starting
which lets you set the config file value for the selection.
NOTE: All configuration file set color values are removed when output is
piped or redirected. You must use the explicit runtime \fB\-c <color number>\fR
option if you want color codes to be present in the piped/redirected output.
Color selectors for each type display (NOTE: IRC and global only show safe
color set):
.TP
.B \-c 94\fR
\- Console, out of X.
.TP
.B \-c 95\fR
\- Terminal, running in X \- like xTerm.
.TP
.B \-c 96\fR
\- GUI IRC, running in X \- like XChat, Quassel,
Konversation etc.
.TP
.B \-c 97\fR
\- Console IRC running in X \- like irssi in xTerm.
.TP
.B \-c 98\fR
\- Console IRC not in X.
.TP
.B \-c 99\fR
\- Global \- Overrides/removes all settings.
Setting a specific color type removes the global color selection.
.TP
.B \-C\fR,\fB \-\-cpu\fR
Show full CPU output, including per CPU clock speed and CPU max speed (if
available). If max speed data present, shows \fB(max)\fR in short output
formats (\fBinxi\fR, \fBinxi \-b\fR) if actual CPU speed matches max CPU
speed. If max CPU speed does not match actual CPU speed, shows both actual
and max speed information. See \fB\-x\fR for more options.
For certain CPUs (some ARM, and AMD Zen family) shows CPU die count.
The details for each CPU include a technical description e.g. \fBtype: MT
MCP\fR
* \fBMT\fR \- Multi/Hyper Threaded CPU, more than 1 thread per core
(previously \fBHT\fR).
* \fBMCM\fR \- Multi Chip Model (more than 1 die per CPU).
* \fBMCP\fR \- Multi Core Processor (more than 1 core per CPU).
* \fBSMP\fR \- Symmetric Multi Processing (more than 1 physical CPU).
* \fBUP\fR \- Uni (single core) Processor.
Note that \fBmin/max:\fR speeds are not necessarily true in cases of
overclocked CPUs or CPUs in turbo/boost mode. See \fB\-Ca\fR for alternate
\fBbase/boost:\fR speed data.
.TP
.B \-d\fR,\fB \-\-disk\-full\fR,\fB\-\-optical\fR
Show optical drive data as well as \fB\-D\fR hard drive data. With \fB\-x\fR,
adds a feature line to the output. Also shows floppy disks if present. Note
that there is no current way to get any information about the floppy device
that we are aware of, so it will simply show the floppy ID without any extra
data. \fB\-xx\fR adds a few more features.
.TP
.B \-D\fR,\fB \-\-disk\fR
Show Hard Disk info. Shows total disk space and used percentage. The disk used
percentage includes space used by swap partition(s), since those are not usable
for data storage. Also, unmounted partitions are not counted in disk use
percentages since inxi has no access to the used amount.
If the system has RAID or other logical storage, and if inxi can determine
the size of those vs their components, you will see the storage total raw and
usable sizes, plus the percent used of the usable size. The no argument short
form of inxi will show only the usable (or total if no usable) and used
percent. If there is no logical storage detected, only \fBtotal:\fR and
\fBused:\fR will show. Sample (with RAID logical size calculated):
\fBLocal Storage: total: raw: 5.49 TiB usable: 2.80 TiB used: 1.35 TiB
(48.3%)\fR
Without logical storage detected:
\fBLocal Storage: total: 2.89 TiB used: 1.51 TiB (52.3%)\fR
Also shows per disk information: Disk ID, type (if present), vendor (if
detected), model, and size. See \fBExtra Data Options\fR (\fB\-x\fR options)
and \fBAdmin Extra Data Options\fR (\fB\-\-admin\fR options) for many more
features.
.TP
.B \-E\fR, \fB\-\-bluetooth\fR
Show bluetooth device(s), drivers. Show \fBReport:\fR with HCI ID, state,
address per device (requires \fBbt\-adapter\fR or \fBhciconfig\fR),
and if available (hciconfig only) bluetooth version (\fBbt\-v\fR).
See \fBExtra Data Options\fR for more.
If bluetooth shows as \fBstatus: down\fR, shows \fBbt-service:\fR\fB state
and rfkill\fR software and hardware blocked states, and rfkill ID.
Note that \fBReport\-ID:\fR indicates that the HCI item was not able to be
linked to a specific device, similar to \fBIF\-ID:\fR in \fB\-n\fR.
If your internal bluetooth device does not show, it's possible that
it has been disabled, if you try enabling it using for example:
\fBhciconfig hci0 up\fR
and it returns a blocked by RF\-Kill error, you can do one of these:
\fBconnmanctl enable bluetooth\fR
or
\fBrfkill list bluetooth\fR
\fBrfkill unblock bluetooth\fR
.TP
.B \-\-filter\fR,\fB \-\-filter\-override\fR \- See \fB\-z\fR, \fB\-Z\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-filter\-label\fR
Filter partition label names from \fB\-j\fR, \fB\-o\fR, \fB\-p\fR,
\fB\-P\fR, and \fB\-Sa\fR (root=LABEL=...). Generally only useful in
very specialized cases.
.TP
.B \-\-filter\-uuid\fR
Filter partition UUIDs from \fB\-j\fR, \fB\-o\fR, \fB\-p\fR,
\fB\-P\fR, and \fB\-Sa\fR (root=UUID=...). Generally only useful in
very specialized cases.
.TP
.B \-f\fR,\fB \-\-flags\fR
Show all CPU flags used, not just the short list. Not shown with \fB\-F\fR
in order to avoid spamming. ARM CPUs: show \fBfeatures\fR items.
.TP
.B \-F\fR,\fB \-\-full\fR
Show Full output for inxi. Includes all Upper Case line letters (except
\fB\-J\fR and \fB\-W\fR) plus \fB\-\-swap\fR, \fB\-s\fR and \fB\-n\fR. Does
not show extra verbose options such as \fB\-d \-f \-i -J \-l \-m \-o \-p \-r
\-t \-u \-x\fR unless you use those arguments in the command, e.g.:
\fBinxi \-Frmxx\fR
.TP
.B \-G\fR,\fB \-\-graphics\fR
Show Graphic device(s) information, including details of device and display
drivers (\fBloaded:\fR, and, if applicable: \fBunloaded:\fR, \fBfailed:\fR),
display protocol (if available), display server (and/or Wayland compositor),
vendor and version number, e.g.:
\fBDisplay: x11 server: Xorg 1.15.1\fR
If protocol is not detected, shows:
\fBDisplay: server: Xorg 1.15.1\fR
Also shows screen resolution(s) (per monitor/X screen), OpenGL renderer,
OpenGL core profile version/OpenGL version.
Compositor information will show if detected using \fB\-xx\fR option
or always if detected and Wayland.
.TP
.B \-h\fR,\fB \-\-help\fR
The help menu. Features dynamic sizing to fit into terminal window. Set script
global \fBCOLS_MAX_CONSOLE\fR if you want a different default value, or
use \fB\-y <width>\fR to temporarily override the defaults or actual window
width.
.TP
.B \-i\fR,\fB \-\-ip\fR
Show WAN IP address and local interfaces (latter requires \fBifconfig\fR or
\fBip\fR network tool), as well as network output from \fB\-n\fR.
Not shown with \fB\-F\fR for user security reasons. You shouldn't paste your
local/WAN IP. Shows both IPv4 and IPv6 link IP addresses.
.TP
.B \-I\fR,\fB \-\-info\fR
Show Information: processes, uptime, memory, IRC client (or shell type if run
in shell, not IRC), inxi version. See \fB\-Ix\fR, \fB\-Ixx\fR, and \fB\-Ia\fR
for extra information (init type/version, runlevel, packages).
Note: if \fB\-m\fR is used or triggered, the memory item will show in the main
Memory: report of \fB\-m\fR, not in \fB\Info:\fR.
Rasberry Pi only: uses \fBvcgencmd get_mem gpu\fR to get gpu RAM amount,
if user is in video group and \fBvcgencmd\fR is installed. Uses
this result to increase the \fBMemory:\fR amount and \fBused:\fR amounts.
.TP
.B \-j\fR, \fB\-\-swap\fR
Shows all active swap types (partition, file, zram). When this option is used,
swap partition(s) will not show on the \fB\-P\fR line to avoid redundancy.
To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with
\fB\-l\fR or\fB \-u\fR.
.TP
.B \-J\fR,\fB \-\-usb\fR
Show USB data for attached Hubs and Devices. Hubs also show number of ports.
Be aware that a port is not always external, some may be internal, and either
used or unused (for example, a motherboard USB header connector that is not
used).
Hubs and Devices are listed in order of BusID.
BusID is generally in this format: BusID\-port[.port][.port]:DeviceID
Device ID is a number created by the kernel, and has no necessary ordering
or sequence connection, but can be used to match this output to lsusb
values, which generally shows BusID / DeviceID (except for tree view, which
shows ports).
Examples: \fBDevice\-3: 4\-3.2.1:2\fR or \fBHub: 4\-0:1\fR
The \fBrev: 2.0\fR item refers to the USB revision number, like \fB1.0\fR or
\fB3.1\fR.
.TP
.B \-l\fR,\fB \-\-label\fR
Show partition labels. Use with \fB\-j\fR, \fB\-o\fR, \fB\-p\fR, and \fB\-P\fR
to show partition labels. Does nothing without one of those options.
Sample: \fB\-ojpl\fR.
.TP
.B \-L\fR, \fB\-\-logical\fR
Show Logical volume information, for LVM, LUKS, bcache, etc. Shows
size, free space (for LVM VG). For LVM, shows \fBDevice\-[xx]: VG:\fR
(Volume Group) size/free, \fBLV\-[xx]\fR (Logical Volume). LV shows type,
size, and components. Note that components are made up of either containers
(aka, logical devices), or physical devices. The full report requires
doas[BSDs]/sudo/root.
Logical block devices can be thought of as devices that are made up out
of either other logical devices, or physical devices. inxi does its best
to show what each logical device is made out of. RAID devices form a subset
of all possible Logical devices, but have their own section, \fB\-R\fR.
If \fB\-R\fR is used with \fB\-Lxx\fR, \fB\-Lxx\fR will not show RAID
information for LVM RAID devices since it's redundant. If \fB\-R\fR is
not used, a simple RAID line will appear for LVM RAID in \fB\-Lxx\fR.
\fB\-Lxx\fR also shows all components and devices. Note that since
components can go in many levels, each level per primary component is
indicated by either another 'c', or ends with a 'p' device, the physical
device. The number of c's or p's indicates the depth, so you can see which
component belongs to which.
\fB\-L\fR shows only the top level components/devices (like \fB\-R\fR).
\fB\-La\fR shows component/device size, maj:min ID, mapped name
(if applicable), and puts each component/device on its own line.
Sample:
\fBDevice\-10: mybackup type: LUKS dm: dm\-28 size: 6.36 GiB Components:
c\-1: md1 cc\-1: dm\-26 ppp\-1: sdj2 cc\-2: dm\-27 ppp\-1: sdk2\fR
.nf
\fBLV\-5: lvm_raid1 type: raid1 dm: dm\-16 size: 4.88 GiB
RAID: stripes: 2 sync: idle copied: 100% mismatches: 0
Components: c\-1: dm\-10 pp\-1: sdd1 c\-2: dm\-11 pp\-1: sdd1 c\-3: dm\-13
pp\-1: sde1 c\-4: dm\-15 pp\-1: sde1\fR
.fi
It is easier to follow the flow of components and devices using \fB\-y1\fR. In
this example, there is one primary component (c\-1), md1, which is made up of
two components (cc\-1,2), dm\-26 and dm\-27. These are respectively made from
physical devices (p\-1) sdj2 and sdk2.
.nf
\fBDevice\-10: mybackup
maj\-min: 254:28
type: LUKS
dm: dm\-28
size: 6.36 GiB
Components:
c\-1: md1
maj\-min: 9:1
size: 6.37 GiB
cc\-1: dm\-26
maj\-min: 254:26
mapped: vg5\-level1a
size: 12.28 GiB
ppp\-1: sdj2
maj\-min: 8:146
size: 12.79 GiB
cc\-2: dm\-27
maj\-min: 254:27
mapped: vg5\-level1b
size: 6.38 GiB
ppp\-1: sdk2
maj\-min: 8:162
size: 12.79 GiB\fR
.fi
Other types of logical block handling like LUKS, bcache show as:
\fBDevice\-[xx] [name/id] type: [LUKS|Crypto|bcache]:\fR
.TP
.B \-m\fR,\fB \-\-memory\fR
Memory (RAM) data. Does not display with \fB\-b\fR or \fB\-F\fR unless you
use \fB\-m\fR explicitly. Ordered by system board physical system memory
array(s) (\fBArray\-[number]\fR), and individual memory devices
(\fBDevice\-[number]\fR). Physical memory array data shows array capacity,
number of devices supported, and Error Correction information. Devices shows
locator data (highly variable in syntax), size, speed, type
(eg: \fBtype: DDR3\fR).
Note: \fB\-m\fR uses \fBdmidecode\fR, which must be run as root (or start
\fBinxi\fR with \fBsudo\fR), unless you figure out how to set up
doas[BSDs]/sudo to permit dmidecode to read \fB/dev/mem\fR as user.
\fBspeed\fR and \fBbus\-width\fR will not show if \fBNo Module Installed\fR
is found in \fBsize\fR.
Note: If \fB\-m\fR is triggered RAM total/used report will appear in this
section, not in \fB\-I\fR or \fB\-tm\fR items.
Because \fBdmidecode\fR data is extremely unreliable, inxi will try to make
best guesses. If you see \fB(check)\fR after the capacity number, you should
check it with the specifications. \fB(est)\fR is slightly more reliable, but
you should still check the real specifications before buying RAM. Unfortunately
there is nothing \fBinxi\fR can do to get truly reliable data about the system
RAM; maybe one day the kernel devs will put this data into \fB/sys\fR, and make
it real data, taken from the actual system, not dmi data. For most people, the
data will be right, but a significant percentage of users will have either a
wrong max module size, if present, or max capacity.
Under dmidecode, \fBSpeed:\fR is the expected speed of the memory
(what is advertised on the memory spec sheet) and \fBConfigured Clock Speed:\fR
is what the actual speed is now. To handle this, if speed and configured speed
values are different, you will see this instead:
\fBspeed: spec: [specified speed] MT/S actual: [actual] MT/S\fR
Also, if DDR, and speed in MHz, will change to: \fBspeed: [speed] MT/S
([speed] MHz)\fR
If the detected speed is logically absurd, like 1 MT/s or 69910 MT/s, adds:
\fBnote: check\fR. Sample:
.nf
\fBMemory:
RAM: total: 31.38 GiB used: 20.65 GiB (65.8%)
Array\-1: capacity: N/A slots: 4 note: check EC: N/A
Device\-1: DIMM_A1 size: 8 GiB speed: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
Device\-2: DIMM_A2 size: 8 GiB speed: spec: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
actual: 61910 MT/s (30955 MHz) note: check
Device\-3: DIMM_B1 size: 8 GiB speed: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
Device\-4: DIMM_B2 size: 8 GiB speed: spec: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
actual: 2 MT/s (1 MHz) note: check\fR
.fi
See \fB\-\-memory\-modules\fR and \fB\-\-memory\-short\fR if you want a
shorter report.
.TP
.B \-\-memory\-modules\fR
Memory (RAM) data. Show only RAM arrays and modules in Memory report.
Skip empty slots. See \fB\-m\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-memory\-short\fR
Memory (RAM) data. Show a one line RAM report in Memory. See \fB\-m\fR.
Sample: \fBReport: arrays: 1 slots: 4 modules: 2 type: DDR4\fR
.TP
.B \-M\fR,\fB \-\-machine\fR
Show machine data. Device, Motherboard, BIOS, and if present, System Builder
(Like Lenovo). Older systems/kernels without the required \fB/sys\fR data can
use \fBdmidecode\fR instead, run as root. If using \fBdmidecode\fR, may also
show BIOS/UEFI revision as well as version. \fB\-\-dmidecode\fR forces use of
\fBdmidecode\fR data instead of \fB/sys\fR. Will also attempt to show if the
system was booted by BIOS, UEFI, or UEFI [Legacy], the latter being legacy
BIOS boot mode in a system board using UEFI.
Device information requires either \fB/sys\fR or \fBdmidecode\fR. Note that
\fBother\-vm?\fR is a type that means it's usually a VM, but inxi failed to
detect which type, or positively confirm which VM it is. Primary VM
identification is via systemd\-detect\-virt but fallback tests that should also
support some BSDs are used. Less commonly used or harder to detect VMs may not
be correctly detected. If you get an incorrect output, post an issue and we'll
get it fixed if possible.
Due to unreliable vendor data, device type will show: desktop, laptop,
notebook, server, blade, plus some obscure stuff that inxi is unlikely to
ever run on.
.TP
.B \-n\fR,\fB \-\-network\-advanced\fR
Show Advanced Network device information in addition to that produced by
\fB\-N\fR. Shows interface, speed, MAC ID, state, etc.
.TP
.B \-N\fR,\fB \-\-network\fR
Show Network device(s) information, including device driver. With \fB\-x\fR,
shows Bus ID, Port number.
.TP
.B \-o\fR,\fB \-\-unmounted\fR
Show unmounted partition information (includes UUID and LABEL if available).
Shows file system type if you have \fBlsblk\fR installed (Linux only). For
BSD/GNU Linux: shows file system type if \fBfile\fR is installed, and if you
are root or if you have added to \fB/etc/sudoers\fR (sudo v. 1.7 or newer):
.B <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/file (sample)
BSD users: see \fBman doas.conf\fR for setup.
Does not show components (partitions that create the md\-raid array) of
md\-raid arrays.
To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with
\fB\-l\fR or\fB \-u\fR.
.TP
.B \-p\fR,\fB \-\-partitions\-full\fR
Show full Partition information (\fB\-P\fR plus all other detected mounted
partitions).
To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with
\fB\-l\fR or\fB \-u\fR.
.TP
.B \-P\fR,\fB \-\-partitions\fR
Show basic Partition information.
Shows, if detected: \fB/ /boot /boot/efi /home /opt /tmp /usr /usr/home /var
/var/tmp /var/log\fR (for android, shows \fB/cache /data /firmware /system\fR).
If \fB\-\-swap\fR is not used, shows active swap partitions (never shows file
or zram type swap). Use \fB\-p\fR to see all mounted partitions.
To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with
\fB\-l\fR or\fB \-u\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-processes\fR \- See \fB\-t\fR
.TP
.B \-r\fR,\fB \-\-repos\fR
Show distro repository data. Currently supported repo types:
\fBAPK\fR (Alpine Linux + derived versions)
\fBAPT\fR (Debian, Ubuntu + derived versions, as well as RPM based
APT distros like PCLinuxOS or Alt\-Linux)
\fBCARDS\fR (NuTyX + derived versions)
\fBEOPKG\fR (Solus)
\fBNIX\fR (NixOS + other distros as alternate package manager)
\fBPACMAN\fR (Arch Linux, KaOS + derived versions)
\fBPACMAN\-G2\fR (Frugalware + derived versions)
\fBPISI\fR (Pardus + derived versions)
\fBPKG\fR (OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD + derived OS types)
\fBPORTAGE\fR (Gentoo, Sabayon + derived versions)
\fBPORTS\fR (OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD + derived OS types)
\fBSCRATCHPKG\fR (Venom + derived versions)
\fBSLACKPKG\fR (Slackware + derived versions)
\fBTCE\fR (TinyCore)
\fBURPMI\fR (Mandriva, Mageia + derived versions)
\fBXBPS\fR (Void)
\fBYUM/ZYPP\fR (Fedora, Red Hat, Suse + derived versions)
More will be added as distro data is collected. If yours is missing please
show us how to get this information and we'll try to add it.
See \fB\-rx\fR, \fB\-rxx\fR, and \fB\-ra\fR for installed package count
information.
.TP
.B \-R\fR,\fB \-\-raid\fR
Show RAID data. Shows RAID devices, states, levels, device/array size,
and components. See extra data with \fB\-x\fR / \fB\-xx\fR.
md\-raid: If device is resyncing, also shows resync progress line.
Note: supported types: lvm raid, md\-raid, softraid, ZFS, and hardware RAID.
Other software RAID types may be added, if the software RAID can be made to
give the required output.
The component ID numbers work like this: mdraid: the numerator is the actual
mdraid component number; lvm/softraid/ZFS: the numerator is auto\-incremented
counter only. Eg. \fBOnline: 1: sdb1\fR
If hardware RAID is detected, shows basic information. Due to complexity
of adding hardware RAID device disk / RAID reports, those will only be added
if there is demand, and reasonable reporting tools.
.TP
.B \-\-recommends\fR
Checks inxi application dependencies and recommends, as well as directories,
then shows what package(s) you need to install to add support for each feature.
.TP
.B \-s\fR,\fB \-\-sensors\fR
Show output from sensors if sensors installed/configured: Motherboard/CPU/GPU
temperatures; detected fan speeds. GPU temperature when available. Nvidia shows
screen number for multiple screens. IPMI sensors are also used (root required)
if present. See Advanced options \fB\-\-sensors\-use\fR or
\fB\-\-sensors\-exclude\fR if you want to use only a subset of all sensors, or
exclude one.
.
.TP
.B \-\-slots\fR
Show PCI slots with type, speed, and status information.
.TP
.B \-\-swap\fR \- See \fB\-j\fR
.TP
.B \-S\fR,\fB \-\-system\fR
Show System information: host name, kernel, desktop environment (if in X),
distro. With \fB\-xx\fR show dm \- or startx \- (only shows if present and
running if out of X), and if in X, with \fB\-xxx\fR show more desktop info,
e.g. taskbar or panel.
.TP
.B \-t\fR,\fB \-\-processes\fR
[\fBc\fR|\fBm\fR|\fBcm\fR|\fBmc NUMBER\fR] Show processes. If no arguments,
defaults to \fBcm\fR. If followed by a number, shows that number of processes
for each type (default: \fB5\fR; if in IRC, max: \fB5\fR)
Make sure that there is no space between letters and numbers (e.g. write as
\fB\-t cm10\fR).
.TP
.B \-t c\fR
\- CPU only. With \fB\-x\fR, also shows memory for that process on same line.
.TP
.B \-t m\fR
\- memory only. With \fB\-x\fR, also shows CPU for that process on same line.
If the \fB\-I\fR or \fB\-m\fR lines are not triggered, will also show the
system RAM used/total information.
.TP
.B \-t cm\fR
\- CPU+memory. With \fB\-x\fR, shows also CPU or memory for that process on
same line.
.TP
.B \-u\fR,\fB \-\-uuid\fR
Show partition UUIDs. Use with \fB\-j\fR, \fB\-o\fR, \fB\-p\fR, and \fB\-P\fR
to show partition labels. Does nothing without one of those options.
Sample: \fB\-opju\fR.
.TP
.B \-U\fR,\fB \-\-update\fR
Note \- Maintainer may have disabled this function.
If inxi \fB\-h\fR has no listing for \fB\-U\fR then it's disabled.
Auto\-update script. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to
update, otherwise user is fine. Also installs / updates this man page to:
\fB/usr/local/share/man/man1\fR (if \fB/usr/local/share/man/\fR exists
AND there is no inxi man page in \fB/usr/share/man/man1\fR, otherwise it
goes to \fB/usr/share/man/man1\fR). This requires that you be root to write
to that directory. See \fB\-\-man\fR or \fB\-\-no\-man\fR to force or disable
man install.
.TP
.B \-\-usb\fR \- See \fB\-J\fR
.TP
.B \-V\fR, \fB\-\-version\fR
inxi version information. Prints information then exits.
.TP
.B \-v\fR,\fB \-\-verbosity\fR
Script verbosity levels. If no verbosity level number is given, 0 is assumed.
Should not be used with \fB\-b\fR or \fB\-F\fR.
Supported levels: \fB0\-8\fR Examples :\fB inxi \-v 4 \fR or \fB inxi \-v4\fR
.TP
.B \-v 0
\- Short output, same as: \fBinxi\fR
.TP
.B \-v 1
\- Basic verbose, \fB\-S\fR + basic CPU (cores, type, clock speed, and min/max
speeds, if available) + \fB\-G\fR + basic Disk + \fB\-I\fR.
.TP
.B \-v 2
\- Adds networking device (\fB\-N\fR), Machine (\fB\-M\fR) data, Battery
(\fB\-B\fR) (if available). Same as: \fBinxi \-b\fR
.TP
.B \-v 3
\- Adds advanced CPU (\fB\-C\fR) and network (\fB\-n\fR) data; triggers
\fB\-x\fR advanced data option.
.TP
.B \-v 4
\- Adds partition size/used data (\fB\-P\fR) for (if present):
\fB/ /home /var/ /boot\fR. Shows full disk data (\fB\-D\fR)
.TP
.B \-v 5
\- Adds audio device (\fB\-A\fR), memory/RAM (\fB\-m\fR),
bluetooth data (\fB\-E\fR) (if present), sensors (\fB\-s\fR),
RAID data (if present), partition label (\fB\-l\fR),
UUID (\fB\-u\fR), full swap data (\fB\-j\fR), and short form of
optical drives.
.TP
.B \-v 6
\- Adds full mounted partition data (\fB\-p\fR),
unmounted partition data (\fB\-o\fR), optical drive data (\fB\-d\fR),
USB (\fB\-J\fR); triggers \fB\-xx\fR extra data option.
.TP
.B \-v 7
\- Adds network IP data (\fB\-i\fR), forced bluetooth (\fB\-E\fR),
Logical (\fB\-L\fR), RAID (\fB\-R\fR); triggers \fB\-xxx\fR
.TP
.B \-v 8
\- All system data available. Adds Repos (\fB\-r\fR),
PCI slots (\fB\-\-slots\fR), processes (\fB\-tcm\fR), admin (\fB\-\-admin\fR).
Useful for testing output and to see what data you can get from your system.
.TP
.B \-w\fR,\fB \-\-weather\fR
Adds weather line. To get weather for an alternate location, use
\fB\-W [location]\fR. See also \fB\-x\fR, \fB\-xx\fR, \fB\-xxx\fR options.
Please note that your distribution's maintainer may chose to disable this
feature.
DO NOT USE THIS FEATURE FOR AUTOMATED WEATHER UPDATES! Automated or excessive
use will lead to your being blocked from any further access. This feature is not
meant for widget type weather monitoring, or Conky type use. It is meant to get
weather when you need to see it, for example, on a remote server. If you did not
type the weather option in manually, it's an automated request.
.TP
.B \-W\fR, \fB\-\-weather\-location <location_string>\fR
Get weather/time for an alternate location. Accepts postal/zip code[, country],
city,state pair, or latitude,longitude. Note: city/country/state names must
not contain spaces. Replace spaces with '\fB+\fR' sign. Don't place spaces
around any commas. Postal code is not reliable except for North America and
maybe the UK. Try postal codes with and without country code added. Note that
City,State applies only to USA, otherwise it's City,Country. If country name
(english) does not work, try 2 character country code (e.g. Spain: es;
Great Britain: gb).
See \fIhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166\-1_alpha\-2\fR for current 2
letter country codes.
Use only ASCII letters in city/state/country names.
Examples: \fB\-W 95623,us\fR OR \fB\-W Boston,MA\fR OR
\fB\-W 45.5234,\-122.6762\fR OR \fB\-W new+york,ny\fR OR \fB\-W bodo,norway\fR.
DO NOT USE THIS FEATURE FOR AUTOMATED WEATHER UPDATES! Automated or excessive
use will lead to your being blocked from any further access. This feature is not
meant for widget type weather monitoring, or Conky type use. It is meant to get
weather when you need to see it, for example, on a remote server. If you did not
type the weather option in manually, it's an automated request.
.TP
.B \-\-weather\-source\fR, \fB\-\-ws <unit>\fR
[\fB1\-9\fR] Switches weather data source. Possible values are \fB1\-9\fR.
\fB1\-4\fR will generally be active, and \fB5\-9\fR may or may not be active,
so check. \fB1\fR may not support city / country names with spaces (even if
you use the \fB+\fR sign instead of space). \fB2\fR offers pretty good data,
but may not have all small city names for \fB\-W\fR.
Please note that the data sources are not static per value, and can change any
time, or be removed, so always test to verify which source is being used for
each value if that is important to you. Data sources may be added or removed
on occasions, so try each one and see which you prefer. If you get unsupported
source message, it means that number has not been implemented.
.TP
.B \-\-weather\-unit <unit>\fR
[\fBm\fR|\fBi\fR|\fBmi\fR|\fBim\fR] Sets weather units to metric (\fBm\fR),
imperial (\fBi\fR), metric (imperial) (\fBmi\fR, default), imperial (metric)
(\fBim\fR). If metric or imperial not found,sets to default value, or \fBN/A\fR.
.TP
.B \-y\fR,\fB \-\-width [integer]\fR
This is an absolute width override which sets the output line width max.
Overrides \fBCOLS_MAX_IRC\fR / \fBCOLS_MAX_CONSOLE\fR globals, or the
actual widths of the terminal. \fB80\fR is the minimum width supported.
\fB\-1\fR removes width limits. 1 switches to a single indented key/value
pair per line, and removes all long line wrapping (similar to
\fBdmidecode\fR output).
If no integer value is given, sets width to default of 80.
Examples: \fBinxi \-Fxx\ \-y 130\fR or \fBinxi \-Fxxy\fR or \fBinxi \-bay1\fR
.TP
.B \-z\fR,\fB \-\-filter\fR
Adds security filters for IP addresses, serial numbers, MAC,
location (\fB\-w\fR), and user home directory name. Removes Host:.
On by default for IRC clients.
.TP
.B \-Z\fR,\fB \-\-filter\-override\fR
Absolute override for output filters. Useful for debugging networking
issues in IRC for example.
.SH EXTRA DATA OPTIONS
These options can be triggered by one or more \fB\-x\fR.
Alternatively, the \fB\-v\fR options trigger them in the following
way: \fB\-v 3\fR adds \fB\-x\fR;
\fB\-v 6\fR adds \fB\-xx\fR; \fB\-v 7\fR adds \fB\-xxx\fR
These extra data triggers can be useful for getting more in\-depth
data on various options. They can be added to any long form option list,
e.g.: \fB\-bxx\fR or \fB\-Sxxx\fR
There are 3 extra data levels:
\fB\-x\fR, \fB\-xx\fR, \fB\-xxx\fR
OR
\fB\-\-extra 1\fR, \fB\-\-extra 2\fR, \fB\-\-extra 3\fR
The following details show which lines / items display extra information for
each extra data level.
.TP
.B \-x \-A\fR
\- Adds (if available and/or relevant) \fBvendor:\fR item, which shows
specific vendor [product] information.
\- Adds version/port(s)/driver version (if available) for each device.
\- Adds PCI/USB ID of each device.
\- Adds non-running sound servers, if detected.
.TP
.B \-x \-B\fR
\- Adds vendor/model, battery status (if battery present).
\- Adds attached battery powered peripherals (\fBDevice\-[number]:\fR) if
detected (keyboard, mouse, etc.).
\- Adds battery \fBvolts:\fR, \fBmin:\fR voltages. Note that if difference
is critical, that is current voltage is too close to minimum voltage, shows
without \fB\-x\fR.
.TP
.B \-x \-C\fR
\- Adds bogomips on CPU (if available)
\- Adds \fBboost: [enabled|disabled]\fR if detected, aka \fBturbo\fR. Not all
CPUs have this feature.
\- Adds CPU Flags (short list). Use \fB\-f\fR to see full flag/feature list.
\- Adds CPU microarchitecture + revision (e.g. Sandy Bridge, K8, ARMv8, P6,
etc.). Only shows data if detected. Newer microarchitectures will have
to be added as they appear, and require the CPU family ID, model ID,
and stepping.
Examples: \fBarch: Sandy Bridge rev: 2\fR, \fBarch: K8 rev.F+ rev: 2\fR
If unable to non\-ambiguosly determine architecture, will show something like:
\fBarch: Amber Lake note: check rev: 9\fR
.TP
.B \-x \-d\fR
\- Adds more items to \fBFeatures\fR line of optical drive;
dds rev version to optical drive.
.TP
.B \-x \-D\fR
\- Adds HDD temperature with disk data.
Method 1: Systems running Linux kernels ~5.6 and newer should have
\fBdrivetemp\fR module data available. If so, drive temps will come from
/sys data for each drive, and will not require root or hddtemp. This method
is MUCH faster than using hddtemp. Note that NVMe drives do not require
\fBdrivetemp\fR.
If your \fBdrivetemp\fR module is not enabled, enable it:
\fBmodprobe drivetemp\fR
Once enabled, add \fBdrivetemp\fR to \fB/etc/modules\fR or
\fB/etc/modules\-load.d/***.conf\fR so it starts automatically.
If you see drive temps running as regular user and you did not configure
system to use doas[BSDs]/sudo hddtemp, then your system supports this feature.
If no /sys data is found, inxi will try to use hddtemp methods instead for
that drive. Hint: if temp is /sys sourced, the temp will be to 1 decimal,
like 34.8, if hddtemp sourced, they will be integers.
Method 2: if you have hddtemp installed, if you are root
or if you have added to \fB/etc/sudoers\fR (sudo v. 1.7 or newer):
.B <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/hddtemp (sample)
BSD users: see \fBman doas.conf\fR for setup.
You can force use of \fBhddtemp\fR for all drives using \fB\-\-hddtemp\fR.
\- If free LVM volume group size detected (root required), show \fBlvm-free:\fR
on Local Storage line. This is how much unused space the VGs contain, that is,
space not assigned to LVs.
.TP
.B \-x \-E\fR (\fB\-\-bluetooth\fR)
\- Adds (if available and/or relevant) \fBvendor:\fR item, which shows
specific vendor [product] information.
\- Adds PCI/USB Bus ID of each device.
\- Adds driver version (if available) for each device.
\- Adds (if available, and \fBhciconfig\fR only) LMP (HCI if no LMP data,
and HCI if HCI/LMP versions are different) version (if available)
for each HCI ID.
.TP
.B \-x \-G\fR
\- Adds (if available and/or relevant) \fBvendor:\fR item, which shows
specific vendor [product] information.
\- Adds direct rendering status.
\- Adds (for single GPU, nvidia driver) screen number that GPU is running on.
\- Adds PCI/USB ID of each device.
.TP
.B \-x \-i\fR
\- Adds IP v6 additional scope data, like Global, Site, Temporary for
each interface.
Note that there is no way we are aware of to filter out the deprecated
IP v6 scope site/global temporary addresses from the output of
\fBifconfig\fR. The \fBip\fR tool shows that clearly.
\fBip\-v6\-temporary\fR \- (\fBip\fR tool only), scope global temporary.
Scope global temporary deprecated is not shown
\fBip\-v6\-global\fR \- scope global (\fBifconfig\fR will show this for
all types, global, global temporary, and global temporary deprecated,
\fBip\fR shows it only for global)
\fBip\-v6\-link\fR \- scope link (\fBip\fR/\fBifconfig\fR) \- default
for \fB\-i\fR.
\fBip\-v6\-site\fR \- scope site (\fBip\fR/\fBifconfig\fR). This has been
deprecated in IPv6, but still exists. \fBifconfig\fR may show multiple site
values, as with global temporary, and global temporary deprecated.
\fBip\-v6\-unknown\fR \- unknown scope
.TP
.B \-x \-I\fR
\- Adds current init system (and init rc in some cases, like OpenRC).
With \fB\-xx\fR, shows init/rc version number, if available.
\- Adds default system gcc. With \fB\-xx\fR, also show other installed gcc
versions.
\- Adds current runlevel (not available with all init systems).
\- Adds total packages discovered in system. See \fB\-xx\fR and \fB\-a\fR
for per package manager types output. Moves to \fBRepos\fR if \fB\-rx\fR.
If your package manager is not supported, please file an issue and we'll add it.
That requires the full output of the query or method to discover all installed
packages on your system, as well of course as the command or method used to
discover those.
\- If in shell (i.e. not in IRC client), adds shell version number, if
available.
.TP
.B \-x \-j\fR, \fB\-x \-\-swap\fR
Add \fBmapper:\fR. See \fB\-x \-o\fR.
.TP
.B \-x \-J\fR (\fB\-\-usb\fR)
\- For Devices, adds driver(s).
.TP
.B \-x \-L\fR, \fB\-x \-\-logical\fR
\- Adds \fBdm: dm-x\fR to VG > LV and other Device types. This can help
tracking down which device belongs to what.
.TP
.B \-x \-m\fR, \fB\-\-memory\-modules\fR
\- If present, adds maximum memory module/device size in the Array line.
Only some systems will have this data available. Shows estimate if it can
generate one.
\- Adds device type in the Device line.
.TP
.B \-x \-N\fR
\- Adds (if available and/or relevant) \fBvendor:\fR item, which shows
specific vendor [product] information.
\- Adds version/port(s)/driver version (if available) for each device;
\- Adds PCI/USB ID of each device.
.TP
.B \-x \-o\fR, \fB\-x \-p\fR, \fB\-x \-P\fR
\- Adds \fBmapper:\fR (the \fB/dev/mapper/\fR partitioni ID)
if mapped partition.
Example: \fBID\-4: /home ... dev: /dev/dm-6 mapped: ar0-home\fR
.TP
.B \-x \-r\fR
\- Adds Package info. See \fB\-Ix\fR
.TP
.B \-x \-R\fR
\- md\-raid: Adds second RAID Info line with extra data: blocks, chunk size,
bitmap (if present). Resync line, shows blocks synced/total blocks.
\- Hardware RAID: Adds driver version, Bus ID.
.TP
.B \-x \-s\fR
\- Adds basic voltages: 12v, 5v, 3.3v, vbat (\fBipmi\fR, \fBlm-sensors\fR if
present).
.TP
.B \-x \-S\fR
\- Adds Kernel gcc version.
\- Adds to \fBDistro:\fR \fBbase:\fR if detected. System base will only be
seen on a subset of distributions. The distro must be both derived from a
parent distro (e.g. Mint from Ubuntu), and explicitly added to the supported
distributions for this feature. Due to the complexity of distribution
identification, these will only be added as relatively solid methods are
found for each distribution system base detection.
.TP
.B \-x \-t\fR (\fB\-\-processes\fR)
\- Adds memory use output to CPU (\fB\-xt c\fR), and CPU use to memory
(\fB\-xt m\fR).
.TP
.B \-x \-w\fR,\fB \-W\fR
\- Adds humidity and barometric pressure.
\- Adds wind speed and direction.
.TP
.B \-xx \-A\fR
\- Adds vendor:product ID for each device.
.TP
.B \-xx \-B\fR
\- Adds serial number.
.TP
.B \-xx \-C\fR
\- Adds \fBL1\-cache:\fR and \fBL3\-cache:\fR if either are available.
Requires dmidecode and doas[BSDs]/sudo/root.
.TP
.B \-xx \-D\fR
\- Adds disk serial number.
\- Adds disk speed (if available). This is the theoretical top speed of the
device as reported. This speed may be restricted by system board limits,
eg. a SATA 3 drive on a SATA 2 board may report SATA 2 speeds, but this is
not completely consistent, sometimes a SATA 3 device on a SATA 2 board reports
its design speed.
NVMe drives: adds lanes, and (per direction) speed is calculated with
lane speed * lanes * PCIe overhead. PCIe 1 and 2 have data rates of
GT/s * .8 = Gb/s (10 bits required to transfer 8 bits of data).
PCIe 3 and greater transfer data at a rate of GT/s * 128/130 * lanes = Gb/s
(130 bits required to transfer 128 bits of data).
For a PCIe 3 NVMe drive, with speed of \fB8 GT/s\fR and \fB4\fR lanes
(\fB8GT/s * 128/130 * 4 = 31.6 Gb/s\fR):
\fBspeed: 31.6 Gb/s lanes: 4\fR
\- Adds disk duid, if available. Some BSDs have it.
.TP
.B \-xx \-E\fR (\fB\-\-bluetooth\fR)
\- Adds vendor:product ID of each device.
\- Adds (\fBhciconfig \fRonly) LMP subversion (and/or HCI revision
if applicable) for each device.
.TP
.B \-xx \-G\fR
\- Adds vendor:product ID of each device.
\- Adds Xorg compositor, if found (always shows for Wayland systems).
\- For free drivers, adds OpenGL compatibility version number if available.
For nonfree drivers, the core version and compatibility versions are usually
the same. Example:
\fBv: 3.3 Mesa 11.2.0 compat\-v: 3.0\fR
\- If available, shows \fBalternate:\fR Xorg drivers. This means a driver on
the default list of drivers Xorg automatically checks for the device, but which
is not installed. For example, if you have \fBnouveau\fR driver, \fBnvidia\fR
would show as alternate if it was not installed. Note that \fBalternate:\fR
does NOT mean you should have it, it's just one of the drivers Xorg checks to
see if is present and loaded when checking the device. This can let you know
there are other driver options. Note that if you have explicitly set the driver
in \fBxorg.conf\fR, Xorg will not create this automatic check driver list.
\- If available, shows Xorg dpi (\fBs-dpi:\fR) for the active Xorg \fBScreen\fR
(not physical monitor). Note that the physical monitor dpi and the Xorg
dpi are not necessarily the same thing, and can vary widely.
.TP
.B \-xx \-I\fR
\- Adds init type version number (and rc if present).
\- Adds other detected installed gcc versions (if present).
\- Adds system default runlevel, if detected. Supports Systemd/Upstart/SysVinit
type defaults.
\- Shows \fBPackages:\fR counts by discovered package manager types. In cases
where only 1 type had results, does not show total after \fBPackages:\fR. Does
not show installed package managers wtih 0 packages. See \fB\-a\fR for full
output. Moves to \fBRepos\fR if \fB\-rxx\fR.
\- Adds parent program (or tty) that started shell, if not IRC client.
.TP
.B \-xx \-j\fR (\fB\-\-swap\fR), \fB\-xx \-p\fR, \fB\-xx \-P\fR
\- Adds swap priority to each swap partition (for \fB\-P\fR) used, and for all
swap types (for \fB\-j\fR).
.TP
.B \-xx \-J\fR (\fB\-\-usb\fR)
\- Adds vendor:chip id.
.TP
.B \-xx \-L\fR, \fB\-xx \-\-logical\fR
\- Adds internal LVM Logical volumes, like raid image and meta data volumes.
\- Adds full list of Components, sub\-components, and their physical devices.
\- For LVM RAID, adds a RAID report line (if not \fB\-R\fR). Read up on LVM
documentation to better understand their use of the term 'stripes'.
.TP
.B \-xx \-m\fR, \fB\-\-memory\-modules\fR
\- Adds memory device Manufacturer.
\- Adds memory device Part Number (\fBpart\-no:\fR). Useful for ordering new
or replacement memory sticks etc. Part numbers are unique, particularly if you
use the word \fBmemory\fR in the search as well. With \fB\-xxx\fR, also shows
serial number.
\- Adds single/double bank memory, if data is found. Note, this may not be
100% right all of the time since it depends on the order that data is found
in \fBdmidecode\fR output for \fBtype 6\fR and \fBtype 17\fR.
.TP
.B \-xx \-M\fR
\- Adds chassis information, if data is available. Also shows BIOS
ROM size if using \fBdmidecode\fR.
.TP
.B \-xx \-N\fR
\- Adds vendor:product ID for each device.
.TP
.B \-xx \-r\fR
\- Adds Packages info. See \fB\-Ixx\fR
.TP
.B \-xx \-R\fR
\- md\-raid: Adds superblock (if present) and algorithm. If resync,
shows progress bar.
\- Hardware RAID: Adds Chip vendor:product ID.
.TP
.B \-xx \-s\fR
\- Adds DIMM/SOC voltages, if present (\fBipmi\fR only).
.TP
.B \-xx \-S\fR
\- Adds display manager (\fBdm\fR) type, if present. If none, shows N/A.
Supports most known display managers, including gdm, gdm3,
idm, kdm, lightdm, lxdm, mdm, nodm, sddm, slim, tint, wdm, and xdm.
\- Adds, if run in X, window manager type (\fBwm\fR), if available. Not all
window managers are supported. Some desktops support using more than one
window manager, so this can be useful to see what window manager is actually
running. If none found, shows nothing. Uses a less accurate fallback tool
\fBwmctrl\fR if \fBps\fR tests fail to find data.
\- Adds desktop toolkit (\fBtk\fR), if available (Xfce/KDE/Trinity).
.TP
.B \-xx \-\-slots\fR
\- Adds slot length.
.TP
.B \-xx \-w\fR,\fB \-W\fR
\- Adds wind chill, heat index, and dew point, if available.
\- Adds cloud cover, rain, snow, or precipitation (amount in previous hour
to observation time), if available.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-A\fR
\- Adds, if present, serial number.
\- Adds, if present, PCI/USB class ID.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-B\fR
\- Adds battery chemistry (e.g. \fBLi\-ion\fR), cycles (NOTE: there appears to
be a problem with the Linux kernel obtaining the cycle count, so this almost
always shows \fB0\fR. There's nothing that can be done about this glitch, the
data is simply not available as of 2018\-04\-03), location (only available from
\fBdmidecode\fR derived output).
\- Adds attached device \fBrechargeable: [yes|no]\fR information.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-C\fR
\- Adds CPU voltage and external clock speed (this is the motherboard speed).
Requires doas[BSDs]/sudo/root and \fBdmidecode\fR.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-D\fR
\- Adds disk firmware revision number (if available).
\- Adds disk partition scheme (in most cases), e.g. \fBscheme: GPT\fR.
Currently not able to detect all schemes, but handles the most common, e.g.
\fBGPT\fR or \fBMBR\fR.
\- Adds disk type (\fBHDD\fR/\fBSSD\fR), rotation speed (in some but not all
cases), e.g. \fBtype: HDD rpm: 7200\fR, or \fBtype: SSD\fR if positive SSD
identification was made. If no HDD, rotation, or positive SSD ID found, shows
\fBtype: N/A\fR. Not all HDD spinning disks report their speed, so even if they
are spinnning, no rpm data will show.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-E\fR (\fB\-\-bluetooth\fR)
\- Adds, if present, PCI/USB class ID.
\- Adds (\fBhciconfig \fRonly) HCI version, revision.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-G\fR
\- Adds, if present, PCI/USB class ID.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-I\fR
\- For \fBUptime:\fR adds \fBwakeups:\fR to show how many times the machine
has been woken from suspend state during current uptime period (if available,
Linux only). 0 value means the machine has not been suspended.
\- For \fBShell:\fR adds \fB(su|sudo|login)\fR to shell name if present.
\- For \fBShell:\fR adds \fBdefault:\fR shell if different from
running shell, and default shell \fBv:\fR, if available.
\- For \fBrunning\-in:\fR adds \fB(SSH)\fR to parent, if present. SSH detection
uses the \fBwhoami\fR test.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-J\fR (\fB\-\-usb\fR)
\- Adds, if present, serial number for non hub devices.
\- Adds \fBinterfaces:\fR for non hub devices.
\- Adds, if available, USB speed in \fBMbits/s\fR or \fBGbits/s\fR.
\- Adds, if present, USB class ID.
\- Adds, if non 0, max power in mA.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-m\fR, \fB\-\-memory\-modules\fR
\- Adds memory bus width: primary bus width, and if present, total width. e.g.
\fBbus width: 64 bit (total: 72 bits)\fR. Note that total / data widths are
mixed up sometimes in dmidecode output, so inxi will take the larger value as
the total if present. If no total width data is found, then inxi will not show
that item.
\- Adds device Type Detail, e.g. \fBdetail: DDR3 (Synchronous)\fR.
\- Adds, if present, memory module voltage. Only some systems will have this
data available.
\- Adds device serial number.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-N\fR
\- Adds, if present, serial number.
\- Adds, if present, PCI/USB class ID.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-R\fR
\- md\-raid: Adds system mdraid support types (kernel support, read ahead,
RAID events)
\- zfs\-raid: Adds portion allocated (used) by RAID array/device.
\- Hardware RAID: Adds rev, ports, and (if available and/or relevant)
\fBvendor:\fR item, which shows specific vendor [product] information.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-S\fR
\- Adds, if in X, or with \fB--display\fR, bar/dock/panel/tray items
(\fBinfo\fR). If none found, shows nothing. Supports desktop items like
gnome\-panel, lxpanel, xfce4\-panel, lxqt\-panel, tint2, cairo-dock, trayer,
and many others.
\- Adds (if present), window manager (\fBwm\fR) version number.
\- Adds (if present), display manager (\fBdm\fR) version number.
\- Adds (if available, and in display), virtual terminal (\fBvt\fR) number.
These are the same as \fBctrl+alt+F[x]\fR numbers usually. Some systems
have this, some don't, it varies.
.TP
.B \-xxx \-w\fR,\fB \-W\fR
\- Adds location (city state country), observation altitude (if available),
weather observation time (if available), sunset/sunrise (if available).
.SH ADMIN EXTRA DATA OPTIONS
These options are triggered with \fB\-\-admin\fR or \fB\-a\fR. Admin options
are advanced output options, and are more technical, and mostly of interest to
system administrators or other machine admins.
The \fB\-\-admin\fR option sets \fB\-xxx\fR, and only has to be used once.
It will trigger the following features:
.TP
.B \-a \-A\fR
\- Adds, if present, possible \fBalternate:\fR kernel modules capable of
driving each \fBDevice\-x\fR (not including the current \fBdriver:\fR). If no
non\-driver modules found, shows nothing. NOTE: just because it lists a module
does NOT mean it is available in the system, it's just something the kernel
knows could possibly be used instead.
.TP
.B \-a \-C\fR
\- Adds CPU family, model\-id, and stepping (replaces \fBrev\fR of \fB\-Cx\fR).
Format is \fBhexadecimal (decimal)\fR if greater than 9, otherwise
\fBhexadecimal\fR.
\- Adds CPU microcode. Format is \fBhexadecimal\fR.
\- Adds socket type (for motherboard CPU socket, if available). If results
doubtful will list two socket types and \fBnote: check\fR. Requires
doas[BSDs]/sudo/root and \fBdmidecode\fR. The item in parentheses may simply
be a different syntax for the same socket, but in general, check this before
trusting it.
.nf
Sample: \fBsocket: 775 (478) note: check\fR
Sample: \fBsocket: AM4\fR
.fi
\- Adds DMI CPU base and boost/turbo speeds. Requires doas[BSDs]/sudo/root and
\fBdmidecode\fR. In some cases, like with overclocking or 'turbo' or 'boost'
modes, voltage and external clock speeds may be increased, or short term limits
raised on max CPU speeds. These are often not reflected in /sys based
CPU \fBmin/max:\fR speed results, but often are using this source.
Samples:
.nf
CPU not overclocked, with boost, like Ryzen:
\fBSpeed: 2861 MHz min/max: 1550/3400 MHz boost: enabled base/boost: 3400/3900\fR
Overclocked 2900 MHz CPU, with no boost available:
\fBSpeed: 2900 MHz min/max: 800/2900 MHz base/boost: 3350/3000\fR
Overclocked 3000 MHz CPU, with boosted max speed:
\fBSpeed: 4190 MHz min/max: 1200/3001 MHz base/boost: 3000/4000\fR
.fi
Note that these numbers can be confusing, but basically, the \fBbase\fR
number is the actual normal top speed the CPU runs at without boost mode, and
the \fBboost\fR number is the max speed the CPU reports itself able to run at.
The actual max speed may be higher than either value, or lower. The \fBboost\fR
number appears to be hard\-coded into the CPU DMI data, and does not seem to
reflect actual max speeds that overclocking or other combinations of speed
boosters can enable, as you can see from the example where the CPU is running
at a speed faster than the min/max or base/boost values.
Note that the normal \fBmin/max:\fR speeds do NOT show actual overclocked OR
boost/turbo mode speeds, and appear to be hard\-coded values, not dynamic real
values. The \fBbase/boost:\fR values are sometimes real, and sometimes not.
\fBbase\fR appears in general to be real.
\- Adds CPU Vulnerabilities (bugs) as known by your current kernel. Lists by
\fBType: ... (status|mitigation): ....\fR for systems that support this feature
(Linux kernel 4.14 or newer, or patched older kernels).
.TP
.B \-a \-d\fR,\fB\-a \-D\fR
\- Adds logical and physical block size in bytes.
Using \fBsmartctl\fR (requires doas[BSDs]/sudo/root privileges).
\- Adds device model family, like \fBCaviar Black\fR, if available.
\- Adds SATA type (eg 1.0, 2.6, 3.0) if a SATA device.
\- Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).
\- Adds SMART report line: status, enabled/disabled, health, powered on,
cycles, and some error cases if out of range values. Note that for Pre\-fail
items, it will show the VALUE and THRESHOLD numbers. It will also fall back
for unknown attributes that are or have been failing and print out the
Attribute name, value, threshold, and failing message. This way even for
unhandled Attribute names, you should get a solid report for full failure
cases. Other cases may show if inxi believes that the item may be approaching
failure. This is a guess so make sure to check the drive and smartctl full
output to verify before taking any further action.
\- Adds, for USB or other external drives, actual model name/serial if
available, and different from enclosure model/serial, and corrects block
sizes if necessary. Adds in drive temperature for some drives as well,
and other useful data.
.TP
.B \-a \-E\fR (\fB\-\-bluetooth\fR)
\- Adds (\fBhciconfig\fR only) extra line to \fBReport:\fR, \fBInfo:\fR.
Includes, if available, ACL MTU, SCO MTU, Link policy, Link mode,
and Service Classes.
.TP
.B \-a \-G\fR
Triggers a much more complete Screen/Monitor output on the
\fBDisplay:\fR line of \fB\-G\fR. Note that the
basic feature requires \fBxdpyinfo\fR, and the advanced per monitor
feature requires \fBxrandr\fR.
No support currently exists for \fBWayland\fR since we so far can find
no documentation or easy methods to extract this information from \fBWayland\fR
compositors. This unfortunate situation may change in the future, hopefully.
However, most \fBWayland\fR systems also come with \fBxwayland\fR,
which should supply the tools necessary for the time being.
Further note that all references to \fBDisplays\fR, \fBScreens\fR,
and \fBMonitors\fR are referring to the \fBX\fR technical terms,
not normal consumer usage. 1 \fBDisplay\fR runs 1 or more
\fBScreens\fR, and a \fBScreen\fR runs 1 or more \fBMonitors\fR.
\- Adds \fBDisplay\fR ID, for the Display running the Screen that runs the
Monitors.
\- Adds total number of \fBScreens\fR listed for the current \fBDisplay\fR.
\- Adds default \fBScreen\fR ID if Screen (not monitor!) total is greater than
1.
\- Adds \fBScreen\fR line, which includes the ID (\fBScreen: 0\fR) then
\fBs-res\fR (Screen resolution), \fBs\-dpi\fR, \fBs\-size\fR and \fBs\-diag\fR.
Remember, this is an Xorg \fBScreen\fR, NOT a monitor screen, and the
information listed is about the Xorg Screen! It may at times be the same as a
single monitor system, but usually it's different in some ways.
\- Adds \fBMonitor\fR ID(s). Monitors are a subset of a Screen, each of which
can have one or more monitors. Normally a dual monitor setup is 2 monitors
run by one Xorg Screen. Each monitor has the following data, if available:
\- \fBres:\fR resolution in pixels. This is the individual monitor's
reported pixel dimensions.
\- \fBhz:\fR frequency in Herz, as reported to Xorg. Note that there have been
and may continue to be bugs with how Xorg treats > 1 monitor frequencies.
\- \fBdpi:\fR dpi (dots per inch), aka, ppi (pixels per inch). This is the
physical screen dpi, which is calculated using the screen dimensions and its
resolution.
\- \fBsize:\fR size in mm (inches). Note that this is the real monitor size,
not the Xorg Screen size, which can be quite different (1 Xorg Screen can
for instance contain two or more monitors).
\- \fBdiag:\fR monitor screen diagonal in mm (inches). Note that this is
the real monitor size, not the Xorg full Screen diagonal size, which
can be quite different.
Sample (with both \fBxdpyinfo\fR and \fBxrandr\fR data available):
.nf
\fBinxi \-aG
Graphics:
....
Display: x11 server: X.Org 1.20.6 driver: loaded: modesetting
display ID: :0.0 screens: 1
Screen\-1: 0 s\-res: 2560x1024 s\-dpi: 96 s\-size: 677x271mm (26.7x10.7")
s\-diag: 729mm (28.7")
Monitor\-1: DVI\-I\-0 res: 1280x1024 hz: 60 dpi: 96
size: 338x270mm (13.3x10.6") diag: 433mm (17")
Monitor\-2: VGA\-0 res: 1280x1024 hz: 60 dpi: 86
size: 376x301mm (14.8x11.9") diag: 482mm (19")
....\fR
.fi
\- Adds, if present, possible \fBalternate:\fR kernel modules capable of
driving each \fBDevice\-x\fR (not including the current \fBloaded:\fR). If no
non\-driver modules found, shows nothing. NOTE: just because it lists a module
does NOT mean it is available in the system, it's just something the kernel
knows could possibly be used instead.
.TP
.B \-a \-I\fR
\- Adds Packages, totals, per package manager totals, and number of lib
packages detected per package manager. Also adds detected package managers
with 0 packages listed. Moves to \fBRepos\fR if \fB\-ra\fR.
.nf
\fBinxi \-aI
Info:
....
Init: systemd v: 245 runlevel: 5 Compilers: gcc: 9.3.0 alt: 5/6/7/8/9
Packages: apt: 3681 lib: 2096 rpm: 0 Shell: ksh v: A_2020.0.0 default: Bash
v: 5.0.16 running\-in: kate inxi: 3.1.04\fR
.fi
\- Adds service control tool, tested for in the following order: \fBsystemctl
rc-service rcctl service sv /etc/rc.d /etc/init.d\fR - useful to know which
you need when using an unfamiliar machine.
.TP
.B \-a \-j\fR, \fB\-a \-P\fR [swap], \fB\-a \-P\fR [swap]
\- Adds swappiness and vfs cache pressure, and a message to indicate
if the value is the default value or not (Linux only, and only if available).
If not the default value, shows default value as well, e.g.
For \fB\-P\fR per swap physical partition:
\fBswappiness: 60 (default) cache\-pressure: 90 (default 100)\fR
For \fB\-j\fR row 1 output:
\fBKernel: swappiness: 60 (default) cache\-pressure: 90 (default 100)\fR
\- Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).
.TP
.B \-a \-L\fR
\- Expands Component report, shows size / maj-min of components and devices,
and mapped name for logical components. Puts each component/device on its own
line.
\- Adds maj-min to LV and other devices.
.TP
.B \-a \-n\fR, \fB\-a \-N\fR, \fB\-a \-i\fR
\- Adds, if present, possible \fBalternate:\fR kernel modules capable of
driving each \fBDevice\-x\fR (not including the current \fBdriver:\fR). If no
non\-driver modules found, shows nothing. NOTE: just because it lists a module
does NOT mean it is available in the system, it's just something the kernel
knows could possibly be used instead.
.TP
.B \-a \-o\fR
\- Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).
.TP
.B \-a \-p\fR,\fB\-a \-P\fR
\- Adds raw partition size, including file system overhead, partition table,
e.g.
\fBraw\-size: 60.00 GiB\fR.
\- Adds percent of raw size available to \fBsize:\fR item, e.g.
\fBsize: 58.81 GiB (98.01%)\fR.
Note that \fBused: 16.44 GiB (34.3%)\fR percent refers to the available size,
not the raw size.
\- Adds partition filesystem block size if found (requires root and blockdev).
\- Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).
.TP
.B \-a \-r\fR
\- Adds Packages. See \fB\-Ia\fR
.TP
.B \-a \-R\fR
\- Adds device kernel major:minor number (mdraid, Linux only).
\- Adds, if available, component size, major:minor number (Linux only). Turns
Component report to 1 component per line.
.TP
.B \-a \-S\fR
\- Adds kernel boot parameters to \fBKernel\fR section (if detected). Support
varies by OS type.
.SH ADVANCED OPTIONS
.TP
.B \-\-alt 40\fR
Bypass \fBPerl\fR as a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny),
Curl, Wget, Fetch, (OpenBSD only) ftp.
.TP
.B \-\-alt 41\fR
Bypass \fBCurl\fR as a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny),
Curl, Wget, Fetch, (OpenBSD only) ftp.
.TP
.B \-\-alt 42\fR
Bypass \fBFetch\fR as a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny),
Curl, Wget, Fetch, (OpenBSD only) ftp.
.TP
.B \-\-alt 43\fR
Bypass \fBWget\fR as a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny),
Curl, Wget, Fetch, OpenBSD only: ftp
.TP
.B \-\-alt 44\fR
Bypass \fBCurl\fR, \fBFetch\fR, and \fBWget\fR as downloader options. This
basically forces the downloader selection to use \fBPerl 5.x\fR
\fBHTTP::Tiny\fR, which is generally slower than \fBCurl\fR or \fBWget\fR but
it may help bypass issues with downloading.
.TP
.B \-\-bt\-tool [bt\-adapter|hciconfig|rfkill]\fR
Force the use of the given tool for bluetooth report (\fB\-E\fR).
\fBrfkill\fR does not support mac address data.
.TP
.B \-\-dig\fR
Temporary override of \fBNO_DIG\fR configuration item. Only use to test w/wo
dig. Restores default behavior for WAN IP, which is use dig if present.
.TP
.B \-\-display [:<integer>]\fR
Will try to get display data out of X (does not usually work as root user).
Default gets display info from display \fB:0\fR. If you use the format
\fB\-\-display :1\fR then it would get it from display \fB1\fR instead,
or any display you specify.
Note that in some cases, \fB\-\-display\fR will cause inxi to hang endlessly
when running the option in console with Intel graphics. The situation regarding
other free drivers such as nouveau/ATI is currently unknown. It may be that
this is a bug with the Intel graphics driver \- more information is required.
You can test this easily by running the following command out of X/display
server: \fBglxinfo \-display :0\fR
If it hangs, \fB\-\-display\fR will not work.
.TP
.B \-\-dmidecode\fR
Shortcut, legacy. See \fB\-\-force dmidecode\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-downloader [curl|fetch|perl|wget]\fR
Force inxi to use Curl, Fetch, Perl, or Wget for downloads.
.TP
.B \-\-force [dmidecode|hddtemp|lsusb|pkg|usb-sys|vmstat|wmctl]\fR
Various force options to allow users to override defaults. Values be given
as a comma separated list:
\fBinxi \-MJ --force dmidecode,lsusb\fR
\- \fBdmidecode\fR \- Force use of \fBdmidecode\fR. This will override
\fB/sys\fR data in some lines, e.g. \fB\-M\fR or \fB\-B\fR.
\- \fBhddtemp\fR \- Force use of hddtemp instead of /sys temp data for disks.
\- \fBlsusb\fR \- Forces the USB data generator to use \fBlsusb\fR as
data source (default). Overrides \fBUSB_SYS\fR in user configuration file(s).
\- \fBpkg\fR \- Force override of disabled package counts. Known package
managers with non\-resolvable issues:
rpm: Due to up to 30 seconds delays executing
.nf
\fBrpm \-qa \-\-nodigest \-\-nosignature\fR
.fi
on older hardware (and over 1 second on new hardware with some rpm versions)
package counts are disabled by default because of the unacceptable slowdowns
to execute a simple package list command.
\- \fBusb-sys\fR \- Forces the USB data generator to use \fB/sys\fR as
data source instead of \fBlsusb\fR (Linux only).
\- \fBvmstat\fR \- Forces use of vmstat for memory data.
\- \fBwmctl\fR \- Force \fBSystem\fR item \fBwm\fR to use \fBwmctrl\fR
as data source, override default \fBps\fR source.
.TP
.B \-\-hddtemp\fR
Shortcut, legacy. See \fB\-\-force hddtemp\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-host\fR
Turns on hostname in System line. Overrides inxi config file value (if set):
\fBSHOW_HOST='false'\fR \- Same as: \fBSHOW_HOST='true'\fR
This is an absolute override, the host will always show no matter what
other switches you use.
.TP
.B \-\-html\-wan\fR
Temporary override of \fBNO_HTML_WAN\fR configuration item. Only use to test
w/wo HTML downloaders for WAN IP. Restores default behavior for WAN IP, which
is use HTML downloader if present and if dig failed.
.TP
.B \-\-limit [\-1 \- x]\fR
Raise or lower max output limit of IP addresses for \fB\-i\fR. \fB\-1\fR
removes limit.
.TP
.B \-\-man\fR
Updates / installs man page with \fB\-U\fR if \fBpinxi\fR or using \fB\-U 3\fR
dev branch. (Only active if \fB\-U\fR is is not disabled by maintainers).
.TP
.B \-\-no\-dig\fR
Overrides default use of \fBdig\fR to get WAN IP address. Allows use of normal
downloader tool to get IP addresses. Only use if dig is failing, since dig is
much faster and more reliable in general than other methods.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-doas\fR
Skips the use of doas to run certain internal features (like \fBhddtemp\fR,
\fBfile\fR) with doas. Not related to running inxi itself with doas/sudo or
super user. Some systems will register errors which will then trigger admin
emails in such cases, so if you want to disable regular user use of doas
(which requires configuration to setup anyway for these options) just use
this option, or \fBNO_DOAS\fR configuration item. See \fB\-\-no\-sudo\fR if
you need to disable both types.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-host\fR
Turns off hostname in System line. This is default when using \fB\-z\fR,
for anonymizing inxi output for posting on forums or IRC. Overrides
configuration value (if set):
indent\-min
\fBSHOW_HOST='true'\fR \- Same as: \fBSHOW_HOST='false'\fR
This is an absolute override, the host will not show no matter what other
switches you use.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-html-wan\fR
Overrides use of HTML downloaders to get WAN IP address. Use either only dig,
or do not get wan IP. Only use if dig is failing, and the HTML downloaders are
taking too long, or are hanging or failing.
Make permanent with \fBNO_HTML_WAN='true'\fR
.TP
.B \-\-no\-man\fR
Disables man page install with \fB\-U\fR for master and active development
branches. (Only active if \fB\-U\fR is is not disabled by maintainers).
.TP
.B \-\-no\-sensor\-force\fR
Overrides user set \fBSENSOR_FORCE\fR configuration value. Restores default
behavior.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-ssl\fR
Skip SSL certificate checks for all downloader actions (\fB\-U\fR, \fB\-w\fR,
\fB\-W\fR, \fB\-i\fR). Use if your system does not have current SSL certificate
lists, or if you have problems making a connection for any reason. Works with
\fBWget\fR, \fBCurl\fR, \fBPerl HTTP::Tiny\fR and \fBFetch\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-no\-sudo\fR
Skips the use of sudo to run certain internal features (like \fBhddtemp\fR,
\fBfile\fR) with sudo. Not related to running inxi itself with sudo or
superuser. Some systems will register errors which will then trigger admin
emails in such cases, so if you want to disable regular user use of sudo (which
requires configuration to setup anyway for these options) just use this option,
or \fBNO_SUDO\fR configuration item.
.TP
.B \-\-output [json|screen|xml]\fR
Change data output type. Requires \-\-output\-file if not \fBscreen\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-output\-file [full path to output file|print]\fR
The given directory path must exist. The directory path given must exist,
The \fBprint\fR options prints to stdout.
Required for non\-screen \fB\-\-output\fR formats (json|xml).
.TP
.B \-\-partition\-sort [dev\-base|fs|id|label|percent\-used|size|uuid|used]\fR
Change default sort order of partition output. Corresponds to
\fBPARTITION_SORT\fR configuration item. These are the available sort options:
\fBdev\-base\fR - \fB/dev\fR partition identifier, like \fB/dev/sda1\fR.
Note that it's an alphabetic sort, so \fBsda12\fR is before \fBsda2\fR.
\fBfs\fR \- Partition filesystem. Note that sorts will be somewhat random if
all filesystems are the same.
\fBid\fR \- Mount point of partition (default).
\fBlabel\fR \- Label of partition. If partitions have no labels,
sort will be random.
\fBpercent\-used\fR - Percentage of partition size used.
\fBsize\fR \- KiB size of partition.
\fBuuid\fR \- UUID of the partition.
\fBused\fR \- KiB used of partition.
.TP
.B \-\-pkg\fR
Shortcut. See \fB\-\-force pkg\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-pm\-type [package manager name]\fR
For distro package maintainers only, and only for non apt, rpm, or pacman
based systems. To be used to test replacement package lists for recommends
for that package manager.
.TP
.B \-\-sensors\-default\fR
Overrides configuration values \fBSENSORS_USE\fR or \fBSENSORS_EXCLUDE\fR
on a one time basis.
.TP
.B \-\-sensors\-exclude\fR
Similar to \fB\-\-sensors\-use\fR except removes listed sensors from sensor
data. Make permanent with \fBSENSORS_EXCLUDE\fR configuration item. Note that
gpu, network, disk, and other specific device monitor chips are excluded by
default.
Example: \fBinxi \-sxx \-\-sensors\-exclude k10temp-pci-00c3\fR
.TP
.B \-\-sensors\-use\fR
Use only the (comma separated) sensor arrays for \fB\-s\fR output. Make
permanent with \fBSENSORS_USE\fR configuration item. Sensor array ID value
must be the exact value shown in lm\-sensors sensors output (Linux/lm-sensors
only). If you only want to exclude one (or more) sensors from the output,
use \fB\-\-sensors\-exlude\fR.
Can be useful if the default sensor data used by inxi is not from the right
sensor array. Note that all other sensor data will be removed, which may lead
to undesired consequences. Please be aware that this can lead to many
undesirable side\-effects, since default behavior is to use all the sensors
arrays and select which values to use from them following a set sequence of
rules. So if you force one to be used, you may lose data that was used from
another one.
Most likely best use is when one (or two) of the sensor arrays has all the
sensor data you want, and you just want to make sure inxi doesn't use data
from another array that has inacurate or misleading data.
Note that gpu, network, disk, and other specific device monitor chips are
excluded by default, and should not be added since they do not provide cpu,
board, system, etc, sensor data.
Example: \fBinxi \-sxx \-\-sensors\-use nct6791-isa-0290,k10temp-pci-00c3\fR
.TP
.B \-\-sleep [0\-x.x]\fR
Usually in decimals. Change CPU sleep time for \fB\-C\fR (current: \fB\0.35\fR).
Sleep is used to let the system catch up and show a more accurate CPU use.
Example:
\fBinxi \-Cxxx \-\-sleep 0.15\fR
Overrides default internal value and user configuration value:
\fBCPU_SLEEP=0.25\fR
.TP
.B \-\-tty\fR
Forces internal IRC flag to off. Used in unhandled cases where the program
running inxi may not be seen as a shell/tty, but it is not an IRC client.
Put \fB\-\-tty\fR first in option list to avoid unexpected errors. If you want
a specific output width, use the \fB\-\-width\fR option. If you want normal
color codes in the output, use the \fB\-c [color ID]\fR flag.
The sign you need to use this is extra numbers before the key/value pairs of
the output of your program. These are IRC, not TTY, color codes. Please post a
github issue if you find you need to use \fB\-\-tty\fR (including the full
\fB\-Ixxx\fR line) so we can figure out how to add your program to the list of
whitelisted programs.
You can see what inxi believed started it in the \fB\-Ixxx\fR line,
\fBShell:\fR or \fBClient:\fR item. Please let us know what that result was
so we can add it to the parent start program whitelist.
.TP
.B \-\-usb\-sys\fR
Shortcut, legacy. See \fB\-\-force usb\-sys\fR
.TP
.B \-\-usb\-tool\fR
Shortcut, legacy. See \fB\-\-force lsusb\fR
.TP
.B \-\-wan\-ip\-url [URL]\fR
Force \fB\-i\fR to use supplied URL as WAN IP source. Overrides dig or
default IP source urls. URL must start with http[s] or ftp.
The IP address from the URL must be the last item on the last (non\-empty)
line of the page content source code.
Same as configuration value (example):
\fBWAN_IP_URL='https://mysite.com/ip.php'\fR
.TP
.B \-\-wm\fR
Shortcut, legacy. See \fB\-\-force wmctl\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-wrap\-max [integer]\fR
Overrides default or configuration set line starter wrap width value. Wrap
max is the maximum width that inxi will wrap line starters (e.g. \fBInfo:\fR)
to their own lines, with data lines indented only 2 columns. If
terminal/console width or \fB\-\-width\fR is less than wrap width, wrapping
of line starter occurs. If \fB80\fR or less, no wrapping will occur. Overrides
internal default value (90) and user configuration value:
\fBWRAP_MAX=85\fR (previously \fBINDENT_MIN\fR)
Previously called: \fB\-\-indent\-min\fR.
.SH DEBUGGING OPTIONS
.TP
.B \-\-dbg 1\fR
\- Debug downloader failures. Turns off silent/quiet mode for curl, wget, and
fetch. Shows more downloader action information. Shows some more information
for Perl downloader.
.TP
.B \-\-dbg [2\-xx]\fR
\- See github \fBinxi-perl/docs/inxi-values.txt\fR for specific specialized
debugging options.
.TP
.B \-\-debug [1\-3]\fR
\- On screen debugger output.
.TP
.B \-\-debug 10\fR
\- Basic logging. Check \fB$XDG_DATA_HOME/inxi/inxi.log\fR or
\fB$HOME/.local/share/inxi/inxi.log\fR or \fB$HOME/.inxi/inxi.log\fR.
.TP
.B \-\-debug 11\fR
\- Full file/system info logging.
.TP
.B \-\-debug 20\fR
Creates a tar.gz file of system data and collects the inxi output
in a file.
* tree traversal data file(s) read from \fB/proc\fR and \fB/sys\fR, and
other system data.
* xorg conf and log data, xrandr, xprop, xdpyinfo, glxinfo etc.
* data from dev, disks, partitions, etc.
.TP
.B \-\-debug 21\fR
Automatically uploads debugger data tar.gz file to \fIftp.smxi.org\fR,
then removes the debug data directory, but leaves the debug tar.gz file.
See \fB\-\-ftp\fR for uploading to alternate locations.
.TP
.B \-\-debug 22\fR
Automatically uploads debugger data tar.gz file to \fIftp.smxi.org\fR, then
removes the debug data directory and the tar.gz file.
See \fB\-\-ftp\fR for uploading to alternate locations.
.TP
.B \-\-ftp [ftp.yoursite.com/incoming]\fR
For alternate ftp upload locations: Example:
\fBinxi \-\-ftp \fIftp.yourserver.com/incoming\fB \-\-debug 21\fR
.SH DEBUGGING OPTIONS TO DEBUG DEBUGGER FAILURES
Only use the following in conjunction with \fB\-\-debug 2[012]\fR, and only
use if you experienced a failure or hang, or were instructed to do so.
.TP
.B \-\-debug\-proc\fR
Force debugger to parse \fB/proc\fR directory data when run as root. Normally
this is disabled due to unpredictable data in /proc tree.
.TP
.B \-\-debug\-proc\-print\fR
Use this to locate file that /proc debugger hangs on.
.TP
.B \-\-debug\-no\-exit\fR
Skip exit on error when running debugger.
.TP
.B \-\-debug\-no\-proc\fR
Skip /proc debugging in case of a hang.
.TP
.B \-\-debug\-no\-sys\fR
Skip /sys debugging in case of a hang.
.TP
.B \-\-debug\-sys\fR
Force PowerPC debugger parsing of /sys as doas[BSDs]/sudo/root.
.TP
.B \-\-debug\-sys\-print\fR
Use this to locate file that /sys debugger hangs on.
.SH SUPPORTED IRC CLIENTS
BitchX, Gaim/Pidgin, ircII, Irssi, Konversation, Kopete, KSirc, KVIrc,
Weechat, and Xchat. Plus any others that are capable of displaying either
built\-in or external script output.
.SH RUNNING IN IRC CLIENT
To trigger inxi output in your IRC client, pick the appropriate method from the
list below:
.TP
.B Hexchat, XChat, Irssi
\fR(and many other IRC clients)
.B /exec \-o inxi \fR[\fBoptions\fR]
If you don't include the \fB\-o\fR, only you will see the output on your local
IRC client.
.TP
.B Konversation
.B /cmd inxi
\fR[\fBoptions\fR]
To run inxi in Konversation as a native script if your distribution or inxi
package hasn't already done this for you, create this symbolic link:
KDE 4:
.B ln \-s /usr/local/bin/inxi /usr/share/kde4/apps/konversation/scripts/inxi
KDE 5:
.B ln \-s /usr/local/bin/inxi /usr/share/konversation/scripts/inxi
If inxi is somewhere else, change the path \fB/usr/local/bin\fR to wherever it
is located.
If you are using KDE/QT 5, then you may also need to add the following to get
the Konversation \fR/inxi\fR command to work:
.B ln \-s /usr/share/konversation /usr/share/apps/
Then you can start inxi directly, like this:
.B /inxi
\fR[\fBoptions\fR]
.TP
.B WeeChat
.B NEW: /exec \-o inxi
\fR[\fBoptions\fR]
.B OLD: /shell \-o inxi
\fR[\fBoptions\fR]
Newer (2014 and later) WeeChats work pretty much the same now as other console
IRC clients, with \fB/exec \-o inxi \fR[\fBoptions\fR]. Newer WeeChats
have dropped the \fB\-curses\fR part of their program name, i.e.:
\fBweechat\fR instead of \fBweechat\-curses\fR.
.SH CONFIGURATION FILE
inxi will read its configuration/initialization files in the
following order:
\fB/etc/inxi.conf\fR contains the default configurations. These can be
overridden by user configurations found in one of the following locations
(inxi will store its config file using the following precedence:
if \fB$XDG_CONFIG_HOME\fR is not empty, it will go there, else if
\fB$HOME/.conf/inxi.conf\fR exists, it will go there, and as a last default,
the legacy location is used), i.e.:
\fB$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/inxi.conf\fR > \fB$HOME/.conf/inxi.conf\fR >
\fB$HOME/.inxi/inxi.conf\fR
.SH CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
See the documentation page for more complete information on how to set
these up, and for a complete list of options:
.I https://smxi.org/docs/inxi\-configuration.htm
.TP
.B Basic Options
Here's a brief overview of the basic options you are likely to want to use:
\fBCOLS_MAX_CONSOLE\fR The max display column width on terminal.
If terminal/console width or \fB\-\-width\fR is less than wrap width,
wrapping of line starter occurs
\fBCOLS_MAX_IRC\fR The max display column width on IRC clients.
\fBCOLS_MAX_NO_DISPLAY\fR The max display column width in console, out of GUI
desktop.
\fBCPU_SLEEP\fR Decimal value \fB0\fR or more. Default is usually around
\fB0.35\fR seconds. Time that inxi will 'sleep' before getting CPU speed data,
so that it reflects actual system state.
\fBDOWNLOADER\fR Sets default inxi downloader: curl, fetch, ftp, perl, wget.
See \fB\-\-recommends\fR output for more information on downloaders and Perl
downloaders.
\fBFILTER_STRING\fR Default \fB<filter>\fR. Any string you prefer to see
instead for filtered values.
\fBLIMIT\fR Overrides default of \fB10\fR IP addresses per IF. This is only of
interest to sys admins running servers with many IP addresses.
\fBNO_DIG\fR Set to \fB1\fR or \fBtrue\fR to disable WAN IP use of \fBdig\fR
and force use of alternate downloaders.
\fBNO_DOAS\fR Set to \fB1\fR or \fBtrue\fR to disable internal use of
\fBdoas\fR.
\fBNO_HTML_WAN\fR Set to \fB1\fR or \fBtrue\fR to disable WAN IP use of
\fBHTML Downloaders\fR and force use of dig only, or nothing if dig disabled
as well. Same as \fB\-\-no\-html\-wan\fR. Only use if dig is failing, and
HTML downloaders are hanging.
\fBNO_SUDO\fR Set to \fB1\fR or \fBtrue\fR to disable internal use of
\fBsudo\fR.
\fBPARTITION_SORT\fR Overrides default partition output sort. See
\fB\-\-partition\-sort\fR for options.
\fBPS_COUNT\fR The default number of items showing per \fB\-t\fR type, \fBm\fR
or \fBc\fR. Default is 5.
\fBSENSORS_CPU_NO\fR In cases of ambiguous temp1/temp2 (inxi can't figure out
which is the CPU), forces sensors to use either value 1 or 2 as CPU
temperature. See the above configuration page on smxi.org for full info.
\fBSENSORS_EXCLUDE\fR Exclude supplied sensor array[s] from sensor output.
Override with \fB\-\-sensors\-default\fR. See \fB\-\-sensors\-exclude\fR.
\fBSENSORS_USE\fR Use only supplied sensor array[s]. Override with
\fB\-\-sensors\-default\fR. See \fB\-\-sensors\-use\fR.
\fBSEP2_CONSOLE\fR Replaces default key / value separator of '\fB:\fR'.
\fBUSB_SYS\fR Forces all USB data to use \fB/sys\fR instead of \fBlsusb\fR.
\fBWAN_IP_URL\fR Forces \fB\-i\fR to use supplied URL, and to not use dig
(dig is generally much faster). URL must begin with http or ftp. Note that if
you use this, the downloader set tests will run each time you start inxi
whether a downloader feature is going to be used or not.
The IP address from the URL must be the last item on the last (non\-empty)
line of the URL's page content source code.
Same as \fB\-\-wan\-ip\-url [URL]\fR
\fBWEATHER_SOURCE\fR Values: [\fB0-9\fR]. Same as \fB\-\-weather\-source\fR.
Values 4\-9 are not currently supported, but this can change at any time.
\fBWEATHER_UNIT\fR Values: [\fBm\fR|\fBi\fR|\fBmi\fR|\fBim\fR]. Same as
\fB\-\-weather\-unit\fR.
\fBWRAP_MAX\fR (previously \fBINDENT_MIN\fR) The maximum width where the line
starter wraps to its own line. If terminal/console width or \fB\-\-width\fR is
less than wrap width, wrapping of line starter occurs. Overrides default.
See \fB\-\-wrap\-max\fR. If \fB80\fR or less, wrap will never happen.
.TP
.B Color Options
It's best to use the \fB\-c [94\-99]\fR color selector tool to set the
following values because it will correctly update the configuration file and
remove any invalid or conflicting items, but if you prefer to create your own
configuration files, here are the options. All take the integer value from the
options available in \fB\-c 94\-99\fR.
NOTE: All default and configuration file set color values are removed when
output is piped or redirected. You must use the explicit
\fB\-c <color number>\fR option if you want colors to be present in the
piped/redirected output (creating a PDF for example).
\fBCONSOLE_COLOR_SCHEME\fR The color scheme for console output (not in
X/Wayland).
\fBGLOBAL_COLOR_SCHEME\fR Overrides all other color schemes.
\fBIRC_COLOR_SCHEME\fR Desktop X/Wayland IRC CLI color scheme.
\fBIRC_CONS_COLOR_SCHEME\fR Out of X/Wayland, IRC CLI color scheme.
\fBIRC_X_TERM_COLOR_SCHEME\fR In X/Wayland IRC client terminal color scheme.
\fBVIRT_TERM_COLOR_SCHEME\fR Color scheme for virtual terminal output (in
X/Wayland).
.SH BUGS
Please report bugs using the following resources.
You may be asked to run the inxi debugger tool (see \fB\-\-debug 21/22\fR),
which will upload a data dump of system files for use in debugging inxi. These
data dumps are very important since they provide us with all the real system
data inxi uses to parse out its report.
.TP
.B Issue Report
File an issue report:
.I https://github.com/smxi/inxi/issues
.TP
.B Forums
Post on inxi forums:
.I https://techpatterns.com/forums/forum\-33.html
.TP
.B IRC irc.oftc.net#smxi
You can also visit
.I irc.oftc.net
\fRchannel:\fI #smxi\fR to post issues.
.SH HOMEPAGE
.I https://github.com/smxi/inxi
.I https://smxi.org/docs/inxi.htm
.SH AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS TO CODE
.B inxi
is a fork of \fBlocsmif\fR's very clever \fBinfobash\fR script.
Original infobash author and copyright holder:
Copyright (C) 2005\-2007 Michiel de Boer aka locsmif
inxi version: Copyright (C) 2008\-2021 Harald Hope
This man page was originally created by Gordon Spencer (aka aus9) and is
maintained by Harald Hope (aka h2 or TechAdmin).
Initial CPU logic, konversation version logic, occasional maintenance fixes,
and the initial xiin.py tool for /sys parsing (obsolete, but still very much
appreciated for all the valuable debugger data it helped generate):
Scott Rogers
Further fixes (listed as known):
Horst Tritremmel <hjt at sidux.com>
Steven Barrett (aka: damentz) \- USB audio patch; swap percent used patch.
Jarett.Stevens \- \fBdmidecode \-M\fR patch for older systems with no
\fB/sys\fR.
.SH SPECIAL THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING
The nice people at irc.oftc.net channels #linux\-smokers\-club and #smxi,
who all really have to be considered to be co\-developers because of their
non\-stop enthusiasm and willingness to provide real\-time testing and
debugging of inxi development.
Siduction forum members, who have helped get some features working by providing
a large number of datasets that have revealed possible variations, particularly
for the RAM \fB\-m\fR option.
AntiX users and admins, who have helped greatly with testing and debugging,
particularly for the 3.0.0 release.
ArcherSeven (Max), Brett Bohnenkamper (aka KittyKatt), and Iotaka, who always
manage to find the weirdest or most extreme hardware and setups that help make
inxi much more robust.
For the vastly underrated skill of output error/glitch catching, Pete Haddow.
His patience and focus in going through inxi repeatedly to find errors and
inconsistencies is much appreciated.
For a huge boost to BSD support, Stan Vandiver, who did a lot of testing
and setup many remote access systems for testing and development.
All the inxi package maintainers, distro support people, forum moderators,
and in particular, sys admins with their particular issues, which almost always
help make inxi better, and any others who contribute ideas, suggestions, and
patches.
Without a wide range of diverse Linux kernel\-based Free Desktop systems to
test on, we could never have gotten inxi to be as reliable and solid as it's
turning out to be.
And of course, a big thanks to locsmif, who figured out a lot of the core
ideas, logic, and tricks originally used in inxi Gawk/Bash.
.\" EOF