Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
The boolean flag 'watt_as_unit' may be used without being initialized if the
configured battery path does not contain expected statistics (for example if
it is misconfigured and points to AC adapter info or simply an unrelated file).
Even though it does not cause ill effects, it causes a warning (true positive)
when running i3status under Valgrind. Initialize the variable to make code
well-defined.
|
|
Since we have deterministic device names in Linux, these strings are a
much better default in the i3status config than "eth0" and "wlan0" (what
we used before).
|
|
In many public WiFis, the 2.4 GHz wireless band is slow due to
congestion, while there is still plenty of bandwidth available on the
5 GHz area. So when debugging wireless issues it's convenient to have
i3status display the frequency of the access point that the interface is
connected to.
This patch adds support for the %frequency tag for wireless interfaces,
so for example:
format_up = "WLAN: %essid - %quality / %frequency"
would result in:
"WLAN: eduroam - 074% / 2.4 GHz"
|
|
dicharching, full)
Replaced hard coded status strings (CHR, BAT, FULL) in
print_battery_info.c with user defined strings. The new strings are
'status_chr', 'status_bat' and 'status_full' and can be set in i3status.conf.
e.g.
status_chr = "⚡ CHR"
If any of the new status strings is omitted the standard strings (CHR,
BAT, FULL) are used.
|
|
fixes #1353
|
|
In my case, the voltage variable would stay initialized as -1,
which caused the calculation of battery charge percentage to be
incorrect (I would get the message that there is no battery present
or even -0% charge).
I have no idea how this would affect other systems, since I don't
have a chance to test this.
|
|
This patch fixes CPU temperature gauge for DragonFly BSD.
Commit 0eeded8 assumed that fetching CPU temperature for DragonFly
BSD was similar to that of FreeBSD but this assumption is false.
|
|
Apparently some notebooks report a negative current, whereas most don’t.
fixes #1249
|
|
brotbart)
fixes #1245
|
|
This patch fixes a bug in which multiple (conflicting) CPU temps may be
included in the output for the "cpu temperature" module.
The bug is due to the way that the code parsed the envsys(4)-returned data,
and would manifest itself on x86-based NetBSD machines, since those use
cputemp(4) as well as acpitz(4), thereby creating multiple envsys(4) entries
with identical descriptions but which refer to different physical sensors.
Instead of matching the description attribute of each device returned by
envsys(4) against the target format, this patch throws away non-matching keys
in the first instruction inside the dict walk. This has the benefit of sparing
unnecessary CPU cycles, and preventing other sensors from being included
erroneously.
Additionally, the THERMAL_ZONE format is now joined with OpenBSD in that it
uses acpitz(4) explicitly. This is prefered since it is much older (dating
back to NetBSD 2.0), and does not exclude x86-based users (as with cputemp(4)).
|
|
This patch takes a similar approach as the NetBSD CPU temperature
code in that it uses proplib(3) to walk dictionaries supplied by
envsys(4).
In addition to providing the basic functionality, it:
* Provides all existing format specifiers (%emptytime %consumption
%status %percentage %remaining)
* Respects all existing config options (hide_seconds, low_threshold,
integer_battery_capacity, last_full_capacity)
* Projects "time until full" when battery status is CS_CHARGING
|
|
* strncmp(s1, s2, strlen(s2)) → BEGINS_WITH(s1, s2)
* strncmp(s1, s2, strlen(s1)) → strcmp(s1, s2)
* Prefer case-insensitive comparison for options
|
|
|
|
New disk module options:
* threshold_type: ^(percentage|[kmgt]?bytes)_(free|avail)$
* low_threshold: <double>
fixes #912
|
|
Fixes the typo in print_seperator()
|
|
This patch adds the ability to customize the separator that is placed
between modules.
Specifically this patch:
* adds the "separator" general directive
* moves the definition of the default separator for the different
output formats (excluding color formatting) to src/i3status.c
* updates the SEC_CLOSE_MAP macro to disable the separator for the
i3bar output format if the separator directive dictates so
* changes print_seperator() in src/output.c to take a separator
parameter in order to disable the output of the separator if
the separator is empty and to use the provided separator
otherwise
* updates the manpage to explain the new directive
|
|
This patch inlines the creation of the thermal zone string in order
to force computation on each invocation. This is necessary to be able
to read the values of several temperature sensors.
|
|
fixes: #1134
|
|
* IEC: Ki, Mi, Gi, Ti (powers of 1024)
* SI: k, M, G, T (powers of 1000)
* custom: K, M, G, T (powers of 1024)
|
|
|
|
If the volume is muted, the volume level would simply be displayed as zero and the color changed to color_degraded.
This patch lets the user define a custom format string for when the volume is muted.
The default value is "♪: 0%" ("♪: %volume" being the usual format).
|
|
i3 starts processes using /bin/sh now, not $SHELL. This increases the
likelihood with which we are started by dash, which tends to leave its
processes in the hierarchy, e.g.:
michael 1524 i3bar --bar_id=bar-0 --socket=/run/user/1000/i3/ipc-s
michael 1525 \_ /bin/sh -c i3status
michael 1526 \_ i3status
This case is now handled correctly — when the parent is “sh”, the parent
of sh will be used instead.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This fix the following bug:
If you switch your sound card on-the-fly, print_volume continued to
use the old sound card.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Otherwise, i3bar will display “SPEC VIOLATION” because full_text is
missing in the block.
|
|
|
|
make mixer_idx load the default mixer
|
|
|
|
|
|
On GNU/Hurd, THERMAL_ZONE is undefined. This makes compilation fail as
outwalk is declared inside of #ifdef THERMAL_ZONE, but it's used outside
of it (by OUTPUT_FULL_TEXT).
This moves the declaration outside the #ifdef to allow for successful
compilation on Hurd again.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
fixes #940
|
|
|
|
|