wmcpuload

Langue: en

Autres versions - même langue

Version: June 30, 2001 (debian - 07/07/09)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

wmcpuload - A dockapp to display CPU usage

SYNOPSIS

wmcpuload [options]

DESCRIPTION

This manual page documents briefly the wmcpuload command. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution.

WMCPULoad is a dockapp that is supported by X window managers such as Window Maker, AfterStep, BlackBox, and Enlightenment. It displays the current CPU usage, expressed as a percentile and a chart, and has an LCD look-alike user interface. The back-light may be turned on/off by clicking the mouse button over the application. If the CPU usage hits a certain threshold, an alarm-mode will alert you by turning on back-light.

OPTIONS

This program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is included below.
-d, --display <string>
Attempt to open a window on the named X display. In the absence of this option, the display specified by the DISPLAY environment variable is used.
-t, --title <string>
specify title name
-bl, --backlight
turn on back-light.
-lc, --light-color <color>
back-light color (rgb:6E/C6/3B is default)
-i, --interval <number>
number of secs between updates (1 is default)
-c, --cpu <number> (GNU/Linux / IRIX)
CPU number to monitor (Counting starts with 0).
-n, --ignore-nice (GNU/Linux / FreeBSD / OpenBSD / NetBSD)
ignore a nice value
-h, --help
show help text and exit
-v, --version
show program version and exit
-w, --windowed
run the application in windowed mode
-wp, --windowed-withpanel
run the application in windowed mode with background panel
-bw, --broken-wm
activate broken window manager fix
-a, --alarm <percentage>
activate alarm mode. <percentage> is threshold of percentage from 0 to 100.(90 is default)
-p, --ignore-proc <name><...>
ignore all processes specified by command name

AUTHOR

WMCPULoad was written by Seiichi SATO <ssato@sh.rim.or.jp>.

This manual page was written by Gordon Fraser <gordon@freakzone.net>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).