From e78718b21a19a824bb260761246572ab4c9fa83e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: reinelt Date: Fri, 1 Aug 2003 05:15:42 +0000 Subject: [lcd4linux @ 2003-08-01 05:15:42 by reinelt] last cleanups for 0.9.9 git-svn-id: https://ssl.bulix.org/svn/lcd4linux/trunk@205 3ae390bd-cb1e-0410-b409-cd5a39f66f1f --- README | 287 +---------------------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 284 deletions(-) (limited to 'README') diff --git a/README b/README index 3d236e8..c5182e7 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -1,287 +1,6 @@ # -# $Id: README,v 1.23 2002/04/29 11:00:26 reinelt Exp $ +# $Id: README,v 1.24 2003/08/01 05:15:42 reinelt Exp $ # -This is the README file for lcd4linux - - -INTRODUCTION - -lcd4linux is a small program that reads various information from the kernel -(and from other subsystems, especially ISDN) and displays them on a LCD or -other display device. - -It supports displaying text values and different types of bars: Horizontal and -vertical bars, logarithmic bars, split bars (two independent bars in one row). - - -USAGE - -lcd4linux -h - print version number and a small help text, then exit - -lcd4linux -l - list available drivers - -#ifdef USE_OLD_UDELAY -lcd4linux -d - calibrate delay loop (necessary for some drivers) -#endif - -lcd4linux [-c key=val] [-F] [-f config-file] [-o output] [-q] [-v] - run lcd4linux - overwrite entries from the config-file with '-c' - do not fork and detach with '-F' - use configuration from 'config-file' instead of /etc/lcd4linux.conf - write picture to 'output' (raster driver only) - suppress startup splash screen with '-q' - generate info messages with '-v' - generate debugging messages with '-vv' - debug socket traffic too, with '-vvv' - - -DIAGNOSTICS - - lcd4linux on foreground writes (depending on level) to stdout or stderr. - The Text-Driver has ist's own diagnostics window. - - Started in the background (the default), lcd4linux uses your syslog daemon - for logging. Facility is USER, levels are ERR, INFO and DEBUG. - - -SUPPORTED DISPLAYS - -* Matrox Orbital: - - "LCD0821": 2 lines by 8 characters - "LCD1621": 2 lines by 16 characters - "LCD2021": 2 lines by 20 characters - "LCD2041": 4 lines by 20 characters (tested) - "LCD4021": 2 lines by 40 characters - - -* CrystalFontz - - any of 626, 632, 634 and 636. - - -* HD44780-based displays - - This driver supports display modules based on the Hitachi HD44780 chip, - connected to a parallel port. These displays are made by different - manufactures, and come in various sizes. - -* Beckmann+Egle mini-terminal - - thanks to Helmut A. Bender - - -* Mitsubishi M50530 - - I got a real cool display (8 lines by 24 characters!) from - Udo Altmann (udo.altmann@web.de) Thanks again! - Unfortunately, the driver is not finished yet. - - -* Toshiba T6963 - - I got another real cool display (240x128 pixel!) from - Carsten Nau (info@cnau.de). Thanks again! - Unfortunately, the driver is not finished yet. - - -* PalmOrb - - I was told that lcd4linux works fine with PalmOrb, a small program that - emulates a Matrox Orbital display on the Palm Pilot. - - -* X11 - thanks to Herbert Rosmanith a driver - for the X Window System is available. It supports any size at any - resolution. A very small XLCD4Linux-Window can even swallow on the KDE - Panel! - - -* Raster formats: - a generic raster driver (which is used by the X11-driver, too) is availiable, - it supports: - PPM (portable pixmap) - PNG (with libgd) - -* Text: - This is a ncurses based text driver, mainly intended for debugging. - -* other displays: lcd4linux and especially the display driver code is very - modular, so it should be quite easy to write a driver for any display. See - README.driver for details. Contributors are welcome!!! - - -CONFIGURATION - -The configuration file (default: /etc/lcd4linux.conf) has a very simple -format: Every line consists of a key and a value, seperated by whitespace -(blanks or tabs). Values can contain whitespace, and can be enclosed in -single or double quotes. A key must not contain whitespace. Keys are NOT -case-sensitive. Order doesn't matter. Empty lines and all text on a line -after a '#' will be ignored. If you want to use '#' in a value (think of -X11-colors), you have to quote it with a backslash. - -NOTE: - -Because of security reasons the config file is assured to be: - * - file is a normal file (or /dev/null) - * - file owner is owner of program - * - file is not accessible by group - * - file is not accessible by other - -So if you run lcd4linux as root, /etc/lcd4linux has to be: - chmod 600 - chown root.root - - -The configuration file contains information for different modules of -lcd4linux: - -Global options: - - tick: time in milliseconds between bar updates - tack: time in milliseconds between text updates (text can be updated less - often than bars, so you get a smooth bar display and readable text) - tau: time constant (in milliseconds) for damping function (not used by now) - -Data-specific options: - - overload: load average threshold and bar scaling. The '%L' token (see below) - displays a '!' instead of a blank if the current load average - exceeds this value. - load bars are scaled by this value (load=overload gives 100%) - sensor1: path to the 1st temperature file - (e.g. /proc/sys/dev/sensors/w83781d-isa-0290/temp1) - it is important that you use the isa sensors, because the i2c - sensors are very slow! - sensor1_min: temperature where the corresponding bar starts - sensor1_max: temperature where bar ends - sensor[2..9], -_min, -_max: entries for the 2nd to 9th temperature sensor - - exec: - x1 ... x9: command to execute, PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin - $X1 ... $X8 is result of command 1..8 in environment - Tick_x1 .. 9 delay in ticks (overrides delay_x) - Delay_x1 ..9 delay in seconds (default 1) - Max_x1 ..9 max value for bars (default 100) - Min_x1 ..9 min value for bars (default 0) - - battery: Battwarning 10 (default 10) - - Mailbox: - The option string may be a plain mbox file or a pop3/imap4/nntp server - string with the following format: - - pop3:[user[:pass]@]machine[:port] - imap4:[user[:pass]@]machine[:port][/dir] - nntp:[user[:pass]@]machine[:port][/dir] - - Port defaults to 110 and 143 respectively. - If /dir is not given, INBOX is assumed. - If dir is given for nntp: it should be a valid group name - with '.' separating items - If dir is not given for nntp: all/unread news of subscribed groups - from Newsrc are calcualted. - - Delay_e1..e9 delay in seconds for querying the MailboxN (default 5) - Newsrc ... path/name of your .newsrc file containing subscribed news - - Note: authorization on newsservers is untested. - Note: user and pass may not contain a '/' with above syntax, I hope - that's ok. - - SetiDir: directory where seti@home stores its data files - - -Driver-specific options: - - Display: the name of a display model (see "supported displays" above) - every driver has its own configuration options (e.g. 'Port', 'Speed', ...) - see README. for details! - - -Display options: - - row1: Text to display in row 1 - row[2-max]: Text to display in other rows - - The text to be displayed can contain specific directives, which will be - replaced by the appropriate values, or will create bars: - - '\nnn` will write the ASCII-character nnn (octal) - '%' will be replaced by the value of - '%%' will write a '%' - '%$' will write a '$' - - '$[+] will create a bar with the - specified direction and length (in characters) with the value of . - If the driver supports dual bars, you can specify the second value with - '+'. can be 'l' (left), 'r' (right), 'u' (up) or 'd' - (down). If you specify the direction in upper case, a logarithmic bar will - be created. note that the space occupied by a bar always grows from left - to right or from top to bottom, regardless of the direction! - - '$t, will create a time series bar. The data are - displayed like '$u', but are shifted every second 1 pixel to the - left. Currently only displays based on the pixel-driver support this - bar type. - -Tokens: - - 'o' operating system name ('Linux') - 'v' operating system release ('2.0.38') - 'p' processor ('i686') - 'r' total amount of memory installed (MB) - 'mt' total memory from /proc/meminfo (kB) - 'mu' used memory (kB) - 'mf' free memory (kB) - 'ms' shared memory (kB) - 'mb' buffers (kB) - 'mc' page cache (kB) - 'ma' application memory (kB) = used - buffer - cache - 'l1' load average for the past 1 minute - 'l2' load average for the past 5 minutes - 'l3' load average for the past 15 minutes - 'L' '!' if load > overload (from config) - 'cu' percentage of CPU in user mode - 'cn' percentage of CPU in niced tasks - 'cs' percentage of CPU in system mode - 'cb' percentage of CPU busy (=100-idle) - 'ci' percentage of CPU idle - 'dr' disk blocks read - 'dw' disk blocks written - 'dt' disk blocks total (read+write) - 'dm' disk blocks max (read, write) - 'nr' network bytes received - 'nw' network bytes transmitted - 'nt' network bytes total (receive+transmit) - 'nm' network bytes max (receive, transmit) - 'ii' ISDN bytes received - 'io' ISDN bytes sent - 'it' ISDN bytes total (received+send) - 'im' ISDN bytes max (received, send) - 'ic' ISDN connected (0=offline, 1=online) - 'ti' PPP bytes received - 'to' PPP bytes sent - 'tt' PPP bytes total (received+send) - 'tm' PPP bytes max (received, send) - 's1' temperature of sensor 1 - 's2' temperature of sensor 2 (up to s9) - 'bp' battery percentage (APM by now) - 'bs' battery status ('=' = online, '+' = charging, '-' discharging) - 'bd' battery duration in s{econds}, m{ins}, h{ours} or d{ays} - 'hc' seti@home % completed - 'ht' seti@home time spent on workunit - 'e*' mails in mailbox 1-9, total mail - 'u*' mails in mailbox 1-9, unseen mail - 'x*' output of command 1-9 - -Please have a look at lcd4linux.conf.sample, where you can find examples -of all options and there usage. - +Sorry, there is no README anymore. +Go to http://lcd4linux.sourceforge.net for all the documentation. -- cgit v1.2.3