This adds support for reading log entries from the Systemd journal. A
new command, called simply 'journal', is added which takes a number of
lines as a parameter and optionally which journal (user or system) to
read from.
Obviously, libsystemd is required to build journal support. Tested on
Arch Linux (Systemd v229).
Signed-off-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@toke.dk>
* don't use kvm_* calls, just sysctl (so no suid perm necessary)
* sysctls calls in general aren't thread safe, collapse callbacks
using same sysctls (specifically total/running procs and proc list
ones).
Some sysctls need two calls (first to get size of obj returned,
second to get object self); if different threads use this schema
on same sysctl, weird values are returned (first/second calls
sequence should be serialized).
In general it makes not much sense too having more threads that use
the same sysctl; just get info once and populate all data.
* add DragonFly specific extended uname string ($version in conky.conf)
with git version and signature
Todo:
- top process list logic is old style, use top.cc funcs.
- find a solution for cpu freq
Signed-off-by: Pavel Labath <pavelo@centrum.sk>
it should replace both timed_thread and run_update_callback() systems
it features:
- automatic removal of callbacks which are not used
- ability to run callback less frequent than the update_interval
- avoidance of running the same callback multiple times
Warning: Altough the current version works (for me),
the syntax of the configoptions and vars will probably change
over time. Contact me if you have ideas.
The following is a example of how you can use it now:
mysql_host someserver.com
mysql_db my_database
mysql_user loginname
mysql_password "s3cr3t"
TEXT
${mysql select var1 from some_table}${mysql select var2 from some_table}
Rewrote timed_thread library in C++ using fancy new C++0x features. The
main reason for this is to phase out poor encapsulation and C-style
function pointers.