Basically, I just added three new process properties (io_read, io_write, io_perc - representing
the amount of I/O done by the process during the update interval) and $top_io, that sorts
processes based on io_perc.
Atm, it's completely #ifdef'd, since it requires kernel support. But that creates some wierd
looking syntax at some places, so it may be better to remove some ifdefs. It even may be
possible to completely remove the ifdefs (ie. convert them to #ifdef linux) since the code will
compile just fine even if the kernel doesn't support I/O accounting. I'll leave that for someone
else to decide.
Changed llua_getinteger() to llua_getnumber() returning a double, so
that you can use floating point values in graphs etc. Lua graph will
scale like other graphs (except execgraph) by default now, and you can
manually set a scale with the scale argument.
See docs for more details on 'temperature gradients', which can be
turned on with the -t switch on graphs. Also improved parsing of
options with $execgraph and $execigraph, but may cause some breakage.
Also undid the last change because sony.h was not included, feel free to submit
it again if you include this file and other sourcefiles needed (there is also
no definition of get_sony_fanspeed). If sony systems already have this file and
a definition of this function, please update the configure file so that support
for this is disabled by default and can be enabled by sony owners.
Added the (incomplete) check_docs.py, to 'synchronize' the docs with the
code, as well as vim/nano syntax stuff.
Removed some unused OBJ_* stuff from text_objects.h, and updated docs
with some missing things. Also removed a couple deprecated objects
which were still documented.
The inconsistent naming of the cpu parameter in the docs led me to this,
so I also simplified parsing by introducing the macro SCAN_CPU(). Note
that this introduces a syntactical change to the config: the cpuN
argument now has to be passed at first position to $cpugraph.
This object makes use of the possibility to escape dollar signs in TEXT.
Take the following example in the conkyrc:
| $${downspeed ${gw_iface}}
will be evaluated to (assuming the gw_iface is eth0):
| ${downspeed eth0}
and finally interpreted to print the gateway interface's downspeed rate.
In general, argument types should match, but for combined long and
double usage the long is being converted to double before evaluation.
A few examples:
${if_match ${cpu} < 30}
${if_match "asdf" != "qwer"}
${if_match 0.5 < 0.50001}
${if_match 49.999 < 50}