tmux-mem-cpu-load
tmux
CPU, RAM, and load monitor for use withDescription
A simple, lightweight program provided for system monitoring in the status line of tmux.
The memory monitor displays the used and available memory.
The CPU usage monitor outputs a percent CPU usage over all processors. It also displays a textual bar graph of the current percent usage.
The system load average is also displayed.
Example output:
2885/7987MB [||||| ] 51.2% 2.11 2.35 2.44 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ | | | | | | | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
- Currently used memory.
- Available memory.
- CPU usage bar graph.
- CPU usage percentage.
- Load average for the past minute.
- Load average for the past 5 minutes.
- Load average for the past 15 minutes.
For terminals with 256 color support, graded colors can be displayed by passing the --colors flag.
Installation
Dependencies
Currently, Linux, Mac OSX, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD are supported.
Building
- >= CMake -3.5
- C++ compiler with C++11 support (e.g. gcc/g++ >= 4.6)
Download
There are links to the source code at the project homepage.
Build
cd <source dir> cmake . make
Install
su - make install logout
tpm
Build and Install UsingInclude the plugin in your .tmux.conf
, the same file you'll set the
configuration in, below.
set -g @plugin 'thewtex/tmux-mem-cpu-load'
Install with Package Managers
- Gentoo:
emerge tmux-mem-cpu-load
- Homebrew:
brew install tmux-mem-cpu-load
Antigen
Build and Install UsingInclude the bundle in your .zshrc
antigen bundle thewtex/tmux-mem-cpu-load
tmux
ConfiguringEdit $HOME/.tmux.conf
to display the program's output in status-left or
status-right. For example:
set -g status-interval 2 set -g status-left "#S #[fg=green,bg=black]#(tmux-mem-cpu-load --colors --interval 2)#[default]" set -g status-left-length 60
If you installed using tpm, you must specify the full path to the
tmux-mem-cpu-load
script, like below:
set -g status-right '#[fg=green]#($TMUX_PLUGIN_MANAGER_PATH/tmux-mem-cpu-load/tmux-mem-cpu-load --colors --powerline-right --interval 2)#[default]'
Note that the interval argument to tmux-mem-cpu-load should be the same number of seconds that status-interval is set at.
Another optional argument is the number of bars in the bar graph, which defaults to 10. This can, for instance, be set to the number of cores in a multi-core system.
The colors option will add graded colors for each of the measures.
The full usage:
Usage: tmux-mem-cpu-load [OPTIONS] Available options: -h, --help Prints this help message -c, --colors Use tmux colors in output -p, --powerline-left Use powerline left symbols throughout the output, enables --colors -q, --powerline-right Use powerline right symbols throughout the output, enables --colors -v, --vertical-graph Use vertical bar chart for CPU graph -l <value>, --segments-left <value> Enable blending bg/fg color (depending on -p or -q use) with segment to left Provide color to be used depending on -p or -q option for seamless segment blending Color is an integer value which uses the standard tmux color palette values -r <value>, --segments-right <value> Enable blending bg/fg color (depending on -p or -q use) with segment to right Provide color to be used depending on -p or -q option for seamless segment blending Color is an integer value which uses the standard tmux color palette values -i <value>, --interval <value> Set tmux status refresh interval in seconds. Default: 1 second -g <value>, --graph-lines <value> Set how many lines should be drawn in a graph. Default: 10 -m <value>, --mem-mode <value> Set memory display mode. 0: Default, 1: Free memory, 2: Usage percent. -t <value>, --cpu-mode <value> Set cpu % display mode. 0: Default max 100%, 1: Max 100% * number of threads. -a <value>, --averages-count <value> Set how many load-averages should be drawn. Default: 3
Blending Dynamic Colors Tmux Powerline Segments
The -l and -r options when used in conjunction with a recent version of Tmux Powerline that has the ability to selectively disable spacing and separators between segments allow for seamless blending of tmux-mem-cpu-load output with other adjacent segments. The end result is dynamic changing of appropriate foreground and background colors as the start and end of the tmux-mem-cpu-load output string that is aggregated with other Tmux Powerline output to produce a more polished status line in Tmux.
Segment Adjaceny before this feature:
Segment Adjaceny after this feature:
Note that the values for the -l and -r options will be the standard Tmux integer color values. They set the appropriate background and foreground colors used for the separator character when used with the poweline-left or powerline-right options so it is easy to match coloring to adjacent segments. An example from the segment script that calls tmux-mem-cpu-load is as follows:
tmux-mem-cpu-load -q -v -l 52 -r 33
This combines with theme options available to tmux-powerline, such as the following:
"disk_usage_cust 52 123 ${TMUX_POWERLINE_SEPARATOR_LEFT_BOLD} 52 123 right_disable" \ "tmux_mem_cpu_load_cust 52 234 ${TMUX_POWERLINE_SEPARATOR_LEFT_BOLD} 52 234 both_disable separator_disable" \ "batt_cust 33 154 ${TMUX_POWERLINE_SEPARATOR_LEFT_BOLD} 16 33 N separator_disable" \
Authors
Matt McCormick (thewtex) <[email protected]>
Contributions from:
- cousine <[email protected]>
- Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse <[email protected]>
- Justin Crawford <[email protected]>
- krieiter <[email protected]>
- Mark Palmeri <[email protected]>
- Pawel 'l0ner' Soltys <[email protected]>
- Travil Heller <[email protected]>
- Tony Narlock <[email protected]>
- Compilenix <[email protected]>
- jodavies <[email protected]>
- @nhdaly (Nathan Daly) <[email protected]>
- bensuperpc <[email protected]>