Provided by: trend_1.4-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

     trend — a general-purpose, efficient trend graph

SYNOPSIS

     trend [-dDSsvlmFgGhtAERIMNTLzfcpue] [-display] [-geometry] [-iconic] ⟨fifo | -⟩
           ⟨hist-spec | hist-sz x-sz⟩ [low high]

DESCRIPTION

     trend is a general-purpose, efficient trend graph for "live" data. Data is read in ASCII
     form from a file or continuously from a FIFO and displayed in real-time into a multi-pass
     trend (much like a CRT oscilloscope).  trend can be used as a rapid analysis tool for
     progressive or time-based data series together with trivial scripting.

     trend requires at least a valid fifo to read from and an history specification (hist-spec)
     or, for advanced usage, a combination of history size and horizontal size (hist-sz and x-sz
     respectively). Optionally, to disable auto-scaling, the vertical limits can be specified
     directly through the command line via low and high.  The default input format is ASCII, in
     absolute counting mode. Many settings can be changed directly during execution.

INPUT

   FIFO
     To display real-time data you should use a FIFO. Both standard input and named pipes can be
     used. Standard input (used for simple pipelining purposes) can be opened by using - instead
     of a named file. A named FIFO can be created using the mkfifo(1) command. FIFOs are
     automatically re-opened upon EOF. See the EXAMPLES section.

     Alternatively you can store your data in a plain file and simply display its last values
     non-interactively.

     When new data is written, the value is plotted and the cursor position is advanced. That is,
     the graph scrolling speed is determined by the speed of the data flow. When the number of
     received values is above the specified horizontal size, the graph will wrap or scroll,
     depending on your settings.

   ASCII DATA
     The default data format is a space/tab/newline-separated series of parseable ASCII numbers;
     eg:

           1 2 3 4 5.1 0642
           0x12 -12.4E5 .987

     The parser is very lenient, and will silently ignore whatever looks like garbage.

   COUNTING MODES
     By default all input values are considered absolute and displayed "as is" in a single graph.

     The -c [N]mode flag sets an alternate counting mode and the number of available graphs.
     Available modes are:

           a    absolute (default)
           i    incremental counter
           d    differential values

     In incremental and differential mode, each value is calculated using the previous value as a
     reference except for the first, which is taken as absolute. The number of graphs can be
     specified by prefixing a multiplier before the counting mode (eg: 2a draws two graphs in
     absolute mode). See MULTIPLE GRAPHS for more details on how this affects the input stream.

   FORMAT TYPES
     Different input formats are supported, as specified by the -f flag. Note however that only
     the ASCII parser (the default) silently ignores errors. NaNs and Infinity have special
     treatment. Internally, trend always works with double precision floating points: conversion
     toward these is performed with the default FPU conversion rules. The actual underlying
     binary format depends on the host architecture:

           a    ASCII parser (default)
           f    binary float
           d    binary double
           s    binary short
           i    binary int
           l    binary long

   SPECIAL VALUES
     ASCII and binary floating point input have special treatment for NaNs and Infinity (entered
     in any representable form). Both are considered as "undefined values". Undefined values can
     be highlighted, but aren't otherwise rendered. If the -e flag is set, Infinity enters an
     escape sequence instead (See ESCAPE SEQUENCES)

   MULTIPLE GRAPHS
     Multiple graphs can be displayed inside a single trend instance by specifying a prefix
     number N for the -c flag. The input is interleaved, but otherwise unchanged: the reference
     value, if needed, is expected to be seen N times, one for each graph. Thus, for three graphs
     (A, B and C), the input order is:

           [A0 B0 C0]
           A1 B1 C1
           A2 B2 C2
           .. .. ..

     The display is updated only once all graph values are read. The color, label and origin for
     each graph can be specified through the usual command-line flags, separating each value with
     a comma; in the same order as the input. Default colors and labels are assigned if not
     completely specified.

     All graphs share and are affected by the same settings, except for the origin (zero) which
     can be changed independently. Filling, values and the examiners only work on the current
     graph. The current graph can be cycled dynamically with the TAB key and differentiated using
     the K key, which cycles between "normal", "dim others" and "hide others" views. The graph
     key, if enabled, also highlights the current graph.

   ESCAPE SEQUENCES
     If escape sequences are enabled (through the -e flag), entering Infinity (in any
     representable form) will start an escape sequence. Currently, this feature is not yet
     implemented: Infinity is simply discarded. This is reserved for future use as a way to
     control the trend interface and parameters remotely.

OPTIONS

   FLAGS
     -d                       "dimmed" shading mode
     -D                       visible distribution graph
     -S                       enable anti-aliasing
     -s                       "scrolling" mode
     -v                       visible values
     -l                       visible visual/max sync latency
     -m                       visible marker
     -F                       enable filling
     -g                       visible grid
     -G grid-spec             specify grid resolution
     -z zero[,zero...]        specify y zero/s
     -h                       help and version info
     -t str                   specify a window title
     -A colour                background colour
     -E colour                text (values) colour
     -R colour                grid colour
     -I colour[,colour...]    trend colour/s
     -M colour                marker colour
     -N colour                interactive examiner colour
     -T colour                edit mode colour
     -L label[,label...]      trend label/s
     -c mode                  input number/counting mode (See COUNTING MODES)
     -f format                input format (See FORMAT TYPES)
     -p rate                  polling rate (hz)
     -u                       show undefined values
     -e                       enable escape sequences (See ESCAPE SEQUENCES)
     -display                 See X(7).
     -geometry                See X(7).
     -iconic                  See X(7).

   HIST-SPEC
     An history specification is another convenient form of defining the pair `hist-sz x-sz` for
     common cases. An history specification can be in either one of the following formats:

           N      Sets x-sz to N, and hist-sz to N+1.
           N/M    Sets hist-sz to N, and x-sz to N/M.
           NxM    Sets x-sz to N, and hist-sz to N*M.

     While this may seem hard at first, trend fifo '60x3' is an easier way of expressing "60
     seconds for 3 minutes" and similar idioms.

   COLOUR
     A colour is specified in hex RGB format, as follows: #RRGGBB, RRGGBB or 0xRRGGBB; some
     examples:

           #FF0000    red
           #00FF00    green
           #A020F0    purple

   GRID-SPEC
     A grid specification is of the form:

           [[A][+C]][x[B][+C]]

     (eg: 1.3, 10+5, 1x10+5, +5x+5; +1x+1 gets the old behaviour) where:

           A    y grid resolution
           B    x grid resolution
           C    draw a mayor line every C normal grid lines

DISPLAY

   INTERACTIVE KEYS
           ESC      quit/exit
           TAB      cycle current graph
           a        toggle auto-scaling
           A        re-scale the graph without activating auto-scaling
           d        toggle dimmed shading mode
           D        toggle distribution graph
           S        toggle anti-aliasing
           s        switch scrolling mode (wrap-around or scrolling)
           v        toggle values
           l        show visual and maximal sync latency
           L        set limits interactively
           m        activate a marker on the current cursor position
           f        toggle filling
           g        toggle grid
           G        change grid-spec interactively
           z        change zero interactively
           Z        set limits by center and amplitude
           p        change polling rate interactively
           u        toggle display of undefined values
           k        toggle the graph key
           K        cycle view mode (normal, dim others or hide others)
           space    pause visualisation (but still continue to consume input to preserve time
                    coherency)

   AUTOSCALING
     When autoscaling is enabled the graph will be scaled vertically to fit visible values. The
     grid resolution is used to add some vertical bounds to the graph. Disabling autoscaling
     interactively will retain current limits. When the grid is too dense to be displayed it's
     deactivated automatically.

   LATENCY INDICATOR
     The latency indicator shows a 5s average of the visual and maximal sync latency (in
     seconds). The visual latency is the time-frame between real value updates and the final
     output you're seeing: it includes copy/redraw times, which varies depending on enabled
     layers, plus video sync. The maximal sync latency is the maximal time ever required for any
     received value to be synced with the display: since the display is updated atomically,
     values received while redrawing are implicitly delayed. See the UPDATE POLICY section for
     further details.

   SHADING MODES
     The default is to shade uniformly old values to complete transparency. The "dimmed" shading
     mode draws the foreground values with full opacity and the others with half opacity.

   SCROLLING MODES
     The default visualisation mode is "wrap-around": newer values will simply wrap around the
     screen when new data arrives. The other available one is "scrolling": new data is always
     placed at the right edge of the screen, and older values scrolled on the left.

   VALUE INDICATORS
     Three value indicators are drawn on the screen: upper limit, lower limit and current value
     (respectively on the upper right, lower right and lower left of the screen).

   INTERACTIVE EXAMINERS
     You can query interactively the graph for any value in the history by clicking with the
     first mouse button. This will enable a permanent examiner in the selected position and
     display up to the three nearest values in the upper-left corner of the screen. Intersections
     are projected horizontally, while a small circle will show the position of the nearest
     sampled value. The mean value refers to the three intersections.

     By holding down the CTRL key while clicking/dragging only "foreground" values will be
     considered.

     When clicking inside the distribution graph, the current count for the selected value is
     displayed instead.

     The examiners can be removed by clicking anywhere with the third mouse button.

   DISTRIBUTION GRAPH
     D or -D enable a distribution graph on the left side of the window. This is especially
     useful when analyzing the continuity of a function or signal. Intensity is proportional to
     the visible maximum.

   FILLING
     f or -F enable filling. In standard mode, or when hist-sz is smaller than x-sz, the area
     between the curve and zero will be filled. Otherwise, in dimmed mode, the area between the
     "foreground" and "background" values is filled instead.

UPDATE POLICY

     The fifo is read and managed asynchronously from the graphics. Delays at the display end
     will not interfere with the data feed.

     The fifo is unbuffered and the feeder thread is synchronously locked on it waiting for new
     data.

     The value is put in the history buffer when a separator character is received after the
     value, or, for binary input, when the needed amount of bytes is read (in this case each
     value is read with a single read call).

     The polling rate (as defined by p or -p and defaulting to 1000) defines how often the
     history buffer should be checked for updates and kept in sync with the visual. Values
     greater than 1000 result in continuous scanning (note that this only affects the maximal
     sync latency, and not the display rate, which is handled automatically).

     Syncing occurs atomically, reflecting the actual state at the instant of the update.
     Scheduler latencies apply.

ENVIRONMENT

     DISPLAY See X(7).

EXAMPLES

     Running trend with a named FIFO:

           mkfifo fifo
           command > fifo &
           trend fifo ...

     Display the number of current active processes over time:

           (while true; do ps -A | wc -l; sleep 1; done) | \
           trend - 60x24

     Display two graphs:

           trend -c2a -L"graph 1, graph 2" fifo ...

DIAGNOSTICS

     The trend utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.

ERRORS

     trend: producer thread exiting  The data stream finished for some reason (the specified file
     was invalid at the time of the request). For regular or invalid files this warning is
     normal.

SEE ALSO

     mkfifo(1), stdin(4), fd(4), /usr/share/doc/trend/examples/

AUTHORS

     trend is distributed under LGPL (see COPYING) WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY.  Copyright(c) 2003-2009
     by Yuri D'Elia <wavexx@thregr.org>.

                                         November 2, 2007