Provided by: byobu_4.37-0ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       byobu  -  wrapper  script  for seeding a user's byobu configuration and
       launching screen

SYNOPSIS

       byobu [screen options]

       Options to byobu are simply passed through screen(1).

DESCRIPTION

       byobu is a script that launches GNU screen in the byobu  configuration.
       This enables the display of system information and status notifications
       within two lines at the bottom of the screen session. It  also  enables
       multiple   tabbed   terminal   sessions,   accessible   through  simple
       keystrokes.

       Note  that  BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR=$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/byobu  if  defined,   and
       $HOME/.byobu otherwise.

STATUS NOTIFICATIONS

       byobu  supports a number of unique and interesting status notifications
       across the lowest two lines in the screen.   Each  status  notification
       item  is  independently  configurable,  enabled  and  disabled  by  the
       configuration utility.  The guide below helps identify each status item
       (in alphabetical order):

       apport  -  symbol  displayed  if  there  are pending crash reports; {!}
       symbol displayed on the lower bar toward  the  left,  in  black  on  an
       orange background

       arch - system architecture; displayed on the lower bar toward the left,
       in the default text color on the default background color

       battery - battery information; display on  the  lower  bar  toward  the
       right; |-| indicates discharging, |+| indicates charging, |=| indicates
       fully charged;  when  charging  or  discharging,  the  current  battery
       capacity  as a percentage is displayed;  the colours green, yellow, and
       red are used to give further indication of the battery's charge  state;
       you     may     override    the    detected    battery    by    setting
       BATTERY=/proc/acpi/battery/BAT0 in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       cpu_count - the number of cpu's or cores on the  system;  displayed  in
       the lower bar toward the right in the default text color on the default
       background, followed by a trailing 'x'

       cpu_freq - the current frequency of the cpu in GHz;  displayed  in  the
       lower bar toward the right in white text on a light blue background

       cpu_temp  -  the  cpu  temperature  in Celsius (default) or Fahrenheit,
       configure TEMP=F or TEMP=C in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc; displayed  in
       the  lower  bar  toward the right in yellow text on a black background;
       you may  override  the  detected  cpu  temperature  device  by  setting
       MONITORED_TEMP=/proc/acpi/whatever in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       custom  -  user  defined custom scripts; must be executable programs of
       any kind in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/bin; must be named N_NAME, where N is the
       frequency  in  seconds to refresh the status indicator, and NAME is the
       name of the script; N should not be less than  5  seconds;  the  script
       should  echo  a small amount of text to standard out, standard error is
       discarded; the indicator will be  displayed  in  the  lower  panel,  in
       inverted  colors  to  your current background/foreground scheme, unless
       you manually specify the colors in your script's output;  BEWARE,  cpu-
       intensive custom scripts may impact your overall system performance and
       could upset your system administrator!
         Example: $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/bin/1000_uname
           #!/bin/sh
           printf "\005{= bw}%s\005{-}" "$(uname -r)"

       date - the system date in YYYY-MM-DD formate; displayed in the lower on
       the far right in the default text color on the default background

       disk  -  total  disk  space  available  and  total used on / directory;
       displayed in the lower bar on the far right in white text  on  a  light
       purple  background;  override  the  default  directory by specifying an
       alternate    mount    point    with     MONITORED_DISK=/wherever     in
       $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       disk_io  -  instantaneous read/write througput in kB/s or MB/s over the
       last 3 seconds; displayed in the lower bar toward the  right  in  white
       text  on  a  light purple background with a leading '<' sign indicating
       'read speed' and  '>'  sign  indicating  'write  speed';  override  the
       default   monitored   disk  by  specifying  an  alternate  device  with
       MONITORED_DISK=/dev/sdb, and override the default  DISK_IO_THRESHOLD=50
       (kB/s) in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       ec2_cost  - an estimation of the cost of the current boot of the system
       in terms of the Amazon EC2 billing model; displayed in  the  lower  bar
       toward  the  right  in  green  text  on  a black background; there is a
       leading '~' to indicate that this is an estimation,  and  the  monetary
       units are US Dollars '$'

       raid  -  note  very prominently if there is a RAID failure detected, in
       red blinking text on a white background; the  term  'RAID'  notes  that
       there   is   something   wrong  with  the  RAID,  and  if  there  is  a
       rebuild/resync in progress, the percent complete is also shown

       rcs_cost - an estimation of the cost of the current boot of the  system
       in  terms of the Rackspace Cloud Server billing model; displayed in the
       lower bar toward the right in green text on a black  background;  there
       is  a  leading  '~'  to  indicate  that  this is an estimation, and the
       monetary units are US Dollars '$'

       fan_speed -  cpu  or  system  fan  speed  as  reported  by  lm-sensors;
       displayed  in  the  lower  bar toward the right in black text on a grey
       background; there is a trailing 'rpm' for units; you may  override  the
       detected    fan    by   setting   FAN=/sys/path/to/your/fan1_input   in
       $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       hostname - the hostname of the system; displayed in the  upper  bar  on
       the  far  right  in  bold  black  text on a grey background; there is a
       leading '@' symbol if the username status is also enabled

       ip_address - the IPv4 address of the system  in  dotted  decimal  form;
       displayed  in  the  upper  bar on the far right in bold black text on a
       grey background;  you can override and display  your  IPv6  address  by
       setting 'IPV6=1' in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       load_average  -  the  system  load  average  over  the  last  1 minute;
       displayed in the lower bar toward the right in black text on  a  yellow
       background

       logo  -  an  approximation  of  the  current  operating  system's logo;
       displayed in the lower bar on the far left; you may customize this logo
       by setting a chosen logo in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/logo, or you may override
       this with LOGO=:-D in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       mail - system mail for the current user; the letter '[M]' is  displayed
       in the lower bar toward the left in black text on a grey background

       memory  -  total  memory available and used in the system; displayed in
       the lower bar toward the right in white text on a green background

       menu - a simple indicator directing new users to use the F9  keybinding
       to access the byobu menu

       network  - instantaneous upload/download bandwidth in [GMk]bps over the
       last 3 seconds; nothing is displayed if traffic is 0; displayed in  the
       lower  bar  toward the left in white text on a purple background with a
       leading '^' sign  indicating  'up'  and  'v'  sign  indicating  'down';
       override  the  default  interface  by specifying an alternate interface
       with MONITORED_NETWORK=eth1, and override the default units (bits) with
       NETWORK_UNITS=bytes,  and  override  the  default  NETWORK_THRESHOLD=20
       (kbps) in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       notify_osd  -  Send  on-screen  notification   messages   to   screen's
       notification buffer

       processes  - total number of processes running on the system; displayed
       in the lower bar in white text on  a  dark  yellow  background  with  a
       trailing '&' indicating 'background processes'

       reboot_required  -  symbol  present if a reboot is required following a
       system update; displayed  in  the  lower  bar  white  text  on  a  blue
       background  by  the  symbol  '(R)';  additionally, reboot_required will
       print '<F5>' in white text on a blue background, if Byobu requires  you
       to  reload  your profile to affect some changes; it will also detect if
       your system is currently in powernap(8) state and if so print '.zZ'.

       release -  distribution  and  version  information  about  the  release
       running  on  the  current  system  as  reported  by  lsb_release(1)  or
       /etc/issue; displayed in the lower bar in bold black  text  toward  the
       left  on  a grey background; you may override the detected release with
       DISTRO=Whatever in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

       services - users can configure a list of services  to  monitor,  define
       the  SERVICES  variable  in  $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc,  a  whitespace
       separated of services, each service should include the init name of the
       service, then a pipe, and then an abbreviated name or symbol to display
       when running (e.g. SERVICES="ssh|ssh apache2|http"); displayed  in  the
       lower bar toward the center in cyan on a white background

       swap  -  total  swap  space and total used as a percentage of the total
       available; displayed in the lower bar toward the right in white text on
       a light green background with a trailing '%' sign

       time  -  the system time in HH:MM:SS format; displayed in the lower bar
       on the far right in the default text and default background colors

       time_binary - only for the hard core geek, the  local  system  time  in
       binary;  requires  UTF8 support in a VERY recent version of GNU Screen;
       you  must  additionally  set  "UTF8=1"  in  $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc;
       displayed  in  the  lower  bar on the far right in the default text and
       background colors

       time_utc - the UTC system time in HH:MMformat; displayed in  the  lower
       bar on the far right in dark text on a light background

       updates_available  -  the  number  of  updates available on the system;
       displayed in the lower bar toward the right in  white  text  on  a  red
       background  with  a  trailing  '!'  sign;  if  any  updates  are marked
       'security updates',  then  there  will  be  a  total  of  two  trailing
       exclamation points, '!!'

       uptime  -  the  total  system  uptime since last boot; displayed in the
       lower bar toward the right in blue text on a grey background

       users - the number of remote users logged into  the  system  via  sshd,
       empty  if  0  users; displayed in the lower bar toward the right in red
       text on a grey background with a trailing '#' sign

       whoami - the name of the user who owns the screen session; displayed in
       the  upper  bar  toward  the  far  right  in  bold black text on a grey
       background

       wifi_quality - the connection rate  and  signal  quality  of  the  wifi
       connection;  displayed  in the lower bar toward the right in black text
       on a cyan background; the connection rate is in 'Mb/s' and  the  signal
       quality  is  as  a percentage with a trailing '%'; override the default
       interface    by    specifying    an    alternate     interface     with
       MONITORED_NETWORK=wlan0 in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc

SESSIONS

       Byobu  name  screen sessions "byobu", if unspecified.  To hide sessions
       from byobu-select-session(1), prepend a "." to  the  beginning  of  the
       session name, like:

        byobu -S .hidden

WINDOWS

       Each  open  window  in the screen session is displayed in the upper bar
       toward the far left.  These are numbered, and include indicators as  to
       activity  in  the  window  (see  "activity"  in  screen(1)  for  symbol
       definitions).  The current active window is  highlighted  by  inverting
       the background/text from the rest of the window bar.

       Users   can   create  a  list  of  windows  to  launch  at  startup  in
       $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/windows.   This  file   is   the   same   syntax   as
       ~/.screenrc,  each line specifying a window using the "screen" command,
       as described in screen(1).

       User can also launch Byobu with unique window sets.   Users  can  store
       these  as  $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/windows.[NAME],  and launch Byobu with the
       environment variable BYOBU_WINDOWS.

       For example:
         $ cat $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/windows.ssh_sessions
         screen -t localhost bash
         screen -t aussie ssh root@aussie
         screen -t beagle ssh root@beagle
         screen -t collie ssh root@collie
         $ BYOBU_WINDOWS=ssh_sessions byobu

UNITS OF MEASURE

       byobu uses binary for capacity measurements of  KB,  MB,  GB,  and  TB.
       This  means  multiples  of  1024  rather  than  multiples  of  1000, in
       accordance with JEDEC Standard 100B.01 for  disk  and  memory  capacity
       measurements.  See:
        * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JEDEC_memory_standards

       byobu  uses  decimal for measurements of network data transfer, meaning
       multiple of 1000, rather than 1024.  See:
        * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_rate_units

KEYBINDINGS

       byobu keybindings can be user defined in  /usr/share/byobu/keybindings/
       (or within .screenrc if byobu-export was used). The common key bindings
       are:

       F2 - Create a new window

       F3 - Move to previous window

       F4 - Move to next window

       F5 - Reload profile

       F6 - Detach from this session

       F7 - Enter copy/scrollback mode

       F8 - Re-title a window

       F9 - Configuration Menu

       F12 -  Lock this terminal

       shift-F2 - Split the screen horizontally

       ctrl-F2 - Split the screen vertically

       shift-F3 - Shift the focus to the previous split region

       shift-F4 - Shift the focus to the next split region

       shift-F5 - Join all splits

       ctrl-F6 - Remove this split

       ctrl-F5 - Reconnect GPG and SSH sockets

       shift-F6 - Detach, but do not logout

       alt-pgup - Enter scrollback mode

       alt-pgdn - Enter scrollback mode

       Ctrl-a $ - show detailed status

       Ctrl-a R - Reload profile

       Ctrl-a ! - Toggle key bindings on and off

       Ctrl-a k - Kill the current window

       Ctrl-a ~ - Save the current window's scrollback buffer

BUGS

       For Byobu colors to work properly, older versions of GNU Screen require
       a 1-line patch to adjust MAX_WINMSG_REND in screen.c.  The change is in
       GNU Screen's upstream source control system as of 2010-01-26,  but  GNU
       Screen  has  not released a new upstream version in several years.  You
       can   disable   colors   entirely   by    setting    MONOCHROME=1    in
       $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc.  For more information, see:
        * http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?22146

       PuTTY users have reported that the F2, F3, and F4 shortcut keys are not
       working properly.  PuTTY sends the same escape sequences as  the  linux
       console  for  F1-F4  by default.  You can fix this problem in the PuTTY
       config,  Terminal  ->  Keyboard  ->  Function  keys:  Xterm  R6.   See:
       http://www.mail-archive.com/screen-users@gnu.org/msg01525.html

       Apple  Mac  OSX  terminal users have reported 'flashing text'.  You can
       fix this in the advanced settings of  the  terminal  application,  with
       'Declare Terminal As: xterm-color'.

       Apple Mac keyboard users may need to specify a vt100 terminal by adding
       this to your OSX profile, in order to get  Byobu's  function  keys  and
       colors to work:
         alias ssh='TERM=vt100 ssh'

       Users of a non-UTF8 locale (such as cs_CZ charset ISO-8859-2), may need
       to add "defutf8 off" to ~/.screenrc, if some characters  are  rendering
       as "?".

       Users  who  customize  their  PS1  prompt  need  to put this setting in
       ~/.bashrc, rather than ~/.profile, in order for it  to  work  correctly
       with Byobu.

       If  you  run  byobu(1)  under sudo(8), you must use the -H option, such
       that the user's $HOME directory environment variable is  set  properly.
       Otherwise,   byobu(1)  will  create  a  bunch  of  directories  in  the
       $SUDO_USER's $HOME, but will be owned by root.  To  prevent  this  from
       happening,  byobu(1)  will  simply  refuse to run if $USER does not own
       $HOME.

SEE ALSO

       screen(1), byobu-config(1),  byobu-export(1),  byobu-status(1),  byobu-
       status-detail(1), byobu-enable(1), byobu-launch(1)
       http://launchpad.net/byobu

AUTHOR

       This   manpage   and  the  utility  were  written  by  Dustin  Kirkland
       <kirkland@ubuntu.com> for Ubuntu systems (but may be used  by  others).
       Permission  is  granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
       and the utility under the terms of  the  GNU  General  Public  License,
       Version 3 published by the Free Software Foundation.

       The  complete  text  of  the GNU General Public License can be found in
       /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL  on   Debian/Ubuntu   systems,   or   in
       /usr/share/doc/fedora-release-*/GPL on Fedora systems, or on the web at
       http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.txt.