Provided by: xosview_1.17-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       xosview - X based system monitor

SYNOPSIS

       xosview [options]

DESCRIPTION

       xosview  is  a  monitor  which  displays  the  status of several system parameters.  These
       include CPU usage, load average,  memory,  swap  space,  network  usage  and  more.   Each
       resource  is  displayed  as  a  horizontal bar which is separated into color coded regions
       showing how much of the resource is being put to a particular use.

       xosview runs on several platforms (Linux, NetBSD,  FreeBSD,  OpenBSD,  DragonflyBSD,  some
       Solaris  systems,  IRIX  6.5,  HPUX  and  GNU).  Not all of the meters described below are
       supported on all platforms.  Some of the meters may appear different  depending  upon  the
       platform  xosview  is  running  on.  Note that *BSD is used as an abbreviation for all the
       supported BSD operating systems (NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, DragonflyBSD).

       Load: Kernel reported load average
          all platforms  :  load
          Linux          :  load | CPU frequency
          *BSD           :  load | CPU frequency
          SunOS5         :  load | CPU frequency

       CPU Usage
          Linux  : user | nice | system | soft-interrupt | interrupt | io-wait |
                   guest | niced guest | stolen | idle
          *BSD   : user | nice | system | interrupt | idle
          SunOS5 : user | system | wait | idle
          IRIX   : user | system | interrupt | wait | idle
          HPUX   : user | nice | system | interrupt | idle

       Memory Usage
          Linux  : used | buffers | slab | map | cache | free
          FreeBSD: active | inactive | wired | cache | free
          DFBSD  : active | inactive | wired | cache | free
          OpenBSD: active | inactive | wired | free
          NetBSD : active | inactive | wired | free
          SunOS5 : kernel | zfs | other | free
          IRIX   : kernel | fs | user | free
          HPUX   : text | used | other | free
          GNU    : active | inactive | wired | free

       Swap Usage
          Linux  : used | free
          *BSD   : used | free
          SunOS5 : used | free
          HPUX   : used | free
          GNU    : used | free

       Disk Usage: Throughput to/from local disk, per second
          Linux  : in | out | idle
          *BSD   : in | out | idle
          SunOS5 : in | out | idle

       Page Swapping: Pages to/from swap, per second
          Linux  : in | out | idle
          *BSD   : in | out | idle
          SunOS5 : in | out | idle
          HPUX   : in | out | idle
          GNU    : in | out | idle

       Network Usage
          Linux  : in | out | idle
          *BSD   : in | out | idle
          SunOS5 : in | out | idle

       GFX Usage: Framebuffer exchanges, per second
          IRIX   : swapbuffers

       Interrupts: "leds" which blink when an interrupt occurs
          Linux  : IRQs
          *BSD   : IRQs

       Interrupt Rate: Per second
          Linux  : interrupts | free
          *BSD   : interrupts | free
          SunOS5 : interrupts | free

       Serial Port Status: "leds" which show the serial port parameters
          Linux  : LSR and MSR

       Battery Level: charge and status of batteries
          Linux  : available | used
          *BSD   : available | used

       RAID: State of disks in a software RAID array
          Linux  : disk0 disk1 disk2 ... diskN | rebuild

       Wireless Link
          Linux  : quality

       Sensors: Readings from sensors
          Linux  : I2C/hwmon sensors (lmstemp)
                   Intel Core/AMD K8+/VIA C7 temperature (coretemp)
                   ACPI thermal zones (acpitemp)
          *BSD   : I2C sensors (bsdsensor)
                   Intel Core/AMD K8+ temperature (coretemp)

       Typing a 'q' in the window will terminate xosview.

OPTIONS

       Most of these command line options are just a  convenient  way  to  set  one  or  more  of
       xosview's  resources.   Please  see  the  RESOURCES  section  for more details on what the
       resource is for.

       -v
              Displays the version number.

       -name name
              Sets the Resource name xosview will use (same as the -name  option  for  typical  X
              applications  like  xterm).   When  performing  resource lookups, xosview will look
              under name, and then under ``xosview''.  For an example, perform the following  (as
              documented in README.netbsd):
                       xrdb -merge Xdefaults.stipple
                       xosview -name xosvstipple &
                       xosview -name xosvstipplebw &

       -display display
              Sets the X display to display.  This option overrides the xosview*display resource.

       -font font
              Specifies  the  font  xosview  will  use  for  labels.   This  option overrides the
              xosview*font resource.

       -title title
              This option sets the name xosview will tell the window manager to  use  for  the  X
              window and icon.  This option overrides the xosview*title resource.

       -geometry geometry_string
              Sets the X geometry to geometry_string.  This option overrides the xosview*geometry
              resource.

       -captions
              This option overrides the xosview*captions resource.  It is equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*captions to "False".

       +captions
              This  option  overrides the xosview*captions resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*captions to "True".
       -labels
              This option overrides the xosview*labels resource.  It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*labels to "False".

       +labels
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*labels resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*labels to "True".
       -usedlabels
              This option overrides the xosview*usedlabels resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*usedlabels to "False".

       +usedlabels
              This option overrides the xosview*usedlabels resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*usedlabels to "True".
       -cpu
              This option overrides the  xosview*cpu  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*cpu to "False".

       +cpu
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*cpu  resource.   It  is equivalent to setting
              xosview*cpu to "True".

       -cpus
              Force the display of a single meter for all CPUs in  the  system.  This  option  is
              equivalent to setting xosview*cpuFormat to "single".

       +cpus
              Force  the  display of all CPUs in the system. This option is equivalent to setting
              xosview*cpuFormat to "all".

       -load
              This option overrides the xosview*load  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*load to "False".

       +load
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*load  resource.   It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*load to "True".
       -mem
              This option overrides the  xosview*mem  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*mem to "False".

       +mem
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*mem  resource.   It  is equivalent to setting
              xosview*mem to "True".
       -swap
              This option overrides the xosview*swap  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*swap to "False".

       +swap
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*swap  resource.   It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*swap to "True".
       -battery
              This option overrides the xosview*battery resource.  It is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*battery to "False".

       +battery
              This  option  overrides  the xosview*battery resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*battery to "True".
       -gfx
              This option overrides the  xosview*gfx  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*gfx to "False".

       +gfx
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*gfx  resource.   It  is equivalent to setting
              xosview*gfx to "True".
       -wireless
              This option overrides the xosview*wireless resource.  It is equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*wireless to "False".

       +wireless
              This  option  overrides the xosview*wireless resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*wireless to "True".
       -net
              This option overrides the  xosview*net  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*net to "False".

       +net
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*net  resource.   It  is equivalent to setting
              xosview*net to "True".

       -network maxbandwidth
       -networkBW maxbandwidth
       -networkBandwidth maxbandwidth
              These options override the xosview*netBandwidth resource.  They  cause  xosview  to
              display  a  meter  that  will  shows  network  usage,  with  a maximum bandwidth of
              maxbandwidth.  Notice that setting the bandwidth to 0 no longer disables the  meter
              -- use the ``-net'' option instead.

       -page
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*page  resource.   It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*page to "False".

       +page
              This option overrides the xosview*page  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*page to "True".

       -pagespeed val
              This   option   overrides   the   xosview*pageBandWidth   resource.   The  resource
              xosview*pageBandWidth will be set to val.

       -disk
              This option overrides the xosview*disk  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*disk to "False".

       +disk
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*disk  resource.   It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*disk to "True".
       -int
              This option overrides the  xosview*int  resource.   It  is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*int to "False".

       +int
              This  option  overrides  the  xosview*int  resource.   It  is equivalent to setting
              xosview*int to "True".

       -ints +ints
       -interrupts +interrupts
              Equivalent to -int and +int.

       -irqrate
              This option overrides the xosview*irqrate resource.  It is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*irqrate to "False".

       +irqrate
              This  option  overrides  the xosview*irqrate resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*irqrate to "True".

       -intrate +intrate
              Equivalent to -irqrate and +irqrate.

       -lmstemp
              This option overrides the xosview*lmstemp resource.  It is  equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*lmstemp to "False".

       +lmstemp
              This  option  overrides  the xosview*lmstemp resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*lmstemp to "True".
       -coretemp
              This option overrides the xosview*coretemp resource.  It is equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*coretemp to "False".

       +coretemp
              This  option  overrides the xosview*coretemp resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*coretemp to "True".
       -acpitemp
              This option overrides the xosview*acpitemp resource.  It is equivalent  to  setting
              xosview*acpitemp to "False".

       +acpitemp
              This  option  overrides the xosview*acpitemp resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*acpitemp to "True".
       -bsdsensor
              This option overrides the xosview*bsdsensor resource.  It is equivalent to  setting
              xosview*bsdsensor to "False".

       +bsdsensor
              This  option overrides the xosview*bsdsensor resource.  It is equivalent to setting
              xosview*bsdsensor to "True".

       -xrm resource_string
              This switch allows any of xosview's resources to be set on the  command  line.   An
              example  of  how  the  xosview*memFreeColor could be set using this option is shown
              below (Note the use of " to prevent the shell from expanding ´*´ or  from  creating
              two separate arguments, ´xosview*memfreeColor:´ and ´purple´):
                     -xrm "xosview*memFreeColor: purple"

X RESOURCES

       The  following  is  a  list of X resources supported by xosview.  Each has a default value
       assigned to it.  These values can be found in the file Xdefaults which can be obtained  in
       the  source  distribution  of  xosview.   They  can  be  overridden  in  the  usual places
       (/usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/XOsview, $HOME/.Xdefaults, etc.).

       It should be noted that it is OK to have a resource defined for a  port  of  xosview  that
       does  not  support  the  feature  the resource configures.  Xosview will simply ignore the
       resources that are set for it but not supported on a given platform.

       General Resources

       xosview*title: name
              The string that xosview will use for the X window title.  Normally xosview will use
              'xosview@machine_name' for a title.  This resource overrides the default behavior.

       xosview*geometry: geometry_string
              This  is  a  standard X geometry string that defines the size and location of the X
              window used by xosview.

       xosview*display: name
              The name of the display where xosview will contact the X  server  for  drawing  its
              window.

       xosview*pixmapName: name
              The filename of an X pixmap (xpm) file for use as a background image.

       xosview*captions: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display meter captions.

       xosview*labels: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display meter labels.

       xosview*meterLabelColor: color
              The color to use for the meter labels.

       xosview*usedlabels: (True or False)
              If  True  then xosview will display labels that show the percentage of the resource
              (or absolute amount, depending on the meter) being used.  This option requires that
              the labels option also be set to True.

       xosview*usedLabelColor: color
              The color to use for "used" labels.

       xosview*borderwidth: width
              The width of the border for the xosview window.

       xosview*font: font
              This is the font that xosview will use.

       xosview*background: color
              This is the color that will be used for the background.

       xosview*foreground: color
              This is the color that will be used for the foreground.

       xosview*enableStipple: (True or False)
              Change  to  true  to  try  stipple support.  This is primarily for users stuck with
              1-bit monitors/display cards.  Try setting  enableStipple  true.   Please  give  us
              feedback  on this, if you use it.  It needs some more work, but no one has given us
              any feedback so far.

       xosview*graphNumCols: number
              This defines the number of sample bars drawn when a meter  is  in  scrolling  graph
              mode.  This  also  has  the side-effect of defining the width of the graph columns.
              This is only used by meters which have graph mode enabled.

       Load Meter Resources

       xosview*load: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a load meter.

       xosview*loadProcColor: color
              This is the color that the load meter will use to display the load average when  it
              is below the warning threshold.

       xosview*loadWarnColor: color
              This  is  the color that the load meter will use once the load average is above the
              warning but below the critical load threshold.

       xosview*loadCritColor: color
              This is the color that the load meter will use  once  the  load  average  is  above
              critical load threshold.

       xosview*loadIdleColor: color
              The load meter will use this color to display the idle field.

       xosview*loadPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the load meter waits between updates.  A value of 1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*loadWarnThreshold: int
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the value at which  the  loadmeter
              changes  its status and color from "normal" to "warning".  The default value is the
              number of processors.

       xosview*loadCritThreshold: int
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the value at which  the  loadmeter
              changes  its  status  and color from "warning" to "critical".  The default value is
              four times the warning threshold.

       xosview*loadDecay: (True or False)
              You should probably leave this at the default value (False).  The load is already a
              time-averaged value!

       xosview*loadGraph: (True or False)
              If  this  is  set  to  True  then  the  load  meter will be drawn as a horizontally
              scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*loadUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       xosview*loadCpuSpeed: (True or False)
              Display the current CPU speed in the load meter.

       CPU Meter Resources

       xosview*cpu: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a cpu meter. On Linux, *BSD, Solaris and IRIX SMP
              machines, the resource cpuFormat defines how meters are created for multiple CPUs.

       xosview*cpuUserColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu user time field.

       xosview*cpuNiceColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu nice time field.

       xosview*cpuSystemColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu system time field.

       xosview*cpuInterruptColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu hard interrupt time field.

       xosview*cpuSInterruptColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu soft interrupt time field.

       xosview*cpuWaitColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu IO waiting time field.

       xosview*cpuGuestColor: color
              The  cpu  meter  will  use  this color to display the cpu virtualization guest time
              field.

       xosview*cpuNiceGuestColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the  cpu  niced  virtualization  guest
              time field.

       xosview*cpuStolenColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu involuntary wait time field.

       xosview*cpuFreeColor: color
              The cpu meter will use this color to display the cpu idle time field.

       xosview*cpuPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the cpu meter waits between updates.  A value of  1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*cpuDecay: (True or False)
              If True then the cpu meter will be split vertically in two.  The top half will show
              the  instantaneous  state, while the bottom half will display a decaying average of
              the state.

       xosview*cpuGraph: (True or False)
              If this is set to True then the cpu meter will be drawn as a horizontally scrolling
              bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*cpuUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This  resource  tells  xosview  how  to display "used" labels.  The formats work as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       xosview*cpuFormat: (single, all, both or auto)
              If `single', only a cumulative meter for all CPU usage is created.  `all' creates a
              meter for each CPU, but no cumulative meter. `both' creates  one  cumulative  meter
              and one for each CPU. `auto' makes a choice based on the number of CPUs found.

       xosview*cpuFields: USED/USR/NIC/SYS/INT/SI/HI/WIO/GST/NGS/STL/IDLE
              The  set  of  fields  to  show  in Linux CPU meter instead of the default. Possible
              fields are:

              USED:
                     Combine all used CPU time into one field. This is the  sum  of  user,  nice,
                     system, soft and hard interrupts, guest, niced guest and stolen times.  None
                     of these, except stolen, may be defined together with `USED'.
              IDLE:
                     Time spent doing nothing. Includes I/O wait if it is not defined separately.
              USR:
                     Time spent in user mode processes. Includes nice, guest and niced  guest  if
                     those are not defined separately.
              NIC:
                     Time  spent in niced user mode processes. Includes niced guest if neither it
                     nor guest is not defined separately.
              SYS:
                     Time spent in kernel code. Includes soft  and  hard  interrupt  as  well  as
                     stolen time if those are not defined separately.
              INT:
                     Combines soft and hard interrupt handling times into one field.
              SI:
                     Time  the  kernel  used to handle soft interrupts. Available on Linux kernel
                     2.6.0 and higher.
              HI:
                     Time the kernel used to handle hard interrupts. Available  on  Linux  kernel
                     2.6.0 and higher.
              WIO:
                     Time  spent waiting for I/O to complete. Available on Linux kernel 2.6.0 and
                     higher.
              GST:
                     Time spent running guest OS in virtual machine. Includes niced guest  if  it
                     is not defined separately. Available on Linux kernel 2.6.24 and higher.
              NGS:
                     Time  spent  running  niced  guest OS in virtual machine. Available on Linux
                     kernel 2.6.32 and higher.
              STL:
                     Involuntary wait time when running as guest in virtual machine. Available on
                     Linux kernel 2.6.11 and higher.

              Most combinations are possible (see above for restrictions), but at least `USED' or
              `USR' and `SYS' need to be defined. `IDLE' field is added automatically.

       Memory Meter Resources

       xosview*mem: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a mem meter.

       xosview*memUsedColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the used memory field.

       xosview*memSharedColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the shared memory field.

       xosview*memBufferColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the buffer memory field.

       xosview*memCacheColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the cache memory field.

       xosview*memFreeColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the free memory field.

       xosview*memKernelColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the kernel memory field.

       xosview*memSharedColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the shared memory field.

       xosview*memTextColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the HP text memory field.

       xosview*memOtherColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the HP ``other'' memory field.

       xosview*memActiveColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the *BSD active memory field.

       xosview*memInactiveColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the *BSD inactive memory field.

       xosview*memWiredColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the *BSD wired memory field.

       xosview*memSlabColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the Linux  in-kernel  data  structures
              field.

       xosview*memMapColor: color
              The mem meter will use this color to display the Linux memory mapped files field.

       xosview*memPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the mem meter waits between updates.  A value of  1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*memDecay: (True or False)
              If True then the mem meter will be split vertically in two.  The top half will show
              the  instantaneous  state, while the bottom half will display a decaying average of
              the state.

       xosview*memGraph: (True or False)
              If this is set to True then the mem meter will be drawn as a horizontally scrolling
              bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*memUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This  resource  tells  xosview  how  to display "used" labels.  The formats work as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Swap Meter Resources

       xosview*swap: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a swap meter.

       xosview*swapUsedColor: color
              The swap meter will use this color to display the used swap field.

       xosview*swapFreeColor: color
              The swap meter will use this color to display the free swap field.

       xosview*swapPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the swap meter waits between updates.  A value of 1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*swapDecay: (True or False)
              If True then the swap meter will be split vertically in two.   The  top  half  will
              show the instantaneous state, while the bottom half will display a decaying average
              of the state.

       xosview*swapGraph: (True or False)
              If this is set to True then  the  swap  meter  will  be  drawn  as  a  horizontally
              scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*swapUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This  resource  tells  xosview  how  to display "used" labels.  The formats work as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Page Swapping Meter Resources

       xosview*page: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a page meter.

       xosview*pageBandWidth: maxEvents
              This number is used to specify the expected maximum bandwidth (in events / sec) for
              the page meter.  When the expected maximum bandwidth (maxEvents) is  exceeded  then
              the  page  meter will display the relative percentage of page swapping (25% in, 75%
              out).

       xosview*pageInColor: color
              The page meter will use this color to display the page-in field.

       xosview*pageOutColor: color
              The page meter will use this color to display the page-out field.

       xosview*pageIdleColor: color
              The page meter will use this color to display the idle field.

       xosview*pagePriority: priority
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of  a  second
              that  the  page  meter  waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update the
              meter 10 times per second (the fastest).  A value of 600  would  cause  xosview  to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*pageDecay: (True or False)
              If  True  then  the  page meter will be split vertically in two.  The top half will
              show the instantaneous state, while the bottom half will display a decaying average
              of the state.

       xosview*pageGraph: (True or False)
              If  this  is  set  to  True  then  the  page  meter will be drawn as a horizontally
              scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*pageUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Gfx Meter Resources

       xosview*gfx:   (True or False)
              If True xosview will display the GfxMeter. The value is sampled  once  per  second,
              due to the usage of sadc to sample data.

       xosview*gfxWarnColor: color
              This is the color that the gfx meter will use once the warn state is reached.

       xosview*gfxAlarmColor: color
              This is the color that the gfx meter will use once the alarm state is reached.

       xosview*gfxSwapColor: color
              This is the color that the gfx meter will use in normal state

       xosview*gfxIdleColor: color
              The gfx meter will use this color to display the idle field.

       xosview*gfxPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the gfx meter waits between updates.  A value of  1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*gfxWarnThreshold: int
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) of swapbuffers per second and  pipe  at
              which  the  gfxmeter  changes  its  status  and  color from "normal" to "warn". The
              default value is 60.

       xosview*gfxAlarmThreshold: int
              This number (which must be an  integer  >=  gfxWarnThreshold)  of  swapbuffers  per
              second  and  pipe at which the gfxmeter changes its status and color from "warn" to
              "alarm". The default value is 120.

       xosview*gfxDecay: (True or False)
              You should probably leave this at the default value (False).  The gfx does not work
              in decay mode.

       xosview*gfxGraph: (True or False)
              If this is set to True then the gfx meter will be drawn as a horizontally scrolling
              bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*gfxUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Network Meter Resources

       xosview*net: (True or False)
              If True xosview will display the NetMeter.  Linux  users  will  have  to  configure
              their  kernels  and setup some ip accounting rules to make this work.  See the file
              README.linux which comes with the xosview distribution for details.

       xosview*netBandwidth: maxBytes
              This number is used to specify the expected maximum bandwidth (in bytes / sec)  for
              the  meter.   When  the  expected maximum bandwidth (maxBytes) is exceeded then the
              network meter will display the relative percentage of network usage (25%  incoming,
              75% outgoing).

       xosview*netIface: interface
              If  False, xosview will display the data received/transmitted by any of the network
              interfaces. Otherwise, xosview will only display the data  received/transmitted  by
              the  specified  network interface. If the name is prepended with '-' sign, the data
              in that interface is ignored.

       xosview*netInColor: color
              The net meter will use this color to display the incoming field.

       xosview*netOutColor: color
              The net meter will use this color to display the outgoing field.

       xosview*netBackground: color
              This is the color that the network meter will use for the "idle" field.

       xosview*netPriority: priority
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of  a  second
              that  the  net  meter  waits  between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update the
              meter 10 times per second (the fastest).  A value of 600  would  cause  xosview  to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*netDecay: (True or False)
              If True then the net meter will be split vertically in two.  The top half will show
              the instantaneous state, while the bottom half will display a decaying  average  of
              the state.

       xosview*netGraph: (True or False)
              If this is set to True then the net meter will be drawn as a horizontally scrolling
              bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*netUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       NFSStats (Client) Resources

       xosview*NFSStats: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a meter to monitor NFS client stats.

       xosview*NFSStatReTransColor: color
              The color to be used for retransmit stats.

       xosview*NFSStatAuthRefrshColor:    color
              The color to be used for auth refresh stats.

       xosview*NFSStatCallsColor: color
              The color to be used for call stats.

       xosview*NFSStatIdleColor: color
              The color to be used for idle stats.

       NFSDStats (Server) Resources

       xosview*NFSDStats: (True or False)
              If True xosview will display a meter for NFS server/daemon stats.

       xosview*NFSDStatCallsColor: color
              The color to be used for call stats.

       xosview*NFSDStatBadCallsColor: color
              The color to be used for bad stats.

       xosview*NFSDStatUDPColor: color
              The color to be used for UDP stats.

       xosview*NFSDStatTCPColor: color
              The color to be used for TCP stats.

       xosview*NFSDStatIdleColor: color
              The color to be used for idle stats.

       Serial Meter Resources

       xosview*serial(0-9): (True, False, or portBase)
              If True then xosview will display a serial meter for ttySx.  The portbase  will  be
              autodetected.   Because  autodetection can fail, (if the port is locked by ppp/slip
              for example) you can specify the portbase instead of "True".  If a portBase is used
              then xosview will use it instead of trying to autodetect.

              For  this to work on Linux xosview needs to be suid root in order to have access to
              the ports.  See the file README.linux which comes with the xosview distribution for
              more details.

       xosview*serialOnColor: color
              This is the color the serial meter will use for bits that are set.

       xosview*serialOffColor: color
              This is the color the serial meter will use for bits that are not set.

       xosview*serialPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the serial meter waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       Interrupt Meter Resources

       xosview*interrupts: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display an interrupt meter.

       xosview*intSeparate: (True of False)
              If True then xosview will display one interrupt meter per CPU on SMP  machines.  If
              False only one meter is displayed. Default: True.

       xosview*intOnColor: color
              This is the color that will be used to show "active" interrupts.

       xosview*intOffColor: color
              This is the color that will be used to show "inactive" interrupts.

       xosview*intPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the int meter waits between updates.  A value of  1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       Interrupt Rate Meter Resources

       xosview*irqrate: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display an interrupt rate meter.

       xosview*irqrateUsedColor: color
              This is the color that will be used to show the interrupt rate.

       xosview*irqrateIdleColor: color
              The irqrate meter will use this color to display the idle field.

       xosview*irqratePriority: priority
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of  a  second
              that  the irqrate meter waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update the
              meter 10 times per second (the fastest).  A value of 600  would  cause  xosview  to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*irqrateDecay: (True or False)
              If  True then the irqrate meter will be split vertically in two.  The top half will
              show the instantaneous state, while the bottom half will display a decaying average
              of the state.

       xosview*irqrateGraph: (True or False)
              If  this  is  set  to  True  then the irqrate meter will be drawn as a horizontally
              scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*irqrateUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Lm Sensors Resources

       xosview*lmstemp: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a lmstemp meter.

       xosview*lmstempHighest: number
              Highest value displayed. If not given, or too small, the meter will adjust  to  fit
              actual and alarm values. Can be overridden for any meter with lmstempHighestN.

       xosview*lmstempActColor: color
              Color of actual value.

       xosview*lmstempHighColor: color
              Color above high alarm value, also used to indicate alarm.

       xosview*lmstempLowColor: color
              Color of actual value, when it is below low alarm value.

       xosview*lmstempIdleColor: color
              Color between actual and high alarm values.

       xosview*lmstempN: filename
              Name of input file from /proc/sys/dev/sensors/*/* or /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/,
              N=1,2,3,... Can also be absolute path.  For example,
              xosview*lmstemp1: temp1
              xosview*lmstemp2: temp2_input

              Note: Many sensors have the value and alarm threshold in files named "*_input"  and
              "*_max"/"*_min",  respectively.  In  such  case,  specifying  the base name such as
              "temp1" here will be enough for having both files used.

              Note: If the same file name as lmstempN, lmshighN or lmslowN exists in other sensor
              directories,  then  lmsnameN  needs to be specified, or absolute path used, to find
              the correct one.

       xosview*lmshighN: filename or number
              Optional high alarm value  or  name  of  file  from  /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/,
              N=1,2,3,... Can also be absolute path. If not given, lmstempHighest is used as both
              maximum and high alarm. For example,
              xosview*lmshigh1: 70
              xosview*lmshigh2: temp1_crit_hyst

       xosview*lmslowN: filename or number
              Optional low alarm  value  or  name  of  file  from  /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/,
              N=1,2,3,... Can also be absolute path. Default is 0. For example,
              xosview*lmslow1: 1.5
              xosview*lmslow2: fan1_min

       xosview*lmsnameN: name
              Optional  name  of  the  sensor device to use when finding the filename(s) given in
              lmstempN, lmshighN and lmslowN. See /sys/class/hwmon/*/{,device}/name for the names
              of your sensors. This has no effect to files given as absolute paths. For example,
              xosview*lmsname1: nct6779
              xosview*lmsname2: radeon

       xosview*lmstempLabelN: string
              N-th label for above values, default is TMP.

       xosview*lmstempHighestN: number
              Override default lmstempHighest for meter N.

       xosview*lmstempUsedFormatN: (float, percent or autoscale)
              Override default lmstempUsedFormat for meter N.

       xosview*lmstempPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the lmstemp meter waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*lmstempUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       ACPI Temperature Resources

       xosview*acpitemp: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a acpitemp meter.

       xosview*acpitempHighest: 100
              Highest temp value displayed, default 100. If acpihighN is given, the value is read
              from there instead.

       xosview*acpitempActColor:  color
              Color of actual temperature.

       xosview*acpitempHighColor:  color
              Color above alarm temperature, also used to indicate alarm.

       xosview*acpitempIdleColor:   color
              Color between actual and alarm temperatures.

       xosview*acpitempN: filename
              Name      of      temperature      file     from     /proc/acpi/thermal_zone     or
              /sys/devices/virtual/thermal. Note that the last directory part must be given, e.g.
              TZ0/temperature. Absolute path can also be used.

       xosview*acpihighN:    filename
              Name    of   high   value/trip   point   file   from   /proc/acpi/thermal_zone   or
              /sys/devices/virtual/thermal, or an absolute path to one.

       xosview*acpitempLabelN:  Labelstring
              N-th label for above temperatures, default is TMP.

       xosview*acpitempPriority: priority
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of  a  second
              that the acpitemp meter waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update the
              meter 10 times per second (the fastest).  A value of 600  would  cause  xosview  to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*acpitempUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This  resource  tells  xosview  how  to display "used" labels.  The formats work as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Intel Core / AMD K8+ / VIA C7 Temperature Sensor Resources

       xosview*coretemp: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a coretemp meter.

       xosview*coretempHighest: 100
              Highest temp value displayed, default 100. If CPU throttling temperature (tjMax) is
              supplied by the operating system, it is used instead.

       xosview*coretempHigh: number
              Value to use as alarm temperature, default is coretempHighest. If a  usable  value,
              such  as  the temperature for which maximum cooling is required, is supplied by the
              operating system, it is used instead.

       xosview*coretempActColor:  color
              Color of actual temperature.

       xosview*coretempHighColor:  color
              Color above alarm temperature, also used to indicate alarm.

       xosview*coretempIdleColor:   color
              Color between actual and alarm temperatures.

       xosview*coretempDisplayType: (separate, average or maximum)
              This resource tells xosview how to display the CPU temperature. The formats work as
              follows:

              separate:
                     Display  one  meter  for  each  CPU  core  of  a multi-core CPU. This is the
                     default.
              average:
                     Display the average of core temperatures of  a  multi-core  CPU.  On  multi-
                     socket machines, one meter per physical CPU is displayed.
              maximum:
                     Display  the  highest  core temperature of a multi-core CPU. On multi-socket
                     machines, one meter per physical CPU is displayed.

       xosview*coretempPriority: priority
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of  a  second
              that the coretemp meter waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update the
              meter 10 times per second (the fastest).  A value of 600  would  cause  xosview  to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*coretempUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This  resource  tells  xosview  how  to display "used" labels.  The formats work as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       *BSD Sensor Resources

       xosview*bsdsensor: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a bsdsensor meter.

       xosview*bsdsensorHighest: number
              Highest  value  displayed. If not given, or too small, the meter will adjust to fit
              actual and alarm values. Can be overridden for any meter with bsdsensorHighestN.

       xosview*bsdsensorActColor: color
              Color of actual value.

       xosview*bsdsensorHighColor: color
              Color above high alarm value, also used to indicate alarm.

       xosview*bsdsensorLowColor: color
              Color of actual value, when it is below low alarm value.

       xosview*bsdsensorIdleColor: color
              Color between actual and high alarm values.

       xosview*bsdsensorN:     name.type
       xosview*bsdsensorHighN: name.type
       xosview*bsdsensorLowN:  name.type
              These define where the actual value, high alarm value and low alarm value for meter
              N=1,2,3,...  will  be  read  from.  The  name is the sensor driver, and type is the
              wanted value. Both alarm values are optional, and  can  also  be  given  as  static
              numerical values.

              You  can  find  the correct pair for OpenBSD and DragonFly BSD with systat command,
              e.g.
              xosview*bsdsensor1:     it0.temp1
              xosview*bsdsensorHigh1: 100

              On NetBSD, you can find the driver name with envstat command. Value  name  for  the
              actual  reading  is typically 'cur-value' and for high alarm 'critical-max' and for
              low alarm 'critical-min', e.g.
              xosview*bsdsensor2:     coretemp0.cur-value
              xosview*bsdsensorHigh2: coretemp0.critical-max

              For all possible NetBSD value names, refer to envstat source code.

              FreeBSD has no usable sensor drivers as of version 9.0. However, ACPI thermal zones
              can be used by defining the sysctl node below hw.acpi.thermal, e.g.
              xosview*bsdsensor1:     tz0.temperature
              xosview*bsdsensorHigh1: tz0._CRT

              ACPI thermal zones can be used like this on DragonFly BSD as well.

       xosview*bsdsensorLabelN: string
              N-th label for above meters, default is SENN.

       xosview*bsdsensorHighestN: number
              Override default bsdsensorHighest for meter N.

       xosview*bsdsensorUsedFormatN: (float, percent or autoscale)
              Override default bsdsensorUsedFormat for meter N.

       xosview*bsdsensorPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the bsdsensor meter waits between updates.  A value of 1  has  xosview  update
              the meter 10 times per second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*bsdsensorUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Battery Meter Resources

       xosview*battery: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a battery meter.  Linux users will need  to  have
              APM  or  ACPI  support  in  their kernels for this to work.  For both APM and ACPI,
              xosview shows the status/sum of all batteries.  Additionally - the legend text gets
              changed/adjusted  to  reflect the current state (charging/low/critical/etc.) of the
              battery/batteries.

       xosview*batteryLeftColor: color
              This is the color that will be used to show the amount of battery power left.

       xosview*batteryUsedColor: color
              This is the color that will be used to show the amount of battery power used.

       xosview*batteryChargeColor: color
              This is the color that will be used as 'left' - if the batteries get charged.

       xosview*batteryFullColor: color
              This is the color that will be used as 'left' - if the batteries are fully charged.
              APM and ACPI does provide this info, but not all machines actually do so.

       xosview*batteryLowColor: color
              APM  only  -  the  'left'  color  that will indicate a low battery.  Depends on the
              machine - e.g. below 25% remaining capacity.

       xosview*batteryCritColor: color
              APM case: the 'left' color if APM indicates 'critical' state. (less than  5%)  ACPI
              case:  the 'left' color if the remaining capacity is below the alarm value.  (which
              can be set by the user in /proc/acpi/battery/BAT[01]/alarm )

       xosview*batteryNoneColor: color
              If no battery is present - or all batteries get removed (while on AC).

       xosview*batteryPriority: priority
              This number (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of  a  second
              that  the battery meter waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update the
              meter 10 times per second (the fastest).  A value of 600  would  cause  xosview  to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*batteryUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This  resource  tells  xosview  how  to display "used" labels.  The formats work as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Wireless Meter Resources

       xosview*wireless: (True or False)
              If  True  then  xosview  will display the link quality of each wireless connection.
              Note that the graph will *never* show up, if you don't have any  wireless  devices,
              or no wireless extensions in the kernel (/proc/net/wireless).  Default is true.

       xosview*PoorQualityColor: color
              This is the color for the quality field when between 0 and 6.

       xosview*FairQualityColor: color
              This is the color for the quality field when between 7 and 14.

       xosview*GoodQualityColor: color
              This is the color for the quality field when higher than 14.

       xosview*wirelessUsedColor: color
              This is the background color.

       xosview*wirelessPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the wireless meter waits between updates.  A value of 1 has xosview update the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*wirelessDecay: (True or False)
              If True then the wireless meter will be split vertically in two.  The top half will
              show the instantaneous state, while the bottom half will display a decaying average
              of the state.

       xosview*wirelessUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       Disk Meter Resources

       xosview*disk: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a disk meter.

       xosview*diskInColor: color
              The disk meter will use this color to display the reads field.

       xosview*diskOutColor: color
              The disk meter will use this color to display the writes field.

       xosview*diskIdleColor: color
              The disk meter will use this color to display the idle field.

       xosview*diskBandwidth: bandwidth
              This number is used to specify the expected maximum bandwidth in bytes  per  second
              for the disk meter.

       xosview*diskWriteColor: color
              This color will be used for the linux meter to show writes.

       xosview*diskReadColor: color
              This color will be used for the linux meter to show reads.

       xosview*diskPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the disk meter waits between updates.  A value of 1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*diskDecay: (True or False)
              If True then the disk meter will be split vertically in two.   The  top  half  will
              show the instantaneous state, while the bottom half will display a decaying average
              of the state.

       xosview*diskGraph: (True or False)
              If this is set to True then  the  disk  meter  will  be  drawn  as  a  horizontally
              scrolling bargraph showing the state value verses time.

       xosview*diskUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This  resource  tells  xosview  how  to display "used" labels.  The formats work as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

       RAID Meter Resources

       xosview*RAID: (True or False)
              If True then xosview will display a RAID meter.

       xosview*RAIDdevicecount: int
              Please  enter  your RAID device count (n) here or 0 if you don't have any supported
              RAID devices. xosview then will display n RAID state displays.

       xosview*RAIDdiskOnlineColor: color

       xosview*RAIDdiskFailureColor: color
              These colors will be used for indicating working/online  or  failed/offline  disks.
              The order (from left to right) is the same as in /proc/mdstat.

       xosview*RAIDresyncdoneColor: color

       xosview*RAIDresynctodoColor: color

       xosview*RAIDresynccompleteColor: color
              If  a resync/rebuild of the RAID array is in progress, the "done" and "todo" colors
              will be used. If no rebuild/resync is running, then the "complete"  color  will  be
              shown.

       xosview*RAIDPriority: priority
              This  number  (which must be an integer >= 1) sets the number of tenths of a second
              that the RAID meter waits between updates.  A value of 1  has  xosview  update  the
              meter  10  times  per  second (the fastest).  A value of 600 would cause xosview to
              update the meter once a minute.

       xosview*RAIDUsedFormat: (float, percent or autoscale)
              This resource tells xosview how to display "used"  labels.   The  formats  work  as
              follows:

              float:
                     Display the value as a floating point number.
              percent:
                     Display the value as a percentage of the total.
              autoscale:
                     Display the absolute value and automatically print the units (K, M, or G) as
                     appropriate.

OBTAINING

       This version of xosview is distributed from the following site:

              http://www.pogo.org.uk/~mark/xosview/

AUTHORS

       Mike Romberg  <mike.romberg@noaa.gov>
              Original author, Linux and HPUX ports.

       Brian Grayson <bgrayson@netbsd.org>
              NetBSD port and most of the nice enhancements for  version  1.4,  initial  work  on
              FreeBSD port.

       Scott McNab <jedi@tartarus.uwa.edu.au>
              Added the scrolling graph mode.

       Tom Pavel <pavel@slac.stanford.edu>
              Most of the FreeBSD support, more resource-handling improvements.

       Greg Onufer <exodus@cheers.bungi.com>
              SunOS port.

       Stefan Eilemann <eilemann@gmail.com>
              IRIX 6.5 port.

       Sheldon Hearn <axl@iafrica.com>
              FreeBSD libdevstat-based diskmeter support.

       David W. Talmage <talmage@jefferson.cmf.nrl.navy.mil>
              Added battery-meter support to NetBSD.

       Oleg Safiullin <form@openbsd.org>
              OpenBSD interrupt-meter support.

       Werner Fink <werner@suse.de>
              Originator of the loadmeter.

       Massimiliano Ghilardi <ghilardi@cibs.sns.it>
              Linux pagemeter.

       Carsten Schabacker <cschaba@spock.central.de>
              Made extensions to the serial-meter.

       Paal Beyer <pbeyer@online.no>
              Ported the linux memstat kernel module to linux-2.1

       Jerome Forissier <forissier@isia.cma.fr>
              Author  of the Linux SMP kernel patch which xosview uses to display meters for each
              CPU.

       Tomer Klainer <mandor@cs.huji.ac.il>
              Initial port to BSDI.

       Arno Augustin <Arno.Augustin@3SOFT.de>
              Solaris disk and network meters.

       Alberto BARSELLA <ishark@lsh01.univ-lille1.fr>
              Fixes for linux diskmeter + ip_chains support

       Thomas Waldmann <ThomasWaldmann@gmx.de>
              Linux raid meter, bitfieldmeter.  Many cosmetic fixes.

       Leopold Toetsch <lt@toetsch.at>
              Linux lms temp meter.

       David O'Brien <obrien@nuxi.com>
              FreeBSD 4.* updates, and a few other suggestions.

       Christos Zoulas <christos@netbsd.org>
              C++ standard compliance and other NetBSD fixes.

       Tim Ehlers <tehlers@gwdg.de>
              Wireless Link-Meter for Linux.

       Mark Hills <mark@pogo.org.uk>
              Bug fixes and general caretaking.

       Tomi Tapper <tomi.o.tapper@student.jyu.fi>
              Temperature sensor, and FreeBSD updates.

       Raymond S Brand (rsbx@acm.org)
              Misc fixes.

       And many others who have sent in small fixes and improvements.