Provided by: inxi_3.3.35-1-1_all bug

NAME

       inxi - Command line system information script for console and IRC

SYNOPSIS

       inxi

       inxi [-AbBCdDEfFGhiIjJlLmMnNopPrRsSuUwyYzZ]

       inxi  [-c  -NUMBER]  [--sensors-exclude  SENSORS]  [--sensors-use  SENSORS]  [-t [c|m|cm|mc][NUMBER]] [-v
       NUMBER] [-w [LOCATION]] [--weather-unit {m|i|mi|im}] [-y WIDTH]

       inxi  [--edid]   [--memory-modules]   [--memory-short]   [--recommends]   [--sensors-default]   [--slots]
       [--version]  [--version-short]

       inxi [-x|-xx|-xxx|-a] -OPTION(s)

       All short form options have long form variants - see below for these and more advanced options.

DESCRIPTION

       inxi  is  a command line system information script built for console and IRC. It is also used a debugging
       tool for forum technical support to quickly ascertain users' system  configurations  and  hardware.  inxi
       shows  system  hardware,  CPU, drivers, Xorg, Desktop, Kernel, compiler version(s), Processes, RAM usage,
       and a wide variety of other useful information.

       inxi output varies depending on whether it is being used on CLI or IRC, with  some  default  filters  and
       color options applied only for IRC use.  Script colors can be turned off if desired with -c 0, or changed
       using the -c color options listed in the STANDARD OPTIONS section below.

PRIVACY AND SECURITY

       In order to maintain basic privacy and security, inxi used on IRC automatically filters out your  network
       device MAC address, WAN and LAN IP, your /home username directory in partitions, and a few other items.

       Because  inxi is often used on forums for support, you can also trigger this filtering with the -z option
       (-Fz, for example). To override the IRC filter, you can  use  the  -Z  option.  This  can  be  useful  in
       debugging network connection issues online in a private chat, for example.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

       This man page is pretty long and information packed. It is divided into the following sections:

       * USING OPTIONS How to use the command line options.

       * STANDARD OPTIONS Primary data types trigger items.

       * FILTER OPTIONS Apply a variety of output filters.

       * OUTPUT CONTROL OPTIONS Change default colors, widths, heights, output types, etc.

       * EXTRA DATA OPTIONS What -x, -xx, and -xxx add to the output per primary data type.

       *  ADMIN  EXTRA  DATA  OPTIONS  What  -a  adds  to  the output per primary data type. These have a lot of
       information because this is advanced admin data, which are not always intuitive or easy to understand.

       * ADVANCED OPTIONS Modify behavior or choice of data sources, and other advanced switches.

       * DEBUGGING OPTIONS For development use mainly, or contributing datasets to the project.

       * DEBUGGING OPTIONS TO DEBUG DEBUGGER FAILURES Only for advanced users, sometimes something will hang the
       debuggers, this shows you various ways to get around those failures.

       *  SUPPORTED  IRC  CLIENTS List of known good IRC clients. Not checked often, let us know if something is
       not working.

       * RUNNING IN IRC CLIENT How to run inxi in various IRC clients.

       * CONFIGURATION FILE Configuration file locations and priority in using.

       * CONFIGURATION OPTIONS Most of the commonly used configuration options, along with sample values.

       * BUGS How and where to report bugs.

       * HOMEPAGE, AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS TO CODE, SPECIAL THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING These are self explanitory.

USING OPTIONS

       Options can be combined if they do not conflict. You can either group the letters  together  or  separate
       them.

       Letters with numbers can have no gap or a gap at your discretion, except when using  -t. Note that if you
       use an option that requires an additional argument, that must be last in the short form group of options.
       Otherwise you can use those separately as well.

       For example: inxi -AG | inxi -A -G | inxi -b | inxi -c10 | inxi -FxxzJy90 | inxi -bay

       Note that all the short form options have long form equivalents, which are listed below. However, usually
       the short form is used in examples in order to keep things simple.

STANDARD OPTIONS

       -A , --audio
              Show Audio/sound device(s) information, including device driver. Shows  active  sound  API(s)  and
              sound server(s).

              Supported  APIs:  ALSA,  OSS,  sndio.  Supported  servers:  aRts (artsd), Enlightened Sound Daemon
              (esound, esd), JACK, NAS (Network Audio System, nasd), PipeWire, PulseAudio, RoarAudio, sndiod.

              Use -Ax to show all sound APIs/servers detected, including inactive, -Axx to see API/Server helper
              daemons/plugin/modules, and -Aa to see API/sound server tools.

              Audio:
                Device-1: C-Media CMI8788 [Oxygen HD Audio] driver: snd_virtuoso
                Device-2: AMD Cedar HDMI Audio [Radeon HD 5400/6300/7300 Series]
                  driver: snd_hda_intel
                Device-3: AMD Family 17h HD Audio driver: snd_hda_intel
                API: ALSA v: k5.19.0-16.2-liquorix-amd64 status: kernel-api
                Server-1: PulseAudio v: 16.1 status: active

       -b , --basic
              Show basic output, short form. Same as: inxi -v 2

       -B , --battery
              Show  system  battery (ID-x) data, charge, condition, plus extra information (if battery present).
              Uses /sys or, for BSDs without systctl battery data, use --dmidecode to force its  use.  dmidecode
              does not have very much information, and none about current battery state/charge/voltage. Supports
              multiple batteries when using /sys or sysctl data.

              Note that for charge:, the output shows the current charge, as well as its value as  a  percentage
              of  the  available capacity, which can be less than the original design capacity. In the following
              example, the actual current available capacity of the battery is 22.2 Wh.

              charge: 20.1 Wh (95.4%)

              The condition: item shows the remaining available capacity / original design  capacity,  and  then
              this figure as a percentage of original capacity available in the battery.

              condition: 22.2/36.4 Wh (61%)

              With -x, or if voltage difference is critical, volts: item shows the current voltage, and the min:
              voltage. Note that if the current is below the minimum listed the battery is essentially dead  and
              will not charge.  Test that to confirm, but that's technically how it's supposed to work.

              volts: 12.0 min: 11.4

              With -x shows attached Device-x information (mouse, keyboard, etc.) if they are battery powered.

       --bluetooth
              See -E.

       -c , --color
              See OUTPUT CONTROL OPTIONS.

       --config, --configuration
              Show active configuration values, by file, and exit.

       -C , --cpu
              Show  full CPU output (if each item available): basic CPU topology, model, type, L2 cache, average
              speed of all cores (if > 1 core, otherwise speed of the core), min/max speeds for CPU, and per CPU
              clock speed. More data available with -x, -xxx, and -a options.

              Explanation of CPU type (type: MT MCP) abbreviations:

              *  AMCP  -  Asymmetric Multi Core Processor. More than 1 core per CPU, and more than one core type
              (single and multithreaded cores in the same CPU).

              * AMP - Asymmetric Multi Processing (more than 1 physical CPU, but not identical in terms of  core
              counts or min/max speeds).

              * MT - Multi/Hyper Threaded CPU (more than 1 thread per core, previously HT).

              * MST - Multi and Single Threaded CPU (a CPU with both Single and Multi Threaded cores).

              * MCM - Multi Chip Model (more than 1 die per CPU).

              * MCP - Multi Core Processor (more than 1 core per CPU).

              * SMP - Symmetric Multi Processing (more than 1 physical CPU).

              * UP - Uni (single core) Processor.

              Note  that  min/max:  speeds  are  not  necessarily  true  in cases of overclocked CPUs or CPUs in
              turbo/boost mode. See -Ca for alternate base/boost: speed data,  more  granular  cache  data,  and
              more.

              Sample:
              CPU:
                Info: 2x 8-core model: Intel Xeon E5-2620 v4 bits: 64 type: MT MCP SMP
                  cache: L2: 2x 2 MiB (4 MiB)
                Speed (MHz): avg: 1601 min/max: 1200/3000 cores: 1: 1280 2: 1595 3: 1416
                  ... 32: 1634

       -d , --disk-full,--optical
              Show  optical  drive  data  as  well as -D HDD/SSD drive data. With -x, adds a feature line to the
              output. Also shows floppy disks if present.  Note  that  there  is  no  current  way  to  get  any
              information  about  the  floppy  device that we are aware of, so it will simply show the floppy ID
              without any extra data. -xx adds a few more features.

       -D , --disk
              Show HDD/SSD drive info. Shows total drive space and used percentage. The  drive  used  percentage
              includes  space  used  by  swap  partition(s),  since those are not usable for data storage. Also,
              unmounted partitions are not counted in drive use percentages since inxi has no access to the used
              amount.

              If  the  system  has RAID or other logical storage, and if inxi can determine the size of those vs
              their components, you will see the storage total raw and usable sizes, plus the  percent  used  of
              the  usable  size.  The  no  argument short form of inxi will show only the usable (or total if no
              usable) and used percent. If there is no logical storage detected,  only  total:  and  used:  will
              show. Sample (with RAID logical size calculated):

              Local Storage: total: raw: 5.49 TiB usable: 2.80 TiB used: 1.35 TiB (48.3%)

              Without logical storage detected:

              Local Storage: total: 2.89 TiB used: 1.51 TiB (52.3%)

              Also  shows per drive information: Disk ID, type (FireWire, Removable, USB if present), vendor (if
              detected), model, and size. See Extra Data Options (-x  options)  and  Admin  Extra  Data  Options
              (--admin options) for many more features.

       -E, --bluetooth
              Show  bluetooth  device(s), drivers. Show Report: with HCI ID, state, address per device (requires
              btmgmt, bt-adapter, or hciconfig), and if available (hciconfig,  btmgmt  only)  bluetooth  version
              (bt-v). See Extra Data Options for more.

              If  bluetooth  shows  as  status:  down,  shows bt-service: state and rfkill software and hardware
              blocked states, and rfkill ID.

              Note that Report-ID: indicates that the HCI item was not able to be linked to a  specific  device,
              similar to IF-ID: in -n.

              If  your  internal bluetooth device does not show, it's possible that it has been disabled, if you
              try enabling it using for example:

              hciconfig hci0 up

              and it returns a blocked by RF-Kill error, you can do one of these:

              connmanctl enable bluetooth

              or

              rfkill list bluetooth

              rfkill unblock bluetooth

       --edid
              Triggers full EDID data in Graphics, activates -G and -a.

              - Adds monitor chromacity (chroma: red:..green:...blue:...white:).

              - Shows all available monitor modes if > 2 present, in comma separated list.

              - Shows EDID errors and warnings if any present.

       --filter, -z
              See FILTER OPTIONS.

       -f , --flags
              Show all CPU flags used, not just the short list. Not shown with -F in order  to  avoid  spamming.
              ARM CPUs: show features items.

       -F , --full
              Show  Full  output  for inxi. Includes all Upper Case line letters (except -J, plus --swap, -s and
              -n. Does not show extra verbose options such as -d -f -i -J -l -m -o -p -r -t -u -x unless you use
              those arguments in the command, e.g.: inxi -Frmxx

       -G , --graphics
              Show  Graphic  device(s) information, including details of device and display drivers (X: loaded:,
              and, if applicable: unloaded:, failed:, dri: (if X and different from loaded X  drivers)  drivers,
              and  active  gpu:  drivers),  display  protocol  (if  available),  display  server (and/or Wayland
              compositor), vendor and version number, e.g.:

              Display: x11 server: Xorg v: 1.15.1

              or:

              Display: wayland server: X.org v: 1.20.1 with: Xwayland v: 20.1

              If protocol is not detected, shows:

              Display: server: Xorg 1.15.1

              Adds with: Xwayland v:... if xwayland server is installed, regardless of protocol.

              Also shows screen resolution(s)  (per  monitor/X  screen).  Shows  graphics  API  information  (if
              available).  EGL:  EGL  version, drivers, acdtive platforms; OpenGL: renderer, OpenGL core profile
              version/OpenGL version (if core/compat versions different, shows that  as  well);  Vulkan:  Vulkan
              version, drivers, surfaces;VESA: data (for Xvesa).

              Compositor  information  will  show if detected using -xx option or always if detected and Wayland
              since the compositor is the server with Wayland.

              -Gxx shows monitor data as well, if detected. --edid shows  advanced  monitor  data  (full  modes,
              chroma, etc.).

       -h , --help
              The  help  menu.  Features  dynamic  sizing  to  fit  into  terminal  window.  Set  script  global
              COLS_MAX_CONSOLE if you want a different default value, or use -y [width] to temporarily  override
              the defaults or actual window width.

       -i , --ip
              Show WAN IP address and local interfaces (latter requires ifconfig or ip network tool), as well as
              network output from -n. Not shown with -F for user security  reasons.  You  shouldn't  paste  your
              local/WAN IP.  Shows both IPv4 and IPv6 link IP addresses.

       --ip-limit, --limit [-1 - x]
              Raise or lower max output limit of IP addresses for -i. -1 removes limit.

       -I , --info
              Show  Information: processes, uptime, memory, IRC client (or shell type if run in shell, not IRC),
              inxi version. See -Ix, -Ixx, and -Ia for extra information  (init  type/version,  runlevel/target,
              packages).

              Note:  if  -m  or -tm are active, the memory item will show in the main Memory: report of -m/-tm/,
              not in Info:.

              See -m for explanation of Memory: fields and values..

       -j, --swap
              Shows all active swap types (partition, file, zram). When this option is used,  swap  partition(s)
              will not show on the -P line to avoid redundancy.

              To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with -l or -u.

       -J , --usb
              Show  USB data for attached Hubs and Devices. Hubs also show number of ports. Be aware that a port
              is not always external, some  may  be  internal,  and  either  used  or  unused  (for  example,  a
              motherboard USB header connector that is not used).

              Hubs and Devices are listed in order of BusID.

              BusID is generally in this format: BusID-port[.port][.port]:DeviceID

              Device ID is a number created by the kernel, and has no necessary ordering or sequence connection,
              but can be used to match this output to lsusb values,  which  generally  shows  BusID  /  DeviceID
              (except for tree view, which shows ports).

              Examples: Device-3: 4-3.2.1:2 or Hub: 4-0:1

              The rev: 2.0 item refers to the USB revision number, like 1.0 or 3.1.

              Use -Jx for basic Si base 10 bits/s speed, -Jxx for Si and IEC base 2 Bytes/s speeds. -Ja adds USB
              mode.

       -l , --label
              Show partition labels. Use with -j, -o, -p, and -P to show partition labels. Requires one of those
              options.

              Sample: -ojpl.

       -L, --logical
              Show  Logical volume information, for LVM, LUKS, bcache, etc. Shows size, free space (for LVM VG).
              For LVM, shows Device-[xx]: VG: (Volume Group) size/free, LV-[xx] (Logical Volume). LV shows type,
              size,  and  components.   Note  that  components  are  made  up of either containers (aka, logical
              devices), or physical devices. The full report requires doas/sudo/root.

              Logical block devices can be thought of as devices that are made up out of  either  other  logical
              devices,  or physical devices. inxi does its best to show what each logical device is made out of.
              RAID devices form a subset of all possible Logical devices, but have their own section, -R.

              If -R is used with -Lxx, -Lxx will not show RAID information  for  LVM  RAID  devices  since  it's
              redundant. If -R is not used, a simple RAID line will appear for LVM RAID in -Lxx.

              -Lxx also shows all components and devices. Note that since components can go in many levels, each
              level per primary component is indicated by either another 'c', or ends with  a  'p'  device,  the
              physical  device.  The  number  of  c's or p's indicates the depth, so you can see which component
              belongs to which.

              -L shows only the top level  components/devices  (like  -R).   -La  shows  component/device  size,
              maj:min ID, mapped name (if applicable), and puts each component/device on its own line.

              Sample:

                Device-10: mybackup type: LUKS dm: dm-28 size: 6.36 GiB Components:
                  c-1: md1 cc-1: dm-26 ppp-1: sdj2 cc-2: dm-27 ppp-1: sdk2
                LV-5: lvm_raid1 type: raid1 dm: dm-16 size: 4.88 GiB
                  RAID: stripes: 2 sync: idle copied: 100% mismatches: 0
                Components: c-1: dm-10 pp-1: sdd1 c-2: dm-11 pp-1: sdd1 c-3: dm-13
                  pp-1: sde1 c-4: dm-15 pp-1: sde1

              It is easier to follow the flow of components and devices using -y1. In this example, there is one
              primary component (c-1), md1, which is made up of two components (cc-1,2), dm-26 and dm-27.  These
              are respectively made from physical devices (p-1) sdj2 and sdk2.

              Device-10: mybackup
                maj-min: 254:28
                type: LUKS
                dm: dm-28
                size: 6.36 GiB
                Components:
                  c-1: md1
                  maj-min: 9:1
                  size: 6.37 GiB
                  cc-1: dm-26
                    maj-min: 254:26
                    mapped: vg5-level1a
                    size: 12.28 GiB
                    ppp-1: sdj2
                      maj-min: 8:146
                      size: 12.79 GiB
                  cc-2: dm-27
                    maj-min: 254:27
                    mapped: vg5-level1b
                    size: 6.38 GiB
                    ppp-1: sdk2
                      maj-min: 8:162
                      size: 12.79 GiB

              Other types of logical block handling like LUKS, bcache show as:

              Device-[xx] [name/id] type: [LUKS|Crypto|bcache]:

       -m , --memory
              Memory  (RAM) data. Does not display with -b or -F unless you use -m explicitly. Ordered by system
              board  physical  system  memory  array(s)  (Array-[number]),   and   individual   memory   devices
              (Device-[number]).   Physical memory array data shows array capacity, number of devices supported,
              and Error Correction information. Devices shows locator data (highly  variable  in  syntax),  type
              (eg: type: DDR3)size, speed.

              Note: inxi -m uses either dboot (BSDs), dmidecode, or udevadm (Linux) to collect the RAM data. Not
              all boards have DMI RAM data available.

              dmidecode must be run as root (or start inxi with doas/sudo), unless you figure out how to set  up
              doas/sudo to permit dmidecode to read /dev/mem as user.

              udevadm  can  be  run  by  non-superuser,  or if dmidecode is not installed (Linux only). It has a
              slightly less reliable dmi table outut, and does not seem to support  more  than  1  board  memory
              array, but is pretty good. Voltages may be wrong however.

              Both  dmidecode  and  udevadm  need  a  DMI table with RAM data to create the report. Most SBC/SOC
              boards don't have dmi based RAM data. But most other machines do.

              speed and bus-width will not show if no module installed is found in size.

              Note: If -m is triggered RAM available/used report will appear in this section, not in -I  or  -tm
              items.

              Because  dmi  source  data  is somewhat unreliable, inxi will try to make best guesses. If you see
              (check) after the capacity number, you should check it with the specifications. (est) is  slightly
              more reliable, but you should still check the real specifications before buying RAM. Unfortunately
              there is nothing inxi can do to get truly reliable data about the system RAM; maybe  one  day  the
              kernel devs will put this data into /sys, and make it real data, taken from the actual system, not
              dmi data. For most people, the data will be right, but a significant percentage of users will have
              either a wrong max module size, if available, or max capacity.

              Under  dmidecode/udevadm, speed: is the expected speed of the memory (spec:, what is advertised on
              the memory spec sheet) and actual:, what the actual speed is now. To handle  this,  if  speed  and
              configured speed values are different, you will see this instead:

              speed: spec: [specified speed] MT/s actual: [actual] MT/s

              Also, if DDR, and speed in MHz, will change to: speed: [speed] MT/s ([speed] MHz)

              If the detected speed is logically absurd, like 1 MT/s or 69910 MT/s, adds: note: check. Sample:

              Memory:
                System RAM: total: 32 GiB note: est. available: 31.38 GiB
                  used: 20.65 GiB (65.8%)
                Array-1: capacity: N/A slots: 4 note: check EC: N/A
                Device-1: DIMM_A1 type: DDR3 size: 8 GiB speed: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
                Device-2: DIMM_A2 type: DDR3 size: 8 GiB speed: spec: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
                  actual: 61910 MT/s (30955 MHz) note: check
                Device-3: DIMM_B1 type: DDR3 size: 8 GiB speed: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
                Device-4: DIMM_B2 type: DDR3 size: 8 GiB speed: spec: 1600 MT/s (800 MHz)
                  actual: 2 MT/s (1 MHz) note: check

              See --memory-modules and --memory-short if you want a shorter report.

              Notes on System RAM: / Memory: report item:

              * total: and igpu: do not show for short form.

              * The total: can come from several possible sources:

              - If not superuser, and if /sys/devices/system/memory exists, it will estimate the total RAM based
              on how many RAM blocks and their size. Sometimes  the  block  count  is  not  an  exact  match  to
              installed  RAM, and inxi will attempt to guess the actual RAM amount, except for virtual machines.
              When it synthesizes the actual physical RAM total, it will show note: est..

              Note that not all kernels are compiled to support generating this /sys directory (kernel needs  to
              be compiled with CONFIG_MEMORY_HOTPLUG).

              - For OpenBSD and not superuser, the total comes from the detected RAM in dboot, if available.

              -  If  superuser, and if -m used, it comes from the dmidecode RAM totals if available, and if not,
              it comes from counting up the System RAM ranges in /proc/iomem (Linux  only),  then  rounding  up,
              since  that total is usually slightly under the actual physical RAM total. If inxi is unsure about
              the total, it will show note: est..

              If no total data found, shows total: N/A.

              * The available: item is the total installed RAM minus some reserved and kernel code RAM  (and  in
              some  cases iGPU assigned main system RAM) that is allocated on system boot, and thus is generally
              less than the actual physical RAM installed. This is called MemTotal in free/meminfo  even  though
              it isn't, though it is the total available the kernel has to work with.

              * The used: is the percent of the available RAM used, NOT of the total physical RAM.

              * The igpu: item either comes from Raspberry Pi gpu RAM, or from /proc/iomem. The latter source is
              Linux + superuser only, and is not guaranteed to be accurate, but sometimes is. That is  for  iGPU
              system  RAM  used,  not for standalone GPUs with their own internal RAM. Not all types of internal
              VRAM are detectable, it depends on how the hardware assigns RAM to iGPU.

              Raspberry Pi uses vcgencmd get_mem gpu to get gpu RAM amount,  if  user  is  in  video  group  and
              vcgencmd is installed.

       --memory-modules, --mm
              Memory (RAM) data. Show only RAM arrays and modules in Memory report.  Skip empty slots. See -m.

       --memory-short, --ms
              Memory (RAM) data. Show a one line RAM report in Memory. See -m.

              Sample: Report: arrays: 1 slots: 4 modules: 2 type: DDR4

       -M , --machine
              Show  machine data. Device, Motherboard, BIOS, and if present, System Builder (Like Lenovo). Older
              systems/kernels without the required /sys data can use dmidecode instead, run as  root.  If  using
              dmidecode,  may  also  show  BIOS/UEFI  revision  as  well  as  version. --dmidecode forces use of
              dmidecode data instead of /sys. Will also attempt to show if the system was booted by BIOS,  UEFI,
              or UEFI [Legacy], the latter being legacy BIOS boot mode in a system board using UEFI.

              Device  information  requires  either  /sys or dmidecode. Note that other-vm? is a type that means
              it's usually a VM, but inxi failed to detect which type, or positively confirm  which  VM  it  is.
              Primary  VM  identification is via systemd-detect-virt but fallback tests that should also support
              some BSDs are used. Less commonly used or harder to detect VMs may not be correctly  detected.  If
              you get an incorrect output, post an issue and we'll get it fixed if possible.

              Due  to  unreliable  vendor data, device type will show: desktop, laptop, notebook, server, blade,
              plus some obscure stuff that inxi is unlikely to ever run on.

       -n , --network-advanced
              Show Advanced Network device information in addition to that  produced  by  -N.  Shows  interface,
              speed, MAC ID, state, etc.

       -N , --network
              Show Network device(s) information, including device driver. With -x, shows Bus ID, Port number.

       -o , --unmounted
              Show  unmounted  partition  information (includes UUID and LABEL if available).  Shows file system
              type if you have lsblk installed (Linux only). For BSD/GNU Linux: shows file system type  if  file
              is installed, and if you are root or if you have added to /etc/sudoers (sudo v. 1.7 or newer):

              <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/file (sample)

              doas users: see man doas.conf for setup.

              Does not show components (partitions that create the md-raid array) of md-raid arrays.

              To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with -l or -u.

       -p , --partitions-full
              Show full Partition information (-P plus all other detected mounted partitions).

              To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with -l or -u.

       --partitions-sort, --ps [dev-base|fs|id|label|percent-used|size|uuid|used]
              Change  default  sort order of partition output. Corresponds to PARTITION_SORT configuration item.
              These are the available sort options:

              dev-base - /dev partition identifier, like /dev/sda1.  Note that it's an alphabetic sort, so sda12
              is before sda2.

              fs  -  Partition  filesystem.  Note  that sorts will be somewhat random if all filesystems are the
              same.

              id - Mount point of partition (default).

              label - Label of partition. If partitions have no labels, sort will be random.

              percent-used - Percentage of partition size used.

              size - KiB size of partition.

              uuid - UUID of the partition.

              used - KiB used of partition.

       -P , --partitions
              Show basic Partition information.  Shows, if detected: / /boot  /boot/efi  /home  /opt  /tmp  /usr
              /usr/home  /var  /var/tmp /var/log (for android, shows /cache /data /firmware /system).  If --swap
              is not used, shows active swap partitions (never shows file or zram type swap). Use -p to see  all
              mounted partitions.

              To show partition labels or UUIDs (when available and relevant), use with -l or -u.

       --processes
              See -t.

       -r , --repos
              Show distro repository data. Currently supported repo types:

              APK (Alpine Linux + derived versions)

              APT  (Debian,  Ubuntu  +  derived  versions,  as  well  as rpm based apt distros like PCLinuxOS or
              Alt-Linux)

              CARDS (NuTyX + derived versions)

              EMERGE (T2 SDE, svn target URL)

              EOPKG (Solus)

              NETPKG (Zenwalk/Slackware)

              NIX (NixOS + other distros as alternate package manager)

              PACMAN (Arch Linux, KaOS + derived versions)

              PACMAN-G2 (Frugalware + derived versions)

              PISI (Pardus + derived versions)

              PKG (OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD + derived OS types)

              PORTAGE (Gentoo, Sabayon + derived versions)

              PORTS (OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD + derived OS types)

              SBOPKG (Slackware + derived versions)

              SBOUI (Slackware + derived versions)

              SCRATCHPKG (Venom + derived versions)

              SLACKPKG (Slackware + derived versions)

              SLAPT_GET (Slackware + derived versions)

              SLPKG (Slackware + derived versions)

              TCE (TinyCore)

              TAZPKG (Slitaz)

              URPM (Mandriva, Mageia + derived versions)

              XBPS (Void)

              YUM/ZYPP (Fedora, Red Hat, Suse + derived versions)

              More will be added as distro data is collected. If yours is missing please show us how to get this
              information and we'll try to add it.

              See -rx, -rxx, and -ra for installed package count information.

       -R , --raid
              Show  RAID  data. Shows RAID devices, states, levels, device/array size, and components. See extra
              data with -x / -xx.

              md-raid: If device is resyncing, also shows resync progress line.

              Note: supported types: lvm raid, md-raid, softraid, ZFS, and hardware RAID.  Other  software  RAID
              types may be added, if the software RAID can be made to give the required output.

              The  component  ID  numbers  work  like this: mdraid: the numerator is the actual mdraid component
              number; lvm/softraid/ZFS: the numerator is auto-incremented counter only. Eg. Online: 1: sdb1

              If hardware RAID is detected, shows basic information. Due to complexity of adding  hardware  RAID
              device  disk / RAID reports, those will only be added if there is demand, and reasonable reporting
              tools.

       --recommends
              Checks inxi application dependencies and recommends, as  well  as  directories,  then  shows  what
              package(s) you need to install to add support for each feature.

       -s , --sensors
              Show  output  from  sensors  if  sensors  installed/configured:  Motherboard/CPU/GPU temperatures;
              detected fan speeds. GPU temperature when available.  Nvidia  shows  screen  number  for  multiple
              screens. IPMI sensors are also used (root required) if present.

              See  Advanced  options  --sensors-use or --sensors-exclude if you want to use only a subset of all
              sensors, or exclude one (currently only for lm-sensors and /sys sourced data).

              For current Linux, will fallback gracefully to using /sys/class/hwmon as  sensor  data  source  if
              lm-sensors is not installed. You can compare the two by using --force sensors-sys option with -s.

       --slots
              Show PCI slots with type, speed, and status information.

       --swap
              See -j

       -S , --system
              Show  System  information: host name, kernel, desktop environment (if in X), distro. With -xx show
              dm - or startx - (only shows if present and running if out of X), and if in X, with -xxx show more
              desktop info, e.g. taskbar or panel.

       -t , --processes
              [c|m|cm|mc NUMBER] Show processes. If no arguments, defaults to cm. If followed by a number, shows
              that number of processes for each type (default: 5; if in IRC, max: 5)

              Make sure that there is no space between letters and numbers (e.g. write as -t cm10).

       -t c   - CPU only. With -x, also shows memory for that process on same line.

       -t m   - memory only. With -x, also shows CPU for that process on same line.  If the -I or -m  lines  are
              not triggered, will also show the system RAM used/total information.

              See -m for explanation of System RAM: fields and values.

       -t cm  - CPU+memory. With -x, shows also CPU or memory for that process on same line.

       -u , --uuid
              Show  UUIDs.  Use  with  -j,  -M -o, -p, and -P to show partition/system board (not common) UUIDs.
              Requires one of those options.

              Sample: -opju.

       -U , --update
              Note - Maintainer may have disabled this function.

              If inxi -h has no listing for -U then it's disabled.

              Auto-update inxi or pinxi. Note: if you installed as root, you must be root to  update,  otherwise
              user  is  fine.  Also  installs  /  updates  current  man  page  to: /usr/local/share/man/man1 (if
              /usr/local/share/man/ exists AND there is no inxi man page in  /usr/share/man/man1,  otherwise  it
              goes to /usr/share/man/man1). This requires that you be root to write to that directory. See --man
              or --no-man to force or disable man install.

              -U accepts the following options (inxi and pinxi):

              No arg - Get from main git branch.

              3 - Get the dev server (smxi.org) version. Be aware that pinxi when taken from here  can  be  very
              unstable  during  active  development!  The inxi version is the stable master branch version. Also
              useful to update if you have SSL issues and --no-ssl works.

              4 - Get the dev server (smxi.org) FTP version (same as 3 version). Use if SSL issues and  --no-ssl
              doesn't  work.  For  very old systems with SSL 1, you will probably need to use this option, which
              bypasses HTTP downloading, and uses straight FTP to get the file from smxi.org server.

              [http|https|ftp] - Get a version of $self_name from your own server. Use the full  download  path,
              e.g.

              inxi -U https://myserver.com/inxi

              For  failed  downloads,  use  the  debug  option  --dbg  1 in addition to get more verbose failure
              reports.

       --usb
              See -J.

       -v , --verbosity
              Script verbosity levels. If no verbosity level number is given, 0 is assumed.  Should not be  used
              with -b or -F.

              Supported levels: 0-8 Examples : inxi -v 4  or  inxi -v4

       -v 0   - Short output, same as: inxi

       -v 1   -  Basic  verbose,  -S  +  basic  CPU  (cores,  type,  average clock speed, and min/max speeds, if
              available) + -G + basic Disk + -I.

       -v 2   - Adds networking device (-N), Machine (-M) data, Battery (-B) (if available). Same as: inxi -b

       -v 3   - Adds advanced CPU (-C) and network (-n) data; triggers -x advanced data option.

       -v 4   - Adds partition size/used data (-P) for (if present): / /home /var/ /boot. Shows full drive  data
              (-D)

       -v 5   -  Adds  audio  device (-A), memory/RAM (-m), bluetooth data (-E) (if present), sensors (-s), RAID
              data (if present), partition label (-l), UUID (-u), full swap data (-j), and short form of optical
              drives.

       -v 6   -  Adds  full mounted partition data (-p), unmounted partition data (-o), optical drive data (-d),
              USB (-J); triggers -xx extra data option.

       -v 7   - Adds  network  IP  data  (-i),  forced  bluetooth  (-E),  Logical  (-L),  RAID  (-R),  full  CPU
              flags/features (-f),  triggers -xxx

       -v 8   -  All  system  data available. Adds advanced EDID data (--edid), Repos (-r), PCI slots (--slots),
              processes (-tcm), admin (--admin). Useful for testing output and to see what data you can get from
              your system.

       --version, --vf
              inxi full version and license information. Prints information then exits.

       --version-short, --vs
              inxi  single  line  version information. Prints information if not short form (which shows version
              info already). Does not exit unless used without any other options. Can be used with  normal  line
              options, and prints version info line as first line of output.

       -w , --weather [location]
              DO  NOT  USE  THIS  FEATURE FOR AUTOMATED WEATHER UPDATES! Automated or excessive use will lead to
              your being blocked from any further access. This feature is not  meant  for  widget  type  weather
              monitoring, or Conky type use. It is meant to get weather when you need to see it, for example, on
              a remote server. If you did not type the weather option in manually, it's an automated request.

              Adds weather line for your current location (by IP address)  if  no  location  requested.  To  get
              weather  for  an  alternate  location, add [location]. See also -x, -xx, -xxx options. Please note
              that your distribution's maintainer may chose to disable this feature.

              With optional [location] - get weather/time for an alternate location.  Accepts postal/zip  code[,
              country], city,state pair, or latitude,longitude.  Note: city/country/state names must not contain
              spaces. Replace spaces with the '+' sign. Don't place spaces around any commas. Postal code is not
              reliable except for North America and maybe the UK. Try postal codes with and without country code
              added. Note that City,State applies only to USA, otherwise  it's  City,Country.  If  country  name
              (english) does not work, try 2 character country code (e.g. Spain: es; Great Britain: gb).

              See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2 for current 2 letter country codes.

              Use only ASCII letters in city/state/country names.

              Examples:  -w  OR  -w  95623,us  OR  -w  Boston,MA OR -w 45.5234,-122.6762 OR -w new+york,ny OR -w
              bodo,norway.

       --weather-source, --ws [source-id]
              [1-9] Switches weather data source. Possible values are 1-9.  1-4 will generally  be  active,  and
              5-9  may  or may not be active, so check. 1 may not support city / country names with spaces (even
              if you use the + sign instead of space). 2 offers pretty good data, but may  not  have  all  small
              city names for -w location.

              Please  note  that  the  data  sources  are  not  static per value, and can change any time, or be
              removed, so always test to verify which source is being used for each value if that  is  important
              to  you.  Data  sources  may  be  added or removed on occasions, so try each one and see which you
              prefer. If you get unsupported source message, it means that number has not been implemented.

       --weather-unit, --wu [unit]
              [m|i|mi|im] Sets weather units to metric (m),  imperial  (i),  metric  (imperial)  (mi,  default),
              imperial (metric) (im). If metric or imperial not found,sets to default value, or N/A.

FILTER OPTIONS

       The following options allow for applying various types of filtering to the output.

       --filter , --filter-override
              See -z, -Z.

       --filter-label, --filter-uuid, --filter-vulnerabilities
              See --zl, --zu, --zv.

       --host Turns on hostname in System line. Overrides inxi config file value (if set):

              SHOW_HOST='false' - Same as: SHOW_HOST='true'

              This is an absolute override, the host will always show no matter what other switches you use.

       --no-host
              Turns  off hostname in System line. This is default when using -z, for anonymizing inxi output for
              posting on forums or IRC. Overrides configuration value (if set):

              SHOW_HOST='true' - Same as: SHOW_HOST='false'

              This is an absolute override, the host will not show no matter what other switches you use.

       -z, --filter
              Adds security filters for IP  addresses,  serial  numbers,  MAC,  location  (-w),  and  user  home
              directory name. Removes Host:. On by default for IRC clients.

       --za, --filter-all
              Shortcut to trigger -z, --zl, --zu, --zv. All the filters, that is.

       --zl, --filter-label
              Filter  partition label names from -j, -o, -p, -P, and -Sa (root=LABEL=...). Generally only useful
              in very specialized cases.

       --zu, --filter-uuid
              Filter partition UUIDs from -j, -o, -p, -P, -Sa  (root=UUID=...),  -Mxxx  board  UUID.  Useful  in
              specialized cases.

       --zv, --filter-v, --filter-vulnerabilities
              Filter Vulnerabilities report from -Ca. Generally only useful in very specialized cases.

       -Z , --filter-override , --no-filter
              Absolute override for output filters. Useful for debugging networking issues in IRC for example.

OUTPUT CONTROL OPTIONS

       The following options allow for modifying the output in various ways.

       -c , --color [0-42]
              Set color scheme. If no scheme number is supplied, 0 is assumed.

       -c  [94-99]
              These  color  selectors  run a color selector option prior to inxi starting which lets you set the
              config file value for the selection.

              NOTE: All configuration file set color values are removed when output is piped or redirected.  You
              must  use  the  explicit runtime -c [color number] option if you want color codes to be present in
              the piped/redirected output.

              Color selectors for each type display (NOTE: IRC and global only show safe color set):

       -c 94  - Console, out of X.

       -c 95  - Terminal, running in X - like xTerm.

       -c 96  - GUI IRC, running in X - like XChat, Quassel, Konversation etc.

       -c 97  - Console IRC running in X - like irssi in xTerm.

       -c 98  - Console IRC not in X.

       -c 99  - Global - Overrides/removes all settings.

              Setting a specific color type removes the global color selection.

       --export [json|screen|xml]
              See --output.

       --indent [11-xx]
              Change primary wide indent width. Generally useless. Only applied if output width is greater  than
              max wrap width (see --max-wrap). Use configuration item INDENT to make permanent.

       --indents [0-10]
              Change primary wrap mode, second, and -y1 level indents. First indent level only applied if output
              width is less than max wrap width (see --max-wrap). 0 disables all wrapped indents and all  second
              level indents. Use configuration item INDENTS to make permanent.

       --max-wrap, --wrap-max [integer]
              Overrides  default  or  configuration  set  line starter wrap width value. Wrap max is the maximum
              width that inxi will wrap line starters (e.g. Info:) to their own lines, with data lines  indented
              default 2 columns (use --indents to change).

              If  terminal/console width or --width is less than wrap width, wrapping of line starter occurs. If
              80 or less, no wrapping will occur. Overrides internal default value (110) and user  configuration
              value MAX_WRAP.

       --output,  --export [json|screen|xml]
              Change data output type. Requires --output-file if not screen.

              See  this  page  https://smxi.org/docs/inxi-json-xml-output.htm BEFORE you post an issue about not
              understanding, or being unable to use, the output format! That gives a fairly complete explanation
              of what the output means, and how to work with it. It is not a tutorial, and it will not teach you
              to program, if you don't know how to work with json/xml structures using a proper  language,  then
              this feature is not meant for you.

       --output-file,  --export-file [full path to output file|print]
              The given directory path must exist. The directory path given must exist, The print options prints
              to stdout.  Required for non-screen --output formats (json|xml).

       --separator, --sep [character(s)]
              Change the default  output  key:  value  separator  :  to  something  else.  Make  permanent  with
              configuration item SEP2_CONSOLE.

       --wrap-max [integer]
              See --max-wrap.

       -y, --width [integer]
              This  is an absolute width override which sets the output line width max.  Overrides COLS_MAX_IRC,
              COLS_MAX_NO_DISPLAY, COLS_MAX_CONSOLE configuration items, or the actual widths of the terminal.

              * -y - sets default width of 80 columns.
              * -y [60-xxx] - sets width to given number. Must be 60 or more.
              * -y 1 -  switches to a single indented key/value  pair  per  line,  and  removes  all  long  line
              wrapping (similar to dmidecode output). Not recommended for use with -Y;
              * -y -1 - removes width limits (if assigned by configuration items).

              Examples:
              inxi -Fxx -y 130
              inxi -Fxxy
              inxi -bay1

       -Y, --height, --less [-3-[integer]
              Control  output  height. Useful when in console, and scrollback not available.  Breaks output flow
              based on values provided.

              * -Y 0 or -Y - Set default max height to terminal height.
              * -Y [1-xxx] - set max output block height height in lines.
              * -Y -1 - Print out one primary data item block (like CPU:, System:) at a time.  Useful  for  very
              long outputs like -Fa, -v8, etc. Not available for -h.
              *  -Y  -2  -  Do  not disable output colors when redirected or piped to another program. Useful if
              piping output to less -R for  example.  This  does  not  limit  the  height  otherwise  since  the
              expectation it is being piped to another program like less which will handle that.
              * -Y -3 - Restore default unlimited output lines if LINES_MAX configuration item set.

              Recommended  to  use  the  following  for very clean up and down scrollable output out of display,
              while retaining the color schemes, which are normally removed with piping or redirect:

              pinxi -v8Y -2 | less -R

              Note: since it's not possible for inxi to know how many actual terminal lines are  being  used  by
              terminal wrapped output, with -y 1 , it may be better in general to use a fixed height like:

              -y 1 -Y 20 instead of: -y 1 -Y

EXTRA DATA OPTIONS

       These  options  can  be  triggered  by one or more -x.  Alternatively, the -v options trigger them in the
       following way: -v 3 adds -x; -v 6 adds -xx; -v 7 adds -xxx

       These extra data triggers can be useful for getting more in-depth data on various options.  They  can  be
       added to any long form option list, e.g.: -bxx or -Sxxx

       There are 3 extra data levels:
       -x, -xx, -xxx
       OR
       --extra 1, --extra 2, --extra 3

       The following details show which lines / items display extra information for each extra data level.

       -x -A  -  Adds  (if  available  and/or  relevant)  vendor:  item,  which  shows specific vendor [product]
              information.

              - Adds version/port(s)/driver version (if available) for each device.

              - Adds PCI/USB ID of each device.

              - Adds inactive sound servers/APIs, if detected.

       -x -B  - Adds vendor/model, battery status (if battery present).

              - Adds attached battery powered  peripherals  (Device-[number]:)  if  detected  (keyboard,  mouse,
              etc.).

              - Adds battery volts:, min: voltages. Note that if difference is critical, that is current voltage
              is too close to minimum voltage, shows without -x.

       -x -C  - Adds bogomips to CPU speed report (if available).

              - Adds L1: and L3: cache types if either are present/available. For  BSD  or  legacy  Linux,  uses
              dmidecode  +  doas/sudo/root. Force use of dmidecode cache values by adding --dmidecode. This will
              override /sys based cache data, which tends to be better, so in general don't do that.

              - Adds boost: [enabled|disabled] if detected, aka turbo. Not all CPUs have this feature.

              - Adds CPU Flags (short list). Use -f to see full flag/feature list.

              - Adds CPU microarchitecture + revision (e.g. Sandy Bridge, K8, ARMv8, P6, etc.). Only shows  data
              if  detected.  Newer  microarchitectures will have to be added as they appear, and require the CPU
              family ID, model ID, and stepping.

              - Adds, if smt (Simultaneous MultiThreading) is available but  disabled,  after  type:  data  smt:
              disabled. type: MT means it's enabled. See -Cxxx.

              Examples:
              arch: Sandy Bridge rev: 2
              arch: K8 rev.F+ rev: 2

              If  unable  to  non-ambiguosly  determine architecture, will show something like: arch: Amber Lake
              note: check rev: 9

              - Adds CPU highest speed after avg: [speed] high: [speed] if greater than 1 core  and  cores  have
              different speeds. Linux only.

       -x -d  - Adds more items to Features line of optical drive; dds rev version to optical drive.

       -x -D  - Adds drive temperature with disk data.

              Method  1:  Systems  running  Linux  kernels  ~5.6  and  newer  should  have drivetemp module data
              available. If so, drive temps will come from /sys data for each drive, and will not  require  root
              or  hddtemp.  This  method is MUCH faster than using hddtemp. Note that NVMe drives do not require
              drivetemp.

              If your drivetemp module is not enabled, enable it:

              modprobe drivetemp

              Once  enabled,  add  drivetemp  to  /etc/modules  or  /etc/modules-load.d/***.conf  so  it  starts
              automatically.

              If  you  see drive temps running as regular user and you did not configure system to use doas/sudo
              hddtemp, then your system supports this feature. If no /sys data is found, inxi will  try  to  use
              hddtemp  methods  instead  for  that  drive.  Hint: if temp is /sys sourced, the temp will be to 1
              decimal, like 34.8, if hddtemp sourced, they will be integers.

              Method 2: if you have hddtemp installed, if you are root or if  you  have  added  to  /etc/sudoers
              (sudo v. 1.7 or newer):

              <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/hddtemp (sample)

              doas users: see man doas.conf for setup.

              You can force use of hddtemp for all drives using --hddtemp.

              -  If  free  LVM volume group size detected (root required), show lvm-free: on Local Storage line.
              This is how much unused space the VGs contain, that is, space not assigned to LVs.

       -x -E (--bluetooth)
              - Adds (if available  and/or  relevant)  vendor:  item,  which  shows  specific  vendor  [product]
              information.

              - Adds PCI/USB Bus ID of each device.

              - Adds driver version (if available) for each device.

              - Adds (if available, btmgmt, hciconfig only) LMP (HCI if no LMP data, and HCI if HCI/LMP versions
              are different) version (if available) for each HCI ID.

       -x -G  - Adds GPU micro-architecture (if AMD/Intel/Nvidia and detected).

              - Adds PCI/USB ID of each device.

              - Adds (if available  and/or  relevant)  vendor:  item,  which  shows  specific  vendor  [product]
              information.

              - X.org: Adds (for single GPU, nvidia driver) screen number that GPU is running on.

              - Adds device temperature for each discrete device (Linux only).

              - For EGL, adds active/inactive platform report.

              - For OpenGL (X.org only) adds direct render status, GLX version.

              - For Vulkan, adds device count.

       -x -i  - Adds IP v6 additional scope data, like Global, Site, Temporary for each interface.

              Note  that  there  is  no way we are aware of to filter out the deprecated IP v6 scope site/global
              temporary addresses from the output of ifconfig. The ip tool shows that clearly.

              ip-v6-temporary - (ip tool only), scope global temporary.  Scope global  temporary  deprecated  is
              not shown

              ip-v6-global  - scope global (ifconfig will show this for all types, global, global temporary, and
              global temporary deprecated, ip shows it only for global)

              ip-v6-link - scope link (ip/ifconfig) - default for -i.

              ip-v6-site - scope site (ip/ifconfig). This  has  been  deprecated  in  IPv6,  but  still  exists.
              ifconfig may show multiple site values, as with global temporary, and global temporary deprecated.

              ip-v6-unknown - unknown scope

       -x -I  -  Adds  current  init  system  (and init rc in some cases, like OpenRC).  With -xx, shows init/rc
              version number, if available.

              - Adds default system compilers. With -xx, also show other installed compiler versions.

              - Adds current runlevel/target (not available with all init systems).

              - Adds total packages discovered in system. See -xx and -a for per package manager  types  output.
              Moves to Repos if -rx.

              If  your  package  manager is not supported, please file an issue and we'll add it.  That requires
              the full output of the query or method to discover all installed packages on your system, as  well
              of course as the command or method used to discover those.

              - If in shell (i.e. not in IRC client), adds shell version number, if available.

       -x -j (--swap)
              Add mapper:. See -x -o.

       -x -J (--usb)
              - For Devices, adds driver(s).

              -  Adds,  if  available,  USB speed in base 10 bits/s (Si) units Mb/s or Gb/s (may be incorrect on
              BSDs due to non reliable data source). These are base 10 bits per second. This unit corresponds to
              the  standard units the USB consortium uses to indicate speeds, but not to how most of the rest of
              your system reports sizes. Use -Jxx to add base 2 IEC Byte/second speeds.

       -x -L (--logical)
              - Adds dm: dm-x to VG > LV and other Device types.  This  can  help  tracking  down  which  device
              belongs to what.

       -x -m, --memory-modules
              -  If  present,  adds maximum memory module/device size in the Array line.  Only some systems will
              have this data available. Shows estimate if it can generate one.

       -x -N  - Adds (if available  and/or  relevant)  vendor:  item,  which  shows  specific  vendor  [product]
              information.

              - Adds version/port(s)/driver version (if available) for each device;

              - Adds PCI/USB ID of each device.

              - Adds device temperature for each discrete device (Linux only).

       -x -o, -x -p, -x -P
              - Adds mapper: (the /dev/mapper/ partition ID) if mapped partition.

              Example: ID-4: /home ... dev: /dev/dm-6 mapped: ar0-home

       -x -r  - Adds Package info. See -Ix

       -x -R  -  md-raid:  Adds  second RAID Info line with extra data: blocks, chunk size, bitmap (if present).
              Resync line, shows blocks synced/total blocks.

              - Hardware RAID: Adds driver version, Bus ID.

       -x -s  - Adds basic voltages: 12v, 5v, 3.3v, vbat (ipmi, lm-sensors / /sys/class/hwmon if present).

       -x -S  - Adds Kernel compiler version.

              - Adds to Distro: base: if detected. System base will only be seen on a subset  of  distributions.
              The distro must be both derived from a parent distro (e.g. Mint from Ubuntu), and explicitly added
              to  the  supported  distributions  for  this  feature.  Due  to  the  complexity  of  distribution
              identification,  these  will  only  be  added  as  relatively  solid  methods  are  found for each
              distribution system base detection.

       -x --slots
              - Adds slot bus-ID:, if found.

       -x -t (--processes)
              - Adds memory use output to CPU (-xt c), and CPU use to memory (-xt m).

       -x -w  - Adds humidity and barometric pressure.

              - Adds wind speed and direction.

       -xx -A - Adds vendor:product ID for each device.

              - Adds PCIe speed and lanes item (Linux only, if detected).

              - Adds for USB devices USB rev, speed, lanes (lanes Linux only).

              - Adds with: [item] status: [state/plugin] helper daemons/plugins for the sound API/server.

       -xx -B - Adds current power use, in watts.

              - Adds serial number.

       -xx -D - Adds HDD/SSD drive serial number.

              - Adds drive speed (if available). This is the theoretical top speed of the  device  as  reported.
              This  speed  may  be  restricted  by system board limits, eg. a SATA 3 drive on a SATA 2 board may
              report SATA 2 speeds, but this is not completely consistent, sometimes a SATA 3 device on a SATA 2
              board reports its design speed.

              NVMe  drives:  adds  lanes, and (per direction) speed is calculated with lane speed * lanes * PCIe
              overhead. PCIe 1 and 2 have data rates of GT/s * .8 = Gb/s (10 bits required to transfer 8 bits of
              data).   PCIe  3  and  greater  transfer data at a rate of GT/s * 128/130 * lanes = Gb/s (130 bits
              required to transfer 128 bits of data).

              For a PCIe 3 NVMe drive, with speed of 8 GT/s and 4 lanes (8GT/s * 128/130 * 4 = 31.6 Gb/s):

              speed: 31.6 Gb/s lanes: 4

              - Adds HDD/SSD drive duid, if available. Some BSDs have it.

              - Adds for USB drives USB rev, speed, lanes (lanes Linux only).

       -xx -E (--bluetooth)
              - Adds vendor:product ID of each device.

              - Adds PCIe speed and lanes item (Linux only, and if PCIe bluetooth, which is rare).

              - Adds for USB devices USB rev, speed, lanes (lanes Linux only).

              - Adds (hciconfig only) LMP subversion (and/or HCI revision if applicable) for each device.

       -xx -G Triggers much more complete Screen/Monitor output.

              X.org: requires xdpyinfo or xrandr, and the advanced per monitor feature requires xrandr.

              Wayland: requires any tool capable  of  showing  monitor  and  resolution  information.  Sway  has
              swaymsg,  weston-info  or wayland-info can show Wayland information on any Wayland compositor, and
              wlr-randr can show Wayland information for any wlroots based compositor.

              Further note that all references to Displays, Screens, and Monitors are  referring  to  the  X  or
              Wayland technical terms, not normal consumer usage.

              X.org: 1 Display runs 1 or more Screens, and 1 Screen runs 1 or more Monitors.

              Wayland: The Display is the primary container, and it can contain 1 or more Monitors.

              - Adds vendor:product ID of each device.

              - Adds PCIe speed and lanes item (Linux only, and if PCIe device and detected).

              - Adds for USB devices USB rev, speed, lanes (lanes Linux only).

              -  Adds output port IDs, active, off (connected but disabled, like a closed laptop lid) and empty.
              Example:

              ports: active: DVI-I-1,VGA-1 empty: HDMI-A-1

              - Adds Display ID. X.org: the Display running the Screen that  runs  the  Monitors;  Wayland:  the
              Display that runs the monitors.

              - Adds compositor, if found (always shows for Wayland).

              -  Wayland: Adds to  Display d-rect: if > 1 monitors in Display. This is the size of the rectangle
              Wayland creates to situate the monitors in.

              - X.org: If available, shows alternate: Xorg drivers. This means a driver on the default  list  of
              drivers  Xorg automatically checks for the device, but which is not installed. For example, if you
              have nouveau driver, nvidia would show as alternate if it was not installed. Note that  alternate:
              does  NOT  mean  you should have it, it's just one of the drivers Xorg checks to see if is present
              and loaded when checking the device. This can let you know there are other  driver  options.  Note
              that if you have explicitly set the driver in xorg.conf, Xorg will not create this automatic check
              driver list.

              - Xorg: Adds total number of Screens listed for the current Display.

              - Xorg: Adds default Screen ID if Screen (not monitor!) total is greater than 1.

              - X.org: Adds Screen line, which includes the ID  (Screen:  0)  then  s-res  (Screen  resolution),
              s-dpi. Remember, this is an Xorg Screen, NOT a monitor screen, and the information listed is about
              the Xorg Screen! It may at times be the  same  as  a  single  monitor  system,  but  usually  it's
              different  in  some  ways. Note that the physical monitor dpi and the Xorg dpi are not necessarily
              the same thing, and can vary widely.

              - Adds Monitor lines. Monitors are a subset of a Screen (X.org)  or  Display  (Wayland),  each  of
              which  can  have one or more monitors. Normally a dual monitor setup is 2 monitors run by one Xorg
              Screen/Wayland Display.

              - pos: [primary,]{position string|row-col} (X.org:  requires  xrandr;  Wayland:  requires  swaymsg
              [sway],  wlr-randr  [wlroots  based  compositors],  weston-info / wayland-info [all]). Uses either
              explicit primary value or +0+0 position if no primary monitor value set.  pos: does not  show  for
              single monitor setups, or if no position data was found.

              Position  is  text (left, center, center-l, center-r, right, top, top-left, top-center, top-right,
              middle, middle-c, middle-r, bottom, bottom-l, bottom-c,  bottom-r)  if  monitors  fit  within  the
              following  grids:  1x2,  1x3,  1x4, 2x1, 2x2, 2x3, 3x1, 3x2, 3x3. If layout not supported in text,
              uses [row-nu]-[column-nu] instead to indicate the monitor's position in its grid.

              The position is based on the upper left corner of each monitor relative to the  grid  of  monitors
              that the Xorg Screen is composed of.

              -  diag:  monitor screen diagonal in mm (inches). Note that this is the real monitor size, not the
              Xorg full Screen diagonal size, which can be quite different.

              - For EGL, shows platform by specific platforms, with driver and egl version if different from the
              main one.

              - For OpenGL, adds ES version (es-v) if available. If the Display line did not find an X11 display
              ID, the ID (e.g. :0.0) will show here instead.

              - For OpenGL, Vulkan, adds device-ID, if available.

              - For Vulkan, adds per Device ID report (type, driver, device-ID).

       -xx -I - Addes Power: parent for power data children uptime: and adds wakeups:. Wakeups  shows  how  many
              times  the  machine  has been woken from suspend state during current uptime period (if available,
              Linux only). 0 value means the machine has not been suspended.

              - Adds init type version number (and rc if present).

              - Adds alternate (alt:) detected installed compiler versions (if present).

              - Adds system default runlevel/target, if detected. Supports  Systemd  /  Upstart  /SysVinit  type
              defaults.

              -  Shows Packages: counts by discovered package manager types (pm:).  In cases where only 1 pm had
              results, does not show total after Packages:.  Does not show installed  package  managers  with  0
              packages. See -a for full output. Moves to Repos if -rxx.

              - Adds parent program (or pty/tty) that started shell, if not IRC client.

       -xx -j (--swap), -xx -p, -xx -P
              - Adds swap priority to each swap partition (for -P) used, and for all swap types (for -j).

       -xx -J (--usb)
              - Adds vendor:chip id.

              -  Adds  USB  lanes. Uses tx (transmit) lane count for total unless rx and tx counts are different
              (eg: lanes: rx: 2 tx: 4). Linux only.  See -Ja for sample output.

       -xx -L (--logical)
              - Adds internal LVM Logical volumes, like raid image and meta data volumes.

              - Adds full list of Components, sub-components, and their physical devices.

              - For LVM RAID, adds a RAID report line (if not -R).  Read  up  on  LVM  documentation  to  better
              understand their use of the term 'stripes'.

       -xx -m, --memory-modules
              - Adds memory device Manufacturer.

              -  Adds memory device Part Number (part-no:). Useful for ordering new or replacement memory sticks
              etc. Part numbers are unique, particularly if you use the word memory in the search as well.  With
              -xxx, also shows serial number.

              -  Adds  single/double  bank memory, if data is found. Note, this may not be 100% right all of the
              time since it depends on the order that data is found in dmidecode output for type 6 and type 17.

              - Adds, if present, memory array voltage. Only some legacy systems will have this data available.

              - Adds memory module current configured operating voltage, if available.

       -xx -M - Adds chassis information, if data is available. Also shows BIOS ROM size if using dmidecode.

              - Adds board part number (part-nu:) if available. This is not commonly found.

       -xx -N - Adds vendor:product ID for each device.

              - Adds PCIe speed and lanes item (Linux only, and if PCIe device and detected).

              - Adds for USB devices USB rev, speed, lanes (lanes Linux only).

       -xx -r - Adds to Packages: info. See -Ixx

       -xx -R - md-raid: Adds superblock (if present) and algorithm. If resync, shows progress bar.

              - Hardware RAID: Adds Chip vendor:product ID.

       -xx -s - Adds DIMM/SOC voltages, if present (ipmi only).

       -xx -S

              - Adds desktop toolkit (tk:), if available (Xfce/KDE/Trinity/Gnome etc).

              - Adds, if run in X, window manager (wm:), if available. Not all window  managers  are  supported.
              File  issue to request a missing one. Some desktops support using more than one window manager, so
              this can be useful to see what window manager is actually running. If none found,  shows  nothing.
              Uses a less accurate fallback tool wmctrl if ps tests fail to find data.

              -  Adds  display/login  manager  (dm:/lm:),  if  present.  If none, shows N/A. Supports most known
              display/login managers, including elogind, entrance, gdm,  gdm3,  greetd,  kdm,  lemurs,  lightdm,
              lxdm,  ly,  mdm,  mlogind,  nodm, sddm, seatd, slim, slimski,  tint, wdm, xdm, and several others,
              added as discovered.

       -xx --slots
              - Adds slot length.

              - Adds slot voltage, if available.

       -xx -w - Adds wind chill, heat index, and dew point, if available.

              - Adds cloud cover, rain, snow, or precipitation (amount in previous hour to observation time), if
              available.

       -xxx -A
              - Adds, if present, serial number.

              - Adds, if present, PCI/USB class ID.

       -xxx -B
              - Adds battery chemistry (e.g. Li-ion), cycles (NOTE: there appears to be a problem with the Linux
              kernel obtaining the cycle count, so this almost always shows 0. There's nothing that can be  done
              about  this  glitch,  the data is simply not available as of 2018-04-03), location (only available
              from dmidecode derived output).

              - Adds attached device rechargeable: [yes|no] information.

       -xxx -C
              - Adds  CPU  voltage  and  external  clock  speed  (this  is  the  motherboard  speed).   Requires
              doas/sudo/root and dmidecode.

              - Adds, if smt (Simultaneous MultiThreading) data is available, after type: data smt: [status].
              smt: [status]
              MT   in   type:   will   show   if   smt   is   enabled   in   general.  3  values  are  possible:
              [enabled|disabled|<unsupported>]. <unsupported> means the CPU does not support SMT.

       -xxx -D
              - Adds HDD/SSD drive firmware revision number (if available).

              - Adds drive partition scheme (in most cases), e.g. scheme: GPT.  Currently not able to detect all
              schemes, but handles the most common, e.g.  GPT or MBR.

              - Adds drive tech (HDD/SSD), rotation speed (in some but not all cases), e.g. tech: HDD rpm: 7200,
              or tech: SSD if positive SSD identification was made. If no HDD,  rotation,  or  positive  SSD  ID
              found,  shows  tech:  N/A.  Not  all  HDD  spinning  disks report their speed, so even if they are
              spinning, no rpm data will show.

       -xxx -E (--bluetooth)
              - Adds, if present, PCI/USB class ID.

              - Adds, if present, bluetooth device class ID.

              - Adds (hciconfig only) HCI version, revision.

       -xxx -G
              - Adds, if present, Device PCI/USB class ID.

              - Adds to Device serial: number (if found).

              - Xorg: Adds to Screen: s-size: and s-diag:. (Screen size data requires  xdpyinfo).  This  is  the
              X.org Screen dimensions, NOT the Monitor size!

              - Adds to Monitors (if detected) frequency (hz:).

              -  Adds  to  Monitors (if detected) size (size: 277x156mm (10.9x6.1")). Note that this is the real
              physical monitor size, not the Xorg Screen/Wayland Display size, which can be quite  different  (1
              Xorg Screen / Wayland Display can for instance contain two or more monitors).

              -  Adds  to  Monitors  modes:  min: max: (if detected). These are the smallest and largest monitor
              modes found, using an inexact method, so might not always be right.

              - Adds to Monitors serial: number (if detected).

              - Wayland: Adds to Monitors scale: (if detected).

              - For EGL, shows hardware based driver(s) (hw:), with the related hardware, like AMD or Intel.

              - For Vulkan, adds layer count, per device driver hardware vendor (not displayed if device name is
              present with -a).

       -xxx -I
              -  For  Power:  adds supported system power states:, active suspend: type, active hibernate: type.
              See https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.15/admin-guide/pm/sleep-states.html for full explanation of
              states and actions.

              - For Shell: adds (su|sudo|login) to shell name if present.

              -  For  Shell:  adds  default:  shell  if  different  from running shell, and default shell v:, if
              available.

              - For running-in: adds (SSH) to parent, if present. SSH detection uses the whoami test.

       -xxx -J (--usb)
              - Adds, if present, serial number for non hub devices.

              - Adds interfaces: for non hub devices.

              - Adds, if present, USB class ID.

              - Adds, if non 0, max power in mA.

       -xxx -m, --memory-modules
              - Adds memory bus width: primary bus width, and if present, total width. e.g.

              width (bits): data: 64 total: 72

              Note that total / data widths are mixed up sometimes in dmidecode output, so inxi  will  take  the
              larger  value  as  the total if present. Data width usually corresponds to the CPU bits. Total can
              reflect EEC or Dual Channel widths. If no total width data is found, shows:

              width: N/A

              - Adds device type detail, e.g. type: DDR3 detail: Synchronous.

              - Adds device serial number.

              - Adds memory module current, max, and min voltages, if they are available and different from each
              other.  If  they  are  the  identical, displays same as -xxm voltage report. Use -ma to always see
              them.

       -xxx -M
              - Adds, if present, board/chassis UUID, This is also activated by --uuid.

       -xxx -N
              - Adds, if present, serial number.

              - Adds, if present, PCI/USB class ID.

       -xxx -R
              - md-raid: Adds system mdraid support types (kernel support, read ahead, RAID events)

              - zfs-raid: Adds portion allocated (used) by RAID array/device.

              - Hardware RAID: Adds rev, ports, and (if available and/or relevant)  vendor:  item,  which  shows
              specific vendor [product] information.

       -xxx -S
              - Adds current kernel clock source, if available (Linux only).

              - Adds (if present), window manager (wm) version number.

              -  Adds,  if  in X, or with --display, bar/dock/menu/panel/tray components (with:). If none found,
              shows nothing. Examples:  cairo-dock, docky,  gnome-panel,  lxpanel,  tint2,  trayer,  lxqt-panel,
              xfce4-panel and many others.

              -  Adds  (if present) tools: item for all detected running screensavers, screen lockers. Note that
              not all screen lockers run as daemons/services, some are just programs called by  other  tools  or
              actions.

              -  Adds  (if  available,  and  in  display),  virtual terminal (vt) number.  These are the same as
              ctrl+alt+F[x] numbers usually. Some systems have this, some don't, it varies.

              - Adds (if present), display/login manager (dm) version number.

       -xxx -w
              - Adds location (city state country), observation altitude  (if  available),  weather  observation
              time (if available), sunset/sunrise (if available).

ADMIN EXTRA DATA OPTIONS

       These  options  are triggered with --admin or -a. Admin options are advanced output options, and are more
       technical, and mostly of interest to system administrators or other machine admins.

       The --admin option sets -xxx, and only has to be used once.  It will trigger the following features:

       -a -A  - Adds, if present, possible alternate: kernel modules  capable  of  driving  each  Device-x  (not
              including  the current driver:). If no non-driver modules found, shows nothing. NOTE: just because
              it lists a module does NOT mean it is available in the system,  it's  just  something  the  kernel
              knows could possibly be used instead.

              -  Adds PCIe generation, and, if different than running PCIe generation, speed or lanes, link-max:
              gen: speed: lanes: (only items different from primary shown).

              - Adds list of detected audio server tools (tools: [tools]) to API/Server lines,  like  alsamixer,
              jack_control, pactl, pavuctl, pw-cli, sndioctl, etc.

              - Adds for USB devices USB mode (Linux only).

       -a -C
              -  Adds  CPU  generation, process node, and built years, if detected. For Intel, only will show if
              Core generation, otherwise the arch value is enough. For AMD, only shows Zen generation.

              - Adds microarchitecture level: (v1,v2,v3,v4) (64 bit Intel/AMD CPUs only).  This  information  is
              used  for  setting  compile  time  optimization  switches  in  for  example GCC. These levels were
              introduced in 2020.

              Because this a CPU flag based test, and these levels when > 2 are not always 100% based on exposed
              CPU flags (eg OSXSAVE), for > v2, adds note: check.

              -  Adds CPU family, model-id, and stepping (replaces rev of -Cx).  Format is hexadecimal (decimal)
              if greater than 9, otherwise hexadecimal.

              - Adds CPU microcode. Format is hexadecimal.

              - Adds socket type (for motherboard CPU socket, if available). If results doubtful will  list  two
              socket  types  and note: check. Requires doas/sudo/root and dmidecode. The item in parentheses may
              simply be a different syntax for the same socket, but in general, check this before trusting it.

              Sample: socket: 775 (478) note: check
              Sample: socket: AM4

              - Adds DMI CPU base and boost/turbo speeds. Requires doas/sudo/root and dmidecode. In some  cases,
              like  with  overclocking  or  'turbo'  or  'boost' modes, voltage and external clock speeds may be
              increased, or short term limits raised on max CPU speeds. These are often not  reflected  in  /sys
              based CPU min/max: speed results, but often are using this source.

              Samples:
              CPU not overclocked, with boost, like Ryzen:
              Speed (MHz):
                avg: 2861
                high: 3250
                min/max: 1550/3400
                boost: enabled
                base/boost: 3400/3900
              Overclocked 2900 MHz CPU, with no boost available:
              Speed (MHz):
                avg: 2345
                high: 2900
                min/max: 800/2900
                base/boost: 3350/3000
              Overclocked 3000 MHz CPU, with boosted max speed:
              Speed (MHz):
                avg: 3260
                high: 4190
                min/max: 1200/3001
                base/boost: 3000/4000

              Note  that these numbers can be confusing, but basically, the base number is the actual normal top
              speed the CPU runs at without boost mode, and the boost number is the max speed  the  CPU  reports
              itself  able to run at.  The actual max speed may be higher than either value, or lower. The boost
              number appears to be hard-coded into the CPU DMI data, and does not seem  to  reflect  actual  max
              speeds  that  overclocking or other combinations of speed boosters can enable, as you can see from
              the example where the CPU is running at a speed faster than the min/max or base/boost values.

              Note that the normal min/max: speeds do NOT show actual overclocked OR  boost/turbo  mode  speeds,
              and  appear to be hard-coded values, not dynamic real values. The base/boost: values are sometimes
              real, and sometimes not.  base appears in general to be real.

              - Adds frequency scaling: governor:.. driver:.. if  found/available.  Also  adds  scaling  min/max
              speeds if different from standard CPU min/max spees (not common).

              - Adds description of cache topology per cpu. Linux only.

              - Creates new Topology: line after the Info: line. Moves cache data to this line from Info: line.

              Topology line contains, if available and/or relevant: physical CPU count (cpus:); per physical cpu
              core count (cores:); threads per core, if > 1 (tpc:); how many  threads:  (if  more  threads  than
              cores);  dies:  (rarely  detected,  but  if so, if > 1); smt status (if no smt status found, shows
              N/A).

              If complex CPU type, like Alder lake, cores; will have a more granular breakdown of  how  many  mt
              (multi-threaded)  and  how  many st (single-threaded) cores there in the physical cpu ( mt-cores:,
              st-cores:);  For complex CPU types like ARM SoC devices with 2  CPU  types,  with  different  core
              counts  and/or  min/max:)  frequencies,  variant: per type found, with relevant differences shown,
              like cores:, min/max:, etc.

              CPU:
                Info:
                  model: AMD EPYC 7281
                  bits: 64
                  type: MT MCP MCM SMP
                  arch: Zen
                    gen: 1
                  level: v3
                    note: check
                  process: GF 14nm
                  built: 2017-19
                  family:0x17 (23)
                  model-id:1
                  stepping: 2
                  microcode: 0x8001250
                Topology:
                  cpus: 2
                    cores: 16
                      tpc: 2
                    threads: 32
                    dies: 4
                 cache:
                   L1: 2x 1.5 MiB (3 MiB)
                     desc: d-16x32 KiB; i-16x64 KiB
                   L2: 2x 8 MiB (16 MiB)
                     desc: 16x512 KiB
                   L3: 2x 32 MiB (64 MiB)
                     desc: 8x4 MiB
                Speed (MHz):
                  avg: 1195
                  high: 1197
                  min/max: 1200/2100
                  boost: enabled
                  scaling:
                    driver: acpi-cpufreq
                    governor: ondemand
                  cores:
                    1: 1195
                    2: 1196
                    ....
                  bogomips: 267823

              - Adds  CPU  Vulnerabilities  (bugs)  as  known  by  your  current  kernel.  Lists  by  Type:  ...
              (status|mitigation):  ....  for  systems that support this feature (Linux kernel 4.14 or newer, or
              patched older kernels).

       -a -d,-a -D
              - Adds logical and physical block size in bytes.

              Using smartctl (requires doas/sudo/root privileges).

              - Adds device model family, like Caviar Black, if available.

              - Adds SATA type (eg 1.0, 2.6, 3.0) if a SATA device.

              - Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).

              - Adds SMART report line: status, enabled/disabled, health, powered on,  cycles,  and  some  error
              cases  if  out of range values. Note that for Pre-fail items, it will show the VALUE and THRESHOLD
              numbers. It will also fall back for unknown attributes that are or have been failing and print out
              the  Attribute  name, value, threshold, and failing message. This way even for unhandled Attribute
              names, you should get a solid report for full failure cases. Other cases may show if inxi believes
              that  the  item  may  be  approaching failure. This is a guess so make sure to check the drive and
              smartctl full output to verify before taking any further action.

              - Adds, for USB or other external drives, actual model name/serial  if  available,  and  different
              from enclosure model/serial, and corrects block sizes if necessary.

              - Adds for USB drives USB mode (Linux only).

              - Adds in drive temperature for some drives as well, and other useful data.

       -a -E (--bluetooth)
              -  Adds  (hciconfig only) extra line to Report:, Info:.  Includes, if available, ACL MTU, SCO MTU,
              Link policy, Link mode, and Service Classes.

              - Adds PCIe generation, and, if different than running PCIe generation, speed or lanes,  link-max:
              gen: speed: lanes: (only items different from primary shown. Bluetooth PCIe rare).

              - Adds for USB devices USB mode (Linux only).

              - Adds, if present, bluetooth status: discoverable, active discoverable, and pairing items.

       -a -G  -  Adds,  if  present,  possible  alternate:  kernel modules capable of driving each Device-x (not
              including the current loaded:). If no non-driver modules found, shows nothing. NOTE: just  because
              it  lists  a  module  does  NOT mean it is available in the system, it's just something the kernel
              knows could possibly be used instead.

              - Adds (AMD/Intel/Nvidia, if available) process: [node] built: [years] to arch: item.

              - Adds (if Linux and Nvidia device) non-free support  information  (if  available).  This  can  be
              useful  for  forum  support  people to determine if the card supports current active legacy Nvidia
              driver branches, or if the card nonfree driver is EOL or active. Note that  if  card  is  current,
              shows basic series and status.

              Includes  extended  non  free  Nvidia legacy informatin (Linux and Nvidia only), and arch: reports
              (AMD/Intel/Nvidia). Useful to help diagnose driver support issues, shows extra data that can  help
              diagnose/debug. Adds code: item if found and not the same as arch:.

              - Adds for USB devices USB mode (Linux only).

              inxi -Gaz
              Graphics:
                Device-1: NVIDIA NV34 [GeForce FX 5200] driver: nouveau v: kernel
                  non-free: 173.14.xx status: legacy (EOL) last: kernel: 3.12 xorg: 1.15
                  release: 173.14.39 arch: Rankine code: NV3x process: 130-150nm
                  built: 2003-05 ports: active: VGA-1 empty: DVI-I-1,TV-1
                  bus-ID: 01:00.0 chip-ID: 10de:0322 class-ID: 0300
                Display: x11 server: X.Org v: 21.1.3 driver: X: loaded: nouveau
                  unloaded: fbdev,modesetting,vesa alternate: nv,nvidia gpu: nouveau
                  display-ID: :0 screens: 1

              With -y1:

              inxi -Gaz -y1
              Graphics:
                Device-1: NVIDIA NV34 [GeForce FX 5200]
                  driver: nouveau
                    v: kernel
                    non-free:
                      series: 173.14.xx
                      status: legacy (EOL)
                      last:
                        kernel: 3.12
                        xorg: 1.15
                        release: 173.14.39
                  arch: Rankine
                    code: NV3x
                    process: 130-150nm
                    built: 2003-05
                  ports:
                    active: VGA-1
                    empty: DVI-I-1,TV-1
                  bus-ID: 01:00.0
                  chip-ID: 10de:0322
                  class-ID: 0300

              -  Adds PCIe generation, and, if different than running PCIe generation, speed or lanes, link-max:
              gen: speed: lanes: (only items different from primary shown).

              - Adds to Monitors built:, gamma:, ratio: (if found).

              - Adds to OpenGL device memory and unified status, if present.

              - Adds to Vulkan full device report, with  full  device  names,  ids,  drivers,  driver  versions,
              surfaces.

              X.org sample (with both xdpyinfo and xrandr data available):
              inxi -aGz
              Graphics:
                Device-1: AMD Cedar [Radeon HD 5000/6000/7350/8350 Series]
                  vendor: XFX Pine driver: radeon v: kernel alternate: amdgpu
                  arch: TeraScale-2 code: Evergreen process: TSMC 32-40nm
                  built: 2009-15 pcie: gen: 1 speed: 2.5 GT/s lanes: 16 link-max:
                  gen: 2 speed: 5 GT/s ports: active: DVI-I-1,VGA-1 empty: HDMI-A-1
                  bus-ID: 0a:00.0 chip-ID: 1002:68f9 class-ID: 0300 temp: 58.0 C
                Display: x11 server: X.Org v: 1.21.1.7 with: Xwayland v: 22.1.9
                  compositor: xfwm v: 4.18.0 driver: X: loaded: modesetting dri: r600
                  gpu: radeon display-ID: :0.0 screens: 1
                Screen-1: 0 s-res: 2560x1024 s-dpi: 96
                  s-size: 677x270mm (26.65x10.63") s-diag: 729mm (28.7")
                Monitor-1: DVI-I-1 pos: primary,left model: Samsung SyncMaster
                  serial: H9NX842662 built: 2004 res: 1280x1024 hz: 60 dpi: 96
                  gamma: 1.2 size: 338x270mm (13.31x10.63") diag: 433mm (17")
                  ratio: 5:4 modes: max: 1280x1024 min: 720x400
                Monitor-2: VGA-1 pos: right model: Dell 1908FP
                  serial: G434H87HRA2D built: 2008 res: 1280x1024 hz: 60 dpi: 86
                  gamma: 1.4 size: 376x301mm (14.8x11.85") diag: 482mm (19")
                  ratio: 5:4 modes: max: 1280x1024 min: 720x400
                API: EGL v: 1.5 hw: drv: amd r600 platforms: device: 0 drv: r600
                  device: 1 drv: swrast gbm: egl: 1.4 drv: kms_swrast surfaceless:
                  drv: r600 x11: drv: r600 inactive: wayland
                API: OpenGL v: 4.5 vendor: x.org mesa v: 22.3.6 glx-v: 1.4
                  es-v: 3.1 direct-render: yes renderer: AMD CEDAR (DRM 2.50.0 /
                  6.4.3-1-liquorix-amd64 LLVM 15.0.6) device-ID: 1002:68f9
                  memory: 1000 MiB unified: no
                API: Vulkan v: 1.3.250 layers: 3 device: 0 type: cpu
                  name: llvmpipe (LLVM 15.0.6 256 bits) driver: mesa llvmpipe
                  v: 22.3.6 (LLVM 15.0.6) device-ID: 10005:0000 surfaces: xcb,xlib

              Wayland sample, with Sway/swaymsg:
              inxi -aGz
              Graphics:
                Device-1: AMD Cedar [Radeon HD 5000/6000/7350/8350 Series] vendor: XFX Pine
                  driver: radeon v: kernel alternate: amdgpu arch: TeraScale 2
                  process: TSMC 32-40nm pcie: gen: 1 speed: 2.5 GT/s lanes: 16 link-max:
                  gen: 2 speed: 5 GT/s ports: active: DVI-I-1,VGA-1 empty: HDMI-A-1
                  bus-ID: 0a:00.0 chip-ID: 1002:68f9 class-ID: 0300
                Display: wayland server: Xwayland v: 21.1.4 compositor: sway v: 1.6.1
                  driver: dri: r600 gpu: radeon d-rect: 2560x1024
                Monitor-1: DVI-I-1 pos: right model: SyncMaster serial: <filter>
                  built: 2004 res: 1280x1024 hz: 60 dpi: 96 gamma: 1.2
                  size: 340x270mm (13.4x10.6") diag: 434mm (17.1") ratio: 5:4 modes:
                  max: 1280x1024 min: 720x400
                Monitor-2: VGA-1 pos: primary,left model: DELL 1908FP serial: <filter>
                  res: 1280x1024 hz: 60 gamma: 1.4 dpi: 86 gamma: 1.4
                  size: 380x300mm (15.0x11.8") diag: 484mm (19.1") ratio: 5:4 modes:
                  max: 1280x1024 min: 720x400
                API: OpenGL v: 4.6 compat-v: 4.5 vendor: x.org mesa v: 22.3.6
                  glx-v: 1.4 direct-render: yes renderer: AMD CEDAR (DRM 2.50.0 /
                  6.4.3-1-liquorix-amd64 LLVM 15.0.6) device-ID: 1002:68f9
                API: EGL v: 1.5 hw: drv: amd r600 platforms: device: 0
                  drv: r600 device: 1 drv: swrast surfaceless: drv: r600 wayland:
                  drv: r600 inactive: gbm,x11

       -a -I  -  Adds  to Power: other hibernate and suspend available (avail:) states, hibernate suspend image:
              size, and if any suspend failures (fails:), how many.

              - Adds power daemons/services (services:) running. Note not all services are daemons.

              - Adds to Packages number of lib packages detected per package manager. Also adds detected package
              managers  with 0 packages listed. Adds package manager tools (supported: rpm, dpkg, pkgtool) Moves
              to Repos if -ra.

              - Adds service control tool, tested for in the following order: systemctl rc-service rcctl service
              sv /etc/rc.d /etc/init.d. Can be useful to know which you need when using an unfamiliar machine.

              inxi -aI
              Info:
                Memory: total: N/A available: 31.27 GiB used: 14.9 GiB (47.7%)
                Processes: 651 Power: uptime: 8d 21h 32m states: freeze,mem,disk
                  suspend: deep avail: s2idle wakeups: 14 fails: 3 hibernate: platform
                  avail: shutdown,reboot,suspend,test_resume image: 12.49 GiB
                  services: upowerd,xfce4-power-manager Init: systemd v: 255
                  target: graphical (5) default: graphical tool: systemctl
                Packages: pm: dpkg pkgs: 3960 libs: 2184 tools: apt,apt-get,aptitude
                  pm: rpm pkgs: 0 Compilers: gcc: 13.2.0 alt: 5/6/8/9/10/11/12 Shell: Bash
                  v: 5.2.21 running-in: xfce4-terminal pinxi: 3.3.32

       -a -j (--swap), -a -P [swap], -a -P [swap]
              -  Adds  swappiness  and vfs cache pressure, and a message to indicate if the value is the default
              value or not (Linux only, and only if available). If not the default value, shows default value as
              well, e.g.

              For -P per swap physical partition:

              swappiness: 60 (default) cache-pressure: 90 (default 100)

              For -j row 1 output:

              Kernel: swappiness: 60 (default) cache-pressure: 90 (default 100)

              - Adds zswap data for row 1 output:

              zswap: [yes/no] compressor: [type] max-pool: xx%

              -  Adds  for  zram  swap  type:  active  compression  type,  available  compression types, and max
              compression streams.

              - Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).

       -a -J (--usb)
              - Adds, if available, USB speed in IEC units MiB/s or GiB/s (may be incorrect on BSDs due  to  non
              reliable data source). These are base 2 Bytes per second.

              -  Adds  USB  mode  (Linux  only), which is the technical terms the USB group uses to describe USB
              revisions. In cases where speed and rev are an unknown combination, (and probably at least one  is
              wrong) shows message.

              There  are  no granular data sources in BSDs for accurate revision/lane/speed information, so mode
              cannot be determined.

              Sample:
              Hub-1: 1-0:1 info: hi-speed hub with single TT ports: 14 rev: 2.0
                speed: 480 Mb/s (57.2 MiB/s) lanes: 1 mode: 2.0 chip-ID: 1d6b:0002
                class-ID: 0900
              Device-1: 1-4:2 info: Wacom ET-0405A [Graphire2 (4x5)] type: mouse
                driver: usbhid,wacom interfaces: 1 rev: 1.1 speed: 1.5 Mb/s (183 KiB/s)
                lanes: 1 mode: 1.0 power: 40mA chip-ID: 056a:0011 class-ID: 0301
              Hub-2: 2-0:1 info: Super-speed hub ports: 8 rev: 3.1
                speed: 10 Gb/s (1.16 GiB/s) lanes: 1 mode: 3.2 gen-2x1 chip-ID: 1d6b:0003
                class-ID: 0900
              Device-1: 2-8:5 info: SanDisk Ultra type: mass storage driver: usb-storage
                interfaces: 1 rev: 3.0 speed: 5 Gb/s (596.0 MiB/s) lanes: 1 mode: 3.2 gen-1x1
                power: 896mA chip-ID: 0781:5581 class-ID: 0806
                serial: <filter>

       -a -L (--logical)
              - Expands Component report, shows size / maj-min of components and devices, and  mapped  name  for
              logical components. Puts each component/device on its own line.

              - Adds maj-min to LV and other devices.

       -a -m  - Expands volts to include curr/min/max values even if they are all identical.

              - Adds RAM module firmware version, if detected. Not common.

       -a -n, -a -N, -a -i
              -  Adds,  if  present,  possible  alternate:  kernel modules capable of driving each Device-x (not
              including the current driver:). If no non-driver modules found, shows nothing. NOTE: just  because
              it  lists  a  module  does  NOT mean it is available in the system, it's just something the kernel
              knows could possibly be used instead.

              - Adds PCIe generation, and, if different than running PCIe generation, speed or lanes,  link-max:
              gen: speed: lanes: (only items different from primary shown).

              - Adds for USB devices USB mode (Linux only).

              -  Adds  Info:  line (-n, -i only), with running network type services:. Note not all services are
              daemons. For example, NetworkManager can be started with --no-daemon flag.

       -a -o  - Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).

       -a -p,-a -P
              - Adds raw partition size, including file system overhead, partition table, e.g.

              raw-size: 60.00 GiB.

              - Adds percent of raw size available to size: item, e.g.

              size: 58.81 GiB (98.01%).

              Note that used: 16.44 GiB (34.3%) percent refers to the available size, not the raw size.

              - Adds partition filesystem block size if found (requires root and blockdev).

              - Adds device kernel major:minor number (Linux only).

       -a -r  - Adds to Packages: report. See -Ia

       -a -R  - Adds device kernel major:minor number (mdraid, Linux only).

              - Adds, if available, component size, major:minor number (Linux only). Turns Component report to 1
              component per line.

       -a -S  - Adds alternate kernel clock sources, if available (Linux only).

              - Adds kernel boot parameters to Kernel section (if detected). Support varies by OS type.

              - Adds advanced desktop (info:) item, and version. Currently supports KDE Frameworks and version.

              -  Adds other available (avail:) screensavers/lockers in tools: section. These are ones installed,
              but not necessarily active or running.

       -a --slots
              - Adds PCI children of the main slot bus ID, and their types and  class  IDs,  recursively.  Linux
              only, and only if detected. Sample:

              Slot: 0
                type: PCIe
                lanes: 16
                status: in use
                length: long
                volts: 3.3
                bus-ID: 00:03.1
                  children:
                    1: 07:00.0
                      class-ID: 0300
                      type: display
                    2: 07:00.1
                      class-ID: 0403
                      type: audio

ADVANCED OPTIONS

       --alt 40
              Bypass  Perl  as  a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny), Curl, Wget, Fetch, (OpenBSD
              only) ftp.

       --alt 41
              Bypass Curl as a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny), Curl,  Wget,  Fetch,  (OpenBSD
              only) ftp.

       --alt 42
              Bypass  Fetch  as a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny), Curl, Wget, Fetch, (OpenBSD
              only) ftp.

       --alt 43
              Bypass Wget as a downloader option. Priority is: Perl (HTTP::Tiny),  Curl,  Wget,  Fetch,  OpenBSD
              only: ftp

       --alt 44
              Bypass Curl, Fetch, and Wget as downloader options. This basically forces the downloader selection
              to use Perl 5.x HTTP::Tiny, which is generally slower than Curl or Wget but  it  may  help  bypass
              issues with downloading.

       --bt-tool [bt-adapter|btmgmt|hciconfig|rfkill]
              See --force [tool name]. Used to set -E report tool.

       --dig  Temporary  override  of  NO_DIG  configuration  item.  Only use to test w/wo dig. Restores default
              behavior for WAN IP, which is use dig if present.

       --display [:<integer>]
              Will try to get display data out of X (does not usually work as root user).  Default gets  display
              info  from  display  :0.  If  you  use the format --display :1 then it would get it from display 1
              instead, or any display you specify.

              Note that in some cases, --display will cause inxi to hang endlessly when running  the  option  in
              console  with  Intel  graphics.  The situation regarding other free drivers such as nouveau/ATI is
              currently unknown. It may be that this is a bug with the Intel graphics driver - more  information
              is required.

              You  can  test  this  easily  by  running  the  following command out of X/display server: glxinfo
              -display :0

              If it hangs, --display will not work.

       --dmidecode
              Shortcut. See --force dmidecode.

       --downloader [curl|fetch|perl|wget]
              Force inxi to use Curl, Fetch, Perl, or Wget for downloads.

       --force [option(s)]
              Various force options to allow users to  override  defaults.  Values  can  be  given  as  a  comma
              separated list:

              inxi -MJ --force dmidecode,lsusb

              - bt-adapter - Force use of bt-adapter tool in -E.

              - btmgmt - Force use of btmgmt tool in -E.

              - colors - Same as -Y -2 . Do not remove colors from piped or redirected output.

              - dmidecode - Force use of dmidecode. This will override /sys data in some lines, e.g. -M or -B.

              - hddtemp - Force use of hddtemp instead of /sys temp data for disks.

              - ifconfig - Force use of IF tool ifconfig for -i.

              - ip - Force use of IF ip tool for -i (default).

              -  lsusb  - Forces the USB data generator to use lsusb as data source (default). Overrides USB_SYS
              in user configuration file(s).

              - rfkill - Force use of rfkill tool in -E. rfkill does not support mac address data.

              - rpm, pkg - Force override of disabled rpm package counts on primarily rpm  run  systems  due  to
              unacceptably slow execution times for this command:

              rpm -qa --nodigest --nosignature

              Even  on  newer  rpm  systems, in virtual machines, running rpm package list query takes more than
              0.15 seconds (compared to 0.01 to 0.05 for  dpkg,  pacman,  pkgtool  etc)  for  just  this  single
              feature, which is north of 10% of total execution time for inxi -bar. On bare metal this can hit 1
              second or more in our tests.  Older systems have taken up to 30 seconds to run this command!

              For systems that support running rpm along with the primary package installer  (dpkg/apt,  pacman,
              and pkgtool/slackpkg), there are not going to be many rpms, if any, installed, so the command runs
              in those cases (if inxi can determine it is running in that type of system).

              - sensors-sys - Force use of /sys/class/hwmon data for sensors (excluding ipmi sensors, which  are
              their  own  line if present), skip lm-sensors. Generally useful for testing since sys data is used
              if no lm-sensors data was found anyway, but if lm-sensors was installed,  and  returned  no  data,
              it's most likely if not nearly certain that /sys will also not return data.

              - udevadm - Forces use of udevadm as data source (currently -m RAM data).

              -  usb-sys  -  Forces  the  USB  data generator to use /sys as data source instead of lsusb (Linux
              only).

              - vmstat - Forces use of vmstat for memory data.

              - wayland - Forces use of Wayland, disables x tools glxinfo, xrandr, xdpyinfo.

              - wmctrl - Force System item wm to use wmctrl as data source, override default ps source.

       --hddtemp
              Shortcut. See --force hddtemp.

       --html-wan
              Temporary override of NO_HTML_WAN configuration item. Only use to test w/wo HTML  downloaders  for
              WAN  IP.  Restores default behavior for WAN IP, which is use HTML downloader if present and if dig
              failed.

       --ifconfig
              Shortcut. See --force ifconfig.

       --man  Updates / installs man page with -U if pinxi or using -U 3 dev branch. (Only active if  -U  is  is
              not disabled by maintainers).

       --no-dig
              Overrides default use of dig to get WAN IP address. Allows use of normal downloader tool to get IP
              addresses. Only use if dig is failing, since dig is much faster and more reliable in general  than
              other methods.

       --no-doas
              Skips the use of doas to run certain internal features (like hddtemp, file) with doas. Not related
              to running inxi itself with doas/sudo or super user. Some systems will register errors which  will
              then trigger admin emails in such cases, so if you want to disable regular user use of doas (which
              requires configuration to setup anyway for  these  options)  just  use  this  option,  or  NO_DOAS
              configuration item. See --no-sudo if you need to disable both types.

       --no-html-wan
              Overrides  use  of  HTML downloaders to get WAN IP address. Use either only dig, or do not get wan
              IP. Only use if dig is failing, and the HTML downloaders are taking too long, or  are  hanging  or
              failing.

              Make permanent with NO_HTML_WAN='true'

       --no-man
              Disables  man  page install with -U for master and active development branches. (Only active if -U
              is is not disabled by maintainers).

       --no-sensor-force
              Overrides user set SENSOR_FORCE configuration value. Restores default behavior.

       --no-ssl
              Skip SSL certificate checks for all downloader actions (-U, -w, -i). Use if your system  does  not
              have  current  SSL  certificate lists, or if you have problems making a connection for any reason.
              Works with Wget, Curl, Perl HTTP::Tiny and Fetch.

       --no-sudo
              Skips the use of sudo to run certain internal features (like hddtemp, file) with sudo. Not related
              to  running  inxi itself with sudo or superuser. Some systems will register errors which will then
              trigger admin emails in such cases, so if you want to disable regular  user  use  of  sudo  (which
              requires  configuration  to  setup  anyway  for  these  options)  just use this option, or NO_SUDO
              configuration item.

       --pm-type [package manager name]
              For distro package maintainers only, and only for non apt, rpm, or pacman  based  systems.  To  be
              used to test replacement package lists for recommends for that package manager.

       --rpm, --pkg
              Shortcut. See --force rpm.

       --sensors-default
              Overrides configuration values SENSORS_USE or SENSORS_EXCLUDE on a one time basis.

       --sensors-exclude
              Linux  only.  Similar  to  --sensors-use  except  removes  listed  sensors  from sensor data. Make
              permanent with SENSORS_EXCLUDE configuration  item.  Note  that  gpu,  network,  disk,  and  other
              specific device monitor chips are excluded by default.

              Example: inxi -sxx --sensors-exclude k10temp-pci-00c3

       --sensors-sys
              Shortcut. See --force sensors-sys

       --sensors-use
              Linux  only.  Use  only  the  (comma  separated) sensor arrays for -s output.  Make permanent with
              SENSORS_USE configuration item. Sensor array ID value must be the exact value shown in  lm-sensors
              sensors  output  (lm-sensors  only)  or use -s --dbg 18 ('main' =>.. section) to see the sensor ID
              strings used internally. If you only want to exclude one (or more) sensors from  the  output,  use
              --sensors-exclude.

              Can  be  useful  if  the default sensor data used by inxi is not from the right sensor array. Note
              that all other sensor data will be removed, which may lead to undesired  consequences.  Please  be
              aware  that  this  can lead to many undesirable side-effects, since default behavior is to use all
              the sensors arrays and select which values to use from them following a set sequence of rules.  So
              if you force one to be used, you may lose data that was used from another one.

              Most  likely  best use is when one (or two) of the sensor arrays has all the sensor data you want,
              and you just want to make sure inxi doesn't use data from another array  that  has  inaccurate  or
              misleading data.

              Note that gpu, network, disk, and other specific device monitor chips are excluded by default, and
              should not be added since they do not provide cpu, board, system, etc, sensor data.

              Example: inxi -sxx --sensors-use nct6791-isa-0290,k10temp-pci-00c3

       --sleep [0-x.x]
              Usually in decimals. Change CPU sleep time for -C (current:  .35).   Sleep  is  used  to  let  the
              system catch up and show a more accurate CPU use.  Example:

              inxi -Cxxx --sleep 0.15

              Overrides default internal value and user configuration value:

              CPU_SLEEP=0.25

       --tty  Forces internal IRC flag to off. Used in unhandled cases where the program running inxi may not be
              seen as a shell/pty/tty, but it is not an IRC client.  Put --tty first in  option  list  to  avoid
              unexpected errors. If you want a specific output width, use the --width option. If you want normal
              color codes in the output, use the -c [color ID] flag.

              The sign you need to use this is extra numbers before the key/value pairs of the  output  of  your
              program.  These  are  IRC,  not TTY, color codes. Please post a codeberg.org issue if you find you
              need to use --tty (including the full -Ixxx line) so we can figure out how to add your program  to
              the list of whitelisted programs.

              You can see what inxi believed started it in the -Ixxx line, Shell: or Client: item. Please let us
              know what that result was so we can add it to the parent start program whitelist.

              In some cases, you may want to also use --no-filter/-Z option if you want to see filtered  values.
              Filtering is turned on by default if inxi believes it is running in an IRC client.

       --usb-sys
              Shortcut. See --force usb-sys

       --usb-tool
              Shortcut. See --force lsusb

       --wan-ip-url [URL]
              Force  -i  to use supplied URL as WAN IP source. Overrides dig or default IP source urls. URL must
              start with http[s] or ftp.

              The IP address from the URL must be the last item on the last (non-empty) line of the page content
              source code.

              Same as configuration value (example):

              WAN_IP_URL='https://mysite.com/ip.php'

       --wayland, --wl
              Shortcut. See --force wayland.

       --wm   Shortcut. See --force wmctl.

DEBUGGING OPTIONS

       --dbg {[1-x][,[1-x]]}
              Accepts one or more comma separated dbg specific debugging numbers.

              1  -  Debug downloader failures. Turns off silent/quiet mode for curl, wget, and fetch. Shows more
              downloader action information. Shows some more information for Perl downloader.

              1-xx - See codeberg.org inxi-perl/docs/inxi-values.txt for specific specialized debugging options.
              There are a lot.

       --debug [1-3]
              - On screen debugger output.

       --debug 10
              -   Basic  logging.  Check  $XDG_DATA_HOME/inxi/inxi.log  or  $HOME/.local/share/inxi/inxi.log  or
              $HOME/.inxi/inxi.log.

       --debug 11
              - Full file/system info logging.

       --debug 20
              Creates a tar.gz file of system data and collects the inxi output in a file.

              * tree traversal data file(s) read from /proc and /sys, and other system data.

              * xorg conf and log data, xrandr, xprop, xdpyinfo, glxinfo etc.

              * data from dev, disks, partitions, etc.

       --debug 21
              Automatically uploads debugger data tar.gz file to  ftp.smxi.org,  then  removes  the  debug  data
              directory, but leaves the debug tar.gz file.  See --ftp for uploading to alternate locations.

       --debug 22
              Automatically  uploads  debugger  data  tar.gz  file  to ftp.smxi.org, then removes the debug data
              directory and the tar.gz file.  See --ftp for uploading to alternate locations.

       --debug-id [string]
              Insert string to file name for debugger. This is helpful so you can add for instance a username to
              a debugger dataset to make it easy to find.

              Sample: --debug 22 --debug-id mrmazda

       --fake-data-dir
              Developer  only:  Change  default  location of $fake_data_dir, which is where files are for --fake
              {item} items.

       --ftp [ftp.yoursite.com/incoming]
              For alternate ftp upload locations: Example:

              inxi --ftp ftp.yourserver.com/incoming --debug 21

DEBUGGING OPTIONS TO DEBUG DEBUGGER FAILURES

       Only use the following in conjunction with --debug 2[012], and only use if you experienced a  failure  or
       hang, or were instructed to do so.

       --debug-proc
              Force  debugger  to  parse /proc directory data when run as root. Normally this is disabled due to
              unpredictable data in /proc tree.

       --debug-proc-print
              Use this to locate file that /proc debugger hangs on.

       --debug-no-exit
              Skip exit on error when running debugger.

       --debug-no-proc
              Skip /proc debugging in case of a hang.

       --debug-no-sys
              Skip /sys debugging in case of a hang.

       --debug-sys
              Force PowerPC debugger parsing of /sys as doas/sudo/root.

       --debug-sys-print
              Use this to locate file that /sys debugger hangs on.

SUPPORTED IRC CLIENTS

       BitchX, Gaim/Pidgin, ircII, Irssi, Konversation, Kopete, KSirc,  KVIrc,  Weechat,  and  Xchat.  Plus  any
       others that are capable of displaying either built-in or external script output.

RUNNING IN IRC CLIENT

       To trigger inxi output in your IRC client, pick the appropriate method from the list below:

       Hexchat, XChat, Irssi
              (and  many  other  IRC clients) /exec -o inxi [options] If you don't include the -o, only you will
              see the output on your local IRC client.

       Konversation
              /cmd inxi [options]

              To run inxi in Konversation as a native script if your distribution or inxi package hasn't already
              done this for you, create this symbolic link:

              KDE 4: ln -s /usr/local/bin/inxi /usr/share/kde4/apps/konversation/scripts/inxi

              KDE 5: ln -s /usr/local/bin/inxi /usr/share/konversation/scripts/inxi

              If inxi is somewhere else, change the path /usr/local/bin to wherever it is located.

              If  you  are  using  KDE/QT 5, then you may also need to add the following to get the Konversation
              /inxi command to work:

              ln -s /usr/share/konversation /usr/share/apps/

              Make  sure  you  also  have  the  qdbus-qt5  package  (Debian/Ubuntu   +   derived),   qt5-qttools
              (Fedora/RHEL/SUSE + derived),  qt5-tools (Arch + derived) installed (for KDE 5/QT 5, check distros
              for future package names), qt5-tools (Arch +  derived).  Check  your  distro  if  the  program  is
              missing.   Depending  on  the  distro,  /usr/lib/qt5/bin/qdbus  is  required,  which in Debian+ is
              provided by the above package.

              Then you can start inxi directly, like this:

              /inxi [options]

       WeeChat
              NEW: /exec -o inxi [options]

              OLD: /shell -o inxi [options]

              Newer (2014 and later) WeeChats work pretty much the same now as other console IRC  clients,  with
              /exec -o inxi [options]. Newer WeeChats have dropped the -curses part of their program name, i.e.:
              weechat instead of weechat-curses.

CONFIGURATION FILE

       inxi will read its configuration/initialization files in the following order:

       /etc/inxi.conf  contains  the  default  configurations.  These  can   be   overridden   by   creating   a
       /etc/inxi.conf.d/inxi.conf  file  (global  override), which will prevent distro packages from changing or
       overwriting your edits. This method is recommended if you are using a distro packaged inxi  and  want  to
       override some global configuration items from the package's default /etc/inxi.conf file but don't want to
       lose your changes on a package update.

       In case the distro is using either /usr/etc or /usr/local/etc as non core  tool  default  location,  inxi
       will use those paths instead, with the inxi.conf.d/inxi.conf override option.

       You  can  also override, per user, with a user configuration file found in one of the following locations
       (inxi will store its config file using the following precedence):

       if $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not empty, it will go there, else if $HOME/.config/inxi.conf exists,  it  will  go
       there, and as a last default, the legacy location is used), i.e.:

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/inxi.conf  >  $HOME/.config/inxi.conf  >  $HOME/.inxi/inxi.conf  >  /usr/etc/inxi.conf >
       /usr/etc/inxi.conf.d/inxi.conf  >  /usr/local/etc/inxi.conf  >   /usr/local/etc/inxi.conf.d/inxi.conf   >
       /etc/inxi.conf.d/inxi.conf > /etc/inxi.conf

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS

       See  the documentation page for more complete information on how to set these up, and for a complete list
       of options:

       https://smxi.org/docs/inxi-configuration.htm

       Basic Options
              Here's a brief overview of the basic options you are likely to want to use:

              COLS_MAX_CONSOLE The max display column width on terminal. If terminal/console width or --width is
              less than wrap width, wrapping of line starter occurs

              COLS_MAX_IRC The max display column width on IRC clients.

              COLS_MAX_NO_DISPLAY The max display column width in out of X / Wayland / desktop / window manager.

              CPU_SLEEP  Decimal  value  0  or more. Default is usually around 0.35 seconds. Time that inxi will
              'sleep' before getting CPU speed data, so that it reflects actual system state.

              DOWNLOADER Sets default inxi downloader: curl, fetch, ftp, perl, wget.   See  --recommends  output
              for more information on downloaders and Perl downloaders.

              FILTER_STRING Default <filter>. Any string you prefer to see instead for filtered values.

              INDENT Change primary indent width of wide mode output. See --indent.

              INDENTS  Change  primary  indents  of  narrow  wrapped  mode output, and second level indents. See
              --indents.

              LIMIT Overrides default of 10 IP addresses per IF. This is only of interest to sys admins  running
              servers with many IP addresses.

              LINES_MAX  Values:  [-2-xxx].  See  -Y  for  explanation and values.  Use -Y -3 to restore default
              unlimited output lines. Avoid using this in general unless the machine is a  headless  system  and
              you want the output to be always controlled.

              MAX_WRAP  (or  WRAP_MAX)  The  maximum  width  where  the  line  starter wraps to its own line. If
              terminal/console width or --width is less than  wrap  width,  wrapping  of  line  starter  occurs.
              Overrides default. See --max-wrap. If 80 or less, wrap will never happen.

              NO_DIG Set to 1 or true to disable WAN IP use of dig and force use of alternate downloaders.

              NO_DOAS Set to 1 or true to disable internal use of doas.

              NO_HTML_WAN  Set to 1 or true to disable WAN IP use of HTML Downloaders and force use of dig only,
              or nothing if dig disabled as well. Same as --no-html-wan. Only use if dig is  failing,  and  HTML
              downloaders are hanging.

              NO_SUDO Set to 1 or true to disable internal use of sudo.

              PARTITION_SORT Overrides default partition output sort. See --partition-sort for options.

              PS_COUNT The default number of items showing per -t type, m or c. Default is 5.

              SENSORS_CPU_NO  In cases of ambiguous temp1/temp2 (inxi can't figure out which is the CPU), forces
              sensors to use either value 1 or 2 as  CPU  temperature.  See  the  above  configuration  page  on
              smxi.org for full info.

              SENSORS_EXCLUDE   Exclude   supplied   sensor   array[s]   from   sensor  output.   Override  with
              --sensors-default. See --sensors-exclude.

              SENSORS_USE Use only supplied sensor array[s]. Override with --sensors-default. See --sensors-use.

              SEP2_CONSOLE Replaces default key / value separator of ':'. Test with --separator.

              USB_SYS Forces all USB data to use /sys instead of lsusb.

              WAN_IP_URL Forces -i to use supplied URL, and to not use dig (dig is generally much  faster).  URL
              must  begin  with  http  or ftp. Note that if you use this, the downloader set tests will run each
              time you start inxi whether a downloader feature is going to be used or not.

              The IP address from the URL must be the last item on the last (non-empty) line of the  URL's  page
              content source code.

              Same as --wan-ip-url [URL]

              WEATHER_SOURCE  Values:  [0-9]. Same as --weather-source.  Values 4-9 are not currently supported,
              but this can change at any time.

              WEATHER_UNIT Values: [m|i|mi|im]. Same as --weather-unit.

       Color Options
              It's best to use the -c [94-99] color selector tool to set the following values  because  it  will
              correctly  update  the  configuration file and remove any invalid or conflicting items, but if you
              prefer to create your own configuration files, here are the options. All take  the  integer  value
              from the options available in -c 94-99.

              NOTE:  All  default  and  configuration  file set color values are removed when output is piped or
              redirected. You must use the explicit -c [color number] option if you want colors to be present in
              the piped/redirected output (creating a PDF for example).

              CONSOLE_COLOR_SCHEME The color scheme for console output (not in X/Wayland).

              GLOBAL_COLOR_SCHEME Overrides all other color schemes.

              IRC_COLOR_SCHEME Desktop X/Wayland IRC CLI color scheme.

              IRC_CONS_COLOR_SCHEME Out of X/Wayland, IRC CLI color scheme.

              IRC_X_TERM_COLOR_SCHEME In X/Wayland IRC client terminal color scheme.

              VIRT_TERM_COLOR_SCHEME Color scheme for virtual terminal output (in X/Wayland).

       Developer Options
              These are useful only for developers.

              FAKE_DATA_DIR - change default fake data directory location. See --fake-data-dir.

BUGS

       Please report bugs using the following resources.

       You  may  be  asked  to  run the inxi debugger tool (see --debug 21/22), which will upload a data dump of
       system files for use in debugging inxi. These data dumps are very important since they  provide  us  with
       all the real system data inxi uses to parse out its report.

       Issue Report
              File an issue report: https://codeberg.org/smxi/inxi/issues

       Forums Post on inxi forums: https://techpatterns.com/forums/forum-33.html

       IRC irc.oftc.net / irc.libera.chat
              You can also visit channel: #smxi to post issues on either network.

HOMEPAGE

       https://codeberg.org/smxi/inxi
        - Home of inxi source repository

       https://codeberg.org/smxi/pinxi
        - Home of pinxi (inxi development version), docs and data.

       https://smxi.org/docs/inxi.htm
        - The main docs for inxi. See pinxi repository for more technical resources.

       https://fosstodon.org/@smxi
        - Follow @smxi on Mastodon!

AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS TO CODE

       inxi is a fork of locsmif's very clever infobash script.

       Original infobash author and copyright holder: Copyright (C) 2005-2007 Michiel de Boer aka locsmif

       inxi version: Copyright (C) 2008-2023 Harald Hope

       This  man  page was originally created by Gordon Spencer (aka aus9) and is maintained by Harald Hope (aka
       h2 or TechAdmin).

       Initial CPU logic, konversation version logic, occasional maintenance fixes, and the initial xiin.py tool
       for  /sys parsing (obsolete, but still very much appreciated for all the valuable debugger data it helped
       generate): Scott Rogers

       Further fixes (listed as known):

       Horst Tritremmel <hjt at sidux.com>

       Steven Barrett (aka: damentz) - USB audio patch; swap percent used patch.

       Jarett.Stevens - dmidecode -M patch for older systems with no /sys.

SPECIAL THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING

       The nice people at irc.oftc.net channels #linux-smokers-club  and  #smxi,  who  all  really  have  to  be
       considered  to be co-developers because of their non-stop enthusiasm and willingness to provide real-time
       testing and debugging of inxi development over the years.

       LinuxQuestions.org Slackware forum members,  for  major  help  with  development  and  debugging  new  or
       refactored features, particularly the redone CPU logic of 2021-12.

       Siduction  forum  members,  who  have  helped  get  some  features working by providing a large number of
       datasets that have revealed possible variations, particularly for the RAM -m option.

       AntiX users and admins, who have helped greatly with testing and debugging, particularly  for  the  3.0.0
       release.

       ArcherSeven (Max), Brett Bohnenkamper (aka KittyKatt), and Iotaka, who always manage to find the weirdest
       or most extreme hardware and setups that help make inxi much more robust.

       For the vastly underrated skill of output error/glitch catching, Pete Haddow.  His patience and focus  in
       going through inxi repeatedly to find errors and inconsistencies is much appreciated.

       For  a  huge  boost  to BSD support, Stan Vandiver, who did a lot of testing and setup many remote access
       systems for testing and development.

       For testing, bug finding, suggestions, feature requests, MrMazda. He has over the years has helped  shape
       inxi into what it is today, in particular but not limited to, the Graphics features.

       All  the inxi package maintainers, distro support people, forum moderators, and in particular, sys admins
       with their particular issues, which almost always help make inxi better, and any  others  who  contribute
       ideas, suggestions, and patches.

       Without  a  wide range of diverse Linux kernel-based Free Desktop systems to test on, we could never have
       gotten inxi to be as reliable and solid as it's turning out to be.

       And of course, a big thanks to locsmif, who figured out a lot  of  the  core  ideas,  logic,  and  tricks
       originally used in inxi Gawk/Bash.