sysline(1) sysline(1)NAME sysline - display system status on status line of a terminal SYNOPSIS sysline [-b] [-c] [-d] [-D] [-e] [-h] [-H remote] [-i] [-j] [-l] [-m] [-p] [-q] [-r] [-s] [+N] DESCRIPTION sysline runs in the background and periodically displays system status information on the status line of the termi- nal. Not all terminals have a status line. Those that do include the h19, c108, aaa, vt100, tvi925/tvi950 and Freedom 100. Of these, only the h19 termcap entry supports the status line. Note: The Macintosh monitor does not have a status line. If no flags are given, sysline displays the time of day, the current load average, the change in load average in the last 5 minutes, the number of users (followed by u), the number of runnable process (followed by r) the number of suspended processes (followed by s), and the users who have logged on and off since the last status report. Finally, if new mail has arrived, a summary of it is printed. If there is unread mail in your mailbox, an asterisk will appear after the display of the number of users. The display is normally in reverse video (if your terminal supports this in the status line) and is right-justified to reduce distraction. Every fifth display is done in normal video to give the screen a chance to rest. If you have a file named .who in your home directory, then the contents of that file is printed first. One common use of this feature is to alias chdir, pushd, and popd to place the current directory stack in ~/.who after it changes the new directory. The following flag options may be used on the command line: -b Beep once every half hour and twice every hour, just like those obnoxious watches you keep hear- ing. -c Clear the status line for 5 seconds before each redisplay. -d Debug mode - print status line data in human-readable format -D Print out the current day/date before the time. April, 1990 1
sysline(1) sysline(1)-e Print out only the information. Do not print out the control commands necessary to put the information on the bottom line. This flag op- tion is useful for putting the output of sysline onto the mode line of an emacs window. -H remote Print the load average on the remote host re- mote. If the host is down, or is not sending out rwhod packets, then the down time is printed in- stead. -h Print out the host machine's name after the time. -l Don't print the names of people who log in and out. -m Don't check for mail. -p Don't report the number of process which are runnable and suspended. -r Don't display in reverse video. +N Update the status line every N seconds. The de- fault is 60 seconds. -q Don't print out diagnostic messages if something goes wrong when starting up. -i Print out the process ID of the sysline process onto standard output upon startup. With this information you can send the alarm signal to the sysline process to cause it to update immediate- ly. sysline writes to the standard error, so you can redirect the standard output into a file to catch the process id. -s Print ``short'' form of line by left-justifying. iff escapes are not allowed in the status line. Some terminals (the tvi's and Freedom 100's, for example) do not allow cursor movement (or other ``intelligent'' operations) in the status line. For these terminals, sysline normally uses blanks to cause right-justification. This flag option will disable the adding of the blanks. -j Force the sysline output to be left-justified even on terminals capable of cursor movement on the status line. 2 April, 1990
sysline(1) sysline(1)If you have a file .syslinelock in your home directory, then sysline will not update its statistics and write on your screen, it will just go to sleep for a minute. This is use- ful if you want to disable sysline momentarily. Note that it may take a few seconds from the time the lock file is created until you are guaranteed that sysline will not write on the screen. FILES /usr/ucb/sysline /etc/termcap database of terminal capabilities /etc/utmp names of people who are logged in /dev/kmem contains process table /usr/spool/rwho/whod.* who/uptime information for remote hosts ${HOME}/.who information to print on bottom line ${HOME}/.syslinelock when it exists, sysline will not print SEE ALSO ps(1), pstat(1). BUGS If you interrupt the display, you may find your cursor miss- ing or stuck on the status line. The best thing to do is to reset the terminal. If there is too much for one line, the excess is thrown away. April, 1990 3