SYNOPSIS

       wmfire  [-b] [-c CPU] [-f COLOUR] [-F FILE] [-g GEOMETRY] [-h] [-H MAX]
       [-i INTERFACE] [-l] [-L MIN] [-m] [-n] [-p] [-s SPEED] [-x] [-y]



DESCRIPTION

       wmfire is flaming dock app which can monitor your cpu, memory,  network
       or a file.

       o Left click to change the status monitor (unless locked)
       o Middle click to hide/show nice'd process on cpu load
       o Right click to change flame colour (unless locked)
       o Mouse wheel up or down is the same as left click

       On  mouse  over  the cursor will disappear and be replaced by a burning
       spot at that location. After two seconds symbols will be burnt to  rep-
       resent  what  is being monitored. For cpu, a short solid bar represents
       average load or a line of dots representing the current cpu  number  on
       SMP systems. For the memory, a grid of dots is used to signify a memory
       array. For the network, a line of marching dots is  like  data  passing
       through a cable. For file values, a spinning disk platter is shown.

       (Not all window managers support all mouse over effects.)



OPTIONS

       -b     Activate broken window manager fix (if grey box diplayed)

       -c [0..3]
              Monitor SMP CPU number X

       -f [1..4]
              Change flame colour
              (1:Natural 2:Coronal 3:Blue 4:Green)

       -F [...]
              Monitor file

       -g [{+-}X{+-}Y]
              Set initial window position

       -h     Show help

       -H [...]
              Set maximum (high) value for file monitoring

       -i [...]
              Change the network interface
              (Default is "ppp0")


       -x     Exclude nice'd CPU load

       -y     Set  window sticky for window managers which do not support dock
              apps



EXAMPLES

       wmfire -F /tmp/file -L 40 -H 60 -i eth2 -s 1000M



NOTES

       The file monitoring will only read the first value in a file. For  com-
       plex  parsing  use  an  external program to read the required value and
       write it to the same file wmfire is set to read.



BUGS

       Please report any bugs you may find to:

       swanson@ukfsn.org



AUTHOR

       Alan Swanson <alan.swanson@ukfsn.org>

       http://www.swanson.ukfsn.org



                                   June 2004                         WMFIRE(1)

Man(1) output converted with man2html