DOKK / manpages / debian 12 / wmdiskmon / wmdiskmon.1.en
WMDISKMON(1) General Commands Manual WMDISKMON(1)

wmdiskmon - A dockapp to monitor disks usage.

wmdiskmon [options]

This manual page documents briefly the wmdiskmon command.

WMDiskMon is a program to monitor disks usage. It is a dockapp that is supported by X window managers such as Window Maker, AfterStep, BlackBox, and Enlightenment.

The dockapp has two modes. The default displays three devices at a time in a bargraph manner. The other displays only one device, but with numeric percentage and a longer name over three lines.

In default mode, clicking on the arrows scrolls the devices list up and down. In single mode, it cycles through the list. In both modes, clicking with left button on the background toggles the back light. Clicking on the background with the middle button toggles displays of entries (devices or mount points). With the control key, the same action toggles mode.

This program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is included below.

Attempt to open a window on the named X display. In the absence of this option, the display specified by the DISPLAY environment variable is used.
turn on back-light.
back-light color. (rgb:6E/C6/3B is default)
number of secs between updates. (1 is default)
show help text and exit.
show program version and exit.
run the application in windowed mode
activate broken window manager fix
monitor the <device> partition (may be used more than once), a NFS device can also be specified (in fact all that is in the 1rst column of df -P, the POSIX df behavior)
show device instead of mount point
show only one device at a time (default behavior is to display 3)

The program uses the POSIX command df -P. If your system does not support this command, then you should send me a mail telling me with command give the same result for your OS.

df(1)

WMDiskMon was assembled by Thomas Nemeth <tnemeth@free.fr>. It is largely based on WMMemMon and WMCPULoad by Seiichi SATO <ssato@sh.rim.or.jp> and WMMemLoad by Mark Staggs <me@markstaggs.net>.

February 13, 2004