42 lines
1.5 KiB
Nix
42 lines
1.5 KiB
Nix
{ lib
|
|
, stdenv
|
|
, fetchurl
|
|
, libX11
|
|
}:
|
|
|
|
stdenv.mkDerivation (finalAttrs: {
|
|
pname = "xosview2";
|
|
version = "2.3.2";
|
|
|
|
src = fetchurl {
|
|
url = "mirror://sourceforge/xosview/${finalAttrs.pname}-${finalAttrs.version}.tar.gz";
|
|
hash = "sha256-ex1GDBgx9Zzx5tOkZ2IRYskmBh/bUYpRTXHWRoE30vA=";
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
buildInputs = [ libX11 ];
|
|
|
|
meta = with lib; {
|
|
homepage = "https://xosview.sourceforge.net/index.html";
|
|
description = "Lightweight graphical operating system monitor";
|
|
longDescription = ''
|
|
xosview is a lightweight program that gathers information from your
|
|
operating system and displays it in graphical form. It attempts to show
|
|
you in a quick glance an overview of how your system resources are being
|
|
utilized.
|
|
|
|
It can be configured to be nothing more than a small strip showing a
|
|
couple of parameters on a desktop task bar. Or it can display dozens of
|
|
meters and rolling graphical charts over your entire screen.
|
|
|
|
Since xosview renders all graphics with core X11 drawing methods, you can
|
|
run it on one machine and display it on another. This works even if your
|
|
other host is an operating system not running an X server inside a
|
|
virtual machine running on a physically different host. If you can
|
|
connect to it on a network, then you can popup an xosview instance and
|
|
monitor what is going on.
|
|
'';
|
|
license = with licenses; [ gpl2 bsdOriginal ];
|
|
maintainers = with maintainers; [ AndersonTorres ];
|
|
platforms = platforms.all;
|
|
};
|
|
})
|