depot/third_party/nixpkgs/pkgs/tools/X11/xosview2/default.nix
Default email a0cb138ada Project import generated by Copybara.
GitOrigin-RevId: a100acd7bbf105915b0004427802286c37738fef
2023-02-02 18:25:31 +00:00

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;
};
})