Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Both functions had a default parameter for use in some error cases. Now each accepts only one parameter (a
PerChannel), and return Nothing on an error.
The definition of 'channel' confused me, so I simplified it. Hopefully it's now
more clear that it just applies 'toInteger' to the 'IO (Maybe
CLong)' that 'channel'' returns.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As documented in the http-client library, calling newManager is an
expensive operation:
```
Creating a new Manager is a relatively expensive operation, you are
advised to share a single Manager between requests instead.
```
But inspite of the haddocks in xmobar claiming that once 'Manager' is
created, it will be used throughout the monitor is not true. Because for
every call of `startWeather` a new manager is being created.
Also I removed the option in WeatherOpts because even if it is false,
it will be ultimately created in `getData` function. Also without
using a manager - the plugin won't really work. So, I don't think
there is any reason for this option to exist.
I have introduced a new dependency http-client-tls to use the shared
global manager so that we reuse the same manager every time. This
simplifies a lot of code. Note that this is not really a new
dependency because http-conduit already depends on it transitively.
|
|
We avoid calling getTimeZone for each of the time the date has to be
updated. Instead, it's computed once at the start and re-used for each
invocation.
Looking at the implementation of 'getTimeZone', we can see that it's
very expensive:
https://www.stackage.org/haddock/lts-15.15/time-1.9.3/src/Data-Time-LocalTime-Internal-TimeZone.html#getTimeZone
It calls a C FFI each time to get the time
zone (getTimeZoneCTime). This is something which we can avoid and the
MR implements that.
I have been using my xmobar with this patch and the result has been
quite good. My xmobar CPU usage has used to hit 3~7%
intermittently. With this MR, It hits only 0.7% intermittently which
is nice. :-)
|
|
|
|
Fixes https://github.com/jaor/xmobar/issues/442
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This specifically avoids situation described in this issue
https://github.com/jaor/xmobar/issues/438 where the handle was
throwing the IOException continously in a loop:
<stdin>: hGetLine: invalid argument (invalid byte sequence)
It happened because my system's environment was right, but the proper
behaviour hear would be to let it to throw the exception rather than
leading to a busy loop.
I did some git blame to find out that this commit introduced the
behaviour:
https://github.com/jaor/xmobar/commit/fc24dc1874dcf7c9e66e21502a58b40cbe627c85
but there was no reason mentioned in the commit for trying to capture
all exceptions.
|
|
|
|
hGetLineSafe is always hGetLine and hence we can directly use it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This adds a new `HandleReader` plugin, which displays data from a
Haskell `Handle`. This is really only useful if you are running xmobar
from within another Haskell program, but lets you avoid the mechanics of
creating a named pipe with the proper file permissions.
Instead, you can use `System.Process.createPipe` to make a pair of read
& write Handles. If you pass the read handle to HandleReader, you can
use hPutStr on the write Handle to send data to xmobar from your
application code.
|
|
|
|
This makes the code hlint-clean for --cpp-define=USE_NL80211,
--cpp-define=IWLIB and without --cpp-define too.
|
|
|
|
NL80211 was introduced in Linux 2.6.24 in 2007 as a new extensible
universal API, replacing "wireless extensions" ioctls. It works on top
of netlink, and allows direct communication to cfg80211 kernel
subsystem. Since then it became a hard requirement for all upstream
wireless drivers to hook into cfg80211 (SoftMAC drivers do it via the
common mac80211 layer). There's still additional compatibility code that
allows limited Wext functionality for cfg80211 drivers but it's buggy
and can be disabled altogether when CONFIG_CFG80211_WEXT is not set.
This patch makes use of "netlink" Haskell library which doesn't have any
additional runtime dependencies (so neither iwlib nor libnl are
required). The operation is the same as performed by "iw dev <devname>
link" command.
The signal level is transformed to "quality" by first clamping it to
[-110; -40], then adding 110 and dividing by 70 (same meaningless
formula as used by the cfg80211 Wext compatibility layer).
"essid" template argument is replaced by more appropriate "ssid" (with
the old variant still available for backwards compatibility)
|
|
A preparation for timer coalescing: tenthSeconds is just a sleep whereas
doEveryTenthSeconds enables using a central timer and waiting for all
monitors to update before refreshing the window. This commit is just a
simple refactor, the actual timer coalescing code comes later.
|
|
The calculations are based on the assumption that current_now (or
power_now) are always positive. However, power_supply documentation in
the kernel sources say nothing about it, and so some drivers provide a
signed value (e.g. bq27xxx_battery_current).
Discovered and fixed on ac100/paz00 netbook.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This reverts commit 1f1f0bd8b811740c84215f9ed4fa5ebd8309a990.
|
|
This reverts commit efb6d6817c092fe08e9b0f1b8a17bddd29d97cdb.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exposed via -f with_freebsd flag, uses sysctl to query battery status.
|