Vicious is a modular widget library for window managers, but mostly catering to users of the awesome window manager. It was derived from the old Wicked widget library, and has some of the old Wicked widget types, a few of them rewritten, and a good number of new ones.
Vicious widget types are a framework for creating your own widgets. Vicious contains modules that gather data about your system, and a few awesome helper functions that make it easier to register timers, suspend widgets and so on. Vicious doesn't depend on any third party Lua libraries, but may depend on additional system utilities (see widget description).
When provided by an operating system package, or installed from source into the Lua library path Vicious can be used as a regular Lua library, to be used stand-alone or to feed widgets of any window manager (e.g. Ion, WMII). It is compatible with Lua version 5.1 and above.
> widgets = require("vicious.widgets.init")
> print(widgets.volume(nil, "Master")[1])
100
To use Vicious with Awesome, install the package from your operating
system provider, or download the source code and move it to your
awesome configuration directory in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
(usually ~/.config
):
$ git clone https://github.com/vicious-widgets/vicious.git
$ mv vicious $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/awesome/
Vicious will only load modules for widget types you intend to use in your awesome configuration, to avoid having useless modules sitting in your memory.
Then add the following to the top of your rc.lua
:
local vicious = require("vicious")
Once you create a widget (a textbox, graph or a progressbar) call
vicious.register()
to register it with Vicious:
vicious.register(widget, wtype, format, interval, warg)
Awesome widget created with widget()
or awful.widget()
(in case of a
graph or a progressbar).
Type: Vicious widget or function
:
- Vicious widget type: any of the available (default, or custom) widget type provided by Vicious.
- function: custom function from your own Awesome configuration can be registered as widget types (see Custom widget types).
Type: string
or function
:
- string:
$key
will be replaced by respective value in the tablet
returned by the widget type. I.e. use$1
,$2
, etc. to retrieve data from an integer-indexed table (a.k.a. array);${foo bar}
will be substituted byt["{foo bar}"]
. function (widget, args)
can be used to manipulate data returned by the widget type (see Format functions).
Number of seconds between updates of the widget (default: 2). Read section Power and Caching for more information.
Some widget types require an argument to be passed, for example the battery ID.
vicious.register
alone is not much different from
awful.widget.watch,
which has been added to Awesome since version 4.0. However, Vicious offers more
advanced control of widgets' behavior by providing the following functions.
vicious.unregister(widget, keep)
If keep == true
, widget
will be suspended and wait for activation.
vicious.suspend()
See example automation script for the "laptop-mode-tools" start-stop module.
vicious.activate(widget)
If widget
is provided only that widget will be activated.
vicious.cache(wtype)
Enable caching of values returned by a widget type.
vicious.force(wtable)
wtable
is a table of one or more widgets to be updated.
vicious.call(wtype, format, warg)
Fetch data from wtype
to use it outside from the wibox
(example).
Widget types consist of worker functions that take two arguments format
and
warg
(in that order), which were previously passed to vicious.register
, and
return a table of values to be formatted by format
.
Provides state, charge, and remaining time for a requested battery.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux (require sysfs
), FreeBSD (require acpiconf
), OpenBSD (no extra requirements).
warg
(from now on will be called argument):- On GNU/Linux: battery ID, e.g.
"BAT0"
- On FreeBSD (optional): battery ID, e.g.
"batt"
or"0"
- On OpenBSD (optional):
bat
followed by battery index, e.g.bat0
orbat1
on systems with more than one battery
- On GNU/Linux: battery ID, e.g.
- Returns an array (integer-indexed table) consisting of:
$1
: State of requested battery$2
: Charge level in percent$3
: Remaining (charging or discharging) time$4
: Wear level in percent$5
: Current (dis)charge rate in Watt
Provides cmus player information using cmus-remote
.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
- Argument: a table whose first field is the socket including host (or nil).
- Returns a table with string keys:
${status}
,${artist}
,${title}
,${duration}
,${file}
,${continue}
,${shuffle}
,${repeat}
.
Provides CPU usage for all available CPUs/cores. Since this widget type give CPU utilization between two consecutive calls, it is recommended to enable caching if it is used to register multiple widgets (#71).
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD.
On FreeBSD and Linux returns an array containing:
$1
: usage of all CPUs/cores$2
,$3
, etc. are respectively the usage of 1st, 2nd, etc. CPU/core
On OpenBSD returns an array containing:
$1
: usage of all CPUs/cores
Provides freq, voltage and governor info for a requested CPU.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux, FreeBSD.
- Argument: CPU ID, e.g.
"cpu0"
on GNU/Linux,"0"
on FreeBSD - Returns an array containing:
$1
: Frequency in MHz$2
: Frequency in GHz$3
: Voltage in mV$4
: Voltage in V$5
: Governor state- On FreeBSD: only the first two are supported
(other values will always be
"N/A"
)
Provides speed and cache information for all available CPUs/cores.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux.
Returns a table whose keys using CPU ID as a base, e.g. ${cpu0 mhz}
,
${cpu0 ghz}
, ${cpu0 kb}
, ${cpu0 mb}
, ${cpu1 mhz}
, etc.
Provides access to Lua's os.date
, with optional settings for time format and
time offset.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
format
(optional): a strftime(3) format specification string (format functions are not supported). If not provided, use the prefered representation for the current locale.- Argument (optional): time offset in seconds, e.g. for different a time zone. If not provided, current time is used.
- Returns the output of
os.date
formatted byformat
string.
Provides I/O statistics for all available storage devices.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux.
Returns a table with string keys: ${sda total_s}
, ${sda total_kb}
,
${sda total_mb}
, ${sda read_s}
, ${sda read_kb}
, ${sda read_mb}
,
${sda write_s}
, ${sda write_kb}
, ${sda write_mb}
, ${sda iotime_ms}
,
${sda iotime_s}
, ${sdb1 total_s}
, etc.
Provides fanspeed information for specified fans.
Supported platforms: FreeBSD.
- Argument: full
sysctl
string to one or multiple entries, e.g."dev.acpi_ibm.0.fan_speed"
- Returns speed of specified fan in RPM,
"N/A"
on error (probably wrong string)
Provides usage of disk space.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
- Argument (optional): if true includes remote filesystems, otherwise fallback to default, where only local filesystems are included.
- Returns a table with string keys, using mount points as a base, e.g.
${/ size_mb}
,${/ size_gb}
,${/ used_mb}
,${/ used_gb}
,${/ used_p}
,${/ avail_mb}
,${/ avail_gb}
,${/ avail_p}
,${/home size_mb}
, etc. mb and gb refer to mebibyte and gibibyte respectively.
Provides count of new and subject of last e-mail on Gmail.
Supported platform: platform independent, requiring curl
.
This widget expects login information in your ~/.netrc
file, e.g.
machine mail.google.com login user password pass
and you have to disable
two step verification.
Allow access for less secure apps
afterwards.
BE AWARE THAT MAKING THESE SETTINGS IS A SECURITY RISK!
- Arguments (optional): either a number or a table
- If it is a number, subject will be truncated.
- If it is a table whose first field is the maximum length and second field
is the widget name (e.g.
"gmailwidget"
), scrolling will be used.
- Returns a table with string keys:
${count}
and${subject}
Provides hard drive temperatures using the hddtemp daemon.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux, requiring hddtemp
and curl
.
- Argument (optional):
hddtemp
listening port (default: 7634) - Returns a table with string keys, using hard drives as a base, e.g.
${/dev/sda}
and${/dev/sdc}
.
Provides name-based access to hwmon devices via sysfs.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux
- Argument: an array with sensor name and input number (optional, falling back
to
1
), e.g.{"radeon", 2}
- Returns a table with just the temperature value:
$1
- Usage example:
gputemp = wibox.widget.textbox() vicious.register(gputemp, vicious.widgets.hwmontemp, " $1°C", 5, {"radeon"})
Provides the subject of last e-mail in a mbox file.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
- Argument: either a string or a table:
- A string representing the full path to the mbox, or
- Array of the form
{path, maximum_length[, widget_name]}
. If the widget name is provided, scrolling will be used. - Note: the path will be escaped so special variables like
~
will not work, useos.getenv
instead to access environment variables.
- Returns an array whose first value is the subject of the last e-mail.
Provides the count of total, old and new messages in mbox files.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
- Argument: an array full paths to mbox files.
- Returns an array containing:
$1
: Total number of messages$2
: Number of old messages$3
: Number of new messages
Provides the number of unread messages in Maildir structures/directories.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
- Argument: an array with full paths to Maildir structures.
- Returns an array containing:
$1
: Number of new messages$2
: Number of old messages lacking the Seen flag
Provides RAM and Swap usage statistics.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux, FreeBSD.
Returns (per platform):
- GNU/Linux: an array consisting of:
$1
: Memory usage in percent$2
: Memory usage in MiB$3
: Total system memory in MiB$4
: Free memory in MiB$5
: Swap usage in percent$6
: Swap usage in MiB$7
: Total system swap in MiB$8
: Free swap in MiB$9
: Memory usage with buffers and cache, in MiB
- FreeBSD: an array including:
$1
: Memory usage in percent$2
: Memory usage in MiB$3
: Total system memory in MiB$4
: Free memory in MiB$5
: Swap usage in percent$6
: Swap usage in MiB$7
: Total system swap in MiB$8
: Free swap in MiB$9
: Wired memory in percent$10
: Wired memory in MiB$11
: Unfreeable memory (basically active+inactive+wired) in percent$12
: Unfreeable memory in MiB
Provides Music Player Daemon information.
Supported platforms: platform independent (required tools: curl
).
- Argument: an array including password, hostname and port in that order.
nil
fields will be fallen back to default (localhost:6600
without password). - Returns a table with string keys:
${volume}
,${bitrate}
,${elapsed}
(in seconds),${duration}
(in seconds),${Elapsed}
(formatted as [hh:]mm:ss),${Duration}
(formatted as [hh:]mm:ss),${Progress}
(in percentage),${random}
,${repeat}
,${state}
,${Artist}
,${Title}
,${Album}
,${Genre}
and optionally${Name}
and${file}
.
Provides state and usage statistics of network interfaces.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux, FreeBSD.
- Argument (FreeBSD only): desired interface, e.g.
"wlan0"
- Returns (per platform):
- GNU/Linux: a table with string keys, using net interfaces as a base, e.g.
${eth0 carrier}
,${eth0 rx_b}
,${eth0 tx_b}
,${eth0 rx_kb}
,${eth0 tx_kb}
,${eth0 rx_mb}
,${eth0 tx_mb}
,${eth0 rx_gb}
,${eth0 tx_gb}
,${eth0 down_b}
,${eth0 up_b}
,${eth0 down_kb}
,${eth0 up_kb}
,${eth0 down_mb}
,${eth0 up_mb}
,${eth0 down_gb}
,${eth0 up_gb}
,${eth1 rx_b}
, etc. - FreeBSD: a table with string keys:
${carrier}
,${rx_b}
,${tx_b}
,${rx_kb}
,${tx_kb}
,${rx_mb}
,${tx_mb}
,${rx_gb}
,${tx_gb}
,${down_b}
,${up_b}
,${down_kb}
,${up_kb}
,${down_mb}
,${up_mb}
,${down_gb}
,${up_gb}
.
- GNU/Linux: a table with string keys, using net interfaces as a base, e.g.
Provides a message count according to an arbitrary Notmuch query.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
Argument: the query that is passed to Notmuch. For instance:
tag:inbox AND tag:unread
returns the number of unread messages with
tag "inbox".
Returns a table with string keys containing:
${count}
: the count of messages that match the query
Provides agenda statistics for Emacs org-mode.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
- Argument: an array of full paths to agenda files, which will be parsed as arguments.
- Returns an array consisting of
$1
: Number of tasks you forgot to do$2
: Number of tasks for today$3
: Number of tasks for the next 3 days$4
: Number of tasks to do in the week
Provides operating system information.
Supported platforms: platform independent.
Returns an array containing:
$1
: Operating system in use$2
: Release version$3
: Username$4
: Hostname$5
: Available system entropy$6
: Available entropy in percent
Provides number of pending updates on UNIX systems. Be aware that some package managers need to update their local databases (as root) before showing the correct number of updates.
Supported platforms: platform independent, although it requires Awesome
awful.spawn
library for non-blocking spawning.
- Argument: distribution name, e.g.
"Arch"
,"Arch C"
,"Arch S"
,"Debian"
,"Ubuntu"
,"Fedora"
,"FreeBSD"
,"Mandriva"
. - Returns an array including:
$1
: Number of available updates$2
: Packages available for update
Provides state information for a requested RAID array.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux.
- Argument: the RAID array ID.
- Returns an array containing:
$1
: Number of assigned devices$2
: Number of active devices
Provides temperature levels of several thermal zones.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux, FreeBSD.
- Argument (per platform):
- GNU/Linux: either a string - the thermal zone, e.g.
"thermal_zone0"
, or a table of the form{thermal_zone, data_source[, input_file]}
. Availabledata_source
s and corresponding defaultinput_file
are given in the table below. For instance, if"thermal_zone0"
is passed, temperature would be read from/sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone0/temp
. This widget type is confusing and ugly but it is kept for backward compatibility. - FreeBSD: either a full
sysctl
path to a thermal zone, e.g."hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature"
, or a table with multiple paths.
- GNU/Linux: either a string - the thermal zone, e.g.
- Returns (per platform):
- GNU/Linux: an array whose first value is the requested temperature.
- FreeBSD: a table whose keys are provided paths thermal zones.
data_source |
Path | Default input_file |
---|---|---|
"sys" |
/sys/class/thermal/ | "temp" |
"core" |
/sys/devices/platform/ | "temp2_input" |
"hwmon" |
/sys/class/hwmon/ | "temp1_input" |
"proc" |
/proc/acpi/thermal_zone/ | "temperature" |
Provides system uptime and load information.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux, FreeBSD.
Returns an array containing:
$1
: Uptime in days$2
: Uptime in hours$3
: Uptime in minutes$4
: Load average in the past minute$5
: Load average in the past 5 minutes$6
: Load average in the past 15 minutes
Provides volume levels and state of requested mixers.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux (requiring amixer
), FreeBSD.
- Argument (per platform):
- GNU/Linux: either a string containing the ALSA mixer control
(e.g.
"Master"
) or a table including command line arguments to be passed to amixer(1), e.g.{"PCM", "-c", "0"}
or{"Master", "-D", "pulse"}
- FreeBSD: the mixer control, e.g.
"vol"
- GNU/Linux: either a string containing the ALSA mixer control
(e.g.
- Returns an array consisting of (per platform):
- GNU/Linux:
$1
as the volume level and$2
as the mute state of the requested control - FreeBSD:
$1
as the volume level of the left channel,$2
as the volume level of the right channel and$3
as the mute state of the desired control
- GNU/Linux:
Provides weather information for a requested station.
Supported platforms: any having Awesome and curl
installed.
- Argument: the ICAO station code, e.g.
"LDRI"
- Returns a table with string keys:
${city}
,${wind}
,${windmph}
,${windkmh}
,${sky}
,${weather}
,${tempf}
,${tempc}
,${humid}
,${dewf}
,${dewc}
and${press}
,${when}
Provides wireless information for a requested interface.
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux.
- Argument: the network interface, e.g.
"wlan0"
- Returns a table with string keys:
${ssid}
,${mode}
,${chan}
,${rate}
(Mb/s),${freq}
(MHz),${txpw}
(transmission power, in dBm),${sign}
(signal level),${link}
and${linp}
(link quality per 70 and per cent)
Provides wireless information for a requested interface (similar to
vicious.widgets.wifi, but uses iw
instead of iwconfig
).
Supported platforms: GNU/Linux.
- Argument: the network interface, e.g.
"wlan0"
- Returns a table with string keys:
${bssid}
,${ssid}
,${mode}
,${chan}
,${rate}
(Mb/s),${freq}
(MHz),${linp}
(link quality in percent),${txpw}
(transmission power, in dBm) and${sign}
(signal level, in dBm)
Use any of the existing widget types as a starting point for your own. Write a quick worker function that does the work and plug it in. How data will be formatted, will it be red or blue, should be defined in rc.lua (or somewhere else, outside the actual module).
Before writing a widget type you should check if there is already one in the contrib directory of Vicious. The contrib directory contains extra widgets you can use. Some are for less common hardware, and other were contributed by Vicious users. Most of the contrib widgets are obsolete. Contrib widgets will not be imported by init unless you explicitly enable it, or load them in your rc.lua.
Some users would like to avoid writing new modules. For them Vicious
kept the old Wicked functionality, possibility to register their own
functions as widget types. By providing them as the second argument to
vicious.register. Your function can accept format
and warg
arguments, just like workers.
When a lot of widgets are in use they, and awesome, can generate a lot of wake-ups and also be very expensive for system resources. This is especially important when running on battery power. It was a big problem with awesome v2 and widgets that used shell scripts to gather data, and with widget libraries written in languages like Ruby.
Lua is an extremely fast and efficient programming language, and Vicious takes advantage of that. But suspending Vicious widgets is one way to prevent them from draining your battery, despite that.
Update intervals also play a big role, and you can save a lot of power with a smart approach. Don't use intervals like: 5, 10, 30, 60, … to avoid harmonics. If you take the 60-second mark as an example, all of your widgets would be executed at that point. Instead think about using only prime numbers, in that case you will have only a few widgets executed at any given time interval. When choosing intervals also consider what a widget actually does. Some widget types read files that reside in memory, others call external utilities and some, like the mbox widget, read big files.
Vicious can also cache values returned by widget types. Caching enables you to have multiple widgets using the same widget type. With caching its worker function gets executed only once - which is also great for saving power.
-
Some widget types keep internal data and if you call one multiple times without caching, the widget that executes it first would modify stored values. This can lead to problems and give you inconsistent data. Remember it for widget types like CPU and Network usage, which compare the old set of data with the new one to calculate current usage.
-
Widget types that require a widget argument to be passed should be handled carefully. If you are requesting information for different devices then caching should not be used, because you could get inconsistent data.
At the moment only one widget type (Gmail) requires auth. information in order to get to the data. In the future there could be more, and you should give some thought to the issue of protecting your data. The Gmail widget type by default stores login information in the ~/.netrc file, and you are advised to make sure that file is only readable by the owner. Other than that we can not force all users to conform to one standard, one way of keeping it secure, like in some keyring.
First let's clear why we simply don't encrypt the login information and store it in ciphertext. By exposing the algorithm anyone can reverse the encryption steps. Some claim even that's better than plaintext but it's just security trough obscurity.
Here are some ideas actually worth your time. Users that have KDE (or
parts of it) installed could store their login information into the
Kwallet service and request it via DBus from the widget type. It can
be done with tools like dbus-send
and qdbus
. The Gnome keyring
should support the same, so those with parts of Gnome installed could
use that keyring.
Users of GnuPG (and its agent) could consider encrypting the netrc file with their GPG key. Trough the GPG Passphrase Agent they could then decrypt the file transparently while their session is active.
Start with a simple widget, like date
. Then build your setup from
there, one widget at a time. Also remember that besides creating and
registering widgets you have to add them to a wibox
(statusbar) in
order to actually display them.
Update every 2 seconds (the default interval), use standard date sequences as the format string:
datewidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.register(datewidget, vicious.widgets.date, "%b %d, %R")
Update every 13 seconds, append MiB
to 2nd and 3rd returned values and
enables caching.
memwidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.cache(vicious.widgets.mem)
vicious.register(memwidget, vicious.widgets.mem, "$1 ($2MiB/$3MiB)", 13)
Update every 19 seconds, request the temperature level of the /dev/sda and append °C to the returned value. Since the listening port is not provided, default one is used.
hddtempwidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.register(hddtempwidget, vicious.widgets.hddtemp, "${/dev/sda} °C", 19)
Updated every 5 seconds, provide full path to the mbox as argument:
mboxwidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.register(mboxwidget, vicious.widgets.mbox, "$1", 5,
"/home/user/mail/Inbox")
Update every 61 seconds, request the current battery charge level and displays
a progressbar, provides "BAT0"
as battery ID:
batwidget = wibox.widget.progressbar()
-- Create wibox with batwidget
batbox = wibox.layout.margin(
wibox.widget{{max_value = 1, widget = batwidget,
border_width = 0.5, border_color = "#000000",
color = {type = "linear",
from = {0, 0},
to = {0, 30},
stops = {{0, "#AECF96"}, {1, "#FF5656"}}}},
forced_height = 10, forced_width = 8,
direction = 'east', color = beautiful.fg_widget,
layout = wibox.container.rotate},
1, 1, 3, 3)
-- Register battery widget
vicious.register(batwidget, vicious.widgets.bat, "$2", 61, "BAT0")
Update every 3 seconds, feed the graph with total usage percentage of all CPUs/cores:
cpuwidget = awful.widget.graph()
cpuwidget:set_width(50)
cpuwidget:set_background_color"#494B4F"
cpuwidget:set_color{type = "linear", from = {0, 0}, to = {50, 0},
stops = {{0, "#FF5656"}, {0.5, "#88A175"}, {1, "#AECF96"}}}
vicious.register(cpuwidget, vicious.widgets.cpu, "$1", 3)
You can use a function instead of a string as the format parameter.
Then you are able to check the value returned by the widget type and
change it or perform some action. You can change the color of the
battery widget when it goes below a certain point, hide widgets when
they return a certain value or maybe use string.format
for padding.
Do not confuse this with just coloring the widget, in those cases standard Pango markup can be inserted into the format string.
The format function will get the widget as its first argument, table with the values otherwise inserted into the format string as its second argument, and will return the text/data to be used for the widget.
mpdwidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.register(
mpdwidget,
vicious.widgets.mpd,
function (widget, args)
if args["{state}"] == "Stop" then
return ''
else
return ('<span color="white">MPD:</span> %s - %s'):format(
args["{Artist}"], args["{Title}"])
end
end)
uptimewidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.register(uptimewidget, vicious.widgets.uptime,
function (widget, args)
return ("Uptime: %02d %02d:%02d "):format(
args[1], args[2], args[3])
end, 61)
When it comes to padding it is also useful to mention how a widget can be
configured to have a fixed width. You can set a fixed width on your textbox
widgets by changing their width
field (by default width is automatically
adapted to text width). The following code forces a fixed width of 50 px to the
uptime widget, and aligns its text to the right:
uptimewidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
uptimewidget.width, uptimewidget.align = 50, "right"
vicious.register(uptimewidget, vicious.widgets.uptime, "$1 $2:$3", 61)
Stacked graphs are handled specially by Vicious: format
functions passed to
the corresponding widget types must return an array instead of a string.
cpugraph = wibox.widget.graph()
cpugraph:set_stack(true)
cpugraph:set_stack_colors({"red", "yellow", "green", "blue"})
vicious.register(cpugraph, vicious.widgets.cpu,
function (widget, args)
return {args[2], args[3], args[4], args[5]}
end, 3)
The snipet above enables graph stacking/multigraph and plots usage of all four CPU cores on a single graph.
If you are not happy with default symbols used in volume, battery, cpufreq and other widget types, use your own symbols without any need to modify modules. The following example uses a custom table map to modify symbols representing the mixer state: on or off/mute.
volumewidget = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.register(volumewidget, vicious.widgets.volume,
function (widget, args)
local label = {["♫"] = "O", ["♩"] = "M"}
return ("Volume: %d%% State: %s"):format(
args[1], label[args[2]])
end, 2, "PCM")
vicious.call
could be useful for naughty notification and scripts:
mybattery = wibox.widget.textbox()
vicious.register(mybattery, vicious.widgets.bat, "$2%", 17, "0")
mybattery:buttons(awful.util.table.join(
awful.button(
{}, 1,
function ()
naughty.notify{title = "Battery indicator",
text = vicious.call(vicious.widgets.bat,
"Remaining time: $3", "0")}
end)))
Format functions can be used as well:
mybattery:buttons(awful.util.table.join(
awful.button(
{}, 1,
function ()
naughty.notify{
title = "Battery indicator",
text = vicious.call(
vicious.widgets.bat,
function (widget, args)
return ("%s: %10sh\n%s: %14d%%\n%s: %12dW"):format(
"Remaining time", args[3],
"Wear level", args[4],
"Present rate", args[5])
end, "0")}
end)))
- Manual pages: awesome(1), awesomerc(5)
- Awesome declarative layout system
- Example awesome configuration (outdated)
- My first awesome
For details, see CONTRIBUTING.md. Vicious is licensed under GNU GPLv2+, which require all code within the package to be released under a compatible license. All contributors retain their copyright to their code, so please make sure you add your name to the header of every file you touch.
Wicked was written by:
- Lucas de Vries <lucas glacicle.com>
Vicious was originally written by:
- Adrian C. (anrxc) <anrxc sysphere.org>
Current maintainers:
- Jörg Thalheim (Mic92) <joerg thalheim.io>
- mutlusun (especially the FreeBSD port)
- Daniel Hahler (blueyed) <github thequod.de>
- Nguyễn Gia Phong (McSinyx) <vn.mcsinyx gmail.com>
Contributors, listed in alphabetic order:
- 0x5b <dragen15051 gmail.com>
- Adam Lee <adam8157 gmail.com>
- Alexander Koch <lynix47 gmail.com>
- Amir Mohammad Saied <amirsaied gmail.com>
- Andrea Scarpino <me andreascarpino.it>
- Andreas Geisenhainer <psycorama datenhalde.de>
- Andrew Merenbach <andrew merenbach.com>
- Andrzej Bieniek <andyhelp gmail.com>
- Arthur Axel 'fREW' Schmidt <git frew.co>
- Arvydas Sidorenko <asido4 gmail.com>
- Benedikt Sauer <filmor gmail.com>
- Beniamin Kalinowski <beniamin.kalinowski gmail.com>
- Benoît Zugmeyer <bzugmeyer gmail.com>
- blastmaster <blastmaster tuxcode.org>
- Brandon Hartshorn <brandonhartshorn gmail.com>
- crondog <patches crondog.com>
- David Udelson <dru5 cornell.edu>
- Dodo The Last <dodo.the.last gmail.com>
- Elric Milon <whirm gmx.com>
- Enric Morales <me enric.me>
- getzze <getzze gmail.com>
- Greg D. <jabbas jabbas.pl>
- Hagen Schink <troja84 googlemail.com>
- Henning Glawe <glaweh debian.org>
- Hiltjo Posthuma <hiltjo codemadness.org>
- James Reed
- Jay Kamat <jaygkamat gmail.com>
- Jeremy <jeremy.sainvil gmaill.com>
- jinleileiking <jinleileiking gmail.com>
- joe di castro <joe joedicastro.com>
- Joerg Jaspert <joerg debian.org>
- Jonathan McCrohan <jmccrohan gmail.com>
- Juan Carlos Menonita
- Juergen Descher <jhdl gmx.net>
- Julian Volodia <julianvolodia gmail.com>
- Keith Hughitt <keith.hughitt gmail.com>
- Lorenzo Gaggini <lg lgaggini.net>
- Lyderic Lefever <lyderic.lefever gmail.com>
- Martin Striz <striz raynet.cz>
- Martin Ueding <dev martin-ueding.de>
- Mellich <mellich gmx.net>
- Michael Kressibucher <mkressibucher hotmail.com>
- Michael Unterkalmsteiner <miciu gmx.de>
- niko <nikomomo gmail.com>
- Noah Tilton <code tilton.co>
- Normal Ra <normalrawr gmail.com>
- Perry Hargrave <perry.hargrave gmail.com>
- Rémy CLOUARD <shikamaru shikamaru.fr>
- Roberto
- Sébastien Luttringer <seblu seblu.net>
- Shadowmourne G <s10e live.com>
- starenka <starenka0 gmail.com>
- Suseika <wlasowegor gmail.com>
- Uli Schlachter <psychon znc.in>
- Wtfcoder <matt mattfreeman.co.uk>
- Xaver Hellauer <xaver hellauer.bayern>
- zhrtz <apaterson scramble.io>
- And many others