externalize config for cpu widget

This commit is contained in:
streetturtle 2019-06-02 22:05:37 -04:00
parent fb465d371e
commit 712d11568a
2 changed files with 82 additions and 32 deletions

View File

@ -2,9 +2,7 @@
This widget shows the average CPU load among all cores of the machine:
![screenshot](out.gif)
When the load is more than 80% the graph becomes red. You can easily customize the widget by changing colors, step width, step spacing, width and interval.
![screenshot](cpu.gif)
## How it works
@ -18,6 +16,32 @@ cpu 197294 718 50102 2002182 3844 0 2724 0 0 0
and calculates the percentage.
## Customization
It is possible to customize widget by providing a table with all or some of the following config parameters:
| Name | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
| `width` | 50 | Width of the widget |
| `step_width` | 2 | Width of the step |
| `step_spacing` | 1 | Space size between steps |
| `color` | `beautiful.fg_normal` | Color of the graph |
### Example
```lua
cpu_widget({
width = 70,
step_width = 2,
step_spacing = 0,
color = '#434c5e'
})
```
The config above results in the following widget:
![custom](./custom.png)
## Installation
Clone/download repo and use widget in **rc.lua**:
@ -29,6 +53,14 @@ s.mytasklist, -- Middle widget
{ -- Right widgets
layout = wibox.layout.fixed.horizontal,
...
cpu_widget,
-- default
cpu_widget(),
-- or custom
cpu_widget({
width = 70,
step_width = 2,
step_spacing = 0,
color = '#434c5e'
})
...
```

View File

@ -10,15 +10,27 @@
local watch = require("awful.widget.watch")
local wibox = require("wibox")
local beautiful = require("beautiful")
local widget = {}
local function worker(args)
local args = args or {}
local width = args.width or 50
local step_width = args.step_width or 2
local step_spacing = args.step_spacing or 1
local color= args.color or beautiful.fg_normal
local cpugraph_widget = wibox.widget {
max_value = 100,
background_color = "#00000000",
forced_width = 50,
step_width = 2,
step_spacing = 1,
forced_width = width,
step_width = step_width,
step_spacing = step_spacing,
widget = wibox.widget.graph,
color = "linear:0,0:0,22:0,#FF0000:0.3,#FFFF00:0.5,#74aeab"
color = "linear:0,0:0,20:0,#FF0000:0.3,#FFFF00:0.6," .. color
}
--- By default graph widget goes from left to right, so we mirror it and push up a bit
@ -47,3 +59,9 @@ watch([[bash -c "cat /proc/stat | grep '^cpu '"]], 1,
)
return cpu_widget
end
return setmetatable(widget, { __call = function(_, ...)
return worker(...)
end })