!! This should be considered a beta release.. You have been warned.. !! Ok, I wrote this mainly because I was pissed at how much CPU wmflame took (it could be easily fixed, however), and I wanted to use a fire algo that looks a bit different, and hey, it's always nice to have your own dockapps laying around the desktop. -zinx- Invoking: wmfire [-L[1|0|on|off|yes|no]] [-B[1|0|on|off|yes|no]]] [-C<0..2>] [-s[1|0|on|off|yes|no]] [-P <program [args [...]]>] [-h] -L Toggles/Sets if flame height follows info provided by -P -B Toggles/Sets if load bar shows -s Toggles/Sets if the numbers are shown -C<0..2> Start at a different colormap -P <...> Set "load program"; will be expanded by shell... -h Shows this short bit of help Examples: Use lm_sensors to follow the temperature of the cpu (at least on my comp): wmfire -P "fireload_file -F /proc/sys/dev/sensors/*/temp1 -S '%s%s' -m 40 -x 51" Start up wmfire with no bar, and a cyanish flame, and follow load: wmfire -B0 -C2 Start up wmfire with a bar, and follow load but don't show nice'd processes: wmfire -P "fireload_cpu -n" Full flame height all the time, no bar, flame with no blue, no numbers: wmfire -L0 -B0 -C1 -s0 All comments/questions should be directed towards zinx@linuxfreak.com