Crates.io | lipl |
lib.rs | lipl |
version | 0.1.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2022-08-23 20:14:35.830996 |
updated_at | 2022-08-23 20:14:35.830996 |
description | A command line tool to analyse the output over time of custom shell commands. |
homepage | https://github.com/yxdunc/lipl |
repository | https://github.com/yxdunc/lipl |
max_upload_size | |
id | 651315 |
size | 33,813 |
lipl is a command line tool that is similar to watch but has extended functions for commands outputing a number.
For example lipl 'ls'
will show the output of ls
and will refresh the result
every 1 second (by default).
Now if a command outputs a number like ls -1 | wc -l
it will be able to plot
the result. In this case the plot will show a constant result until another
process adds or removes a file from the current folder. It can be useful when
downloading many files to the current folder and you want to follow the
progress. If you know that in total 1000 files will be downloaded, you can
simply add the option --target 1000
and a progress bar will be shown along
with an estimated time of completion.
brew install yxdunc/tools/lipl
lipl
can be installed from available AUR packages using an AUR helper. For example,
yay -S lipl
A string containing a bash command.
If the bash command returns a number a plot will be shown (ex: ls -1 | wc -l
)
If the bash command returns anything else the command shows the output and follow the same behaviour as watch
-n/--refresh-rate
: the refresh rate in seconds
-t/--target
: a target value that will be used to show a progress bar based on
the command outputs. A simple linear regression is used.
-l/--history-len
: the number of results from the given command that are stored
and plotted.
--show-regression-line
: when true shows the regression line used to compute
the ETA.
--show-target-line
: when true shows an horizontal line representing the target
value.
🗃Plot number of files in /tmp
lipl -n 0.5 "ls -1 /tmp | wc -l"
♨️ Plot cpu usage of a given PID
lipl -n 0.1 "ps -p ${PID} -o %cpu | tail -1"
🗂Plot mem usage of a given PID
lipl -n 0.1 "ps -p ${PID} -o %mem | tail -1"
🐍Plot number of python processes running
lipl -n 0.5 "pgrep python | wc -l"
👩🚀Plot number of people in space
lipl -n 1 'echo "curl -s http://api.open-notify.org/astros.json | jq .number" | sh'
🔥Plot load of most cpu intensive process
lipl -n 0.01 "ps -eo pcpu | sort -n | tail -1"
💻Plot sum of all processes cpu load
lipl -n 0.01 'ps -eo pcpu | grep -v CPU | sed "s/ //" | paste -sd "+" - | bc'
⛓Plot bitcoin price
lipl -n 5 'curl -s https://api.coindesk.com/v1/bpi/currentprice.json | jq .bpi.EUR.rate_float'
🎢Plot polynomial
lipl -n 1 'echo "x=$(($(date +%s) % 30 - 15)); echo $(($x * $x * $x + $x * $x + $x))" | sh'
lipl -n 1 'echo "x=$(($(date +%s) % 30 - 15)); echo $(($x * $x + $x))" | sh'