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screenfetch-c

Build Status

Current Version: 1.6 (release)

screenfetch-c is an attempt to rewrite screenFetch, a popular shell script that displays system information and an ASCII logo, in the C language. Like the original screenFetch, screenfetch-c is meant to be compatible with a number of systems, including the BSDs, Solaris, GNU/Linux, OS X, and Windows.

Installing screenfetch-c

Dependencies:

screenfetch-c only relies on libraries that come on virtually every system.

  • On Linux, OpenGL is used to detect the GPU. In most package managers, this is listed as libgl-dev.

  • On Linux and Solaris, libX11 is required. In most package managers, this is listed as libX11-dev.

Installing screenfetch-c is very simple:

$ git clone https://www.github.com/woodruffw/screenfetch-c.git
$ cd screenfetch-c
$ make

If you want to disable colors you can run make COLORS=0 instead.

Note: For Solaris, make must be GNU make. If it isn't, use gmake. Using regular (Sun) make will cause strange errors.

Arch Linux

screenfetch-c is availible on the AUR

OS X

screenfetch-c is also available via Homebrew!

To install it, just run the following:

$ brew install woodruffw/screenfetch-c/screenfetch-c

Removal:

Removing screenfetch-c is just as easy as installing it:

$ sudo make uninstall

If you installed it via Homebrew:

$ brew rm screenfetch-c
$ brew untap woodruffw/screenfetch-c # optional

Contributing

There are a number of things that still need to be tested or completed in screenfetch-c.

If you think that you can test/fix/improve one or more of them, feel free to fork and issue requests back to me.

In particular, the following things still need to be done:

  • Improve error checking and handling.
  • Matching screencapture capabilities on Windows with OS X/Linux/BSD/Solaris
  • Improve RAM/HDD detection on BSD
  • Fix manual mode on Windows
  • Improve features on Android
  • Improve/replace configuration format and parser

Notes on MinGW

Shell detection on the MinGW build is limited. You must set the SHELL environment variable manually if you're running screenfetch-c from command prompt or PowerShell. For command prompt that's set SHELL=cmd.exe and for PowerShell it's $env:SHELL = "PowerShell".

You can also run screenfetch-c from a batch script

@echo off
set SHELL=cmd.exe
echo.
cmd /C screenfetch-c.exe
echo.
pause

or a PowerShell script

$env:SHELL = "PowerShell"
Write-Host ""
Invoke-Expression -Command:"cmd /C screenfetch-c.exe"
Write-Host "
Press any key to continue ..."
$x = $host.UI.RawUI.ReadKey("NoEcho,IncludeKeyDown")

if you prefer to start it with a double click.

Unlike PowerShell the Windows command prompt doesn't support ANSI colors by default. You can deactivate colors if you build with make COLORS=0. However there's a neat project called ANSICON which allows you to enable colors in command prompt by running screenfetch-c with cmd /C ansicon.exe screenfetch-c.exe.

Current Known Compatibility:

Note: These are only the ones that have actually been tested (so far). screenfetch-c may very well work on many of the untested distros, so feel free to try it.

  • OS X
  • Windows (Cygwin, MSYS2, MinGW)
  • Arch Linux
  • Fedora
  • Linux Mint
  • LMDE
  • Ubuntu (including derivatives)
  • Fedora
  • Debian
  • CrunchBang
  • Gentoo
  • Funtoo
  • FreeBSD
  • OpenBSD
  • NetBSD
  • DragonFlyBSD
  • OpenSUSE
  • Mandriva/Mandrake
  • Slackware
  • Red Hat (RHEL)
  • Frugalware
  • Peppermint
  • SolusOS
  • Mageia
  • ParabolaGNU/Linux-libre
  • Viperr
  • LinuxDeepin
  • Chakra
  • Fuduntu
  • Trisquel
  • Manjaro
  • ElementaryOS (styled as 'elementary OS')
  • Scientific Linux
  • Backtrack Linux
  • Kali Linux
  • Sabayon
  • Android (requires -D "Android" flag)
  • Linux (upon failure to detect a specific distro)
  • Solaris (including SunOS, OpenSolaris, and OpenIndiana)
  • Angstrom

License

screenfetch-c is licensed under the MIT license.

For the exact terms, see the license.