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engrampa
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bottom | engrampa | |
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81 | 3 | |
8,850 | 102 | |
- | - | |
9.3 | 7.3 | |
3 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Rust | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
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- Nvtop: Linux Task Monitor for Nvidia, AMD and Intel GPUs
- Bottom: Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor
- btm: a customizable system monitor for the Linux, macOS, and Windows terminal
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🐚🦀Comandos shell reescritos em Rust
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Windows 11 has made the “clean Windows install” an oxymoron
I'd suggest Bottom as a TUI alternative to the in-built task managers - https://github.com/ClementTsang/bottom
It works on Windows also.
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[REQUEST] Rewrite btop in Rust for Lightning Fast Performance 🚀 and Memory Safety ✨
If anyone is looking for a "top" like, written in Rust, might have a look at https://github.com/ClementTsang/bottom
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My T440p becoming home media player
Looks like bottom with another theme
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Top Productivity CLI Tools I Use on Linux
bottom - A cross-platform graphical process/system monitor with a customizable interface and a multitude of features.
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Report on platform-compliance for cargo directories
As a macOS user, it boils my brain whenever I've to type in something like ~/Library/Application Support/org.rust-lang.Cargo/config.toml. macOS users have been begging CLI tools to support XDG variables on macOS too. Setting defaults is a strong indication to the community what should be the "preferred" locations. The defaults defined in your article will invariably lead to some authors saying that if that path is good enough for cargo, then it is good enough for their tool. Even the latest draft RFC acknowledges that macOS should use XDG variables too. I've written more about this here.
engrampa
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TIL there's a fork of the unmaintained p7zip port of 7-Zip
The p7zip port of 7-Zip is several releases behind and the project seems to be abandoned. I discovered this when a large archive failed to extract with Engrampa which uses it. It reported a "Headers Error" which is due to a compatibility problem between zip format implementations. 7-Zip has a fix but the port doesn't. But there's a fork on GitHub which is being actively maintained. Check it out.
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I made a terminal utility to monitor some system stats. Was wondering if you guys know of anything better or if I should continue dev work on it since we need it?
Linux mint mate has something called "System Monitor" that is a running graphical plot of system activity. http://www.mate-desktop.org It is by the Mate developers. Very nice. It is similar to the windows monitor.
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What compression tool you mainly use?
I use Engrampa. Which archive format I use depends on the use case. For example, if Windows users are involved, I usually use Rar archives. Under Linux, I usually use tar.xz.
What are some alternatives?
btop - A monitor of resources
p7zip - A new p7zip fork with additional codecs and improvements (forked from https://sourceforge.net/projects/sevenzip/ AND https://sourceforge.net/projects/p7zip/).
htop - htop - an interactive process viewer
grafterm - Metrics dashboards on terminal (a grafana inspired terminal version)
gotop - A terminal based graphical activity monitor inspired by gtop and vtop
pbzip2
ytop - A TUI system monitor written in Rust
s-tui - Terminal-based CPU stress and monitoring utility
bpytop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
mediactl - Media controls for Linux, powered by MPRIS via D-Bus
glances - Glances an Eye on your system. A top/htop alternative for GNU/Linux, BSD, Mac OS and Windows operating systems.
sysstat - Performance monitoring tools for Linux