inxi is a full featured system information script that will detect information about hardware specifications, including but not limited to vendor details, CPU info, graphic and sound cards. Most importantly, it will output everything in a easy to read format and it can also be used on irc clients like irssi, weechat or xchat.
How to use inxi?
The general use of inxi is inxi -<color> -<option>. inxi output is colored and to change the color for better visibility use the c option followed by a number between 0-32.
Information type
Command, usage, and more information
System information
inxi -b and inxi -F
The b option output basic system information, while the F option will output full system information.
Hard drive details
inxi -D
Outputs information on your hard drives, like make, model and size
Hard drive partitions
inxi -p
Outputs information about all mounted partitions, mount points and space usage
Networking
inxi -n and inxi -ni
Outputs information about the details of the network interfaces and configuration. When the i option is used with n, Inxi will output IP address details (for both WAN and LAN).
Hardware
inxi -AG and inxi -h
The A and G options output information about the audio and graphics hardware respectively. You usually want to use them together. The h option outputs you the full list of options you can use to get even more information about your hardware.
Using inxi in IRC clients
Client
Usage
Xchat, irssi and most other clients
/exec -o inxi -<option> | pastebinit
The -o option shows the output to the channel. Without it, only the user will see the output.
Weechat
/shell -o inxi -<option> | pastebinit Note: For weechat to run external scripts like inxi, shell.py has to be installed.
Using inxi -c0 within a IRC client environment is highly advisable because colored output doesn’t work in pastebins.
If you experienced problems with logging into your session after suspending your laptop by closing the lid (and only this exact scenario!), your days of worry should be over now. Many users have commented on the respective bugreport, many of whom experienced different issues with suspending. This made the issue very difficult to pinpoint in the beginning for us technical folk and confusing for users too.
Sean Davis, Technical Lead of Xubuntu, put together the pieces we collected after identifying the issue and the fix landed in the 14.04.1 and 14.10 Beta 1 releases. This means that the problem is fixed for
New installs of Xubuntu 14.04.1 or Xubuntu 14.10 Beta 1
New users created with xubuntu-default-settings 14.04.5
All those of you who have been running Trusty since its release have to toggle a setting in order to fix the issue for existing user-accounts:
Open Light Locker Settings from the Settings Manager
Turn “Enable Light Locker” Off. Click “Apply”.
Turn “Enable Light Locker” On. Click “Apply”.
These steps have to followed manually because we never overwrite existing user settings.
Obviously, if you previously had disabled Light Locker, the last step is sufficient.
The first point release of 14.04 just came out a few days ago and many LTS users waited for this to upgrade from 12.04 – in fact do-release-upgrade only offers the LTS to LTS upgrade after the first point release for stability reasons. So we thought this would be the perfect time to do a quick writeup of a few things to do after upgrading your system. User configuration isn’t updated and installed applications aren’t removed when upgrading and that’s a good thing: Upgraders will not have to restore their customizations and their system will mostly look as before.
However, for those of you who want to get closer to the default setup of Xubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr, here go five easy steps you can quickly follow to that end.
Light Locker has replaced XScreenSaver. Light Locker uses LightDM to lock the screen, merging the functionality of the login screen and the lock screen. Having both applications installed at the same time may produce bugs or regressions, so it is recommended to remove XScreenSaver. To remove it just run the following command in a terminal window: sudo apt-get remove xscreensaver
If you would rather see a screensaver instead of an improved screen locker, you can alternatively remove Light Locker and keep XScreenSaver.
MenuLibre, an advanced menu editor that provides modern features in a clean, easy-to-use interface, with full Xfce support, replaces Alacarte for menu editing. To remove Alacarte open a terminal window and run the following command: sudo apt-get remove alacarte
Due to a duplication of functionalities, the Xubuntu Team decided to favor Ristretto for photo viewing, and drop gThumb. To remove gThumb from your system run in a terminal window: sudo apt-get remove gthumb
As Whiskermenu is now the default menu in Xubuntu, swap out the old application menu with it. Just right click the top panel and navigate to Panel > Add New Items, then select “Whisker Menu” and click “Add”.
After that, and to remove the old application menu, just right click on its icon and choose the “Remove” option.
All PPAs are automatically disabled when you upgrade, so you’ll have to re-enable release-independent PPAs manually, taking in consideration that you’ll have to check if the old PPAs work with the new Xubuntu version.
The Xubuntu team is pleased to announce the immediate release of Xubuntu 14.04.1 Xubuntu 14.04 is an LTS (Long-Term Support) release and will be supported for 3 years. This is the first Point Release of it’s cycle.
As the main server will be very busy in the first days after the release, we recommend using the Torrents wherever possible.
For support with the release, navigate to Help & Support for a complete list of methods to get help.
Bug fixes for the first point release
Black screen after wakeup from suspending by closing the laptop lid. (1303736)
Light Locker blanks the screen when playing video. (1309744)
Include MenuLibre 2.0.4, which contains many fixes. (1323405)
The documentation is now attributed to the Translators.
Highlights, changes and known issues
The highlights of this release include:
Light Locker replaces xscreensaver for screen locking, a setting editing GUI is included
The panel layout is updated, and now uses Whiskermenu as the default menu
Mugshot is included to allow you to easily edit your personal preferences
MenuLibre for menu editing, with full Xfce support, replaces Alacarte
A community wallpapers package, which includes work from the five winners of the wallpaper contest
GTK Theme Config to customize your desktop theme colors
Updated artwork, including various enhancements to themes as well as a new default wallpaper
Some of the known issues include:
Window manager shortcut keys don’t work after reboot (1292290)
Sorting by date or name not working correctly in Ristretto (1270894)
Due to the switch from xscreensaver to light-locker, some users might have issues with timing of locking; removing xscreensaver from the system should fix these problems
IBus does not support certain keyboard layouts (1284635). Only affects upgrades with certain keyboard layouts. See release notes for a workaround.
To see the complete list of new features, improvements and known and fixed bugs, read the release notes.
Improving screenlocking (or: sessionlocking) has been on our agenda for a few cycles now. We’ve used the old and proven XScreensaver for a few releases, but people have always complained about its antiquated looks (which are also not customizable). Switching to gnome-screensaver wasn’t an option because of the additional package dependencies. Furthermore, after gnome-screensaver 3.6, locking became more tightly integrated into Gnome-Shell, which is why Ubuntu/Unity kept version 3.6 and has maintained it for a few releases now.
Starting with 14.04, Ubuntu/Unity have switched to a new solution for locking, and so have we.
Xubuntu locking before: xscreensaver
Xubuntu locking now: light-locker
The solution Xubuntu uses in 14.04 is called light-locker. The light-locker project is a fork of gnome-screensaver 3.6, but cut down to a bare minimum (so no gnome-dependencies), using LightDM’s greeter as the lock (and unlock) screen.
How does the screenlocking work?
There aren’t too many changes for users. The light-locker process operates in the background and people can still lock their session in the ways they used to (e.g. through Whiskermenu’s lock launcher or through a keyboard shortcut invoking “xflock4”).
Settings are configurable via a settings dialog developed for Xubuntu 14.04, called Light Locker Settings. The tool can be found in the the Settings Manager. It allows you to configure whether your session should be locked automatically after a timeout and the screen-blank and off times. The dialog is still, for the moment, basic, but it should allow you enough control. Refinements are planned for future cycles/releases.
One thing that changes for users is the fact that locking with LightDM means that a new virtual terminal is opened. In a default single-user session, the user’s X session rests at VT7 (reachable with the keyboard-shortcut Ctrl+Alt+F7). When you lock your session, LightDM sends a lock signal, light-locker locks the session on VT7 and you get forwarded to VT8, where you’re presented with the login greeter, which serves as the unlock dialog.
The aforementioned change introduces one inconvenience you might (or might not) notice: when light-locker switches the VT, there is some screenflickering and it could take a second or two on older machines.
What happened to my music playback?
As your seat becomes inactive, your audio stream is stopped/paused until you log into your session again. This is one of the known issues of light-locker or locking with LightDM in general.
Currently, when locking, it is assumed you are either:
in a public space of sorts (the desktop at home hardly needs locking) and have walked away from the machine
using a system with more than one user
Stopping/pausing playback in both of these scenarios make sense.
However, this might be an annoying change for users used to having their music playback continue even when their session locks. If you don’t like this behavior, there are basically two solutions:
Set light-locker to lock the session “When the screensaver is deactivated”
Switch back to using xscreensaver
Add your user to the “audio” group on your computer and music playback will continue also with light-locker
The first option is a good workaround, because it means that your audio-playback will continue when the screen has been blanked. However, when you wake up your computer, e.g. by touching the mouse, it will pause the music until you log into your session again.
The third solution is mentioned last, because it isn’t advised to add your user to the “audio” group (read The Audio Group wiki page for a comprehensive explanation). However, as long as you’re on a single-user system, this might still be an option for you.
Can I have a screensaver other than the blank screen with light-locker?
In a word – no.
If you need a screensaver for whatever reason, perhaps using a TV for a monitor and don’t want a blank screen, then you will need to remove light-locker and install some alternative, like xscreensaver.
Conclusion
From Xubuntu 14.04 on, we can finally provide a visually consistent way of logging in to and locking your session with light-locker. As mentioned above, there is a conceptual change in how we look at locking in Xubuntu (which to some might seem like a small regression), however, there are still good alternatives for those who don’t agree with our vision.
Known Issues
Currently, you might run into this known issue (that we discovered only when the release was already imminent), which we’re already working on fixing:
Also, upgraders from previous Xubuntu versions might run into trouble because XScreensaver and light-locker are both installed. Just get rid of one of the two to resolve that.