byobu-select-backend(1) [debian man page]
byobu-select-backend(1) byobu byobu-select-backend(1) NAME
byobu-select-backend - select your default Byobu backend window manager SYNOPSIS
byobu-select-backend [screen|tmux] DESCRIPTION
byobu-select-backend is an application that lists the available Byobu backends and allows you to select your default. You can select one of either screen(1) or tmux(1) on the command line, or giving no command line parameters, the utility will run interac- tively. This utility will only affect which backend is used by default when simply running, byobu(1). Note that at any time, you can force the backend of a particular session by running the helpers, byobu-screen(1) or byobu-tmux(1). FILES
~/.byobu/backend SEE ALSO
byobu(1), byobu-screen(1), byobu-tmux(1), screen(1), tmux(1) http://launchpad.net/byobu AUTHOR
This manpage and the utility were written by Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> for Ubuntu systems (but may be used by others). Permis- sion is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document and the utility under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 3 published by the Free Software Foundation. The complete text of the GNU General Public License can be found in /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL on Debian/Ubuntu systems, or in /usr/share/doc/fedora-release-*/GPL on Fedora systems, or on the web at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.txt. byobu 30 Oct 2011 byobu-select-backend(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
byobu(1) byobu byobu(1) NAME
byobu - wrapper script for seeding a user's byobu configuration and launching screen SYNOPSIS
byobu [screen options] Options to byobu are simply passed through screen(1). DESCRIPTION
byobu is a script that launches GNU screen in the byobu configuration. This enables the display of system information and status notifica- tions within two lines at the bottom of the screen session. It also enables multiple tabbed terminal sessions, accessible through simple keystrokes. Note that BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR=$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/byobu if defined, and $HOME/.byobu otherwise. STATUS NOTIFICATIONS
byobu supports a number of unique and interesting status notifications across the lowest two lines in the screen. Each status notification item is independently configurable, enabled and disabled by the configuration utility. The guide below helps identify each status item (in alphabetical order): apport - symbol displayed if there are pending crash reports; {!} symbol displayed on the lower bar toward the left, in black on an orange background arch - system architecture; displayed on the lower bar toward the left, in the default text color on the default background color battery - battery information; display on the lower bar toward the right; |-| indicates discharging, |+| indicates charging, |=| indicates fully charged; when charging or discharging, the current battery capacity as a percentage is displayed; the colours green, yellow, and red are used to give further indication of the battery's charge state; you may override the detected battery by setting BAT- TERY=/proc/acpi/battery/BAT0 in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc cpu_count - the number of cpu's or cores on the system; displayed in the lower bar toward the right in the default text color on the default background, followed by a trailing 'x' cpu_freq - the current frequency of the cpu in GHz; displayed in the lower bar toward the right in white text on a light blue background cpu_temp - the cpu temperature in Celsius (default) or Fahrenheit, configure TEMP=F or TEMP=C in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc; displayed in the lower bar toward the right in yellow text on a black background; you may override the detected cpu temperature device by setting MONI- TORED_TEMP=/proc/acpi/whatever in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/statusrc custom - user defined custom scripts; must be executable programs of any kind in $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/bin; must be named N_NAME, where N is the frequency in seconds to refresh the status indicator, and NAME is the name of the script; N should not be less than 5 seconds; the script should echo a small amount of text to standard out, standard error is discarded; the indicator will be displayed in the lower panel, in inverted colors to your current background/foreground scheme, unless you manually specify the colors in your script's output; BEWARE, cpu-intensive custom scripts may impact your overall system performance and could upset your system administrator! Example: $BYOBU_CONFIG_DIR/bin/1000_uname #!/bin/sh printf "