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posted by martyb on Thursday January 17 2019, @01:45AM   Printer-friendly
from the automation++ dept.

Hi all,

I have been learning linux and have a secondary monitor that I wanted to use for showing some sensor data. Currently I need to manually enter in three commands and then arrange my windows each time I want to look at (and start-up, etc). I am using the nethogs, inxi, and lm-sensors libraries:

sudo nethogs
watch -n1 "inxi -s"
watch -n1 "sensors | grep Tdie"

The end result looks something like this:
https://i.ibb.co/TgWXKSn/sensors.png

Is it possible/easy to script the opening of these three terminal windows and position them onto a specific monitor? Or is there a completely different better way to go about this?

Also, is there a way for me to custom arrange the data on the screen? Eg, could I put the sensors "Tdie" data into two columns and remove the "high = +70.0 C" info?

[Beyond this specific case, is there a general solution with, say, a directory containing a separate shell script for launching each program, with a master script that specifies terminal width/height as well as (x,y) coordinates? --Ed.]


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 17 2019, @02:27PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 17 2019, @02:27PM (#787887)

    Instead of specifying the monitor you want, you'll just use a large value of x so that your window's left edge begins after your monitors right edge ends. If you use xrandr, it will show you your total screen real estate, then just make your x offset large enough that it reaches the monitor you want your terminal on. Generally this is the total width divided by two, if your monitors are even. But really, you could just start feeding in larger and larget x values until your terminal reaches the right screen.