# pfetch A pretty system information tool written in POSIX `sh`. ```sh ➜ pfetch ___ goldie@KISS (.· | os KISS Linux (<> | host Lenovo YOGA 900-13ISK / __ \ kernel 5.3.1-coffee ( / \ /| uptime 6h 20m _/\ __)/_) pkgs 130 \/-____\/ memory 1721MiB / 7942MiB ``` ## OS support - [x] Linux - [x] MacOS - [ ] Needs OS name detection. - [x] OpenBSD - [ ] Needs used memory detection. - [x] FreeBSD - [ ] Needs used memory detection. ## Configuration `pfetch` is configured through environment variables. ```sh # Which information to display. # NOTE: If 'ascii' will be used, it must come first. # Default: first example below # Valid: space separated string PF_INFO="ascii title distro host kernel uptime pkgs memory" # Example: Only ASCII. PF_INFO="ascii" # Example: Only Information. PF_INFO="title distro host kernel uptime pkgs memory" # Separator between info name and info data. # Default: unset # Valid: string PF_SEP=":" # Color of info names: # Default: unset (auto) # Valid: 0-9 PF_COL1=4 # Color of info data: # Default: unset (auto) # Valid: 0-9 PF_COL2=7 # Alignment padding. # Default: unset (auto) # Valid: int PF_ALIGN="" # Which ascii art to use. # Default: unset (auto) # Valid: string PF_ASCII="openbsd" ``` ## Make `pfetch` update on an interval This makes `pfetch` display interactively like `htop`/`top`. ```sh watch -tn1 pfetch ```