smenu is a selection filter just like sed
is an editing filter.
This simple tool reads words from the standard input, presents them in a cool interactive window after the current line on the terminal and writes the selected word, if any, on the standard output.
After having unsuccessfully searched the NET for what I wanted, I decided to try to write my own.
I have tried hard to made its usage as simple as possible. It should
work, even when using an old vt100
terminal and is UTF-8
aware.
smenu can be built on every system where a working terminfo
development platform is available. This includes every Unix and Unix
like systems I am aware of.
Please use the provided build.sh
to build the executable. This
script accepts the same arguments as configure
, type build.sh
--help
the see them.
The script autogen.sh
is also provided if you need to generate a
new configure
script from configure.ac
and Makefile.am
. The
GNU autotools will need to be installed for this script to work.
Once the build process has finished, a simple make install
with the
appropriate privileges will do it
This program should work on most Unix but if you are using Linux,
try to type the following line at a shell prompt (here: "$ "
):
$ R=$(grep Vm /proc/$$/status \ | smenu -n20 -W $':\n' -q -c -b -g -s /VmH) $ echo $R
Something like this should now be displayed with the program waiting for commands: (numbers are mine, yours will be different)
VmPeak¦ 23840 kB VmSize¦ 23836 kB VmLck ¦ 0 kB VmHWM ¦ 2936 kB VmRSS ¦ 2936 kB VmData¦ 1316 kB VmStk ¦ 136 kB VmExe ¦ 28 kB VmLib ¦ 3956 kB VmPTE ¦ 64 kB VmSwap¦ 0 kB
A cursor should be under "VmHWM "
.
After having moved the cursor to " 136 kB"
and ended the program
with <Enter>
, the shell variable R should contain: " 136 kB"
.
The following command, which is Unix brand agnostic, should give you a scrolling window if you have more than 10 accounts on your Unix with a UID lower than 100:
$ R=$(awk -F: '$3 < 100 {print $1,$3,$4,$NF}' /etc/passwd \ | smenu -n10 -c) $ echo $R
On mine (LANG
and LC_ALL
set to POSIX
) it displays:
at 25 25 /bin/bash \ sys 0 3 /usr/bin/ksh + bin 1 1 /bin/bash | daemon 2 2 /bin/bash | ftp 40 49 /bin/bash | games 12 100 /bin/bash | lp 4 7 /bin/bash | mail 8 12 /bin/false | named 44 44 /bin/false | ntp 74 108 /bin/false v
Note the presence of a scrollbar.
Please use the included man page to learn more about this little program.