Geektool Scripts
Wondering if anyone is actively deploying GeekTool and geeklets to there Macs with Casper and how are you doing it? I have a script that is populating the info I need on the desktop, just not sure how to make it start up with the exported geeklet I have. I know there is some discussion here but not exactly the same. Workflow would go something like:. Install GeekTool package. Copy Info script and Geeklet somewhere on the Mac.
Start and run GeekTool with the geeklet in step 2.Not aware of any terminal commands for GeekTool.Thanks in advance for sharing! I use GeekTool to print the computer name and any statuses messages I throw in a text file. I'm working on improving the system I use for status messages, but the computer name works well.The latest version of GeekTool allows you to use AppleScript to control it, which I've only just started playing with. It seems useful for refreshing the widgets on command or with a Casper policy instead of just plugging in a refresh time in the actual GeekTool widget.- You mentioned wanting a URL to the ticket system.
How I have mine set up is with some desktop shortcuts that go straight to a web form to report problems. The form indicates where to find the computer name and the results of the form go to the ticket system. Just a thought.
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I linked to a screenshot of what my shortcuts look like.:) We have signs in the labs that show the 'Report Computer Problem' icon really large so they actually use it most of the time. We have signs w the printer problems icon over the printers.
GeekTool is a Mac OSX Application (or System Preference Pane) that lets you display various kinds of information on your desktop via 3 default plug-ins.Download GeekTool from the.We have our own community based reciprocity full of images and scripts of user generated Geeklets, check that out here:There is also a repository for various GeekTool scripts here:When you post your Geek Tool desktop, please post your Geek Tool scripts that you used so others can utilize them on their own desktops.After submitting your post, please check the 'New' tab. If your post is not visible then it may have been caught by the spam filter. Message the mods and we will fix it for you.
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Geeklet scripts are usually 1 bash scripts that return a string of characters. If you are unfamiliar with the terminal, that is probably the best place to start.
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Terminal is the command line in OS X that runs a Unix shell called bash. I recommend you before writing bash scripts. I say usually because scripts can be written in other languages and then called with a bash command. For example, I've written some of my scripts in python.(Disclaimer: I am somewhat new to GeekTool, but fairly familiar with bash. So, take my advice with a grain of salt.). One of my geeklets displays my current internal IP and then my external IP underneath it.
Here's the python script: import commandsdef bash(x):return commands.getoutput(x)if bash('ipconfig getifaddr en1'):# Return ethernet IP if availableprint bash('ipconfig getifaddr en1')else:# Otherwise, return wireless IPprint bash('ipconfig getifaddr en0')print bash('curl -s4 icanhazip.com')With the commands module, you can run bash commands within python. The python itself is used to determine whether I'm using an ethernet connection.
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If I am, it displays the ethernet IP. Otherwise, it displays my wireless IP. It then prints my external IP (forced IPv4) from icanhazip.com.In order to use this as a geeklet though, I save it to my geeklet directory (/dev/geeklets/ipaddress.py) and then enter 'python /dev/geeklets/ipaddress.py' as the script in GeekTool. Like I said, I'm relatively new to GeekTool, but when I discovered that a geeklet can be anything that will return a string as output in bash, I tried some python and it worked.