Added location_info() to util/location API to return a dict of all location information. Updated modules/contrib/publicip to use that API. Changed modules/contrib/publicip refresh period back to 60 minutes. Changed /util/location API from 'country_name' back to 'name'
Added another API endpoint, Added options to display country name, country code, city name and lat/long coordinates, attempt to handle failure to fetch info from API endpoints cleanly
I run the same bumblebee-status configuration on my laptop and my
workstation. On my laptop, the upower module works fine: it says "ac"
when plugged in, charging, all that stuff is great.
But on my workstation, it's completely broken: it thinks there's a
battery (which is a mistake: there is no battery at all, apart maybe
from the CMOS battery, but that's not covered by upower), and it
thinks it's discharged, which makes a very noisy warning in the bar.
Now maybe there's something wrong with dbus, Debian, the kernel,
Linux, or some thing else in the stack. All I know is that
`self.power.get_display_device()` returns something like a valid
dbus object here and from there it confuses the heck out of the
module.
So this just adds a function to check if the actual device we're
talking about is actually present, and bails earlier otherwise.
Before: battery logo and "0% 00:00m!", all marked as critical ("red")
After: "ac" with the plugged in logo, not marked critical ("black")
This reverts commit eb51a3c1c7, reversing
changes made to c57daf65ce.
Instead of creating a separate module, the changes will be integrated
into the pulseaudio module.
When closing a popup window when the mouse leave the area (default
behaviour, unfortunately), the main "show()" got stuck in an infinite
loop.
Fix that by setting running to False when exiting.
fixes#844
Simplify the previous autohide functionality by adding a flag that lets
a module (e.g. progress) indicate that the current state should be
"revealed" (not auto-hidden).
This vastly simplifies the implementation.
see #835
Add a new "hide-able" state "mayhide" that can be utilized by modules
without warning state. This state indicates that the module *may* be
hidden by autohide, if the user configures it like this.
see #835