Name: gnome-shell-extension-freon Summary: GNOME Shell extension to display system temperature, voltage, and fan speed Version: 23 Release: 4%{?dist} URL: https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/841/freon/ License: GPLv2 BuildArch: noarch # You can see the latest source releases here: # https://github.com/UshakovVasilii/gnome-shell-extension-freon/releases Source0: https://github.com/UshakovVasilii/gnome-shell-extension-freon/archive/EGO-%{version}.tar.gz # Dependencies described here: # https://github.com/UshakovVasilii/gnome-shell-extension-freon/wiki/Dependency Requires: gnome-shell >= 3.12 Requires: gnome-shell-extension-common Requires: lm_sensors Requires: udisks2 # CentOS 7 build environment doesn't support Recommends tag. %if 0%{?fedora} Recommends: gnome-tweak-tool %endif %description Freon is a GNOME Shell extension for displaying the temperature of your CPU, hard disk, solid state, and video card (NVIDIA, Catalyst, and Bumblebee supported), as well as power supply voltage, and fan speed. You can choose which HDD/SSD or other devices to include, what temperature units to use, and how often to refresh the sensors readout, and they will appear in the GNOME Shell top bar. For the GPU temperature, you may need to install the vendor's driver for best results. **NOTE:** Freon relies on lm_sensors. You must run `sensors-detect` before Freon will be able to detect and display hardware temperatures. The default options for sensors-detect are safe for most systems; however, there is a small, but non-zero chance of causing hardware damage or a kernel panic. See the discussion on GitHub -- https://github.com/groeck/lm-sensors/issues/17 **NOTE:** After installing, each user that wants it must still manually enable Freon before it will take effect. You can do so a few different ways: * If you've already installed the GNOME Shell integration web browser plugin, go to , find the extension, and click the switch to "ON." * Open GNOME Tweak Tool, go to the Extensions tab, find the extension, and click the switch to "ON." * Open a terminal or the desktop's command dialog, and (as your normal user account) run: gnome-shell-extension-tool --enable freon@UshakovVasilii_Github.yahoo.com You may also need to restart GNOME Shell (Open the command dialog with Alt-F2, type `r`, and hit enter), or log out and log back in. # UUID is defined in extension's metadata.json and used as directory name. %global UUID freon@UshakovVasilii_Github.yahoo.com %global gnome_extensions_dir %{_datadir}/gnome-shell/extensions/ %global final_install_dir %{buildroot}/%{gnome_extensions_dir}/%{UUID} %prep %autosetup -n %{name}-EGO-%{version} %build # No compilation necessary. %install mkdir -p %{final_install_dir} cp --recursive --preserve=mode,timestamps %{UUID}/* %{final_install_dir} # RPM will take care of gschemas, we don't need to include a precompiled copy. mkdir -p %{buildroot}/%{_datadir}/glib-2.0/schemas/ mv %{final_install_dir}/schemas/org.gnome.shell.extensions.sensors.gschema.xml \ %{buildroot}/%{_datadir}/glib-2.0/schemas/ rm --recursive %{final_install_dir}/schemas/ # Remove source .po localization files, move binary .mo to system directory. rm --recursive %{final_install_dir}/po/ mv %{final_install_dir}/locale %{buildroot}/%{_datadir}/ %find_lang freon %posttrans # The latest versions of Fedora compile gschemas automatically, but CentOS 7 # does not. %if 0%{?rhel} %{_bindir}/glib-compile-schemas %{_datadir}/glib-2.0/schemas/ &> /dev/null || : %endif %files -f freon.lang %doc README.md %license LICENSE %{gnome_extensions_dir}/%{UUID}/ %{_datadir}/glib-2.0/schemas/org.gnome.shell.extensions.sensors.gschema.xml %changelog * Wed Mar 29 2017 Andrew Toskin - 23-4 - Remove the sensors-detect scriptlet. * Mon Mar 27 2017 Andrew Toskin - 23-3 - Explicitly compile gschemas on EPEL 7. - Add extra warning to package description about using lm_sensors. * Tue Mar 21 2017 Andrew Toskin - 23-2 - Revised package description. - Added EPEL 7 branch. * Tue Mar 14 2017 Andrew Toskin - 23-1 - First build accepted into Fedora repos.