.TH WMIR 1 wmii-3 .SH NAME wmiir \- window manager improved 2 remote .SH SYNOPSIS .B wmiir .RB [ \-s .IR socketfile ] .I action .I action_arg [...] .br .B wmiir .RB [ \-s .IR socketfile ] .B \-f .br .B wmiir .B \-v .SH DESCRIPTION .SS Overview .B wmiir is a client to access wmi* fileservers for the command line and scripts. It can be used to configure wmii(1). .SS Options .TP .BI \-s " socketfile" lets you specify the socketfile to which .B wmiir a connection will be established. If the environment variable .B WMIR_SOCKET is set and points to a socket file, wmiir will use that file, if this option is not supplied. .TP .B \-f reads from stdin, useful for interactive wmiir sessions or for scripts that write/read a bunch of data, because this speeds things up due to missing process creation/destruction, ie., a hack. .TP .B \-v prints version information to stderr, then exits. .TP The syntax of the actions is as follows: .TP .B create [] creates file .TP .B write writes value to a file .TP .B read reads file or directory contents .TP .B remove removes file or directory tree .SH ENVIRONMENT .TP WMIR_SOCKET See above. .SH EXAMPLES .TP $ wmiir read / This gives you an idea about what the wmii filesystem currently looks like. .TP $ wmiir write /wm/ctl quit .SH SEE ALSO .BR wmiibar (1), .BR wmiifs (1), .BR wmii (1), .BR wmiiwm (1), .BR wmiikeys (1), .BR wmiimenu (1)