Wcc iii - mcd installation guide, Wcciii - mcd local 2 by 20 line display, Wcc iii technical guide 13a-9 – WattMaster WM-WCC3-TGD-01B User Manual
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13. WCC III - MCD INSTALLATION GUIDE
WCC III Technical Guide
13A-9
Crystalfontz
Rx: 0.0 Down l
Tx: 0.0 UP 0
IP Packet
An IP packet is the formatted unit of data that is carried by a 
packet mode computer network. When the data is formatted into 
IP packets, the bit rate of the communication medium (Ethernet) 
can better be shared among users than if the network were circuit 
switched. 
Rx: Displays the number of IP Packets that are currently being 
received on the network card right now. 
Tx: Displays the number of IP Packets that are currently being 
transmitted on the network card right now. 
Down: Total IP Packets that have been received on the network 
card since the last bootup. 
Up: Total IP Packets that have been transmitted on the network 
card since the last bootup. 
Crystalfontz
Usr: 0.0% Nice 0.0%
Sys: 0.0% Idle100.0%
CPU Usage Percentages
Usr: Percentage of the WCC III – MCD CPU’s utilization that 
occurred while executing at the user level (application). BackTask.
exe is an application.
Sys: Percentage of the WCC III – MCD CPU’s utilization that 
occurred while executing at the system level (kernel). The Linux 
operating system is system level. 
Nice: Percentage of the WCC III – MCD CPU’s utilization that 
occurred while executing at the user level.
Nice (pronounced /na is/) is a program that’s found within Linux. 
Nice directly maps to a kernel call of the same name. For any 
given process, it changes the priority in the kernel’s scheduler. A 
niceness of −20 is the highest priority and 19 is the lowest priority. 
The default niceness for any process is inherited from its parent 
process, usually 0.
Nice becomes useful when there are several processes that are 
demanding more resources than the WCC III – MCD CPU can 
provide. In this state, a higher priority process will get a larger 
chunk of the WCC III – MCD CPU time than a lower priority 
process. If the WCC III – MCD CPU can deliver more resources 
than the processes are requesting, then even the lowest priority 
process can get up to 99% of the WCC III - MCD CPU. Only the 
superuser (root) may set the niceness to a smaller (higher priority) 
value. On Linux it is possible to change ”/etc/security/limits.conf “ 
to allow other users or groups to set a low nice value.
Idle: Percentage of the WCC III – MCD CPU’s time that the CPU 
were idle and the system did not do an outstanding disk I/O request. 
A computer processor is described as idle when it is not being used 
by any program.
Programs which make little use of the CPU Idle Time mean that 
they run at a low priority so as not to impact programs that run at 
normal priority like BackTask.exe. Many programs that use the 
WCC III – MCD CPU idle time can cause the WCC III - MCD CPU 
to always be 100% utilized, so that the time spent where the WCC 
III – MCD CPU would have been idle is instead spent performing 
useful computations. This generally causes the WCC III – MCD 
CPU to consume more power as most modern computer’s CPUs 
can enter power-save modes when they are idle.
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LCDproc Menu
Options
Options Menu
Press the Lower Right button (MENU) to select the “LCDproc 
Menu” selection.
Press the Upper Right button (SELECT) to select the “Option” 
selection.
WCCIII - MCD Local 2 by 20 Line Display
