xmobar: A Minimalistic Text Based Status Bar
Xmobar is a minimalistic text based status bar.
Inspired by the Ion3 status bar, it supports similar features, like dynamic color management, output templates, and extensibility through plugins.
[Skip to Readme]
Modules
- Xmobar
- Plugins
- Xmobar.Plugins.DateZone
- Xmobar.Plugins.MBox
- Xmobar.Plugins.Mail
- Monitors
- Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.Alsa
- Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.MPD
- Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.Mpris
- Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.UVMeter
- Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.Volume
- Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.Weather
- Xmobar.Plugins.Monitors.Wireless
- Plugins
Flags
Automatic Flags
Name | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
with_xft | Use Xft to render text. UTF-8 support included. | Disabled |
with_utf8 | With UTF-8 support. | Enabled |
with_inotify | inotify support (modern Linux only). Required for the Mail and MBox plugins. | Disabled |
with_iwlib | Wireless info support. Required for the Wireless plugin, needs iwlib installed. | Disabled |
with_mpd | MPD support. Needs libmpd installed. | Disabled |
all_extensions | Includes all optional extensions. | Disabled |
with_alsa | Use alsa-mixer to get the volume from soundcards. | Disabled |
with_datezone | Enables localized date support. | Disabled |
with_mpris | MPRIS v1, v2 support. | Disabled |
with_dbus | Publish a service on the session bus for controlling xmobar. | Disabled |
with_xpm | Enable usage of xpm for icons. | Disabled |
with_threaded | Use threaded runtime. | Disabled |
with_rtsopts | Use -with-rtsopts=-V0 to reduce wakeups. | Enabled |
with_uvmeter | UVMeter only useful to australians. | Disabled |
with_weather | Enable weather plugin. | Enabled |
Use -f <flag> to enable a flag, or -f -<flag> to disable that flag. More info
Downloads
- xmobar-0.32.tar.gz [browse] (Cabal source package)
- Package description (as included in the package)
Maintainer's Corner
For package maintainers and hackage trustees
Candidates
Versions [RSS] | 0.3, 0.3.1, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 0.9.1, 0.9.2, 0.10, 0.11, 0.11.1, 0.12, 0.13, 0.14, 0.15, 0.16, 0.17, 0.18, 0.19, 0.20, 0.20.1, 0.21, 0.22, 0.22.1, 0.23, 0.23.1, 0.24, 0.24.1, 0.24.2, 0.24.3, 0.24.4, 0.24.5, 0.25, 0.26, 0.27, 0.28, 0.28.1, 0.29, 0.29.1, 0.29.2, 0.29.3, 0.29.4, 0.29.5, 0.30, 0.31, 0.32, 0.33, 0.34, 0.35, 0.35.1, 0.36, 0.37, 0.38, 0.39, 0.40, 0.41, 0.42, 0.43, 0.44, 0.44.1, 0.44.2, 0.45, 0.46, 0.47, 0.47.1, 0.47.2, 0.47.3, 0.47.4, 0.48, 0.48.1 |
---|---|
Change log | changelog.md |
Dependencies | alsa-core (>=0.5 && <0.6), alsa-mixer (>=0.3 && <0.4), async, base (>=4.9.1.0 && <4.14), bytestring, containers, dbus (>=1), directory, extensible-exceptions (>=0.1 && <0.2), filepath, hinotify (>=0.3 && <0.5), http-conduit, http-types, iwlib (>=0.1.0 && <0.2), libmpd (>=0.9.0.10), mtl (>=2.1 && <2.3), old-locale, parsec (>=3.1 && <3.2), parsec-numbers (>=0.1.0), process, regex-compat, stm (>=2.3 && <2.6), time, timezone-olson (>=0.1 && <0.2), timezone-series (>=0.1 && <0.2), transformers, unix, unsupported-ghc-version (<0), utf8-string (>=0.3 && <1.1), X11 (>=1.6.1), X11-xft (>=0.2 && <0.4), xmobar [details] |
License | BSD-3-Clause |
Author | Andrea Rossato and Jose A. Ortega Ruiz |
Maintainer | Jose A. Ortega Ruiz <jao@gnu.org> |
Category | System |
Home page | http://xmobar.org |
Bug tracker | https://github.com/jaor/xmobar/issues |
Source repo | head: git clone git://github.com/jaor/xmobar.git -b master |
Uploaded | by JoseAntonioOrtegaRuiz at 2019-12-08T17:07:11Z |
Distributions | Arch:0.48.1, Debian:0.36, Fedora:0.46, FreeBSD:0.23.1, NixOS:0.48.1, openSUSE:0.48.1 |
Reverse Dependencies | 2 direct, 0 indirect [details] |
Executables | xmobar |
Downloads | 63489 total (341 in the last 30 days) |
Rating | 2.25 (votes: 2) [estimated by Bayesian average] |
Your Rating |
|
Status | Docs not available [build log] All reported builds failed as of 2019-12-09 [all 3 reports] |
Readme for xmobar-0.32
[back to package description]About
Xmobar is a minimalistic status bar. It was originally designed and implemented by Andrea Rossato to work with xmonad, but it is actually usable with any window manager.
Xmobar was inspired by the Ion3 status bar, and supports similar features, like dynamic color management, icons, output templates, and extensibility through plugins.
These are two xmobar instances using the author's configuration:
and this one is a full desktop with xmonad and, again, two instances of xmobar.
Bug Reports
To submit bug reports you can use the bug tracker over at Github.
Installation
Using cabal-install
Xmobar is available from Hackage, and you can install it using
cabal-install
:
cabal install xmobar
Xmobar versions >= 0.27 require GHC version >= 8.0.2. Due to an intermittent bug in GHC, we recommend using either GHC 8.0.2, 8.2.2 or 8.6.
See below for a list of optional compilation flags that will enable some optional plugins. For instance, to install xmobar with all the bells and whistles, use:
cabal install xmobar --flags="all_extensions"
From source
If you don't have cabal-install
installed, you can get xmobar's
source code in a variety of ways:
-
From Hackage. Just download the latest release from xmobar's hackage page.
-
From Github. You can also obtain a tarball in Github's downloads page. You'll find there links to each tagged release.
-
From the bleeding edge repo. If you prefer to live dangerously, just get the latest and greatest (and buggiest, I guess) using git:
git clone git://github.com/jaor/xmobar
If you have cabal installed, you can now use it from within xmobar's source tree:
cabal install -fall_extensions
There is also a barebones stack.yaml
file that will allow you to
build the xmobar executable with stances of the form:
stack install --flag xmobar:all_extensions
Optional features
You can configure xmobar to include some optional plugins and features, which are not compiled by default. To that end, you need to add one or more flags to either the cabal install command or the configure setup step, as shown in the examples above.
Extensions need additional libraries (listed below) that will be automatically downloaded and installed if you're using cabal install. Otherwise, you'll need to install them yourself.
-
with_dbus
Enables support for DBUS by making xmobar to publish a service on the session bus. Requires the dbus package. -
with_threaded
Uses GHC's threaded runtime. Use this option if xmobar enters a high-CPU regime right after starting. -
with_utf8
UTF-8 support. Requires the utf8-string package. -
with_xft
Antialiased fonts. Requires the X11-xft package. This option automatically enables UTF-8. To use XFT fonts you need to use thexft:
prefix in thefont
configuration option. For instance:font = "xft:Times New Roman-10:italic"
Or to have fallback fonts, just separate them by commas:
font = "xft:Open Sans:size=9,WenQuanYi Zen Hei:size=9"
-
with_mpd
Enables support for the MPD daemon. Requires the libmpd package. -
with_mpris
Enables support for MPRIS v1/v2 protocol. Requires the dbus and text packages. -
with_inotify
Support for inotify in modern Linux kernels. This option is needed for the MBox and Mail plugins to work. Requires the hinotify package. -
with_iwlib
Support for wireless cards. Enables the Wireless plugin. No Haskell library is required, but you will need the iwlib C library and headers in your system (e.g., installlibiw-dev
in Debian-based systems orwireless_tools
on Arch Linux). -
with_alsa
Support for ALSA sound cards. Enables the Volume plugin. Requires the alsa-mixer package. To install the latter, you'll need the libasound C library and headers in your system (e.g., installlibasound2-dev
in Debian-based systems). -
with_datezone
Support for other timezones. Enables the DateZone plugin. Requires timezone-olson and timezone-series package. -
with_xpm
Support for xpm image file format. This will allow loading .xpm files in<icon>
. Requires the libXpm C library. -
with_uvmeter
Enables UVMeter plugin. The plugin shows UV data for Australia. -
with_weather
Support to display weather information. Enables Weather plugin. -
all_extensions
Enables all the extensions above.
Running xmobar
You can now run xmobar with:
xmobar /path/to/config &
or
xmobar &
if you have the default configuration file saved as
$XDG\_CONFIG\_HOME/xmobar/xmobarrc
(defaulting to
~/.config/xmobar/xmobarrc
), or ~/.xmobarrc
.
Signal Handling
Since 0.14 xmobar reacts to SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2:
-
After receiving SIGUSR1 xmobar moves its position to the next screen.
-
After receiving SIGUSR2 xmobar repositions itself on the current screen.
Configuration
Quick Start
See examples/xmobar.config for an example.
For the output template:
-
%command%
will execute command and print the output. The output may contain markups to change the characters' color. -
<fc=#FF0000>string</fc>
will printstring
with#FF0000
color (red). -
<fn=1>string</fn>
will printstring
with the first font fromadditionalFonts
. The index0
corresponds to the standard font. -
<icon=/path/to/icon.xbm/>
will insert the given bitmap. XPM image format is also supported when compiled with--flags="with_xpm"
. -
<action=`command` button=12345>
will execute given command when clicked with specified buttons. If not specified, button is equal to 1 (left mouse button). Using old syntax (without backticks surroundingcommand
) will result inbutton
attribute being ignored. -
<raw=len:str/>
allows the encapsulation of arbitrary textstr
(which must belen
Char
s long, wherelen
is encoded as a decimal sequence). Careful use of this andUnsafeStdinReader
, for example, permits window managers to feed xmobar strings with<action>
tags mixed with un-trusted content (e.g. window titles). For example, if xmobar is invoked asxmobar -c "[Run UnsafeStdinReader]" -t "%UnsafeStdinReader%"
and receives on standard input the line
<action=`echo test` button=1><raw=41:<action=`echo mooo` button=1>foo</action>/></action>`
then it will display the text
<action=`echo mooo` button=1>foo</action>
, which, when clicked, will causetest
to be echoed.
Other configuration options:
-
font
Name of the font to be used. Use thexft:
prefix for XFT fonts. -
additionalFonts
Haskell-style list of fonts to be used with thefn
-template. Use thexft:
prefix for XFT fonts. See alsotextOffsets
below. -
bgColor
Background color. -
fgColor
Default font color. -
alpha
The transparency. 0 is transparent, 255 is opaque. -
position
Top, TopP, TopW, TopSize, Bottom, BottomP, BottomW, BottomSize or Static (with x, y, width and height).TopP and BottomP take 2 arguments: left padding and right padding.
TopW and BottomW take 2 arguments: an alignment parameter (L for left, C for centered, R for Right) and an integer for the percentage width xmobar window will have in respect to the screen width.
TopSize and BottomSize take 3 arguments: an alignment parameter, an integer for the percentage width, and an integer for the minimum pixel height that the xmobar window will have.
For example:
position = BottomW C 75
to place xmobar at the bottom, centered with the 75% of the screen width. Or
position = BottomP 120 0
to place xmobar at the bottom, with 120 pixel indent of the left. Or
position = Static { xpos = 0 , ypos = 0, width = 1024, height = 15 }
or
position = Top
-
textOffset
The vertical offset, in pixels, for the text baseline. If negative or not given, xmobar will try to center text vertically. -
textOffsets
A list of vertical offsets, in pixels, for the text baseline, to be used with the each of the fonts inadditionalFonts
(if any). If negative or not given, xmobar will try to center text vertically for that font. -
iconOffset
The vertical offset, in pixels, for icons bottom line. If negative or not given, xmobar will try to center icons vertically. -
lowerOnStart
When True the window is sent the bottom of the window stack initially. -
hideOnStart
When set to True the window is initially not mapped, i.e. hidden. It then can be toggled manually (for example using the dbus interface) or automatically (by a plugin) to make it reappear. -
allDesktops
When set to True (the default), xmobar will tell the window manager explicitly to be shown in all desktops, by setting_NET_WM_DESKTOP
to 0xffffffff. -
overrideRedirect
If you're running xmobar in a tiling window manager, you might need to set this option toFalse
so that it behaves as a docked application. Defaults toTrue
. -
pickBroadest
When multiple displays are available, xmobar will choose by default the first one to place itself. With this flag set toTrue
(the default isFalse
) it will choose the broadest one instead. -
persistent
When True the window status is fixed i.e. hiding or revealing is not possible. This option can be toggled at runtime. Defaults to False. -
border
TopB, TopBM, BottomB, BottomBM, FullB, FullBM or NoBorder (default).TopB, BottomB, FullB take no arguments, and request drawing a border at the top, bottom or around xmobar's window, respectively.
TopBM, BottomBM, FullBM take an integer argument, which is the margin, in pixels, between the border of the window and the drawn border.
-
borderColor
Border color. -
borderWidth
Border width in pixels. -
iconRoot
Root folder where icons are stored. For <icon=path/> if path start with"/"
,"./"
or"../"
it is interpreted as it is. Otherwise it will haveiconRoot ++ "/"
prepended to it. Default is"."
. -
commands
For setting the options of the programs to run (optional). -
sepChar
The character to be used for indicating commands in the output template (default '%'). -
alignSep
a 2 character string for aligning text in the output template. The text before the first character will be align to left, the text in between the 2 characters will be centered, and the text after the second character will be align to the right. -
template
The output template. -
wmClass
The value for the window's X11 WM_CLASS property. Defaults to "xmobar". -
wmName
The value for the window's X11 WM_NAME property. Defaults to "xmobar".
Running xmobar with i3status
xmobar can be used to display information generated by i3status, a
small program that gathers system information and outputs it in
formats suitable for being displayed by the dzen2 status bar, wmii's
status bar or xmobar's StdinReader
. See i3status manual for
further details.
Dynamically sizing xmobar
See this idea by Jonas Camillus Jeppensen for a way of adapting dynamically xmobar's size and run it alongside a system tray widget such as trayer or stalonetray (although the idea is not limited to trays, really). For your convenience, there is a version of Jonas' script in examples/padding-icon.sh.
Command Line Options
xmobar can be either configured with a configuration file or with command line options. In the second case, the command line options will overwrite the corresponding options set in the configuration file.
Example:
xmobar -B white -a right -F blue -t '%LIPB%' -c '[Run Weather "LIPB" [] 36000]'
This is the list of command line options (the output of xmobar --help):
Usage: xmobar [OPTION...] [FILE]
Options:
-h, -? --help This help
-V --version Show version information
-v --verbose Emit verbose debugging messages
-r --recompile Force recompilation (for Haskell FILE)
-f font name --font=font name Font name
-w class --wmclass=class X11 WM_CLASS property
-n name --wmname=name X11 WM_NAME property
-B bg color --bgcolor=bg color Background color. Default black
-F fg color --fgcolor=fg color Foreground color. Default grey
-A alpha --alpha=alpha Transparency: 0 is transparent
and 255 (the default) is opaque
-o --top Place xmobar at the top of the screen
-b --bottom Place xmobar at the bottom of the screen
-p --position=position Specify position, same as in config file
-d --dock Try to start xmobar as a dock
-a alignsep --alignsep=alignsep Separators for left, center and right text
alignment. Default: '}{'
-s char --sepchar=char Character used to separate commands in
the output template. Default '%'
-t template --template=template Output template
-i path --iconroot=path Default directory for icon pattern files
-c commands --commands=commands List of commands to be executed
-C command --add-command=command Add to the list of commands to be executed
-x screen --screen=screen On which X screen number to start
Mail bug reports and suggestions to <mail@jao.io>
The DBus Interface
When compiled with the optional with_dbus
flag, xmobar can be
controlled over dbus. All signals defined in src/Signal.hs as data SignalType
can now be sent over dbus to xmobar. Due to current
limitations of the implementation only one process of xmobar can
acquire the dbus. This is handled on a first-come-first-served basis,
meaning that the first process will get the dbus interface. Other
processes will run without further problems, yet have no dbus
interface.
- Bus Name:
org.Xmobar.Control
- Object Path:
/org/Xmobar/Control
- Member Name: Any of SignalType, e.g.
string:Reveal
- Interface Name:
org.Xmobar.Control
An example using the dbus-send
command line utility:
dbus-send \
--session \
--dest=org.Xmobar.Control \
--type=method_call \
--print-reply \
'/org/Xmobar/Control' \
org.Xmobar.Control.SendSignal \
"string:Toggle 0"
It is also possible to send multiple signals at once:
# send to another screen, reveal and toggle the persistent flag
dbus-send [..] \
"string:ChangeScreen 0" "string:Reveal 0" "string:TogglePersistent"
The Toggle
, Reveal
, and Hide
signals take an additional integer
argument that denotes an initial delay, in tenths of a second, before
the command takes effect.
Example for using the DBus IPC interface with XMonad
Bind the key which should {,un}map xmobar to a dummy value. This is necessary for {,un}grabKey in xmonad.
((0, xK_Alt_L ), return ())
Also, install avoidStruts
layout modifier from XMonad.Hooks.ManageDocks
Finally, install these two event hooks (handleEventHook
in XConfig
)
myDocksEventHook
is a replacement for docksEventHook
which reacts on unmap
events as well (which docksEventHook
doesn't).
import qualified XMonad.Util.ExtensibleState as XS
data DockToggleTime = DTT { lastTime :: Time } deriving (Eq, Show, Typeable)
instance ExtensionClass DockToggleTime where
initialValue = DTT 0
toggleDocksHook :: Int -> KeySym -> Event -> X All
toggleDocksHook to ks ( KeyEvent { ev_event_display = d
, ev_event_type = et
, ev_keycode = ekc
, ev_time = etime
} ) =
io (keysymToKeycode d ks) >>= toggleDocks >> return (All True)
where
toggleDocks kc
| ekc == kc && et == keyPress = do
safeSendSignal ["Reveal 0", "TogglePersistent"]
XS.put ( DTT etime )
| ekc == kc && et == keyRelease = do
gap <- XS.gets ( (-) etime . lastTime )
safeSendSignal [ "TogglePersistent"
, "Hide " ++ show (if gap < 400 then to else 0)
]
| otherwise = return ()
safeSendSignal s = catchX (io $ sendSignal s) (return ())
sendSignal = withSession . callSignal
withSession mc = connectSession >>= \c -> callNoReply c mc >> disconnect c
callSignal :: [String] -> MethodCall
callSignal s = ( methodCall
( objectPath_ "/org/Xmobar/Control" )
( interfaceName_ "org.Xmobar.Control" )
( memberName_ "SendSignal" )
) { methodCallDestination = Just $ busName_ "org.Xmobar.Control"
, methodCallBody = map toVariant s
}
toggleDocksHook _ _ _ = return (All True)
myDocksEventHook :: Event -> X All
myDocksEventHook e = do
when (et == mapNotify || et == unmapNotify) $
whenX ((not `fmap` (isClient w)) <&&> runQuery checkDock w) refresh
return (All True)
where w = ev_window e
et = ev_event_type e
The Output Template
The output template must contain at least one command. xmobar will
parse the template and will search for the command to be executed in
the commands
configuration option. First an alias
will be searched
(plugins such as Weather or Network have default aliases, see below).
After that, the command name will be tried. If a command is found, the
arguments specified in the commands
list will be used.
If no command is found in the commands
list, xmobar will ask the
operating system to execute a program with the name found in the
template. If the execution is not successful an error will be
reported.
It's possible to insert in the global templates icon directives of the form:
<icon=/path/to/bitmap.xbm/>
which will produce the expected result. Accepted image formats are XBM
and XPM (when with_xpm
flag is enabled). If path does not start with
"/"
, "./"
, "../"
it will have iconRoot ++ "/"
prepended to it.
It's also possible to use action directives of the form:
<action=`command` button=12345>
which will be executed when clicked on with specified mouse buttons. This tag can be nested, allowing different commands to be run depending on button clicked.
The commands
Configuration Option
The commands
configuration option is a list of commands information
and arguments to be used by xmobar when parsing the output template.
Each member of the list consists in a command prefixed by the Run
keyword. Each command has arguments to control the way xmobar is going
to execute it.
The option consists in a list of commands separated by a comma and enclosed by square parenthesis.
Example:
[Run Memory ["-t","Mem: <usedratio>%"] 10, Run Swap [] 10]
to run the Memory monitor plugin with the specified template, and the swap monitor plugin, with default options, every second. And here's an example of a template for the commands above using an icon:
template="<icon=/home/jao/.xmobar/mem.xbm/><memory> <swap>"
This example will run "xclock" command when date is clicked:
template="<action=`xclock`>%date%</action>
The only internal available command is Com
(see below Executing
External Commands). All other commands are provided by plugins. xmobar
comes with some plugins, providing a set of system monitors, a
standard input reader, an Unix named pipe reader, a configurable date
plugin, and much more: we list all available plugins below.
Other commands can be created as plugins with the Plugin infrastructure. See below.
System Monitor Plugins
This is the description of the system monitor plugins available in xmobar. Some of them are only installed when an optional build option is set: we mention that fact, when needed, in their description.
Each monitor has an alias
to be used in the output template.
Monitors have default aliases. The sections below describe every
monitor in turn, but before we provide a list of the configuration
options (or monitor arguments) they all share.
Icon patterns
Some monitors allow usage of strings that depend on some integer value
from 0 to 8 by replacing all occurrences of "%%"
with it
(i.e. "<icon=/path/to/icon_%%.xpm/>"
will be interpreted
as "<icon=/path/to/icon_3.xpm/>"
when the value is 3
, also "%"
is interpreted
as "%"
, "%%"
as "3"
, "%%%"
as "3%"
, "%%%%"
as "33"
and so on). Essentially
it allows to replace vertical bars with custom icons. For example,
Run Brightness
[ "-t", "<ipat>"
, "--"
, "--brightness-icon-pattern", "<icon=bright_%%.xpm/>"
] 30
Will display bright_0.xpm
to bright_8.xpm
depending on current brightness
value.
Default Monitor Arguments
Monitors accept a common set of arguments, described in the first subsection below. In addition, some monitors accept additional options that are specific to them. When specifying the list of arguments in your configuration, the common options come first, followed by "--", followed by any monitor-specific options.
These are the options available for all monitors below:
-t
string Output template- Template for the monitor output. Field names must be enclosed
between pointy brackets (
<foo>
) and will be substituted by the computed values. You can also specify the foreground (and optionally, background) color for a region by bracketing it between<fc=fgcolor>
(or<fc=fgcolor,bgcolor>
) and</fc>
. The rest of the template is output verbatim. - Long option:
--template
- Default value: per monitor (see above).
- Template for the monitor output. Field names must be enclosed
between pointy brackets (
-H
number The high threshold.- Numerical values higher than number will be displayed with the
color specified by
-h
(see below). - Long option:
--High
- Default value: 66
- Numerical values higher than number will be displayed with the
color specified by
-L
number The low threshold.- Numerical values higher than number and lower than the high
threshold will be displayed with the color specified by
-n
(see below). Values lower than number will use the-l
color. - Long option:
--Low
- Default value: 33
- Numerical values higher than number and lower than the high
threshold will be displayed with the color specified by
-h
color High threshold color.- Color for displaying values above the high threshold. color can be either a name (e.g. "blue") or an hexadecimal RGB (e.g. "#FF0000").
- Long option:
--high
- Default: none (use the default foreground).
-n
color Color for 'normal' values- Color used for values greater than the low threshold but lower than the high one.
- Long option:
--normal
- Default: none (use the default foreground).
-l
color The low threshold color- Color for displaying values below the low threshold.
- Long option:
--low
- Default: none (use the default foreground).
-S
boolean Display optional suffixes- When set to a true designator ("True", "Yes" or "On"), optional value suffixes such as the '%' symbol or optional units will be displayed.
- Long option:
--suffix
- Default: False.
-p
number Percentages padding- Width, in number of digits, for quantities representing
percentages. For instance
-p 3
means that all percentages in the monitor will be represented using 3 digits. - Long option:
--ppad
- Default value: 0 (don't pad)
- Width, in number of digits, for quantities representing
percentages. For instance
-d
number Decimal digits- Number of digits after the decimal period to use in float values.
- Long option:
--ddigits
- Default value: 0 (display only integer part)
-m
number Minimum field width- Minimum width, in number of characters, of the fields in the
monitor template. Values whose printed representation is shorter
than this value will be padded using the padding characters
given by the
-c
option with the alignment specified by-a
(see below). - Long option:
--minwidth
- Default: 0
- Minimum width, in number of characters, of the fields in the
monitor template. Values whose printed representation is shorter
than this value will be padded using the padding characters
given by the
-M
number Maximum field width- Maximum width, in number of characters, of the fields in the monitor template. Values whose printed representation is longer than this value will be truncated.
- Long option:
--maxwidth
- Default: 0 (no maximum width)
-e
string Maximum width ellipsis- Ellipsis to be added to the field when it has reached its max width.
- Long option:
--maxwidthellipsis
- Default: "" (no ellipsis)
-w
number Fixed field width- All fields will be set to this width, padding or truncating as needed.
- Long option:
--width
- Default: 0 (variable width)
-T
number Maximum total width- Maximum total width of the text.
- Long option:
--maxtwidth
- Default: 0 (no limit)
-E
string Maximum total width ellipsis- Ellipsis to be added to the total text when it has reached its max width.
- Long option:
--maxtwidthellipsis
- Default: "" (no ellipsis)
-c
string- Characters used for padding. The characters of string are used
cyclically. E.g., with
-P +- -w 6
, a field with value "foo" will be represented as "+-+foo". - Long option:
--padchars
- Default value: " "
- Characters used for padding. The characters of string are used
cyclically. E.g., with
-a
r|l Field alignment- Whether to use right (r) or left (l) alignment of field values when padding.
- Long option:
--align
- Default value: r (padding to the left)
-b
string Bar background- Characters used, cyclically, to draw the background of bars.
For instance, if you set this option to "·.", an empty bar will
look like this:
·.·.·.·.·.
- Long option:
--bback
- Default value: ":"
- Characters used, cyclically, to draw the background of bars.
For instance, if you set this option to "·.", an empty bar will
look like this:
-f
string Bar foreground- Characters used, cyclically, to draw the foreground of bars.
- Long option:
--bfore
- Default value: "#"
-W
number Bar width- Total number of characters used to draw bars.
- Long option:
--bwidth
- Default value: 10
-x
string N/A string- String to be used when the monitor is not available
- Long option:
--nastring
- Default value: "N/A"
Commands' arguments must be set as a list. E.g.:
Run Weather "EGPF" ["-t", "<station>: <tempC>C"] 36000
In this case xmobar will run the weather monitor, getting information for the weather station ID EGPF (Glasgow Airport, as a homage to GHC) every hour (36000 tenth of seconds), with a template that will output something like:
Glasgow Airport: 16.0C
Uptime Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to
uptime
- Args: default monitor arguments. The low and high thresholds refer to the number of days.
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:days
,hours
,minutes
,seconds
. The total uptime is the sum of all those fields. You can set the-S
argument to "True" to add units to the display of those numeric fields. - Default template:
Up: <days>d <hours>h <minutes>m
Weather StationID Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to the Station ID: so
Weather "LIPB" []
can be used in template as%LIPB%
- Thresholds refer to temperature in the selected units
- Args: default monitor arguments
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:station
,stationState
,year
,month
,day
,hour
,windCardinal
,windAzimuth
,windMph
,windKnots
,windMs
,windKmh
visibility
,skyCondition
,tempC
,tempF
,dewPointC
,dewPointF
,rh
,pressure
- Default template:
<station>: <tempC>C, rh <rh>% (<hour>)
- Retrieves weather information from http://tgftp.nws.noaa.gov.
WeatherX StationID SkyConditions Args RefreshRate
- Works in the same way as
Weather
, but takes an additional argument, a list of pairs from sky conditions to their replacement (typically a unicode string or an icon specification). - Use the variable
skyConditionS
to display the replacement of the corresponding sky condition. All otherWeather
template variables are available as well.
For example:
WeatherX "LEBL"
[ ("clear", "🌣")
, ("sunny", "🌣")
, ("mostly clear", "🌤")
, ("mostly sunny", "🌤")
, ("partly sunny", "⛅")
, ("fair", "🌑")
, ("cloudy","☁")
, ("overcast","☁")
, ("partly cloudy", "⛅")
, ("mostly cloudy", "🌧")
, ("considerable cloudiness", "⛈")]
["-t", "<fn=2><skyConditionS></fn> <tempC>° <rh>% <windKmh> (<hour>)"
, "-L","10", "-H", "25", "--normal", "black"
, "--high", "lightgoldenrod4", "--low", "darkseagreen4"]
18000
As mentioned, the replacement string can also be an icon
specification, such as ("clear", "<icon=weather-clear.xbm/>")
.
Network Interface Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to the interface name: so
Network "eth0" []
can be used as%eth0%
- Thresholds refer to velocities expressed in Kb/s
- Args: default monitor arguments, plus:
--rx-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for reception rate inrxipat
.--tx-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for transmission rate intxipat
.
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:dev
,rx
,tx
,rxbar
,rxvbar
,rxipat
,txbar
,txvbar
,txipat
. Reception and transmission rates (rx
andtx
) are displayed by default as Kb/s, without any suffixes, but you can set the-S
to "True" to make them displayed with adaptive units (Kb/s, Mb/s, etc.). - Default template:
<dev>: <rx>KB|<tx>KB
DynNetwork Args RefreshRate
- Active interface is detected automatically
- Aliases to "dynnetwork"
- Thresholds are expressed in Kb/s
- Args: default monitor arguments, plus:
--rx-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for reception rate inrxipat
.--tx-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for transmission rate intxipat
--devices
: comma-separated list of devices to show.
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:dev
,rx
,tx
,rxbar
,rxvbar
,rxipat
,txbar
,txvbar
,txipat
. Reception and transmission rates (rx
andtx
) are displayed in Kbytes per second, and you can set the-S
to "True" to make them displayed with units (the string "Kb/s"). - Default template:
<dev>: <rx>KB|<tx>KB
- Example of usage of
--devices
option:["--", "--devices", "wlp2s0,enp0s20f41"]
Wireless Interface Args RefreshRate
- If set to "", the interface is looked up in /proc/net/wireless.
- Aliases to the interface name with the suffix "wi": thus,
Wireless "wlan0" []
can be used as%wlan0wi%
, andWireless "" []
as%wi%
. - Args: default monitor arguments, plus:
--quality-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for connection quality inqualityipat
.
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:essid
,quality
,qualitybar
,qualityvbar
,qualityipat
- Thresholds refer to link quality in a
[0, 100]
scale - Default template:
<essid> <quality>
- Requires the C library iwlib (part of the wireless tools suite)
installed in your system. In addition, to activate this plugin you
must pass
--flags="with_iwlib"
during compilation
Memory Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to
memory
- Args: default monitor arguments, plus:
--used-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for used memory ratio inusedipat
.--free-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for free memory ratio infreeipat
.--available-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for available memory ratio inavailableipat
.
- Thresholds refer to percentage of used memory
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:total
,free
,buffer
,cache
,available
,used
,usedratio
,usedbar
,usedvbar
,usedipat
,freeratio
,freebar
,freevbar
,freeipat
,availableratio
,availablebar
,availablevbar
,availableipat
- Default template:
Mem: <usedratio>% (<cache>M)
Swap Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to
swap
- Args: default monitor arguments
- Thresholds refer to percentage of used swap
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:total
,used
,free
,usedratio
- Default template:
Swap: <usedratio>%
Cpu Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to
cpu
- Args: default monitor arguments, plus:
--load-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for cpu load inipat
- Thresholds refer to percentage of CPU load
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:total
,bar
,vbar
,ipat
,user
,nice
,system
,idle
,iowait
- Default template:
Cpu: <total>%
MultiCpu Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to
multicpu
- Args: default monitor arguments, plus:
--load-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for overall cpu load inipat
.--load-icon-patterns
: dynamic string for each cpu load inautoipat
,ipat{i}
. This option can be specified several times. nth option corresponds to nth cpu.--fallback-icon-pattern
: dynamic string used byautoipat
andipat{i}
when no--load-icon-patterns
has been provided forcpu{i}
--contiguous-icons
: flag (no value needs to be provided) that causes the load icons to be drawn without padding.
- Thresholds refer to percentage of CPU load
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:autototal
,autobar
,autovbar
,autoipat
,autouser
,autonice
,autosystem
,autoidle
,total
,bar
,vbar
,ipat
,user
,nice
,system
,idle
,total0
,bar0
,vbar0
,ipat0
,user0
,nice0
,system0
,idle0
, ... The auto* variables automatically detect the number of CPUs on the system and display one entry for each. - Default template:
Cpu: <total>%
Battery Args RefreshRate
- Same as
BatteryP ["BAT", "BAT0", "BAT1", "BAT2"] Args RefreshRate
.
BatteryP Dirs Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
battery
-
Dirs: list of directories in
/sys/class/power_supply/
where to look for the ACPI files of each battery. Example:["BAT0","BAT1","BAT2"]
. Only up to 3 existing directories will be searched. -
Args: default monitor arguments, plus the following specific ones (these options, being specific to the monitor, are to be specified after a
--
in the argument list):-O
: string for AC "on" status (default: "On")-i
: string for AC "idle" status (default: "On")-o
: string for AC "off" status (default: "Off")-L
: low power (watts
) threshold (default: 10)-H
: high power threshold (default: 12)-l
: color to display power lower than the-L
threshold-m
: color to display power lower than the-H
threshold-h
: color to display power higher than the-H
threshold-p
: color to display positive power (battery charging)-f
: file in/sys/class/power_supply
with AC info (default: "AC/online")-A
: a number between 0 and 100, threshold below which the action given by-a
, if any, is performed (default: 5)-a
: a string with a system command that is run when the percentage left in the battery is less or equal than the threshold given by the-A
option. If not present, no action is undertaken.-P
: to include a percentage symbol inleft
.--on-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for current battery charge when AC is "on" inleftipat
.--off-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for current battery charge when AC is "off" inleftipat
.--idle-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for current battery charge when AC is "idle" inleftipat
.--lows
: string for AC "off" status and power lower than the-L
threshold (default: "")--mediums
: string for AC "off" status and power lower than the-H
threshold (default: "")--high
: string for AC "off" status and power higher than the-H
threshold (default: "")
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:left
,leftbar
,leftvbar
,leftipat
,timeleft
,watts
,acstatus
-
Default template:
Batt: <watts>, <left>% / <timeleft>
-
Example (note that you need "--" to separate regular monitor options from Battery's specific ones):
Run BatteryP ["BAT0"] ["-t", "<acstatus><watts> (<left>%)", "-L", "10", "-H", "80", "-p", "3", "--", "-O", "<fc=green>On</fc> - ", "-i", "", "-L", "-15", "-H", "-5", "-l", "red", "-m", "blue", "-h", "green" "-a", "notify-send -u critical 'Battery running out!!'", "-A", "3"] 600
In the above example, the thresholds before the "--" separator affect only the
<left>
and<leftbar>
fields, while those after the separator affect how<watts>
is displayed. For this monitor, neither the generic nor the specific options have any effect on<timeleft>
. We are also telling the monitor to execute the unix commandnotify-send
when the percentage left in the battery reaches 6%.It is also possible to specify template variables in the
-O
and-o
switches, as in the following example:Run BatteryP ["BAT0"] ["-t", "<acstatus>" , "-L", "10", "-H", "80" , "-l", "red", "-h", "green" , "--", "-O", "Charging", "-o", "Battery: <left>%" ] 10
-
The "idle" AC state is selected whenever the AC power entering the battery is zero.
BatteryN Dirs Args RefreshRate Alias
Works like BatteryP
, but lets you specify an alias for the monitor
other than "battery". Useful in case you one separate monitors for
more than one battery.
TopProc Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to
top
- Args: default monitor arguments. The low and high
thresholds (
-L
and-H
) denote, for memory entries, the percent of the process memory over the total amount of memory currently in use and, for cpu entries, the activity percentage (i.e., the value ofcpuN
, which takes values between 0 and 100). - Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:no
,name1
,cpu1
,both1
,mname1
,mem1
,mboth1
,name2
,cpu2
,both2
,mname2
,mem2
,mboth2
, ... - Default template:
<both1>
- Displays the name and cpu/mem usage of running processes (
bothn
andmboth
display both, and is useful to specify an overall maximum and/or minimum width, using the-m
/-M
arguments.no
gives the total number of processes.
TopMem Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to
topmem
- Args: default monitor arguments. The low and high
thresholds (
-L
and-H
) denote the percent of the process memory over the total amount of memory currently in use. - Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:name1
,mem1
,both1
,name2
,mem2
,both2
, ... - Default template:
<both1>
- Displays the name and RSS (resident memory size) of running
processes (
bothn
displays both, and is useful to specify an overall maximum and/or minimum width, using the-m
/-M
arguments.
DiskU Disks Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
disku
-
Disks: list of pairs of the form (device or mount point, template), where the template can contain
<size>
,<free>
,<used>
,<freep>
or<usedp>
,<freebar>
,<freevbar>
,<freeipat>
,<usedbar>
,<usedvbar>
or<usedipat>
for total, free, used, free percentage and used percentage of the given file system capacity. -
Thresholds refer to usage percentage.
-
Args: default monitor arguments.
-t
/--template
is ignored. Plus--free-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for free disk space infreeipat
.--used-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for used disk space inusedipat
.
-
Default template: none (you must specify a template for each file system).
-
Example:
DiskU [("/", "<used>/<size>"), ("sdb1", "<usedbar>")] ["-L", "20", "-H", "50", "-m", "1", "-p", "3"] 20
DiskIO Disks Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
diskio
-
Disks: list of pairs of the form (device or mount point, template), where the template can contain
<total>
,<read>
,<write>
for total, read and write speed, respectively, as well as<totalb>
,<readb>
,<writeb>
, which report number of bytes during the last refresh period rather than speed. There are also bar versions of each:<totalbar>
,<totalvbar>
,<totalipat>
,<readbar>
,<readvbar>
,<readipat>
,<writebar>
,<writevbar>
, and<writeipat>
; and their "bytes" counterparts:<totalbbar>
,<totalbvbar>
,<totalbipat>
,<readbbar>
,<readbvbar>
,<readbipat>
,<writebbar>
,<writebvbar>
, and<writebipat>
. -
Thresholds refer to speed in b/s
-
Args: default monitor arguments.
-t
/--template
is ignored. Plus--total-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for total disk I/O in<totalipat>
.--write-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for write disk I/O in<writeipat>
.--read-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for read disk I/O in<readipat>
.
-
Default template: none (you must specify a template for each file system).
-
Example:
DiskIO [("/", "<read> <write>"), ("sdb1", "<total>")] [] 10
ThermalZone Number Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to "thermaln": so
ThermalZone 0 []
can be used in template as%thermal0%
-
Thresholds refer to temperature in degrees
-
Args: default monitor arguments
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:temp
-
Default template:
<temp>C
-
This plugin works only on systems with devices having thermal zone. Check directories in
/sys/class/thermal
for possible values of the zone number (e.g., 0 corresponds tothermal_zone0
in that directory). -
Example:
Run ThermalZone 0 ["-t","<id>: <temp>C"] 30
Thermal Zone Args RefreshRate
-
This plugin is deprecated. Use
ThermalZone
instead. -
Aliases to the Zone: so
Thermal "THRM" []
can be used in template as%THRM%
-
Args: default monitor arguments
-
Thresholds refer to temperature in degrees
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:temp
-
Default template:
Thm: <temp>C
-
This plugin works only on systems with devices having thermal zone. Check directories in /proc/acpi/thermal_zone for possible values.
-
Example:
Run Thermal "THRM" ["-t","iwl4965-temp: <temp>C"] 50
CpuFreq Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
cpufreq
-
Args: default monitor arguments
-
Thresholds refer to frequency in GHz
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:cpu0
,cpu1
, ..,cpuN
-
Default template:
Freq: <cpu0>GHz
-
This monitor requires acpi_cpufreq module to be loaded in kernel
-
Example:
Run CpuFreq ["-t", "Freq:<cpu0>|<cpu1>GHz", "-L", "0", "-H", "2", "-l", "lightblue", "-n","white", "-h", "red"] 50
CoreTemp Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
coretemp
-
Args: default monitor arguments
-
Thresholds refer to temperature in degrees
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:core0
,core1
, ..,coreN
-
Default template:
Temp: <core0>C
-
This monitor requires coretemp module to be loaded in kernel
-
Example:
Run CoreTemp ["-t", "Temp:<core0>|<core1>C", "-L", "40", "-H", "60", "-l", "lightblue", "-n", "gray90", "-h", "red"] 50
MultiCoreTemp Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
multicoretemp
-
Args: default monitor arguments, plus:
--max-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for overall cpu load inmaxipat
.--avg-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for overall cpu load inavgipat
.--mintemp
: temperature in degree Celsius, that sets the lower limit for percentage calculation.--maxtemp
: temperature in degree Celsius, that sets the upper limit for percentage calculation.
-
Thresholds refer to temperature in degree Celsius
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:max
,maxpc
,maxbar
,maxvbar
,maxipat
,avg
,avgpc
,avgbar
,avgvbar
,avgipat
,core0
,core1
, ...,coreN
The *pc, *bar, vbar and ipat variables are showing percentages on the scale defined by
--mintemp
and--maxtemp
. The max and avg variables to the highest and the average core temperature. -
Default template:
Temp: <max>°C - <maxpc>%
-
This monitor requires coretemp module to be loaded in kernel
-
Example:
Run MultiCoreTemp ["-t", "Temp: <avg>°C | <avgpc>%", "-L", "60", "-H", "80", "-l", "green", "-n", "yellow", "-h", "red" "--", "--mintemp", "20", "--maxtemp", "100"] 50
Volume Mixer Element Args RefreshRate
- Aliases to the mixer name and element name separated by a colon. Thus,
Volume "default" "Master" [] 10
can be used as%default:Master%
. - Args: default monitor arguments. Also accepts:
-O
string On string- The string used in place of
<status>
when the mixer element is on. Defaults to "[on]". - Long option:
--on
- The string used in place of
-o
string Off string- The string used in place of
<status>
when the mixer element is off. Defaults to "[off]". - Long option:
--off
- The string used in place of
-C
color On color- The color to be used for
<status>
when the mixer element is on. Defaults to "green". - Long option:
--onc
- The color to be used for
-c
color Off color- The color to be used for
<status>
when the mixer element is off. Defaults to "red". - Long option:
--offc
- The color to be used for
--highd
number High threshold for dB. Defaults to -5.0.--lowd
number Low threshold for dB. Defaults to -30.0.--volume-icon-pattern
string dynamic string for current volume involumeipat
.-H
number High threshold for volume (in %). Defaults to 60.0.- Long option:
--highv
- Long option:
-L
number Low threshold for volume (in %). Defaults to 20.0.- Long option:
--lowv
- Long option:
-h
: string High string- The string added in front of
<status>
when the mixer element is on and the volume percentage is higher than the-H
threshold. Defaults to "". - Long option:
--highs
- The string added in front of
-m
: string Medium string- The string added in front of
<status>
when the mixer element is on and the volume percentage is lower than the-H
threshold. Defaults to "". - Long option:
--mediums
- The string added in front of
-l
: string Low string- The string added in front of
<status>
when the mixer element is on and the volume percentage is lower than the-L
threshold. Defaults to "". - Long option:
--lows
- The string added in front of
- Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:volume
,volumebar
,volumevbar
,volumeipat
,dB
,status
- Note that
dB
might only return 0 on your system. This is known to happen on systems with a pulseaudio backend. - Default template:
Vol: <volume>% <status>
- Requires the package alsa-core and alsa-mixer installed in your
system. In addition, to activate this plugin you must pass
--flags="with_alsa"
during compilation.
Alsa Mixer Element Args
Like Volume, but with the following differences:
- Uses event-based refreshing via
alsactl monitor
instead of polling, so it will refresh instantly when there's a volume change, and won't use CPU until a change happens. - Aliases to
alsa:
followed by the mixer name and element name separated by a colon. Thus,Alsa "default" "Master" []
can be used as%alsa:default:Master%
. - Additional options (after the
--
):--alsactl=/path/to/alsactl
- If this option is not specified,
alsactl
will be sought in yourPATH
first, and failing that, at/usr/sbin/alsactl
(this is its location on Debian systems.alsactl monitor
works as a non-root user despite living in/usr/sbin
.).
- If this option is not specified,
stdbuf
(from coreutils) must be (and most probably already is) in yourPATH
.
MPD Args RefreshRate
-
This monitor will only be compiled if you ask for it using the
with_mpd
flag. It needs libmpd 5.0 or later (available on Hackage). -
Aliases to
mpd
-
Args: default monitor arguments. In addition you can provide
-P
,-S
and-Z
, with an string argument, to represent the playing, stopped and paused states in thestatei
template field. The environment variablesMPD_HOST
andMPD_PORT
are used to configure the mpd server to communicate with, unless given in the additional arguments-p
(--port
) and-h
(--host
). Also available:lapsed-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for current track position inipat
.
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:bar
,vbar
,ipat
,state
,statei
,volume
,length
,lapsed
,remaining
,plength
(playlist length),ppos
(playlist position),flags
(ncmpcpp-style playback mode),name
,artist
,composer
,performer
,album
,title
,track
,file
,genre
,date
-
Default template:
MPD: <state>
-
Example (note that you need "--" to separate regular monitor options from MPD's specific ones):
Run MPD ["-t", "<composer> <title> (<album>) <track>/<plength> <statei> [<flags>]", "--", "-P", ">>", "-Z", "|", "-S", "><"] 10
Mpris1 PlayerName Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
mpris1
-
Requires dbus and text packages. To activate, pass
--flags="with_mpris"
during compilation. -
PlayerName: player supporting MPRIS v1 protocol. Some players need this to be an all lowercase name (e.g. "spotify"), but some others don't.
-
Args: default monitor arguments.
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:album
,artist
,arturl
,length
,title
,tracknumber
-
Default template:
<artist> - <title>
-
Example:
Run Mpris1 "clementine" ["-t", "<artist> - [<tracknumber>] <title>"] 10
Mpris2 PlayerName Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
mpris2
-
Requires dbus and text packages. To activate, pass
--flags="with_mpris"
during compilation. -
PlayerName: player supporting MPRIS v2 protocol. Some players need this to be an all lowercase name (e.g. "spotify"), but some others don't.
-
Args: default monitor arguments.
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:album
,artist
,arturl
,length
,title
,tracknumber
,composer
,genre
-
Default template:
<artist> - <title>
-
Example:
Run Mpris2 "spotify" ["-t", "<artist> - [<composer>] <title>"] 10
Mail Args Alias
-
Args: list of maildirs in form
[("name1","path1"),...]
. Paths may start with a '~' to expand to the user's home directory. -
This plugin requires inotify support in your Linux kernel and the hinotify package. To activate, pass
--flags="with_inotify"
during compilation. -
Example:
Run Mail [("inbox", "~/var/mail/inbox"), ("lists", "~/var/mail/lists")] "mail"
MailX Args Opts Alias
-
Args: list of maildirs in form
[("name1","path1","color1"),...]
. Paths may start with a '~' to expand to the user's home directory. When mails are present, counts are displayed with the given name and color. -
Opts is a possibly empty list of options, as flags. Possible values: -d dir --dir dir a string giving the base directory where maildir files with a relative path live. -p prefix --prefix prefix a string giving a prefix for the list of displayed mail counts -s suffix --suffix suffix a string giving a suffix for the list of displayed mail counts
-
This plugin requires inotify support in your Linux kernel and the hinotify package. To activate, pass
--flags="with_inotify"
during compilation. -
Example:
Run MailX [("I", "inbox", "green"), ("L", "lists", "orange")] ["-d", "~/var/mail", "-p", " ", "-s", " "] "mail"
MBox Mboxes Opts Alias
-
Mboxes a list of mbox files of the form
[("name", "path", "color")]
, where name is the displayed name, path the absolute or relative (to BaseDir) path of the mbox file, and color the color to use to display the mail count (use an empty string for the default). -
Opts is a possibly empty list of options, as flags. Possible values: -a --all (no arg) Show all mailboxes, even if empty. -u (no arg) Show only the mailboxes' names, sans counts. -d dir --dir dir a string giving the base directory where mbox files with a relative path live. -p prefix --prefix prefix a string giving a prefix for the list of displayed mail counts -s suffix --suffix suffix a string giving a suffix for the list of displayed mail counts
-
Paths may start with a '~' to expand to the user's home directory.
-
This plugin requires inotify support in your Linux kernel and the hinotify package. To activate, pass
--flags="with_inotify"
during compilation. -
Example. The following command look for mails in
/var/mail/inbox
and~/foo/mbox
, and will put a space in front of the printed string (when it's not empty); it can be used in the template with the aliasmbox
:Run MBox [("I ", "inbox", "red"), ("O ", "~/foo/mbox", "")] ["-d", "/var/mail/", "-p", " "] "mbox"
XPropertyLog PropName
- Aliases to
PropName
- Reads the X property named by
PropName
(a string) and displays its value. The examples/xmonadpropwrite.hs script in xmobar's distribution can be used to set the given property from the output of any other program or script.
UnsafeXPropertyLog PropName
- Aliases to
PropName
- Same as
XPropertyLog
, but the input is not filtered to avoid injection of actions (cf.UnsafeXMonadLog
). The program writing the value of the read property is responsible of performing any needed cleanups.
NamedXPropertyLog PropName Alias
- Aliases to
Alias
- Same as
XPropertyLog
, but a custom alias can be specified.
NamedXPropertyLog PropName Alias
- Aliases to
Alias
- Same as
UnsafeXPropertyLog
, but a custom alias can be specified.
Brightness Args RefreshRate
-
Aliases to
bright
-
Args: default monitor arguments, plus the following specif ones:
-D
: directory in/sys/class/backlight/
with files in it (default: "acpi_video0")-C
: file with the current brightness (default: actual_brightness)-M
: file with the maximum brightness (default: max_brightness)--brightness-icon-pattern
: dynamic string for current brightness inipat
.
-
Variables that can be used with the
-t
/--template
argument:vbar
,percent
,bar
,ipat
-
Default template:
<percent>
-
Example:
Run Brightness ["-t", "<bar>"] 60
Kbd Opts
-
Registers to XKB/X11-Events and output the currently active keyboard layout. Supports replacement of layout names.
-
Aliases to
kbd
-
Opts is a list of tuples:
- first element of the tuple is the search string
- second element of the tuple is the corresponding replacement
-
Example:
Run Kbd [("us(dvorak)", "DV"), ("us", "US")]
Locks
-
Displays the status of Caps Lock, Num Lock and Scroll Lock.
-
Aliases to
locks
-
Example:
Run Locks
CatInt n filename
-
Reads and displays an integer from the file whose path is
filename
(especially useful with files in/sys
). -
Aliases as
catn
(e.g.Cat 0
ascat0
, etc.) so you can have several. -
Example:
Run CatInt 0 "/sys/devices/platform/thinkpad_hwmon/fan1_input" [] 50
UVMeter
-
Aliases to "uv " + station id. For example:
%uv brisbane%
or%uv alice springs%
-
Args: default monitor arguments.
-
Reminder: Keep the refresh rate high, to avoid making unnecessary requests every time the plug-in is run.
-
Station IDs can be found here: http://www.arpansa.gov.au/uvindex/realtime/xml/uvvalues.xml
-
Example:
Run UVMeter "brisbane" ["-H", "3", "-L", "3", "--low", "green", "--high", "red"] 900
Executing External Commands
In order to execute an external command you can either write the command name in the template, in this case it will be executed without arguments, or you can configure it in the "commands" configuration option list with the Com template command:
Com ProgramName Args Alias RefreshRate
- ProgramName: the name of the program
- Args: the arguments to be passed to the program at execution time
- RefreshRate: number of tenths of second between re-runs of the command. A zero or negative rate means that the command will be executed only once.
- Alias: a name to be used in the template. If the alias is en empty string the program name can be used in the template.
E.g.:
Run Com "uname" ["-s","-r"] "" 0
can be used in the output template as %uname%
(and xmobar will call
uname only once), while
Run Com "date" ["+\"%a %b %_d %H:%M\""] "mydate" 600
can be used in the output template as %mydate%
.
Sometimes, you don't mind if the command executed exits with an error,
or you might want to display a custom message in that case. To that
end, you can use the ComX
variant:
ComX ProgramName Args ExitMessage Alias RefreshRate
Works like Com
, but displaying ExitMessage
(a string) if the
execution fails. For instance:
Run ComX "date" ["+\"%a %b %_d %H:%M\""] "N/A" "mydate" 600
will display "N/A" if for some reason the date
invocation fails.
Other Plugins
StdinReader
- Aliases to StdinReader
- Displays any text received by xmobar on its standard input.
- Strips actions from the text received. This means you can't pass dynamic
actions via stdin. This is safer than
UnsafeStdinReader
because there is no need to escape the content before passing it to xmobar's standard input.
UnsafeStdinReader
- Aliases to UnsafeStdinReader
- Displays any text received by xmobar on its standard input.
- Will not do anything to the text received. This means you can pass dynamic
actions via stdin. Be careful to remove tags from dynamic text that you
pipe-thru to xmobar's standard input, e.g. window's title. There is no way
to escape the tags, i.e. you can't print a literal
<action>
tag as a text on xmobar. - Sample usage: send to xmobar's stdin the list of your workspaces enclosed by
actions tags that switches the workspaces to be able to switch workspaces by
clicking on xmobar:
<action=`xdotool key alt+1`>ws1</action> <action=`xdotool key alt+1`>ws2</action>
Date Format Alias RefreshRate
- Format is a time format string, as accepted by the standard ISO C
strftime
function (or Haskell'sformatCalendarTime
). - Sample usage:
Run Date "%a %b %_d %Y <fc=#ee9a00>%H:%M:%S</fc>" "date" 10
DateZone Format Locale Zone Alias RefreshRate
- Format is a time format string, as accepted by the standard ISO C
strftime
function (or Haskell'sformatCalendarTime
). - If Locale is "" the default locale of the system is used, otherwise the given locale. If there are more instances of DateZone, using "" as input for Locale is not recommended.
- Zone is the name of the TimeZone. It is assumed that the tz database is stored in /usr/share/zoneinfo/. If "" is given as Zone, the default system time is used.
- Sample usage:
Run DateZone "%a %H:%M:%S" "de_DE.UTF-8" "Europe/Vienna" "viennaTime" 10
CommandReader "/path/to/program" Alias
- Runs the given program, and displays its standard output.
PipeReader "default text:/path/to/pipe" Alias
- Reads its displayed output from the given pipe.
- Prefix an optional default text separated by a colon
- Expands environment variables in the first argument of syntax '\({VAR}' or '\)VAR'
MarqueePipeReader "default text:/path/to/pipe" (length, rate, sep) Alias
-
Generally equivalent to PipeReader
-
Text is displayed as marquee with the specified length, rate in 10th seconds and separator when it wraps around
Run MarqueePipeReader "/tmp/testpipe" (10, 7, "+") "mpipe"
-
Expands environment variables in the first argument
BufferedPipeReader Alias [(Timeout, Bool, "/path/to/pipe1"), ..]
-
Display data from multiple pipes.
-
Timeout (in tenth of seconds) is the value after which the previous content is restored i.e. if there was already something from a previous pipe it will be put on display again, overwriting the current status.
-
A pipe with Timeout of 0 will be displayed permanently, just like
PipeReader
-
The boolean option indicates whether new data for this pipe should make xmobar appear (unhide, reveal). In this case, the Timeout additionally specifies when the window should be hidden again. The output is restored in any case.
-
Use it for OSD-like status bars e.g. for setting the volume or brightness:
Run BufferedPipeReader "bpr" [ ( 0, False, "/tmp/xmobar_window" ) , ( 15, True, "/tmp/xmobar_status" ) ]
Have your window manager send window titles to
"/tmp/xmobar_window"
. They will always be shown and not reveal your xmobar. Sending some status information to"/tmp/xmobar_status"
will reveal xmonad for 1.5 seconds and temporarily overwrite the window titles. -
Take a look at examples/status.sh
-
Expands environment variables for the pipe path
XMonadLog
-
Aliases to XMonadLog
-
Displays information from xmonad's
_XMONAD_LOG
. You can set this property by usingxmonadPropLog
as your log hook in xmonad's configuration, as in the following example (more info here):main = do spawn "xmobar" xmonad $ defaultConfig { logHook = dynamicLogString defaultPP >>= xmonadPropLog }
This plugin can be used as a sometimes more convenient alternative to
StdinReader
. For instance, it allows you to (re)start xmobar outside xmonad.
UnsafeXMonadLog
-
Aliases to UnsafeXMonadLog
-
Similar to StdinReader versus UnsafeStdinReader, this does not strip
<action ...>
tags from XMonad's_XMONAD_LOG
. -
It is advised that you still use
xmobarStrip
for the ppTitle in your logHook:myPP = defaultPP { ppTitle = xmobarStrip } main = xmonad $ defaultConfig { logHook = dynamicLogString myPP >>= xmonadPropLog }
Plugins
Writing a Plugin
Writing a plugin for xmobar should be very simple. You need to create a data type with at least one constructor.
Next you must declare this data type an instance of the Exec
class, by
defining the 1 needed method (alternatively start
or run
) and 2
optional ones (alias and rate):
start :: e -> (String -> IO ()) -> IO ()
run :: e -> IO String
rate :: e -> Int
alias :: e -> String
start
must receive a callback to be used to display the String
produced by the plugin. This method can be used for plugins that need
to perform asynchronous actions. See
src/Xmobar/Plugins/PipeReader.hs
for an example.
run
can be used for simpler plugins. If you define only run
the
plugin will be run every second. To overwrite this default you just
need to implement rate
, which must return the number of tenth of
seconds between every successive runs. See examples/xmobar.hs
for an
example of a plugin that runs just once, and
src/Xmobar/Plugins/Date.hs
for one that implements rate
.
Notice that Date could be implemented as:
instance Exec Date where
alias (Date _ a _) = a
start (Date f _ r) = date f r
date :: String -> Int -> (String -> IO ()) -> IO ()
date format r callback = do go
where go = do
t <- toCalendarTime =<< getClockTime
callback $ formatCalendarTime defaultTimeLocale format t
tenthSeconds r >> go
This implementation is equivalent to the one you can read in
Plugins/Date.hs
.
alias
is the name to be used in the output template. Default alias
will be the data type constructor.
After that your type constructor can be used as an argument for the
Runnable type constructor Run
in the commands
list of the
configuration options.
Using a Plugin
To use your new plugin, you need to use a pure Haskell configuration for xmobar, and load your definitions there. You can see an example in examples/xmobar.hs showing you how to write a Haskell configuration that uses a new plugin, all in one file.
When xmobar runs with the full path to that Haskell file as its
argument (or if you put it in ~/.config/xmobar/xmobar.hs
), and with
the xmobar library installed, the Haskell code will be compiled as
needed, and the new executable spawned for you.
That's it!
Configurations written in pure Haskell
xmobar can be used as a pure Haskell program, that is compiled with your specific configuration, expressed as Haskell source code. For an example, see the author's configuration.
Authors and credits
Andrea Rossato originally designed and implemented xmobar up to version 0.11.1. Since then, it is maintained and developed by jao, with the help of the greater xmobar and Haskell communities.
In particular, xmobar incorporates patches by Mohammed Alshiekh, Alex Ameen, Axel Angel, Claudio Bley, Dragos Boca, Ben Boeckel, Duncan Burke, Roman Cheplyaka, Patrick Chilton, Antoine Eiche, Nathaniel Wesley Filardo, John Goerzen, Reto Hablützel, Juraj Hercek, Tomáš Janoušek, Ada Joule, Spencer Janssen, Roman Joost, Jochen Keil, Lennart Kolmodin, Krzysztof Kosciuszkiewicz, Dmitry Kurochkin, Todd Lunter, Vanessa McHale, Robert J. Macomber, Dmitry Malikov, David McLean, Marcin Mikołajczyk, Dino Morelli, Tony Morris, Eric Mrak, Thiago Negri, Edward O'Callaghan, Svein Ove, Martin Perner, Jens Petersen, Alexander Polakov, Pavan Rikhi, Petr Rockai, Andrew Emmanuel Rosa, Sackville-West, Markus Scherer, Daniel Schüssler, Olivier Schneider, Alexander Shabalin, Valentin Shirokov, Peter Simons, Alexander Solovyov, Will Song, John Soros, Felix Springer, Travis Staton, Artem Tarasov, Samuli Thomasson, Edward Tjörnhammar, Sergei Trofimovich, Thomas Tuegel, John Tyree, Jan Vornberger, Anton Vorontsov, Daniel Wagner, Zev Weiss, Phil Xiaojun Hu, Edward Z. Yang and Norbert Zeh.
Thanks
Andrea Rossato:
Thanks to Robert Manea and Spencer Janssen for their help in understanding how X works. They gave me suggestions on how to solve many problems with xmobar.
Thanks to Claus Reinke for make me understand existential types (or at least for letting me think I grasp existential types...;-).
jao:
Thanks to Andrea for creating xmobar in the first place, and for giving me the chance to contribute.
Related
-
To understand the internal mysteries of xmobar you may try reading this tutorial on X Window Programming in Haskell.
-
My sawflibs project includes a module to automate running xmobar in sawfish.
License
This software is released under a BSD-style license. See LICENSE for more details.
Copyright © 2010-2019 Jose Antonio Ortega Ruiz
Copyright © 2007-2010 Andrea Rossato