c75518e8f7
This modules makes it very easy to create shortcuts as widgets, for which the user can define the command to be executed when left clicking on it. It supports single or multiple shortcuts |
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bin | ||
bumblebee | ||
screenshots | ||
tests | ||
themes | ||
.codeclimate.yml | ||
.coveragerc | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
bumblebee-status | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
PKGBUILD | ||
README.md | ||
runlint.sh | ||
runtests.sh | ||
testjson.sh |
bumblebee-status
Many, many thanks to all contributors! As of now, 22 of the modules are from various contributors (!), and only 16 from myself.
bumblebee-status is a modular, theme-able status line generator for the i3 window manager.
Focus is on:
- Ease of use (no configuration files!)
- Theme support
- Extensibility (of course...)
One thing I like in particular: You can use the mouse wheel up/down to switch workspaces forward and back everywhere throughout the bar (unless you have mapped the mouse wheel buttons to another action for a widget, in which case this doesn't work while hovering that particular widget).
I hope you like it and appreciate any kind of feedback: Bug reports, Feature requests, etc. :)
Thanks a lot!
Required i3wm version: 4.12+ (in earlier versions, blocks won't have background colors)
Supported Python versions: 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
Explicitly unsupported Python versions: 3.2 (missing unicode literals)
Documentation
See the wiki for documentation.
Other resources:
Installation
$ git clone git://github.com/tobi-wan-kenobi/bumblebee-status
Usage
Normal usage
In your i3wm configuration, modify the status_command for your i3bar like this:
bar {
status_command = <path to bumblebee-status/bumblebee-status> -m <list of modules> -p <list of module parameters> -t <theme>
}
You can retrieve a list of modules and themes by entering:
$ cd bumblebee-status
$ ./bumblebee-status -l themes
$ ./bumblebee-status -l modules
Any parameter you can specify with -p <name>=<value>
, you can alternatively specify in ~/.bumblebee-status.conf
or ~/.config/bumblebee-status.conf
. This parameters act as a fallback, so values specified with -p
have priority.
Configuration files have a format like this:
$ cat ~/.bumblebee-status.conf
[module-parameters]
<key> = <value>
For example:
$ cat ~/.bumblebee-status.conf
[module-parameters]
github.token=abcdefabcdef12345
To change the update interval, use:
$ ./bumblebee-status -m <list of modules> -p interval=<interval in seconds>
As a simple example, this is what my i3 configuration looks like:
bar {
font pango:Inconsolata 10
position top
tray_output none
status_command ~/.i3/bumblebee-status/bumblebee-status -m nic disk:root cpu memory battery date time pasink pasource dnf -p root.path=/ time.format="%H:%M CW %V" date.format="%a, %b %d %Y" -t solarized-powerline
}
Restart i3wm and - that's it!
Events
By default, the following events are handled:
- Mouse-Wheel on any module moves to the next/previous i3 workspace
- Left-click on the "disk" module opens the specified path in nautilus
- Left-click on either "memory" or "cpu" opens gnome-system-monitor
- Left-click on a "pulseaudio" (or pasource/pasink) module toggles the mute state
- Right-click on a "pulseaudio" module opens pavucontrol
- Mouse-Wheel up/down on a "pulseaudio" module raises/lowers the volume
By default, the Mouse-Wheel wraps for the current output. You can disable this behavior by providing the parameter engine.workspacewrap=false
(starting with version 1.4.5). Also, you can completely disable output switching by using engine.workspacewheel=false
.
You can provide your own handlers to any module by using the following "special" configuration parameters:
- left-click
- right-click
- middle-click
- wheel-up
- wheel-down For example, to execute "pavucontrol" whenever you left-click on the nic module, you could write:
$ bumblebee-status -p nic.left-click="pavucontrol"
In the string, you can use the following format identifiers:
- name
- instance
- button
For example:
$ bumblebee-status -p disk.left-click="nautilus {instance}"
Errors
If errors occur, you should see them in the i3bar itself. If that does not work, or you need more information for troubleshooting, you can activate a debug log using the -d
or --debug
switch:
$ ./bumblebee-status -d -m <list of modules>
This will create a file called ~/bumblebee-status-debug.log
by default. The file name can be changed by using the -f
or --logfile
option.
Required Modules
Modules and commandline utilities are only required for modules, the core itself has no external dependencies at all.
- psutil (for the modules 'cpu', 'memory', 'traffic')
- netifaces (for the modules 'nic', 'traffic')
- requests (for the modules 'weather', 'github', 'getcrypto', 'stock')
- power (for the module 'battery')
- dbus (for the module 'spotify')
- i3rpc (for the module 'title')
Required commandline utilities
- xset (for the module 'caffeine')
- notify-send (for the module 'caffeine')
- cmus-remote (for the module 'cmus')
- dnf (for the module 'dnf')
- gpmdp-remote (for the module 'gpmdp')
- setxkbmap (for the module 'layout')
- fakeroot (for the module 'pacman')
- pacman (for the module 'pacman')
- pactl (for the module 'pulseaudio')
- ping (for the module 'ping')
- redshift (for the module 'redshift')
- xrandr (for the module 'xrandr')
- mpc (for the module 'mpd')
- bluez / blueman (for module 'bluetooth')
- dbus-send (for module 'bluetooth')
- nvidia-smi (for module 'nvidiagpu')
- sensors (for module 'sensors', as fallback)
Examples
Here are some screenshots for all themes that currently exist:
❗ Some themes (all 'Powerline' themes) require Font Awesome and a powerline-compatible font (powerline-fonts, for example) to display all icons correctly.
Gruvbox Powerline (-t gruvbox-powerline
) (contributed by @paxy97):
Solarized Powerline (-t solarized-powerline
):
Gruvbox (-t gruvbox
):
Solarized (-t solarized
):
Powerline (-t powerline
):
Default (nothing or -t default
):