Configuration ============= The configuration file is a normal Python script. The status bar is controlled by a central :py:class:`.Status` object, which individual *modules* like a :py:mod:`.clock` or a :py:mod:`.battery` monitor are added to with the ``register`` method. A typical configuration file could look like this (note the additional dependencies from :py:mod:`.network` and :py:mod:`.pulseaudio` in this example): .. code:: python from i3pystatus import Status status = Status() # Displays clock like this: # Tue 30 Jul 11:59:46 PM KW31 # ^-- calendar week status.register("clock", format="%a %-d %b %X KW%V",) # Shows the average load of the last minute and the last 5 minutes # (the default value for format is used) status.register("load") # Shows your CPU temperature, if you have a Intel CPU status.register("temp", format="{temp:.0f}°C",) # The battery monitor has many formatting options, see README for details # This would look like this, when discharging (or charging) # ↓14.22W 56.15% [77.81%] 2h:41m # And like this if full: # =14.22W 100.0% [91.21%] # # This would also display a desktop notification (via D-Bus) if the percentage # goes below 5 percent while discharging. The block will also color RED. # If you don't have a desktop notification demon yet, take a look at dunst: # http://www.knopwob.org/dunst/ status.register("battery", format="{status}/{consumption:.2f}W {percentage:.2f}% [{percentage_design:.2f}%] {remaining:%E%hh:%Mm}", alert=True, alert_percentage=5, status={ "DIS": "↓", "CHR": "↑", "FULL": "=", },) # This would look like this: # Discharging 6h:51m status.register("battery", format="{status} {remaining:%E%hh:%Mm}", alert=True, alert_percentage=5, status={ "DIS": "Discharging", "CHR": "Charging", "FULL": "Bat full", },) # Displays whether a DHCP client is running status.register("runwatch", name="DHCP", path="/var/run/dhclient*.pid",) # Shows the address and up/down state of eth0. If it is up the address is shown in # green (the default value of color_up) and the CIDR-address is shown # (i.e. 10.10.10.42/24). # If it's down just the interface name (eth0) will be displayed in red # (defaults of format_down and color_down) # # Note: the network module requires PyPI package netifaces status.register("network", interface="eth0", format_up="{v4cidr}",) # Note: requires both netifaces and basiciw (for essid and quality) status.register("network", interface="wlan0", format_up="{essid} {quality:03.0f}%",) # Shows disk usage of / # Format: # 42/128G [86G] status.register("disk", path="/", format="{used}/{total}G [{avail}G]",) # Shows pulseaudio default sink volume # # Note: requires libpulseaudio from PyPI status.register("pulseaudio", format="♪{volume}",) # Shows mpd status # Format: # Cloud connected▶Reroute to Remain status.register("mpd", format="{title}{status}{album}", status={ "pause": "▷", "play": "▶", "stop": "◾", },) status.run() Also change your i3wm config to the following: .. code:: ini # i3bar bar { status_command python ~/.path/to/your/config/file.py position top workspace_buttons yes } .. note:: Don't name your config file ``i3pystatus.py``, as it would make ``i3pystatus`` un-importable and lead to errors. Another way to launch your configuration file is to use ``i3pystatus`` script from installation: .. code:: bash i3pystatus -c ~/.path/to/your/config/file.py If no arguments were provided, ``i3pystatus`` script works as an example of ``Clock`` module. Formatting ---------- All modules let you specify the exact output formatting using a `format string `_, which gives you a great deal of flexibility. If a module gives you a float, it probably has a ton of uninteresting decimal places. Use ``{somefloat:.0f}`` to get the integer value, ``{somefloat:0.2f}`` gives you two decimal places after the decimal dot .. _formatp: formatp ~~~~~~~ Some modules use an extended format string syntax (the :py:mod:`.mpd` and :py:mod:`.weather` modules, for example). Given the format string below the output adapts itself to the available data. :: [{artist}/{album}/]{title}{status} Only if both the artist and album is known they're displayed. If only one or none of them is known the entire group between the brackets is excluded. "is known" is here defined as "value evaluating to True in Python", i.e. an empty string or 0 (or 0.0) counts as "not known". Inside a group always all format specifiers must evaluate to true (logical and). You can nest groups. The inner group will only become part of the output if both the outer group and the inner group are eligible for output. .. _TimeWrapper: TimeWrapper ~~~~~~~~~~~ Some modules that output times use :py:class:`.TimeWrapper` to format these. TimeWrapper is a mere extension of the standard formatting method. The time format that should be used is specified using the format specifier, i.e. with some_time being 3951 seconds a format string like ``{some_time:%h:%m:%s}`` would produce ``1:5:51``. * ``%h``, ``%m`` and ``%s`` are the hours, minutes and seconds without leading zeros (i.e. 0 to 59 for minutes and seconds) * ``%H``, ``%M`` and ``%S`` are padded with a leading zero to two digits, i.e. 00 to 59 * ``%l`` and ``%L`` produce hours non-padded and padded but only if hours is not zero. If the hours are zero it produces an empty string. * ``%%`` produces a literal % * ``%E`` (only valid on beginning of the string) if the time is null, don't format anything but rather produce an empty string. If the time is non-null it is removed from the string. * When the module in question also uses formatp, 0 seconds counts as "not known". * The formatted time is stripped, i.e. spaces on both ends of the result are removed. .. _logging: Logging ------- Errors do happen and to ease debugging i3pystatus includes a logging facility. By default i3pystatus will log exceptions raised by modules to files in your home directory named ``.i3pystatus-``. Some modules might log additional information. Setting a specific logfile ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When instantiating your ``Status`` object, the path to a log file can be specified (it accepts environment variables). If this is done, then log messages will be sent to that file and not to an ``.i3pystatus-`` file in your home directory. This is useful in that it helps keep your home directory from becoming cluttered with files containing errors. .. code-block:: python from i3pystatus import Status status = Status(logfile='$HOME/var/i3pystatus.log') Changing log format ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. versionadded:: 3.35 The ``logformat`` option can be useed to change the format of the log files, using `LogRecord attributes`__. .. code-block:: python from i3pystatus import Status status = Status( logfile='/home/username/var/i3pystatus.log', logformat='%(asctime)s %(levelname)s:', ) .. __: https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html#logrecord-attributes Log level ~~~~~~~~~ Every module has a ``log_level`` option which sets the *minimum* severity required for an event to be logged. The numeric values of logging levels are given in the following table. +--------------+---------------+ | Level | Numeric value | +==============+===============+ | ``CRITICAL`` | 50 | +--------------+---------------+ | ``ERROR`` | 40 | +--------------+---------------+ | ``WARNING`` | 30 | +--------------+---------------+ | ``INFO`` | 20 | +--------------+---------------+ | ``DEBUG`` | 10 | +--------------+---------------+ | ``NOTSET`` | 0 | +--------------+---------------+ Exceptions raised by modules are of severity ``ERROR`` by default. The default ``log_level`` in i3pystatus (some modules might redefine the default, see the reference of the module in question) is 30 (``WARNING``). .. _callbacks: Callbacks --------- Callbacks are used for click-events (merged into i3bar since i3 4.6, mouse wheel events are merged since 4.8), that is, you click (or scroll) on the output of a module in your i3bar and something happens. What happens is defined by these settings for each module individually: - ``on_leftclick`` - ``on_doubleleftclick`` - ``on_rightclick`` - ``on_doublerightclick`` - ``on_upscroll`` - ``on_downscroll`` The global default action for all settings is ``None`` (do nothing), but many modules define other defaults, which are documented in the module reference. .. note:: Each of these callbacks, when triggered, will call the module's ``run()`` function (typically only called each time the module's interval is reached). If there are things in the ``run()`` function of your module which you do not want to be executed every time a mouse event is triggered, then consider using threading to perform the module update, and manually sleep for the module's interval between updates. You can start the update thread in the module's ``init()`` function. The ``run()`` function can then either just update the module's displayed text, or simply do nothing (if your update thread also handles updating the display text). See the `weather module`_ for an example of this method. .. _`weather module`: https://github.com/enkore/i3pystatus/blob/82fc9fb/i3pystatus/weather/__init__.py#L244-L265 The values you can assign to these four settings can be divided to following three categories: .. rubric:: Member callbacks These callbacks are part of the module itself and usually do some simple module related tasks (like changing volume when scrolling, etc.). All available callbacks are (most likely not) documented in their respective module documentation. For example the module :py:class:`.ALSA` has callbacks named ``switch_mute``, ``increase_volume`` and ``decrease volume``. They are already assigned by default but you can change them to your liking when registering the module. .. code:: python status.register("alsa", on_leftclick = ["switch_mute"], # or as a strings without the list on_upscroll = "decrease_volume", on_downscroll = "increase_volume", # this will refresh any module by clicking on it on_rightclick = "run", ) Some callbacks also have additional parameters. Both ``increase_volume`` and ``decrease_volume`` have an optional parameter ``delta`` which determines the amount of percent to add/subtract from the current volume. .. code:: python status.register("alsa", # all additional items in the list are sent to the callback as arguments on_upscroll = ["decrease_volume", 2], on_downscroll = ["increase_volume", 2], ) .. rubric:: Python callbacks These refer to to any callable Python object (most likely a function). To external Python callbacks that are not part of the module the ``self`` parameter is not passed by default. This allows to use many library functions with no additional wrapper. If ``self`` is needed to access the calling module, the :py:func:`.get_module` decorator can be used on the callback: .. code:: python from i3pystatus import get_module # Note that the 'self' parameter is required and gives access to all # variables of the module. @get_module def change_text(self): self.output["full_text"] = "Clicked" status.register("text", text = "Initial text", on_leftclick = [change_text], # or on_rightclick = change_text, ) If the module your attaching the callback too is not a subclass of :py:class:`.IntervalModule` you will need to invoke ``init()``. using :py:class:`.Uname` as an example, the following code would suffice. .. code:: python from i3pystatus import get_module @get_module def sys_info(self): if self.format == "{nodename}": self.format = "{sysname} {release} on {machine}" else: self.format = "{nodename}" self.init() status.register("uname", format="{nodename}", on_rightclick=sys_info) You can also create callbacks with parameters. .. code:: python from i3pystatus import get_module @get_module def change_text(self, text="Hello world!", color="#ffffff"): self.output["full_text"] = text self.output["color"] = color status.register("text", text = "Initial text", color = "#00ff00", on_leftclick = [change_text, "Clicked LMB", "#ff0000"], on_rightclick = [change_text, "Clicked RMB"], on_upscroll = change_text, ) .. rubric:: External program callbacks You can also use callbacks to execute external programs. Any string that does not match any `member callback` is treated as an external command. If you want to do anything more complex than executing a program with a few arguments, consider creating an `python callback` or execute a script instead. .. code:: python status.register("text", text = "Launcher?", # open terminal window running htop on_leftclick = "i3-sensible-terminal -e htop", # open i3pystatus github page in firefox on_rightclick = "firefox --new-window https://github.com/enkore/i3pystatus", ) Most modules provide all the formatter data to program callbacks. The snippet below demonstrates how this could be used, in this case XMessage will display a dialog box showing verbose information about the network interface: .. code:: python status.register("network", interface="eth0", on_leftclick="ip addr show dev {interface} | xmessage -file -" ) .. _hints: Hints ----- Hints are additional parameters used to customize output of a module. They give you access to all attributes supported by `i3bar protocol `_. Hints are available as the ``hints`` setting in all modules and its value should be a dictionary or ``None``. An attribute defined in ``hints`` will be applied only if the module output does not contain attribute with the same name already. Some possible uses for these attributes are: * `min_width` and `align` can be used to set minimal width of output and align the text if its width is shorter than `minimal_width`. * `separator` and `separator_block_width` can be used to remove the vertical bar that is separating modules. * `background` can be used to set an alternative background color for the module. supports RGBA if your i3bar version does. * `markup` can be set to `"none"` or `"pango"`. `Pango markup `_ provides additional formatting options for drawing rainbows and other fancy stuff. .. note:: Pango markup requires that i3bar is configured to use `Pango `_, too. It can't work with X core fonts. Here is an example with the :py:mod:`.network` module. Pango markup is used to keep the ESSID green at all times while the recieved/sent part is changing color depending on the amount of traffic. .. code:: python status.register("network", interface = "wlp2s0", hints = {"markup": "pango"}, format_up = "{essid} {bytes_recv:6.1f}KiB {bytes_sent:5.1f}KiB", format_down = "", dynamic_color = True, start_color = "#00FF00", end_color = "#FF0000", color_down = "#FF0000", upper_limit = 800.0, ) Or you can use pango to customize the color of ``status`` setting in :py:mod:`.now_playing` and :py:mod:`.mpd` modules. .. code:: python ... hints = {"markup": "pango"}, status = { "play": "▶", "pause": "", "stop": "", }, ... Or make two modules look like one. .. code:: python status.register("text", text = "shmentarianism is a pretty long word.") status.register("text", hints = {"separator": False, "separator_block_width": 0}, text = "Antidisestabli", color="#FF0000") .. note:: To prevent pango rendering errors, ampersands in the formatted text will be replaced with the HTML escape code ``&``. Any ampersands that are themselves part of an HTML escape (e.g. ``<``, ``>``, etc.) will not be replaced. .. _refresh: Refreshing the bar ------------------ The whole bar can be refreshed by sending SIGUSR1 signal to i3pystatus process. This feature is not available in chained mode (:py:class:`.Status` was created with ``standalone=False`` parameter and gets it's input from ``i3status`` or a similar program). To find the PID of the i3pystatus process look for the ``status_command`` you use in your i3 config file. If your `bar` section of i3 config looks like this .. code:: bar { status_command python ~/.config/i3/pystatus.py } then you can refresh the bar by using the following command: .. code:: bash pkill -SIGUSR1 -f "python /home/user/.config/i3/pystatus.py" Note that the path must be expanded if using '~'. .. _internet: Internet Connectivity --------------------- Module methods that ``@require(internet)`` won't be run unless a test TCP connection is successful. By default, this is made to Google's DNS server, but you can customize the host and port. See :py:class:`.internet`. If you are behind a gateway that redirects web traffic to an authorization page and blocks other traffic, the DNS check will return a false positive. This is often encountered in open WiFi networks. In these cases it is helpful to try a service that is not traditionally required for web browsing: .. code:: python from i3pystatus import Status status = Status(check_internet=("whois.arin.net", 43)) .. code:: python from i3pystatus import Status status = Status(check_internet=("github.com", 22)) .. _credentials: Credentials ----------- For modules which require credentials, i3pystatus supports credential management using the keyring_ module from PyPI. .. important:: Many distributions have keyring_ pre-packaged, available as ``python-keyring``. Unless you have KWallet_ or SecretService_ available, you will also most likely need to install keyrings.alt_, which contains additional keyring backends for use by the keyring_ module. Both i3pystatus and ``i3pystatus-setting-util`` will abort with a RuntimeError_ if keyring_ isinstalled but a usable keyring backend is not present, so it is a good idea to install both if you plan to use a module which supports credential handling. To store credentials in a keyring, use the ``i3pystatus-setting-util`` script installed along i3pystatus. .. note:: ``i3pystatus-setting-util`` will store credentials using the default keyring backend. The method for determining which backend is the default can be found :ref:`below `. If, for some reason, it is necessary to use a keyring other than the default, then you will need to override the default in your keyringrc.cfg_ for ``i3pystatus-setting-util`` to successfully use it. Once you have successfully set up credentials, you can add the module to your config file without specifying the credentials in the registration, e.g.: .. code:: python # Use the default keyring to retrieve credentials status.register('github') i3pystatus will locate and set the credentials during the module loading process. Currently supported credentials are ``password``, ``email`` and ``username``. .. _default-keyring-backend: .. note:: To determine which backend is the default on your system, run the following: .. code-block:: bash python -c 'import keyring; print(keyring.get_keyring())' If this command returns a ``keyring.backends.fail.Keyring`` object, none of the keyrings supported out-of-the box by the keyring_ module are available, and you will need to install the keyrings.alt_ Python module. keyrings.alt_ provides an encrypted keyring which will be seen as the default if both keyrings.alt_ and keyring_ are installed, and none of the keyrings supported by keyring_ are present: .. code-block:: bash $ python -c 'import keyring; print(keyring.get_keyring())' If the keyring backend you used to store credentials using ``i3pystatus-setting-util`` is not the default, then you can change which keyring backend i3pystatus will use in one of two ways: #. Override the default in your keyringrc.cfg_ #. Import and instantiate a keyring backend class, and pass it as the ``keyring_backend`` parameter when registering the module: .. code:: python # Requires the keyrings.alt package from keyrings.alt.file import PlaintextKeyring status.register('github', keyring_backend=PlaintextKeyring()) .. _KWallet: http://www.kde.org/ .. _SecretService: https://specifications.freedesktop.org/secret-service/re01.html .. _RuntimeError: https://docs.python.org/3/library/exceptions.html#RuntimeError .. _keyring: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/keyring .. _keyrings.alt: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/keyrings.alt .. _keyringrc.cfg: http://pythonhosted.org/keyring/#customize-your-keyring-by-config-file