i3 - improved tiling WM


This document is intended to be the first thing you read before looking and/or touching i3’s source code. It should contain all important information to help you understand why things are like they are. If it does not mention something you find necessary, please do not hesitate to contact me.

1. Window Managers

A window manager is not necessarily needed to run X, but it is usually used in combination with X to facilitate some things. The window manager’s job is to take care of the placement of windows, to provide the user with some mechanisms to change the position/size of windows and to communicate with clients to a certain extent (for example handle fullscreen requests of clients such as MPlayer).

There are no different contexts in which X11 clients run, so a window manager is just another client, like all other X11 applications. However, it handles some events which normal clients usually don’t handle.

In the case of i3, the tasks (and order of them) are the following:

  1. Grab the key bindings (events will be sent upon keypress/keyrelease)

  2. Iterate through all existing windows (if the window manager is not started as the first client of X) and manage them (reparent them, create window decorations, etc.)

  3. When new windows are created, manage them

  4. Handle the client’s _WM_STATE property, but only _WM_STATE_FULLSCREEN and _NET_WM_STATE_DEMANDS_ATTENTION

  5. Handle the client’s WM_NAME property

  6. Handle the client’s size hints to display them proportionally

  7. Handle the client’s urgency hint

  8. Handle enter notifications (focus follows mouse)

  9. Handle button (as in mouse buttons) presses for focus/raise on click

  10. Handle expose events to re-draw own windows such as decorations

  11. React to the user’s commands: Change focus, Move windows, Switch workspaces, Change the layout mode of a container (default/stacking/tabbed), start a new application, restart the window manager

In the following chapters, each of these tasks and their implementation details will be discussed.

1.1. Tiling window managers

Traditionally, there are two approaches to managing windows: The most common one nowadays is floating, which means the user can freely move/resize the windows. The other approach is called tiling, which means that your window manager distributes windows to use as much space as possible while not overlapping each other.

The idea behind tiling is that you should not need to waste your time moving/resizing windows while you usually want to get some work done. After all, most users sooner or later tend to lay out their windows in a way which corresponds to tiling or stacking mode in i3. Therefore, why not let i3 do this for you? Certainly, it’s faster than you could ever do it.

The problem with most tiling window managers is that they are too unflexible. In my opinion, a window manager is just another tool, and similar to vim which can edit all kinds of text files (like source code, HTML, …) and is not limited to a specific file type, a window manager should not limit itself to a certain layout (like dwm, awesome, …) but provide mechanisms for you to easily create the layout you need at the moment.

1.2. The layout tree

The data structure which i3 uses to keep track of your windows is a tree. Every node in the tree is a container (type Con). Some containers represent actual windows (every container with a window != NULL), some represent split containers and a few have special purposes: they represent workspaces, outputs (like VGA1, LVDS1, …) or the X11 root window.

So, when you open a terminal and immediately open another one, they reside in the same split container, which uses the default layout. In case of an empty workspace, the split container we are talking about is the workspace.

To get an impression of how different layouts are represented, just play around and look at the data structures — they are exposed as a JSON hash. See http://i3wm.org/docs/ipc.html#_tree_reply for documentation on that and an example.

2. Files

include/atoms.xmacro

A file containing all X11 atoms which i3 uses. This file will be included various times (for defining, requesting and receiving the atoms), each time with a different definition of xmacro().

include/data.h

Contains data definitions used by nearly all files. You really need to read this first.

include/*.h

Contains forward definitions for all public functions, as well as doxygen-compatible comments (so if you want to get a bit more of the big picture, either browse all header files or use doxygen if you prefer that).

src/cfgparse.l

Contains the lexer for i3’s configuration file, written for flex(1).

src/cfgparse.y

Contains the parser for i3’s configuration file, written for bison(1).

src/click.c

Contains all functions which handle mouse button clicks (right mouse button clicks initiate resizing and thus are relatively complex).

src/cmdparse.l

Contains the lexer for i3 commands, written for flex(1).

src/cmdparse.y

Contains the parser for i3 commands, written for bison(1).

src/con.c

Contains all functions which deal with containers directly (creating containers, searching containers, getting specific properties from containers, …).

src/config.c

Contains all functions handling the configuration file (calling the parser (src/cfgparse.y) with the correct path, switching key bindings mode).

src/debug.c

Contains debugging functions to print unhandled X events.

src/ewmh.c

Functions to get/set certain EWMH properties easily.

src/floating.c

Contains functions for floating mode (mostly resizing/dragging).

src/handlers.c

Contains all handlers for all kinds of X events (new window title, new hints, unmapping, key presses, button presses, …).

src/ipc.c

Contains code for the IPC interface.

src/load_layout.c

Contains code for loading layouts from JSON files.

src/log.c

Contains the logging functions.

src/main.c

Initializes the window manager.

src/manage.c

Looks at existing or new windows and decides whether to manage them. If so, it reparents the window and inserts it into our data structures.

src/match.c

A "match" is a data structure which acts like a mask or expression to match certain windows or not. For example, when using commands, you can specify a command like this: [title="Firefox"] kill. The title member of the match data structure will then be filled and i3 will check each window using match_matches_window() to find the windows affected by this command.

src/move.c

Contains code to move a container in a specific direction.

src/output.c

Functions to handle CT_OUTPUT cons.

src/randr.c

The RandR API is used to get (and re-query) the configured outputs (monitors, …).

src/render.c

Renders the tree data structure by assigning coordinates to every node. These values will later be pushed to X11 in src/x.c.

src/resize.c

Contains the functions to resize containers.

src/sighandler.c

Handles SIGSEGV, SIGABRT and SIGFPE by showing a dialog that i3 crashed. You can chose to let it dump core, to restart it in-place or to restart it in-place but forget about the layout.

src/tree.c

Contains functions which open or close containers in the tree, change focus or cleanup ("flatten") the tree. See also src/move.c for another similar function, which was moved into its own file because it is so long.

src/util.c

Contains useful functions which are not really dependant on anything.

src/window.c

Handlers to update X11 window properties like WM_CLASS, _NET_WM_NAME, CLIENT_LEADER, etc.

src/workspace.c

Contains all functions related to workspaces (displaying, hiding, renaming…)

src/x.c

Transfers our in-memory tree (see src/render.c) to X11.

src/xcb.c

Contains wrappers to use xcb more easily.

src/xcursor.c

XCursor functions (for cursor themes).

src/xinerama.c

Legacy support for Xinerama. See src/randr.c for the preferred API.

3. Data structures

See include/data.h for documented data structures. The most important ones are explained right here.

So, the hierarchy is:

  1. X11 root window, the root container

  2. Output container (LVDS1 in this example)

  3. Content container (there are also containers for dock windows)

  4. Workspaces (Workspace 1 in this example, with horizontal orientation)

  5. Split container (vertically split)

  6. X11 window containers

The data type is Con, in all cases.

3.1. X11 root window

The X11 root window is a single window per X11 display (a display is identified by :0 or :1 etc.). The root window is what you draw your background image on. It spans all the available outputs, e.g. VGA1 is a specific part of the root window and LVDS1 is a specific part of the root window.

3.2. Output container

Every active output obtained through RandR is represented by one output container. Outputs are considered active when a mode is configured (meaning something is actually displayed on the output) and the output is not a clone.

For example, if your notebook has a screen resolution of 1280x800 px and you connect a video projector with a resolution of 1024x768 px, set it up in clone mode (xrandr --output VGA1 --mode 1024x768 --same-as LVDS1), i3 will reduce the resolution to the lowest common resolution and disable one of the cloned outputs afterwards.

However, if you configure it using xrandr --output VGA1 --mode 1024x768 --right-of LVDS1, i3 will set both outputs active. For each output, a new workspace will be assigned. New workspaces are created on the output you are currently on.

3.3. Content container

Each output has multiple children. Two of them are dock containers which hold dock clients. The other one is the content container, which holds the actual content (workspaces) of this output.

3.4. Workspace

A workspace is identified by its name. Basically, you could think of workspaces as different desks in your office, if you like the desktop metaphor. They just contain different sets of windows and are completely separate of each other. Other window managers also call this “Virtual desktops”.

3.5. Split container

A split container is a container which holds an arbitrary amount of split containers or X11 window containers. It has an orientation (horizontal or vertical) and a layout.

Split containers (and X11 window containers, which are a subtype of split containers) can have different border styles.

3.6. X11 window container

An X11 window container holds exactly one X11 window. These are the leaf nodes of the layout tree, they cannot have any children.

4. List/queue macros

i3 makes heavy use of the list macros defined in BSD operating systems. To ensure that the operating system on which i3 is compiled has all the expected features, i3 comes with include/queue.h. On BSD systems, you can use man queue(3). On Linux, you have to use google (or read the source).

The lists used are SLIST (single linked lists), CIRCLEQ (circular queues) and TAILQ (tail queues). Usually, only forward traversal is necessary, so an SLIST works fine. If inserting elements at arbitrary positions or at the end of a list is necessary, a TAILQ is used instead. However, for the windows inside a container, a CIRCLEQ is necessary to go from the currently selected window to the window above/below.

5. Naming conventions

There is a row of standard variables used in many events. The following names should be chosen for those:

  • “conn” is the xcb_connection_t

  • “event” is the event of the particular type

  • “con” names a container

  • “current” is a loop variable when using TAILQ_FOREACH etc.

6. Startup (src/mainx.c, main())

  • Establish the xcb connection

  • Check for XKB extension on the separate X connection, load Xcursor

  • Check for RandR screens (with a fall-back to Xinerama)

  • Grab the keycodes for which bindings exist

  • Manage all existing windows

  • Enter the event loop

7. Keybindings

7.1. Grabbing the bindings

Grabbing the bindings is quite straight-forward. You pass X your combination of modifiers and the keycode you want to grab and whether you want to grab them actively or passively. Most bindings (everything except for bindings using Mode_switch) are grabbed passively, that is, just the window manager gets the event and cannot replay it.

We need to grab bindings that use Mode_switch actively because of a bug in X. When the window manager receives the keypress/keyrelease event for an actively grabbed keycode, it has to decide what to do with this event: It can either replay it so that other applications get it or it can prevent other applications from receiving it.

So, why do we need to grab keycodes actively? Because X does not set the state-property of keypress/keyrelease events properly. The Mode_switch bit is not set and we need to get it using XkbGetState. This means we cannot pass X our combination of modifiers containing Mode_switch when grabbing the key and therefore need to grab the keycode itself without any modifiers. This means, if you bind Mode_switch + keycode 38 ("a"), i3 will grab keycode 38 ("a") and check on each press of "a" if the Mode_switch bit is set using XKB. If yes, it will handle the event, if not, it will replay the event.

7.2. Handling a keypress

As mentioned in "Grabbing the bindings", upon a keypress event, i3 first gets the correct state.

Then, it looks through all bindings and gets the one which matches the received event.

The bound command is parsed by the cmdparse lexer/parser, see parse_cmd in src/cmdparse.y.

8. Manage windows (src/main.c, manage_window() and reparent_window())

manage_window() does some checks to decide whether the window should be managed at all:

  • Windows have to be mapped, that is, visible on screen

  • The override_redirect must not be set. Windows with override_redirect shall not be managed by a window manager

Afterwards, i3 gets the intial geometry and reparents the window (see reparent_window()) if it wasn’t already managed.

Reparenting means that for each window which is reparented, a new window, slightly larger than the original one, is created. The original window is then reparented to the bigger one (called "frame").

After reparenting, the window type (_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE) is checked to see whether this window is a dock (_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_DOCK), like dzen2 for example. Docks are handled differently, they don’t have decorations and are not assigned to a specific container. Instead, they are positioned at the bottom or top of the screen (in the appropriate dock area containers). To get the height which needs to be reserved for the window, the _NET_WM_STRUT_PARTIAL property is used.

Furthermore, the list of assignments (to other workspaces, which may be on other screens) is checked. If the window matches one of the user’s criteria, it may either be put in floating mode or moved to a different workspace. If the target workspace is not visible, the window will not be mapped.

9. What happens when an application is started?

i3 does not care for applications. All it notices is when new windows are mapped (see src/handlers.c, handle_map_request()). The window is then reparented (see section "Manage windows").

After reparenting the window, render_tree() is called which renders the internal layout table. The new window has been placed in the currently focused container and therefore the new window and the old windows (if any) need to be moved/resized so that the currently active layout (default/stacking/tabbed mode) is rendered correctly. To move/resize windows, a window is “configured” in X11-speak.

Some applications, such as MPlayer obviously assume the window manager is stupid and try to configure their windows by themselves. This generates an event called configurerequest. i3 handles these events and tells the window the size it had before the configurerequest (with the exception of not yet mapped windows, which get configured like they want to, and floating windows, which can reconfigure themselves).

10. _NET_WM_STATE

Only the _NET_WM_STATE_FULLSCREEN atom is handled. It calls “toggle_fullscreen()” for the specific client which just configures the client to use the whole screen on which it currently is. Also, it is set as fullscreen_client for the i3Screen.

11. WM_NAME

When the WM_NAME property of a window changes, its decoration (containing the title) is re-rendered. Note that WM_NAME is in COMPOUND_TEXT encoding which is totally uncommon and cumbersome. Therefore, the _NET_WM_NAME atom will be used if present.

12. _NET_WM_NAME

Like WM_NAME, this atom contains the title of a window. However, _NET_WM_NAME is encoded in UTF-8. i3 will recode it to UCS-2 in order to be able to pass it to X. Using an appropriate font (ISO-10646), you can see most special characters (every special character contained in your font).

13. Size hints

Size hints specify the minimum/maximum size for a given window as well as its aspect ratio. This is important for clients like mplayer, who only set the aspect ratio and resize their window to be as small as possible (but only with some video outputs, for example in Xv, while when using x11, mplayer does the necessary centering for itself).

So, when an aspect ratio was specified, i3 adjusts the height of the window until the size maintains the correct aspect ratio. For the code to do this, see src/layout.c, function resize_client().

14. Rendering (src/layout.c, render_layout() and render_container())

Rendering in i3 version 4 is the step which assigns the correct sizes for borders, decoration windows, child windows and the stacking order of all windows. In a separate step (x_push_changes()), these changes are pushed to X11.

Keep in mind that all these properties (rect, window_rect and deco_rect) are temporary, meaning they will be overwritten by calling render_con. Persistent position/size information is kept in geometry.

The entry point for every rendering operation (except for the case of moving floating windows around) currently is tree_render() which will re-render everything that’s necessary (for every output, only the currently displayed workspace is rendered). This behavior is expected to change in the future, since for a lot of updates, re-rendering everything is not actually necessary. Focus was on getting it working correct, not getting it work very fast.

What tree_render() actually does is calling render_con() on the root container and then pushing the changes to X11. The following sections talk about the different rendering steps, in the order of "top of the tree" (root container) to the bottom.

14.1. Rendering the root container

The i3 root container (con->type == CT_ROOT) represents the X11 root window. It contains one child container for every output (like LVDS1, VGA1, …), which is available on your computer.

Rendering the root will first render all tiling windows and then all floating windows. This is necessary because a floating window can be positioned in such a way that it is visible on two different outputs. Therefore, by first rendering all the tiling windows (of all outputs), we make sure that floating windows can never be obscured by tiling windows.

Essentially, though, this code path will just call render_con() for every output and x_raise_con(); render_con() for every floating window.

In the special case of having a "global fullscreen" window (fullscreen mode spanning all outputs), a shortcut is taken and x_raise_con(); render_con() is only called for the global fullscreen window.

14.2. Rendering an output

Output containers (con->layout == L_OUTPUT) represent a hardware output like LVDS1, VGA1, etc. An output container has three children (at the moment): One content container (having workspaces as children) and the top/bottom dock area containers.

The rendering happens in the function render_l_output() in the following steps:

  1. Find the content container (con->type == CT_CON)

  2. Get the currently visible workspace (con_get_fullscreen_con(content, CF_OUTPUT)).

  3. If there is a fullscreened window on that workspace, directly render it and return, thus ignoring the dock areas.

  4. Sum up the space used by all the dock windows (they have a variable height only).

  5. Set the workspace rects (x/y/width/height) based on the position of the output (stored in con->rect) and the usable space (con->rect.{width,height} without the space used for dock windows).

  6. Recursively raise and render the output’s child containers (meaning dock area containers and the content container).

14.3. Rendering a workspace or split container

From here on, there really is no difference anymore. All containers are of con->type == CT_CON (whether workspace or split container) and some of them have a con->window, meaning they represent an actual window instead of a split container.

14.3.1. Default layout

In default layout, containers are placed horizontally or vertically next to each other (depending on the con->orientation). If a child is a leaf node (as opposed to a split container) and has border style "normal", appropriate space will be reserved for its window decoration.

14.3.2. Stacked layout

In stacked layout, only the focused window is actually shown (this is achieved by calling x_raise_con() in reverse focus order at the end of render_con()).

The available space for the focused window is the size of the container minus the height of the window decoration for all windows inside this stacked container.

If border style is "1pixel" or "none", no window decoration height will be reserved (or displayed later on), unless there is more than one window inside the stacked container.

14.3.3. Tabbed layout

Tabbed layout works precisely like stacked layout, but the window decoration position/size is different: They are placed next to each other on a single line (fixed height).

14.3.4. Dock area layout

This is a special case. Users cannot chose the dock area layout, but it will be set for the dock area containers. In the dockarea layout (at the moment!), windows will be placed above each other.

14.4. Rendering a window

A window’s size and position will be determined in the following way:

  1. Subtract the border if border style is not "none" (but "normal" or "1pixel").

  2. Subtract the X11 border, if the window has an X11 border > 0.

  3. Obey the aspect ratio of the window (think MPlayer).

  4. Obey the height- and width-increments of the window (think terminal emulator which can only be resized in one-line or one-character steps).

15. Pushing updates to X11 / Drawing

A big problem with i3 before version 4 was that we just sent requests to X11 anywhere in the source code. This was bad because nobody could understand the entirety of our interaction with X11, it lead to subtle bugs and a lot of edge cases which we had to consider all over again.

Therefore, since version 4, we have a single file, src/x.c, which is responsible for repeatedly transferring parts of our tree datastructure to X11.

src/x.c consists of multiple parts:

  1. The state pushing: x_push_changes(), which calls x_push_node().

  2. State modification functions: x_con_init, x_reinit, x_reparent_child, x_move_win, x_con_kill, x_raise_con, x_set_name and x_set_warp_to.

  3. Expose event handling (drawing decorations): x_deco_recurse() and x_draw_decoration().

15.1. Pushing state to X11

In general, the function x_push_changes should be called to push state changes. Only when the scope of the state change is clearly defined (for example only the title of a window) and its impact is known beforehand, one can optimize this and call x_push_node on the appropriate con directly.

x_push_changes works in the following steps:

  1. Clear the eventmask for all mapped windows. This leads to not getting useless ConfigureNotify or EnterNotify events which are caused by our requests. In general, we only want to handle user input.

  2. Stack windows above each other, in reverse stack order (starting with the most obscured/bottom window). This is relevant for floating windows which can overlap each other, but also for tiling windows in stacked or tabbed containers. We also update the _NET_CLIENT_LIST_STACKING hint which is necessary for tab drag and drop in Chromium.

  3. x_push_node will be called for the root container, recursively calling itself for the container’s children. This function actually pushes the state, see the next paragraph.

  4. If the pointer needs to be warped to a different position (for example when changing focus to a differnt output), it will be warped now.

  5. The eventmask is restored for all mapped windows.

  6. Window decorations will be rendered by calling x_deco_recurse on the root container, which then recursively calls itself for the children.

  7. If the input focus needs to be changed (because the user focused a different window), it will be updated now.

  8. x_push_node_unmaps will be called for the root container. This function only pushes UnmapWindow requests. Separating the state pushing is necessary to handle fullscreen windows (and workspace switches) in a smooth fashion: The newly visible windows should be visible before the old windows are unmapped.

x_push_node works in the following steps:

  1. Update the window’s WM_NAME, if changed (the WM_NAME is set on i3 containers mainly for debugging purposes).

  2. Reparents a child window into the i3 container if the container was created for a specific managed window.

  3. If the size/position of the i3 container changed (due to opening a new window or switching layouts for example), the window will be reconfigured. Also, the pixmap which is used to draw the window decoration/border on is reconfigured (pixmaps are size-dependent).

  4. Size/position for the child window is adjusted.

  5. The i3 container is mapped if it should be visible and was not yet mapped. When mapping, WM_STATE is set to WM_STATE_NORMAL. Also, the eventmask of the child window is updated and the i3 container’s contents are copied from the pixmap.

  6. x_push_node is called recursively for all children of the current container.

x_push_node_unmaps handles the remaining case of an i3 container being unmapped if it should not be visible anymore. WM_STATE will be set to WM_STATE_WITHDRAWN.

15.2. Drawing window decorations/borders/backgrounds

x_draw_decoration draws window decorations. It is run for every leaf container (representing an actual X11 window) and for every non-leaf container which is in a stacked/tabbed container (because stacked/tabbed containers display a window decoration for split containers, which at the moment just says "another container").

Then, parameters are collected to be able to determine whether this decoration drawing is actually necessary or was already done. This saves a substantial number of redraws (depending on your workload, but far over 50%).

Assuming that we need to draw this decoration, we start by filling the empty space around the child window (think of MPlayer with a specific aspect ratio) in the user-configured client background color.

Afterwards, we draw the appropriate border (in case of border styles "normal" and "1pixel") and the top bar (in case of border style "normal").

The last step is drawing the window title on the top bar.

16. User commands (parser-specs/commands.spec)

In the configuration file and when using i3 interactively (with i3-msg, for example), you use commands to make i3 do things, like focus a different window, set a window to fullscreen, and so on. An example command is floating enable, which enables floating mode for the currently focused window. See the appropriate section in the User’s Guide for a reference of all commands.

In earlier versions of i3, interpreting these commands was done using lex and yacc, but experience has shown that lex and yacc are not well suited for our command language. Therefore, starting from version 4.2, we use a custom parser for user commands (not yet for the configuration file). The input specification for this parser can be found in the file parser-specs/commands.spec. Should you happen to use Vim as an editor, use :source parser-specs/highlighting.vim to get syntax highlighting for this file (highlighting files for other editors are welcome).

Excerpt from commands.spec
state INITIAL:
  '[' -> call cmd_criteria_init(); CRITERIA
  'move' -> MOVE
  'exec' -> EXEC
  'workspace' -> WORKSPACE
  'exit' -> call cmd_exit()
  'restart' -> call cmd_restart()
  'reload' -> call cmd_reload()

The input specification is written in an extremely simple format. The specification is then converted into C code by the Perl script generate-commands-parser.pl (the output file names begin with GENERATED and the files are stored in the include directory). The parser implementation src/commands_parser.c includes the generated C code at compile-time.

The above excerpt from commands.spec illustrates nearly all features of our specification format: You describe different states and what can happen within each state. State names are all-caps; the state in the above excerpt is called INITIAL. A list of tokens and their actions (separated by an ASCII arrow) follows. In the excerpt, all tokens are literals, that is, simple text strings which will be compared with the input. An action is either the name of a state in which the parser will transition into, or the keyword call, followed by the name of a function (and optionally a state).

16.1. Example: The WORKSPACE state

Let’s have a look at the WORKSPACE state, which is a good example of all features. This is its definition:

WORKSPACE state (commands.spec)
# workspace next|prev|next_on_output|prev_on_output
# workspace back_and_forth
# workspace <name>
state WORKSPACE:
  direction = 'next_on_output', 'prev_on_output', 'next', 'prev'
      -> call cmd_workspace($direction)
  'back_and_forth'
      -> call cmd_workspace_back_and_forth()
  workspace = string
      -> call cmd_workspace_name($workspace)

As you can see from the commands, there are multiple different valid variants of the workspace command:

workspace <direction>

The word workspace can be followed by any of the tokens next, prev, next_on_output or prev_on_output. This command will switch to the next or previous workspace (optionally on the same output).
There is one function called cmd_workspace, which is defined in src/commands.c. It will handle this kind of command. To know which direction was specified, the direction token is stored on the stack with the name "direction", which is what the "direction = " means in the beginning.

Note
Note that you can specify multiple literals in the same line. This has exactly the same effect as if you specified direction = 'next_on_output' -> call cmd_workspace($direction) and so forth.
Note
Also note that the order of literals is important here: If next were ordered before next_on_output, then next_on_output would never match.
workspace back_and_forth

This is a very simple case: When the literal back_and_forth is found in the input, the function cmd_workspace_back_and_forth will be called without parameters and the parser will return to the INITIAL state (since no other state was specified).

workspace <name>

In this case, the workspace command is followed by an arbitrary string, possibly in quotes, for example "workspace 3" or "workspace bleh".
This is the first time that the token is actually not a literal (not in single quotes), but just called string. Other possible tokens are word (the same as string, but stops matching at a whitespace) and end (matches the end of the input).

16.2. Introducing a new command

The following steps have to be taken in order to properly introduce a new command (or possibly extend an existing command):

  1. Define a function beginning with cmd_ in the file src/commands.c. Copy the prototype of an existing function.

  2. After adding a comment on what the function does, copy the comment and function definition to include/commands.h. Make the comment in the header file use double asterisks to make doxygen pick it up.

  3. Write a test case (or extend an existing test case) for your feature, see i3 testsuite. For now, it is sufficient to simply call your command in all the various possible ways.

  4. Extend the parser specification in parser-specs/commands.spec. Run the testsuite and see if your new function gets called with the appropriate arguments for the appropriate input.

  5. Actually implement the feature.

  6. Document the feature in the User’s Guide.

17. Moving containers

The movement code is pretty delicate. You need to consider all cases before making any changes or before being able to fully understand how it works.

17.1. Case 1: Moving inside the same container

The reference layout for this case is a single workspace in horizontal orientation with two containers on it. Focus is on the left container (1).

1

2

When moving the left window to the right (command move right), tree_move will look for a container with horizontal orientation and finds the parent of the left container, that is, the workspace. Afterwards, it runs the code branch commented with "the easy case": it calls TAILQ_NEXT to get the container right of the current one and swaps both containers.

17.2. Case 2: Move a container into a split container

The reference layout for this case is a horizontal workspace with two containers. The right container is a v-split with two containers. Focus is on the left container (1).

1

2

3

When moving to the right (command move right), i3 will work like in case 1 ("the easy case"). However, as the right container is not a leaf container, but a v-split, the left container (1) will be inserted at the right position (below 2, assuming that 2 is focused inside the v-split) by calling insert_con_into.

insert_con_into detaches the container from its parent and inserts it before/after the given target container. Afterwards, the on_remove_child callback is called on the old parent container which will then be closed, if empty.

Afterwards, con_focus will be called to fix the focus stack and the tree will be flattened.

17.3. Case 3: Moving to non-existant top/bottom

Like in case 1, the reference layout for this case is a single workspace in horizontal orientation with two containers on it. Focus is on the left container:

1

2

This time however, the command is move up or move down. tree_move will look for a container with vertical orientation. As it will not find any, same_orientation is NULL and therefore i3 will perform a forced orientation change on the workspace by creating a new h-split container, moving the workspace contents into it and then changing the workspace orientation to vertical. Now it will again search for parent containers with vertical orientation and it will find the workspace.

This time, the easy case code path will not be run as we are not moving inside the same container. Instead, insert_con_into will be called with the focused container and the container above/below the current one (on the level of same_orientation).

Now, con_focus will be called to fix the focus stack and the tree will be flattened.

17.4. Case 4: Moving to existant top/bottom

The reference layout for this case is a vertical workspace with two containers. The bottom one is a h-split containing two containers (1 and 2). Focus is on the bottom left container (1).

3

1

2

This case is very much like case 3, only this time the forced workspace orientation change does not need to be performed because the workspace already is in vertical orientation.

17.5. Case 5: Moving in one-child h-split

The reference layout for this case is a horizontal workspace with two containers having a v-split on the left side with a one-child h-split on the bottom. Focus is on the bottom left container (2(h)):

1

3

2(h)

In this case, same_orientation will be set to the h-split container around the focused container. However, when trying the easy case, the next/previous container swap will be NULL. Therefore, i3 will search again for a same_orientation container, this time starting from the parent of the h-split container.

After determining a new same_orientation container (if it is NULL, the orientation will be force-changed), this case is equivalent to case 2 or case 4.

17.6. Case 6: Floating containers

The reference layout for this case is a horizontal workspace with two containers plus one floating h-split container. Focus is on the floating container.

TODO: nice illustration. table not possible?

When moving up/down, the container needs to leave the floating container and it needs to be placed on the workspace (at workspace level). This is accomplished by calling the function attach_to_workspace.

18. Click handling

Without much ado, here is the list of cases which need to be considered:

  • click to focus (tiling + floating) and raise (floating)

  • click to focus/raise when in stacked/tabbed mode

  • floating_modifier + left mouse button to drag a floating con

  • floating_modifier + right mouse button to resize a floating con

  • click on decoration in a floating con to either initiate a resize (if there is more than one child in the floating con) or to drag the floating con (if it’s the one at the top).

  • click on border in a floating con to resize the floating con

  • floating_modifier + right mouse button to resize a tiling con

  • click on border/decoration to resize a tiling con

19. Gotchas

  • Forgetting to call xcb_flush(conn); after sending a request. This usually leads to code which looks like it works fine but which does not work under certain conditions.

  • Forgetting to call floating_fix_coordinates(con, old_rect, new_rect) after moving workspaces across outputs. Coordinates for floating containers are not relative to workspace boundaries, so you must correct their coordinates or those containers will show up in the wrong workspace or not at all.

20. Using git / sending patches

For a short introduction into using git, see http://www.spheredev.org/wiki/Git_for_the_lazy or, for more documentation, see http://git-scm.com/documentation

Please talk to us before working on new features to see whether they will be accepted. There are a few things which we don’t want to see in i3, e.g. a command which will focus windows in an alt+tab like way.

When working on bugfixes, please make sure you mention that you are working on it in the corresponding bugreport at http://bugs.i3wm.org/. In case there is no bugreport yet, please create one.

After you are done, please submit your work for review at http://cr.i3wm.org/

Do not send emails to the mailing list or any author directly, and don’t submit them in the bugtracker, since all reviews should be done in public at http://cr.i3wm.org/. In order to make your review go as fast as possible, you could have a look at previous reviews and see what the common mistakes are.

21. Thought experiments

In this section, we collect thought experiments, so that we don’t forget our thoughts about specific topics. They are not necessary to get into hacking i3, but if you are interested in one of the topics they cover, you should read them before asking us why things are the way they are or why we don’t implement things.

21.1. Using cgroups per workspace

cgroups (control groups) are a linux-only feature which provides the ability to group multiple processes. For each group, you can individually set resource limits, like allowed memory usage. Furthermore, and more importantly for our purposes, they serve as a namespace, a label which you can attach to processes and their children.

One interesting use for cgroups is having one cgroup per workspace (or container, doesn’t really matter). That way, you could set different priorities and have a workspace for important stuff (say, writing a LaTeX document or programming) and a workspace for unimportant background stuff (say, JDownloader). Both tasks can obviously consume a lot of I/O resources, but in this example it doesn’t really matter if JDownloader unpacks the download a minute earlier or not. However, your compiler should work as fast as possible. Having one cgroup per workspace, you would assign more resources to the programming workspace.

Another interesting feature is that an inherent problem of the workspace concept could be solved by using cgroups: When starting an application on workspace 1, then switching to workspace 2, you will get the application’s window(s) on workspace 2 instead of the one you started it on. This is because the window manager does not have any mapping between the process it starts (or gets started in any way) and the window(s) which appear.

Imagine for example using dmenu: The user starts dmenu by pressing Mod+d, dmenu gets started with PID 3390. The user then decides to launch Firefox, which takes a long time. So he enters firefox into dmenu and presses enter. Firefox gets started with PID 4001. When it finally finishes loading, it creates an X11 window and uses MapWindow to make it visible. This is the first time i3 actually gets in touch with Firefox. It decides to map the window, but it has no way of knowing that this window (even though it has the _NET_WM_PID property set to 4001) belongs to the dmenu the user started before.

How do cgroups help with this? Well, when pressing Mod+d to launch dmenu, i3 would create a new cgroup, let’s call it i3-3390-1. It launches dmenu in that cgroup, which gets PID 3390. As before, the user enters firefox and Firefox gets launched with PID 4001. This time, though, the Firefox process with PID 4001 is also member of the cgroup i3-3390-1 (because fork()ing in a cgroup retains the cgroup property). Therefore, when mapping the window, i3 can look up in which cgroup the process is and can establish a mapping between the workspace and the window.

There are multiple problems with this approach:

  1. Every application has to properly set _NET_WM_PID. This is acceptable and patches can be written for the few applications which don’t set the hint yet.

  2. It does only work on Linux, since cgroups are a Linux-only feature. Again, this is acceptable.

  3. The main problem is that some applications create X11 windows completely independent of UNIX processes. An example for this is Chromium (or gnome-terminal), which, when being started a second time, communicates with the first process and lets the first process open a new window. Therefore, if you have a Chromium window on workspace 2 and you are currently working on workspace 3, starting chromium does not lead to the desired result (the window will open on workspace 2).

Therefore, my conclusion is that the only proper way of fixing the "window gets opened on the wrong workspace" problem is in the application itself. Most modern applications support freedesktop startup-notifications which can be used for this.