Now you move one of these terminals down (+$mod+k+ by default). The workspace
node’s orientation will be changed to +vertical+. The terminal window you moved
down is directly attached to the workspace and appears on the bottom of the
-screen. A new (horizontal) container was created to accomodate the other two
+screen. A new (horizontal) container was created to accommodate the other two
terminal windows. You will notice this when switching to tabbed mode (for
example). You would end up having one tab called "another container" and the
other one being the terminal window you moved down.
(anything higher than wide) get vertical orientation.
With the +default_orientation+ configuration directive, you can override that
-behaviour.
+behavior.
*Syntax*:
----------------------------------------------
bindsym $m+Shift+r restart
------------------------
-Variables are directly replaced in the file when parsing. There is no fancy
-handling and there are absolutely no plans to change this. If you need a more
-dynamic configuration you should create a little script which generates a
-configuration file and run it before starting i3 (for example in your
-+~/.xsession+ file).
+Variables are directly replaced in the file when parsing. Variables expansion
+is not recursive so it is not possible to define a variable with a value
+containing another variable. There is no fancy handling and there are
+absolutely no plans to change this. If you need a more dynamic configuration
+you should create a little script which generates a configuration file and run
+it before starting i3 (for example in your +~/.xsession+ file).
=== Automatically putting clients on specific workspaces
When being in a tabbed or stacked container, the first container will be
focused when you use +focus down+ on the last container -- the focus wraps. If
however there is another stacked/tabbed container in that direction, focus will
-be set on that container. This is the default behaviour so you can navigate to
+be set on that container. This is the default behavior so you can navigate to
all your windows without having to use +focus parent+.
If you want the focus to *always* wrap and you are aware of using +focus
If an application on another workspace sets an urgency hint, switching to this
workspace may lead to immediate focus of the application, which also means the
-window decoration color would be immediately resetted to +client.focused+. This
+window decoration color would be immediately reseted to +client.focused+. This
may make it unnecessarily hard to tell which window originally raised the
event.
=== Display mode
-You can have i3bar either be visible permanently at one edge of the screen
-(+dock+ mode) or make it show up when you press your modifier key (+hide+
+You can either have i3bar be visible permanently at one edge of the screen
+(+dock+ mode) or make it show up when you press your modifier key (+hide+ mode).
+It is also possible to force i3bar to always stay hidden (+invisible+
mode). The modifier key can be configured using the +modifier+ option.
+The mode option can be changed during runtime through the +bar mode+ command.
+On reload the mode will be reverted to its configured value.
+
The hide mode maximizes screen space that can be used for actual windows. Also,
i3bar sends the +SIGSTOP+ and +SIGCONT+ signals to the statusline process to
save battery power.
-The default is dock mode; in hide mode, the default modifier is Mod4 (usually
-the windows key).
+Invisible mode allows to permanently maximize screen space, as the bar is never
+shown. Thus, you can configure i3bar to not disturb you by popping up because
+of an urgency hint or because the modifier key is pressed.
+
+In order to control whether i3bar is hidden or shown in hide mode, there exists
+the hidden_state option, which has no effect in dock mode or invisible mode. It
+indicates the current hidden_state of the bar: (1) The bar acts like in normal
+hide mode, it is hidden and is only unhidden in case of urgency hints or by
+pressing the modifier key (+hide+ state), or (2) it is drawn on top of the
+currently visible workspace (+show+ state).
+
+Like the mode, the hidden_state can also be controlled through i3, this can be
+done by using the +bar hidden_state+ command.
+
+The default mode is dock mode; in hide mode, the default modifier is Mod4 (usually
+the windows key). The default value for the hidden_state is hide.
*Syntax*:
----------------
-mode <dock|hide>
+mode <dock|hide|invisible>
+hidden_state <hide|show>
modifier <Modifier>
----------------
----------------
bar {
mode hide
+ hidden_state hide
modifier Mod1
}
----------------
Available modifiers are Mod1-Mod5, Shift, Control (see +xmodmap(1)+).
+=== Bar ID
+
+Specifies the bar ID for the configured bar instance. If this option is missing,
+the ID is set to 'bar-x', where x corresponds to the position of the embedding
+bar block in the config file ('bar-0', 'bar-1', ...).
+
+*Syntax*:
+---------------------
+id <bar_id>
+---------------------
+
+*Example*:
+---------------------
+bar {
+ id bar-1
+}
+---------------------
+
[[i3bar_position]]
=== Position
--------------------------
*Example*:
---------------------
+------------------------
bar {
workspace_buttons no
}
---------------------
+------------------------
+
+=== Binding Mode indicator
+
+Specifies whether the current binding mode indicator should be shown or not.
+This is useful if you want to hide the workspace buttons but still be able
+to see the current binding mode indicator.
+For an example of a +mode+ definition, see <<resizingconfig>>.
+
+The default is to show the mode indicator.
+
+*Syntax*:
+-------------------------------
+binding_mode_indicator <yes|no>
+-------------------------------
+
+*Example*:
+-----------------------------
+bar {
+ binding_mode_indicator no
+}
+-----------------------------
=== Colors
will be the case for most workspaces.
urgent_workspace::
Border, background and text color for a workspace button when the workspace
- window with the urgency hint set.
+ contains a window with the urgency hint set. Also applies to +mode+ indicators.
*Syntax*:
----------------------------------------
[[command_criteria]]
Furthermore, you can change the scope of a command - that is, which containers
-should be affected by that command, by using various criteria. These are
-prefixed in square brackets to every command. If you want to kill all windows
-which have the class Firefox, use:
+should be affected by that command, by using various criteria. The criteria
+are specified before any command in a pair of square brackets and are separated
+by space.
*Example*:
------------------------------------
+# if you want to kill all windows which have the class Firefox, use:
bindsym $mod+x [class="Firefox"] kill
# same thing, but case-insensitive
bindsym $mod+x [class="(?i)firefox"] kill
+
+# kill only the About dialog from Firefox
+bindsym $mod+x [class="Firefox" window_role="About"] kill
------------------------------------
The criteria which are currently implemented are:
You can rename workspaces. This might be useful to start with the default
numbered workspaces, do your work, and rename the workspaces afterwards to
reflect what’s actually on them. You can also omit the old name to rename
-the currently focused workspace. This is handy if you wan't to use the
+the currently focused workspace. This is handy if you want to use the
rename command with +i3-input+.
*Syntax*:
i3-msg 'rename workspace 1 to "1: www"'
i3-msg 'rename workspace "1: www" to "10: www"'
i3-msg 'rename workspace to "2: mail"
-bindsym $mod+r exec i3-input -F 'rename workspace to %s' -P 'New name: '
+bindsym $mod+r exec i3-input -F 'rename workspace to "%s"' -P 'New name: '
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
=== Moving workspaces to a different screen
This feature is like the jump feature: It allows you to directly jump to a
specific window (this means switching to the appropriate workspace and setting
focus to the windows). However, you can directly mark a specific window with
-an arbitrary label and use it afterwards. You do not need to ensure that your
-windows have unique classes or titles, and you do not need to change your
-configuration file.
+an arbitrary label and use it afterwards. You can unmark the label in the same
+way, using the unmark command. If you don't specify a label, unmark removes all
+marks. You do not need to ensure that your windows have unique classes or
+titles, and you do not need to change your configuration file.
As the command needs to include the label with which you want to mark the
window, you cannot simply bind it to a key. +i3-input+ is a tool created
------------------------------
mark identifier
[con_mark="identifier"] focus
+unmark identifier
------------------------------
*Example (in a terminal)*:
------------------------------
$ i3-msg mark irssi
$ i3-msg '[con_mark="irssi"] focus'
+$ i3-msg unmark irssi
------------------------------
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
image:stacklimit.png[Container limited to two columns]
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
+[[shmlog]]
+
+=== Enabling shared memory logging
+
+As described in http://i3wm.org/docs/debugging.html, i3 can log to a shared
+memory buffer, which you can dump using +i3-dump-log+. The +shmlog+ command
+allows you to enable or disable the shared memory logging at runtime.
+
+Note that when using +shmlog <size_in_bytes>+, the current log will be
+discarded and a new one will be started.
+
+*Syntax*:
+------------------------------
+shmlog <size_in_bytes>
+shmlog <on|off|toggle>
+------------------------------
+
+*Examples*:
+---------------
+# Enable/disable logging
+bindsym $mod+x shmlog toggle
+
+# or, from a terminal:
+# increase the shared memory log buffer to 50 MiB
+i3-msg shmlog $((50*1024*1024))
+---------------
+
+=== Enabling debug logging
+
+The +debuglog+ command allows you to enable or disable debug logging at
+runtime. Debug logging is much more verbose than non-debug logging. This
+command does not activate shared memory logging (shmlog), and as such is most
+likely useful in combination with the above-described <<shmlog>> command.
+
+*Syntax*:
+------------------------
+debuglog <on|off|toggle>
+------------------------
+
+*Examples*:
+------------------------
+# Enable/disable logging
+bindsym $mod+x debuglog toggle
+------------------------
+
=== Reloading/Restarting/Exiting
You can make i3 reload its configuration file with +reload+. You can also
bindsym mod4+s [title="^Sup ::"] scratchpad show
------------------------------------------------
+=== i3bar control
+
+There are two options in the configuration of each i3bar instance that can be
+changed during runtime by invoking a command through i3. The commands +bar
+hidden_state+ and +bar mode+ allow setting the current hidden_state
+respectively mode option of each bar. It is also possible to toggle between
+hide state and show state as well as between dock mode and hide mode. Each
+i3bar instance can be controlled individually by specifying a bar_id, if none
+is given, the command is executed for all bar instances.
+
+*Syntax*:
+---------------
+bar hidden_state hide|show|toggle [<bar_id>]
+
+bar mode dock|hide|invisible|toggle [<bar_id>]
+---------------
+
+*Examples*:
+------------------------------------------------
+# Toggle between hide state and show state
+bindsym $mod+m bar hidden_state toggle
+
+# Toggle between dock mode and hide mode
+bindsym $mod+n bar mode toggle
+
+# Set the bar instance with id 'bar-1' to switch to hide mode
+bindsym $mod+b bar mode hide bar-1
+
+# Set the bar instance with id 'bar-1' to always stay hidden
+bindsym $mod+Shift+b bar mode invisible bar-1
+------------------------------------------------
+
[[multi_monitor]]
== Multiple monitors