XNotify displays a notification on the screen. XNotify receives a notification specification in stdin and shows a notification for the user on the screen.
See the manual for more information on how xnotify works.
XNotify comes with the following features:
-
xnotify receives notifications from stdin. You can use a fifo to echo notifications on the fly like
echo Hello World > /path/to/xnotify.fifo
-
xnotify queue notifications and display them one above the other.
-
Image support, just prefix the notification string with
IMG:/path/to/the/file.png
and a tab. -
Multiple monitor support. You can set the monitor with the
-m
option. -
Support for fallback fonts (you can set more than one fonts, that will be tried in order).
-
X resources support (you don't need to recompile Xnotify for configuring it).
The files are:
./README
: This file../Makefile
: The makefile../config.h
: The hardcoded default configuration for XNotify../config.mk
: The setup for the makefile../xnotify.{c,h}
: The source code of XNotify.
First, edit ./config.mk
to match your local setup.
In order to build XNotify you need the Imlib2
, Xlib
and Xft
header files.
The default configuration for XNotify is specified in the file config.h
,
you can edit it, but most configuration can be changed at runtime via
X resources and via command-line options.
Enter the following command to build XNotify.
This command creates the binary file ./xnotify
.
make
By default, XNotify is installed into the /usr/local
prefix. Enter the
following command to install XNotify (if necessary as root). This command
installs the binary file ./xnotify
into the ${PREFIX}/bin/
directory, and
the manual file ./xnotify.1
into ${MANPREFIX}/man1/
directory.
make install
XNotify receives as input one line per notification. Each line is made out of a notification title and a notification body separated by any number of tabs. Lines without a title are ignored.
The following is an example of how to run XNotify
$ xnotify -m 10 -G NE -g -10+10 -s 15
This line means: read notifications from stdin, display
the notifications on the north east (-G NE
) of the monitor 0 (-m 0
),
that is, on the upper right corner of the first monitor. The
notifications should be placed 10 pixels to the left and 10 pixels
down (thus creating a 10 pixel gap with the upper right corner).
Each notification stay alive for 15 seconds.
To create a named pipe for XNotify, you can place the following in the beginning of your ~/.xinitrc
.
This will create a named pipe unique to your current X display in your home directory at ~/.cache
.
Then, it will open xnotify in the background, reading from this named pipe.
XNOTIFY_FIFO="$HOME/.cache/xnotify$DISPLAY.fifo"
export XNOTIFY_FIFO
rm -f $XNOTIFY_FIFO
mkfifo $XNOTIFY_FIFO
xnotify 0<>$XNOTIFY_FIFO
Note that the first two lines (the line setting the environment variable and the line exporting it)
should be at the beginning of your ~/.xinitrc
, so other programs you invoke are aware of this variable.
To create a notification with a image, input to XNotify a line beginning
with IMG:/path/to/file.png
followed by a tab. For example:
$ printf 'IMG:/path/to/file.png\tThis is a notification\n' > $XNOTIFY_FIFO
To read dbus notifications from stdin, you'll need tiramisu.
Then add the following line to your .xinitrc
, after the line calling xnotify.
$ tiramisu -o "$(printf '#summary\t#body\n')" > $XNOTIFY_FIFO &
To use a different size other than the default for the notifications,
run xnotify
with the -g
option set to the notification size in
WIDTHxHEIGHT
. For example:
$ xnotify -g 300x80
The argument for the -g
option has the form [WIDTHxHEIGHT][{+-}XPOS{+-}YPOS]
.
Parts between square brackets are optional.
{+-}
means to chose either +
or -
.