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WMII(1) General Commands Manual WMII(1)

NAME

wmii - Window Manager Improved²

SYNOPSIS

wmii [-a <address>] [-r <wmiirc>]

wmii -v

DESCRIPTION

Overview

wmii is a dynamic window manager for X11. In contrast to static window management the user rarely has to think about how to organize windows, no matter what he is doing or how many applications are used at the same time. The window manager adapts to the current environment and fits to the needs of the user, rather than forcing him to use a preset, fixed layout and trying to shoehorn all windows and applications into it.

wmii supports classic and tiled window management with extended keyboard and mouse control. Classic window management arranges windows in a floating layer in which tyen can be moved and resized freely. Tiled window management arranges windows in vertical columns. Each column holds an arbitrary number arbitrary windows and arranges them vertically in a non-overlapping manner. They can then be moved and resized, among and within columns, at will.

wmii provides a virtual filesystem which represents the internal state similar to the procfs of Unix operating systems. Modifying this virtual filesystem results in changing the state of the window manager. The virtual filesystem service can be accessed through 9P-capable client programs, like wmiir(1). This allows simple and powerful remote control of the core window manager.

Command Line Arguments

Specifies the address on which wmii should listen for connections. The address takes the form <protocol>!<address>. The default is of the form:


unix!/tmp/ns.$USER.${DISPLAY%.0}/wmii

which opens a unix socket per Plan 9 Port conventions. To open a TCP socket, listening at port 4332 on the loopback interface, use:


tcp!localhost!4332

$WMII_NAMESPACE is automatically set to this value.

Specifies which rc script to run. If <wmiirc> consists of a single argument, $WMII_CONFPATH is searched before $PATH. Otherwise, it is passed to the shell for evaluation. The environment variables $WMII_ADDRESS and $WMII_CONFPATH are preset for the script.

Terminology

A running X server instance consisting of input devices and screens.
A physical or virtual (Xinerama or Xnest(1)) screen of an X display.
A (rectangular) drawable X object which is displayed on a screen, usually an application window.
An application window surrounded by a frame window containing a border and a titlebar.
A screen layer of wmii on top of all other layers, where clients are arranged in a classic (floating) manner. They can be resized or moved freely.
A screen layer of wmii underneath the floating layer, where clients are arranged in a non-overlapping (managed) manner. Here, the window manager dynamically assigns each client a size and position. The managed layer consists of columns.
Alphanumeric strings which can be assigned to a client. This provides a mechanism to group clients with similar properties. Clients can have one tag, e.g. work, or several tags, e.g. work+mail. Tags are separated with the + character.
A set of clients containing a specific tag, quite similar to a workspace in other window managers. It consists of the floating and managed layers.
A column is a screen area which arranges clients vertically in a non-overlapping way. Clients can be moved and resized between and within columns freely.
The bar at the bottom of the screen displays a label for each view and allows the creation of arbitrary user-defined labels.
An event is a message which can be read from a special file in the filesystem of wmii, such as a mouse button press, a key press, or a message written by a different 9P-client.

Basic window management

Running a raw wmii process without a wmiirc(1) script provides basic window management capabilities. However, to use it effectively, remote control through its filesystem interface is necessary. Without such a script, it is only possible to move and resize clients with the mouse, but not to change their tags or to switch views. Other interactions, such as customizing the style, killing or retagging clients, and grabbing keys, cannot be achieved without accessing the filesystem.

The filesystem can be accessed by connecting to the address of wmii with any 9P-capable client, such as wmiir(1)

Actions

The default configuration provides for a special menu of actions. These consist of either shell scripts in $WMII_CONFPATH or action definitions included in wmiirc.

Here is a list of the default actions:

exec Replace the window manager with another program
quit Leave the window manager nicely
rehash Refresh the program list
showkeys Display a list of key bindings recognized by wmii
status Periodically print date and load average to the bar
welcome Display a welcome message that contains the wmii tutorial

Default Key Bindings

All of the provided wmiirc scripts accept at least the following key bindings. They should also provide a showkeys action to open a key binding quick-reference.

Moving Around

Key Action
Mod-h Move to a window to the left of the one currently focused
Mod-l Move to a window to the right of the one currently focused
Mod-j Move to the window below the one currently focused
Mod-k Move to a window above the one currently focused
Mod-space Toggle between the managed and floating layers
Mod-t <tag> Move to the view of the given <tag>
Mod-n Move to the next view
Mod-b Move to the previous view
Mod-[0-9] Move to the view with the given number

Moving Things Around

Key Action
Mod-Shift-h Move the current window window to a column on the left
Mod-Shift-l Move the current window to a column on the right
Mod-Shift-j Move the current window below the window beneath it.
Mod-Shift-k Move the current window above the window above it.
Mod-Shift-space Toggle the current window between the managed and floating layer
Mod-Shift-t <tag> Move the current window to the view of the given <tag>
Mod-Shift-[0-9] Move the current window to the view with the given number

Miscellaneous

Key Action
Mod-m Switch the current column to max mode
Mod-s Switch the current column to stack mode
Mod-d Switch the current column to default mode
Mod-Shift-c Kill the selected client
Mod-p <program> Execute <program>
Mod-a <action> Execute the named <action
Mod-Enter Execute an x-terminal-emulator

Configuration

If you feel the need to change the default configuration, then customize (as described above) the wmiirc action. This action is executed at the end of the wmii script and does all the work of setting up the window manager, the key bindings, the bar labels, etc.

Filesystem

Most aspects of wmii are controlled via the filesystem. It is usually accessed via the wmiir(1) command, but it can be accessed by any 9P, including plan9port's 9P[1], and can be mounted natively on Linux via v9fs[1], and on Inferno (which man run on top of Linux). All data in the filesystem, including filenames, is UTF-8 encoded. However, when accessed via wmiir(1), text is automatically translated to and from your locale encoding.

The filesystem is, as are many other 9P filesystems, entirely synthetic. The files exist only in memory, and are not written to disk. They are generally initiated on wmii startup via a script such as wmiirc. Several files are used to issue commands, others simply act as if they were ordinary files (their contents are updated and returned exactly as written), though writing them has side-effects (such as changing key bindings). A description of the filesystem layout and control commands follows.

Hierarchy

/
Global control files
/client/*/
Client control files
/tag/*/
View control files
/lbar/, /rbar/
Files representing the contents of the bottom bar

The / Hierarchy

The colrules file contains a list of rules which affect the width of newly created columns. Rules have the form:


/<regex>/ -> <width>[+<width>]*

Where,


<width> := <percent of screen> | <pixels>px

When a new column, <n>, is created on a view whose name matches <regex>, it is given the <n>th supplied <width>. If there is no <n>th width, it is given 1/<ncol>th of the screen.

PROVISIONAL

The rules file contains a list of rules that may be used to automatically set properties of new clients. Rules are specified as:


/<regex>/ <key>=<value> ...

where each <key> represents a command in the clients ctl file, and each <value> represents the value to assign to it. The rules are applied when the client is first started and the contents of the props file match the regular expression <regex>.

Additionally, the following keys are accepted and have special meaning:

Normally, when a matching rule is encountered, rule matching stops. When the continue key is provided (with any value), matching continues at the next rule.
Like tags, but overrides any settings obtained obtained from the client's group or from the _WMII_TAGS window property.
The keys file contains a list of keys which wmii will grab. Whenever these key combinations are pressed, the string which represents them are written to '/event' as: Key <string>
The event file never returns EOF while wmii is running. It stays open and reports events as they occur. Included among them are:
[Not]Urgent <client> [Manager|Client]
<client>'s urgent hint has been set or unset. The second arg is [Client] if it's been set by the client, and [Manager] if it's been set by wmii via a control message.
[Not]UrgentTag <tag> [Manager|Client]
A client on <tag> has had its urgent hint set, or the last urgent client has had its urgent hint unset.
Client<Click|MouseDown> <client> <button>
A client's titlebar has either been clicked or has a button pressed over it.
[Left|Right]Bar[Click|MouseDown] <button> <bar>
A left or right bar has been clicked or has a button pressed over it.

For a more comprehensive list of available events, see wmii.pdf[2]

The ctl file takes a number of messages to change global settings such as color and font, which can be viewed by reading it. It also takes the following commands:
Quit wmii
Replace wmii with <prog>
Spawn a new program, as if by the -r flag.

The /client/ Hierarchy

Each directory under '/client/' represents an X11 client. Each directory is named for the X window id of the window the client represents, in the form that most X utilities recognize. The one exception is the special 'sel' directory, which represents the currently selected client.

When read, the 'ctl' file returns the X window id of the client. The following commands may be written to it:
The set of unusual actions the client is allowed to perform, in the same format as the tag set.
The client is allowed to activate itself – that is, focus its window and, as the case may require, uncollapse it and select a tag it resides on. This flag must be set on a client if you wish it able to activate itself from the system tray.
Defines whether this client is likely to float when attached to a new view. Ordinarilly, the value changes automatically whenever the window is moved between the floating and managed layers. However, setting a value of always or never overrides this behavior. Additionally, dialogs, menus, docks, and splash screens will always float unless this value is set to never.
Sets the client's fullscreen state.
The client's group ID, or 0 if not part of a group. Clients tend to open with the same tags and in the same columns as the last active member of their group. Setting this property is only useful when done via the rules file.
Close the client's window.
Read-only value of the PID of the program that owns the window, if the value is available and the process is on the same machine as wmii.
Forcibly kill the client's connection to the X server, closing all of its windows. Kill the parent process if the client's PID is available.
tags <tags>
The client's tags. The same as the tags file.
Set or unset the client's urgent hint.

Set or read a client's label (title).
Returns a clients class and label as: <instance>:<class>:<label>.
Set or read a client's tags. Tags are separated by +, -, or ^. Tags beginning with + are added, while those beginning with - are removed and those beginning with ^ are toggled. If the tag string written begins with +, ^, or -, the written tags are added to or removed from the client's set, otherwise the set is overwritten.

The /tag/ Hierarchy

Each directory under '/tag/' represents a view, containing all of the clients with the given tag applied. The special 'sel' directory represents the currently selected tag.

The 'ctl' file can be read to retrieve the name of the tag the directory represents, or written with the following commands:
Select a client: select [left|right|up|down]

select [<row number>|sel] [<frame number>]

select client <client>

Send a client somewhere:
send [<client>|sel] [up|down|left|right]
send [<client>|sel] <area>
Send <client> to the nth <area>
send [<client>|sel] toggle
Toggle <client> between the floating and managed layer.
Swap a client with another. Same syntax as send.

Grow or shrink a client.


grow <frame> <direction> [<amount>]

Nudge a client in a given direction.


grow <frame> <direction> [<amount>]

Where the arguments are defined as follows:
Selects a column or the floating area.


area ::= <area_spec> | <screen_spec>:<area_spec>

When <screen_spec> is omitted and <area_spec> is not "sel", 0 is assumed. "sel" by itself represents the selected client no matter which screen it is on.


area_spec ::= "~" | <number> | "sel"

Where "~" represents the floating area and <number> represents a column index, starting at one.


screen_spec ::= <number>

Where <number> representes the 0-based Xinerama screen number.

Selects a client window.


frame ::= <area> <index> | <area> sel | client <window-id>

Where <index> represents the nth frame of <area> or <window-id> is the X11 window id of the given client.

The amount to grow or nudge something.


amount ::= <number> | <number>px

If "px" is given, <number> is interperated as an exact pixel count. Otherwise, it's interperated as a "reasonable" amount, which is usually either the height of a window's title bar, or its sizing increment (as defined by X11) in a given direction.

Read for a description of the contents of a tag.

The /rbar/, /lbar/ Hierarchy

The files under '/rbar/' and '/lbar/' represent the items of the bar at the bottom of the screen. Files under '/lbar/' appear on the left side of the bar, while those under '/rbar/' appear on the right, with the leftmost item occupying all extra available space. The items are sorted lexicographically.

The files may be read or written to obtain or alter the colors and text of the bars. The format is similar to the various ctl files and should be self explanitory.

FILES

/tmp/ns.$USER.${DISPLAY%.0}/wmii
The wmii socket file which provides a 9P service.
/etc/X11/wmii
Global action directory.
~/.wmii
User-specific action directory. Actions are first searched here.

ENVIRONMENT

$HOME, $DISPLAY
See the section FILES above.

The following variables are set and exported within wmii and thus can be used in actions:

$WMII_ADDRESS
The address on which wmii is listening.
$WMII_CONFPATH
The path that wmii searches for its configuration scripts and actions.
$NAMESPACE
The namespace directory to use if no address is provided.

SEE ALSO

wimenu(1), wmii9menu(1), witray(1), wmiir(1), wihack(1)

/usr/share/doc/wmii/wmii.pdf /usr/share/doc/wmii/FAQ

[1] http://www.suckless.org/wiki/wmii/tips/9p_tips

[2] /usr/share/doc/wmii/wmii.pdf

2010 June wmii-hg2813