ironbar/docs/Configuration guide.md
2024-04-01 15:09:11 +01:00

13 KiB

By default, you get a single bar at the bottom of all your screens. To change that, you'll unsurprisingly need a config file.

This page details putting together the skeleton for your config to get you to a stage where you can start configuring modules. It may look long and overwhelming, but that is just because the bar supports a lot of scenarios!

If you want to see some ready-to-go config files check the examples folder and the example pages in the sidebar.

1. Create config file

The config file lives inside the ironbar directory in your XDG_CONFIG_DIR, which is usually ~/.config/ironbar.

Ironbar supports a range of configuration formats, so you can pick your favourite:

  • config.json
  • config.toml
  • config.yaml
  • config.corn (Experimental, includes variable support for re-using blocks. See here for info)

You can also override the default config path using the IRONBAR_CONFIG environment variable.

2. Pick your use-case

Ironbar gives you a few ways to configure the bar to suit your needs. This allows you to keep your config simple and relatively flat if your use-case is simple, and make it more complex if required.

a) I want the same bar across all monitors

Place the bar config inside the top-level object. This is automatically applied to each of your monitors.

JSON
{
  "position": "bottom",
  "height": 42,
  "start": [],
  "center": [],
  "end": []
}
TOML
position = "bottom"
height = 42
start = []
center = []
end = []
YAML
position: "bottom"
height: 42
start: [ ]
center: [ ]
end: [ ]
Corn
{
  position = "bottom"
  height = 42
  start = []
  center = []
  end = []
}

b) I want my config to differ across one or more monitors

Create a map/object called monitors inside the top-level object. Each of the map's keys should be an output name, and each value should be an object containing the bar config.

You can still define a top-level "default" config to use for unspecified monitors. Alternatively, leave the top-level start, center and end keys null to hide bars on unspecified monitors.

Tip

To find your output names, run wayland-info | grep wl_output -A1.

JSON
{
  "monitors": {
    "DP-1": {
      "start": []
    },
    "DP-2": {
      "position": "bottom",
      "height": 30,
      "start": []
    }
  }
}
TOML
[monitors]

[monitors.DP-1]
start = []

[monitors.DP-2]
position = "bottom"
height = 30
start = []
YAML
monitors:
  DP-1:
    start: [ ]
  DP-2:
    position: "bottom"
    height: 30
    start: [ ]
Corn
{
  monitors.DP-1.start = []
  monitors.DP-2 = {
    position = "bottom"
    height = 30
    start = []
  }
}

c) I want one or more monitors to have multiple bars

Create a map/object called monitors inside the top-level object. Each of the map's keys should be an output name. If you want the screen to have multiple bars, use an array of bar config objects. If you want the screen to have a single bar, use an object.

To find your output names, run wayland-info | grep wl_output -A1.

JSON
{
  "monitors": {
    "DP-1": [
      {
        "start": []
      },
      {
        "position": "top",
        "start": []
      }
    ],
    "DP-2": {
      "position": "bottom",
      "height": 30,
      "start": []
    }
  }
}
TOML
[monitors]

[[monitors.DP-1]]
start = []

[[monitors.DP-2]]
position = "top"
start = []

[monitors.DP-2]
position = "bottom"
height = 30
start = []
YAML
monitors:
  DP-1:
    - start: [ ]
    - position: "top"
      start: [ ]
  DP-2:
    position: "bottom"
    height: 30
    start: [ ]
Corn
{
  monitors.DP-1 = [
    { start = [] }
    { position = "top" start = [] }
  ]
  monitors.DP-2 = {
    position = "bottom"
    height = 30
    start = []
  }
}

3. Write your bar config(s)

Once you have the basic config structure set up, it's time to actually configure your bar(s).

Check here for an example config file for a fully configured bar in each format.

3.1 Top-level options

The following table lists each of the top-level bar config options:

Name Type Default Description
ironvar_defaults Map<string, string> {} Map of ironvar keys against their default values.
monitors Map<string, BarConfig or BarConfig[]> null Map of monitor names against bar configs.

Tip

monitors is only required if you are following 2b or 2c (ie not the same bar across all monitors).

Note

All bar-level options listed in the below section can also be defined at the top-level.

3.2 Bar-level options

The following table lists each of the bar-level bar config options:

Name Type Default Description
name string bar-<n> A unique identifier for the bar, used for controlling it over IPC. If not set, uses a generated integer suffix.
position top or bottom or left or right bottom The bar's position on screen.
anchor_to_edges boolean false Whether to anchor the bar to the edges of the screen. Setting to false centres the bar.
height integer 42 The bar's height in pixels.
popup_gap integer 5 The gap between the bar and popup window.
margin.top integer 0 The margin on the top of the bar
margin.bottom integer 0 The margin on the bottom of the bar
margin.left integer 0 The margin on the left of the bar
margin.right integer 0 The margin on the right of the bar
icon_theme string null Name of the GTK icon theme to use. Leave blank to use default.
start_hidden boolean false, or true if autohide set Whether the bar should be hidden when the application starts. Enabled by default when autohide is set.
autohide integer null The duration in milliseconds before the bar is hidden after the cursor leaves. Leave unset to disable auto-hide behaviour.
start Module[] [] Array of left or top modules.
center Module[] [] Array of center modules.
end Module[] [] Array of right or bottom modules.

3.2 Module-level options

Each module must include a type key.

The following table lists each of the module-level options that are present on all modules. For details on available modules and each of their config options, check the sidebar.

For information on the Script type, and embedding scripts in strings, see here.

Events

Name Type Default Description
on_click_left Script [oneshot] null Runs the script when the module is left clicked.
on_click_middle Script [oneshot] null Runs the script when the module is middle clicked.
on_click_right Script [oneshot] null Runs the script when the module is right clicked.
on_scroll_up Script [oneshot] null Runs the script when the module is scroll up on.
on_scroll_down Script [oneshot] null Runs the script when the module is scrolled down on.
on_mouse_enter Script [oneshot] null Runs the script when the module is hovered over.
on_mouse_exit Script [oneshot] null Runs the script when the module is no longer hovered over.

Visibility

Name Type Default Description
show_if Dynamic Boolean null Polls the script to check its exit code. If exit code is zero, the module is shown. For other codes, it is hidden.
transition_type slide_start or slide_end or crossfade or none slide_start The transition animation to use when showing/hiding the widget.
transition_duration integer 250 The length of the transition animation to use when showing/hiding the widget.
disable_popup boolean false Prevents the popup from opening on-click for this widget.

Appearance

Name Type Default Description
tooltip string null Shows this text on hover. Supports embedding scripts between {{double braces}}.
name string null Sets the unique widget name, allowing you to style it using #name.
class string null Sets one or more CSS classes, allowing you to style it using .class.

For more information on styling, please see the styling guide.