| I3BLOCKS(1) | I3BLOCKS(1) |
i3blocks - A flexible scheduler for your i3bar blocks
i3blocks [options]
i3blocks allows one to easily describe blocks in a simple format, and generate a status line for i3bar(1). It handles clicks, signals and time interval for user scripts.
#OPTIONS -c : Specifies an alternate configuration file path. By default, i3blocks looks for configuration files in the following order (note that /etc may be prefixed with /usr/local depending on the compilation flags):
1. ~/.config/i3blocks/config (or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/i3blocks/config if set)
2. ~/.i3blocks.conf
3. /etc/xdg/i3blocks/config (or $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/i3blocks/config if set)
4. /etc/i3blocks.conf
The configuration file is an ini file. Each section describes a new block. A line beginning with a # sign is a comment, and empty lines are ignored. A property is a key=value pair per line, with no space around the equal sign. Properties declared outside a block (i.e. at the beginning of the file) describe global settings.
Here is an example config file:
# This is a comment
interval=5
color=#00FF00
[weather]
command=~/bin/weather.pl
interval=1800
[time]
command=date +%T
To use i3blocks as your status line, define it in a bar block of your ~/i3/config file:
bar {
status_command i3blocks
}
The properties used to describe a block are the keys specified in the i3bar protocol http://i3wm.org/docs/i3bar-protocol.html , plus additional properties used by i3blocks to describe when and how to update a block. All the supported properties are described below.
The following keys are standard, see http://i3wm.org/docs/i3bar-protocol.html for details.
The following keys are specific to i3blocks.
If “once” (or -1), the block will be executed only on startup (note that a click or signal will still trigger an update).
If “repeat” (or -2), the block will be spawned on startup, and as soon as it terminates (useful to repeat blocking commands). Use with caution!
If “persist” (or -3), the block will be executed only on startup, and updated as soon as it outputs a line. Thus limited to single line updates.
The value of the command key will be passed and executed as is by a shell.
The standard output of the command line is used to update the block content. Each non-empty line of the output will overwrite the corresponding property:
For example, this script sets the full_text in blue but no short_text:
echo "Here's my label"
echo
echo \#0000FF
If the command line returns 0 or 33, the block is updated. Otherwise, it is considered a failure and the first line (if any) is still displayed. Note that stderr is ignored. A return code of 33 will set the urgent flag to true.
For example, this script prints the battery percentage and sets the urgent flag if it is below 10%:
BAT=`acpi -b | grep -E -o '[0-9][0-9]?%'`
echo "BAT: $BAT"
test ${BAT%?} -le 10 && exit 33 || exit 0
When forking a block command, i3blocks will set the environment with some BLOCK_* variables. The following variables are always provided, with eventually an empty string as the value.
Here is an example using the environment:
[block]
command=echo name=$BLOCK_NAME instance=$BLOCK_INSTANCE
interval=1
[clickme]
full_text=Click me!
command=echo button=$BLOCK_BUTTON x=$BLOCK_X y=$BLOCK_Y
min_width=button=1 x=1366 y=768
align=left
Note that i3blocks provides a set of optional scripts for convenience, such as network status, battery check, cpu load, volume, etc.
As an example, here is a close configuration to i3status(1) default settings:
TODO
interval=5
signal=10
[ipv6]
[free]
[dhcp]
[vpn]
[wifi]
[ethernet]
min_width=E: 255.255.255.255 (1000 Mbit/s)
[battery]
[cpu]
[datetime]
The following block shows the usage of signal with some i3(1) bindings which adjust the volume, before issuing a pkill -RTMIN+1 i3blocks:
[volume]
command=echo -n 'Volume: '; amixer get Master | grep -E -o '[0-9][0-9]?%'
interval=once
signal=1
# no interval, only check on SIGRTMIN+1
Here is an example of a very minimalist config, assuming you have a bunch of scripts under ~/bin/blocks/ with the same name as the blocks:
command=~/bin/blocks/$BLOCK_NAME
interval=1
[free]
[wifi]
[ethernet]
[battery]
[cpu]
[datetime]
The development of i3blocks takes place on Github.
The wiki is a good source of examples for blocks and screenshots.
i3 (1), i3bar (1), i3status (1)
Please report bugs on the issue tracker.
None.
Written by Vivien Didelot vivien.didelot@gmail.com.
Copyright (C) 2014 Vivien Didelot vivien.didelot@gmail.com
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.