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// This config is in the KDL format: https://kdl.dev |
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// "/-" comments out the following node. |
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// Check the wiki for a full description of the configuration: |
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// https://niri-wm.github.io/niri/Configuration:-Introduction |
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|
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// Input device configuration. |
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// Find the full list of options on the wiki: |
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// https://niri-wm.github.io/niri/Configuration:-Input |
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input { |
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keyboard { |
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xkb { |
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// You can set rules, model, layout, variant and options. |
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// For more information, see xkeyboard-config(7). |
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|
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// For example: |
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// layout "us,ru" |
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// options "grp:win_space_toggle,compose:ralt,ctrl:nocaps" |
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|
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// If this section is empty, niri will fetch xkb settings |
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// from org.freedesktop.locale1. You can control these using |
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// localectl set-x11-keymap. |
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} |
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|
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// Enable numlock on startup, omitting this setting disables it. |
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numlock |
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} |
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|
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// Next sections include libinput settings. |
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// Omitting settings disables them, or leaves them at their default values. |
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// All commented-out settings here are examples, not defaults. |
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touchpad { |
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// off |
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tap |
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// dwt |
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// dwtp |
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// drag false |
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// drag-lock |
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natural-scroll |
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// accel-speed 0.2 |
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// accel-profile "flat" |
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// scroll-method "two-finger" |
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// disabled-on-external-mouse |
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} |
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|
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mouse { |
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// off |
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// natural-scroll |
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// accel-speed 0.2 |
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// accel-profile "flat" |
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// scroll-method "no-scroll" |
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} |
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|
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trackpoint { |
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// off |
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// natural-scroll |
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// accel-speed 0.2 |
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// accel-profile "flat" |
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// scroll-method "on-button-down" |
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// scroll-button 273 |
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// scroll-button-lock |
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// middle-emulation |
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} |
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|
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// Uncomment this to make the mouse warp to the center of newly focused windows. |
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// warp-mouse-to-focus |
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|
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// Focus windows and outputs automatically when moving the mouse into them. |
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// Setting max-scroll-amount="0%" makes it work only on windows already fully on screen. |
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// focus-follows-mouse max-scroll-amount="0%" |
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} |
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|
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// You can configure outputs by their name, which you can find |
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// by running `niri msg outputs` while inside a niri instance. |
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// The built-in laptop monitor is usually called "eDP-1". |
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// Find more information on the wiki: |
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// https://niri-wm.github.io/niri/Configuration:-Outputs |
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// Remember to uncomment the node by removing "/-"! |
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|
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// Settings that influence how windows are positioned and sized. |
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// Find more information on the wiki: |
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// https://niri-wm.github.io/niri/Configuration:-Layout |
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layout { |
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// Set gaps around windows in logical pixels. |
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gaps 16 |
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|
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// When to center a column when changing focus, options are: |
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// - "never", default behavior, focusing an off-screen column will keep at the left |
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// or right edge of the screen. |
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// - "always", the focused column will always be centered. |
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// - "on-overflow", focusing a column will center it if it doesn't fit |
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// together with the previously focused column. |
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center-focused-column "never" |
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|
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// You can customize the widths that "switch-preset-column-width" (Mod+R) toggles between. |
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preset-column-widths { |
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// Proportion sets the width as a fraction of the output width, taking gaps into account. |
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// For example, you can perfectly fit four windows sized "proportion 0.25" on an output. |
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// The default preset widths are 1/3, 1/2 and 2/3 of the output. |
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proportion 0.33333 |
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proportion 0.5 |
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proportion 0.66667 |
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|
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// Fixed sets the width in logical pixels exactly. |
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// fixed 1920 |
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} |
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|
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// You can also customize the heights that "switch-preset-window-height" (Mod+Ctrl+Shift+R) toggles between. |
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// preset-window-heights { } |
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|
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// You can change the default width of the new windows. |
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default-column-width { proportion 0.5; } |
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// If you leave the brackets empty, the windows themselves will decide their initial width. |
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// default-column-width {} |
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|
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// By default focus ring and border are rendered as a solid background rectangle |
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// behind windows. That is, they will show up through semitransparent windows. |
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// This is because windows using client-side decorations can have an arbitrary shape. |
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// |
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// If you don't like that, you should uncomment `prefer-no-csd` below. |
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// Niri will draw focus ring and border *around* windows that agree to omit their |
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// client-side decorations. |
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// |
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// Alternatively, you can override it with a window rule called |
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// `draw-border-with-background`. |
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|
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// You can change how the focus ring looks. |
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focus-ring { |
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// Uncomment this line to disable the focus ring. |
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// off |
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|
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// How many logical pixels the ring extends out from the windows. |
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width 4 |
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|
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// Colors can be set in a variety of ways: |
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// - CSS named colors: "red" |
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// - RGB hex: "#rgb", "#rgba", "#rrggbb", "#rrggbbaa" |
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// - CSS-like notation: "rgb(255, 127, 0)", rgba(), hsl() and a few others. |
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|
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// Color of the ring on the active monitor. |
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active-color "#7fc8ff" |
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|
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// Color of the ring on inactive monitors. |
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// |
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// The focus ring only draws around the active window, so the only place |
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// where you can see its inactive-color is on other monitors. |
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inactive-color "#505050" |
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|
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// You can also use gradients. They take precedence over solid colors. |
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// Gradients are rendered the same as CSS linear-gradient(angle, from, to). |
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// The angle is the same as in linear-gradient, and is optional, |
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// defaulting to 180 (top-to-bottom gradient). |
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// You can use any CSS linear-gradient tool on the web to set these up. |
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// Changing the color space is also supported, check the wiki for more info. |
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// |
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// active-gradient from="#80c8ff" to="#c7ff7f" angle=45 |
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|
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// You can also color the gradient relative to the entire view |
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// of the workspace, rather than relative to just the window itself. |
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// To do that, set relative-to="workspace-view". |
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// |
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// inactive-gradient from="#505050" to="#808080" angle=45 relative-to="workspace-view" |
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} |
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|
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// You can also add a border. It's similar to the focus ring, but always visible. |
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border { |
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// The settings are the same as for the focus ring. |
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// If you enable the border, you probably want to disable the focus ring. |
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off |
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width 4 |
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active-color "#ffc87f" |
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inactive-color "#505050" |
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// Color of the border around windows that request your attention. |
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urgent-color "#9b0000" |
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|
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// Gradients can use a few different interpolation color spaces. |
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// For example, this is a pastel rainbow gradient via in="oklch longer hue". |
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// |
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// active-gradient from="#e5989b" to="#ffb4a2" angle=45 relative-to="workspace-view" in="oklch longer hue" |
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|
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// inactive-gradient from="#505050" to="#808080" angle=45 relative-to="workspace-view" |
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} |
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|
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// You can enable drop shadows for windows. |
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shadow { |
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// Uncomment the next line to enable shadows. |
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on |
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// By default, the shadow draws only around its window, and not behind it. |
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// Uncomment this setting to make the shadow draw behind its window. |
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// |
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// Note that niri has no way of knowing about the CSD window corner |
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// radius. It has to assume that windows have square corners, leading to |
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// shadow artifacts inside the CSD rounded corners. This setting fixes |
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// those artifacts. |
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// |
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// However, instead you may want to set prefer-no-csd and/or |
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// geometry-corner-radius. Then, niri will know the corner radius and |
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// draw the shadow correctly, without having to draw it behind the |
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// window. These will also remove client-side shadows if the window |
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// draws any. |
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// |
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// draw-behind-window true |
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// You can change how shadows look. The values below are in logical |
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// pixels and match the CSS box-shadow properties. |
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// Softness controls the shadow blur radius. |
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softness 30 |
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// Spread expands the shadow. |
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spread 5 |
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// Offset moves the shadow relative to the window. |
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offset x=0 y=5 |
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// You can also change the shadow color and opacity. |
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color "#0007" |
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} |
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// Struts shrink the area occupied by windows, similarly to layer-shell panels. |
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// You can think of them as a kind of outer gaps. They are set in logical pixels. |
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// Left and right struts will cause the next window to the side to always be visible. |
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// Top and bottom struts will simply add outer gaps in addition to the area occupied by |
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// layer-shell panels and regular gaps. |
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struts { |
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// left 64 |
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// right 64 |
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// top 64 |
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// bottom 64 |
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} |
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} |
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|
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// Add lines like this to spawn processes at startup. |
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// Note that running niri as a session supports xdg-desktop-autostart, |
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// which may be more convenient to use. |
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// See the binds section below for more spawn examples. |
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|
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// This line starts waybar, a commonly used bar for Wayland compositors. |
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// To run a shell command (with variables, pipes, etc.), use spawn-sh-at-startup: |
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// spawn-sh-at-startup "qs -c ~/source/qs/MyAwesomeShell" |
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hotkey-overlay { |
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// Uncomment this line to disable the "Important Hotkeys" pop-up at startup. |
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skip-at-startup |
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} |
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|
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// Uncomment this line to ask the clients to omit their client-side decorations if possible. |
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// If the client will specifically ask for CSD, the request will be honored. |
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// Additionally, clients will be informed that they are tiled, removing some client-side rounded corners. |
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// This option will also fix border/focus ring drawing behind some semitransparent windows. |
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// After enabling or disabling this, you need to restart the apps for this to take effect. |
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prefer-no-csd |
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// You can change the path where screenshots are saved. |
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// A ~ at the front will be expanded to the home directory. |
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// The path is formatted with strftime(3) to give you the screenshot date and time. |
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screenshot-path "~" |
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// You can also set this to null to disable saving screenshots to disk. |
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// screenshot-path null |
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|
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// Animation settings. |
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// The wiki explains how to configure individual animations: |
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// https://niri-wm.github.io/niri/Configuration:-Animations |
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animations { |
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// Uncomment to turn off all animations. |
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// off |
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// Slow down all animations by this factor. Values below 1 speed them up instead. |
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slowdown 0.5 |
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} |
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|
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// Window rules let you adjust behavior for individual windows. |
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// Find more information on the wiki: |
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// https://niri-wm.github.io/niri/Configuration:-Window-Rules |
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|
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// Work around WezTerm's initial configure bug |
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// by setting an empty default-column-width. |
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window-rule { |
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// This regular expression is intentionally made as specific as possible, |
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// since this is the default config, and we want no false positives. |
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// You can get away with just app-id="wezterm" if you want. |
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match app-id=r#"^org\.wezfurlong\.wezterm$"# |
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default-column-width {} |
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} |
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// Open the Firefox picture-in-picture player as floating by default. |
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window-rule { |
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// This app-id regular expression will work for both: |
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// - host Firefox (app-id is "firefox") |
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// - Flatpak Firefox (app-id is "org.mozilla.firefox") |
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match app-id=r#"firefox$"# title="^Picture-in-Picture$" |
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open-floating true |
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} |
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// Example: block out two password managers from screen capture. |
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// (This example rule is commented out with a "/-" in front.) |
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/-window-rule { |
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match app-id=r#"^org\.keepassxc\.KeePassXC$"# |
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match app-id=r#"^org\.gnome\.World\.Secrets$"# |
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block-out-from "screen-capture" |
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// Use this instead if you want them visible on third-party screenshot tools. |
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// block-out-from "screencast" |
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} |
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// Example: enable rounded corners for all windows. |
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// (This example rule is commented out with a "/-" in front.) |
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window-rule { |
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geometry-corner-radius 12 |
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clip-to-geometry true |
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} |
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binds { |
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// Keys consist of modifiers separated by + signs, followed by an XKB key name |
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// in the end. To find an XKB name for a particular key, you may use a program |
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// like wev. |
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// |
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// "Mod" is a special modifier equal to Super when running on a TTY, and to Alt |
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// when running as a winit window. |
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// |
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// Most actions that you can bind here can also be invoked programmatically with |
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// `niri msg action do-something`. |
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// Mod-Shift-/, which is usually the same as Mod-?, |
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// shows a list of important hotkeys. |
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Mod+Shift+Slash { show-hotkey-overlay; } |
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// Suggested binds for running programs: terminal, app launcher, screen locker. |
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Mod+Return hotkey-overlay-title="Open a Terminal: alacritty" { spawn "alacritty"; } |
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Mod+D hotkey-overlay-title="Run an Application: rofi" { spawn "rofi" "-combi-modi" "window,drun" "-show" "combi" "-modi" "combi" "-show-icons"; } |
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Mod+Shift+Home hotkey-overlay-title="Lock the Screen: swaylock" { spawn "swaylock" "--screenshots" "--effect-pixelate" "10" "--clock"; } |
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// Use spawn-sh to run a shell command. Do this if you need pipes, multiple commands, etc. |
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// Note: the entire command goes as a single argument. It's passed verbatim to `sh -c`. |
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// For example, this is a standard bind to toggle the screen reader (orca). |
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Super+Alt+S allow-when-locked=true hotkey-overlay-title=null { spawn-sh "pkill orca || exec orca"; } |
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// Example volume keys mappings for PipeWire & WirePlumber. |
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// The allow-when-locked=true property makes them work even when the session is locked. |
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// Using spawn-sh allows to pass multiple arguments together with the command. |
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// "-l 1.0" limits the volume to 100%. |
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XF86AudioRaiseVolume allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "wpctl set-volume @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@ 0.1+ -l 1.0"; } |
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XF86AudioLowerVolume allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "wpctl set-volume @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@ 0.1-"; } |
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XF86AudioMute allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "wpctl set-mute @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@ toggle"; } |
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XF86AudioMicMute allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "wpctl set-mute @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SOURCE@ toggle"; } |
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// Example media keys mapping using playerctl. |
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// This will work with any MPRIS-enabled media player. |
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XF86AudioPlay allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "playerctl play-pause"; } |
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XF86AudioPause allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "playerctl play-pause"; } |
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XF86AudioStop allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "playerctl stop"; } |
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XF86AudioPrev allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "playerctl previous"; } |
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XF86AudioNext allow-when-locked=true { spawn-sh "playerctl next"; } |
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// Example brightness key mappings for brightnessctl. |
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// You can use regular spawn with multiple arguments too (to avoid going through "sh"), |
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// but you need to manually put each argument in separate "" quotes. |
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XF86MonBrightnessUp allow-when-locked=true { spawn "brightnessctl" "--class=backlight" "set" "+10%"; } |
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XF86MonBrightnessDown allow-when-locked=true { spawn "brightnessctl" "--class=backlight" "set" "10%-"; } |
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// Open/close the Overview: a zoomed-out view of workspaces and windows. |
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// You can also move the mouse into the top-left hot corner, |
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// or do a four-finger swipe up on a touchpad. |
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Mod+O repeat=false { toggle-overview; } |
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Mod+Shift+Q repeat=false { close-window; } |
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Mod+Left { focus-column-left; } |
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Mod+Down { focus-window-down; } |
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Mod+Up { focus-window-up; } |
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Mod+Right { focus-column-right; } |
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Mod+H { focus-column-left; } |
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Mod+J { focus-window-down; } |
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Mod+K { focus-window-up; } |
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Mod+L { focus-column-right; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Left { move-column-left; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Down { move-window-down; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Up { move-window-up; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Right { move-column-right; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+H { move-column-left; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+J { move-window-down; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+K { move-window-up; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+L { move-column-right; } |
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// Alternative commands that move across workspaces when reaching |
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// the first or last window in a column. |
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// Mod+J { focus-window-or-workspace-down; } |
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// Mod+K { focus-window-or-workspace-up; } |
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// Mod+Ctrl+J { move-window-down-or-to-workspace-down; } |
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// Mod+Ctrl+K { move-window-up-or-to-workspace-up; } |
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Mod+Home { focus-column-first; } |
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Mod+End { focus-column-last; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Home { move-column-to-first; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+End { move-column-to-last; } |
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Mod+Shift+Left { focus-monitor-left; } |
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Mod+Shift+Down { focus-monitor-down; } |
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Mod+Shift+Up { focus-monitor-up; } |
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Mod+Shift+Right { focus-monitor-right; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+Left { move-column-to-monitor-left; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+Down { move-column-to-monitor-down; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+Up { move-column-to-monitor-up; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+Right { move-column-to-monitor-right; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+H { move-column-to-monitor-left; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+J { move-column-to-monitor-down; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+K { move-column-to-monitor-up; } |
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Mod+Shift+Ctrl+L { move-column-to-monitor-right; } |
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|
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// Alternatively, there are commands to move just a single window: |
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// Mod+Shift+Ctrl+Left { move-window-to-monitor-left; } |
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// ... |
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|
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// And you can also move a whole workspace to another monitor: |
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// Mod+Shift+Ctrl+Left { move-workspace-to-monitor-left; } |
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// ... |
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Mod+Page_Down { focus-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+Page_Up { focus-workspace-up; } |
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Mod+U { focus-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+I { focus-workspace-up; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Page_Down { move-column-to-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Page_Up { move-column-to-workspace-up; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+U { move-column-to-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+I { move-column-to-workspace-up; } |
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|
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// Alternatively, there are commands to move just a single window: |
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// Mod+Ctrl+Page_Down { move-window-to-workspace-down; } |
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// ... |
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Mod+Shift+Page_Down { move-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+Shift+Page_Up { move-workspace-up; } |
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Mod+Shift+U { move-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+Shift+I { move-workspace-up; } |
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|
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// You can bind mouse wheel scroll ticks using the following syntax. |
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// These binds will change direction based on the natural-scroll setting. |
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// |
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// To avoid scrolling through workspaces really fast, you can use |
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// the cooldown-ms property. The bind will be rate-limited to this value. |
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// You can set a cooldown on any bind, but it's most useful for the wheel. |
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Mod+WheelScrollDown cooldown-ms=150 { focus-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+WheelScrollUp cooldown-ms=150 { focus-workspace-up; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+WheelScrollDown cooldown-ms=150 { move-column-to-workspace-down; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+WheelScrollUp cooldown-ms=150 { move-column-to-workspace-up; } |
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|
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Mod+WheelScrollRight { focus-column-right; } |
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Mod+WheelScrollLeft { focus-column-left; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+WheelScrollRight { move-column-right; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+WheelScrollLeft { move-column-left; } |
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|
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// Usually scrolling up and down with Shift in applications results in |
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// horizontal scrolling; these binds replicate that. |
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Mod+Shift+WheelScrollDown { focus-column-right; } |
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Mod+Shift+WheelScrollUp { focus-column-left; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Shift+WheelScrollDown { move-column-right; } |
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Mod+Ctrl+Shift+WheelScrollUp { move-column-left; } |
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|
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// Similarly, you can bind touchpad scroll "ticks". |
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// Touchpad scrolling is continuous, so for these binds it is split into |
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// discrete intervals. |
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// These binds are also affected by touchpad's natural-scroll, so these |
||||
// example binds are "inverted", since we have natural-scroll enabled for |
||||
// touchpads by default. |
||||
// Mod+TouchpadScrollDown { spawn-sh "wpctl set-volume @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@ 0.02+"; } |
||||
// Mod+TouchpadScrollUp { spawn-sh "wpctl set-volume @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@ 0.02-"; } |
||||
|
||||
// You can refer to workspaces by index. However, keep in mind that |
||||
// niri is a dynamic workspace system, so these commands are kind of |
||||
// "best effort". Trying to refer to a workspace index bigger than |
||||
// the current workspace count will instead refer to the bottommost |
||||
// (empty) workspace. |
||||
// |
||||
// For example, with 2 workspaces + 1 empty, indices 3, 4, 5 and so on |
||||
// will all refer to the 3rd workspace. |
||||
Mod+1 { focus-workspace 1; } |
||||
Mod+2 { focus-workspace 2; } |
||||
Mod+3 { focus-workspace 3; } |
||||
Mod+4 { focus-workspace 4; } |
||||
Mod+5 { focus-workspace 5; } |
||||
Mod+6 { focus-workspace 6; } |
||||
Mod+7 { focus-workspace 7; } |
||||
Mod+8 { focus-workspace 8; } |
||||
Mod+9 { focus-workspace 9; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+1 { move-column-to-workspace 1; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+2 { move-column-to-workspace 2; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+3 { move-column-to-workspace 3; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+4 { move-column-to-workspace 4; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+5 { move-column-to-workspace 5; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+6 { move-column-to-workspace 6; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+7 { move-column-to-workspace 7; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+8 { move-column-to-workspace 8; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+9 { move-column-to-workspace 9; } |
||||
|
||||
// Alternatively, there are commands to move just a single window: |
||||
// Mod+Ctrl+1 { move-window-to-workspace 1; } |
||||
|
||||
// Switches focus between the current and the previous workspace. |
||||
// Mod+Tab { focus-workspace-previous; } |
||||
|
||||
// The following binds move the focused window in and out of a column. |
||||
// If the window is alone, they will consume it into the nearby column to the side. |
||||
// If the window is already in a column, they will expel it out. |
||||
Mod+BracketLeft { consume-or-expel-window-left; } |
||||
Mod+BracketRight { consume-or-expel-window-right; } |
||||
|
||||
// Consume one window from the right to the bottom of the focused column. |
||||
Mod+Comma { consume-window-into-column; } |
||||
// Expel the bottom window from the focused column to the right. |
||||
Mod+Period { expel-window-from-column; } |
||||
|
||||
// Cycle through widths set in preset-column-widths. |
||||
Mod+R { switch-preset-column-width; } |
||||
// Cycling through the presets in reverse order is also possible. |
||||
Mod+Shift+R { switch-preset-column-width-back; } |
||||
|
||||
Mod+Ctrl+Shift+R { switch-preset-window-height; } |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+R { reset-window-height; } |
||||
|
||||
Mod+F { maximize-column; } |
||||
Mod+Shift+F { fullscreen-window; } |
||||
|
||||
// While maximize-column leaves gaps and borders around the window, |
||||
// maximize-window-to-edges doesn't: the window expands to the edges of the screen. |
||||
// This bind corresponds to normal window maximizing, |
||||
// e.g. by double-clicking on the titlebar. |
||||
Mod+M { maximize-window-to-edges; } |
||||
|
||||
// Expand the focused column to space not taken up by other fully visible columns. |
||||
// Makes the column "fill the rest of the space". |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+F { expand-column-to-available-width; } |
||||
|
||||
Mod+C { center-column; } |
||||
|
||||
// Center all fully visible columns on screen. |
||||
Mod+Ctrl+C { center-visible-columns; } |
||||
|
||||
// Finer width adjustments. |
||||
// This command can also: |
||||
// * set width in pixels: "1000" |
||||
// * adjust width in pixels: "-5" or "+5" |
||||
// * set width as a percentage of screen width: "25%" |
||||
// * adjust width as a percentage of screen width: "-10%" or "+10%" |
||||
// Pixel sizes use logical, or scaled, pixels. I.e. on an output with scale 2.0, |
||||
// set-column-width "100" will make the column occupy 200 physical screen pixels. |
||||
Mod+Minus { set-column-width "-10%"; } |
||||
Mod+Equal { set-column-width "+10%"; } |
||||
|
||||
// Finer height adjustments when in column with other windows. |
||||
Mod+Shift+Minus { set-window-height "-10%"; } |
||||
Mod+Shift+Equal { set-window-height "+10%"; } |
||||
|
||||
// Move the focused window between the floating and the tiling layout. |
||||
Mod+V { toggle-window-floating; } |
||||
Mod+Shift+V { switch-focus-between-floating-and-tiling; } |
||||
|
||||
// Toggle tabbed column display mode. |
||||
// Windows in this column will appear as vertical tabs, |
||||
// rather than stacked on top of each other. |
||||
Mod+W { toggle-column-tabbed-display; } |
||||
|
||||
// Actions to switch layouts. |
||||
// Note: if you uncomment these, make sure you do NOT have |
||||
// a matching layout switch hotkey configured in xkb options above. |
||||
// Having both at once on the same hotkey will break the switching, |
||||
// since it will switch twice upon pressing the hotkey (once by xkb, once by niri). |
||||
// Mod+Space { switch-layout "next"; } |
||||
// Mod+Shift+Space { switch-layout "prev"; } |
||||
|
||||
Print { screenshot; } |
||||
Ctrl+Print { screenshot-screen; } |
||||
Alt+Print { screenshot-window; } |
||||
|
||||
// Applications such as remote-desktop clients and software KVM switches may |
||||
// request that niri stops processing the keyboard shortcuts defined here |
||||
// so they may, for example, forward the key presses as-is to a remote machine. |
||||
// It's a good idea to bind an escape hatch to toggle the inhibitor, |
||||
// so a buggy application can't hold your session hostage. |
||||
// |
||||
// The allow-inhibiting=false property can be applied to other binds as well, |
||||
// which ensures niri always processes them, even when an inhibitor is active. |
||||
Mod+Escape allow-inhibiting=false { toggle-keyboard-shortcuts-inhibit; } |
||||
|
||||
// The quit action will show a confirmation dialog to avoid accidental exits. |
||||
Mod+Shift+E { quit; } |
||||
Ctrl+Alt+Delete { quit; } |
||||
|
||||
// Powers off the monitors. To turn them back on, do any input like |
||||
// moving the mouse or pressing any other key. |
||||
Mod+Shift+P { power-off-monitors; } |
||||
} |
||||
|
||||
spawn-at-startup "waybar" |
||||
spawn-sh-at-startup "kanshi" |
||||
spawn-sh-at-startup "awww-daemon --no-cache" |
||||
spawn-sh-at-startup "udiskie --tray" |
||||
spawn-sh-at-startup "wl-paste --watch cliphist store" |
||||
spawn-sh-at-startup "~/.config/scripts/set_wallpaper.sh" |
||||
|
||||
// forces running on nvidia card |
||||
debug { |
||||
render-drm-device "/dev/dri/renderD128" |
||||
} |
||||
|
||||
@ -1,8 +0,0 @@ |
||||
#!/bin/bash |
||||
|
||||
dir="$HOME/.wallpapers" |
||||
wallpapers=("$dir"/*) |
||||
idx=$(( RANDOM % ${#wallpapers[@]})) |
||||
selected="${wallpapers[$idx]}" |
||||
|
||||
awww img "$selected" |
||||
@ -1 +0,0 @@ |
||||
Subproject commit 2d6e5a9dfba137251547f99befc330ef93d70551 |
||||
Loading…
Reference in new issue