when using hyprland instead of sway also replace mode with submap
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Waybar
Waybar is a GTK status bar made specifically for wlroots compositors and supports Hyprland by default. To use it, it's recommended to use your distro's package.
To start configuring, copy the configuration files from
/etc/xdg/waybar/
into ~/.config/waybar/
. Then, in ~/.config/waybar/config
To use the workspaces module, replace all the occurrences of sway/workspaces
with hyprland/workspaces
. Addionally replace all occurences of sway/mode
with hyprland/submap
For more info regarding configuration, see The Waybar Wiki.
How to launch
Type waybar
into your terminal. In order to have Waybar launch alongside
Hyprland, add this line to your Hyprland configuration:
exec-once = waybar
Waybar FAQ
Waybar popups render behind the windows
In ~/.config/waybar/config
, make sure that you have the layer
configuration
set to top
and not bottom
.
Active workspace doesn't show up
Replace #workspaces button.focused
with #workspaces button.active
in
~/.config/waybar/style.css
.
Scrolling through workspaces
Since a lot of configuration options from sway/workspaces
are missing,
you should deduce some of them by yourself. In the case of scrolling, it should
look like this:
"hyprland/workspaces": {
"format": "{icon}",
"on-scroll-up": "hyprctl dispatch workspace e+1",
"on-scroll-down": "hyprctl dispatch workspace e-1"
}
Window title is missing
The prefix for the window module that provides the title is hyprland
not wlr
.
In your Waybar config, insert this module:
"modules-center": ["hyprland/window"],
If you are using multiple monitors, you may want to insert the following option:
"hyprland/window": {
"separate-outputs": true
},
Eww
Eww (ElKowar's Wacky Widgets) is a widget system made in Rust + GTK, which lets allows the creation of custom widgets similarly to AwesomeWM. The key difference is that it is independent of window manager/compositor.
Install Eww either using your distro's package manager, by searching
eww-wayland
, or by manually compiling. In the latter case, you can follow the
instructions.
Configuration
There are a few examples listed in the Readme. It's also highly recommended to read through the Configuration options.
{{< callout >}}
Read the Wayland section carefully, otherwise Eww won't work on Hyprland.
{{< /callout >}}
Here are some example widgets that might be useful for Hyprland:
Workspaces widget
This widget displays a list of workspaces 1-10. Each workspace can be clicked on to jump to it, and scrolling over the widget cycles through them. It supports different styles for the current workspace, occupied workspaces, and empty workspaces. It requires bash, awk, stdbuf, grep, seq, socat, jq, and Python 3.
~/.config/eww.yuck
...
(deflisten workspaces :initial "[]" "bash ~/.config/eww/scripts/get-workspaces")
(deflisten current_workspace :initial "1" "bash ~/.config/eww/scripts/get-active-workspace")
(defwidget workspaces []
(eventbox :onscroll "bash ~/.config/eww/scripts/change-active-workspace {} ${current_workspace}" :class "workspaces-widget"
(box :space-evenly true
(label :text "${workspaces}${current_workspace}" :visible false)
(for workspace in workspaces
(eventbox :onclick "hyprctl dispatch workspace ${workspace.id}"
(box :class "workspace-entry ${workspace.windows > 0 ? "occupied" : "empty"}"
(label :text "${workspace.id}" :class "workspace-entry ${workspace.id == current_workspace ? "current" : ""}" )
)
)
)
)
)
)
...
~/.config/eww/scripts/change-active-workspace
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function clamp {
min=$1
max=$2
val=$3
python -c "print(max($min, min($val, $max)))"
}
direction=$1
current=$2
if test "$direction" = "down"
then
target=$(clamp 1 10 $(($current+1)))
echo "jumping to $target"
hyprctl dispatch workspace $target
elif test "$direction" = "up"
then
target=$(clamp 1 10 $(($current-1)))
echo "jumping to $target"
hyprctl dispatch workspace $target
fi
~/.config/eww/scripts/get-active-workspace
#!/usr/bin/env bash
hyprctl monitors -j | jq '.[] | select(.focused) | .activeWorkspace.id'
socat -u UNIX-CONNECT:$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/hypr/$HYPRLAND_INSTANCE_SIGNATURE/.socket2.sock - |
stdbuf -o0 awk -F '>>|,' -e '/^workspace>>/ {print $2}' -e '/^focusedmon>>/ {print $3}'
~/.config/eww/scripts/get-workspaces
#!/usr/bin/env bash
spaces (){
WORKSPACE_WINDOWS=$(hyprctl workspaces -j | jq 'map({key: .id | tostring, value: .windows}) | from_entries')
seq 1 10 | jq --argjson windows "${WORKSPACE_WINDOWS}" --slurp -Mc 'map(tostring) | map({id: ., windows: ($windows[.]//0)})'
}
spaces
socat -u UNIX-CONNECT:$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/hypr/$HYPRLAND_INSTANCE_SIGNATURE/.socket2.sock - | while read -r line; do
spaces
done
Active window title widget
This widget simply displays the title of the active window. It requires awk, stdbuf, socat, and jq.
~/.config/eww/eww.yuck
...
(deflisten window :initial "..." "sh ~/.config/eww/scripts/get-window-title")
(defwidget window_w []
(box
(label :text "${window}"
)
)
...
~/.config/eww/scripts/get-window-title
#!/bin/sh
hyprctl activewindow -j | jq --raw-output .title
socat -u UNIX-CONNECT:$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/hypr/$HYPRLAND_INSTANCE_SIGNATURE/.socket2.sock - | stdbuf -o0 awk -F '>>|,' '/^activewindow>>/{print $3}'
Hybrid
Like Waybar, Hybrid is a GTK status bar mainly focused on wlroots compositors.
It can be installed using the hybrid-bar
package from the AUR.
Configuration
The configuration is done through JSON. More information is available here.
How to launch
After configuring HybridBar, it can be launched by typing hybrid-bar
into a
terminal. It is also possible to set it to launch at startup. To do this, add
this line to hyprland.conf
:
exec-once = hybrid-bar
Blur
To activate blur, set blurls = NAMESPACE
in your Hyprland configuration, where
NAMESPACE
is the gtk-layer-shell namespace of your HybridBar. The default
namespace is gtk-layer-shell
and can be changed in the HybridBar configuration
at
{
"hybrid" {
"namespace": "namespace name"
}
}